It doesn’t map so simply. Greed will try to push prices up as high as possible, but what’s possible depends on other factors. People can understand how a global pandemic causing supply issues would lead to higher prices, but greed took full advantage of that understanding and pushed it far beyond limits.
There are many scams and a lot of them don’t involve a contract at all. There are also ones that do involve a contract and upholding it is part of the scam. Regardless, you missed the point that just because someone pays the price, doesn’t mean everything is fine and dandy.
Which part of the equation is it?
Like how much greed gives you 1% higher prices? How do you measure greed?
It doesn’t map so simply. Greed will try to push prices up as high as possible, but what’s possible depends on other factors. People can understand how a global pandemic causing supply issues would lead to higher prices, but greed took full advantage of that understanding and pushed it far beyond limits.
It didn’t push beyond limits, greed pushes the price exactly up to the limit people will pay.
That’s like claiming that no one gets scammed because they were willing to participate.
Usually a scammer doesn’t uphold his end of the contract. They promised you something, but you didn’t get it.
That’s not the case here
There are many scams and a lot of them don’t involve a contract at all. There are also ones that do involve a contract and upholding it is part of the scam. Regardless, you missed the point that just because someone pays the price, doesn’t mean everything is fine and dandy.
There’s an implied verbal contract when you say you’re providing a service and you are in fact not.
My point is that a lot of people are fine with paying the price they are paying. The people who are not can just stop