As explained in an earlier post, K&C and other companies that produce toy soldiers in China and price their sets in U.S. dollars have lost 10% just from the depreciation of the U.S. Dollar vs. the Chinese Yuan over the last ten months and close to 20% over the last 2 years. As a result, 10% of the price increase from last year just allows K&C to make the same amount of profit it did last year without even looking at any increases in labor costs, materials and shipping.
If at least 10% of the price increase from last year results from currency depreciation, the remaining 14% price increase is easily explained by the increases in the cost of packing foam (oil-based so almost tripled in price in last 8 months), metal alloy (30% or more depending on metal in China though Fubar posted it has doubled in the US), and labor (basic labor cost plus higher cost of adding the details required by current collectors).
I am not privy to the breakdown of K&C's actual figure costs, but all of the above information can be gleamed from business publications or the internet. I believe the price increases basically allow K&C to make maintain the same profit margin it had last year.
Collectors should also realize that manufacturing costs have been increasing the last several years, and that Andy has stated at several of his talks that K&C absorbed some of the past cost increases by reducing its profit margin and cutting other costs. If K&C had not tried to keep prices lower, the price for the referenced set should have been higher than $50 last year, and collectors would not have seen such a severe price increase.
At his talks, Andy has mentioned looking for factories in other countries like Thailand and Viet Nam. However, these countries do not have a similar pool of skilled artists like China that can produce the paint quality that collectors expect from K&C.
Most of K&C's factories are in the Guangdong area while Figarti is in Shanghai. While basic labor costs are actually higher in Shanghai, Figarti owns its own factory while K&C contracts out its production. Having its own factory allows Figarti to cut out a 3rd party factory's profit margin and produce figures at a lower cost. If Figarti produced K&C type polystone vehicles, it probably would be cheaper than K&C. However, Figarti choses to make vehicles with lots of detail like real rubber tires and hatches that open so the resultant vehicle costs more.