dphill said:
How about we just move this to the Soapbox where it belongs?
I have a better suggestion. How about everyone get back on topic and ignore the distraction. It's a shame that one person with a not-so-subtle political statement can derail a great thread. Delegating this to the sopabox everytime only serves to hide the great information in this thread. Let's ignore his remark and focus on the topic.
Willie Jan said:
somebody is getting rich....
price increase silver 300%, but since there is only around 1 gram of silver in a pack of 18x24cm paper, how would this affect the price so much????
As the former head of an engineering department, this type of statement drives me more crazy than any political one. Fine, sure, some people along the supply chain get rich from the making of that film. So what? The fact is that it is a complex chain of events that is required to make the roll of film - from the mining, extraction and processing of silver to the bonded storage and distribution of the silver and the logistics behind associated other chemicals and materials, to the construction, delivery, testing of the manufacturing equipment and buildings, to the maintenance of same, to the research and development of the emulsion and the coating processes, to the actual manufacturing process of making a roll of film and it's packaging, to the marketing of that film, to supply chain of distributing that film across the world - all this takes salaries and benefits - civilized or not, equipment, buildings energy, taxes, fees, etc...
There's a saying about being "nickeled and dimed". You are only looking at the increase of one variable in a million. I would say due to the increased energy costs recently all the raw materials have increaesed in costs, which means all the logistics costs have increased, which means all the maintenance costs have increased, etc.... it's a supply chain. Increase the cost of energy and all the basic costs along the supply chain increase incrementally so that the cummulative effect is a substantial increase to the consumer.
Sometimes I feel I am explaining the obvious.
Regards, Art.