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Apple Increases App Store Prices By 25% Following Brexit Vote (theguardian.com)

Following the UK's vote to leave the European Union last year, Apple is raising prices on its UK App Store by almost 25 percent to counter the depreciation of the pound. For example, an app that costs $0.99 in the U.S., and used to cost 0.79 British pounds, will now cost 0.99 British pounds. The Guardian reports: Apple announced the price rises in an email to app developers on Tuesday, and told them "when foreign exchange rates or taxation changes, we sometimes need to update prices on the App Store." It says the new prices will roll out over the next seven days, giving customers a short opportunity to beat the price increase. Similar price increases are expected to hit other Apple stores, including the iTunes Store for music and video and the iBooks Store. Britain isn't the only country experiencing price changes. India is seeing price increases due to changes in service taxes, while Turkish prices are also rising due to depreciation of the Turkish Lira. Since the vote to leave the European Union, the value of the pound has fallen by 18.5% against the U.S. dollar. In a statement, Apple said: "Price tiers on the App Store are set internationally on the basis of several factors, including currency exchange rates, business practices, taxes and the cost of doing business. These factors vary from region to region and over time."

172 comments

  1. love the subtle anti-brexit push by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The dollar is doing well. it would be much more honest to compare the pound to the euro in that not so subtle piece of advocacy.

    1. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by gweilo8888 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Bullshit. In no way does 0.81528 (today's close) "pretty much match" old pricing. Just 6-12 months ago, the norm was somewhere in the region of 0.7 pounds to the dollar, and from early 2009 to just a year or so ago, the norm was more like 0.6 to 0.65 or thereabouts. 0.8+ pounds to the dollar is in no way normal, and Apple is not increasing prices here, but rather adjusting them to match the post-Brexit norm.

      Citation, since you'll pretend it's not true otherwise. (Mind you, you'll probably still pretend it's not true.) http://www.xe.com/currencychar...

    2. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I was in London for work shortly before the Brexit referendum, and the dollar was then worth 0.69GBP[1]. Compared to the current value of 0.816GBP, the pound has dropped 18.3% -- almost exactly what TFS claims. So if you want to characterize a nearly 20% drop in value as "pretty much matching the old pricing", I guess go ahead. But for those of us living in reality, a 20% drop in the value of our money is a pretty big fucking deal.

      [1] Source: Wolfram Alpha

    3. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about the price of loaf of bread? That matters a lot more to the value of the GBP than does the comparison between one fiat currency and another.

    4. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2009 to recent it wasn't the pound dropping it was the US dollar rising. recent changes though are the pounbd dropping. maybe a 10-15% price change could be justified, basically now you pay around 20% more in the UK than you do in the US.

    5. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by beelsebob · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yeh, both the RPI and CPI are showing marked increases after brexit, so yes, the price of a loaf of bread is not only going up, but going up faster than before.

    6. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

      How about the price of loaf of bread?

      Bread is not a good measure of currency valuations, because it is based on only a single commodity and is mass produced, thus failing to reflect the cost of services that make up a much bigger portion of modern economies.

      A better measure is the Big Mac Index. A McDonalds Big Mac contains more commodities, and a significant portion of the price is in the service sector. In the UK, the average price of a Big Mac is 2.99UKP. In America, it is $4.79. So the fair market conversion should be about 0.62. So the pound is currently undervalued against the dollar, and Apple is screwing the Brits.

    7. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by frovingslosh · · Score: 1

      What? You think this is about sending a political message or some greedy cash grab by Apple? Well, as you say the dollar is doing very well. If it was just politics or a cash grab then Apple would not be cutting app store prices in the U.S. to reflect the growing value of the dollar.

      Oh, I see your point!

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    8. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by arglebargle_xiv · · Score: 1

      Bread is not a good measure of currency valuations, because it is based on only a single commodity and is mass produced, thus failing to reflect the cost of services that make up a much bigger portion of modern economies.

      It's also heavily subsidised in some countries. In the East German worker's paradise, bread cost 5 pfennig (a couple of US cents), which certainly wasn't its real cost.

    9. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by hcs_$reboot · · Score: 1

      Bullshit. Apple store UK is for British people. And British people didn't get a salary raise due to Brexit, and local prices are certainly not linked to USD GBP forex. Apple store items are sold in GBP and no importing cost is involved. This is just another lame excuse to make more profit (or at least keep the same profit).

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    10. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by Archfeld · · Score: 1

      England (GB) is an island nation so the cost of many things has always been higher, American fast foods amongst them. For example compare the price of a BigMac in Hawaii or Alaska. I spent several contract terms there in the early 90's and found that the average citizen spent a larger portion of their income on basics like housing and food then in the US, even at that time. What I find odd is the currency based on sterling silver is falling in relation to a soft backed currency based on 'confidence'. Seems like someone is gaming the system. But I am not an economist so what do I know...

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    11. Re: love the subtle anti-brexit push by gweilo8888 · · Score: 2

      Has the price of a Big Mac been adjusted since Brexit? Can you guarantee that it won't be? Yeah, stop trying to abuse a metric to have it match your preconceptions. All else being equal, McDonalds will eventually be adjusting its pricing just like many, many other businesses.

    12. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by MightyMartian · · Score: 4, Interesting

      There are a lot of people in the US and Britain who seem keen to minimize Brexit's effects, to the point where they seem unwilling to admit that because Brexit hasn't even happened yet (Article 50 hasn't even been activated yet, for goodness sake), the idea that the more dire predictions can be just dismissed seems pretty unsupportable.

      My assumption is that Theresa May, for political reasons, is going to allow this uncertainty to do a certain amount of calculated damage to British economy. This will serve to finally undermine the "Bastards" in her party, and allow her to negotiate at least some access to the Common Market, which will inevitably entail some degree of freedom of movement for EU citizens. But first she needs to make sure Boris Johnson's reputation is ruined.

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    13. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Big Mac Index kinda works to measure some internal price shift.
      It is useless when comparing different countries to each other since some countries subsidizes junkfood and others taxes it more heavily.

    14. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by AxeTheMax · · Score: 2

      What I find odd is the currency based on sterling silver is falling in relation to a soft backed currency based on 'confidence'. Seems like someone is gaming the system. But I am not an economist so what do I know..

      You seem to have taken in the two distinct phrases 'sterling silver' and 'pound sterling' and developed a new myth from it. The original currency was once based on silver coins, but that was not necessarily the currency itself. The currency was formally put on the gold standard during the Napoleonic wars, and came off it in the 20th century.

    15. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      Can't believe this is my takeaway from a Brexit discussion, but - wait, a Big Mac is now almost $5 in the US!?!

      I guess the fact that I haven't been to McDonalds for lunch in a decade means that shouldn't surprise me, but it does. Especially since an In-N-Out Double Double is only $4, and it doesn't make me regret the next 4 hours after I eat it...

    16. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      A better measure is the Big Mac Index [wikipedia.org]. A McDonalds Big Mac contains more commodities, and a significant portion of the price is in the service sector. In the UK, the average price of a Big Mac is 2.99UKP. In America, it is $4.79. So the fair market conversion should be about 0.62. So the pound is currently undervalued against the dollar, and Apple is screwing the Brits.

      That's silly. The Big Mac in the UK is likely made with British beef, British bread, British lettuce, British tomatoes, etc. Expecting the same exchange rate is completely unrealistic when you're talking about buying goods that are made outside the EU.

      Mind you, I'm not saying the 1:1 conversion rate that Apple is using isn't Apple's way of giving the middle finger to the UK for Brexit, nor am I saying that I agree with it, but the rate ought to be set based on roughly the average conversion rate over the past few months or so, and that rate isn't anywhere near 0.62:1. Realistically, looking at recent trends, a 0.82:1 rate is probably pretty reasonable. Add to that Apple's usual safety margin, and I'd expect more like 0.85:1.

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    17. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they did the Big Mac index in December 2016, Sweden would have been at $2.80. Now it's at $5.70 (promotion ended and they want to sell "menus/meals" again). It's like that in many markets, where they change the price not due to cost but due to what they want to sell more of. (Cheeseburgers in Sweden are always heavily subsidized, barely costing the cost for the restaurant; because they want customers to come in). Same with the McD soft serve ice cream in China ($0.10, 1/15 of the Swedish price) while the big mac is $2.74 (same as in Sweden)... McD is known for their cheap ice cream in China, and that is what most people buy (not the burgers).

