On 4 April 2011 16:09, Eric Brunner-Williams <ebw@abenaki.wabanaki.net>wrote:
We could have ALAC recommends inflicting wicked high and purposeless costs on all applicants through a comment on the SSR-RT issues.
We could have ALAC recommends avoiding inflicting wicked high and purposeless costs on all applicants through a comment on the SSR-RT issues.
Of the two choices my preference is for the latter.
We could have NARALO recommends jacking up the prices on all scarce goods and services through mass synchronous demand.
We could have NARALO recommends not jacking up the prices on all scarce goods and services and avoiding mass synchronous demand.
High school economics teaches that demand rises as prices drop, assuming a certain amount of elasticity in demand. If this is applicable here, shouldn't it follow that minimizing prices might *increase* mass synchronous demand (as opposed to the result of artificial price inflation)? If not, why? If so, what is our suggestion of a throttling mechanism to deal with the increase in demand? - Evan