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Topic: Are you aware of Shrinkflation? (Read 366 times)

legendary
Activity: 1974
Merit: 2124
June 09, 2021, 05:39:03 AM
#40
It's the one way of company market strategy where they want to increase the profits with inflation and expenses being increased.Many times we as consumers don't give much importance to these small changes as if they don't matter like if we are getting 3-4 grams less at same price we don't care but company is gaining huge profits on global level with these.Like PepsiCo products Lays says 25% extra with same rate but it's just the size of packet not chips which they have increased but we don't know.But in the end they all matters and type of hidden inflation in the market.
sr. member
Activity: 1680
Merit: 379
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June 08, 2021, 08:16:56 PM
#39
I remember as a kid we used to have the big bags of Doritos and today they look really tiny by comparison. Not only is everything smaller now but it is also more expensive. You can only shrink things so much before people stop buying your product so these companies will have to find the right balance between price increase and resizing the package.
sr. member
Activity: 1092
Merit: 256
June 08, 2021, 06:48:02 PM
#38
Maybe this is the reason, When production costs increase, the company has three options: increase prices, make packaging smaller, and change production materials.

Changing the prescription is a risky move. Not only is there a chance that the product won't taste great later — as Chandon, INSEAD professor of marketing, says that the three most important things in food are taste, flavor, and taste — but substituting artificial ingredients of inferior quality can cause even greater waves of anger at producer than at the time of depreciation.
full member
Activity: 303
Merit: 112
May 13, 2021, 08:45:45 PM
#37
Congrats to every comments here! Every experience, opinion or criticism show how this subject has space in the actual consumer market as well as manufacturers sales policy. Both sides try to earn some kind of advantage putting their needs in the balance of life. But who or what has to rule this? Through different economic models we can, in this post, verify that one common element is the necessity of a wide open and "seethrough" relationship between companies and customers. To let market be ruled by itself is the ideal mechanism, even oscilating high and low but from time to time finding balanced points for both sides keep on trading under a fair price for goods and services. The deceptive trail may culminate in a "no way out" or "dead end road"!
I'd like to interact with the higher as possible number of comments here, but time is short for this at the moment. I hope I can do this as soon as my others duties release me from.
Happy to see people conscious and aware about what occurs on our daily lives!
member
Activity: 1358
Merit: 81
May 13, 2021, 06:20:52 PM
#36
OMG! This is what happened in my country, Venezuela, little by little we saw drastic changes in the products of the supermarkets.
Obviously the situation in my country is different but it is finally inflation.
I wish that the situation in your country is short and that it does not last for a long time.
What can be seen is that large industrialists are trying to maintain their products to avoid losses and maintain jobs.
legendary
Activity: 2366
Merit: 1624
Do not die for Putin
May 13, 2021, 05:14:22 AM
#35
Super post my friend, I just could not help laughing. It seems like a serious issue, however I can see a clear benefit to all this: foods that are not processed are normally sold by an standard unit of weight, that is, a kilo a pound a gallon,... however it is only packaged and porcessed foods that can play with shrinking amounts, so overall this means that we will eat less crap and benefit from the less processed foods.

In any case, I know this phenomenon happened when certain pizza company went public in Spain (telepizza). All the sudden some "marketing expert" stripped the cheese and reduced the size. I never bought again.
member
Activity: 1120
Merit: 68
May 13, 2021, 05:05:08 AM
#34
Consider the persoective of the businesses though, they have to make a profit and they have to adapt with the current prices of raw materials to make their product which also goes up. I didn't know that it was called shrinkflation but I have seen and observe this happening in my country although it doesn't really affect me as an individual, I am sure that my country's economy is fucked if I can see it then.

