Oliveira-Castro, J.M., Foxall, G.R. & Schrezenmaier, T.C. (2006).
Consumer brand choice: Individual and group analyses of demand elasticity.
Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 85, 147-
166.
Following the behavior-analytic tradition of analyzing individual behavior, the
present research investigated demand elasticity of individual consumers purchasing
supermarket products, and compared individual and group analyses of elasticity.
Panel data from 80 UK consumers purchasing 9 product categories (i.e., baked beans,
biscuits, breakfast cereals, butter, cheese, fruit juice, instant coffee, margarine
and tea) during a 16-week period were used. Elasticity coefficients were calculated
for individual consumers with data from all or only 1 product category (intra-consumer
elasticities), and for each product category using all data points from all consumers
(overall product elasticity) or 1 average data point per consumer (inter-consumer
elasticity). In addition to this, split-sample elasticity coefficients were
obtained for each individual with data from all product categories purchased
during weeks 1 to 8 and 9 to 16. The results suggest that: 1) demand elasticity
coefficients calculated for individual consumers purchasing supermarket food
products are compatible with predictions from economic theory and behavioral
economics; 2) overall product elasticities, typically employed in marketing
and econometric research, include effects of interconsumer and intraconsumer
elasticities; 3) when comparing demand elasticities of different product categories,
group and individual analyses yield similar trends; and 4) individual differences
in demand elasticity are relatively consistent across time, but do not seem to be
consistent across products. These results demonstrate the theoretical, methodological,
and managerial relevance of investigating the behavior of individual consumers.
Key words: consumer behavior, behavioral economics, demand elasticity, marketing, panel data, brand choice, humans