I wish you would stop these foolish contentions. For someone with a "backround in economics", you do not seem to have a grasp of Supply and Demand. As long as customers are willing to pay for EF lenses, Canon will produce and sell them. You do understand that Canon makes a profit from the sales, don't you? Canon's plan is not to force people into switching to RF. They are producing RF lenses that are superior to their EF counterparts so folks will want to switch...
Thank you. I do prefer civil discourse and applaud those posters who disagree with me in a respectful way (there are several!)
My thread is all about PREDICTIONS and laying out why I think DSLRs are fading out much more quickly than some others think. Everyone has their own opinion. No need to get worked up over that.
In terms of the your first point about sales of lenses, the poster that I responded to spoke about used lenses. Canon does not produce used lenses. Since there has been a substantial decrease in demand for ILCs Canon can only adjust production volumes of new lenses. They can't adjust the inventory of used lenses. Therefore there will be an oversupply in the used market and that is why the prices are coming down. It has nothing to do with Canon itself therefore Canon cannot be blamed for these price decreases.
In terms of your second point about Canon not forcing new mount (in this case RF) lenses onto photographers, unfortunately Canon did exactly that in 1987. My FD lenses at the time became bricks once EF camera mount was introduced, with no way of adapting them to the EOS cameras. EOS at the time was a four letter word to me!
Luckily this time there is a smooth transition as EF glass can be adapted quite nicely to R series cameras. But I believe that once critical mass has been achieved in terms of R series camera sales, Canon will quickly cut off production equivalent EF mount lenses to rationalize costs in much tougher market conditions than existed in 1987.
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