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bobc163
13-11-2014, 8:01am
Hi All,

Don't know what sort of reaction I will get to this but here goes.

After spending a considerable amount on equipment from local suppliers i have elected to purchase from the "grey" market for several reasons

1. After considerable research both here and overseas I cannot find any difference in the branded products being offered

2. The price difference on most items is considerable, sometimes up to 40%

3. The warranty's being offered both by the manufacturer and the supplier state that they have local authorised repair agents to handle any warranty issues (local suppliers of the product?)

I have heard all the scare stories from local suppliers stating that "sometimes the products appear to be the same but use inferior components". They are refurbished ( I have found that where this is the case itis stated as such)

I have to date not been given a reasonable answer as to why we in Australia are paying a premium for what is essentially the same item obtainable overseas

I know we should support our local retailers but at what price should we be supporting them or the local distributors (who are in all reality just another middle man)

I do not begrudge paying a little more to purchase from a local supplier but when this "liitle more" is upward of 15% or more on a product in the 1K$ or more price range it is a lot of money to pay for the "local" product

I await the answers
Surely if one is purchasing from a known reliable merchant (and this can be easily checked via the web) the goods are of a merchantible quality and are as stated

Would not the "local" suppliers be speaking up loudly if the "grey" items were not genuine and be enforcingg strict rules re:- warranty repairs etc

I was informed by one US supplier that if a product was purchased in Australia and taken to the US it would be considered a "grey import" and hence the local supplier would not warrant it locally but would still repair the product.

ameerat42
13-11-2014, 8:52am
Choice!:) It's all about choice!:)
What choice do you have?:cool:
How to lose:(.

I @ M
13-11-2014, 10:26am
Would not the "local" suppliers be speaking up loudly if the "grey" items were not genuine and be enforcingg strict rules re:- warranty repairs etc

The local suppliers are speaking quite loudly on the subject, one only has to look at their distributorship web sites to see that they will not offer warranty support on "grey" imports.
When the "grey" sellers assure you of warranty support through "authorised repairers" they will in most cases be using repair facilities that are independent to the official distributors and simply paying the bill for any repairs. You may also need to check closely with overseas "grey" sellers to see if they insist on the good being returned to them in their country as most of the time you will be paying for freight and insurance to return it to them. That figure can add a lot to the cost of the item if it needs to be returned.

Yes, there are some very reputable "grey" suppliers based in both Australia and overseas but their prices are usually not as cheap as the slight less reputable sellers that have a less than desirable reputation.

This is one time where you really need to remember the old "buyer beware" adage and to to do extreme research into "grey" sellers reputations. Ausphotography has quite a few threads dedicated to the reputation etc of various grey sellers and they can be found using the search function within the site.

The thread linked is a recent example of such discussion ----- http://www.ausphotography.net.au/forum/showthread.php?135734-Anyone-purchased-from

shakes
13-11-2014, 10:28am
I've seen this across several industries. One in particular I've spent several years working in.

I can buy bicycle parts from the UK cheaper than I can at wholesale price from the local distributor (and I know the UK shop has the items in stock)

This has just as much to do with the current retail model and the parent company seeing australia as 'little fish' rather than having the same price for each distributor. I'm going to assume photography gear isn't too much different.

I try and support local as much as I can - I'll drop in to a few stores, I purchase hobby farm milk rather than the $2 milk - but where it is significant savings or obvious price wroughts I will almost always purchase online (pending my need for a local warranty etc)

farmmax
13-11-2014, 3:45pm
If I had to pay the local price, I would never have a camera. At the time I bought my 50D, I could almost buy two grey ones for the price of one local one, so I thought I'd risk it. Of course, that was a few years ago now, and I've never regretted the decision. From payment time to the time it arrived at my front door was around 48 hours! The people I dealt with did have service places in Australia, but I never needed them.

