Measurement costs and pricing methods in the retail produce market

A persistent practice in the retail produce market is the mixed use of per unit and per pound pricing for bulk produce commodities. While per pound pricing explicitly prices the size dimension of the produce, per unit pricing (known in the industry as "by the each" pricing) is a fo...

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Main Author: Malishka, Peter
Language:en
Published: 1999
Online Access:http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/1999/malishka/MalishkaP1999.pdf
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spelling ndltd-MONTSTATE-http---etd.lib.montana.edu-etd-1999-malishka-MalishkaP1999.pdf2012-07-03T13:19:55Z Measurement costs and pricing methods in the retail produce market Malishka, Peter A persistent practice in the retail produce market is the mixed use of per unit and per pound pricing for bulk produce commodities. While per pound pricing explicitly prices the size dimension of the produce, per unit pricing (known in the industry as "by the each" pricing) is a form of average pricing whereby units differing in size and value are sold for the same price. When goods are average priced, opportunities exist for buyers to find units of exceptional value at the going price. Exploiting these opportunities requires buyers to measure and compare the values of individual units. Measurement of this kind often results in costly wealth transfers among buyers and between buyers and sellers. Profit maximization implies that sellers will avoid average pricing and its associated measurement costs whenever alternative pricing methods can be implemented at lower cost. This study examines the implications of measurement costs in the retail produce market, and develops predictions concerning the seller's decision to set an average price (price per each) or a price per pound. Logistic regression analysis is used to test the predictions on retail price data from major retailers in Bozeman, Montana. The results suggest that sellers choose between the two pricing methods in a manner that is consistent with the minimization of pre-sale measurement costs. 1999-05-15 Thesis Montana State University en http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/1999/malishka/MalishkaP1999.pdf
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description A persistent practice in the retail produce market is the mixed use of per unit and per pound pricing for bulk produce commodities. While per pound pricing explicitly prices the size dimension of the produce, per unit pricing (known in the industry as "by the each" pricing) is a form of average pricing whereby units differing in size and value are sold for the same price. When goods are average priced, opportunities exist for buyers to find units of exceptional value at the going price. Exploiting these opportunities requires buyers to measure and compare the values of individual units. Measurement of this kind often results in costly wealth transfers among buyers and between buyers and sellers. Profit maximization implies that sellers will avoid average pricing and its associated measurement costs whenever alternative pricing methods can be implemented at lower cost. This study examines the implications of measurement costs in the retail produce market, and develops predictions concerning the seller's decision to set an average price (price per each) or a price per pound. Logistic regression analysis is used to test the predictions on retail price data from major retailers in Bozeman, Montana. The results suggest that sellers choose between the two pricing methods in a manner that is consistent with the minimization of pre-sale measurement costs.
author Malishka, Peter
spellingShingle Malishka, Peter
Measurement costs and pricing methods in the retail produce market
author_facet Malishka, Peter
author_sort Malishka, Peter
title Measurement costs and pricing methods in the retail produce market
title_short Measurement costs and pricing methods in the retail produce market
title_full Measurement costs and pricing methods in the retail produce market
title_fullStr Measurement costs and pricing methods in the retail produce market
title_full_unstemmed Measurement costs and pricing methods in the retail produce market
title_sort measurement costs and pricing methods in the retail produce market
publishDate 1999
url http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/1999/malishka/MalishkaP1999.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT malishkapeter measurementcostsandpricingmethodsintheretailproducemarket
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