Evan!
Well-Known Member
desertBrew said:This is and isn't a "what the market will bear" situation [...] increase the price just to the point of pissing the world off where the alarms for R&D for alternatives may be fiscally the right decision. then lower it back down to control the mob. expect to see this going on for years to come.
So, it's not about what the market will bear; but it is about stretching the limits of the market until it begins to rebel and search for alternatives, then backing down from there. Huh? How is that not "what the market will bear"? I realize that it's a very complex situation including foreign regimes, OPEC, etc. But let's say, for example, snickers kept raising its prices until a candy bar cost $7. But people still like snickers, so they would pay $7. But any more than that, and people start looking for some kind of alternative to snickers...some kind of off-brand blend of peanuts and caramel and chocolate. So they don't dare go past that point. It's the same deal with petro, just more complex and not quite free-market due to OPEC and the massive taxation at all levels.
Increasing the price to just short of the market's breaking point is the same thing as "what the market will bear".