Top 10 Biggest Product Price Markups - YouTube

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Top 10 Biggest Price Markups
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10.
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Cosmetics
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The thing that many people forget about makeup is what it’s made out of.
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Make up is usually around 80-90% dirt!
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The other ingredients usually consist of oil and wax.
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People pay ridiculous amounts of money to put dirt on their face!
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Fragrances are added to make them smell nice; but it’s still clay or dirt.
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A couple grams of dirt will sell in a fancy department store for $20-30.
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The actual cost of the product is the cost of walking outside picking up a handful of
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clay, grinding it up and adding fragrance and putting it in a little fancy case.
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Then it can be sold at a huge markup.
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With the proliferation of designer makeup brands and competitive companies, luxury and
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name brands of makeup have become popular.
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The old adage says: you can put lipstick on a pig, but it’s still a pig; and you can
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put dirt in a fancy jar; but it is still dirt.
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Consider making your own makeup at home (it sounds hard, but it’s not).
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“Recipes” for creating homemade makeup are everywhere on the internet and can save
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you money.
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9.
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Bottled water
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Bottled water; what a ripoff!
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Someone decided to take one of the world’s most plentiful resources and cover it with
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plastic and charge $3-4 a bottle!
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Bottled water is commonplace at convenience stores, beverage machines, and in the cooler
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at basketball games.
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But why?
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When did we stop drinking from taps and drinking fountains and switch to polyethylene coated
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H20?
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When bottled water splashed onto the market, it was being marketed as a healthy alternative
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to soft drinks.
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But it has evolved into an issue of convenience.
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Instead of using a reusable bottle, it is now easier to grab a prepackaged disposable
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bottle of water and drop it off in the nearest garbage receptacle when finished with it.
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But is it any different from tap water?
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Some companies market their water as being the “purest” or “cleanest” but in
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fact, all water must comply with federal regulations of cleanliness regardless of whether it is
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being drunk out of a plastic bottle or from the tap.
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Water can usually be attained for free at most places.
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Bottled water is a corporate success story; they took a readily available product (one
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of the most abundant resources on the planet!) and packaged it into a popular product that
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everyone is willing to pay for.
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But it hurts the consumer’s wallet; not to mention it’s horrible for the environment.
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8.
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Greeting cards
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The markup on a greeting card is around 100-200%; which is pretty modest considering some of
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the more vicious markups on other products.
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But retailers spend very little money to produce this product, so the unsold products do not
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hurt the bottom line as much as say, an unsold car.
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Greeting cards are one of the best items to mark up because they are so cheap, and unsold
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merchandise does not dramatically affect the bottom line.
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Paper is cheap, but paper with some sappy writing on it is expensive.
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It’s a retailer’s dream product!
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A little piece of paper with some writing on it that can be sold for three or four bucks.
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Recently, electronic greeting cards (also called e-cards) have proliferated and can
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be found on the internet for free.
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On Amazon.com, 20 packs of blank greeting cards are available at a cost of $10.99 for
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a cost of 55 cents per card.
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Next time you want to save some of that paper in your wallet when it comes to getting a
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greeting card, choose to use your own greeting card!
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It will be more meaningful and will cost less.
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7.
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Mattresses and furniture
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Ever notice how mattresses and furniture are always on sale?
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Well there’s a reason for that.
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Furniture salesmen receive a higher commission if they sell their product at MSRP (manufacturer
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suggested retail price); usually a minimum of 20%.
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If they sell their product at MAP (minimum advertised price) they receive a minuscule
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7% commission.
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If you were a salesman, which price would you sell it at?
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Do your research and find out what the product is actually worth, then buy it.
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Markups range from 200%-400%.
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Buying an expensive mattress might make you sleep better right away, but it could leave
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you tossing and turning at night in the long run.
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The best thing to do to avoid being duped at a furniture store is to shop around a lot
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before you make your final decision.
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There is often a wide disparity in the price for the same product between two competing
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stores; it all depends on the MSRP, the MAP, and the honesty of the salespeople.
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6.
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Restaurant drinks (wine and soda)
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Wine has an astonishing 300-600% markup.
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If you can forego that glass of wine with dinner, your wallet will thank you.
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What’s even more shocking is that the average markup is even higher for soda.
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A 12 ounce glass of soda costs the restaurant nickels, but it is sold for dollars; and it
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is half filled with ice!
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It’s no secret that you can buy a soda from a soda machine for between fifty and seventy
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five cents and that same soda will cost $2.75 in a restaurant.
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Lately there has been talk of adding a hefty tax to soda because it is unhealthy.
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So it’s only going to get more expensive.
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If you’re tired of whining about wine and sniveling about soda, maybe it’s time to
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choose water instead!
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(But not bottled water!)
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5.
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Brand name clothing
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Brand name clothiers rely on the advertising power of humans as walking billboards as well
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as conventional marketing strategies for the advancement of their products.
