{"id":27,"date":"2022-12-27T16:07:51","date_gmt":"2022-12-27T16:07:51","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/academicwritersbay.com\/writings\/consumer-behavior\/"},"modified":"2022-12-27T16:07:51","modified_gmt":"2022-12-27T16:07:51","slug":"consumer-behavior","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/academicwritersbay.com\/writings\/consumer-behavior\/","title":{"rendered":"Consumer behavior"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><span class=\"fontstyle0\">Consumer behavior in online shopping is affected by sales tax | USAPP 4\/11\/20, 9:59 am<br \/> https:\/\/blogs.lse.ac.uk\/usappblog\/2014\/01\/14\/sales-tax-internet\/ Page 1 of 4<br \/> <\/span><\/p>\n<table class=\"NormalTable\">\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"429\"><span class=\"fontstyle2\">Credit: Luke Dorny (Creative Commons BY NC ND)<\/span><\/td>\n<td width=\"263\"><span class=\"fontstyle2\">Best Buy, or Barnes and<br \/> Noble, that have stores in<\/span><\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<p><span class=\"fontstyle3\">Consumer behavior in online shopping is affected by sales tax<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle4\">Profits from the sales tax make up a large percentage of overall<br \/> revenues in many states, making the estimated $10 billion lost each<br \/> year to tax-free internet purchases particularly concerning. <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle5\">Liran<br \/> Einav<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle5\">, <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle5\">Dan Knoepfle<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle5\">, <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle5\">Jonathan Levin<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle5\">, <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle4\">and <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle5\">Neel Sundaresan<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle4\">examine just how much the presence (or lack thereof) of a sales tax<br \/> influences consumer behavior. He finds that online purchasing goes<br \/> up by 1-2 percent for each percentage point increase in the state<br \/> sales tax, and that an online sales tax does lead to a decline in<br \/> purchases.<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">The tax treatment of online commerce has been hotly debated. In<br \/> the United States, the current legal regime effectively makes a<br \/> sizeable fraction of online retail tax-free, at a time when there is significant pressure on state<br \/> and local governments to generate tax revenues.<br \/> In conventional retail sales, sellers must collect the applicable state and local sales tax. When a<br \/> U.S. buyer purchases from an out-of-state seller, however, the buyer\u2019s home state cannot<br \/> compel the seller to collect sales tax. Instead, states require buyers to self-report and pay an<br \/> equivalent \u201cuse tax.\u201d While this conceivably might amount to the same thing, use tax<br \/> compliance is extremely limited and is estimated to be only in the single digits.<br \/> Merchants are classified for<br \/> tax purchases according to<br \/> whether they have a<br \/> physical presence (known<br \/> as \u201cnexus\u201d) in a given state.<br \/> The 1998 Internet Tax<br \/> Nondiscrimination Act made<br \/> it explicit that Web presence<br \/> alone does not constitute<br \/> nexus, placing online<br \/> commerce in an analogous<br \/> situation to mail-order sales.<br \/> As a result, \u201cbrick and click\u201d<br \/> retailers, such as Wal-Mart,<br \/> essentially every state must<br \/> collect sales tax on their online sales. However, smaller online retailers, such as sellers on eBay<br \/> or other e-commerce platforms, and larger Internet-only retailers, such as Newegg and<br \/> Amazon, must collect tax on relatively few of their online sales.<br \/> When the Internet was new, some argued that favorable tax treatment would facilitate the<br \/> growth of online commerce. Of course, from the perspective of states with stressed budgets,<\/span><br \/> <span class=\"fontstyle0\">Consumer behavior in online shopping is affected by sales tax | USAPP 4\/11\/20, 9:59 am<br \/> https:\/\/blogs.lse.ac.uk\/usappblog\/2014\/01\/14\/sales-tax-internet\/ Page 2 of 4<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">August 1, 2012 Online Sales Tax Hearing. Witnesses (from L to<br \/> R): Paul Misener (Amazon), Steven Bercu (BookPeople, Austin<br \/> TX), Scott Peterson (Streamlined Sales Tax Governing Board),<br \/> and Steve DelBianco (NetChoice) Credit: John D. Rockefeller IV<br \/> this translates into forgone tax revenue. Sales and use taxes on retail purchases are substantial<br \/> are the largest single component of overall state tax revenue, more than 30 percent. Estimates<br \/> suggest that the \u201cmissing\u201d taxes on Internet sales could amount to $10 billion a year.<br \/> Current policy debates about online taxes are taking place at both the federal and state levels.