    18. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      Being an "island" has nothing to do with prices in UK.

      According to the index, a Big Mac in Alaska averages $4.87. In CA it's $5.11, in NY it's $5.23, and in HI it's $5.31.

      Hawaii is a pricing exception to almost every rule, though, since it's an island thousands of miles away from *everything* and is too small and too tropical to grow many crops like corn or wheat or raise significant cattle. UK is BIG, has plenty of farming, a significant cattle industry, and a tunnel to Europe that will get you to France in a bit over a half hour. Big Mac prices in UK have to do with many factors (same with why they are expensive in CA and NY) but being an "island nation" is not one of them.

    19. Re: love the subtle anti-brexit push by Dahamma · · Score: 2

      Yeah, someone is really unclear on the whole concept of semi-joking-metrics (to quote The Economist, "Burgernomics was never intended as a precise gauge of currency misalignment, merely a tool to make exchange-rate theory more digestible." - I'm sure pun intended).

      If you look at the "Big Mac index" almost every country is now considered "vastly undervalued". So while it may be fun, it's basically a teaching tool and not reality.

      Though I *do* think the index shows McDonalds may not necessarily be adjusting pricing... it depends on how they source their raw materials, cost of labor, and just plain what the market will bear.

      (If you want to see a *really* good example of how there is no reason to think US companies have to match their pricing to currency valuation - go look at drug prices by country...)

    20. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    21. Re: love the subtle anti-brexit push by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's exactly it (hey, we're on the Internet, and we're mostly agreeing! WTF?!): > Though I *do* think the index shows McDonalds may not necessarily be adjusting pricing... it depends on how they source their raw materials, cost of labor, and just plain what the market will bear. The Big Mac has been dwindling - AFAICS - as a desirable commodity, and I suspect that the market wouldn't bear a significant price increase. There are plenty of better burgers these days. In fact - rant on - I had a Big Mac for the first time in 15 years a little while ago, and HOLY CRAP was it the weediest burger I ever had! Never having one again! I felt like Michael Douglas in that movie. Sorry, rant off.

    22. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And given that Boris Johnson stepped down from the leadership race, basically handing the PM position to Theresa May, one can only surmise that he believes that she will fail hard.

    23. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When the Euro was doing well, it was still 1€=$1 for Apple.

    24. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      I didn't know Boris Johnson has a reputation that could still be ruined.

    25. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2

      I don't think Boris ever seriously wanted to be PM, any more than he wanted to win the referendum. He's much happier when he can tell everyone he'd do a much better job if he were in charge than when he's actually in charge.

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    26. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by peragrin · · Score: 1

      Except the EU has stated you want access then you have to be a part of it.

      It isn't the common market British needs it is the free exchange of people and goods.

      The finance centers in London have to move out because access isn't good enough. There goes 50% of London's value Right there.

      The uncertianity comes from she and other brexiters promised massive growth and savings and just the opposite is happening.

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    27. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by jeremyp · · Score: 1

      And in what currency does Apple pay its suppliers? i.e. app developers music distributers etc?

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    28. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by hcs_$reboot · · Score: 1

      Apple gives 80% to the app dev. So the dev will get 80% x forex. He'll get less, and anyway the app store prices are always approximate (ie they don't follow the forex rates - there's some adjustment from time to time)

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    29. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      May seems to have thrown away all hope of getting any kind of real "access" to the Common Market with her speech this week. As the EU has stated many, many times, you can't have anything like the deal you have now without being a member and accepting the things that come with membership - particularly fees, rules and freedom of movement. May has ruled those things out, which means her negotiating position is for at best a very poor level of access.

      It's actually worse than that. The UK has 24 months to negotiate its exit. Realistically it will have about 18 to actually negotiate, with the remaining 6 being implementation. Before it can talk about a trade deal, it needs to resolve the mechanics of actually leaving. The EU is adamant about that. So it will probably have around 6 months to hash out what the trade deal will be, and again it's been stated many, many times that it has to be inferior to membership.

      On top of that, all 27 other members have to agree to the deal. Spain has already said that a condition of any deal is joint sovereignty over Gibraltar, and others are lining up their demands too. There will also likely be a Scottish independence referendum to fight, and negotiations over how Scotland can remain in the UK or immediately re-join.

      Oh, and the government is saying it will further divide its resources and small number of negotiators to line up trade deals with other countries outside the EU, to be inked shortly after leaving. Seeing as they have us over a barrel and we don't have the manpower to properly handle them, those are likely to be quite unfavourable as well.

      And then a final debate and vote on the whole thing in parliament, likely taking at least a few weeks, maybe longer if the Lords decides to keep amending and rejecting it.

      The most likely outcome at the moment is falling back to WTO rules or something close to them, and then maybe a decade later working out some kind of highly inferior trade deal. You know things are bad when the best outcome seems to be for your government to collapse before March.

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    30. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by Big+Hairy+Ian · · Score: 1

      But first she needs to make sure Boris Johnson's reputation is ruined.

      Easy just let him speak in public he'll do it all by himself

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    31. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hohohohoho @ notMightyMartian blown down by apk https://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=10130851&cid=53684953/

    32. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by EvilSS · · Score: 1

      The dollar is doing well. it would be much more honest to compare the pound to the euro in that not so subtle piece of advocacy.

      The Pound is doing OK as well. 1 USD = 0.816 GBP. Pretty much matching the old pricing. This is just a price increase by Apple. It now matches the way games tend to be priced on Steam: the same number of dollars, pounds, and euros for the game.

      UK VAT is 20%. The dollar is now valued at about 20% below the pound. When you add VAT onto the price (because in the US we don't put taxes into the product price, europeans don't always know this) the difference between the dollar and the pound vanishes and they are essentially at parity. So charging 0.99£ is essentially equivalent to charging $0.99 in the US. A friend of mine was bitching about the price of the new Nintendo in the UK until I pointed out that, with taxes taken out of the equation, there would only be about a 3£ difference from what I would pay if I bought one. The Brits are just going to have to come to grips with the fact that their currency has tumbled since the Brexit vote and live with it or find a way to fix it.

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    33. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by EvilSS · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. Apple store UK is for British people. And British people didn't get a salary raise due to Brexit, and local prices are certainly not linked to USD GBP forex. Apple store items are sold in GBP and no importing cost is involved. This is just another lame excuse to make more profit (or at least keep the same profit).

      This is your argument:

      "We did something dumb and our currency plummeted, but we shouldn't be held responsible for that! Those developers and that foreign company Apple should just accept less money for what they are selling. We need Apple welfare to keep our app prices from going up!"

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    34. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by gsslay · · Score: 1

      >England (GB)

      You say that as if they mean the same thing. They don't.

      >is an island nation

      On that basis I'm going to assume what you actually mean is GB. England is not an island.

    35. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by gsslay · · Score: 1

      Pretty much matching the old pricing.

      You're an idiot who has no idea what the difference is.

      Give me all your money. I promise to give you it all back "pretty much matching the old pricing" of one a year ago. I think you'll find you then have a clearer understanding of what the a drop of 0.12 in the dollar means. It means someone has just stolen 12% of your money in US dollar terms.

    36. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by lgw · · Score: 2

      We did something dumb

      Regaining sovereignty was not dumb. Stopping unlimited immigration was not dumb. Nor is is dumb in America that we're doing the same. Sucks the guys you have to vote for to achieve these objectives, but no one better is in the right.

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    37. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by lgw · · Score: 2

      Except the EU has stated you want access then you have to be a part of it.

      Britain will trade with the EU just as most other nations do. This is not a bad thing. Britain remains a top-10 world economy. There will of course be turbulence until all the new trade treaties settle, but that's a small price to pay for sovereignty. Certainly lower than the price paid in centuries past to achieve sovereignty of the common man.

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    38. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by tlhIngan · · Score: 1

      Bullshit. Apple store UK is for British people. And British people didn't get a salary raise due to Brexit, and local prices are certainly not linked to USD GBP forex. Apple store items are sold in GBP and no importing cost is involved. This is just another lame excuse to make more profit (or at least keep the same profit).

      Tax is involved. UK prices include tax in the price. US prices do not. If you buy an app in the US, you get charged 99 cents for the app, and a bit more under the line "Tax". In the UK, you'd pay the 99 pence that was shown.

      That's where the differences lie. You embed your sales taxes in the price, the US doesn't.

