Sure, but that doesn’t change the cost of the liquid. It’s a direct comparison of the price of 1ml for each product. That’s not a problem, that’s just the cost of the liquid. People do the same thing with different metals, rocks, and whatever else you want to compare the price of.
Of course the amount of liquid(or other stuff) you sell change the cost of the product.
If you for example only produce/sell 1 litre of a product, then all your costs(plant, distribution, people, suppliers…) will be spread throuout this 1 litre you sell, but if you could sell 1000 litre of that product the cost per litre would be lower. Of course your overall costs will increase with your output increase, but not on the same level. That’s called Economy of Scale
Sure, but that doesn’t change the cost of the liquid. It’s a direct comparison of the price of 1ml for each product. That’s not a problem, that’s just the cost of the liquid. People do the same thing with different metals, rocks, and whatever else you want to compare the price of.
Of course the amount of liquid(or other stuff) you sell change the cost of the product.
If you for example only produce/sell 1 litre of a product, then all your costs(plant, distribution, people, suppliers…) will be spread throuout this 1 litre you sell, but if you could sell 1000 litre of that product the cost per litre would be lower. Of course your overall costs will increase with your output increase, but not on the same level. That’s called Economy of Scale
https://www.britannica.com/money/economy-of-scale