<br \/> Discussions at the federal level revolve around harmonizing the varied system of state and local<br \/> taxes, with the goal of lowering the transaction costs of collecting taxes on interstate sales.<br \/> Debates at the state level have tended to involve challenges to the legal definition of nexus, as<br \/> states attempt to classify more retailers, especially Amazon, as having nexus and hence being<br \/> responsible for sales tax collection.<br \/> An unanswered question in the policy debate is how much sales taxes actually matter in<br \/> determining where and how consumers shop. Although some have argued that favorable sales<br \/> tax treatment has helped spur the growth of online commerce, others point out that sales taxes<br \/> may not be very salient to consumers and that factors such as convenience and variety could<br \/> be much more important in driving retail purchasing decisions.<br \/> In recent research, we used the data from eBay\u2019s massive online marketplace to estimate the<br \/> importance of sales taxes. As one part of our study, we looked at tax changes that have<br \/> occurred over time at the state and local level, and examined whether (untaxed) online<br \/> purchasing by state residents increased when their applicable offline tax rate rose. We found<br \/> that for every 1 percentage point increase in state sales tax, online purchasing increases by 1 to<br \/> 2 percent. For example, if a state raised its sales tax rate from 8 to 9 percent, our estimates<br \/> suggest that this would lead to an increase of 1 to 2 percent of online spending by state<br \/> residents and a likely corresponding decline in offline sales. Another interpretation of the<br \/> estimates, farther out-of-sample, is that if the law changed to require collection of home-state<br \/> sales tax on all internet purchases, internet purchasing by state residents might fall by 8-9% in a<br \/> state with a typical 5-6% sales tax.<br \/> In a second part of our<br \/> study, we investigated<br \/> exactly how much<br \/> consumers actually pay<br \/> attention to sales taxes.<br \/> Offline studies have found<br \/> that consumers tend to treat<br \/> sales taxes as a \u201chidden\u201d<br \/> price and respond less to<br \/> taxes than to regular retail<br \/> prices. We used detailed<br \/> browsing data from eBay to<br \/> find hundreds of thousands<br \/> of \u201cmicro-experiments\u201d in<br \/> which individuals clicked on<br \/> an item only to find that<br \/> there was a sales tax<br \/> collected (if they lived in the<br \/> same state as the seller) or<br \/> no tax (if they lived in a<br \/> different state). We<\/span><br \/> <span class=\"fontstyle0\">Consumer behavior in online shopping is affected by sales tax | USAPP 4\/11\/20, 9:59 am<br \/> https:\/\/blogs.lse.ac.uk\/usappblog\/2014\/01\/14\/sales-tax-internet\/ Page 3 of 4<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">compared these instances (Creative Commons BY)<br \/> to see if the tax would deter<br \/> some purchases. We do<br \/> indeed find a non-trivial decline in purchases when tax is applied, and substitution to similar<br \/> goods being sold by out-of-state sellers (where the purchase would be untaxed). However, the<br \/> tax sensitivity is perhaps only a third or even less than what we might have expected from an<br \/> equivalent increase in the retail price.<br \/> The uneven application of sales taxes also has a second potential consequence. It may help to<br \/> determine the geography of online commerce, by encouraging online shoppers to purchase<br \/> from sellers that are located in different states and by encouraging sellers to make their location<br \/> decisions to obtain favorable tax status.<br \/> To assess this, we tried to estimate the extent to which Internet consumers shop \u201cout of state\u201d to<br \/> avoid sales tax and how this might affect the flow of goods in online commerce. A somewhat<br \/> surprising finding is that contrary to the popular idea of \u201cfrictionless\u201d Internet commerce, online<br \/> shoppers seem to exhibit fairly strong preferences for buying from nearby sellers and in<br \/> particular for buying from sellers within their home state. The effect is sufficiently strong that,<br \/> according to our estimates, a California seller who moved across the state border into Oregon<br \/> to reduce her tax liability on California sales might lose enough of her California sales to nearly<br \/> offset the tax benefit!<br \/> This calculation suggests that online retailers face a trade-off between locating near their<br \/> customers and locating far enough away from their customers to limit their taxes. Amazon<br \/> famously resolved this in favor of limiting taxes. Two of Amazon\u2019s distribution centers are<br \/> located just on the Nevada side of the California\/Nevada border. In fact, none were located in<br \/> California or in New York. Of course, the company\u2019s recent agreement with California to collect<br \/> taxes has changed the calculus, and it now opened new centers in California. If the state and<br \/> local initiatives to apply sales tax across the Internet succeed, effects on retail location<br \/> decisions could prove to be transitory.