Same diameter, just less grains.

Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
Heartland Patriot wrote:To take a guess, its because 9mm is used by the US military...therefore, the ammunition companies are already tooled up to produce large batches...since they churn out volume, it keeps the price down...good old supply and demand at work...less supply of .380 and a reasonably solid civilian demand for it...if our military would go back to using .45 ACP, the price on that would probably come down and 9mm would go up...when these wars finally come to an end, they will use less 5.56mm and 9mm, and order smaller batches...and the prices for both will probably go up...anyone else have a theory?
Wars end => demand goes down => price goes down?Heartland Patriot wrote:To take a guess, its because 9mm is used by the US military...therefore, the ammunition companies are already tooled up to produce large batches...since they churn out volume, it keeps the price down...good old supply and demand at work...less supply of .380 and a reasonably solid civilian demand for it...if our military would go back to using .45 ACP, the price on that would probably come down and 9mm would go up...when these wars finally come to an end, they will use less 5.56mm and 9mm, and order smaller batches...and the prices for both will probably go up...anyone else have a theory?
Makes sense. Thank you everyone.Jumping Frog wrote:It is more than just the US Military. 9mm is a NATO cartridge produced for many countries,
"Economies of scale" is the appropriate business and economic description.
There it is .... proof .... proof of the old saying ... "less is more"Thomas wrote:Why is .380 more expensive than 9mm?
Same diameter, just less grains.