Tariff-Specific Preferences and Their Influence on Price Sensitivity

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Abstract

For many services, consumers can choose among a range of optional tariffs that differ in their access and usage prices. Recent studies indicate that tariff-specific preferences may lead consumers to choose a tariff that does not minimize their expected billing rate. This study analyzes how tariff-specific preferences influence the responsiveness of consumers’ usage and tariff choice to changes in price. We show that consumer heterogeneity in tariff-specific preferences leads to heterogeneity in their sensitivity to price changes. Specifically, consumers with tariff-specific preferences are less sensitive to price increases of their preferred tariff than other consumers. Our results provide an additional reason why firms should offer multiple tariffs rather than a uniform nonlinear pricing plan to extract maximum consumer surplus.

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APA

Wolk, A., & Skiera, B. (2010). Tariff-Specific Preferences and Their Influence on Price Sensitivity. Business Research, 3(1), 70–80. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF03342716

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