    39. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What I find odd is the currency based on sterling silver is falling in relation to a soft backed currency based on 'confidence'. Seems like someone is gaming the system. But I am not an economist so what do I know..

      You seem to have taken in the two distinct phrases 'sterling silver' and 'pound sterling' and developed a new myth from it. The original currency was once based on silver coins, but that was not necessarily the currency itself.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pound_sterling

      silver coins known as "sterlings" were issued in the Saxon kingdoms, 240 of them being minted from a pound of silver... Hence, large payments came to be reckoned in "pounds of sterlings," a phrase later shortened...

      —Encyclopædia Britannica, entry "pound sterling"

    40. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. Apple store UK is for British people. And British people didn't get a salary raise due to Brexit,

      Are you going to blame Apple for that too?

    41. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We did something dumb

      Regaining sovereignty was not dumb. Stopping unlimited immigration was not dumb. Nor is is dumb in America that we're doing the same. Sucks the guys you have to vote for to achieve these objectives, but no one better is in the right.

      Yes it is dumb. Don't come crying to us if you can't fucking del with the consequences. Including a devalued currency and (as a result) higher app prices.

    42. Re: love the subtle anti-brexit push by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      I haven't had a Big Mac in over in a decade (really, I always disliked it, even when I was a kid and actually went to McDonalds I'd get the Quarter Pounder), and that's not going to change because I now live less then 3 miles from not one, but *two* In-N-Outs.

      And as far as the market - good luck, Big Mac - the Double Double is already a dollar less!

    43. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by EvilSS · · Score: 1

      We did something dumb

      Regaining sovereignty was not dumb. Stopping unlimited immigration was not dumb. Nor is is dumb in America that we're doing the same. Sucks the guys you have to vote for to achieve these objectives, but no one better is in the right.

      The 20% drop in the value of your currency would seem to disagree.

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    44. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by AxeTheMax · · Score: 1
      That is an explanation of 'pound sterling' which corresponds to what I said. However 'sterling silver' is not connected, being a precise alloy of silver and other metals that is harder than pure silver.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    45. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by lgw · · Score: 1

      Bankers are sad. Poor bankers.

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    46. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by EvilSS · · Score: 1

      Yes, because this totally doesn't affect everyday citizens. Oh wait, it does.

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    47. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Great Britain is an island and not a nation, so the correct term would be "England, Scotland and Wales", but not necessarily in that order...

    48. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by dave420 · · Score: 1

      1. As long as Britain has trade deals it will not have total sovereignty.

      2. Non-EU immigration was *always* under the complete control of Westminster, and EU immigration could have been drastically limited, but Westminster refused to do so every single time it could have

      So your argument is factually incorrect. Do you want to try again to explain how leaving the world's largest trading bloc just off its shores is a good idea?

    49. Re:love the subtle anti-brexit push by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Britain will trade with the EU, but at an increased cost to now. Usually adding extra costs to something that business didn't ask for is a bad idea. Britain's world standing took a hit after the result, and A50 hasn't been invoked yet, so we can look forward to another hit then. The trade deals you refer to can only be started in earnest after Britain has left the EU (and especially the deal with the EU), and take years to finalise. This is not helped by Britain lacking negotiators. Also the trade deals will wait until Britain's left the EU so the other parties can use the weakened position of Britain to their advantage.

      Nothing you have said is positive when viewed in the big picture. If you zoom in, your arguments look really good. Unfortunately the world isn't zoomed in, and is currently laughing at Britain shooting itself in the foot for no apparent reason.

  2. Before the Anti-Apple-Fan-Boi's arrive. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This makes developers more money. Or do we care about end users right now because we hate Apple for an unrelated reason?

    1. Re:Before the Anti-Apple-Fan-Boi's arrive. by gweilo8888 · · Score: 2

      Actually, no it doesn't. It makes them about the same amount of money that they used to before the pound tanked after the Brexit vote (and even then, only the same amount if we assume that they'd have gotten just as many sales with the new higher pricetag, which they likely won't do.)

  3. Nothing new by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's happened before. It'll happen again. The price changes can go in both directions so embrace it.

    1. Re: Nothing new by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its a well established fact that prices never change. Ever. Ive never seen a price change in my life.

  4. IAPs by xushi · · Score: 1

    What about In App Purchases. Will those rise too?

    1. Re:IAPs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. It's store prices as a whole not simply the initial price of apps.

    2. Re:IAPs by msauve · · Score: 1

      I thought Apple was only renting space to developers, and got a fixed percentage from them. Isn't setting/raising prices something developer's should decide to do? Or are things somehow different in the UK?

      (yes, I know the other article was about a court case in the US)

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    3. Re:IAPs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They've changed the cost to rent the space.

    4. Re:IAPs by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      Yes. All Apple purchases are expressed in units, approximately equal to a dollar. IAPs and app prices both. These units are then translated into local currencies as Apple feels most appropriate.

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    5. Re:IAPs by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      I thought Apple was only renting space to developers [slashdot.org], and got a fixed percentage from them. Isn't setting/raising prices something developer's should decide to do? Or are things somehow different in the UK?

      Basically, when you sell something in any of Apple's stores, you choose a price tier in your default currency, and prices in other currencies are based on that price combined with the current exchange rates. For example, if I create a book right now, and specify tier 10 everywhere, that's $9.99 in USD, or $13.99 in CAD. If the Canadian dollar increases relative to the dollar, in a year, tier 10 could be $9.99 in the U.S. and $12.99 in CAD. In theory, the amount paid will always be approximately equal to $9.99 in USD.

      To add further complexity, Apple provides some alternate price tiers that let you charge lower prices in developing countries, and for books, even lets you set per-country price tiers, IIRC, which could distort pricing even further... but that's a side discussion. :-)

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  5. Only goes to show by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    Brits should have gone Euro when it had the chance.

    1. Re: Only goes to show by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Instead things have gone strawberry.

  6. Boo hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cry babies.

  7. Re:Ooh, that evil Apple! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First four comments all say the same thing: "So?" Too bad they will all be tagged -1 offtopic.

  8. Anti-Brexit Bullshit by AlphaBro · · Score: 0

    Despite the USD being up and the GBP being down, at the time of this writing, 1 USD stands at 0.8 GBP. What's wrong with doing a fair conversion, Apple?

  9. Bottom Line by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apples stakeholders only care about themselves.
    Brexiters will hopefully see this as a good reason to move away from the "other" walled garden.

    1. Re:Bottom Line by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Apples stakeholders only care about themselves. Brexiters will hopefully see this as a good reason to move away from the "other" walled garden.

      So what do you want, should Apple pay for that stupid decision you made?

  10. Minus 20% VAT by raymorris · · Score: 3, Informative

    1 GBP - 20% VAT = 0.8GBP = 1USD

    Apple and the developer get the same amount of money in each country. In GB, you also pay the government too.

    1. Re:Minus 20% VAT by AlphaBro · · Score: 1

      The problem is that this seems to be corporate policy, which is notoriously slow to change. Currency markets, on the other hand, are extraordinarily fast paced, and typically open 24 hours a day. The USD rally will not continue, and similarly, the GBP depression won't either. Once these corrections take place, what then? Is Apple going to revise their policy once more?

      The only fair way to handle this is by doing a proper currency exchange at fair market values, then adding appropriate fees and taxes. Anything less is sheer arrogance. I wouldn't be surprised if this policy remains in place even after major price movements occur, invalidating the original justification.

    2. Re:Minus 20% VAT by rmdingler · · Score: 2

      The USD rally will not continue, and similarly, the GBP depression won't either. Once these corrections take place, what then? Is Apple going to revise their policy once more?

      Even supposing your calculations are prophetic, not pathetic, I think the safe money's on a slower response to negative price evaluation.

      --
      Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.

      Ernest Hemingway

    3. Re:Minus 20% VAT by AlphaBro · · Score: 1

      Even if my predictions are wrong (which I doubt, given how general they are), the core of my statement remains true: currencies are volatile and subject to sudden movements. This is not the type of thing that can be accurately captured in corporate policies, and anybody with the slightest exposure to Forex knows this.

      Apple is arrogant for not doing proper currency conversion.

    4. Re:Minus 20% VAT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Forex has solved risk with hedging. Currency swaps give you exactly what you expect no matter what the actual currencies do. Central banks have unlimited currency swap networks that place a floor on exchange rate risk even for speculators.

