Rick Denney wrote: ... Given that true market price is set by what a buyer and a seller can agree to, and given that the seller wants to sell.
Why is this a "given"? I rather think that it is given that the seller wants to make a profit (or avoid a larger loss than he would sustain if he did not sell). The "desire to sell" sounds like the kind of motivation a "boutique" or "hobbyist" seller might have - not a commercial profit-seeking enterprise.
Rick Denney wrote:
the buyer has the final decision of whether or not to buy. Thus, the buyer sets the price. Without a buyer, there is no market, and therefore no "true market price".
And without a seller there is no product, and therefore no "true market price".
The argument is symmetric.
I can just as easily postulate a buyer searching for a product, and a seller who has the "final decision of whether or not to sell".
The high-tech world is just chock full of examples. Bleeding-edge consumers generate a "desire" for all sorts of products - and even set a price at which they will buy the product. There's a buyer, and a suggested price...but the "final say" on the actual price is the supplier who actually creates the product and offers it for sale (or not).
You are assuming an assymetric world, an assumption that I do not accept.
You recognize that your assumptions do not hold in some cases, but apply (pejorative) adjectives ("hobbyist", "boutique") to describe these cases.
In short, you beg the question.
[to be fair, I should offer the HINT that you might want to argue an assymetry in the KIND of consideration offered on each side. The buyer generally offers "money" and the seller generally offers "goods". Everything may well hinge on whether or not the consideration offered can easily be used for some other purpose if the deal does not go through. For example, I'm at the time in my life where I might consider money to be useless to me if I don't spend it - and soon. For some (most?) people, money loses value if not spent - just as surely as goods lose value if not sold. But, if that's the argument you want to make, it has to be a better one than "it is a given that..."]
Rick Denney wrote:
If my company sells fewer than about 1500 of my hours a year, I'll be out of a job. That motivates my company to sell my time.
Or, it might motivate your company to let you go. It all depends on how expensive it is to let you go as opposed to selling your time at a loss.
Rick Denney wrote:
The price at which they will sell my time varies quite a bit, depending on how much of my time is in inventory. They'll sell it at a loss rather than not selling it at all.
They are not selling it at a loss - they are selling it at a price which makes a profit *compared to the alternative (letting you go)*, including the lost opportunity cost of not being able to sell your time at a higher rate at some time in the future, which they hope they have predicted accurately.
If NO ONE steps forward to buy your time, there is a price below which they will not go. They will let you go rather than sell your time. This suffices to disprove your assertion that it is *always* the case that "as demand goes down, price goes down". In this case, as demand goes down, fewer units are made available on the market. And yes...sometimes it is cheaper to throw away inventory than it is to do the paperwork on a sale. Not to mention that company may not want to set a precedent by selling even one hour of your time at a fire-sale price. Other customers might notice and negotiate more aggressively (in the future).
Therefore, the seller DOES have a say in setting the price. And, it may well be the *final* say. Not every transaction is an "absolute auction" - sometimes there is a reserve price.
Rick Denney wrote:
My hourly rate (price) varies by at least 40% on the projects I'm currently working on, despite that costs are identical between them. Some buyers pay less because they refuse to pay more, and if the alternative is to leave hours unsold, then we'll still accept the work. I make sure that my company doesn't raise my salary (which is what determines cost) to the point where I can't sell it at an acceptable price. Again, even in my consulting work, the buyer sets the price.
But...but...you just said that *you* (the seller) "makes sure" that your price (what you sell to the company) does not go up. Isn't that a statement that the seller sets the price? I'm confused by this example - do you mean that the company *might* raise your salary when times are flush...to the point where they would be forced to fire you for lack of business when times are bad?
There are boundaries on both sides of the market price. The seller sets the lower bound, and the buyer sets the upper bound. If you *assume* that the seller has set a lower bound of ZERO, then your conclusion ("the buyer sets the price") follows logically. The problem is that I don't believe your premise. I believe that sellers have a floor and try to raise the price from there, while buyers have a ceiling and try to lower the price from there. In that middle zone, *neither* party has the final say - it's a symmetric negotiation.
So...the car dealer says to you "what will it take to get you to buy this car today?" and you answer "the buyer sets the price - and I'm the buyer, so...$1". Does the dealer answer "you're right - the buyer sets the price; here are the keys"???
Perhaps you mean "all the *other* buyers in the market set the price for this particular buyer"? In which case, I'll reply that it works the other way around as well (except that, in some sense all "buyers" are interchangable, while sellers tend to be associated with unique products).
The key question is: what nitty-gritty detail about sellers and buyers breaks the symmetry. I suspect that you think it has something to do with "inventory" - but your argument doesn't make that clear. For me, it's more likely to have to do with the *kind* of consideration offered: how is "money" different from "goods" or "services". And...who do you think "makes the final decision" in a barter arrangement? Who is the seller and who is the buyer?
No more D.S. - go directly to CODA.