It makes sense, if the population in the country understands the way of marketing maybe people start looking for other ways to buy or all sales made will experience a drastic drop in turnover. It could be that a country experiences chaos in buying and selling transactions because the government also wants profits for their country to be able to pay the profits to other countries. My advice if you need and useful do not think too much about the disadvantages of buying these products. but on the contrary think twice if the goods offered are not useful.
Sadly people doesn't know this and the event happens at a really subtle way that you don't even know it already happened. Well, if you grow up in a household that prioritizes practicality over luxury then you are already set because you know what's important already.
legendary
Activity: 3542
Merit: 1352
Cashback 15%
May 12, 2021, 03:30:55 PM
#33
Yes. It's sad that manufacturers and businesses have to resort to this just to keep up with the economic situation and to ensure that jobs can still be given out. If most manufacturers retain the same amount of quantity of the products they are selling while the prices of raw materials keep on increasing, they'd be operating on a loss, and might drop some workers from their roster up until everything falls apart. While I hate greedy capitalists, things like this couldn't be helped, and is happening everywhere to ensure that manufacturers stay afloat and keep their employees intact.
legendary
Activity: 2884
Merit: 1117
May 12, 2021, 03:13:42 PM
#32
Consider the persoective of the businesses though, they have to make a profit and they have to adapt with the current prices of raw materials to make their product which also goes up. I didn't know that it was called shrinkflation but I have seen and observe this happening in my country although it doesn't really affect me as an individual, I am sure that my country's economy is fucked if I can see it then.
It makes sense, if the population in the country understands the way of marketing maybe people start looking for other ways to buy or all sales made will experience a drastic drop in turnover. It could be that a country experiences chaos in buying and selling transactions because the government also wants profits for their country to be able to pay the profits to other countries. My advice if you need and useful do not think too much about the disadvantages of buying these products. but on the contrary think twice if the goods offered are not useful.
What people are forgetting is that these companies have to make "more" profit and not just profit. You think if those chips were a little bit more each, or that product had some more grams these companies would lose money? I mean sure they would lose millions of dollars in profit there is no doubt about that but you think they would actually not make a profit? These companies do not save enough from these things to be profitable, they are already profitable and what they do help them just a bit more.

This is why they do this, not because they have to in order to be profitable, they do it because they want to make more and more profit. Why? Because they have shareholders and you can't promise shareholders 1 billion dollars profit forever, if you do that they will move to some other that will profit them more, so they have to keep profiting more and more and that is why there is shrinkflation.
sr. member
Activity: 2436
Merit: 455
May 12, 2021, 10:37:50 AM
#31
It's because the ingredients they are using in their product got a price increase as well, so instead of increasing the price by keeping the same amount of weight or quantity inside the product, they chose to decrease it and keep the same price so their regular customer won't complain about the sudden price hike, it's a better marketing strategy knowing your consumers to avoid profit loss because of price changed.
full member
Activity: 826
Merit: 100
May 12, 2021, 10:27:03 AM
#30
Things that continue to be done in a company that make a profit for them. Ordinary people who don't really understand will feel happy with discounts or other forms of promos. but actually everyone is deceived by it all. But all companies will also think about how to market a product they will sell.
Consider the persoective of the businesses though, they have to make a profit and they have to adapt with the current prices of raw materials to make their product which also goes up. I didn't know that it was called shrinkflation but I have seen and observe this happening in my country although it doesn't really affect me as an individual, I am sure that my country's economy is fucked if I can see it then.

It makes sense, if the population in the country understands the way of marketing maybe people start looking for other ways to buy or all sales made will experience a drastic drop in turnover. It could be that a country experiences chaos in buying and selling transactions because the government also wants profits for their country to be able to pay the profits to other countries. My advice if you need and useful do not think too much about the disadvantages of buying these products. but on the contrary think twice if the goods offered are not useful.
With the uselessness of an item being marketed, I think that the item will not last long, so that for example there is a maximum development regarding the price of the item it will be a matter of doubt, of course this is used by an individual to seek personal gain without thinking about the fate of the item in the future.
full member
Activity: 862
Merit: 100
May 12, 2021, 07:33:05 AM
#29
Things that continue to be done in a company that make a profit for them. Ordinary people who don't really understand will feel happy with discounts or other forms of promos. but actually everyone is deceived by it all. But all companies will also think about how to market a product they will sell.
Consider the persoective of the businesses though, they have to make a profit and they have to adapt with the current prices of raw materials to make their product which also goes up. I didn't know that it was called shrinkflation but I have seen and observe this happening in my country although it doesn't really affect me as an individual, I am sure that my country's economy is fucked if I can see it then.

It makes sense, if the population in the country understands the way of marketing maybe people start looking for other ways to buy or all sales made will experience a drastic drop in turnover. It could be that a country experiences chaos in buying and selling transactions because the government also wants profits for their country to be able to pay the profits to other countries. My advice if you need and useful do not think too much about the disadvantages of buying these products. but on the contrary think twice if the goods offered are not useful.
member
Activity: 1120
Merit: 68
May 12, 2021, 04:54:26 AM
#28
Consider the persoective of the businesses though, they have to make a profit and they have to adapt with the current prices of raw materials to make their product which also goes up. I didn't know that it was called shrinkflation but I have seen and observe this happening in my country although it doesn't really affect me as an individual, I am sure that my country's economy is fucked if I can see it then.

