Quizzes & Puzzles17 mins ago
Mark-ups on retail goods
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Hi. Anyone know for a fact any outrageous sounding mark-ups on retail goods (not trying to get philosophical - I'm a capitalist and all that) - just for some shock value. I read, for instance, that a man's work shirt ex-factory costs �1. The kind that are typically sold in 'savile Row' shops for �55. Anybody got any good factual screwed consumer info like that ?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.My mate works in fashion, and it's not that shocking but makes like Firetrap, Boxfresh, Sonnetti and the likes are really cheap to buy trade - talking �2 a t-shirt. And then of course there's the exortinate mark up that there must be on car parts. And Italian restaurants - how much money must they make on a plate of pasta! It's the cheapest thing in the supermarket!!
I have also thought that resturants make a huge mark up. If you think for example how much a food in the super market costs then thats nowhere near what resturants pay for it. For example I go to a chinease supermarket and they have boxes of spring rolls which work out about 10p each in the resturant they are something like �2 for 2. CD's for example I can make a copy of a CD for something like 20p and thats buying them is very limited quantity. One final one i hear that a certain burger chain make their hamburgers for around 4p.
spectacle frames; cost price, hardly anything; retail price �100+ and that's not including lenses. .and it's a cartel, look at he price of market bargain reading glasses, �2 including lenses, perfectly functional, alright looking; take a pair of those to your optician and ask for presciption lenses fitted.. they go mad, ooh we can't do that, blah blah.
I'd like to know the mark-up on watch batteries. How can something so small cost so much? I buy cheap watches anyway, so it's usually not worth replacing the battery. I heard that some other countries have laws limiting profit margins - can anybody confirm that? Also, I believe that France has a law prohibiting retailers selling goods for less than they cost - protecting small shops from being forced out of business by larger firms who can afford to stand a loss for a short time. But what happens when there is stuff that just won't sell at even cost price? Canada had some crazy supermarket price wars a while ago. I read that shoppers began to feel insecure because they ended up having no idea what was a fair price to pay for things. And do you remember our own price wars a few years ago when cans of baked beans were sold for 1p?
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