
Originally Posted by
whiskeybravo
The future is always uncertain, change can happen at any moment. Future expectations are what drives spending and saving.
*Price Deflation* occurred for numerous reasons, I think we all agree the major reasons are an influx of items being sold and a general increase in supply of both tomes and high-end crafting mats (to generate income) coupled with a decrease in the demand of said items and need to increase savings. There are massive incentives for saving right now [the future expectation of buying a house, loot drops], and virtually no incentives to spend. *Price Deflation* on it's own is a natural phenomena, alone it is not an indication of "good" or "bad". Saying the prices before, or now, are good, or bad, is an opinion with no real base of comparison.
"The cost of Gil" is an individual assessment. Since we are not getting any sort of hourly wage or salary in this game (consistent income), it's up to the player to determine how much gil they can earn in a given time frame and even how much gil their time is worth. Philo mats prior to 2.1 were selling for around 18k on my server. That's at least 2 runs of one dungeon or another, say 30 mins each run. So those players time was worth 18,000 gil per hour by the buyers. Key phrase: by the buyers. Now philo tomes are more easily attainable, and philo mats and the buyers say, "Your time is no longer worth 18,000 gil per hour." And at some point the new magic number of 3,000 gil was established. The sellers still need to sell the items if they can't use them, but the buyers have more options for obtaining them.
I don't think it's possible for there to be hyper-inflation in this game, not economy-wide anyways. That would require a huge amount of gil being dumped in the hands of every player, and there's just no device that can accomplish that in-game. Prices were previously *highly-inflated* (bubbles) due to stockpiles of gil from long time players and the early crafters that pretty much set the prices. There was no *future expectation* for gil (housing was known, but not the prices) so purchasing decisions were not as wise as they are now.
Once gil is dumped from the economy via housing purchases, prices are still likely to remain low. They will return to higher levels over time if no other *future expectations* cause gil to get stockpiled up again.