Companies definitely need to make profit but that can be communicated openly. There is no need to try and trick the consumers. Increasing prices on the normal package is fine from time to time. If this happens multiple times per year it already feels a bit wierd. But this shrinkinflation is just a rip off in my opinion. There is no need to make the packages smaller at the same prices. This is just to trick the consumer that the price remains the same. And most of us won't notice if it was 150g and now its 120g for example.
I don't think that it is a rip-off I mean companies don't just make products out of thin air, I am mad at this companies but I they have a reason why they are marking up the prices or shrinking the product, they have a lot to pay besides the raw materials, storage and supply chain is pretty expensive you know.
Ucy
sr. member
Activity: 2674
Merit: 403
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May 12, 2021, 04:47:18 AM
#27
These companies spend so much on branding and human perception of what they sell that they believe that people don't know (or choose to ignore] that they are paying for less with more.
It is funny that this has always been. People abd companies have always been using deceptive  to make customers buy less with more money.
I think some regulations should be put in place to curb these devious acts.


What actually matter is that they do it morally in the ways :
1. They can either increase the price to cover their expenses and earn small profits... Price increase is typically obvious and consumers will have choices on whether to buy or not.
 Or
2. They could just reduce the size without changing the price but will have to make it obvious they reduced it, and the specific size it's reduced to clearly written.

Both 1 and 2 will help competition because people will compete to sell cheaper, bigger and healthier alternatives
hero member
Activity: 1974
Merit: 534
May 12, 2021, 04:18:36 AM
#26
Things that continue to be done in a company that make a profit for them. Ordinary people who don't really understand will feel happy with discounts or other forms of promos. but actually everyone is deceived by it all. But all companies will also think about how to market a product they will sell.
Consider the persoective of the businesses though, they have to make a profit and they have to adapt with the current prices of raw materials to make their product which also goes up. I didn't know that it was called shrinkflation but I have seen and observe this happening in my country although it doesn't really affect me as an individual, I am sure that my country's economy is fucked if I can see it then.

Companies definitely need to make profit but that can be communicated openly. There is no need to try and trick the consumers. Increasing prices on the normal package is fine from time to time. If this happens multiple times per year it already feels a bit wierd. But this shrinkinflation is just a rip off in my opinion. There is no need to make the packages smaller at the same prices. This is just to trick the consumer that the price remains the same. And most of us won't notice if it was 150g and now its 120g for example.
member
Activity: 1120
Merit: 68
May 12, 2021, 03:53:55 AM
#25
Things that continue to be done in a company that make a profit for them. Ordinary people who don't really understand will feel happy with discounts or other forms of promos. but actually everyone is deceived by it all. But all companies will also think about how to market a product they will sell.
Consider the persoective of the businesses though, they have to make a profit and they have to adapt with the current prices of raw materials to make their product which also goes up. I didn't know that it was called shrinkflation but I have seen and observe this happening in my country although it doesn't really affect me as an individual, I am sure that my country's economy is fucked if I can see it then.
legendary
Activity: 2912
Merit: 6403
Blackjack.fun
May 12, 2021, 03:26:17 AM
#24
There is already an EU directive stating that you have to put the price per kilogram also and in every supermarket, you will see those below the price per piece. It's a pretty nice thing to have when comparing the same product at different sizes or weights.
I don't know when it will become mandatory for all the countries but around here almost all chain stores have adopted it, quite nice to see the difference in price per kg, when it comes to pistachio, for example, I see that the few cents I pay more for my favorite brand are actually close to 10 euros per kilogram, almost double% up compared to the other brand if I buy a small 140grams pack compared to the other 1/2 kg bag.

So, read the labels!!!