    5. Re:Minus 20% VAT by Notabadguy · · Score: 1

      Is that an honest question? Because you can safely assume that Apple's policy will reflect whatever makes them the most money, as risk-free as possible.

    6. Re:Minus 20% VAT by AlphaBro · · Score: 1

      Of course not. They were rhetorical questions intended to highlight what I believe to be a dishonest business practice. Maybe I'm an idealogue, but I do know it's possible to run a business without resorting to such practices.

    7. Re:Minus 20% VAT by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      I regularly receive emails from Apple, alerting me to the fact that they adjusted prices in various markets. So yes, Apple regularly assesses currency valuations and makes adjustments.

    8. Re:Minus 20% VAT by locofungus · · Score: 1

      Technicality, but VAT is 20% of the original price.

      So 1GBP is 83p ex VAT

      --
      God said, "div D = rho, div B = 0, curl E = -@B/@t, curl H = J + @D/@t," and there was light.
    9. Re:Minus 20% VAT by AlphaBro · · Score: 1

      This article made it seem as if they were infrequent enough to be newsworthy, so that's good to hear. Still, they're not as fast currency markets, and this approach is a great way to scalp nations if Apple chooses to do so. In my experience, most companies don't do this, even though their conversion rates tend to be less-than-stellar.

    10. Re:Minus 20% VAT by Malc · · Score: 1

      That's not a technicality; it's basic maths.

      Wrong:
      x + 20% != y - 20%

      Right:
      x*1.2 == y / 1.2

  11. I know I'm pigeon holing here by rsilvergun · · Score: 5, Insightful

    but I can't imagine the folks who voted Brexit care. Apps, especially paid ones, are mostly a young person thing. As an old codger I've yet to pay for anything on my phone. Now, as a _reasonable_ old codger here in the colonies my heart goes out to those young people who just got driven off a cliff by Grandpa and Grandma. Sure, it's their fault for staying home on election day (just like Trump's our young folks fault for the exact same reason) but just like Trump nobody deserves what's to come.

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    1. Re:I know I'm pigeon holing here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nobody deserves what's to come
      And that is?

    2. Re:I know I'm pigeon holing here by guruevi · · Score: 1

      The market doesn't care about Brexit in the long term. If you look at the value of the GBP, EUR and USD over the last decade, there are gains and dips, Brexit vote barely brought a noticeable dip on the longer timescales. And you can tie any number of events to the dropping and rising of a currency, whatever fits your narrative. The USD has flatlined over the last 10 years, the only reason the USD is 'better' right now is because it has been able to inflate a bubble by keeping the low interest rate that was supposed to be short term which artificially stabilizes the USD. In the mean time both the EUR and GBP have dropped significant value at about the same rate in that period, not surprising since the UK is part of the EU and the EU has been printing money to keep countries like Greece and Portugal from failing, this also helped the USD. Once the EU either recovers or fails (which hangs on Greece/Portugal/Turkey not failing and the UK not leaving), or the Chinese/Russians have some type of breakthrough in resources, the USD bubble will pop and crash hard.

      --
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    3. Re:I know I'm pigeon holing here by clonehappy · · Score: 2, Flamebait

      God damn, is everything Doom and Gloom with you people? Apple unashamedly politicizes a price hike disguised as equality (gotta keep things "fair" right?), and your ilk uses it as an excuse to play the blame game against populists who look out for their own interests before the interests of foreigners. Real cute.

      Wanna know what else? I know more young people that voted for Trump than old codgers. You must have missed how the shitposting internet memers got Trump elected. The geriatrics sitting at home all day watching Fake News on the Cable TeeVees are the only ones I know that voted for Her(tm) and will actually admit it out loud.

      But yeah, what's to come is going to suck for all those suckling off the teat of the globalist establishment, of which I assume you're on the gravy train somewhere, right?

    4. Re: I know I'm pigeon holing here by mmell · · Score: 4, Funny
      The citizens of the UK allowed Brexit to pass and must now accept the consequences of their choice. The citizens of the US allowed Trump to win the Presidential election and must now accept the consequences.

      Sorta like a hangover.

    5. Re:I know I'm pigeon holing here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your little story is crap. The ECB is not creating money for Greece and Spain and Portugal and Italy; that is the problem and that is the reason the Euro is going down. The Fed created trillions of US Dollars and the dollar has increased in exchange value. The ECB has only created money for private bonds and not enough to satisfy the public demand of Greece, Italy, etc. The ECB should create more money for individuals.

      "The USD has flatlined over the last 10 years, the only reason the USD is 'better' right now is because it has been able to inflate a bubble by keeping the low interest rate that was supposed to be short term which artificially stabilizes the USD."

      The US Dollar has not "flatlined over the last 10 years". Please consult http://www.macrotrends.net/1329/us-dollar-index-historical-chart

      Notice that the US Dollar has increased over the last 10 years at a rate comparable to the increase in the early 1980s, despite interest rates being in double digits then and close to zero now. Cognitive Dissonance, much? Your little story is so baroque that you never could have predicted the dollar being so strong before it happened, given your Quantity Theory of Money predictions.

      Conclusion: your neoliberal economic models are so badly flawed that you have to jump through the ridiculous, epicyclic hoops you just did in your post to hold on to those absurdly nonpredictive neoliberal economic models.

    6. Re:I know I'm pigeon holing here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everyone's on that gravy train somewhere, and when you jump off the train, less gravy!

    7. Re:I know I'm pigeon holing here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Apple politicizes a rate hike, then clearly the UK government can politicize regulation of app store purchases.

      The UK should limit every app store's cut of app revenue to 5% instead of the 30% iTunes currently charges. (This will apply to the Google Play store and any other such similar service in the name of fairness.)

    8. Re:I know I'm pigeon holing here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And ... only proper British Apps! None of your foreign muck!

    9. Re:I know I'm pigeon holing here by jabuzz · · Score: 1

      Being worse off than they otherwise would have been. The devaluation of Sterling is going to make me personally hundreds of pounds a year worse off. Fortunately I am in a position to be able to afford it, at the cost of a lower standard of living. However all those JAM's (just about managing) are going to have problems, as prices go up on just about everything from food, to clothing, electrical goods, fuel etc. Reasonable economists are predicting inflation of 5% this year. So far much of the impact of the currency shift has been shielded by six months of hedging. That has all run out now.

      Aldo there are already companies that have gone to the wall under the pressure of the currency devaluation, and with the hard Brexit May and her cronies seem to be pursuing as they seem to have no idea what a non tariff barrier to trade or a technical barrier to trade is and the effect these will have on UK industry should we simply fall out the common market and customs union without deals in place that are incredibly unlikely to be concluded in less than two years we could easily loose six million jobs in the UK as the economy goes into free fall when trade with the EU grinds to a snails pace.

    10. Re: I know I'm pigeon holing here by Malc · · Score: 1

      More like a case of STDs after a night with a skanky prostitute.

    11. Re:I know I'm pigeon holing here by Kiuas · · Score: 1

      Apple unashamedly politicizes a price hike disguised as equality (gotta keep things "fair" right?)

      I'm no fan of Apple's business practices in general, but this has nothing to do with politicizing anythting. It's a fact that the Pound has weakened after Brexit and keeps weakening. It's also a fact companies don't like their profits being eaten up by exchange-rate fluctuations. They need to make their desired cut on the apps, and it's not their fault that the Pound is falling.

      Sure, if Apple cared about ethics more it could keep the price the same and suffer the loss.. but when have megacorporations ever cared about ethics before profits?

      Smaller countries in the world deal with this on a constant basis. Back when we here in Finland had the mark before the euro, the prices of import goods could vary as much as 10-30 % almost overnight if the exchange rate to dollars/pounds/german marks/rubbles dropped sharply.

      --
      "It is the business of the future to be dangerous" -Alfred North Whitehead
    12. Re: I know I'm pigeon holing here by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      In the case of Brexit we might still be able to avert total disaster. If we can somehow sabotage it, or bring the government down, there is a chance we can salvage something.

      Unfortunately it's a slim chance and a lot of people are looking at simply leaving now. Even if Brexit were averted, it's shown up the reality of commonplace bigotry and xenophobia in the UK.

      --
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    13. Re: I know I'm pigeon holing here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > In the case of Brexit we might still be able to avert total disaster. If we can somehow sabotage it, or bring the government down, there is a chance we can salvage something.

