Dammit I had a response all typed up and fat-fingered a keyboard shortcut. WTF chrome does not even have an option to enable warning before closing a tab if you have entered content!
trying to recreate...
So yeah - the "ingredients costing more than the finished product" thing is what I meant by systematic issues. Economies of scale work great when you are "part of the economy" and terrible if you aren't, because the barrier to entry to getting enough resources to take advantage of that scale are terrible.
It still works out in your favor. Let's just assume the cost of flour is the only cost in bread for simplicity's sake.
A bag of flour costs a
lot less now, in relation to wages, than it ever did in the "good old days". But, think about it. You might buy a 20-pound bag of flour, and that would be really pushing on how much flour one person can keep around and deal with. A pallet can hold around 4000 pounds, and the big bakeries are buying flour by the pallet, not the bag. It's just much cheaper to ship 4000 pounds of flour to one person than to bag up 200 x 20 pound bags and sell them by retail to individuals. You could match price with the bakery, but only if you buy the 4000-pound amount of flour and turn your house into a flour warehouse for life.
Consider an equivalent scenario: a guy bought a
lot of vegetables and sold soup to 20 people. Would you claim you were missing out, because you couldn't buy 1/20th the amount of vegetables for the same price he made one bowl of soup? Or, if you bought ingredients for
one pizza, but your neighbor bought ingredients for 20 pizzas, and offered to sell you one pizza for less than the cost of your ingredients.
That's the same scenario as the bread. "systematic issues" doesn't make any sense. It's just the logic of economies of scale. One big bakery making a lot of bread for everyone is just much more efficient than lots of people getting the ingredients and making bread just for themselves. The cost of flour vs bread reflects that the lone-bread-makers are expending more actual resources than the big bakery.