hero member
Activity: 1274
Merit: 622
May 11, 2021, 05:50:49 PM
#23
This is news to me, I'm probably one of the few that haven't noticed.
In my country, the prices are skyrocketing so much you don't even look at those things anymore. On one hand, 180g against 200g doesn't seem like a big difference, not to the customer. But on a large scale, for the companies and distributors it means a lot of additional profit. I hate the fact that customers are being fd over like that, especially in times of crisis.
full member
Activity: 862
Merit: 100
May 11, 2021, 05:22:25 PM
#22
Things that continue to be done in a company that make a profit for them. Ordinary people who don't really understand will feel happy with discounts or other forms of promos. but actually everyone is deceived by it all. But all companies will also think about how to market a product they will sell. But all companies will also think about how to market a product they will sell.
full member
Activity: 896
Merit: 104
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May 11, 2021, 04:23:29 PM
#21
These companies spend so much on branding and human perception of what they sell that they believe that people don't know (or choose to ignore] that they are paying for less with more.
It is funny that this has always been. People abd companies have always been using deceptive  to make customers buy less with more money.
I think some regulations should be put in place to curb these devious acts.
legendary
Activity: 2688
Merit: 1192
May 11, 2021, 01:49:50 PM
#20
Have you already percepted how products and services are suffering changes in their prices? Oh, but it's normal, it's inflation, the market demand, etc.
By this point that's allright! Although, recently, not only prices have called our attention, but the fact that they are disproportionate to the amount, content, time, weight, size, etc, anyway, services and products have being modified deliberately. We could say widely opened adultered to profit more by spending less to produce or serve. Despite customers receive less, they are paying more cause the price is readjusted due the human perception in relation to the label, fact which explore mass products and services, taking advantage mainly of the ones who have mathematics quantitative difficults, that are the great part of the consumer society.
Would it be the dark side of Free Market?

It can get even more devious than what you've shown us and can be incredibly wasteful. Think about easter eggs - sometimes the packaging is huge in comparison to the product, full of carefully constructed cardboard with large empty spaces inside. It takes a lot more unnecessary shipping space all through the process (increasing fuel pollution and inflated staffing costs elsewhere). Another particularly hard to spot trick they use is keeping all the packaging and even the price exactly the same, but removing one unit from the product to achieve the same effect, so instead of getting 6 weetbix you get 5 in the shrinkflated version. It even happens when travelling, airlines are constantly trying to rearrange the seating on their plane to trim extra centimeters from seats if allows them to squeeze another row in. The only way you can combat it as a consumer is to limit your buying experiences with companies who take these actions, I personally understand that stuff will slowly get more expensive and would rather pay more than get less.
legendary
Activity: 2128
Merit: 1775
May 11, 2021, 12:23:41 PM
#19
Would it be the dark side of Free Market?
At a glance I read about the Theory that the OP mentioned regarding the current condition of the dark side of the market tends to have a concentration on products, goods, Prices are deliberately made to generate profits, in fact this will result in being dominated by a handful of people who develop their same product for trading.

If this happens often will result in a 'new geographic economy' of new products that have an impact on the Free Market.

This kind of theory has often happened in the free market, but it returns to us with the existing structure to avoid consumers experiencing big losses in this theory.
Ucy
sr. member
Activity: 2674
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May 11, 2021, 11:51:54 AM
#18
Ofcourse. Producers either have to Increase prices of goods and services, or maintain the prices while reducing the quantity/quality.
They typically do the latter to remain competitive and it's not always obvious especially when done gradually.

Won't be surprised if some do both (increase prices and still reduce the quantity/quality).
There are also cases of producers adding more yeast to bread, more water to wine or engineering agric products to make them bigger than they are supposed to be.
legendary
Activity: 2086
Merit: 1058
May 09, 2021, 04:52:43 PM
#17
This has been a thing in my nation for nearly a decade. Unfortunately people prefer it this way instead of increasing prices as long as the price stays around the same, but even the price doesn't stay around the same and that is the problem. When you have lesser product but the same money that is the most opted one, when you have higher price but same product that is second best, but sometimes there is a slight increase in price and slight decrease in product and that is the least wanted.

People prefer either more reduction in item or higher increase in price, but not slightly less and more from both, that is definitely the worst. Inflation is not always the same in every nation, some nations have 1% or 2% while others have 5-10% and in that case it is hard to actually keep things at the same price, hence companies are going for things like this in the end.
sr. member
Activity: 2660
Merit: 339
May 09, 2021, 04:21:03 PM
#16
Although, recently, not only prices have called our attention, but the fact that they are disproportionate to the amount, content, time, weight, size, etc, anyway, services and products have being modified deliberately. We could say widely opened adultered to profit more by spending less to produce or serve. Despite customers receive less, they are paying more cause the price is readjusted due the human perception in relation to the label, fact which explore mass products and services, taking advantage mainly of the ones who have mathematics quantitative difficults, that are the great part of the consumer society.
Would it be the dark side of Free Market?
Thanks for bringing our attention to this, I have always felt this is a situation that really needs to be tackled. I just don’t know why companies would increase the price for their products and at the same time decrease the quantity or quality, it’s really annoying. I have been seeing a lot of company products being done like this recently, prices goes up and the amount decreases, then what’s the need for the increase in price?

