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Price Discrimination is Good, Part 3

At Knowledge Problem, Michael Giberson collects anecdotal evidence on New York’s zone pricing ban, i.e. a prohibition on price discrimination. While gasoline prices are falling all over the country, the anecdotal evidence is that New York’s zone pricing ban is resulting in higher profits for retailers at the expense of consumers. Former George Mason economist (now at Chapman with Vernon Smith) Bart Wilson and Cary Deck have a fascinating experimental paper on the impact of zone pricing which anticipates this result. Of course, most economists agree that zone pricing benefits consumers. Here’s Giberson summing up the literature in a earlier post:

I wonder how much of economists’ failure to win these policy debates on points where this is much agreement is the result of bad marketing on our parts and how much can be explained by public choice.