The price difference is not quite so large now, but I wouldn't hesitate buying grey again if the price was right. There is no local supplier here for purchasing such equipment. There is a Hardly Normal in a nearby town, but it probably would have taken weeks for them to get the camera in (6 weeks order time they wanted on a washing machine!), and I would never dare hand it over to them for servicing from friends experiences .

nimrodisease
13-11-2014, 7:23pm
I'd definitely buy grey. I have bought all of my gear grey except for my D800E body. Everything I've ever bought grey market has been delivered within a week, but somehow I waited 6 weeks for that D800E body...

ricktas
13-11-2014, 10:47pm
Buying grey you might also run the risk of paying but not actually getting. Have a look at PhotoBuff and D D Photographics. Both grey importers who closed up shop, leaving quite a few people having paid for things and never getting them

Photobuff just shut up shop and disappeared. D D Photographics changed owners and the old owners did a runner with people's deposits and payments etc. The new owner had not included those in the business purchase and people were left with no money and no goods as completion of those orders was the responsibility of the previous owners.

Whatever you choose, just do some research before buying

http://forums.whirlpool.net.au/archive/2179442

http://forums.whirlpool.net.au/archive/1091454

jev
14-11-2014, 12:18am
Buying grey you might also run the risk of paying but not actually getting.
Pay by credit card and you have 6 months time to file a complaint with the CC company.

Brian500au
14-11-2014, 8:32am
I really cannot understand how retailers have the right not to service / guarantee a grey market product. I mean what is the definition of "grey" market. I live in Europe and work in the USA, yet still a resident of Australia. I travel with my camera all the time. If i buy a lens in the US when I am there, then it is grey market when i visit Australia or return home to Belgium. My camera bag is full of equipment I have bought all around the world including an "L" lens bought from an authorised canon dealer in Cambodia (yet still classed as grey market in Australia). My 6D come from HK. We live in a very global world and international travel is now a normal part of most peoples lives.

If I ever have to put in a warranty claim, or I am refused service on a "grey market" canon product I will cause so much noise they wish they had never sold me a Canon in the first place.

agb
14-11-2014, 1:57pm
Buying grey you might also run the risk of paying but not actually getting. Have a look at PhotoBuff and D D Photographics. Both grey importers who closed up shop, leaving quite a few people having paid for things and never getting them

Photobuff just shut up shop and disappeared. D D Photographics changed owners and the old owners did a runner with people's deposits and payments etc. The new owner had not included those in the business purchase and people were left with no money and no goods as completion of those orders was the responsibility of the previous owners.

Whatever you choose, just do some research before buying

http://forums.whirlpool.net.au/archive/2179442

http://forums.whirlpool.net.au/archive/1091454
True, but D-D were also a bricks and mortar shop in Sydney. I bought from them when they were bricks and mortar in Brisbane. Not quite the same as buying grey off the net I would have thought.

ricktas
14-11-2014, 3:04pm
True, but D-D were also a bricks and mortar shop in Sydney. I bought from them when they were bricks and mortar in Brisbane. Not quite the same as buying grey off the net I would have thought.

Not the same, but they still parallel imported and thus items did not have a true Australian warranty.

Tommo224
14-11-2014, 3:06pm
I purchased my trusty little 550D from a local store, I paid maybe $600 more on top as I would have, had I bought it from a grey importer. My mates GF at the time bought the "Kiss X4"(?) model online. Hers, last I heard, is still going strong and had no issues. As with mine!

My Sony Nex-5N was bought "grey", and so was my 5D Mark 3. My Canon 24-70 lens was an import from Japan.

Only problems I've had? My lens needed a fix a few months ago, after a bump and very active life damaged the "runners".



In regards to other industries, for spare parts on my BMW I ordered them from an American distributor of genuine parts.

The savings?

50% of the price.

BMW Australia wanted $1000 for a water pump, $900 for a 'third party/unbranded' part from another Australian distributer. Or $500 for both the Water Pump and Thermostat from the USA distributor + $60 postage to Australia.
They also wanted $1100 for a high pressure fuel pump, which I purchased for around $500 and got it delivered to my hotel when I was in the USA for a holiday.



It's not only the camera market that is affected by such ridiculous price hikes.

ricktas
14-11-2014, 5:26pm
Australia Post has also setup a warehouse in the US so you can get your things delivered to an US address, then Aussie Post will send them to Aus for you, at a much cheaper rate than some shipping options from US stores.

