Quote:
Originally Posted by SteveEisenberg
Buying used increases authors' incomes.
When I buy a used book, I go to bookfinder.com and get the cheapest one described as in good or better condition. After I buy it, the cheapest one left in the US used book marketplace is typically more expensive. This reduces the price difference between used and new so that:
a. The next person may buy new, since there isn't as much difference between new and used pricing.
b. More importantly, since me, and millions like me, have pushed used prices higher, publishers have room to set new book prices higher.
When you buy used, you bid up the price. When you buy new, you don't. In that way, it is better for authors that we buy used. I think there should be evidence given before assuming that buying new helps the author more, although I concede that buying new helps the author (or at least the publisher) more quickly.
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This.
There's a number of studies that have been done in a number of different industries that consistently show that a robust used market tends to support the "new" market. People are willing to pay more for a new book if the possibility exists that they can resell or gain social clout by sharing with friends and family; I know I tend to think this way even though I almost never lend books and never resell.