If there is, it's usually a bad thing.
Deflation is bad for producers, inflation is bad for consumers.
Americans are trained to be consumers.
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If there is, it's usually a bad thing.
I noticed the jump from $8.99 to $11.99 for DX discs at my local PIAS a few weeks ago.
And I don't buy the inflation or demand excuses. This seems more like price gouging to me.
Discmania provided raw material cost charts that showed the ridiculous increase in raw materials. Trickle down from raw materials all the way to the shelf
Deflation is bad for producers, inflation is bad for consumers.
Americans are trained to be consumers.
Start scouting the places that sell used discs. I mean, we're all throwing used discs after the first new throw anyway, right?
it's called inflation... will there ever be deflation?
If there is, it's usually a bad thing.
Deflation is bad for producers, inflation is bad for consumers.
Americans are trained to be consumers.
lol. Bit more to it than that.
shining examples of American economic illiteracy
i'm tempted to offer free plastic to anyone that can even give an accurate definition of inflation
sorry guy, i always seem to be pissing on your parade. i swear it's not personal.
shining examples of American economic illiteracy
i'm tempted to offer free plastic to anyone that can even give an accurate definition of inflation
sorry guy, i always seem to be pissing on your parade. i swear it's not personal.
To be fair dx has always been $7-8, pro $10-11, champion $14-16, and star $16-18 since I began playing in 2001.
I can't think of many items that haven't increased in price over 20 years.
Back when I started playing, Innova was 5 or 6 bucks a disc (buying from club or trunk at tourney) and 7 bucks for Discraft (local shop). DX was not a term yet.
i'm tempted to offer free plastic to anyone that can even give an accurate definition of inflation
Back when I started playing, Innova was 5 or 6 bucks a disc (buying from club or trunk at tourney) and 7 bucks for Discraft (local shop). DX was not a term yet.
I remember those days, and when premium plastic showed up at $9 or $10, I loudly proclaimed that there was no way a disc could be worth that much, and I'd never pay it.