- Aug 6, 2005
- 2,173
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I'm trying to get this figured out.
If item X increases in price (or is shorter supply - same thing) and there is a suitable substitute Y, will item Y be purchased to totally fill the shortfall of item X?
For example, say 10 Apples and 6 Pears are normally purchased, but only 6 Apples (due to price or whatever) are feasible for purchase. Would a substitute purchase of 6 Apples and 10 Pears be a correct relationship, or would there be less Pears due to some kind of substitution penalty?
Intuitively I'm kind of thinking that there may be some kind of substitution penalty, but from what I've seen Googling it infers a 100% substitution fill rate.
If there is a substitution penalty how would that be calculated?
If item X increases in price (or is shorter supply - same thing) and there is a suitable substitute Y, will item Y be purchased to totally fill the shortfall of item X?
For example, say 10 Apples and 6 Pears are normally purchased, but only 6 Apples (due to price or whatever) are feasible for purchase. Would a substitute purchase of 6 Apples and 10 Pears be a correct relationship, or would there be less Pears due to some kind of substitution penalty?
Intuitively I'm kind of thinking that there may be some kind of substitution penalty, but from what I've seen Googling it infers a 100% substitution fill rate.
If there is a substitution penalty how would that be calculated?