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Dynamic pricing of groceries, or reducing prices as perishable items approach their expiration date, could reduce food waste from grocery retailers by 21% or more, a study from UC San Diego’s Rady School of Management found.
Globally, food waste releases up to 10% of worldwide annual greenhouse gas emissions.
The study, to be published in Marketing Science, evaluates two programs meant to divert waste from landfills: organic waste bans, which have been introduced in nine U.S. states — including California — and dynamic pricing, which is more popular outside the U.S. Grocers also donate many of their perishables.
“Oddly enough, fewer than 25% of U.S. grocery retailers offer any kind of dynamic pricing at all, while most hotels and airlines will discount rooms and seats when they have a surplus,” said the paper’s author, Robert Sanders, an assistant professor of marketing and analytics at the Rady School, in a release. “However, this research shows that the increased price flexibility of discounting food that is about to expire significantly reduces food waste and increases profit margins among retailers.”
Using dynamic pricing, grocers could adjust prices multiple times a day depending on their inventory and expiration date.
Sanders’ analysis found dynamic pricing reduces waste by 21% on average while increasing grocery chains’ gross margins by 3%. In comparison, an organic waste ban, simulated by a tenfold increase in disposal costs, reduces waste by only 4% and decreases gross margins by around 1%.
An added benefit of dynamic pricing is that it makes perishables more affordable, while organic waste bans slightly harm consumers by reducing retailers’ inventories, the study found.
An article in FoodPrint notes that the transition to two-dimensional QR barcodes may be necessary to drive dynamic pricing since the standard UPC code doesn’t include sell-by dates. Markdowns are also seen as more effective sales drivers for certain perishables, such as chicken, rather than lower-value products like bread, and messaging around food waste may be necessary to drive success.
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