完整後設資料紀錄
DC 欄位語言
dc.contributor.authorAntonio Filippin
dc.date.accessioned2020-08-25T07:55:01Z-
dc.date.available2020-08-25T07:55:01Z-
dc.date.issued2013/07/01
dc.identifier.issnissn18190917
dc.identifier.urihttp://dspace.fcu.edu.tw/handle/2376/2699-
dc.description.abstractThe paper investigates the effect of .99 price endings on consumer demand by means of a field experiment. Results tail behind other contributions showing how .99-endings can be ineffective, casting doubts on their widespread use among retailers. When the .99-ending price is removed an increase of sales emerges from descriptive statistics as well as in a multivariate framework in which sales of the treated item are the only dependent variable. However, such a counterintuitive effect does not survive in a differences-in-differences model in which the daily sales of all the relevant substitutes are jointly analyzed. There is no evidence of any common shock during the treatment. In contrast, a different price-elasticity of demand drives the relative increase of sales of the treated item when prices of the substitutes are on average higher. Once the different reactions to price changes are taken into account, the treated item does not display significantly higher sales as compared to its substitutes when the .99-ending price is removed.
dc.description.sponsorship逢甲大學
dc.format.extent19
dc.language.iso英文
dc.relation.ispartofseries經濟與管理論叢
dc.relation.ispartofseries第9卷第2期
dc.subjectprice ending
dc.subjectfield experiment
dc.subjectpricing
dc.titleThe Effect of .99 Price Endings on Consumer Demand: An Example of     Confounding Factors Surviving in Field Experiments
dc.type期刊篇目
分類:第 09卷第2期

文件中的檔案:
沒有與此文件相關的檔案。


在 DSpace 系統中的文件,除了特別指名其著作權條款之外,均受到著作權保護,並且保留所有的權利。