Sunday, February 11, 2007

Toy Prices Skyrocket, So Do Sales

This article reveals that toy companies are selling toys for big bucks and consumers are taking the bait. At first, this observation might seem to go against the economical belief that markets move toward equilibrium. Why would a consumer spend $300 on Hasbro Inc.’s robotic Butterscotch pony when they could purchase a similar product at Wal*Mart for a fraction of the cost? Wouldn’t they be better off buying from Wal*Mart? Maybe not. Toy consumers must be taking opportunity costs into account. Yes, they could buy an off-brand robotic pony for less, but that saved money comes at a price. That price is value. In the article, Boire understands this when he states “This game is about better quality.” Consumers believe a more reliable, long-lasting product will be produced by stores that specialize. High-quality toys, therefore, come from toy stores, not super stores. In this way, buyers of toys are considering not just the explicit, but the implicit cost of purchasing from the toy store at a higher price. The toy might cost more now, but if one of lesser quality is bought, breaks, and must be replaced before the toy store product wears out, the Wal*Mart version could end up costing just as much if not more. Through consumers’ willingness to splurge on toys, it is evident that the choice has been made. The value of quality outweighs the extra cost of high class toys.

3 comments:

Chris Hughes said...

From reading this article I agree with the writer and do believe that people are now taking the implicit costs into hand when purchasing toys for their children. Today people believe in getting the best on the market. You won't find many cheap toys being bought anymore because for one, children aren't going to like them as much, and two, if they do break quicker over time then your looking at having to buy another cheap one when you could of ended up spending the same amount of money for one good quality toy. In the future I believe we'll end up seeing sales go down drastically for the cheaper made toys and the demand go up for the nicer, better quality ones.

Jessica Tucker said...

In the long run, buying better quality toys that cost more would be a better investment. The implicit cost in this case out ways the explicit cost.

Cory said...

After reading this article, it is true that we tend to buy products of higher price because we want the better quality. I know when it comes to shoes i always buy the more exspensive shoe because they are going to last longer than a cheap pair. People are looking for the long term affects now adays instead of the instant ones.