A bit off-topic, but probably relevant.

http://www.9news.com.au/national/2014/11/05/12/13/aust-post-sets-up-warehouse-in-us

Brian500au
14-11-2014, 8:50pm
I think you also need to differentiate between goods bought "grey market" and those bought via "the web". Shopping via the web is not always grey market goods. I think Amazon are now open in Australia and hence are only mail order goods with a money back guarantee for shopper satisfaction etc

I was in NY earlier this year and bought some gear from B&H (probably one of the most reputable Canon dealers in the world), yet when I travel with those goods back into Australia they are considered "grey market".

agb
14-11-2014, 9:01pm
Not the same, but they still parallel imported and thus items did not have a true Australian warranty.
Wasn't the warranty that they were concerned about in the thread that you linked on Whirlpool about D-D, just the loss of money, which happened to a bricks and mortar shop, Grey or not,any store can go bust.

Speedway
15-11-2014, 12:14am
My first DSLR the 400D Twin lens kit was bought from a local store, everything else in my kit has been purchased on eBay with PayPal, the only problems I have had have been with a few small items and I have had no problems with refunds. One item, a usb3 card reader which would not work in a USB3 port but is OK in a USB2 port I was given a full refund and as with all other items was not required to return them. The only item that has needed any repairs was my 150-500 Sigma but after 3.5 years was not covered by any warranty anyway. If a shop goes bust before delivery you have most likely lost your money if you paid by cash or you will have a long wait to get your money back through credit card. I purchased a portable fridge through eBay a few months back and it appears the seller had gone bust, I was unable to contact them and after contacting eBay re my concerns the money was back in my account
in under7 days

arthurking83
15-11-2014, 11:24am
For me the choice and decision to buy grey is simply down to whether the possibility of any service claim is worth the savings.

A saving of only 15% of $1000 is not really worth the effort, but as that saving reaches closer to say 30%(ie. $300, as opposed to $150) then I'd start considering the grey alternative.

My overall outlook is along the lines of:
Support the local industry as much as possible(even it that means those idiots at Nikon Australia!) .. but more so the local stores
Will I, or did I get good value for money from the product purchased!
Saving X amount of money is always important, but (for me) not anywhere near as important as the value that the product has provided me with.

As an example: I paid just over $300 more for my D800E at the local store, as opposed to a reputed grey retailer had them, but that additional $300 is now a long faded memory(and only thought of again after 2 years due to this thread!).
The D800E has provided me with a fantastic experience save for a very few annoyances on it's limitations(shooting speed, and whatnot).
i.e. The money saved is of little importance compared to the joy or experience or performance or financial return .... etc provided by the product.


I'd definitely buy grey. I have bought all of my gear grey except for my D800E body. Everything I've ever bought grey market has been delivered within a week, but somehow I waited 6 weeks for that D800E body...

Strangely, I went into a reputable local store here in Melb(Vanbar) and they didn't have any stock of the D800 for weeks, I was put on a contact list for them to notify me of when they did have stock, but never got back to me.
I went in every now and then during this time, and when I did get my D800E, it was only because they didn't have stock of the D800(non E) .. and they had one E left in the store.(approx mid 2012). Again, and additional cost over the non E version, plus my hesitation of the possibility of seeing moire from the E.
However, the salesman did assure me that if I didn't like the E, I could bring it back and they'd get me a non E if I really wanted .. with the final comment that he was sure I wouldn't be doing that, as the possibility of moire from the E wasn't such a fuss that many made it out to be(including myself!).


I really cannot understand how retailers have the right not to service / guarantee a grey market product. I mean what is the definition of "grey" market. I live in Europe and work in the USA, yet still a resident of Australia. I travel with my camera all the time. If i buy a lens in the US when I am there, then it is grey market when i visit Australia or return home to Belgium. My camera bag is full of equipment I have bought all around the world including an "L" lens bought from an authorised canon dealer in Cambodia (yet still classed as grey market in Australia). My 6D come from HK. We live in a very global world and international travel is now a normal part of most peoples lives.

If I ever have to put in a warranty claim, or I am refused service on a "grey market" canon product I will cause so much noise they wish they had never sold me a Canon in the first place.

I have to say .. I can't see any issue in that a local supply chain refusing to warrant the product of a foreign supply chain!
It would be nice if they did, but the fact they say they won't seems perfectly legitimate really(IMO).