      I suspect your only option here is some sort of civil war. I'm also keen to know who "we" are. There are a lot of remainers who are happy to follow the democratic process, even though there are very unhappy with the result.

      > Unfortunately it's a slim chance and a lot of people are looking at simply leaving now. Even if Brexit were averted, it's shown up the reality of commonplace bigotry and xenophobia in the UK.

      Resorting to name calling undermines your credibility and arguments. A better approach is well reasoned argument backed up with facts.

    14. Re:I know I'm pigeon holing here by coinreturn · · Score: 1

      Apple unashamedly politicizes a price hike disguised as equality.

      Um, no. Apple has adjusted prices like this many times and for many years. I know, I have apps in their app store. I get the emails all the time about price adjustments in foreign markets. SLASHDOT is the one politicizing it by saying the change is "After Brexit." It's also after Obama's term, after the dinosaurs went extinct, and after World War II. Chronology is not causation.

    15. Re: I know I'm pigeon holing here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If what you believe to be bad you sabotage, you will never have to confront false beliefs. Convenient.

      Or, you could be a decent human being and hope for the best, work for the best, and observe the results without throwing a tantrum when the outcome is better than you expected.

  12. Clarification: Plus 8% US tax vs including 20% VAT by raymorris · · Score: 5, Informative

    I should clarify my comment, on some purchases, for customers in some states, the company adds tax, generally around 8%. So US customers pay 99 cents PLUS tax.

    When the company collects VAT, it's INCLUDED in the sticker price - it's illegal in the UK, I understand, to show customers who they are really paying by listing it as "+0.80 purchase price plus VAT".

    Anyway, after the currency conversion, the company is charging the same amount. The extra that UK customers pay is the government charging higher taxes.

  13. But they park the cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple is adjusting for USD, but they just leave the money in UK and can't pay US corporate taxes because it is too expensive. This is just an excuse and pure greed to make margins.

  14. Always rising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Interesting how the summary lists several countries for which the prices are rising due to various factors, but none for which prices are falling due to a strong currency or other factors.

  15. Good by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 0

    Stupid decisions have costs.

    Get ready for the $1 USD Lesser British Pound.

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
    1. Re:Good by AlphaBro · · Score: 1

      It's possible, but if I'm not mistaken, that would take an almost 20% drop from where it stands now. Seems unlikely considering political fervor is one of the major forces behind the rising USD (and the decline of the GBP too--nothing has really changed as of right now), and that sort of thing typically doesn't last.

    2. Re:Good by ChrisMaple · · Score: 2

      The British pound has been declining against the US dollar for decades. A century ago, a pound traded for US$4.70.

      Long term, it's a question of economic strength and which country waters its currency more, and those things in turn depend on the mentality of the general public of each nation.

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    3. Re:Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Bank of England has an unlimited currency swap line with the Fed, so there is a floor on exchange rate risk that is set away from the market by central bankers.

    4. Re:Good by mccalli · · Score: 1

      The century-old pound was a different currency, literally. The current currency started in 1971 with decimalisation.

    5. Re:Good by RDW · · Score: 1

      Since we are going to stand on the trapdoor and invoke Article 50 in March, dropping to $1.10 by the end of the year is now a mainstream forecast, so a fall to parity isn't exactly an outrageous outlier.

  16. Duplicate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    https://apple.slashdot.org/story/17/01/17/145259/apple-app-store-prices-rise-in-uk-india-and-turkey

    At least the first article was focused primarily on the price increase, while this is just a Brexit article. Sadly this is about the best we can expect from Slashdot these days. Tomorrow will doubtless be endless Trump articles.

    Slashdot is like Windows. Like Windows, Slasdot is turning into a train wreck. Like Windows, all the users know how to fix it. Like Windows, the developers refuse to listen to the users and keep running the same shit.

    1. Re:Duplicate by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      The slashdot users know (mostly) how to fix it, but it ain't gonna happen. Take a look at which articles have the most comments, and which ones are almost ignored. Political flamewars draw attention, the tech that slashdot is supposedly based on doesn't. We lose.

      As far as I'm aware, there's no social site with a moderating system as good as slashdot's, and a page format that's as good as slashdot's, that draws a good crowd and stays focused on tech.

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  17. It's just intended price parity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    because the goal now is for the U.S. to make a new pet out of the U.K., which their politicians are happy to assist with. Don't think for a second that the U.S. can resist snapping up the U.K. now that they've broken up from the EU. There will be trade-deals galore, and I think the two countries will align more than ever.

  18. Did the Austrians all die of cognitive dissonance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The more dollars the Fed creates from thin air, the stronger the dollar gets. There is a worldwide dollar shortage. The cause of hyperinflation in Venezuela is a shortage of US Dollars. We need more dollars. We should fund a basic income on the Fed's balance sheet at zero cost to taxpayers, and index fully to neutralize inflation worries.

    World central bank unlimited currency swap networks put a floor on exchange rate risk. The world's currencies are linked through central banks, away from market prices.

  19. Young folks, Blacks and Latinos staying home by rsilvergun · · Score: 2

    elected Trump. The 538 blog has a meticulously sourced article on it. Hilary didn't bother campaigning in the rust belt because she took them for granted (she always was an arrogant bitch) so they stayed home. It took a lot of other stuff (DNC hack, that assclown FBI director's Oct Surprise, Russian propaganda campaigns) but those were surmountable had Hilary fought in the swing states like she should have.

    You're gonna get Globalism whether you like it or not. It benefits your ruling class, and you're in no position to do anything about your ruling class. You've got too many non-economic issues (guns, Abortion, Gay Rights, Religious freedom, Black Lives Matter, you name it). You get picked apart by them, which is why they're called Wedge Issues. They drive a wedge between the working class.You'll never stand up to the ruling class because every time you do they'll throw you a few bones on social issues and you'll fight amongst yourselves while they laugh all the way to the bank.

    So, given that Globalism is basically inevitable what do you think is a better approach: throw up your hands and pretend it's not happening or take that bull by the horns and try to tame it. You just did the former. I wish I could stop and say: Let me know how that turns out for you, but, well, you dragged me into it to. Thanks. Thanks a million.

    --
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    1. Re: Young folks, Blacks and Latinos staying home by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep they stod up to make GB a tax heaven and bigger globalism. Cus that is what May has promised to do.

    2. Re:Young folks, Blacks and Latinos staying home by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > It seems a whole bunch of the working class just stood up, here and in GB, and "bought" the propaganda, lies, fake news, and rhetoric (you call them "wedge issues") to take back control of their nations.

      Just thought I'd correct that, as one of the biggest lies was that was in the UK was £350,000,000 will go to our national health service instead of to Europe.

    3. Re: Young folks, Blacks and Latinos staying home by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I bet you're the kind of person who sniffs the skid-stains in your shorts.

  20. price elasticity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My guess is this is really Apple's thinly veiled study on price elasticity for apps. If it works out, expect higher prices coming to an App Store near you.

  21. Re:Did the Austrians all die of cognitive dissonan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The more dollars the Fed creates from thin air, the stronger the dollar gets. There is a worldwide dollar shortage. The cause of hyperinflation in Venezuela is a shortage of US Dollars. We need more dollars. We should fund a basic income on the Fed's balance sheet at zero cost to taxpayers, and index fully to neutralize inflation worries.

    World central bank unlimited currency swap networks put a floor on exchange rate risk. The world's currencies are linked through central banks, away from market prices.

    wait, what?

  22. Timmy Cook America's Thingy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    By his own actions Timmy Donald Cook has demonstrated that HE is the greatest living Racist on Earth. Congratulations Timmy Donald Cook.

  23. Anti-globalists was one faction of the Trump vote. by Brannon · · Score: 1

    The others were (a) people who hate Hillary because she's a female Democrat and (b) people who love Trump because he's an asshole.

    I won't pretend that anti-globalism wasn't a major driver in this election--please don't pretend that it was the only driver.

  24. Forex vs that magic .99 by raymorris · · Score: 1

    There are two issues at play here. It might be interesting to do an a-b specifically for prices that change day to day versus that magic 0.99 price point which has been tested and proven over and over again.

    Not having done forex, my guess is that *most* of the time, the major currencies would drift within a few percentage points of each other week to week, so sticking with 0.99 would work better than 1.02 one day, 1.01 the next, then 0.98. 1 is psychological cut-off, going above that reduces sales.

