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hugh3 | 14 years ago

This might be an interesting subject worthy of a proper treatment. I was somewhat put off by the fact that there were giant tangentially-related pictures between every paragraph, though.

The answer is: "Depends". Though if your business model is immoral when applied to poor folks, it's still immoral when applied to rich folks.

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faboo|14 years ago

> Though if your business model is immoral when applied to poor folks, it's still immoral when applied to rich folks.

The markup on drug store cotton balls is shockingly high, like 1000%. Nobody who buys cotton balls cares though, because the $2 per bag they end up costing is a very small fraction of their income.

But take that to a developing country, and that $2 is completely unaffordable. You would be forcing people in need of sterile cotton swabs to pay a day's or a week's earnings, when their manufacture costs a few pennies.

I don't think the former example is unethical (indeed, the cost of a bag of cotton balls (in America) is probably far below what the market could truly bear). That stupendously high markup is fine because it still keeps the final price easily affordable.

In the latter example, that same markup makes cotton balls all but impossible to buy, when even a "normal" retail mark up of 25% would have kept the price in the cents and therefore at least approachable. I'd call that unethical.

true_religion|14 years ago

> In the latter example, that same markup makes cotton balls all but impossible to buy, when even a "normal" retail mark up of 25% would have kept the price in the cents and therefore at least approachable. I'd call that unethical.

If setting prices too high is unethical, then is refusing to sell at all also unethical?

And if it is unethical, should it be mandatory to sell any good at a reasonable prices? Or only a class of goods deemed "essential"?

hugh3|14 years ago

That's an interesting example. But if an opportunity exists in the market for somebody to come in undercutting me and selling cotton balls for a mere 500% markup, then I think it's still okay.