Comment by like_any_other

9 months ago

> The only difference? One was labeled “Made in Asia” and priced at $129. The other, “Made in the USA,” at $239. [85% more expensive]

> And many are willing to pay a premium for domestically made goods. Nearly half (48%) say they’d be willing to pay around 10–20% more. 17% say they’d be willing to pay ~30% more for an American-made product over an imported one. - https://www.retailbrew.com/stories/2022/07/28/consumers-will...

The article does not say how many would pay 85% more, but since the number more than halved from 10% to 30% more, I would hazard not many.

I suspect that those folks who answer survey questions of "would you pay more for made in the USA" with "yes" are thinking (if they are thinking at all) of paying $2 to $3 more on a $100 item, not paying $110 more on a $100 item.

None of the surveys are ever crafted to ask: "How much more would you pay for a $100 item for 'made in the USA'?".

  • It is largely pointless, in general, to survey people about how much they would pay for things. Taking such answers seriously has led a lot of companies to ruin. The whole point of pricing is that no one knows how much something is worth until it is actually selling (or not).

    • Yeah isn’t this like the number one lesson for startups? People will say lots of things when there’s no money or reputations on the line.

  • Quality is also an undefined variable, because people may pay 10% more for an American made product that is of comparable quality, but they may also be willing to pay 110% more if the Asian counterpart is poor quality.

    When you’re using the same exact photos, there’s no discernible quality difference.

    • Ironically, perhaps, but in 2025 I'd argue the Asian counterpart would probably be of higher quality, at least in the initial transition back to US manufacturing. AND it would be cheaper.

  • The survey already used percentages. As for not thinking - it would seem to me worrying about the effects of one's purchases on the local economy, and the knock-on effects this has on sovereignty and politics, takes more thought than just short-sightedly picking the cheaper option no matter what.

It's like when people say they'll pay extra for more legroom but only book the cheapest possible tickets.

  • Legroom is mostly overpriced, people would be more willing to pay if it was properly priced. Paying 50% more doesn't get you 50% more area in the plane.

  • £70 on a £100 ticket? Yeah no wonder! They're too poor after paying £100 for a checked bag

    Or long haul premium economy which is just absurdly priced now, often 100-200% more than economy.

  • I’ve never done that - I have flown a lot in my life, much of it internationally and the flight times / fewest number of layovers trumps cost.

Americans in the market for a "premium" shower head are clearly not looking for the cheapest thing on the market. So it's obvious that they would be willing to spend more for the added feel-good of a domestic product.