Sorry, but that's wrong. Firstly, the export price is not linked to the average cost to the USA. It's manufacturing cost plus a margin. So if the USAF buys fewer aircraft that increases average price to the USA, but doesn't affect export price, not even the price to the development partners.
Increasing the export price to reduce the unit price to the USA, when the unit price has gone up because number ordered - and hence total price - has been cut makes no sense at all. You charge more, thus risking losing profitable sales, to make up for spending less money on buying aircraft?
You seem to be forgetting that the fixed costs are FIXED. They don't go up because someone buys fewer aircraft. They're just divided between fewer, so the average unit cost goes up.
BTW, for the (US, not export) unit price to double requires total (not just USAF) US orders to be cut by 80%. That would reduce total US costs by 69%, not increase costs.
As for the accuracy of the predicted costs - well, as you say, history suggests they're likely to go up, but we'll have to wait and see.
Increasing the export price to reduce the unit price to the USA, when the unit price has gone up because number ordered - and hence total price - has been cut makes no sense at all. You charge more, thus risking losing profitable sales, to make up for spending less money on buying aircraft?
You seem to be forgetting that the fixed costs are FIXED. They don't go up because someone buys fewer aircraft. They're just divided between fewer, so the average unit cost goes up.
BTW, for the (US, not export) unit price to double requires total (not just USAF) US orders to be cut by 80%. That would reduce total US costs by 69%, not increase costs.
As for the accuracy of the predicted costs - well, as you say, history suggests they're likely to go up, but we'll have to wait and see.
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