I believe the idea was that Frontier is attempting to create more balance between different activities to better reflect the relative skill and risks involved in each respective activity.
You get whatever size ship you want, no one's going to judge you for it ;-)
It's an idea I appreciate and I'm saying they are doing it wrong if they want to improve the game. It's not about which size ship I want, and it doesn't matter wheather someone judges me for it or not.
How do they intend to quantify the skills and risks? They haven't provided any numbers on that, have they?
Quantifying the skills and risks would be the first step. Where is the table showing the numbers they have come up with?
Once they have that table, they need a couple more numbers, like for the amount of time they expect a player having average skills and average riskyness to need doing an even mix of activities before being able to buy and equip an average ship. That would give an average number for the number of credits per hour required, and they only need to divide that number by the sum of the quantifying numbers of all activities and, taking into consideration how long it takes for a particulary activitiy to yield income, they have figured out how much income an activity should yield. Something like that, it's really easy even for me who totally sucks at math.
It's probably not so easy when it comes to details, like missions having been designated for a given rank and thus requiring to get more detailed numbers, and they might find that this easy system is gona blow up rather quickly --- or they could do away with the influence of ranks on missions to get it balanced. It won't matter if it's all average anyway. Who needs a challenge anyway?
Why are they not telling us how they came up with the numbers for the new maximum prices? They are asking for feedback. How are we supposed to give qualified feedback when we can't even know how they came up with the numbers?
Anyway, I'm saying if they want to improve the game, they are doing it wrong --- not because this balancing is a bad idea, but because there are so many other issues that need work which are far more important than balancing and because with every change they might make --- and hopefully they will make the relevant changes --- they will have to do all the balancing again.
It may not even be a bad idea to do the balancing on a regular basis, like once a year. They could program it so it can be done easily, with reproducible results and with forewarning. Some maintenance of such a program would be needed, depending on what changes have been made in the meantime, and the results won't be entirely predictable. It could be done right.
Pulling a couple new maximum prices out of their sleeves and throwing them into the mix in order to see what might happen means they are doing it wrong. It's maybe not obvious that it is wrong, but they are getting very good feedback if they only care to read it.