Risk Aversion and Preference for Store Price Format

When choosing among retail store formats, consumers face two alternatives: everyday-low-price (EDLP) stores that offer lower mean prices, with less variation over time, or promotion-based (HILO) stores that offer higher mean prices but more variation over time. In this study, we investigate a relati...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Koichi Yonezawa, Timothy J. Richards
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Western Agricultural Economics Association 2016-09-01
Series:Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/246173
Description
Summary:When choosing among retail store formats, consumers face two alternatives: everyday-low-price (EDLP) stores that offer lower mean prices, with less variation over time, or promotion-based (HILO) stores that offer higher mean prices but more variation over time. In this study, we investigate a relationship between consumers' risk preferences and their store-choice decisions. We use data from a two-stage, incentive-compatible experiment to measure subjects' risk preferences and to examine how their attitudes toward risk influence their preferences for store price format. We find that retailers' pricing strategies allow consumers with different risk attitudes to choose a particular store price format.
ISSN:1068-5502
2327-8285