Having seen the wages paid to actual JP translators in the market, there IS an argument to be made about pay more get more. In capitalism, you'll only have competing market pressures when the size of the market goes past a certain point. In niche markets your margins are so thin, you basically pay for what you can get. Again, to use Pokemon as an example, there's no market incentive to create a better product because the BRAND itself has value. A monopoly doesn't have to iterate or improve in quality, it just has to come close to certain expected standards.I'm using an example of a staggeringly more successful business continually not using its resources to make better products of a particular kind, while arguing that their continued success with even those products (despite the criticisms of those who continue to buy them) is more likely to signal that they don't have to up their product quality despite the complaints.
Neither the scale nor the consumer product type matters for this very general argument.
You didn't do that. Your proposition was, facile jabs at capitalism aside, wishful thinking completely divorced from the concept of market pressure. It amounts to "if we give them a lot of money in exchange for their product regardless of product quality, they'll start making better product (out of the goodness of their hearts, of course)".
It's a naïve idea that doesn't acknowledge that product improvement involves taking on additional costs (that they have no certainty will be more-than-recouped) that will more likely be seen as unnecessary if they're already exceeding their targets because of their present product quality. If they have more money despite not already upping their quality, they're more likely to choose to not risk shrinking their profit margins, meaning they won't change. The only reason they would change, at that point, is ideological or otherwise personal-- because it certainly isn't monetary.
Even when they lose money, that doesn't necessarily indicate to them that they have to improve their product, especially if they're more ideologically than financially motivated (which is expected from people with either nothing to lose or a lot to spend). It certainly would incline them more, versus just getting money for their present product quality.
That's why I said that this is fundamentally a problem of people not doing their jobs right, for whatever reasons. You can't just fix that by throwing money at it-- enough people, and particularly enough of the most critical operators, need to have intrinsic interest.
Having worked in publication, the margins are far thinner than you seem to believe. Out of pocket costs for 60k EN words to JP is a little under 1000 USD for what currently amounts to TOP translation efforts. In order for people taking these jobs to SURVIVE, a lot of them have to take on multiple projects quickly. Volume work on a timeline does not usually translate to high quality. The old adage, you can have things fast, cheap, or good..pick 2 applies HEAVILY to niche and emergent markets. Each new translation is a risk that producers have to calculate.
When I say, throw more money at it, I mean specifically in order to create a competitive market where demand for higher quality is greater than the costs.
None of the companies paying for localization are Ideologically motivated over their finances...That made me laugh though.
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