The issue will almost certainly be along the lines of maintaining a balance in the profitability of each regional distribution network.
Part of this would take into account transportation costs, currency fluctuations(look at where our dollar is currently sitting at, and try to remember where it was a year ago!) .. plus fixed regional costs(HR and property outgoings).

In can imagine that HR and property costs in the HK region will be far lower than they will be for Australia, as well as shipping costs on a per unit basis.
That is for each item sold by the HK distributor, the fixed costs are far lower. They would easily sell more units than the Aussie distributor did, so costs will be lower.
Therefore warranty costs will be a much lower factor to take into account too.
So what of the poor Aussie distributor then!
They would sell nothing, because you would all purchase your gear from the HK distributor ... but you expect the Aussie distributor to pay for the warranty on the gear.
This would effective cause Aussie <insert camera brand here> run at or close to a loss as they have to take up the costs of warranty of a product they didn't make any money on.

How long do you reckon the local distributor would stay in business for?

Like I said, I see no issue in one distribution chain refusing warranty claims for products that originated from another distribution area!

In your situation tho, the assumption is that because you travel regularly all over the world that you still travel regularly around the world!
So that if you purchased an item from Cambodia and were living in Belgium, that you were still traveling to Cambodia again at some point(or regularly) .. and hence, you would get any warranty service done there again.
If this is not convenient, then you would have to plan where you purchased your goods from to take warranty/service considerations into account.

Of course the ideal situation is that the corporate headquarters would simply assume the overall responsibility of warranty and service on a global level and simply pay for all the expenses of every regional distribution centre.

An issue I do have is in repairs for which the consumer is willing to pay for, irrespective of the source of the product.
AFAIK, Nikon Aus, have made the claim that they will not repair grey market Nikon gear. (I could be mistaken, but I think this is the case)
To me this is an unacceptable and self deprecating philosophy to have for the corporation as a whole!
If this is still the situation, then the Company HQ (in this instance Nikon HQ) really should make it a point to the regional arm of the company (again in this instance, Nikon Aus) that it's our product and out corporate image may be damaged due to such practices.

Speedway
15-11-2014, 1:34pm
Of course the ideal situation is that the corporate headquarters would simply assume the overall responsibility of warranty and service on a global level and simply pay for all the expenses of every regional distribution centre.

An issue I do have is in repairs for which the consumer is willing to pay for, irrespective of the source of the product.
AFAIK, Nikon Aus, have made the claim that they will not repair grey market Nikon gear. (I could be mistaken, but I think this is the case)
To me this is an unacceptable and self deprecating philosophy to have for the corporation as a whole!
If this is still the situation, then the Company HQ (in this instance Nikon HQ) really should make it a point to the regional arm of the company (again in this instance, Nikon Aus) that it's our product and out corporate image may be damaged due to such practices.

I Agree with you wholeheartedly on this point Arthur. If you buy a new car in Hobart and on a trip to Broome you have problems there you can take it a local dealer for warranty repairs. The manufacturer should cover any warranty irregardless of where it was purchased. Canon cover the warranty on my grey eBay purchased printer even though when I purchased it Canon Australia told me there was no such model when I contacted re more details on the unit. It was about 4-5 weeks after the printer was delivered before canon even recognized the model number and another couple of weeks before the specs. were on their website. It did come with the full Australian warranty paperwork which checked out OK. If they can do this with printers and scanners why cant they do the same with cameras???
Cheers
Keith.

crafty1tutu
15-11-2014, 7:10pm
I have bought most of my gear grey market and never really had any problems with the quality of the gear and I don't really know about warranty as I have never had to try it out thank goodness. I think that DD Photographics is still trading - now in North Sydney, as I bought a Tamron 150-600 lens off them this week and it was delivered in two days.

I @ M
15-11-2014, 7:11pm
I Agree with you wholeheartedly on this point Arthur. If you buy a new car in Hobart and on a trip to Broome you have problems there you can take it a local dealer for warranty repairs. The manufacturer should cover any warranty irregardless of where it was purchased.

Keith, trying not to labour a point here but this is the exact same scenario as a camera purchase. If you buy a camera from a dealer that is part of the official distributorship chain in Australia and take it on a trip from Hobart to Broome you will be covered by warranty in the case of a malfunction if that problem occurs within the warranty period the same way as your car would be covered.

