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Segmenting the Wine Market Based on Price: Hedonic Regression when Different Prices mean Different Products
171
Citations
19
References
2007
Year
Applied EconomicsConsumer ResearchPrice RangesWhite WineWine MarketPricing PolicyMarket AnalysisManagementExperimental EconomicsEconomic AnalysisAggregation BiasMarket SegmentationStatisticsQuantitative ManagementConsumer ChoiceEconomicsDynamic PricingDifferent PricesPrice FormationMarket BehaviorMarketingBusinessEconometricsHedonic RegressionMicroeconomics
Abstract Many economists have estimated hedonic price functions for red and white wine. However, estimating a single hedonic price function imposes the assumption that the implicit prices of the attributes are the same for any red or white wine. We argue that even within these two categories, wines are differentiated, and disregarding this heterogeneity causes an aggregation bias in the estimated implicit prices. By estimating hedonic functions specific to price ranges, we show that the wine market is segmented into several product classes or market segments. We find that a model accounting for the existence of wine classes has greater ability to explain the variability in the data and produces more accurate and interpretable results regarding the implicit prices of the attributes.
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