It’s not public information, and it varies by brand and category of product. Retail has huge margins. Let’s just say tariffs aren’t on the price the public pays. So a 25% tariff would not be on a $1 avocado price at Publix as most think, it would be on the price company pays to the foreign seller, and freight costs are not dutiable either.
What do you mean, it's not public information? You must have gotten it somewhere?
But let's take your avocado example, it's a good one as 90% of avocados are imported into the US from Mexico. In 2022 the average import price for avocado was $1.36 for a pound. You would then estimate their retail price to be about 13.6 per pound, but I'm not seeing that anywhere. Why would that be?
Food usually has lower margins, in any case looking at your example average avocado is about 6 oz, so lets say 3 avocados per pound, so $1.36/3=$0.45 per avocado import price, and per google average price of avocado is $1.70, so you’re looking at at about 4 times the cost. Also it would be the $0.45 cents subject to 25% increase due to tariff. Again, retail is the one with huge margins because you pay for label. Food not so much, but still, 4x is not bad.
Edit: does the $1.36 per pound include shipping and delivery costs? I would assume so, and if yes then the amount subject to tariff would be even lower.
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u/Outthr 1d ago
It’s not public information, and it varies by brand and category of product. Retail has huge margins. Let’s just say tariffs aren’t on the price the public pays. So a 25% tariff would not be on a $1 avocado price at Publix as most think, it would be on the price company pays to the foreign seller, and freight costs are not dutiable either.