    I would further think that occasionally, major events such as Brexit may lead to wider differences. If significant lasting changes only happen every few years, it may make sense to include those in the price adjustments that companies already do every few years anyway.

    Might make an interesting study that a major company would consider funding.

    1. Re:Forex vs that magic .99 by AlphaBro · · Score: 1

      Not having done forex, my guess is that *most* of the time, the major currencies would drift within a few percentage points of each other week to week, so sticking with 0.99 would work better than 1.02 one day, 1.01 the next, then 0.98. 1 is psychological cut-off, going above that reduces sales.

      If it was that simple, I'd be a Forex millionaire by now, as would many others, since buying each dip would be a viable strategy. Unfortunately (or fortunately, since I didn't go broke), I ultimately threw out about 6 months of development into a complex algorithmic trading system that targeted Forex. Bear in mind I did that as somebody that's not afraid to take risks; unfortunately, currency pairs swing wildly, even when no geopolitical events can be easily attributed to the fluctuations.

      To get an idea, take a look at the 52-week pictures for a few currency pairs:

      USD/EUR
      GBP/USD
      GBP/EUR

      These are major currency pairs, and as you can see, they move wildly on a daily basis, let alone weekly or monthly. Sometimes there are obvious events such as Brexit, but most of the time it's due to innumerable factors and a dash of irrationality. Fixed currency conversion rates do not have a place in modern society, and are almost always a scam. What Apple is doing is wrong, and I'm sure at least some of the people involved know.

    2. Re:Forex vs that magic .99 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The big firms take both sides of your bets, hedging and self-funding the positions with other trades on their bigger balance sheets. The big firms make money no matter what. Except when some of the collateral they created out of thin air and bid up to astronomical values in the trillions stop being accepted as collateral; but then the Fed will buy those toxic assets to backstop world markets.

      Conclusion: lrn2f1nance plz k thx.

    3. Re:Forex vs that magic .99 by AlphaBro · · Score: 1

      Well, I'm not a big firm, so I can't do all the fancy tricks. I'm a software developer, and I dabble in algorithmic trading. For the time being, I'll stick to the stock market, which I'm able to play with moderate success.

  25. Re:Did the Austrians all die of cognitive dissonan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unlimited currency swaps price the world's reserve currencies away from the market. There is a floor on exchange rate risk.

    The breakdown of Covered Interest Parity since 2008 shows how strong the dollar is, despite all the Fed's money creation.

    There is a worldwide shortage of US Dollars. The Fed should open electronic deposit accounts for any individual in the world, and deposit a monthly basic income into that account. The contents of that account should be indexed to price rises. Individuals can direct other income streams to that account to inflation-protect them.

  26. Typically price adjustments in steps, many reasons by raymorris · · Score: 0

    > Once these corrections take place, what then? Is Apple going to revise their policy once more?

    That'll depend on what else has happened and is expected to happen, assuming Apple prices according to established best practice.

    Typically, when the price is highly visible to the consumer, certain price points work best: 0.99, 1.49, etc. You don't price an app or a hamburger at 1.82. To achieve that, you "bundle" your price increases. You don't increase the price by 4% because X, then later increase it 2% because Y, you change the price less often, to the next marketing increment.

    When the minimum wage was increased 20%, all the fast food places needed to increase prices by 10% to compensate. They didn't change the price of fries from .99 to 1.09, though, fast food prices all went up 25% and stayed there even as gas prices (and therefore the restaurants costs for everything delivered to them) increased.

    If Apple's *total costs* decrease by 25%, including forex changes and risks, they should drop the price. If their forex improves by only 6%, they should hold onto that to cover the increased cost of whatever cost went up, or is about to go up.

  27. Re:Anti-globalists was one faction of the Trump vo by clonehappy · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Ha!

    See, it never ceases to amaze me how deluded people can STILL be, even now, two months and some change on from when they lost.

    If your party clings to those being the reasons that you lost, then you'll never win another election again as long as you live. I'm no hate-monger or asshole, nor am I really an anti-globalist. I wouldn't mind some globalism, as long as it's on some much better terms than the wholesale shipping of our entire business and manufacturing base into foreign nations to line the pockets of the 0.1% even more, but I digress. I voted for Obama in 2008. (Remember HOPE and CHANGE-I'd bet a lot of those same people voted from Trump this time, starting to understand yet?)

    Anti-globalism was a major driver for those in the know, in addition possibly a fringe of misogynists, sure (I mean less than 1%), but the overarching reason folks voted for Trump is that they wanted someone who at least pays them lip service. Sure, lots of people, myself included, know that he probably won't do 10% of the things he promised, but at least he promised something other than 4 more years of the middle-class circling the bowl and shipping their livelihoods to India or China. That was essentially Hillary's platform, more of the same establishment, more of the same shaft to the people, and wasn't ashamed to say it!

    I expect everything that comes out of a politician's mouth to be unadulterated bullshit, but come on! She couldn't even be bothered to act like she cared about the middle class (what's left of it) she was so arrogant. All she would have had to do to win was lie, but she was too lazy to evendo that. Says a lot about her character, doesn't it? She thought she could win with her middle finger up to America standing next to Obama with his hand on the flush valve. How could she possibly have lost?

    Must be those damned misogynists.

  28. Re:Anti-globalists was one faction of the Trump vo by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    You badly mischaracterize a supermajority of people if you think they hate Hillary because she's a woman. As long as leftists believe that sort of rubbish, they're not going to understand what drives politics in America.

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  29. Re:Did the Austrians all die of cognitive dissonan by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

    "Should" implies a goal of some sort. The goal implied by your plan is the poverty of every person on the planet.

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  30. It's not as simple as that, but almost. by Brannon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Hillary Clinton was held to an impossible standard, one that is never applied to any male candidate. Have you ever heard a man called "shrill"? Every single "scandal" was either completely overblown or just straight up manufactured. Trump's numerous scandals were just ignored. And I don't blame fake news, because there's always fake news. I blame every single voter who chose to believe complete bullshit because they WANTED to believe it.

    If you don't think much of that double standard is because she is a woman then you are living in a make-believe world.

    No, it absolutely wasn't the only reason she lost. She absolutely did ignore those left behind by globalism and that's the enduring message of this election.

    1. Re:It's not as simple as that, but almost. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. Factually. Every language except English is conjugated by gender. I'll take that bet that if you compile a list of "all bad things" the candidates were called, she fares at the least no worse than Trump. A Google search of "Trump scandal" would disprove your second assertion. And for standards never applied to any candidate lets paraphrase the FBI; who actually said "she blatantly violated federal law, but no-one will prosecute her..."

    2. Re:It's not as simple as that, but almost. by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

      Trump went full post-truth, while Clinton was hobbled by still clinging to reality.

      Everyone knew that Trump was lying, contradicting himself, couldn't deliver the things he promised. It didn't matter, because post-truth you just accept that all politicians lie all the time and never deliver their promises so all that matters is how often they tell you that you are right. Yes, you are being oppressed by feminazis and your job was stolen by an immigrant, and vote for Trump because a vote for Trump is a vote against the establishment that represents those things.

      As such Trump became untouchable. Even if his antics in Russian hotels had been published with video a week before the election, it wouldn't have mattered because everyone already knew he was one of the worst people to ever run for that office. He would have just suggested it was CGI or something and that would have been enough for people to dismiss it in their minds, and probably congratulate him for not being blackmailed over it because doublethink comes easily in the post-truth world.

      Clinton was stuck trying to talk about the objective truth, which didn't matter. So what if the investigations showed that there was no case to answer, your personal opinion that she should be in jail is far more important than any kind of legal process or FBI investigation. There was literally nothing she could say or do to believe in reality, because they preferred the fantasy that Trump sold there where she was the villain.

      And yes, being a woman didn't help her either. For a lot of pissed off white men, women were the problem and Trump's attitude towards them was just evidence that he wouldn't be cuckolded by feminists or something.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    3. Re:It's not as simple as that, but almost. by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      You are mistaken and projecting...

      I haven't liked Hillary for 20 years, she sucked in the 90s and she still sucks today.

      I didn't need Trump to tell me that.

      A lot of people voted against Hillary, not for Trump.

    4. Re:It's not as simple as that, but almost. by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Wait... Do you think... Do you think every comment on the internet is directed at you personally?

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    5. Re:It's not as simple as that, but almost. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait... Do you think... Do you think every comment on the internet is directed at you personally?

