It depends WHY more would be sold. Demand or Supply?aceonbass wrote:Actually, I'll bet prices of these would drop significantly if they sold in large numbers. Given their less expensive content of parts, and the fact that they now share the 4003 neck, it seems they'd have to.ajish4 wrote:I'm actually, on a selfish note, glad they are "the best kept secret". Keeps the prices lower for the rest of us who know!![]()
Price and quantity relationships are not linear, necessarily. If some bass hero starts playing the 4004 and demand spikes, the price and quantity sold will both rise.
If the parts get cheap or cheaper, (The supply curve shifts right) price MIGHT go down as quantity increases, but I doubt it. The market for 4004s is NOT competitive in the economic sense. In a non competitive market, the firm has a lot more control over price than otherwise.
If 4004s were cheaper, it would probably cannibalize sales of the 4003. . . seeing as the two are much more closely in direct competition than, say, a 4003 and a Squier. I doubt it makes business sense to sell more 4004s at the cost of fewer 4003s.
