• Thurstylark@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    I think the main concern is that this is a step towards normalizing extremely frequent price changes, a la Uber surge pricing.

    • Eggyhead@fedia.io
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      3 months ago

      It’ll be exciting to see prices temporarily jump during the few hours the majority of working class folk have to do their shopping.

      • Nollij@sopuli.xyz
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        3 months ago

        As long as it’s advertised openly, I don’t see a big problem with it. It would probably be sold as a discount for shopping at slower times, though. It’s a tried-and-true method of smoothing congestion.

        Assuming a store with 9a-9p hours (every day), a 9-5 worker can shop 44 hours in a week, vs 40 they cannot. But that doesn’t particularly line up with the busy hours. Around here, after 7 on weekdays and 5 on weekends tend to get pretty slow.

        • Eggyhead@fedia.io
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          3 months ago

          Assuming a store with 9a-9p hours (every day), a 9-5 worker can shop 44 hours in a week, vs 40 they cannot.

          You can’t just logic this kind of thing out mathematically because during those 44 hours people have lives to live and obligations to fulfill. Families to manage, food to prepare, appointments to attend, plus they need to sleep. Busy shopping hours are busy for a reason. Nobody wants to be stuck in a busy shopping center. They just do because that’s the time they have to do it.

          • Sauerkraut@discuss.tchncs.de
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            3 months ago

            Since you are arguing from a perspective of what benefits society, I can only assume you must be a socialist. One of the foundational principals of capitalism is that capitalists have every moral and legal right to extract as much value from society as they can and the market will regulate itself. As long as we have a capitalist system this will always be the default position of the general public and our politicians.

        • TachyonTele@lemm.ee
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          3 months ago

          You’re thinking logically and with the desire for good service. I assure you they are not.

          • Sauerkraut@discuss.tchncs.de
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            3 months ago

            If capitalists valued the public good instead of profit min-maxing then they wouldn’t be capitalists. They’d be some kind of socialist, probably market socialist (co-ops owned by workers or the public.)

    • tangentism@beehaw.org
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      3 months ago

      It will become an Olympic event where you have to get from the shelf to the till before the price changes!

    • YurkshireLad@lemmy.ca
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      3 months ago

      That’s exactly what this is. All stores will eventually do this and prices will fluctuate throughout the day.

      • solsangraal@lemmy.zip
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        3 months ago

        isn’t it pretty much what amazon’s been doing since the beginning? the difference being there’s no “app” like camel yet to track prices over time at a single store

        but yea, still another reason not to go to walmart. how do they mitigate the problem of something being $X when you put it in your cart, and the price being X+whatever by the time you get through the 2 mile long line at one of the 2 open registers?