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The cost of looking good rises every year as more and higher end clothing brands are
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created.
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The cost of the clothes doesn’t change; only the label on the back does, and that’s
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what changes the price on the tag.
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The markup can be 500-1000%, depending on if it’s an up and coming brand name clothier
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or an established Italian sounding name brand.
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The trendy and fashionable know what the price of looking “hip” is, and it is seldom
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cheap.
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Apparently the label is worth paying the extra money, because high end clothing retailers
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continue to thrive, even in hard economic times.
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The popular names and symbols that are associated with major clothing companies are hard to
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escape from, as they are literally everywhere.
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People will pay big bucks for “the look,” even if it costs them an arm and a leg to
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clothe their arms and legs and feet (shoes).
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4.
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Jewelry/diamonds
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The glittery rocks that cost a fortune are subject to volatile changes in price and high
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markups.
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Although the industry average markup varies widely, (100% to up to 1000%) it’s probably
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not a good deal regardless of where the jewelry is purchased.
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Jewelers thrive on the uneducated buyer, so it is wise to do research before buying to
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settle on a good price and product.
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Ridiculously cheap or expensive jewelry should raise a red flag because it is probably of
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substandard quality.
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It’s always a good decision to find out what the same jewelry’s price is at other
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stores.
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That information can be used as a negotiating tool.
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Also, a diamond over $1000 should come with a certificate certifying its legitimacy from
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the Gemological Institute of America.
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Don’t let these rocks rock your monthly budget or you may find yourself in the hole.
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3.
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Glasses frames
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Why A little scrap of metal costs hundreds of dollars is one of life’s great mysteries.
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Yet eyeglass wearers continue to get smoked at the optometrist when they squander huge
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sums of money for frames that hardly weigh an ounce.
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The markup can be as high as 1000%!
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Consider perusing the internet for alternatives before spending hundreds of dollars on frames.
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Never buy accessories at optometrist’s offices because they are heavily marked up.
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Clip-ons, glasses cases, and other eyeglass accessories can usually be purchased for a
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very reasonable price on the internet.
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Don’t pay for products at the eye care office before looking over the internet; or you could
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end up looking at it in hindsight and regretting it; and hindsight is 20/20.
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2.
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Movie theater popcorn/candy
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It’s no secret that popcorn and candy are expensive at the movie theater.
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It doesn’t take an Alan Greenspan to deduce that movie theater popcorn has a high profit
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to cost margin.
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Concession sales only make up about 20% of total sales in movie theaters but make up
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to 40% of the average profit.
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Why?
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Because movie theaters need to sell overpriced food to keep ticket prices low.
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If ticket prices were high, no one would come in the doors and subsequently spend money
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on snacks.
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So the price of admission is cheap, but the snacks are where movie companies make the
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highest profit margin.
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So what is the average markup of movie theater popcorn?
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900-1200% according to Richard B. Mckenzie, author of “Why popcorn costs so much at
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the movies” and an economics professor at UC Irvine.
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Better stick to sneaking your snacks in.
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1.
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Prescription Medicine
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Prescription medicine tops the list of highest markups.
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The sky high cost of prescription medications is crippling the economy of the United States
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and keeping necessary medicines out of the hands of those who need it most; people living
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on fixed incomes with acute or chronic health issues.”A bottle of tamoxifen, used to fight
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breast cancer, costs $360 in the United States.
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It costs $60 in Germany,” according to U.S. House Representative Jo Ann Emerson of Missouri.
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Canada and European countries’ prescription medication prices are regulated by government
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imposed “ceiling” prices; essentially a li1mit on how high the prices can get for
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medicines.
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They also negotiate directly with drug companies.
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However, no such price controls exist in the United States and we are paying 200%-5600%
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markups on essential medicines such as Prozac and Xanax!
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These two medicines are taken long periods of time; for depression and anxiety disorders
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respectively, which means that the patients that use these prescriptions will be shelling
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out thousands of dollars over the course of a lifetime to obtain them.
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Award winning Detroit reporter Steve Wilson exposed dozens of Detroit area pharmacies
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for illegitimate price gouging on the prices of their generic drugs.
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They were buying them at rock bottom price and selling them at an average of 900-1200%
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markup, depending on the medicine.
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The local pharmacies were found selling Vasotec, a blood pressure medication for $60 when it
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cost them $6 to buy the generic version.
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Similar markups were found at most of the pharmacies in the area; except one.
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The solution: Costco wholesalers consistently had the best prices with mark-ups between
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86 and 423%, not 3,000 to 5,000% according to Florida WFTV reporter Barbara West, who
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conducted an investigation similar to Steve Wilson’s.
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Be wary of the cost of prescription medications when buying from local pharmacies, as they
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may be interested in your wealth instead of
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your health.