pdub
New member
- Joined
- May 31, 2013
- Messages
- 234
- Thread Author
- #1
Long story short, if a European manufacturer posts a list price in Euros, including VAT, that seems to be adhered to at all price-posting dealerships in Europe, would it not be reasonable to expect the American distributor to list these goods 20% less (to exclude VAT, which we don't pay) in USD, though maybe adding back in no more than 10% for import taxes and shipping costs (expecting greater expense to ship to US than to ship within Europe). But basically costing less in USD than the listed VAT-incl. prices in Europe. Certainly not more.
[That might not have been such a great summary ...]
To elaborate, some fairly esoteric Italian gear has caught my eye. European pricing through the line-up is 11,400 Euro ($13k US) - 30,000 Euro ($34.2k), VAT incl. The US price list is $15k (13.1 Euro)-$37k (32.4 Euro). In other words, the US price list, which should be starting from a base 20% less than the European, is actually more than the VAT-incl. European price list. So a 19,400 Euro VAT incl. piece would be 15,600 Euro, VAT excl. (ie, 20% less), or $17,800 at current exchange rates. The US distributor lists this piece at $25,000, and the manufacturer doesn't see a problem with this.
I did a down/dirty look at a couple other smallish European manufacturers with limited US distribution and found no evidence of US pricing in excess of VAT-incl. European pricing.
Realizing it's a free market yada, yada, is my understanding of the underlying economics here correct?
Thanks
Parker
[That might not have been such a great summary ...]
To elaborate, some fairly esoteric Italian gear has caught my eye. European pricing through the line-up is 11,400 Euro ($13k US) - 30,000 Euro ($34.2k), VAT incl. The US price list is $15k (13.1 Euro)-$37k (32.4 Euro). In other words, the US price list, which should be starting from a base 20% less than the European, is actually more than the VAT-incl. European price list. So a 19,400 Euro VAT incl. piece would be 15,600 Euro, VAT excl. (ie, 20% less), or $17,800 at current exchange rates. The US distributor lists this piece at $25,000, and the manufacturer doesn't see a problem with this.
I did a down/dirty look at a couple other smallish European manufacturers with limited US distribution and found no evidence of US pricing in excess of VAT-incl. European pricing.
Realizing it's a free market yada, yada, is my understanding of the underlying economics here correct?
Thanks
Parker