Topic 7: Innovative Pricing

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Topic 7: Innovative Pricing

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Car Selling. Seller has many cars for sale. ... Re-sale and arbitrage ... Rates for rental cars are also differentiated by the size of the vehicle and the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Topic 7: Innovative Pricing


1
Topic 7 Innovative Pricing
  • How to use price discrimination to raiseboth
    profits and total value
  • Paul Kerin Sam Wylie
  • MBS Term 3, 2004

2
Car Selling
  • Seller has many cars for sale. Each is worth
    1,000 (can be bought or sold at wholesale
    auction for 1,000)
  • There are two kinds of buyers

3
One-sided Private Information
  • Seller does not know each individual buyers type
    but knows the proportion of each type
  • Buyers know their own type

4
Bargaining
  • Seller makes take-it-or-leave-it offer to any
    potential buyer
  • Must offer the same price to all
  • Charge 1,040 and get expected profit of 40
  • Charge 1,100 and get expected profit of 50
  • These are the only two price candidates
  • Seller takes a 50 chance of not realising gains
    from trade

5
Opportunities
Price
Lost Opportunity
1100
1040
1000
Q
Quantity
6
No market breakdown
7
Examples of Price Discrimination
  • Despite differences in costs of 1 per unit,
    hardcover books sell for much more than softcover
    ones
  • Different prices charged for adjacent seats on
    the same aircraft
  • Special coupons given for discounts on pizza
    delivery (why not just discount the price?)
  • Differing arrays of mobile phone plans available
  • Export market versus domestic market

8
Classifying Pricing Strategies
9
Linear Pricing

Triangles of Opportunity
P
MC
D
MR
Quantity
Q
10
(Imperfect) Personalised Pricing

Examples B2B Negotiations, Amazon?
Consumer Surplus
Individually tailored prices
Profits
MC
Q
Quantity
11
Tough Conditions
  • Costly negotiations
  • With large numbers of customers, it becomes
    costly to get involved in individual negotiations
  • Information requirements
  • Do you really know WTP?
  • Re-sale and arbitrage
  • If customers buy many units, then ones charged a
    low price can re-sell (at profit) to those who
    would be charged a high price

12
Non-linear Pricing Variable Quantities
  • We now look at price discrimination where
    consumers choose how much of a good or service to
    consume. In this situation, the average price
    that a consumer pays may differ from person to
    person
  • We will also revisit price discrimination that is
    not specific to the variable quantity issue

13
Non-Linear Prices
  • Suppose you operate a service or sell a good.
  • A customer may purchase a quantity, q.
  • You can charge a price based on that quantity
    I.e., a function, P(q).
  • A linear price has P(q) p

14
Examples of Nonlinear Pricing
  • Regulated Industries
  • Per unit price depends on quantity
  • Taxes depend on income
  • Unregulated Industries
  • Quantity discounts
  • Rebates
  • Take-or-pay contracts
  • Credits towards subsequent purchases

15
Electricity
  • Electricity tariffs specify energy charges based
    on the total kwh used in the billing period, as
    well as demand charges based on the peak power
    load during the year
  • Lower rates apply to successive blocks of kwh and
    in some cases the demand charges are also divided
    into blocks
  • Energy rates for most industrial customers are
    further differentiated by the time of use, as
    between peak and off-peak periods

16
Telecommunications
  • Telephone companies offer a variety of tariffs
    for measured long distance calls, local calls and
    access
  • Each tariff provides the least-cost service for a
    particular range of traffic volumes
  • Rates are also differentiated by distance and
    time of use
  • Mobile phone contracts have a take-or-pay quality

17
Airlines
  • Airline fares allow frequent flier credits
    toward free tickets based on accumulated mileage.
    The retail value of a free ticket increases
    sharply with the number of miles used to acquire
    it
  • Further discounts are offered for advance
    purchase, non-cancellation, round trip, weekend
    stays, and duration

18
Rental Agreements
  • Rental rates for durable equipment and space,such
    as vehicles and parking spaces, are lower if the
    duration is longer
  • Rates for rental cars are also differentiated by
    the size of the vehicle and the time of use

19
Classifying Non-linear Prices
  • Block-declining or tapered tariffs marginal
    prices decline in successive increments as
    purchases increase
  • Two-part tariff comprises an initial fixed fee
    and a per-unit price for units purchased

20
Graphical Representation
Three-Part
Linear
TR(P(q).q)
Two-Part
Fixed-Fee
Block
Nonlinear
q
21
Two Part Tariff
  • Charge consumers an entry fee (F) and a per unit
    price (p)
  • F will be higher, the higher is consumer value
  • If a consumer consumes q, this value is u(q)
    p.q
  • As reduce p consumers choose to consumer more
  • For p gt MC, reducing p increases a consumers
    value
  • For p lt MC, there is over-consumption, reducing
    profits
  • So choose p MC to maximise consumer value and
    set F as high as possible so that consumers
    purchase something
  • Can always make more by doing this than choosing
    p gt MC.
  • So long as consumers relatively similar
  • If consumers are very different, may prefer a
    three or greater part tariff structure

22
Two Part Tariff

Fixed fee to capture a share of this
At unit price MC, consumers choose this quantity
D
Unit Price
MC
Quantity
Q
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