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The new arbitrage - importing Big Macs from Taiwan.


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2024 Aug 8, 6:03am   175 views  10 comments

by Al_Sharpton_for_President   ➕follow (5)   💰tip   ignore  



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1   Patrick   2024 Aug 8, 9:58am  

Lol, would be a good profit opportunity if we had the Star Trek transporter room.
2   Ceffer   2024 Aug 8, 10:09am  

Cheaper because they don't have baby burger/Captagon ghetto rages busting up half their shops.
3   Onvacation   2024 Aug 8, 10:10am  

Patrick says

Lol, would be a good profit opportunity if we had the Star Trek transporter room.

If you had a transporter you would have a replicator,
Picard "Tea, Earl Grey, Hot"
4   AD   2024 Aug 8, 10:19am  

The Big Mac is more expensive in the USA considering even in traditionally "cheap cost of living areas" like the Florida panhandle, the starting wage at fast food restaurants is $15 an hour. Also commercial rents have gone up a lot in the Florida panhandle.

The cost of business has increased a lot, as evidenced by the overall inflation rate increasing about 25% since spring of 2022.

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5   WookieMan   2024 Aug 8, 10:54am  

I think it has more to do with the beef. Importing it would be more expensive than paying $15/hr (I don't agree with $15/hr). I think the cheaper countries use local cows and they're poorly cared for. Land cost less for them to graze. Basically cheap/shitty beef.

Go to Costa Rica and get some ground beef. It's pure trash. There's also more demand for fast food in the states versus many other countries. Basic supply and demand. Plus better, more expensive beef/cows here.

My MIL just got McDonalds for my kids and I'm pissed about it. I don't know if I'll ever eat fast food again with Arby's being the exception. Don't know why, I just like their food. But that's maybe once per year.
6   AD   2024 Aug 8, 7:43pm  

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Back in the mid 1980's the average hourly rate was $5 for service workers in South Florida. And also that was the price for a burger meal at Dirty Moe's.

I think also a burger meal at a sit down restaurant is the same as starting hourly wage for service workers (~$15) in South Florida.

I saw at Burger King on Thomas Drive this week that a Whopper regular meal is $10.99 (and Double Whopper is $12.99); same type of fast food restaurant pays $15 an hour for starting wage.

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7   Patrick   2024 Aug 8, 8:39pm  

This is why we need physical silver coins as currency once again.
8   AD   2024 Aug 8, 9:01pm  

Patrick says

This is why we need physical silver coins as currency once again.


I agree Patrick.

Three silver quarters (0.54 ounces of troy silver) will always equal at least a Double Whopper meal.

With productivity and innovation gains, perhaps it will only take two silver quarters to purchase a Double Whopper meal.

McDonalds has kiosks to order food which eventually should help to reduce labor costs, and hopefully those savings get passed on to the consumer.

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9   RWSGFY   2024 Aug 8, 10:52pm  

Patrick says

This is why we need physical silver coins as currency once again.


What would stop McD from charging different amount of silver coins for the same meal in different locations? Not to mention that anyone who visited McD or BK overseas knows that the meal is not the same. For example in Australia everything was smaller, condiments were extra, etc.
10   AmericanKulak   2024 Aug 8, 11:33pm  

Taiwan is closer to the Emu supply.

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