Thomas Bertilsson
Member
All true Thomas and what Ilford or any other maker charges is key to this issue and it's the price we are unlikely ever to know. However if we assume that there are sufficient retailers in the U.K. to get us close to competition and I think this is a fair assumption, then if each and every one of these retailers charges more than in the U.S. then it suggests that Ilford or any other maker's price to those retailers leads to the need to charge a higher retail price by all the U.K retailers.
I continue to remain sceptical about external(outside the control of the producer) circumstances explaining the U.S. v U.K. differential
Nice to see you helping to keep this thread on track. Let's make sure it doesn't become a discussion about the pros and cons of a European "free health service" versus the U.S version. That's for the Lounge
pentaxuser
Is it true that all films, including Ilford, Kodak, and others, are of higher cost in the UK? If yes, that DOES point to a systemic issue with selling film in the UK compared to other places.
If not, then there is no pattern that we can deduce from all this.
Looking at it from the manufacturer's standpoint, where I work we get it pounded into our brains every single time there is big company meeting that what really counts at all times is margin. Pricing is the most effective way to obtain margin expansion, and every single sale has to count. If I make up an arbitrary number of GBP 5 per roll of film, and Kodak or Rollei charges that amount, there is little reason for Ilford to sell it for less.
Reading history, part of Agfa's big problem was that they didn't have enough margin. They sold their film at a very low price (at least in Sweden and the US as I lived in two countries at the time), considerably less expensive than their competitors. That yields volume, but if there's no profit then it's for nothing. All you achieve is market erosion and everybody loses out.
I'm just thinking out loud here, not really trying to prove anything, but I see a couple of possibilities:
1. Ilford, just like every other healthy business, is making as much margin on their product as possible.
2. The distributors and retailers do exactly the same thing.
3. There's a systemic issue with selling things in the UK, making goods expensive; perhaps it's related to taxes (for all hands that touch the product in the distribution chain), or maybe some other cost that all of us are unaware of.
I have told my father, who still lives in Sweden, how much film costs in the United States, and he's always a bit surprised when I tell him, even though he knows. There's a big difference.
You could also turn the argument around and consider the US market, which is extremely cut throat with high competition. When things get too expensive here then people quickly jump to the next best alternative. As a matter of fact, many here shop on price alone. That's why companies like Wal-Mart have become so popular here, in spite of the long term stupidity of that behavior. I wouldn't be surprised if that pricing strategy for the United States is a real factor in why it's less expensive here than most everywhere else.
Just some thoughts to consider to feed the thread.