If you ( parallel / grey ) import a car ( for arguments sake ) direct from Japan and then take that car on a journey from Hobart to Broome and suffer a malfunction 3 weeks after you have owned it ------ best of luck getting the distributor here in Oz to give you any warranty service.

A GREY import is a GREY import whether it was bought from the largest camera retailer in the world located in New York or from a back alley drop shipper in Hong Kong. If it wasn't delivered through the official distribution network in Australia they simply don't want to know about it. Yes, there are certain cases where an Australian citizen working / living o/seas and buying gear in a foreign country will be given latitude when they return to Aus but compared to the massive amount of Internet / bricks and mortar purchasers of grey camera gear they are in the extreme minority.

Mark L
15-11-2014, 9:38pm
You may also need to check closely with overseas "grey" sellers to see if they insist on the good being returned to them in their country as most of the time you will be paying for freight and insurance to return it to them. That figure can add a lot to the cost of the item if it needs to be returned.


Yep, the fine print. I read that print when I bought my camera from site sponsor B&H and if something needing a warranty repair was required I just needed to let them know and they would arrange free postage back to them to get the repairs done.


If I had to pay the local price, I would never have a camera. ......
There is no local supplier here for purchasing such equipment. There is a Hardly Normal in a nearby town,

They think they have a monopoly on camera equipment in that nearby town. They refuse to offer me any decent deal on any camera equipment.( though we have got some good deals on other things from them). They loose any sales from me on photographic equipment. So that's nil in the scheme of things for them.

bobc163
19-11-2014, 3:53pm
Hi arthur,
well certainly "stirred things up" with that posting
What really concerns me is the price difference for the same product both here and overseas!

Point in question
I have a 30 foot yacht which I have owned for at least 30 years. I recently undertook a refurbishment of the entire rig and whilst at it did some upgrading of the equipment.
2 things struck me as being a blatent rip off here
The first was for a rigid boom vang, I found the local distributorand asked his price for the item he explained that some parts were custom made by the manufacturer and the complete item would be imported from the US.
One of my associates advised me to look on line, low and behold here was a US distributor selling the same item for less than half that the Aus dist. was asking. Needlees to say I contacted the US supplier who advised me that certain parts were custom made and the item would be shipped from the US. Guess what I did!!
The second item was a furler by a large international company. Again I tracked the local supplier who said "we have a special for this month if you order now" Asked what was required for the yacht and advised that it would require additional parts at extra cost.
Went to the US distributor who informed me that no additional parts required as they all came with the unit (in fact there was more parts than necessary) not what the Aus distributor was quoting!!
As you can guess I ordered from the US distributor who had the item shipped from France to the US and then to Aus all arrived and at a substantial discount from the Aus supplier
I did however forgetto purchase a small item and went to the Aus distributor to ask them to supply it (cost was irrelavent) they asked where I purchased the furler and said "go back to where you purchased it as we do not want anything to do with your item as you did not purhase it from us" oh and by the way there is no warranty on this item" I subsequently sent an email to the US distributor and received no less than 3 days later an email from the manufacturers head office in France who said "the item has a world wide warranty I will send the part at no cost to you and I will speak to the local distibutor."

This item has dropped significantly in price in AUS now and if I was purchasing it again I would buy from the Aus supplier as they are now more competive with their costs (What does this indicate to you?')

Going back to things photographic, the new lens arrived yesterday as advised from HK (shipped Friday 5PM their time arrived in Newcastle Monday 7AM) A$750 cheaper than local distibutor and "Made in Japan" 12 month warranty with the option to increase to a further 3 years in 30 days of purchase. Same item, same quality
I have purchased equipment in Aus and it has taken up to a week to travel from Sydney to Newcastle with no explanation
I was in China last year and looked at the prices of equipment there and found that the "retail" stores were almost the same price as Aus with a few exceptions

I firmly believe that we are all being "taken for a ride" by someone but as to whom I cannot say in light of the examples above

One must ask why the Aus distributors of products have insited that items will only be warranted by them if purchased through them and international warranties no longer exist on some products.