<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle4\">This article is based on the paper \u201c<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle4\">Sales Taxes and Internet Commerce<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle4\">,\u201d which appeared in the<br \/> American Economic Review, January 2014, pp. 1-26.<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle4\">Please read our comments policy before commenting<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">.<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle4\">Note: This article gives the views of the author, and not the position of USApp\u2013 American<br \/> Politics and Policy, nor of the London School of Economics.<br \/> Shortened URL for this post: <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle5\">http:\/\/bit.ly\/1kzRpAS<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">_________________________________________<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle5\">About the authors<\/span><br \/> <span class=\"fontstyle0\">Consumer behavior in online shopping is affected by sales tax | USAPP 4\/11\/20, 9:59 am<br \/> https:\/\/blogs.lse.ac.uk\/usappblog\/2014\/01\/14\/sales-tax-internet\/ Page 4 of 4<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">January 14th, 2014 | <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">Dan Knoepfle<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">, <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">Economy<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">, <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">Jonathan Levin<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">, <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">Liran Einav<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">, <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">Neel Sundaresan<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">, <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">Urban,<br \/> rural and regional policies <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">| <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">0 Comments<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle5\">Liran Einav <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">\u2013 <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle4\">Stanford University<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">Liran Einav is a Professor of Economics at Stanford University. His current<br \/> research focuses on empirical work in insurance and credit markets, and his<br \/> broader interests include industrial organization, micro-economic theory, applied<br \/> econometrics.<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">_<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle5\">Dan Knoepfle <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">\u2013 <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle4\">Stanford University<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">Dan Knoepfle is a PhD student in the economics department at Stanford<br \/> University. His research focuses on online markets and on experimental studies of<br \/> strategic behavior. He received his undergraduate degree in economics from<br \/> Caltech in 2007.<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">_<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle5\">Jonathan Levin- <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle4\">Stanford University<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">Jonathan Levin is Professor and Chair of the Department of Economics at<br \/> Stanford University, and Professor by courtesy in Stanford\u2019s Graduate School of<br \/> Business. His research is in the field of industrial organization, particularly the<br \/> economics of contracting, organizations, and market design.<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">_<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle5\">Neel Sundaresan \u2013 <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle4\">eBay Research Labs<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">Neel Sundaresan is the Senior Director at eBay Research Labs where he leads<br \/> the research team in areas like Search, Machine Learning, Big Data Science, and<br \/> Vision, among others. Prior to joining eBay he was a founder, CTO of a network<br \/> CRM company and prior to that he was a manager of the eMerging Internet<br \/> Technologies group at IBM Almaden Research Center.<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">This work by <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">LSE USAPP blog <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">is licensed under a <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">.<br \/> We use cookies on this site to understand how you use our content, and to give you the<br \/> best browsing experience. To accept cookies, click continue. To find out more about<br \/> cookies and change your preferences, visit our <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">Cookie Policy.