Posted March 28, 2012
A part of the unfortunate case of Witcher II; we all know GoG asks the same price everywhere...
I was wondering, it is really fair? 5$ in South Africa, in Philippines, Japan or in US are not really the same. In poor countries it is actually more!
To actually see the difference The Economist shows (among many others) the Big Mac Index*. It is a nice and easy way to see the purchasing power of various countries.
So, I was thinking. If a shop like gog wants to be fairer should ask price proportionally to the LOCAL big mac price**.
Example: cheap games 1 big mac, expensive games 2 big macs.
It would mean, at time of writing, that a cheap game would cost:
1.61$ in India
2.32$ in China
3.86$ in Japan
4.07$ in US
7.19$ in Switzerland
Rich countries (rich for the Big Mac index at least) would pay a little more, poor countries would pay less.
I know that everyone would start using a proxy placed in India... but technical aspects a part I think it would be interesting.
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Mac_Index
** http://www.oanda.com/currency/big-mac-index
I was wondering, it is really fair? 5$ in South Africa, in Philippines, Japan or in US are not really the same. In poor countries it is actually more!
To actually see the difference The Economist shows (among many others) the Big Mac Index*. It is a nice and easy way to see the purchasing power of various countries.
So, I was thinking. If a shop like gog wants to be fairer should ask price proportionally to the LOCAL big mac price**.
Example: cheap games 1 big mac, expensive games 2 big macs.
It would mean, at time of writing, that a cheap game would cost:
1.61$ in India
2.32$ in China
3.86$ in Japan
4.07$ in US
7.19$ in Switzerland
Rich countries (rich for the Big Mac index at least) would pay a little more, poor countries would pay less.
I know that everyone would start using a proxy placed in India... but technical aspects a part I think it would be interesting.
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Mac_Index
** http://www.oanda.com/currency/big-mac-index