      So you admit that your statements are just broad, discriminating statements that stereotypes and generalizes huge groups of people?

      This, as said by many others, is a major reason why the D's (and Brexit) lost. You guys can't help but discriminate and stereotype anybody who doesn't agree with you. Oh, they must be sexist/racist/idiots who listened to lies and fake news! Oh those damn baby boomers in rural Britain ruining it for the kids!

      This is all very ironic of course, as the left is the one always claiming how they are the ones fighting against discrimination and prejudice.

    6. Re:It's not as simple as that, but almost. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really. Not sure what new you watch or read. It was always the other way. Trump is evil and Clinton did no wrong.

    7. Re:It's not as simple as that, but almost. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Haha, you must not have many conservative friends or family. Nobody "already knew he was one of the worst people to ever run for that office", they fucking love him and everything about him. They will justify anything he does. He could be caught high on bath salts, chewing the face off a homeless man in Central Park, and they would find a reason to make it a positive thing.

    8. Re:It's not as simple as that, but almost. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are mistaken and projecting...

      I haven't liked Hillary for 20 years, she sucked in the 90s and she still sucks today.

      I didn't need Trump to tell me that.

      A lot of people voted against Hillary, not for Trump.

      Which would be fine - if they hadn't voted for Trump, which is worse than Hillary in every possible way. Which just proves that idiots shouldn't be allowed to vote.

  31. If you voted for Trump then you are an asshole. by Brannon · · Score: 5, Informative

    He openly mocked a disabled reporter...in front of camera...while he was running for President. I'm not sure how to explain that to my disabled child. Any ideas?

    He spent years claiming that President Obama was a Kenyan Muslim. The list goes on and on.

    If you voted for Trump then you are an asshole, it's not anymore complicated than that.

    1. Re:If you voted for Trump then you are an asshole. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      He openly mocked a disabled reporter...in front of camera...while he was running for President. I'm not sure how to explain that to my disabled child. Any ideas?

      Sure. "Just because you're disabled, it doesn't mean people won't mock you."

      I can't stand Trump, but it was pretty damn obvious he didn't even know the reporter was disabled. Sure, he was mocking a disabled reporter, but he wasn't mocking the reporter for being disabled, which is an important difference.

    2. Re:If you voted for Trump then you are an asshole. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if you voted for obama you are a terrorist

      fact

    3. Re:If you voted for Trump then you are an asshole. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "He openly mocked a disabled reporter...in front of camera...while he was running for President."

      This true or is this really the spin the media put on it? The media hates Trump and was willing to do anything to make him look bad.
      I didn't vote for him. I don't care for him. But with all the fake news going around it hard to believe what is real and what is fake anymore.

    4. Re:If you voted for Trump then you are an asshole. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The 2008 Hillary campaign started the whole birther movement, so that part is a poor argument.

    5. Re:If you voted for Trump then you are an asshole. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He probably did not even know there was a disabled reporter in the crowd. There are plenty of videos of him on Youtube making the same gestures to pantomime someone who doesn't know what is going on. You have a disabled child you say. That might just be hypersensitivity. Or you don't even have a child but are using it as a tool for discourse. Either might be true, this is the internet. The articles the media put out made it look like he was standing in front of him and making gestures to his face which could not be further from the truth. Watch the full scenario. You are already inclined to hate Trump beyond political discourse so I'm sure you don't want to see it any other way, but that's life I suppose.

      Hillary Clinton started the Obama birther movement in her campaign against him in 2008. You quickly chose to ignore that, but as before you have chosen to believe what you want instead of check to see if it's real or just what you've been told. Obama never did anyone any favors with muddied waters on where he came from or what his beliefs are. Remember when he claimed to have been a member of a church for 20 years until that pastor came out as a blatant anti-white racist? Yeah, I'm sure you forgot that too.

      Your final statement is a major symptom of why Trump won. So many people like you choose to insult someone because they don't believe precisely as you do. Welcome to the reaping of what you have sown.

    6. Re:If you voted for Trump then you are an asshole. by Brannon · · Score: 1

      https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/fact-checker/wp/2016/08/02/donald-trumps-revisionist-history-of-mocking-a-disabled-reporter/?utm_term=.18fd0fe0de4d

    7. Re:If you voted for Trump then you are an asshole. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He openly mocked a disabled reporter...in front of camera...while he was running for President. I'm not sure how to explain that to my disabled child. Any ideas?

      Sure. "Just because you're disabled, it doesn't mean people won't mock you."

      This isn't about "people", this is about the President (elect). Who got caught lying and tried to distract from the fact, Scumbag - both you and Trump.

      I can't stand Trump, but it was pretty damn obvious he didn't even know the reporter was disabled. Sure, he was mocking a disabled reporter, but he wasn't mocking the reporter for being disabled, which is an important difference.

      He was repeatedly interviewed by him, and once spend almost a full day with him. If he can't remember him or that he is disabld, he isn't fit to be President.

  32. Re:Did the Austrians all die of cognitive dissonan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The question is production capacity and demand. Neoliberal, orthodox economic models consistently fail to predict production capacity and demand. Poverty of everyone would only result if we collectively forgot how to produce what we need. Since the more you know, the less you need, as the Demographic Transition exemplifies, demand need not grow forever just to satisfy some neoliberal objective function.

  33. HAHA by BlytheBowman · · Score: 1

    Really, HAHA

  34. Re: If you voted for Trump then you are an asshole by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sure, here's how to explain it. He appeared genuine, warts and all. People would rather vote for a real person than a slimy, crooked politician. Ask a simple question; how did Trump make his millions? Real estate. How did Hilary make her millions? Uhh ... Corruption, I guess. That's why she lost.

  35. Re:Anti-globalists was one faction of the Trump vo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Her being a woman certainly made people less trusting of her.
    But the post you're responding to specified democrat too. And I would be very surprised if they think that her being a woman was more significant than that.

  36. Other side of the coin by Tranzistors · · Score: 1

    The other side of the GBP depreciation: companies that make apps in UK and profit is calculated in GBP, are making more profits in overseas markets. The selling point of currency depreciation is boot to exports at the expense of import consumption. In other words, producers get richer and consumers — poorer. Unless the trickle down economics actually work.

    1. Re:Other side of the coin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is that production is overrated in the modern economy. The thing all governments are after is demand. Everyone is trying to keep consumption at home, and if they fail, they try really really hard to boost consumption. Demand, mostly consumer demand, is the hard currency of global economy and trade. There hasn't been an economical crisis due to lack of production, while lack of demand has repeatedly trashed economies. If you fuck up consumer demand, you're gonna fuck up everything. And once consumer demand is fucked up, it's really really difficult to get it back in shape again, due to 1) the collective PTSD and 2) the fact that you can't push on a string.

      Those big multinationals who benefit from depreciating domestic currency will do what exactly? Most likely they'll just buy back the shares so the big players and insiders benefit. The common plebs are left holding the bag -- a bag imported from Slovenia, now 10% more expensive due to appreciating Euro.

  37. Re:Clarification: Plus 8% US tax vs including 20% by Raisey-raison · · Score: 1

    I should clarify my comment, on some purchases, for customers in some states, the company adds tax, generally around 8%. So US customers pay 99 cents PLUS tax.

    When the company collects VAT, it's INCLUDED in the sticker price - it's illegal in the UK, I understand, to show customers who they are really paying by listing it as "+0.80 purchase price plus VAT".

    Anyway, after the currency conversion, the company is charging the same amount. The extra that UK customers pay is the government charging higher taxes.

    Yes, you are right. But don't you think it's interesting that historically Apple products have cost more in the UK than in the US even after taking VAT into account. And why when the pound hit $2 in 2007 and 2008 didn't it lower prices? It seems that currency moves only cause Apply to raise prices, not to lower them.

  38. Re:Typically price adjustments in steps, many reas by AlphaBro · · Score: 1
    Regarding this:

    Typically, when the price is highly visible to the consumer, certain price points work best: 0.99, 1.49, etc. You don't price an app or a hamburger at 1.82. To achieve that, you "bundle" your price increases.

    A similar aesthetic could be achieved by showing the attractive USD price, and the converted price in a smaller font, or even on a different page/view/whatever (although that's kind of shitty). I've seen this approach in a few places.

  39. Re:Ooh, that evil Apple! by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    Is this the daily "Let's all scream at Apple article?" Slashdot is becoming a fucking joke.