If they are going to increase the price of a product, then they should not alter the quantity, and if they are going to be reducing the quantity of the products, then they shouldn’t increase the price. We really need to start doing something about this. The problem is how to get everyone to agree to this.
hero member
Activity: 1680
Merit: 655
May 09, 2021, 07:25:02 AM
#15
This is the best example I know and who can even forget about this one?


This is when Toblerone tried to reduce the weight of its chocolate product by redesigning their chocolate bars and tried to reason out that this will make it easier to cut into pieces but the whole community was enraged and they were laughed at for the obvious attempt on making their product cheaper for their cost while not increasing their price. I have other examples in mind but I guess this is the most popular one I could think off and maybe you will remember this as well.
legendary
Activity: 1946
Merit: 1100
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May 09, 2021, 06:27:41 AM
#14
It depends on countries you living where monopoly is the main cause. It is hard to reshape the reality since people have already familiar with names, brands, packages. Moreover, big companies tend to by small one, making the market less competitive, less free

I live in a country where I believe the market is freely operate and thrive. Big companies do not want to buy small companies while small companies distribute more effective products. There are likely a millions of different activities flowing in and out.

So bitcoin maybe an escape path for people like you. Only it (maybe other cryptocurrencies, too) is able to hedge the inflation by the capped number of coins. Therefore, you will never be affected by the inflation and by the shady activities of the government
hero member
Activity: 2114
Merit: 603
May 09, 2021, 05:26:18 AM
#13
Deceptive marketing has always been there. People complain that they receive less product for more money, so the alternative is to charge the same amount while reducing the size or amount of the product. Not so much a dark side of the free market, more so taken advantage of consumers that aren't wise enough to look at the unit price.

Exactly! We never see the units or measure the units if they are packed food, junk food and branded items which we buy on daily basis. In fact the trend for online shopping or E-commerce has increased a lot; in that case there is no valid option to check for the measurement (i.e. weight, shape, size to the accuracy). This could be manipulated way easily to concur the market inflation.

Nonethless, branded items always keep trying such stunts! 15% extra chocolate, 15% extra powder for example, but that is added to the total package not the raw material.

I think that's real shrinkflation. Nicely introduced by the way!
legendary
Activity: 2184
Merit: 1302
May 09, 2021, 05:22:40 AM
#12
This strategy is applied cause it's harder to notice, price fluctuations are obvious, if it goes up or down, people are immediately aware, but when the content is different or altered, it becomes difficult to spot, only very few people actually check the weight or the actual content of the product they buy, they could have the premonition that it feels somewhat smaller, but only very few people will actually go back to compare the previous and the current content and weight.

Thus, that way the company is keeping majority of the customers somewhat happy, since they never increased the price, whereas what they are doing is still very much the same as a hike in the price of the particular item, it's basically just a marketing strategy, and still very much a product of inflation.
legendary
Activity: 3178
Merit: 1054
May 09, 2021, 04:57:21 AM
#11

the price goes up while the quantity of the product is less. looks like cheating the end buyers while they don't notice the grams. the terms probably are very common to the producers but for us, consumers will just accept it for there is nothing we can do about it.

kids will sure notice the quantity inside the Maltesers but they can't do this on products like sugar or flour since it's measured by weight. A kilo will always be a kilo.
full member
Activity: 868
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May 09, 2021, 04:47:32 AM
#10
Deceptive marketing has always been there. People complain that they receive less product for more money, so the alternative is to charge the same amount while reducing the size or amount of the product. Not so much a dark side of the free market, more so taken advantage of consumers that aren't wise enough to look at the unit price.
Well, the producers don't have any choice, the raw materials for their products get expensive so they have to portion control so they can still be up and running and profiting. The problem is that the inflation becomes uncontrollable to the point that it is unhealthy to the economy.
tyz
legendary
Activity: 3360
Merit: 1533
May 09, 2021, 04:13:34 AM
#9
Deceptive marketing has always been there. People complain that they receive less product for more money, so the alternative is to charge the same amount while reducing the size or amount of the product. Not so much a dark side of the free market, more so taken advantage of consumers that aren't wise enough to look at the unit price.

