I see where I've not been clear on this. The amount a person is willing to pay is defined as the maximum amount a person is willing to pay where if the price is higher than that then they will not purchase it. Obviously if it is lower they will purchase it for that too because cheaper is always better. But there is an upper threshold at which people will stop being willing to purchase things.
If I had brand new #2 pencils for sell and priced them at $500 each, they would never sell. Even if I was the only person on planet Earth selling pencils, people are simply not willing to pay that much for that item. Whatever the highest price people WOULD be willing to fork over for it, I could potentially sell it for that, because it would sell and I'd make money then.
(Let's pretend that amount is $0.50) Now, of course another person could bring out pencils for $0.40 and under cut my price sure, but that doesn't change the fact that a person is willing to pay $0.50, but would prefer to pay less.
This is not production cost that is affecting price, it is competition -- vastly different things.
Indeed, and in that case this is literally a what people are willing to pay (since competition is out of the picture), because you are either willing to pay $7.99 for that novel or not. And if not you go without it. I would actually bet (especially given how much Hard covers go for) that people would be willing to pay even more than that for e-books given how ridiculously convenient they are as compared to paper ones.
I never said the public couldn't over time change their mind on how much they're willing to pay for something. But even if they did, it's still what I'm saying. It's about what they are willing to pay. If that goes below the current price then so the price of the item comes down with it.
If I had brand new #2 pencils for sell and priced them at $500 each, they would never sell. Even if I was the only person on planet Earth selling pencils, people are simply not willing to pay that much for that item. Whatever the highest price people WOULD be willing to fork over for it, I could potentially sell it for that, because it would sell and I'd make money then.
(Let's pretend that amount is $0.50) Now, of course another person could bring out pencils for $0.40 and under cut my price sure, but that doesn't change the fact that a person is willing to pay $0.50, but would prefer to pay less.
Sometimes pricing is driven by production costs. If I can figure out a way to make a competing product for a lower cost, I may be able to undercut the other guy's price and draw away sales.
This is not production cost that is affecting price, it is competition -- vastly different things.
This isn't totally applicable to ebooks, though, because they aren't truly fungible. Due to copyright laws and licensing agreements, no one is going to be able to produce a lower priced copy of, say, the Typhon Pact novels.
Indeed, and in that case this is literally a what people are willing to pay (since competition is out of the picture), because you are either willing to pay $7.99 for that novel or not. And if not you go without it. I would actually bet (especially given how much Hard covers go for) that people would be willing to pay even more than that for e-books given how ridiculously convenient they are as compared to paper ones.
But, if the public really believes that ebooks are cheaper to produce, they may not be willing to pay the same amount for an ebook as for a physical book. So, indirectly, the perceived cost to produce an ebook may impact the price.
I never said the public couldn't over time change their mind on how much they're willing to pay for something. But even if they did, it's still what I'm saying. It's about what they are willing to pay. If that goes below the current price then so the price of the item comes down with it.