<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle0\">Continue<\/span><br \/> <span class=\"fontstyle7\">Amazon: How to get around the Australian GST rip-off 29\/6\/18, 10*02 am<br \/> https:\/\/www.news.com.au\/finance\/business\/retail\/turnbulls-online-\u2026-amazon-ripoff\/news-story\/a9fc27c89f4f9c8ad933c34551e463df#.48l7k Page 1 of 6<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle8\">retail<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">JUNE 1, 2018 <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle5\">4:11PM<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle8\">\u2018Turnbull\u2019s online shopping tax punishes Aussie<br \/> consumers\u2019: How to avoid the Amazon rip-off<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle9\">AUSTRALIAN shoppers will be forced to pay insane mark-ups thanks to Amazon\u2019s decision. But there\u2019s a way to avoid<br \/> it.<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle5\">Frank Chung<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle10\">business<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle5\">@franks_chung<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">FROM July 1, online retail giant Amazon will attempt to force Australian shoppers<br \/> to use its local website featuring a much smaller, much more expensive range of<br \/> products than its international sites \u2014 but there are plenty of ways to get around the<br \/> block.<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle12\">\u0001 <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle13\">Video Image<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">Amazon to stop shipping to Australia<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle6\">Hipages Fox Sports SEEK Carsales RealEstate News Network<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle13\">National World Lifestyle Travel Entertainment Technology <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle13\">Finance <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle13\">Sport <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle12\">\u0004<\/span><br \/> <span class=\"fontstyle7\">Amazon: How to get around the Australian GST rip-off 29\/6\/18, 10*02 am<br \/> https:\/\/www.news.com.au\/finance\/business\/retail\/turnbulls-online-\u2026-amazon-ripoff\/news-story\/a9fc27c89f4f9c8ad933c34551e463df#.48l7k Page 2 of 6<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">Amazon said the change was in response to the Turnbull government\u2019s new online<br \/> GST laws, which require overseas businesses to collect the tax <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">on products under<br \/> $1000<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">.<br \/> Treasurer Scott Morrison slammed the move, saying if Amazon wanted to \u201ctake their<br \/> bat and ball and go home\u201d Australians had \u201cmany other choices available to them\u201d.<br \/> \u201cOf course we\u2019re going to proceed with this,\u201d he told reporters on Friday.<br \/> \u201cIt\u2019s $300 million estimated revenue that will be going to the states and territories for<br \/> schools and hospitals. We think it\u2019s a very fair and reasonable step and I know<br \/> retailers have been wanting to see this for some time.<br \/> \u201cI find it hard to believe that one of the world\u2019s most technologically advanced<br \/> companies, two years later now say they\u2019re unable to work out a technological<br \/> solution when it comes to the simple application of a sales tax on their products in<br \/> Australia.<br \/> \u201cThey face different VAT rates all around the world, UK, Canada.<br \/> \u201cI think it\u2019s disappointing that Amazon will take this out on consumers in Australia<br \/> but that\u2019s their commercial decision. If they don\u2019t like selling things into Australia<br \/> because they don\u2019t like paying tax, there are plenty of options here at home.\u201d<br \/> Australian shoppers may disagree, however.<br \/> As Amazon <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">customers noted at launch<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">, many products sold by third-party sellers are<br \/> significantly more expensive on the Australian site, meaning it was already cheaper<br \/> to buy from the US and pay the shipping fee.<br \/> For example, the popular Unicomp Ultra Classic Keyboard \u2014 a favourite among PC<br \/> enthusiasts \u2014 costs <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">$139 on Amazon.com <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">but <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">$360 on Amazon.com.au<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">, a 160 per<br \/> cent mark-up, while a Marc Jacobs Jane West End Suede handbag costs $894<br \/> compared with $2172.<br \/> The July 1 block will make it slightly harder \u2014 and more expensive \u2014 to buy things<br \/> from Amazon international, but there\u2019s a good chance it will still be better than<br \/> paying inflated prices on the Australian site.<br \/> Here\u2019s how you do it.