One of the more rude awakenings upon arriving in Cairns was to discover that prices in Australia approach the ridiculous. A 12 oz. (325ml) can of Coke -- that might go for a dollar or so at a convenience store in the US -- was running about $2.50 in Cairns. The cheapest lunch out -- a sandwich -- would run about $10. Now, the Australian dollar has appreciated over the past year -- more people want to invest in Oz, so the price of an Aussie dollar goes up -- from about 75 US cents for an Aussie dollar to the current 1-for-1 deal, so that explains a bit of the pricing weirdness, but not all. A paperback book in Oz costs over $30. Magazines are between $10 and $15. A 5km (3 miles) taxi ride costs $12. What gives?
Last night, this morning, we arrived in Bangkok. The prices seem equally out of whack, but in the opposite direction. A 12 oz. can of soda costs 30 cents. A hot lunch for two set us back $4. A 30 minute taxi ride of over 8 km cost us a whopping $3. What gives? Subsidies? Supply and demand? Cartel vs. competition? If it wasn't so stark a contrast, I wouldn't have mentioned it , but its hard to fathom. And speaking of contrasts ....
Bangkok is a big city, laced with canals and divided by a large, brown, ferry-rich river. The skyscrapers, lurching upward from shacks and tin roofed shops huddled on dry patches, scream "new money," even as they shadow 200-year-old gold-leafed temples adorned with thousands of glittering tiles. Every street teems with new cars, gaudy buses, lit taxis, and the ubiquitous tuk-tuks, three-wheeled motorcycles that have a canopied seat for two short passengers .. sort of a Thai version of a surrey with a fringe on top.
We visited the Royal Palace, and had a nice guide who explained the symbology of demon guards, snakes, eagles, and the various adornments and enhancements introduced by the nine Kings of Siam./Thailand since Bangkok's founding in 1782. More later, as we're exhausted, but the notion of contrasts -- first encountered in the pricing structure of Cokes -- will deserve some more thought, as we explore a city of 6 million people, skyscrapers, SkyTrains, the timeless wheels of river-shaped commerce, and a polyglot of Buddhist religious history. It's different than any island we've been at, and my first night off the boat in about a year was a useful reminder that it's a big world, and efforts to explain variation and differences often result in a "what gives?" kind of sentiment. Observe, accept, wonder, and maybe, if we're lucky, understand.
As for the price of coke, the cost of the coke is almost nothing. Marketing, sales, distribution, and supply and demand for those things are sure to play a larger role. I am curious to hear your take on it.
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