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HMV Canada Cuts Music CD Prices

umStefa notes a CBC story reporting that the largest music retailer in Canada, HMV, has slashed prices on CDs and is attributing the move to demand by customers for lower prices. The back catalog of popular artists will see price cuts of up to 33%; the cuts average 20% across the board. The Canadian version of the RIAA is spinning the news as being a direct result of music piracy.

6 of 271 comments (clear)

  1. Cheaper music? by Gr33nNight · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So in other words, if people keep pirating, then CDs will be cheaper. Sounds like a win-win to me.

  2. CD Prices and Slothful Government by Stanistani · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So when will CD prices dip below DVD prices?

    Also, from TFA:
    "A succession of Canadian governments have sat on their hands and done nothing," he said.

    Excellent. That's the best kind of government. The type that doesn't make laws just to please some industry group.

    1. Re:CD Prices and Slothful Government by kebes · · Score: 5, Insightful

      because the cost of movie production involves orders of magnitude more people and money that of an album?
      This is probably obvious to most of us, but it bears repeating:

      The fact that a CD and a DVD cost the same amount, even though the production costs are orders-of-magnitude different, means that:
      (1) A CD album sells far fewer copies than a DVD of a movie does. Thus, the price needs to be higher to recoup costs; or
      (2) The price we pay is not really correlated to the production cost. In particular, the claims that the cost of a CD is required to pay all the people involved in the production of the work is greatly exaggerated.

      We all know that a merchant feels no particular desire to sell something at a lower cost if people are buying it at a higher cost. In that sense, the cost of goods is never correlated to the production cost, but only based upon the price the market is willing to bear.

      On the other hand, in any sector of the economy where there is competition the price of a good on the free market will be driven down closer to the production cost, because one company will always be willing to undercut another company, right up until the point where they can no longer pay for production (and staff, and reasonable return-on-investment, etc.). However, where there is no competition, the price can be inflated arbitrarily high above the production cost.

      Again, it's pretty obvious, but I'll say it anyways: The high price of CDs and DVDs is because the market is dominated by a monopoly, devoid of competition.
  3. Prices were unreasonable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This also just helps bring Canadian prices in line with American prices for the same products. We have always been getting ripped off and over the last year as the Canadain dollar has risen the prices have become more and more unreasonable.

  4. Re:Right... by Otter+Escaping+North · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Because, as we all know, customers who want CD's at a decent price are OBVIOUSLY pirates...

    You know - I'm living in Canada, never used p2p or anything like that to download music...don't consider myself a pirate at all. Happy to pay for the materials I want. Upon hearing HMV is slashing prices - I rejoice and head to the website.

    The White Album is still forty-five freakin' dollars!

    Piracy causes lower prices then, does it? I guess I just haven't been doing my part.

    --
    Running Windows^H^H^H^H^H^H^H OSX and Linux in the home. (I don't have time for Solitaire any more.)
  5. Re:Right... by pokerdad · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They are lowering there prices because everybody has caught on that they are really high.

    If only this were true. Once upon a time HMV was a music store that screwed people. Then people stopped buying music there so they started selling DVDs. Just last month they added video games to the mix. I was in an HMV last month, perhaps 25% of the shelf space was for music.

    This cut isn't because HMV has figured out what they were doing wrong, its because they make all their money off of DVDs and games and the few CDs that are left in the store are stealing valuable shelf space. Despite the fact they continue to market themselves as a music store, I think its just a matter of time before the music is gone.