The danger, of course, is that they decide that they don't believe they can sell a single sku at USD20000 and make the same money they're making now. So then, the price goes up 2.5x to 10x depending on how greedy they want to be.
I disagree, and this line of thinking is positively dangerous.
Just because Ferrari might be capable of making that car for $20k, I don't have a fundamental right to demand it from them any more than I have a fundamental right to demand that you make me a sandwich right now for $5.
> they can afford
Before using the word "they" in a prescriptive sentence, think about whether you could substitute "I" and you would still be happy with it.
The goal isn’t to directly force them, but to create a market competitive enough that the only way to compete is to sell the best product they can with a minimal markup.
I have no issue selling into a competitive market, that’s just how things work for individuals. It’s only at the scale of countries and giant companies that the ability for anti competitive behavior really shows up.
There's no fundamental right. But wishing for competition is certainly reasonable! We should all be rooting for competition to improve the efficiency of our markets.
If NVIDIA had real competition they would do this naturally to gain market share. The GP saying they 'should' do x isn't something we can expect companies to do out of the goodness of their hearts, it's what the market should force them to do.
No, they wouldn't. Nvidia focuses more on premium and margin than on unit share. Nvidia looks at Apple. Apple has 75% of profit share with 25% of unit share of the whole smartphone market. Apple makes 3x more profit than all other smartphone makers combined. Why should Apple reduce pricing in such a situation?
I'm not sure if everything turning into a commodity and no companies having any surpluses would be ideal either. That would probably significantly slow down innovation in some ways.
> So company profit margins should be capped? At what level and how would that work exactly?
That a competitive market drives prices to zero economic profit is a fairly basic result; no active measures besides the existence of competition are necessary for this.
> What about all other stuff?
Yes, this applies in all competitive markets. If it doesn't apply in a market, there is a constraint on competition causing it.
> prices to zero economic profit is a fairly basic result
Yes and that's not necessarily a good thing in all markets. Very low profit margins can result in less innovations and would certainly discourage companies from taking risks (basically by definition)