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The Economy

Discussion in 'Sports and News' started by TigerVols, May 14, 2020.

  1. Batman

    Batman Well-Known Member

    I get the concept of dynamic pricing. It sucks for the consumer, but it's slightly more reasonable when it's something where you can justify greater demand leading to more scarcity and thus a greater cost.
    When it comes to food, though — and especially fast food — a customer doesn't want to spin the wheel to see how much your burger is going to cost. One of the reasons you go to Wendy's is because you know you can get a meal for a steady price of about $10. You certainly don't want to walk in wondering if the burger is going to cost you $10 or $20 because four people walked in at the same time and an AI algorithm suddenly decided it was a peak period.
    Not to mention it'll take all of about 30 seconds for restaurants to figure out how to manipulate that algorithm to artificially create a peak period (like ringing up multiple orders in a short span, or playing around with the timing of orders to trick it into thinking there is more demand than there is).
    If they stick with this plan in the face of public backlash, I think we'll look back in a few years at this being one of the great miscalculations in business history.
     
    misterbc and Driftwood like this.
  2. TigerVols

    TigerVols Well-Known Member

    The Waffle House is gonna charge $19 per waffle every Saturday morning at 1 am.
     
    Inky_Wretch and playthrough like this.
  3. Starman

    Starman Well-Known Member

    dixiehack likes this.
  4. Deskgrunt50

    Deskgrunt50 Well-Known Member

    Fair. Should have said, generally rising slower year-over-year and far better than the rest of the world.
     
  5. Deskgrunt50

    Deskgrunt50 Well-Known Member

    Yeah. Tough to find that small outfit called the Associated Press that reports it without the anger/Post agenda. Since it's tough, here it is:

    Wendy's is looking to test having the prices of its menu items fluctuate throughout the day based on demand, implementing a strategy that has already taken hold with ride-sharing companies and ticket sellers.
    During a conference call earlier this month, Wendy's CEO Kirk Tanner said that the Dublin, Ohio-based burger chain will start testing dynamic pricing, also known as surge pricing, as early as next year.
    “Beginning as early as 2025, we will begin testing more enhanced features like dynamic pricing and daypart offerings, along with AI-enabled menu changes and suggestive selling,” he said. “As we continue to show the benefit of this technology in our company-operated restaurants, franchisee interest in digital menu boards should increase, further supporting sales and profit growth across the system.”
    Wendy's Co. plans to invest about $20 million to launch digital menu boards at all of its U.S. company-run restaurants by the end of 2025. It also plans to invest approximately $10 million over the next two years to support digital menu enhancements globally.
    Tanner, a longtime PepsiCo executive, became Wendy's CEO earlier this month. He succeeded Todd Penegor, who had served as Wendy’s president and CEO since 2016.
    Last year, Penegor announced a restructuring intended to speed decision-making and invest more in new restaurant development, particularly overseas. The chain and its franchisees operate about 7,000 restaurants worldwide.
    Shares of Wendy's fell slightly in Tuesday morning trading.
     
  6. Deskgrunt50

    Deskgrunt50 Well-Known Member

    The Shitty NY Post had reaction to numbers that don't exist at this point, or haven't been revealed.
     
  7. BTExpress

    BTExpress Well-Known Member

    You said it fine. Inflation by definition is rising prices. So "inflation is falling" means the rate is falling to most non-nit pickers.
     
  8. Deskgrunt50

    Deskgrunt50 Well-Known Member

    True, but there was a slight tick-up year-over-year in January in some areas. So for that sliver, it's a fair point. But yes, the larger point is that it's in much better shape that the last couple of years and largely better than the rest of the world since it started.
     
  9. The Big Ragu

    The Big Ragu Moderator Staff Member

    The average widget in the CPI basket that cost $5 a year ago, costs $5.15 just a year later. I wasn't trying to pick nits when I said that I don't know how that constitutes falling by any definition of the word.

    It's also particularly absurd, to me at least, that you have people trying to spin that into something positive, in that according to the CPI , since 2020 food prices are up more than 25 percent and rent is up 22 percent, so when broad prices are up .3, .4 percent every month the way they continue to be, it's like you're still getting peppered with jabs. Never mind that the CPI underreports prices. ... for the obvious political reasons and because if it was honest, the cost of living adjustments on entitlement programs would be untenable for our government which already has a debt problem it can't sustain.

    You have about half the country that has gotten slaughtered by how much prices have risen over the last 4 years, because their real wages have not come even close to keeping up. ... and people try to spin their reality into, "Why don't people get how much "better" things are?"
     
  10. The Big Ragu

    The Big Ragu Moderator Staff Member

    Also. ... The "largely better than the rest of the world" thing. ... not sure where we're getting that from, either. I mean, sure we're in way better shape than say Argentina or Romania or Turkey. But prices weren't rising as fast in the entire Euro Area than they were in the U.S. in the last CPI reports (if you believe them).

    And there are plenty of countries, for example Denmark, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Finland, Belgium, Cyprus, Portugal, etc. that have been printing lower CPI numbers than the U.S.

    Not that it should be a pissing contest about who is suffering the least. Rising prices reflect the fact that we have blown up our money supply to monetize runaway debt. Whether that manifests itself in asset bubbles that then cause fnancial crises, or we also see it in rising consumer prices the way we have been, nothing good ultimately ever comes of it. Rising prices of the magntitude we're seeing, hurt a lot of people -- it is a hidden tax -- especially on the lowest end of the wealth and income spectrum. It doesn't matter if the effects of our stupidity are not hitting us as hard as what say, Argentina or Turkey did to themselves.
     
  11. TheSportsPredictor

    TheSportsPredictor Well-Known Member

  12. dixiehack

    dixiehack Well-Known Member

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