> If, under normal market conditions, producers already make X amount (of , say, toilet paper) due to Y demand at price Z, when the demand spikes to 2Y, if you can produce and sell 2X goods at the same unit cost, you can double your profit without raising the price at all.
This doesn't accurately reflect how the cost would scale. X isn't easily adjustable - it reflects annualized wages, depreciation of production line that is sized for production amount X, etc. Equipment sitting idle is wasted money, so production lines operate close to maximum production already (or at least nowhere near half capacity, that would allow 2X production)
This doesn't accurately reflect how the cost would scale. X isn't easily adjustable - it reflects annualized wages, depreciation of production line that is sized for production amount X, etc. Equipment sitting idle is wasted money, so production lines operate close to maximum production already (or at least nowhere near half capacity, that would allow 2X production)