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Are Consumers Fooled by Discounts? An Experimental Test in a Consumer Search Environment

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Ke,  Changxia
Public Economics, MPI for Intellectual Property, Competition and Tax Law, Max Planck Society;

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wp2010-22.pdf
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Citation

Ke, C., & Bayer, R.-C. (2010). Are Consumers Fooled by Discounts? An Experimental Test in a Consumer Search Environment. University of Adelaide, School of Economics Research Paper, 2010-22.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-0011-4E01-E
Abstract
In this paper we investigate experimentally if people search optimally and how price promotions influence search behavior. We implement a sequential search task with exogenous price dispersion in a baseline treatment and introduce discounts in two experimental treatments. We find that search behavior is roughly consistent with optimal search but also observe some discount biases. If subjects don't know in advance where discounts are offered the purchase probability is increased by 19 percentage points in shops with discounts, even after controlling for the benefit of the discount and for risk preferences. If consumers know in advance where discounts are given then the bias is only weakly significant and much smaller (7 percentage points)