The old arguments of "freight, Aus costs etc" do not hold water if you look at the real costings of the items

I was on a cruise ship recently and the bar prices increased dramatically when the Aussie's boarded and then increased again on other items as we neared Aus with the xplanation that Aussie's will pay more for the items if they are still cheaper than what they pay at home!!!
The US passnegers that had joined the ship earlier were not impressed to say the least!! and were "muttering in their beards" about the prices being charged by the cruise line in question

Enough for now as I must return to "work'
Bob

Mark L
19-11-2014, 10:23pm
One must ask why the Aus distributors of products have insited that items will only be warranted by them if purchased through them and international warranties no longer exist on some products.


Think you'll find that's what the manufactures impose on them. They have no choice.:(

ricktas
20-11-2014, 6:40am
Re your Yacht Bob, that is not just an import vs australian issue.

If you go looking to buy a boat here in Hobart you can expect to pay a lot more for it than you would the same one in Melbourne. My family have bought their last 3 boats from Melbourne, as the same boat in Hobart (exact same model and spec) was over $10K more (the smallest gap). One was $25K more. $10K more simply to move the vessel from Melb to Hobart is not something we were willing to cop. The excuse down here is always 'transport costs'. Yet I can transport that same vessel, with help from the Melb distributor for $1-$2K. I wonder where the other $8K went?

In the end each person has to decide if they want to buy Grey or not. It is not something someone can tell another person to do. It is their decision alone. I have bought 2 cameras and probably 3 lenses, two tablets, and a mobile phone as grey, and never had an issue. I have bought about 5 cameras, 6 lenses, and several mobile phones from Australian stores., and never had an issue.

ameerat42
20-11-2014, 8:37am
Living in the Antipodes: everyone else is anti the podians:(
A fabled PM once announced that he was giving us "more choice".
I already mentioned what that means.

Your s:(rry tale left me (almost) speechless. I can only manage to garble something like:
"Sock is a Dig!"

arthurking83
22-11-2014, 11:22am
Bob! .. I hear what you say re the prices we get charged(or used to get charged) vs what you can do by chasing stuff from online(ie. overseas) sources.

GST has to be taken into account to tho, as the overseas online sales surce won't be charging or adding that into the final price.

There are loud noises being made again about the $1K exemption on GST for personally imported goods again(this time it's not Gerry Harvey tho).

I think that one day this will be inevitable too .. as well as an increase in the GST to help pay for the money losing cycle this is supposedly going to introduce.

But I still feel for the local retailers tho .. even tho they have been ripping us off for, god knows how many, years!

You still have to understand the cost of doing business tho.

The US based yacht selling places probably sell hundreds of not thousands of the product you were referring too. The Aussie based folks probably sell 10 .. maybe 100.
Plus the added cost of extra shipping .. plus the added costs of higher labour charges(compared to the US), payroll taxes, company tax rates ... etc, etc.

The biggest problem with Australia is the lack of foresight on our part.
While many people seem to think they have it(with the loud noises made over the past few years on the state of Aussie manufacturing industries) few seem to actually have it.

These is no way Australia(in the foreseeable future) can compete with many countries in mass market/production situations, but we can still have a healthy manufacturing industry base.
if the Government(Treasury) could only sort out the issue of our over priced currency, what would be ideal is if the Yacht widget or whatnot(you were after) was manufactured here instead, and sold to the US as an export. I'm sure the situation would have been reversed.

For many years up to the point of currency parity(with the US) Nikon Aust were ripping us off so hard with respect to prices.
The Aussie dollar eventually climbed higher than the US, and as a result importing your own Nikon stuff from HK, or wherever was so much cheaper than getting it from a local source.
I think at some point you could easily have saved 1/3rd off the price of a (locally priced) $3K item, going by Nikon Aus's price list.
But they finally succumbed a bit and dropped some of their prices to sane levels.

