| > How do you know? It's currently small because it's currently impossible. I think the reason for my belief about iPhones-in-Nigeria being a small market is self-evident. As for other examples: people tend to buy things locally because local businesses are generally good at recognizing local demand, organizing import if necessary, and reaping the benefits of scale (shipping a container of phones). That this arrangement allows for localization of the product which further increases local demand is just icing on the cake. > I disagree, most non-US residents in the world don't even have bank accounts. Yes, but they are getting bank or quasibank accounts faster than they are getting Bitcoin wallets. > Would you really say no to saving $100 when buying a new MacBook? No - but as a price-sensitive customer I would buy a couple-months-old, gently-used Macbook and save $200 or more. As a price-sensitive business I would buy a Dell. > A fringe here and a fringe there and pretty soon you have a whole robe. Sure. But a robe still much smaller than a mainstream provider like Visa. |
Given the number of successful 1-2% cash-back credit cards, it would seem that even regular consumers care about saving tiny fractions on their spending.