The problem with the "market" is that there are hundreds or thousands of people thinking they can strike it rich selling kittens, calculating they need to price a kitten at say 2000L$ and then finding it doesn't sell and complain that "the market is flooded".
Guess what? The market will ALWAYS be flooded as long as each cat can produce 7 boxes (rounded down, it's 7.5 in theory).
A small breeder with 7 breeding pairs will produce 1 box per day on average. That's 365 boxes per year, at the "expense" of 6 boxes per year, for about 359 boxes added per year for that small breeder.
I don't know how many breeders there are, but seeing the number of stalls out there on the secondary markets there are thousands, most of them in that category of small breeders.
So there are at least about a million boxes birthed per year. And those small breeders if they purchase every cat they birth rather than taking them from their own stockpile only purchase less than 20.000 boxes per year.
To make demand meet supply then, 98% of all produced boxes would need to end up in the menagerie (give or take, there's always some sales to newcomers, collectors, people who're not breeding or expanding their operations of course).
Hands up to all breeders who menagerie 98 out of every 100 boxes their cats produce rather than stockpiling them in the hope they may be able to sell or use them in the future please...
Would decreasing the cost of the menagerie cats bring us closer to that goal?
Maybe, but probably not. Unless the menagerie reward cats are no-trans and don't breed they just replace for many breeders some or all of the cats they now buy to inject new blood into their lines, which is the majority of sales on the secondary markets (and especially the auctions).
If they're trans and frequently change (so the supply of each is extremely limited) they would end up as collector's items, most people keeping them boxed and the boxes ending up as showcases in stores and auctions at ridiculous prices, with the sellers complaining that nobody's buying them and wannabe buyers complaining that they're too expensive and supplies should be increased to bring prices down.
(05-29-2015 03:08 AM)Nocshadue Balbozar Wrote: I think the KC team should figure out how many breeding cats the average breeder has. I'm sure it wouldn't be too hard for them to do.
hmm, the data is there in the pedigree page for every owner who's registered on the website.
But what percentage of breeders is registered on the website?
And not every cat of breeding age is breeding. I've one in the cattery for example who's not yet retired but isn't breeding. I'm not interested in breeding him but don't want to menagerie him.
I've a friend who I gave some cats to, she wanted only females as she explicitly didn't want to breed, wanted them only as cats (she didn't know you can turn breeding off).
I'm sure there are a lot of cats like that out there.
The number of breeding pairs per breeder is also bound to be highly variable, both at a specific moment in time and per breeder over time.
At peak I had about a dozen pairs for example, right now I only have 1 pair. Decided to reduce the number of cats to reduce the expense in food when I lost my rl job, and no real plans to increase it again now that I'm employed once again (I birthed one more pair, to continue to have a breeding pair when the current breeders retire, but that's it for numbers).
So just the number of breeding age cats out there isn't an indication of the number of boxes produced per day/week per breeder.
Tailoring the price of menagerie cats to be more achievable to small breeders is a nice idea, but I doubt it's as simple a thing to do as you think.