<br \/> First, you\u2019ll need to <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">sign up for a VPN <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">(virtual private network), and switch to a US<br \/> IP address. VPNs are like a middleman for your internet connection. Many <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">people<br \/> already use them <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">to trick streaming services like Netflix into thinking they are inside<br \/> the US to get around content blocking.<br \/> There are <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">hundreds to choose from<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">, typically ranging from <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">around $10-20 a month<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">.<br \/> Online reviews <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">ranking the various services <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">commonly cite NordVPN, ExpressVPN,<br \/> Private Internet Access, IPVanish and TunnelBear.<br \/> Second, sign up for an account with a <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">freight forwarding service <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">such as <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">ShopMate<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">,<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">Shipito<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">, <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">Hop-Shop-Go <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">or <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">Parcl<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">. Freight forwarding services provide shoppers with a<br \/> US address to give to the retailer, and then ship the package to Australia for a fee.<br \/> \u201cYou\u2019ll still get slammed for the GST by customs on the way in, but it\u2019s 10 per cent<br \/> on massive savings you can\u2019t get in Australia anyway. The consumer still wins out,\u201d<br \/> said 56-year-old Greg, who spends between $2000-$4000 a year shopping online.<br \/> While eBay and Alibaba confirmed on Thursday they would not geoblock Australian<br \/> shoppers, Gartner principal analyst Thomas O\u2019Connor has warned stores like ASOS,<br \/> Nordstrom or Macy\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">may follow Amazon\u2019s lead<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">.<br \/> \u201cThis could be the start of a trend where there are more restrictions placed on<br \/> shipping to Australia,\u201d he told <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle14\">The Daily Telegraph<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">.<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">advertisement<\/span><br \/> <span class=\"fontstyle7\">Amazon: How to get around the Australian GST rip-off 29\/6\/18, 10*02 am<br \/> https:\/\/www.news.com.au\/finance\/business\/retail\/turnbulls-online-\u2026amazon-ripoff\/news-story\/a9fc27c89f4f9c8ad933c34551e463df#.48l7k Page 3 of 6<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">\u201cIt would be surprising if others don\u2019t join Amazon. [Price rises are] definitely a<br \/> possibility. If there are more retailers who join Amazon by doing this, that becomes<br \/> more and more real, and more and more likely.\u201d<br \/> The Australian Taxpayers\u2019 Alliance said the Turnbull government\u2019s online shopping<br \/> tax \u201cpunishes Aussie consumers\u201d and denies shoppers \u201cthe same choice available to<br \/> billions of shoppers worldwide\u201d.<br \/> \u201cLast year, the ATA gave evidence to a Senate inquiry that the online shopping tax<br \/> would not make Australian retailers competitive, would not raise a significant<br \/> amount of revenue for the government and that the cost of implementing the tax<br \/> would force major online platforms to exit the market or cease serving Australians<br \/> entirely,\u201d ATA policy director Satya Marar said in a statement.<br \/> \u201cNow, after persistent denial by the government, we see these consequences in<br \/> action. With another federal election on the horizon, the online shopping tax is a<br \/> failure by the government to prioritise the interests of working Australians and their<br \/> families.<br \/> \u201cInstead, we see capitulation to intense lobbying by major retailers whose products<br \/> remain significantly more expensive on average than similar goods available online<br \/> overseas due to a combination of burdensome local pressures such as zoning laws,<br \/> electricity costs, strict labour regulations and red tape.\u201d<br \/> Amazon announced the move on Thursday in an email to customers, apologising for<br \/> \u201cany inconvenience\u201d but saying the change was necessary to \u201callow us to remain<br \/> compliant with the law\u201d.<br \/> An Amazon spokesman said the company \u201chad to assess the workability of the<br \/> legislation as a global business with multiple international sites\u201d. \u201cBased on our<br \/> assessment, we will redirect Australian customers from our international sites to<br \/> Amazon.com.au,\u201d he said.