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Price Discrimination Methods
1. Submitted By:
Group 6
Lavish Khurana
Lokendra Singh Rathore
Mehak Kaul
Navlika Sinha
Nikita Sharma
Simranjeet Kaur
Yash Kanchan
Zahid M Jamal
Submitted to:
Dr. Biranchi Narayan Swar
Price Discrimination METHODS
2. Price discrimination is a microeconomic pricing strategy where identical or largely similar
goods or services are transacted at different prices by the same provider in different
markets.
Price discrimination is one of the competitive practices used by larger, established
businesses in an attempt to profit from differences in supply and demand from
consumers.
Price discrimination is a pricing strategy that occurs when a business or seller charges
a different price to various customers for the same product or service.
A company can enhance its profits by charging each customer the maximum amount he is
willing to pay, eliminating consumer surplus, but it is often a challenge to determine what
that exact price is for every buyer.
3. TYPE OF PRICE DISCRIMINATION
FIRST
DEGREE
SECOND
DEGREE
THIRD
DEGREE
4. First Degree
• This type of pricing strategy takes place when
businesses can accurately determine what each
customer is willing to pay for a specific product or
service and selling that good or service for that exact
price.
• In some industries, such as used car or truck sales,
an expectation to negotiate final purchase price is
part of the buying process. The company selling the
used car can gather information through data
mining relating to each buyer's past purchase habits,
income, budget and maximum available output to
determine what to charge for each car sold. This
pricing strategy is time-consuming and difficult to
perfect for most businesses, but it allows the seller
to capture the highest amount of available profit for
each sale.
Second Degree
• In second degree price discrimination, the ability to
gather information on every potential buyer is not
present. Instead, companies price products or
services differently based on the preferences of
various groups of consumers.
• This type of pricing strategy is used most often in
warehouse retailers, such as Sam's Club or Costco,
but it can also be seen in companies that offer
loyalty or rewards cards to frequent customers.
• Second degree price discrimination does not
altogether eliminate consumer surplus, but it does
allow a company to increase its profit margin on a
subset of its consumer base.
Third Degree
• Third degree price discrimination occurs when
companies price products and services differently
based on the unique demographics of subsets of its
consumer base, such as students, military personnel
or seniors.
• Companies can understand the broad characteristics
of consumers more easily than the buying
preferences of individual buyers. Third degree price
discrimination provides a way to reduce consumer
surplus by catering to the price elasticity of
demand of specific consumer subsets.
• This type of pricing strategy is often seen in movie
theater ticket sales, admission prices to amusement
parks or restaurant offers. Consumer groups that
may otherwise not be able or willing to purchase a
product due to their lower income are captured by
this pricing strategy, increasing company profits.