Economics Project On Price Discrimination
Economics Project On Price Discrimination
Economics Project On Price Discrimination
ON
PRICE DISCRIMINATION
CONTENT
• ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
• CERTIFICATE
• INTRODUCTION
• THEORETICAL BASIS
• TYPES OF PRICE DISCRIMINATION
• MODERN TAXONOMY
• TWO PART TARIFF
• EXPLANATION
• EXAMPLES
• TWO NECESSARY CONDITIONS FOR P.D
• BIBLOGRAPHY
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
It gives me immense pleasure to present the project on economics , titled PRICE
DISCRIMINATION in the accomplishment of this project successfully, many people
have bestowed upon me and their blessings and the heart pledge support. It
would not have been possible without the kind support my teacher Mr Abdul
Quddus Ansari under whose guidance and constant supervision the project was
brought to the present state. His suggestions and instructions have serves as the
major contributor towards the completion of the project.
I would also like to express my gratitude towards my parents fpr their kind cp
operation and encouragement which helped me in the compelition of this project.
I am also thankful to my school principle Dr. Abdul Naseeb Khan , Syed Abid Husain
Sr. Sec. school for giving me such an amazing opportunity for making this project
and giving suitable instructions and guideline for the project.
Name : Mohammad Sahil Zafar
Roll no : ……………………………
CERTIFICATE
(Some of these examples are not pure "price discrimination", in that the
differential price is related to production costs: the marginal cost of providing
electricity or car parking spaces is very low outside peak hours. Incentivizing
consumers to switch to off-peak usage is done as much to minimize costs as to
maximize revenue.
Combination
These types are not mutually exclusive. Thus a company may vary
pricing by location, but then offer bulk discounts as well. Airlines use
several different types of price discrimination, including:
Complete discrimination
where each user purchases up to the point where the user's marginal benefit equals the
marginal cost of the item;
Direct segmentation
where the seller can condition price on some attribute (like age or gender) that directly
segments the buyers;
Indirect segmentation
where the seller relies on some proxy (e.g., package size, usage quantity, coupon) to
structure a choice that indirectly segments the buyers.
The hierarchy—complete/direct/indirect—is in decreasing order of profitability and
information requirement. Complete price discrimination is most profitable, and requires
the seller to have the most information about buyers. Indirect segmentation is least
profitable, and requires the seller to have the least information about buyers.
Two part tariff
The two-part tariff is another form of price discrimination
where the producer charges an initial fee then a
secondary fee for the use of the product. An example of
this is razors, you pay an initial cost for the razor and then
pay for the replacement blades. This pricing strategy works
because it shifts the demand curve to the right: since you
have already paid for the initial blade holder you will buy
the blades which are now cheaper than buying a
disposable razor.
Explanation
Sales revenue without and with Price Discrimination
The purpose of price discrimination is generally to capture the market's
consumer surplus. This surplus arises because, in a market with a single clearing
price, some customers (the very low price elasticity segment) would have
been prepared to pay more than the single market price. Price discrimination
transfers some of this surplus from the consumer to the producer/marketer.
Strictly, a consumer surplus need not exist, for example where some below-
cost selling is beneficial due to fixed costs or economies of scale. An example
is a high-speed internet connection shared by two consumers in a single
building; if one is willing to pay less than half the cost, and the other willing to
make up the rest but not to pay the entire cost, then price discrimination is
necessary for the purchase to take place.
Note that the above requires both first and second degree price
discrimination: the right segment corresponds partly to different people
than the left segment, partly to the same people, willing to buy more if the
product is cheaper
It is very useful for the price discriminator to determine the optimum prices in
each market segment. This is done in the next diagram where each segment is
considered as a separate market with its own demand curve. As usual, the
profit maximizing output (Qt) is determined by the intersection of the marginal
cost curve (MC) with the marginal revenue curve for the total market (MRt).
Travel industry
Airlines and other travel companies use differentiated pricing regularly,
as they sell travel products and services simultaneously to different
market segments. This is often done by assigning capacity to various
booking classes, which sell for different prices and which may be
linked to fare restrictions. The restrictions or "fences" help ensure that
market segments buy in the booking class range that has been
established for them. For example, schedule-sensitive business
passengers who are willing to pay $300 for a seat from city A to city B
cannot purchase a $150 ticket because the $150 booking class
contains a requirement for a Saturday-night stay, or a 15-day advance
purchase, or another fare rule that discourages, minimizes, or
effectively prevents a sale to business passengers.
Notice however that in this example "the seat" is not really always the
same product. That is, the business person who purchases the $300
ticket may be willing to do so in return for a seat on a high-demand
morning flight, for full refundability if the ticket is not used, and for the
ability to upgrade to first class if space is available for a nominal fee.
On the same flight are price-sensitive passengers who are not willing to
pay $300, but who are willing to fly on a lower-demand flight ( one
leaving an hour earlier), or via a connection city (not a non-stop flight),
and who are willing to forgo refundability.
On the other hand, an airline may also apply differential pricing to "the
same seat" over time, e.g. by discounting the price for an early or late
booking (without changing any other fare condition).
Coupons
The use of coupons in retail is an attempt to distinguish customers by
their reserve price. The assumption is that people who go through the
trouble of collecting coupons have greater price sensitivity than those
who do not. Thus, making coupons available enables, for instance,
breakfast cereal makers to charge higher prices to price-insensitive
customers, while still making some profit of customers who are more
price-sensitive.
Premium pricing
For certain products, premium products are priced at a level (compared to
"regular" or "economy" products) that is well beyond their marginal cost of
production. For example, a coffee chain may price regular coffee at $1, but
"premium" coffee at $2.50 (where the respective costs of production may be
$0.90 and $1.25). Economists such as Tim Harford in the Undercover Economist
have argued that this is a form of price discrimination: by providing a choice
between a regular and premium product, consumers are being asked to
reveal their degree of price sensitivity (or willingness to pay) for comparable
products. Similar techniques are used in pricing business class airline tickets
and premium alcoholic drinks, for example.
Gender Based Discrimination
Gender-based price discrimination is the practice of offering identical
or similar services and products to men and women at different prices
when the cost of producing the products and services is the same. In
the United States, gender-based price discrimination has been a
source of debate.
Two necessary conditions for price discrimination
There are two conditions that must be met if a price discrimination
scheme is to work. First the firm must be able to identify market
segments by their price elasticity of demand and second the firms
must be able to enforce the scheme. For example, airlines routinely
engage in price discrimination by charging high prices for customers
with relatively inelastic demand - business travelers - and discount
prices for tourist who have relatively elastic demand. The airlines
enforce the scheme by enforcing a no resale policy on the tickets
preventing a tourist from buying a ticket at a discounted price and
selling it to a business traveler (arbitrage). Airlines must also prevent
business travelers from directly buying discount tickets. Airlines
accomplish this by imposing advance ticketing requirements or
minimum stay requirements — conditions that would be difficult for
average business traveler to meet.
BIBLOGRAPHY