Many great points in the thread.
What we can say for a fact that majority of people, in general, and in huge markets will always try to go for a cheaper price. It's just the nature of how things work. The producer wants the cheapest possible inputs (not cheapest like 0,01$ but cheapest possible for the desired quality) and the customer wants the cheapest end product. It goes around in a circle. No one can stop that, and you can't blame anyone for trying to do it. It's natural.
The logic of things and the greedy nature of humans is the supply side will take as much as it can no matter be it a little guy or a corp, and if it's a monopoly the demand side will A) Pay more than it should B) Stop buying it if there are alternatives.
When the price of oil gets too high, investments in renewable energy goes up - people searching alternatives.
ACTUALLY - since Gillette is a way too big player and is ever present they are keeping the price of carts high - HAHA - it's actually one of the most common reasons people switch to wet shaving - searching cheaper alternatives. That's why Dollar Shave club came to exist. By venture capitalists (same way anything else can be invented) And is now bought I believe by Unilever.
So, competition is good! It is a constant battle and it is hard, but the strongest survive and one must find it's ways too combat others or go bust. It's like that from the beginning of time so the story about big-time Chinese factories doing it from the little guy is a logical fallacy.
I worked as a restaurant/bar manager in the past. Searching for a way how to become popular I looked into foreign trends, traveled a bit and so on. So my team and I started offering finger food, street food, tapas, however you call it and wine by the glass. At the time no one had it in our city. It became a hit. Instantly. People could have a snack and drink, dance whatever. Next summer there were 5 other restaurants. What could I do? Cry cause other's stole my ideas? After all, I copied it from someone else as well, but totally beside the point. So I tried to be better again by improving our quality, finding new stuff we can offer and so on and so forth. It's the way the market works.
Next, since we are a niche market - a pretty tighter community than regular cart/foam shavers - we are involved in the makings and people in the hobby appreciate the hard work, the energy put into it by the artisan. Part of that is the way artisans are involved with their customers. Good marketing also. Many times I read how a soap is ''underappreciated'' - why? well, cause the artisan is nowhere to be found. Noone hears from him, bad customer service, there's no announcements and so on.
That's why even though there are no patents people still buy ''the original''. That is possible since the market is small.
If wet shaving became a massive trend, there would probably be more and more copies (that is actually happening since the market is growing) since everybody wants a piece of the cake and there's no monopoly - which is again very good for the consumer. Despite that, THERE ARE STILL INNOVATIONS! And there always will be.
If the market becomes big enough there is a possibility Gillette would start making soaps and safety razors again. There's a possibility they buy of artisans and small hardware makers.
That said, there will always be cloning/knocking off, stealing ideas, IMPROVING/HOMMAGING as you might call it. There will always be INSPIRED BY scents, razors, clothes, cars, haircuts, books, whatever. Doesn't matter if it costs more than the ''original'', the first idea, it's still the same thing.
It is possible Yaqi invents a totally new DE and someone IMPROVES IT. Same like a lot of US razor makers today took inspiration and IMPROVED older DEs.
So basically creating a Clubman inspired scent is still the same thing as a Chinese guy doing a lower quality DOC copy. Someone will improve it and sell at a higher price, someone will use cheaper plastic and sell it at a lower price - STILL The SAME THING. Let's not be hypocrites and only defend something when it's to our own advantage.
Anyway, what I'm saying, you can stop it. The whole world is COPYING. I would like to have a haircut like the guy from Mad Men. I will probably copy it/dupe it/be inspired by it/improve it. Should they sue me for it?
For god sake, didn't Gillette took someone else's idea already? Did the world stop shaving or innovating? Nope, they tried everything they can - be it lower price, lower quality OR HIGHER quality product to find their place in the market. All good things for the consumers. You only need to find a way. Or ways.
Nothing can stop innovation, patents or no patents, and that is a good thing.