• @[email protected]
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    017 days ago

    Would you mind changing “instead of making, they make” by some other precise verbs? Your explaination seems very interesting but, probably du to my poor english, I feel like you saying the same thing over and over while changing the numbers and I can’t grasp your explanation.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      117 days ago

      So if a company still wants to make $2 profit per bottle.

      Company raises price to $6.25 to try to cover the tariff (25% increase)

      The tariff becomes $1.56 ($6.25 × 25%)

      Instead of selling for $5 price, they would sell it for $4.69 effectively ($6.25-$1.56)

      Instead of making $2 profit, they would make $1.69 profit ($4.69-$3(production cost))

      If they still sold the bottle for $5, paid $1.25 tariff

      They would make 75 cents of profit ($5-$3(production cost)-$1.25(tariff))

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        117 days ago

        I see. Since the tarif is proportionate to the final price, the final price needs even higher than the initial price times (1 + tarif) in order to keep the profit the same.

        • @[email protected]
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          217 days ago

          Starting Price / (1-Tariff %) = Final Price Needed to Break Even

          $5 / (1-.25) =

          5/.75 = $6.67

          If an item was $5 and there was a 30% tariff

          5 / (1-.30) = $7.14

          If there was a 30% tariff and the syrup company wanted to keep same profit they would have to sell each bottle for $7.14.

          $7.14 × .30 = $2.14

          $7.14 - $2.14 = $5

        • @[email protected]
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          fedilink
          217 days ago

          No, because (1 + tariff) isn’t enough to keep up with the tariff because as the price goes up, the tariff also goes up.

          Like in the example going from $5 to $6.25 (5 × (1+.25)). Would result in 31 cents less per bottle.

          It needs to be ~33% more or $6.67 for the syrup company to keep the same profit with a 25% tariff.

          Final Price × Tariff % = Tariff Amount

          Final Price - Tariff Amount = Cost of Good Sold

          Cost of Good Sold - Expenses = Profit

          So if you need $2 profit

          $2 = (Final Price - (Final Price × Tariff %)) - Expenses

          $2 = (X - (X×.25)) - $3

          $5 = X - .25X

          $5 = .75X

          X = $6.67

          Formula would be

          Profit = (Final Price - (Final Price × Tariff %)) - Expenses