I dont live in the US so all those great deals i see after rebates mean nothing to me, I have to put up with prices that are between 30 and 50% higher than US prices (sometimes 100% on new parts) and that before sales taxes which are 15.5% where I live. yeah I know, sux to be me.
But i still dont understand the financial argument behind MIRs. the best thing i could think of is:
the product costs X$ from the maker. retailer puts it at 2X$ with a X$ MIR.
people buy the product at 2X$, the retailer "gambles" on 50% of them to mail in the rebate so:
0.5*2X + 0.5*X = 1.5X ==> retailer gains 50% per unit price while giving the appearance of a good deal for the end customer.
is this how it works?
			
			But i still dont understand the financial argument behind MIRs. the best thing i could think of is:
the product costs X$ from the maker. retailer puts it at 2X$ with a X$ MIR.
people buy the product at 2X$, the retailer "gambles" on 50% of them to mail in the rebate so:
0.5*2X + 0.5*X = 1.5X ==> retailer gains 50% per unit price while giving the appearance of a good deal for the end customer.
is this how it works?
				
		
			