Nonlinear pricing
Nonlinear pricing is a broad term that covers any kind of price structure in which there is a nonlinear relationship between price and the quantity of goods. An example is affine pricing. A nonlinear price schedule is a menu of different-sized bundles at different prices, from which the consumer makes his selection. In such schedules, the larger bundle generally sells for a higher total price but a lower per-unit price than a smaller bundle.
References and links
Walter Nicholson, Christopher Snyder - Microeconomic Theory: Basic Principles and Extensions, Eleventh Edition
gollark: Obviously the inevitable result of this is a giant server-sized HDD magnetically levitated in a vacuum spinning at several million RPM.
gollark: Actually it's worse as Nvidia enforces software lockouts on a few things.
gollark: It doesn't magically get better if nobody sees it.
gollark: No, AMD and Intel have perfectly good open source ones.
gollark: The process was made accursed around 2018.
See also
- Two part tariff
- Second degree price discrimination
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