by Rico » Mon 08 Jul, 2013 11:04 pm
True, the cost of production is around 15-25% of the RRP. This does not mean that someone is pocketing the remaining 85%. Freight, import duties and taxes, insurances, packaging, advertisement and branding, distribution costs, warranty, Quality Control etc are a very large part of the final value of the goods.
This is how economy of scale works: if you make one pair of shoes it will cost you $1000 and days of work between investing in tools, sourcing the material, learn how to do it, etc. If you make a million of pair of shoes, each pair will cost you $5. You will need to create a costly distribution network to sell all those shoes, and the price may arrive to $100 by the time they hit the shops. It doesn't means that the buyer is paying $100 for a $5 item, as the remaining $95 is going to pay the work of hundreds of people forming that distribution chain. Still it costs to the buyer much less than the $1000 he would need to make those same shoes by himself, the buyer is the one doing a bargain. It is the principle behind the industrial revolution of England, and we are using this technique for pretty much anything we produce today. Without it we would be still farming our own tomatoes (of course the system can be abused, but I am talking about the principle, not the exception).
Back to the subject... Even if the price was a sure indication of the provenience of an item, do you think that boycotting the sweat shop products you'd be doing a favour to the people being abused in those places? I mean, the reason why those poor people work in a sweat shop in the first place is because there is nothing else available... You shut down their factory and you make those people to starve... Once again, if you want to get rid of the sweat shop, give people a way to learn how to do a better paid job, and until you do, don't remove from them the only form of income they have.
Buying overpriced gear instead of cheap stuff will not improve the life of those people, not even a tiny bit, actually maybe it's the opposite...