Something that may or may not be properly understood with respect to the cost of transport, is that this cost is not just the actual shipping of the item(ie. on the container ship from somewhere to here!) but also the cost of the port clearance and the cost of movement from port to a transport depot then onto a (distributor's)warehouse then onto a shop/retailer who may or may not have a centralised distribution centre(which adds more again).
(ps. my job is in transport BTW).
I don't know the actual facts and figures, but I have a suspicion that the cost of the bulk transport stage is only a fraction of the cost of transport(and red tape charges!!) from the docked ship in any Aussie port to the store you collect the item from.
I also have no idea of the warehousing cost for each individual distributor or manufacturer .. but just the rental of the warehouse/offices alone will be in the order of $1/2million annually.
The company I work for is looking to relocate and the rental cost of the warehouse made me cringe!(from one dump to a larger dump ... min annual rental is in the order of $350K .. plus outgoings)

Add to that the cost of the folks that have to manage it, and work it too .. anyhow, I think you get the idea!

While I have no facts or figures, I'm pretty sure that the cost of transport(and labour) going from my experiences of the systems here in Aus is where the cost of transport comes into the equation.
FWIW: years back, in the other transport area I used to work in, one of the regular jobs I used to do was to transport import/export documents from company to banks or loading agents offices, and or VECCI(chamber of commerce) .. just this transfer of documentation could cost in the order of $100-200 alone(something that would otherwise cost a few cents if faxes were allowable in that industry). That was just the courier charge for me to ride/drive from one office to another and wait while docs were stamped and signed, and then to another .. and wait for stamps and signatures .. and so on. This was for the purpose of saving the import/export company, or manufacturer/distributor thousands of dollars in container/dock fees if the documents weren't done ASAP.
While this was many years ago, I have a vague recollection that a 40ft container cost in the order of about $10-15K to move(that is the ship component of the movement from dock to dock).
I have no idea on what it costs now .. could be more .. maybe even less .. but I reckon, to get a container's load from the dock to the appropriate warehouse would now cost at least half that .. maybe $5K .. possibly more.

Just to be sure, my first reply wasn't to 'stir things up' in any way .. just to bring to attention that it doesn't cost nothing for distributor A or manufacturer B to get their goods from point to point.
Of course the value of the goods play a major role in the actual costs of shipping the stuff.
A container of cheap Chinese toys obviously has a lower dollar value than a container of top line photography gear, so the percentage cost of the transportation will be notionally lower for the photography gear. But it's not zero!
Anyhow, my point was to highlight this cost, that it's almost certainly much much higher than for overseas countries, that the government surely makes a hell of a lot of money not just in the taxes .. but also their red tape fees.
Add to that, stupid costs of shipping that can easily be avoided, which probably don't add significantly to the cost of doing business .. that's just me on my soapbox in passing taking advantage of an opportune moment :p

bobc163
22-11-2014, 8:23pm
Bob! .. I hear what you say re the prices we get charged(or used to get charged) vs what you can do by chasing stuff from online(ie. overseas) sources.
<snip overquote>

Thanks for the reply Arthur,
FyI the Aus distibutor was sending the same item direct to me from the US Manufacturer using the same transport chanells But adding his exorbitant "commision"
I have run my company for over 30 years in Aus and have seen the demise of our manufacturing here "up front" soi much so that I elected top stop designing equipment only to see it "pirated " overseas by our Aussie companies ALL IN THE NAME OF THE ALMIGHTY $
Whilst we ask for our shares and super to give us high yields it is at what cost to our ongoing economy?
I really think that we need to embrace a "global" strategey and ensure that we all pay a FAIR price for our consumerabels not what some person thinks we should pay due to our location Etc

Glen1
22-11-2014, 9:22pm
I've bought a fair bit of gear from the 'grey' market, based purely on price. Never had a problem. Recently though, I bought a Sigma 10-20 from an ebay seller (dcexpert) who I think is affiliated with the Sigma importer(C R Kennedy).The price was better than grey market, and now I'll be seeking my future purchases from the local ebay seller. I also bought a Pentax K5 II from C R Kennedy for a killer price when it was the outgoing model. It pays to send your camera distributor an email, asking for their best price. Saved me a couple of hundred dollars,

Regards
Glen1

bobt
22-11-2014, 9:59pm
It's all a matter of risk assessment. Your purchase price is directly related to the risk you are prepared to accept for the saving you think justifies that risk.

I have rarely bought locally simply because of my own risk assessment. Thus far, I am waaaaaay ahead, and if I get let down by a grey purchase in the future I will still be ahead. Caveat emptor is the key phrase as with most purchases in this world. If you can't afford to lose, then don't gamble.