    Yeah lets, put our prices up because we can. It's not like brexit is increasing the price it cost apple to run the store and deliver apps. They're just not making quite as much pure profit of that shit and we all know how tight apples margins are...

    --
    Wanna buy a shirt?
    https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
  40. It's scaring the shit out of Davos globalists by swb · · Score: 1

    This article perfectly encapsulates the extent to which globalists are scared and their complete lack of denial on the inequalities globalism has created:

    Davos Elite Fret About Inequality Over Vintage Wine and Canapes

    Much of this year's Davos meetings have been globalist hand-wringing over the surge in populism and the rejection of globalism, and the majority of Davos speakers are rejecting any notion of increases in labor negotiating or doing anything substantive about reducing economic inequality.

    The article author does a pretty good job in questioning why the Davos globalists are unwilling to do anything that directly addresses the issues that have substantially led to an increase in anti-globalist sentiment.

    I think you can create all kinds of narratives about why Hillary lost, and Hillary's personality/image had a lot to do with it, but I think a lot of it had to do with the attitude that Hillary was a big corporation globalist at the end of the day.

  41. Re:Ooh, that evil Apple! by jeremyp · · Score: 1

    No Brexit has reduced the price that Apple (and the developers) get for apps sold in the UK store because 79p is now significantly less than 99c once you subtract the 20% VAT that Apple has to give to the government for everything sold in the UK store. The pound loses value, so of course imports into the UK are going to cost more. Why is this even a thing?

    --
    All I want is a secure system where it's easy to do anything I want. Is that too much to ask ~~ Randall Munroe
  42. Re:Ooh, that evil Apple! by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    I know, that's what I said, apples margins are so tight and their costs so high that they can't afford not to jack the prices. They need the import fees and duty for the apps to be paid after all. It would probably be different if they were sitting on one of the largest piles of cash around and it's beyond the pale that individual developers could increase prices if they felt their apps were now undervalued. Nope, total across the board price increase is the right thing to do. I wonder, when the pound goes back up if they will reduce the prices. Somehow, I doubt it.

    --
    Wanna buy a shirt?
    https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
  43. Brexit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What the hell did this have to do with Brexit? Unless India and Turkey are leaving the EU as well.

  44. Re:Anti-globalists was one faction of the Trump vo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not a supermajority, not even a majority.

    A minority. A mostly white, mostly male, mostly old minority. She won the popular vote.

  45. Re:Clarification: Plus 8% US tax vs including 20% by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it's illegal in the UK, I understand, to show customers who they are really paying by listing it as "+0.80 purchase price plus VAT".

    It's clear that you try to slant anything against "the government". There is nothing illegal about informing customers where their money is going, or what the split is. What is illegal is advertising an incomplete end price to the consumer.

  46. Not really, different countries are different by raymorris · · Score: 1

    > But don't you think it's interesting that historically Apple products have cost more in the UK than in the US even after taking VAT into account.

    Not really, at least not "interesting" in any kind of mysterious way. Transportation costs are different, taxes are higher in the UK, etc. Since the US tax structure is different from every other country, technically Apple is supposed to pay taxes on UK revenue in both the UK AND the US. So just The tax differences alone could easily make a 10% difference in the total price paid (separate from being included vs being added in the advertised price).

    The stuff the government pays for isn't "free", I'm not surprised it costs money.

    > It seems that currency moves only cause Apply to raise prices, not to lower them.

    Yeah nominal prices tend to go up over time, not down. That's inflation, and it's much better than the alternative, deflation. In theory, Apple could reduce prices on Tuesday due to exchange rates, after increasing them on Monday due to inflation, but that would be a bit silly since you end up with the same price by neither increasing it on Monday nor decreasing it on Tuesday. Instead, most retailers periodically increase nominal prices to reflect current costs, including inflation and all other factors.

  47. Re:Clarification: Plus 8% US tax vs including 20% by Archibald+Buttle · · Score: 1

    Historically, over about the past decade up until the pound took a bath following the Brexit vote, Apple have charged very close to the same amount for their products in the UK as in the USA, once one takes VAT into account. The difference for most products has usually been within a few percentage points. Admittedly for some products the difference has been larger, but for their more expensive items the prices have tended to be close.

    Occasionally currency fluctuations have meant that some Apple products have been cheaper in the UK than the USA (once VAT is considered) - that was the case when I bought my MacBook Pro a few years ago.

    Apple tends to only very rarely adjust their pricing and will generally ride out currency fluctuations, preferring instead to maintain consistent pricing for their products. The adjustments they have made to GBP pricing were done many months after the pound had devalued. Typically their adjustments are done on much longer timescales (years) but as the pound dropped off a cliff it's not surprising they've made these adjustments faster.

    In this particular case, this is an automatic re-pricing of apps so that developers around the world won't be taking a bath on product sales to the UK. Those developers can choose to re-price their product at a newly introduced lower price band to let said products continue to be priced at 79p in the UK should they choose to do so.

  48. Re: If you voted for Trump then you are an asshole by coinreturn · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sure, here's how to explain it. He appeared genuine, warts and all.

    Genuine? He was caught on tape lying so many times I can't count. Constantly denied saying what he was on tape saying. I guess you mean he appeared to be a genuine LIAR.

  49. still bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1$ = $0.81 thats still a 18% price hike - pure profiteering.

  50. Re:Clarification: Plus 8% US tax vs including 20% by SandorZoo · · Score: 1

    When the company collects VAT, it's INCLUDED in the sticker price - it's illegal in the UK, I understand, to show customers who they are really paying by listing it as "+0.80 purchase price plus VAT".

    It's not illegal to show the price before VAT in the UK. However, for goods aimed at consumers, the price you pay at the till (including any applicable taxes) must be the most prominently displayed price. My understanding is it's the opposite in the US, where it's common not to show customers how much they will be paying, by not including taxes, mail in rebates, service charges, etc. That seems bizarre to me.

  51. Re:Anti-globalists was one faction of the Trump vo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ignorance, hate and fear drive the political landscape populated by people like you. We recognize it, we just overestimated your ability to pretend to have some level of morality.

  52. Re: Clarification: Plus 8% US tax vs including 20% by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not illegal AFAIK (some places quote that wat) to quote ex VAT if it's not misleading, but it can annoy people in a retail situation if they get hit by an additional cost, and that tends to be bad for customer relations.

  53. Re:Did the Austrians all die of cognitive dissonan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hugo Chavez, is that you?

  54. Re: If you voted for Trump then you are an asshole by MoaDweeb · · Score: 1

    'Sure, here's how to explain it. He appeared genuine, warts and all.'

    Ok, a genuine racist, misogynistic asshole. Those who voted for him are enablers for his views.
    At least the TPP is dead.

    --
    New Zealanders are well balanced with a chip on each shoulder. One represents Australia, the other the rest of the world
  55. Watch the video. by Brannon · · Score: 1

    Immediately before he started pantomiming the reporters disability, he refers to the an article "written by a nice reporter" and then goes on to say "Now, the poor guy, you ought to see this guy, ‘Ah, I don’t know what I said, I don’t remember, I don’t remember, maybe that’s what I said.’”.

    He is directly miming the reporter's disability while saying "the poor guy, you ought to see this guy". Watch the video--it doesn't pass the smell test.

    This is a reporter who covered Trump directly for many years, interviewing him many times.

  56. Shooting off your cocksucker again troll? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I don't shoot my mouth off without knowing what I'm talking about" - by raymorris (2726007) on Thursday December 31, 2015 @09:29AM (#51215379)

    Raymorris you shoot your mouth off f'ing up in 2 security fuckups https://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=5351503&cid=47379233/ & https://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=5351503&cid=47374033/ + raymorris = scriptkiddie https://politics.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=8895203&cid=51726265/

    &

    Tell us how ONLY 'newer script kiddie tools' have stringlength built in (when PASCAL had it for ages - my fav tool) https://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=8472509&cid=51114383/ YOU BLUNDERING WANNABE!

    APK

    P.S.=> You like to talk behind others' backs like the gossiping bitch TROLL you are raymorris https://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=9880997&cid=53312265/ well, here I am letting YOU TALK in those links, showing your FAILS wannabe ... apk

  57. Re:Did the Austrians all die of cognitive dissonan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Should" implies a goal of some sort. The goal implied by your plan is the poverty of every person on the planet.

    Instead of just 99% of the planet?