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by theturtletalks
354 days ago
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This is not the law in all places sadly. I read that restaurants in Japan give a different, cheaper menu to locals and more expensive menus to tourists. Most tourists don’t know and the restaurant doesn’t want to price out the locals. |
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It's an interesting dilemma. Personally, I prefer the version of price discrimination where you introduce high-margin premium value-adds that people can opt in or out of - alcohol or steak/lobster at a restaurant, rooms with views or additional packages at hotels, table service, etc, which can allow wealthier customers to subsidize less wealthy ones without necessarily compromising the core service. Though that's still a bummer when adding a view to a room is prohibitively expensive for something that cost the hotel nothing more to provide, and you feel like either you're getting screwed or you'll always have an alleyway view from your hotel.