FenrirIII to Work Reform • 10 months agoRational Self Interestimagemessage-square21arrow-up1376arrow-down113cross-posted to: comicstrips
arrow-up1363arrow-down1imageRational Self InterestFenrirIII to Work Reform • 10 months agomessage-square21cross-posted to: comicstrips
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink1•10 months agoNo, you never will without increasing prices to cover the additional overhead of increased production. Remember, only the machine is doubling efficiency, but operations has to increase to handle the new output and resources required.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink2•10 months agoBut some operational costs (I.e. Ground Rent, Marketing, Legal Fees, IP Costs etc…) do not scale with increased output.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink1•10 months agoAgain this is a case of “it depends”. If you are not a market driver then yes it does. (‘mom & pop motor vehicles’ isn’t going to make a dent in the global car market. )
minus-square@trolololollink1•10 months agoNot if most of you cost is labor, you’ll be approaching marginal increase in costs but still certainly of double income.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink1•10 months agoThe labor costs aren’t going away, just shifting. You have to increase employment in other areas to handle a 100% increase in product output. Besides the fact that labor costs are rarely a large enough portion of a manufacturer’s budget to make that big of a difference.
No, you never will without increasing prices to cover the additional overhead of increased production.
Remember, only the machine is doubling efficiency, but operations has to increase to handle the new output and resources required.
But some operational costs (I.e. Ground Rent, Marketing, Legal Fees, IP Costs etc…) do not scale with increased output.
Nor does demand for your product.
Again this is a case of “it depends”. If you are not a market driver then yes it does. (‘mom & pop motor vehicles’ isn’t going to make a dent in the global car market. )
Not if most of you cost is labor, you’ll be approaching marginal increase in costs but still certainly of double income.
The labor costs aren’t going away, just shifting. You have to increase employment in other areas to handle a 100% increase in product output.
Besides the fact that labor costs are rarely a large enough portion of a manufacturer’s budget to make that big of a difference.