In Pursuit of Sustainable Mobile Policy: A Study of Consumer Tariff Preferences under Uncertainty

Literature suggests that consumers expect disutility not only from payment uncertainties but also from reference uncertainties embedded in mobile plans. This paper develops a model of mobile plan choice incorporating both reference and payment uncertainties and uses this model to derive testable imp...

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Main Authors: Seunghee Han, Jooyong Jun, Eunjung Yeo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-01-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/2/540
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spelling doaj-ce53190e11e44b44a00c18535e7ab9862021-01-09T00:02:10ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-01-011354054010.3390/su13020540In Pursuit of Sustainable Mobile Policy: A Study of Consumer Tariff Preferences under UncertaintySeunghee Han0Jooyong Jun1Eunjung Yeo2School of Business Administration, Chung-Ang University, Seoul 06974, KoreaDepartment of Economics, Dongguk University, Seoul 04620, KoreaSchool of Business Administration, Chung-Ang University, Seoul 06974, KoreaLiterature suggests that consumers expect disutility not only from payment uncertainties but also from reference uncertainties embedded in mobile plans. This paper develops a model of mobile plan choice incorporating both reference and payment uncertainties and uses this model to derive testable implications. The paper argues that consumer choice reflects those uncertainties more than could be justified by rational choice theory. Such patterns, the paper hypothesizes, would be more salient in the choice of data plan than voice plan because consumers tend to perceive data usage to be less controllable than voice usage, thus preferring the plan that reduces uncertainty. The paper tests the predictions with data from a laboratory study analyzing a series of choices between plans with different tariff structures—flat-rate, two-part, and three-part tariffs. As predicted, the results suggest that payment and reference uncertainties create significant disutility for consumers, especially when they perceive high uncertainty about their usage. Such understanding of consumer preference and underlying psychological biases is important in the sense that it provides an essential basis for the development of sustainable mobile policy.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/2/540tariff structurereferenceuncertaintygain–loss utilitymobile plans
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Seunghee Han
Jooyong Jun
Eunjung Yeo
spellingShingle Seunghee Han
Jooyong Jun
Eunjung Yeo
In Pursuit of Sustainable Mobile Policy: A Study of Consumer Tariff Preferences under Uncertainty
Sustainability
tariff structure
reference
uncertainty
gain–loss utility
mobile plans
author_facet Seunghee Han
Jooyong Jun
Eunjung Yeo
author_sort Seunghee Han
title In Pursuit of Sustainable Mobile Policy: A Study of Consumer Tariff Preferences under Uncertainty
title_short In Pursuit of Sustainable Mobile Policy: A Study of Consumer Tariff Preferences under Uncertainty
title_full In Pursuit of Sustainable Mobile Policy: A Study of Consumer Tariff Preferences under Uncertainty
title_fullStr In Pursuit of Sustainable Mobile Policy: A Study of Consumer Tariff Preferences under Uncertainty
title_full_unstemmed In Pursuit of Sustainable Mobile Policy: A Study of Consumer Tariff Preferences under Uncertainty
title_sort in pursuit of sustainable mobile policy: a study of consumer tariff preferences under uncertainty
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Literature suggests that consumers expect disutility not only from payment uncertainties but also from reference uncertainties embedded in mobile plans. This paper develops a model of mobile plan choice incorporating both reference and payment uncertainties and uses this model to derive testable implications. The paper argues that consumer choice reflects those uncertainties more than could be justified by rational choice theory. Such patterns, the paper hypothesizes, would be more salient in the choice of data plan than voice plan because consumers tend to perceive data usage to be less controllable than voice usage, thus preferring the plan that reduces uncertainty. The paper tests the predictions with data from a laboratory study analyzing a series of choices between plans with different tariff structures—flat-rate, two-part, and three-part tariffs. As predicted, the results suggest that payment and reference uncertainties create significant disutility for consumers, especially when they perceive high uncertainty about their usage. Such understanding of consumer preference and underlying psychological biases is important in the sense that it provides an essential basis for the development of sustainable mobile policy.
topic tariff structure
reference
uncertainty
gain–loss utility
mobile plans
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/2/540
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