Deconstructing Value in a Production Chain
The production of a final consumer good involves three sequential firms: a raw material supplier, a manufacturer, and a retailer. The final good is sold to the consumer for $150. The manufacturer adds $60 of value during its stage of production. The retailer adds half as much value as the manufacturer. What was the selling price of the intermediate good sold by the raw material supplier to the manufacturer?
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Consider a production process for a wooden chair. A lumberjack sells raw wood to a sawmill for $20. The sawmill processes the wood into lumber and sells it to a furniture maker for $50. The furniture maker builds a chair and sells it to a retail store for $90. The retail store then sells the chair to a final customer for $120. If a new, more efficient saw allows the sawmill to sell the lumber to the furniture maker for $40 instead of $50 (with all other prices remaining the same), how does this change the value added by the furniture maker?
Calculating Value Added in a Production Chain
Calculating Domestic Value Added with Imports
True or False: In a production chain where a farmer sells wheat for $10 to a miller, who sells flour for $25 to a baker, who then sells bread for $40 to a consumer, the total value contributed to the economy is $75 ($10 + $25 + $40).
A bicycle is produced and sold in a multi-stage process. A mining company sells ore to a steel mill for $30. The steel mill sells steel tubes to a frame manufacturer for $70. The frame manufacturer sells the completed frame to an assembly plant for $120. The assembly plant sells the finished bicycle to a retailer for $250, who then sells it to a final consumer for $350. Match each business with the value it adds during its stage of production.
Correcting a Flawed Economic Calculation
Identifying Maximum Value Contribution
Consider a simplified production process for a bookcase. Initially, a logger sells wood for $40 to a mill. The mill processes it into lumber and sells it to a furniture factory for $70. The factory then produces a bookcase and sells it to a retailer for $150. The retailer sells the bookcase to a final customer for $200. Now, imagine the furniture factory vertically integrates, buying the forest and logging the wood itself. It still produces the same bookcase and sells it to the retailer for $150, who in turn sells it to the customer for $200. How does this vertical integration affect the total value added to the economy from the production and sale of the bookcase?
Deconstructing Value in a Production Chain
A leather-bound book is sold to a final consumer for $120. The production process involves four stages. The rancher who provides the raw hide adds $15 in value. The bookbinder who assembles the book adds $40 in value. The final retailer adds $30 in value. The tannery processes the hide into leather and is the second stage in this chain. At what price does the tannery sell the processed leather to the bookbinder?