So what happens if you have a warranty issue with the boots or the jacket? Will you be sending them back to Bike Bandit or expecting your local dealer and whichever importers to cover that even though you cut them out of the original purchase? Are you aware that some companies make their distributors carry the local warranty costs out of their profit, or do not cover the entire cost of repair/replacement etc?
You also (erroneously) complain that no one carries your size in NZ - frankly would it be any wonder when you don't support them anyway?
No one is denying that you can buy things (and not just m/c accessories and parts) cheaper overseas, but the point that most people seem to be trying to make is that if we all went that way you would end up with no dealers, so what then? Buy bikes from overseas? What happens then with servicing and warranty and parts etc?
I don't think anyone has an issue with people picking up some goodies when on an overseas trip, or buying things that aren't available here etc., but when someone is making the effort to service our sport (and I'm including sponsorship and support of individuals & events that we all take for granted, magazines that we all enjoy that these same dealers and importers fund via advertising - you don't think the cover price pays for that nice glossy magazine do you?) and making a modest profit to cover overheads, it just seems wrong and short sighted to me.
The other factor is that most dealers would be happy to offer a deal to someone spending a reasonable amount of money on several items - it's rare that people will pay full retail in instances like that.
Your complaint regarding pricing would be valid if private individuals were on a level playing field with the importers, yet in most cases they are buying from far larger markets where sales volumes are much, much higher enabling shops to bulk buy with appropriate discounts and work on lower margins. They also don't have to pay all the import charges - at worst most will just pay GST and if shipped by FedEx a small brokerage fee. (There should be no duty on boots or textile jackets with armour)
An importer on the other hand will have to pay bank fees (usually at both ends), customs entry charges, customs EDI fees, document fees, terminal transfer fees, port charges, LCL/FCL fees, cartage at both ends and often more fees (they vary between air and sea imports) then being small businesses they are probably operating on an overdraft so factor in the cost of servicing that, add mortgage or rent, all the usual overheads such as power, phone etc. Add running expenses for sales reps, wages for their staff (and of course we all want more pay) and so it goes on.
So what you say, that's not my problem - well it pretty damn well will be soon if whatever job you are in is affected by that company losing revenue to people buying the same products it sells from offshore.
Don't take this as a personal attack on you Jim, I'm just trying to point out that there is a hell of a lot more to the equation than just a short term gain by buying cheap products from overseas.
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