The Threshold Effects on Consumer Choice and Pricing Decisions

41 Pages Posted: 18 Feb 2021

See all articles by Ruxian Wang

Ruxian Wang

Johns Hopkins University - Carey Business School

Date Written: January 13, 2021

Abstract

This paper investigates the threshold effects on the consideration set formation for consumers and the associated pricing decisions for firms. In the class of random utility maximization choice models, consumers choose the alternative with the largest utility after resolving utility uncertainties for all options. However, in practice consumers may not inspect all available alternatives due to bounded rationality or search cost. This paper incorporates bounded rationality into consumer choice behavior: in the first stage, a representative consumer forms her consideration set by removing alternatives whose nominal utility is lower than the largest by a threshold; in the second stage, she examines all alternatives in her consideration set and chooses the one with the highest realized utility. For the Gumbel distributed random utilities, we derive the two-stage threshold multinomial logit (TMNL) model with a consideration set. For the pricing problem, we show the quasi-same-markup/same-utility policy is optimal: high-cost products charge the prices such that their profit markups are the same, and low-cost products charge prices such that their nominal utilities are the same. For the price competition, there may exist zero, one, two, or infinite Nash equilibria, depending on the magnitude of the threshold effects. Our analysis shows the consideration set and bounded rationality play an important role in consumer choice behavior, so they should be taken into account in firms' decision making.

Keywords: Bounded Rationality, Threshold Effects, Consideration Set, Threshold Multinomial Logit Model, Price Optimization and Competition

Suggested Citation

Wang, Ruxian, The Threshold Effects on Consumer Choice and Pricing Decisions (January 13, 2021). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3765711 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3765711

Ruxian Wang (Contact Author)

Johns Hopkins University - Carey Business School ( email )

1625 Massachusetts Ave NW
Washington, DC 20036
United States

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