A MM Legend priced at $3.59 back in 2000 should cost @ $ 6.32 just based upon the current value of a dollar/inflationary factors. Most are selling them for around +$8 now, so maybe a little more margin has been added since 2000. Yet all direct costs of manufacturing are WAY up since Covid. Could be a combination most likely.Hello everyone, I ran across a 23 year old Missouri Meerschaum price list while sorting through some papers and thought some of you might enjoy seeing it.
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Yes you are correct if using the simple inflation rate, there's a reason I used the comparison of price increase vs wage increase rather than use the simple inflation factor. There's more to it than that, as you mentioned with manufacturing costs. Labor costs, material costs, power costs, etc. all play into it, and wages themselves drive labor costs to produce an item. I think as long as the price increase doesn't tremendously surpass our wage increase, it basically costing us the same.A MM Legend priced at $3.59 back in 2000 should cost @ $ 6.32 just based upon the current value of a dollar/inflationary factors. Most are selling them for around +$8 now, so maybe a little more margin has been added since 2000. Yet all direct costs of manufacturing are WAY up since Covid. Could be a combination most likely.
Probably….a lot!I wonder how manyred necks"item #236s" they sold...
Ain't inflation a bitch?
Well stated.Yes you are correct if using the simple inflation rate, there's a reason I used the comparison of price increase vs wage increase rather than use the simple inflation factor. There's more to it than that, as you mentioned with manufacturing costs. Labor costs, material costs, power costs, etc. all play into it, and wages themselves drive labor costs to produce an item. I think as long as the price increase doesn't tremendously surpass our wage increase, it basically costing us the same.
A MM cob could be bought with a little more than a half hour of minimum wage labor back then, and it can be bought with a little more than a half hour of minimum wage labor today. Same-same. Good job Missouri Meerschaum for continuing to give us good value for our labor(dollar).