Apple isn’t a cuddly teddy bear

With the way the media view ‘price gouging’ I have no idea why Apple is so loved: Are they the best company in the world at price skimming?

Apple Inc. halved the price of its entry-level iPhone to $99 and rolled out a next-generation model, looking to sustain the momentum for its popular smart phone amid the recession and fresh competition.

They somehow manage to charge enormous premiums to early adopters and still get viewed as customer focussed and friendly. Given the way they must hog consumer surplus I can only attribute their positive public image to fantastic marketing. Bravo to their marketing department!

Pablo and Goliath

Pablo Soto, the author of popular peer-to-peer file-sharing software, is being sued for LOTS by the recording industry. Their case is that he broke the law by facilitating distribution of copyright protected material. While I understand the reasons they’re going after him, I can’t understand how finding him guilty would be a good outcome. Read more

Do smokers think of those around them?

We’ve written a lot on this blog about taxing cigarettes. The usual arguments focus on health costs and potential ‘internalities’. When you look at the calculated costs of these things you usually get a number much smaller than the tax rate on a pack of cigarettes. Today it was suggested to me that cigarettes are nonetheless undertaxed in NZ. That’s because those calculations don’t include the statistical value of lives lost from smoking. If the value that people place on a life were taken into account at around $4m/life the cost of smoking would be far higher than the tax imposed. It would then take into account the harm to all those around the smoker who would be devastated at the loss of their life.

I’ve been fascinated with the new starbucks dabuccino and I really hope that vaping it will produce less health issues. I haven’t had a chance to think it over in detail so I’m interested to know what you think about the argument. While I don’t have any numbers to back anything up, my initial thoughts are:

  • Smokers’ lives aren’t usually all that much shorter than anyone else’s. It’s not like car accidents which claim people of all ages. That makes it difficult to apply the same number, unless we have an age adjusted figure available.
  • Smokers do care about those around them so they’ll take into account the feelings of others when they make the decision to smoke. Some of the cost to those around them is thus internalised.
  • People close to the smoker have an opportunity to directly bargain with them over their cigarette consumption. Perhaps government intervention isn’t needed to solve this problem.
  • VSL calculations are usually done using willingness to pay to avoid harm. That approach puts a number on how much someone values their own life. Does that $4m figure represent the valuation of one’s own or someone else’s life? I imagine willingness-to-pay to avert the death of others is significantly lower. In fact, given people’s willingness to pay to save the lives of blameless and starving African children, I imagine they aren’t going to pay a whole lot to save someone with a pack-a-day habit.

I don’t know how big this number is, but it does sound kinda significant even given my reservations. So why isn’t it included in the calculations of people like Viscusi, Gruber and Koszegi? I’m sure there’s an obvious answer, but I don’t have it so I’m hoping your collective wisdom can help me out here 🙂

Reference: Pensacola Florida Long Term Disability Lawyer | Ortiz Law Firm.

A good reason to complain

Matt’s bout of food poisoning has prompted an email discussion on whether he should complain to the store that sold him the offending item. He is of the opinion that a certain percentage of products are always going to be bad and he was just unlucky, so why bother complaining. I think he’s ignoring the other half of the equation: the vendor wants people to complain.

It is true that a certain percentage of products will end up being bad. As a vendor I face a trade-off between production costs and production quality. The number of bad products is an important measure of my product quality, so I’m going to be very interested in how many poison my customers. If customers don’t complain then I have no information beyond my own internal testing. To remedy the information problem I offer freebies to people who complain as a payment for taking the time to provide me with information on the quality of my product. So freebies may be a way to make complainers go away, but they may also be a way for companies to gather better information about the quality of products reaching their customers. Read more

Missing Matt

For all those who’ve been missing Matt’s regular lessons in economics, fear not. He was struck down by food poisoning over the weekend and hasn’t been able to post as he catches up on work (yes, he manages to hold down a day job too) but normal transmission will resume as soon as he has regained his strength.

Some issues with GDP

Recently Peter Cresswell from Not PC asked me if I understood the difference between production and consumption.  I know that consumption is what we value and I know that production is what we do in order to achieve consumption.  As a result, I see production as a means to an end – the costly process we take on in order to get what we want.

This brought to my mind some of the issues we need to discuss when looking at Gross Domestic Product.  GDP is a measure of the production in society over a given period of time.  Real GDP gives us a “volume” measure of production, which tells us the quantity of stuff we make in the arbitary prices of some point in time.

Since we value consumption not production we need to remember:

  1. The lifetime consumption associated with a durable good is recorded all in one period – the period it is purchased.  However, the actual value of such a good remains.  During this recession the sale of motor vehicles has collapsed as people have kept driving their old vehicles, as a result GDP states overstate the loss of “motor vehicle consumption” during the recession.
  2. There are many activities that are not recorded in GDP, but provide satisfaction.  Black market drugs, cleaning your own house, and helping your neighbour move are all examples that spring to mind.
  3. In a small open economy like NZ we have a lot of exports and imports.  Now when the terms of trade increases we make relatively more off our exports (and/or pay less for our imports).  GDP does not capture this directly.  For example, if our TOT increases and we just buy imports with the increase in income GDP is unchanged – however, people are getting to consume more because of higher incomes!
  4. GDP is a “flow” of production – not a stock of produced goods in the economy.  It is what we are adding to the set of already produced goods out their (durable goods).  As a result a BOOST or SLUMP in GDP could be the result of timing – not some brilliant/terrible event.

We all overuse GDP.  It is a useful stat, but it is important to keep in mind what it is actually saying, and what society actually wants, before leaping to policy conclusions.

In the housing example this still leads me to believe that house building has a purpose.  Are there enormous issues in the housing market – yes.  Have many households overexposed themselves to housing as a retirement nestegg – yes.  Has NZ inc “over-invested” in housing by borrowing from overseas – at the moment the data suggests not.

I completely agree with many criticisms out there about the NZ housing market, but saying that the countries terrible debt position is the result of a “housing obsession” seems off the mark – as we don’t appear to have overbuilt.

In reality the data seems to indicate that NZ inc has borrowed to fund a whole bunch of business investment that has turned sour – plant and machinery investment has been through the roof and we haven’t done much with it.  Unfortunate, but C’est la vie.