Coercing people to purchase less desirable products by rationing the ones they really want to buy is a bad strategy.
It almost reminds one of how things used to work in the Soviet Union. Everyone wanted to buy nice stuff, but nice stuff was scarce. So people waited in long lines, or did whatever they had to do to get their hands on it. If they couldn't, they were forced to make do with the not so nice alternatives.
Part of those demand imbalances were due to incompetence of the people in charge. They didn't make enough of what people wanted, and they didn't price things appropriately. But the state had a monopoly, so those people kept their jobs (until they didn't...)
We've got the same problems here: it's not "our" fault that demand for Magic Kingdom and Animal Kingdom don't match their respective capacities. That's Disney's fault. But Disney wants to cram one down our throats while withholding the other. Disney can do that because they are a monopoly (somewhat.) But it doesn't make it a good strategy, any more than it did when central planners did it in "non-market economies."
How do market economies solve imbalances in supply and demand? They don't typically use rationing. That tends to piss people off. They try to increase demand of less desirable products by improving them in the long run, while using pricing to adjust demand in the short run.
How would pricing work in this context? Crowding is kind of a cost and it also affects desirability. You could give people a fixed number of credits they could use to purchase visits, and make some parks more "expensive." You could give people a certain number of free Fastpasses per year per park, and maybe give more for the parks you want them to visit more. You could make Annual pass discounts more generous in some parks than others.
But by far the best way to solve this is to make all of the parks desirability match their capacity. By adding more and better rides and attractions to the less desirable parks. And if Disney hasn't been able to do that, that's on them, not us. They need to fix this.
Except the ability to book any of the parks, as long as you plan in advance..and I mean like at least a few weeks ahead , hasn’t shut anyone out of a park.
The people who showed up without them simply didn’t pay attention to the info out there that one needs them.
Even though the Disney website will let you purchase tickets without choosing, when you click buy tickets it starts with check for availability at your parks.
Sure, it’s different now than before in which you could wake up and go to a park and the only risk of being capped was potentially the fire codes and now you can’t.
I still believe this is why they may be developing a way to add alternative choices for APs not staying onsite.
Unless they sell tickets for individual parks, or go back to who cares if MK is always hours long waits, at least this system helps people potentially avoid it.
Add in early hours at every park,,vs just one park each day..and limiting evening hours at MK and Epcot for deluxe guests, they certainly have enhanced options to plan in a way that can help reduce times waiting in lines.
Like I said, if I have access to the parks for around 30 days a year, and can do it cheaper than having to buy multi day tickets each time, I’d be happy with that type of pass.
Unless you are local..and they should have a pass with more admissions, I’d venture a lot of
DVC owners would be okay with access to a pass that isn’t necessarily unlimited for all days of the year.