...and maybe not our revenue woes, either.
This general principle of the Laffer Curve applies to more than just taxes - it applies to prices of all goods and services:
Laffer curve - Wikipedia
No. No no no.
The Laffer curve is a statement of trivially true but unimportant facts that invites the mathematically and economically illiterate to substitute ideology for the actually important mathematical aspects of the question.
In this case, it's not necessarily even about the price elasticity of demand for Tech tickets. What we're looking at is rather the difference between the demand curve for current tech tickets and the demand curve for a basket of one or more more luxurious seat options. At least many of the drivers of willingness to pay are the same (since it's the same people with the same disposable income, etc) which means the elasticity of demand should be similar for both demand curves.
This survey is an attempt to provide information about the demand curve for these new seats. That's good. Now, it's also a well understood phenomenon that surveys are poor tools in general at understanding demand and particularly bad specifically at revealing price information, so I hope GTAA is also undertaking some more rigorous interviews of customers. I suspect they are.
Just in passing, notice that the market for tech seats at present doesn't clear. That should tell you something about where the supply and demand curves are intersecting right now.
Personally, I hate MBS because it's a very comfortable spot to be very far away from the field and be able to understand nothing through the terrible acoustics and audio system. Great opportunity to sip your very expensive beer and gaze upon the stu dent ath uh leets with your opera glasses, though.
Personally, I'd pay more to be in a section where I'm guaranteed to never be asked to sit down and the fans around me do things like cheer. Like the Swarm, but for old people. I recognize that I am weird, though.