You're right, nonetheless, it's a kind of hidden inflation. If you get less quantity for the same price, then an entity of that quantity has become more expensive. Most people don't notice this and that's why companies use this way to maximize profits.
legendary
Activity: 1134
Merit: 1598
May 09, 2021, 02:58:51 AM
#8
Yeah, this seems to happen everywhere around. Chips are a great example, at least here in Romania - new brands usually fill up their chip bags entirely and gradually decrease the amount in time while preserving the same price or even rising it. The typical answer to this question of why there's so much air in the bags is that "it helps preserve the chips" although I am quite sure that's not the case. Price changes are much more evident than taking away a few grams of your product instead, and it's almost always unnoticeable (or people think: "well, it's not that much").
member
Activity: 1204
Merit: 38
May 09, 2021, 02:40:44 AM
#7
Its happening all the time but now the changes are happening in real quick time and its something to play with the human psychology because when a brand increase the price for certain products it will decrease the number of people who are buying it so their strategy is to keep the price same as before while offering the kesser quantity so they can keep making profits and they will boost their products sales with new advertisements to hide the changes in quantity.
full member
Activity: 268
Merit: 100
May 09, 2021, 02:20:01 AM
#6
Have you already percepted how products and services are suffering changes in their prices? Oh, but it's normal, it's inflation, the market demand, etc.
By this point that's allright! Although, recently, not only prices have called our attention, but the fact that they are disproportionate to the amount, content, time, weight, size, etc, anyway, services and products have being modified deliberately. We could say widely opened adultered to profit more by spending less to produce or serve. Despite customers receive less, they are paying more cause the price is readjusted due the human perception in relation to the label, fact which explore mass products and services, taking advantage mainly of the ones who have mathematics quantitative difficults, that are the great part of the consumer society.
Would it be the dark side of Free Market?


I know shrinkflation is the process of shrinking items in size or quantity, or even sometimes changing the recipe or reducing quality while the price of the item above stays the same or increases. In other words, it is economic inflation. For example, before, a mask sold for a very cheap price. When there was a translation of covid19, the sellers pushed their masks up very high. Chili traders are buying, suddenly stop lowering the price of strenuous people...
hero member
Activity: 1666
Merit: 753
May 09, 2021, 12:28:31 AM
#5
This is something that seems to be completely overlooked by the general public.

And this is also something that most CPIs will lie to you about - they only take into account the price of consumer consumer staples but fails to include any deterioration of quality or quantity of the goods in question.

In that sense, inflation is still a real risk. People simply don't realise it enough to act on it with rationality, it seems.
legendary
Activity: 1372
Merit: 2017
May 08, 2021, 11:16:11 PM
#4
Yes, I was aware. I think the first time i realized about it was during the 2008 crisis when I saw certain supermarket products giving less quantity for the same price. Typical of a bag of potato chips that is more full of air than potatoes, and things like that.
hero member
Activity: 2114
Merit: 619
May 08, 2021, 03:58:40 PM
#3
More than Economics it's about sales and marketing strategy. When any company wants to keep it's pricing competitive to it's substitutes and also keep it at a whole number figure, this is the best strategy for them. I have been seeing a packet of Maggi since my childhood. One packet of Maggi Noodles is Rs.10 in my country for almost more than 15 years now. But the weight of one pack has gone down from 100g to just 65 grams now. They have tried to keep the pricing the same to give the feeling that Maggi is still available at the same price at which you brought it in your childhood but actually things have changed a lot. This isn't the dark side of anything. Every company needs to keep it's pricing accurate I don't feel this is unfair to the consumer as they know what they are buying.
legendary
Activity: 2828
Merit: 1515
May 08, 2021, 03:41:08 PM
#2
Deceptive marketing has always been there. People complain that they receive less product for more money, so the alternative is to charge the same amount while reducing the size or amount of the product. Not so much a dark side of the free market, more so taken advantage of consumers that aren't wise enough to look at the unit price.
full member
Activity: 303
Merit: 112
May 08, 2021, 03:03:24 PM
#1
Have you already percepted how products and services are suffering changes in their prices? Oh, but it's normal, it's inflation, the market demand, etc.
By this point that's allright! Although, recently, not only prices have called our attention, but the fact that they are disproportionate to the amount, content, time, weight, size, etc, anyway, services and products have being modified deliberately. We could say widely opened adultered to profit more by spending less to produce or serve. Despite customers receive less, they are paying more cause the price is readjusted due the human perception in relation to the label, fact which explore mass products and services, taking advantage mainly of the ones who have mathematics quantitative difficults, that are the great part of the consumer society.
Would it be the dark side of Free Market?

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