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frodeem t1_j2coh3s wrote

Economy of scale. Let's say I make and sell bottled tea. I need a factory, machinery, labor, and raw materials. Factory rent, and machinery are both good for 100 million bottles a year. Factory rent is $10,000 a month and buy the machinery for $12,000. These costs are fixed. What that means is I would have to pay that if I make one bottle of tea or a hundred million bottles of tea. Labor and raw materials depend on the number of bottles I make - the more bottles the more tea leaves I buy and the more employees I hire.

Now if I produce only 1 bottle a month I still need to pay the fixed costs and minimum amount for raw materials and labor. So I would price that bottle at $11,000 (factory rent + machine cost per month)+ whatever I paid for labor ($1000), and raw materials ($1,00)+ a little bit of profit($100). So I sell one bottle for $12,200 if I want to stay in business.

If I produce 100,000 bottles the pricing changes. Now my expenses are $11,000 (factory rent + machine cost per month)+ whatever I paid for labor ($25,000), and raw materials ($25,000)+ a little bit of profit. So now my expense per bottle is $0.61. I can add $0.39 as a profit and sell each bottle for $1. My profit would be $39,000.

Hope that explains it.

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Necessary-Fudge-3218 t1_j2cm86z wrote

It's like buying in bulk. The more you buy, the cheaper it is per unit. But you're still spending more money, aren't you? That iced tea probably cost 10 cents (maybe) to produce. At the end of the day, it's an incentive to buy more.

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Anonymous_Bozo t1_j2cykfw wrote

It's not just the tea you are paying for. The bottle is probably the most expensive part of the product.

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SherbetHead2010 t1_j2d0206 wrote

This is the correct answer. I used to own a vape juice company. The actual juice costs maybe a penny per ml. The bottle + label costs several dollars each. A larger bottle costs maybe a few dollars more than the smaller ones, but I can charge almost double. I would make much more money selling a larger bottle than a smaller one.

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BurnOutBrighter6 t1_j2csl0h wrote

Let's say iced tea costs the company 10 cents per L to produce.

  • If you buy 500 mL for $2.80, the company makes $2.75 profit
  • If you buy 1L for $3.00, the company makes $2.90 profit

So you feel like you're getting a good deal, and the company turns more of your money into their profit, even after accounting for having to make more product.

TLDR: Bulk pricing encourages consumers to buy more, which makes the company a bigger profit.

(Yes I know I'm ignoring packaging costs and stuff. frodeem's answer covers these economy-of-scale considerations very well)

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Hamjan9000 t1_j2codbb wrote

Well there is a theory that the race of giants want to keep things affordable for themselves, that could be why

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