|
|
|
|
|
by chx
2900 days ago
|
|
I have no idea what your calculations are trying to be, let me try it myself, it should be very simple: In 2014, a 2300 EUR laptop was 2300 / 0.73 = ~3150 USD or so. Today, a 3000 EUR laptop is 3000 / 0.86 = ~3500 USD or so. So no, just the exchange ratio does not explain this. The US inflation numbers, however, say 3150 in 2014 was 3353 USD in 2018 so that's closer. |
|
Apple will give themselves a cushion to prevent undesirable pricing discrepancies (or the need for frequent price adjustments) if the U.S. dollar strengthens against the euro, so a product that they sell at 3150 USD after taxes in the United States would reasonably be in the ballpark of 2800-2900 EUR in Europe given exchange rates in the last year or two. This is rather close to the parent post's stated price even without adjusting for inflation.