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For example, they could pay less in cryptocurrency. There are other items on the list.
I'm not sure what your question is. We're not 10, 20, or 30 years after the hypothetical change in the price of fake child porn. Can you rephrase the question?
Yes, they could. (I mean not really since there's a reasonable price minimum here based on production costs/expected value based on legal risk that I think the small number of sellers are usually pretty close to if not below already so maybe not.)
Yes, and please explain those in particular, like the whole illegality one. That's kind of a big one. Again, I'm a dumb economic denialist who thinks that it being illegal is a big market factor here in not reducing "costs"/prices", so you'll have to explain that aspect to me in particular.
Yes we are (except it's not hypothetical)? Modern lolicon was introduced around the 80s and became basically universally and easily available to anyone online (the same potential audience for online child porn) in the 90s (while also being far more accessible than the real thing even often on places like Twitter, with stuff like this recent Pixiv move being a small and highly recent opposing trend that's still overwhelmed by its mass availability). In your analogy, that's when the price of hamburgers plummeted. So when do hot dogs get cheaper then and how?
Is this to say that you think that the supply of child porn is nearly perfectly elastic?
We are discussing a hypothetical change in policy toward lolicon that has not happened yet. We're not talking about the past price history, which would be an empirical question.
I'm not sure elasticity is the most appropriate lens through which to the view the issue (as you don't have nearly enough of a sample size in points of fluctuation in the price imposed by policy here). The most direct thing to say is that its highly illegal nature creates a de facto high price/cost floor for producers and consumers.
You don't get that in talking about a possible future where it is much more taboo/illegal/harder to access we also implicitly (well, not just implicitly, at least on my end) talk about the existing world and its history of not being so? And that our whole argument is also specifically based on that because you're calling me an economic denialist for claiming that real child porn is incapable of competing with lolicon (and other fictional equivalents) on this exact basis despite your naive interpretation of how they should behave (and haven't behaved) as substitute goods?
Can you name any other good that lacks sufficient sample size?
Why should I interpret a de facto high cost floor for producers as anything other than a nearly perfectly elastic supply curve?
You have empirical data showing that they haven't behaved as substitute goods?
A purely non-physical good that's been consistently illegal for decades? Maybe warez/pirated media, though that's all obviously a lot less illegal. And I think that kind of proves my point. How would you describe the "price elasticity" of pirated movies? I'm not saying you're wrong, just that I'm not sure that it's the best way to phrase it.
You can interpret it that way. It's just not how I'd phrase it for maximum clarity.
I have empirical data showing that they haven't behaved as substitute goods in the manner you claim I'm economically ignorant for thinking they won't (the price of the one being inclined to go down because the price of the other is so much lower). Namely, all of these costs you claim should have been reduced (keep in mind that one of the constraints I mentioned on anything you proposed is that given that the situation's been mostly the same for decades, anything you claim would happen should have already) have not been:
^ Those costs
In particular, it's stayed pretty as much illegal as it ever was if not more. Contrary to any tendency towards the price going down as you claim is academic economic wisdom in the case where you have a lower-priced substitute good, if anything it's gone up. What gives?
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You're not scoping the good correctly. The good is "movies". And there are a variety of ways that good is transacted. The production of movies still follows a supply curve. Furthermore, this is not an example of a good that has insufficient sample size.
Show me your data.
Okay so the best way to scope a good is to eliminate essential context? By this logic, it's just "pornography", not "child pornography".
No reduction in illegality (at least in the US, but that's obviously the subject of our analysis or at least a fine one) of real CP from when the initial laws passed as far as I can tell
Can you find me any evidence of any reduction in the costs you mentioned?
No. It's to do the same thing that academic economists do for pirated movies, since that was the example you gave. They don't suddenly think that supply curves don't real.
That is not data which supports your claim. Your claim was that you have empirical data that they don't act as substitute goods (particularly, WRT the validity of using supply/demand curves).
I'm talking about a hypothetical that hasn't happened yet. Ergo, I have no claimed to have any empirical data on the question. You claimed that you did in fact have empirical data for something that you thought was relevant. It's apparent that you don't.
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