Disclaimer: this is not a post directed at hydrospanner, the "you" is a generic "you". I apologise if that is not self-evident.
You don't seem to understand economics.
No matter how much you may not like it, the facts are the facts, and the market forces do indeed determine pricing. The very nature of compensation for products and services rendered pretty specifically and obviously create a system where pricing is equal exactly to a product or service's worth at that particular intersection of market forces. There's really no disputing that. It's objective fact.
What you don't seem to consider in your "high-demand" hypothetical is that you're changing one of the variables (demand) and not expecting any change in the results as determined by the market based on those variables. All art is not created equal. If a particular artist's art is in high demand, for any reason, the price for that art will obviously increase. What you need to examine at that point, though, is why in your hypothetical that demand has spiked in that case, and more importantly, you need to realize that high demand for one specific thing isn't the same as high demand in that entire sector.
Again, I'm not arguing my side of this one, or presenting an opinion. I'm just stating facts, and those facts aren't really up for discussion. The market sets the price. For everything.
^ and this kids, is why the world is going to hell, the climate is ******, people starve and wars happen. Some people actually believe this is the way it must be, like religious fanatics. Most scientists, but rarely economists for some reason, understand that their models are just that ... models, a simplified representation of an ultimately infinitely more complex reality.
No I'm not accusing you of being a fanatic hydrospanner, you present how many think it is, how it must be - in many ways how it is, some places. Luckily it doesn't have to be that way, nor is that way a prerequisite for freedom, democracy, wealth, equality etc.
Prices and the market can be regulated (no no no, I'm not talking communism, if you think so, go back to school and educate yourself), it is many places in the world, like Norway for instance (but it's surely regulated in the US too, in some ways). The result of this: Prosperity. And then unhappiness and problems no one ever thought could be problems, as being prosperous and having such a high standard of living results in boredom, which then reveals other existential issues not directly related to survival. And the things swing towards the right and we are more or less where we were 100 years ago, just waiting for another genocide...
Luckily the market or economy isn't God or a force of nature - the idea of "market forces" is funny, if not ridiculous. Of course, I'm as ideologically impaired as any other (also I'm not an economist, but I am a social scientist - just like economists are, they're not a part of the natural sciences, keep that in mind), so be sure to disagree and try and persuade me why the market "force" rules, are axiomatic, and factual and not up for discussion. Yes. Please, Remove agency from our list of possible actions, we can only consume and consume... nothing can be changed, the market rules everything. ![]()
So. Rant over.
I just think it plainly sucks that FFG underpays it's artists like that, it's unethical and betrays poor business values (unless exploitation is a good business value).
Edited by Jegergryte