<br \/> On Thursday, Mr Morrison defended the decision to push ahead with the<br \/> controversial change and slammed Amazon \u2014 which could become the world\u2019s first<br \/> trillion-dollar company \u2014 and its founder Jeff Bezos, the world\u2019s richest man.<br \/> \u201cThe second biggest company in the world, run by the richest man in the world,<br \/> shouldn\u2019t get a leave pass from paying tax in Australia,\u201d he said.<br \/> \u201cThe government doesn\u2019t apologise for ensuring multinationals pay a fair amount of<br \/> tax here in Australia. That tax revenue is used to fund essential services.<br \/> \u201cIf multinationals aren\u2019t forced to pay their fair share of tax, they will have a<br \/> competitive advantage over retailers here in Australia, on our own main streets and<br \/> in our shopping centres.\u201d<br \/> Around 4.6 million Australians <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">visited Amazon\u2019s US site <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">in November 2017, the<br \/> month before its Australian website went live, according to online measurement firm<br \/> Nielsen.<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle15\">Update: <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle11\">Amazon has clarified that Australian users will not need to use a VPN to<br \/> access its US site from July 1. Australian customers will still be able to purchase<br \/> from the US site but Amazon will only ship to US addresses.<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle15\"><span class=\"__cf_email__\" data-cfemail=\"254357444b4e0b464d504b42654b4052560b464a480b4450\">[email\u00a0protected]<\/span><br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">advertisement<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle8\">TRENDING IN FINANCE<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle16\">This year, get your<br \/> business online.<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle5\">1894 READERS<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle8\">Woolworths plastic ban:<br \/> Retailer to issue free<br \/> reusable bags\u2026<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle5\">953 READERS<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle8\">Tax return 2018: What<br \/> you need to do before<br \/> June 30<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle5\">179 READERS<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle8\">Online shopping tax,<br \/> power prices: Key<br \/> changes from 1 July 2\u2026<\/span><br \/> <span class=\"fontstyle5\">Economists throw doubt on generic drug<br \/> price advantage over branded version<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">16 September 2013<br \/> (Medical Xpress)\u2014People given a choice between<br \/> generic or branded drugs should look closely at the<br \/> ingredients in the drug they are buying, argue<br \/> economists from Deakin University\u2019s Graduate<br \/> School of Business.<br \/> In a paper published in the <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle4\">Berkeley Electronic<br \/> (BE) Journal of Economic Policy and Analysis <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">the<br \/> researchers (Munirul, Vijay, Aaron and Pasquale)<br \/> throw doubt on the claims by governments that the<br \/> introduction of generics really does benefit<br \/> consumers.<br \/> Lead researcher Dr Munirul Nabin said<br \/> governments generally argued that simplifying the<br \/> entry process for generic drugs increased<br \/> competition in the <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">pharmaceutical sector<\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">, causing<br \/> prices to fall.<br \/> \u201cHowever a number of studies have shown that<br \/> prices of branded drugs actually increases after<br \/> generic drugs enter a market \u2013 an effect<br \/> economists call the Generic Competition Paradox,\u201d<br \/> he said.<br \/> Dr Nabin said <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">economists <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">theorised there were a<br \/> number of reasons why the phenomena occurred,<br \/> including doctors preferring to prescribe branded<br \/> drugs over generics and doctors referring patients<br \/> who had didn\u2019t have health insurance to generic<br \/> drugs, however Deakin\u2019s analysis based on data<br \/> from Canada revealed another explanation.<br \/> \u201cIt is not generic drugs vs branded drugs that is the<br \/> issue, but whether the generic drugs are<br \/> therapeutically equivalent to the branded variety<br \/> that is the factor,\u201d he said.<br \/> Dr Nabin said put simply both generic and branded<br \/> drugs had two types of ingredients, active and<br \/> inactive.<br \/> \u201cIn Australia and elsewhere the <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">active ingredient <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">in<br \/> both the branded and the generic has to be<br \/> biologically equivalent and there are regulatory<br \/> criteria around this,\u201d he said.<br \/> \u201cHowever the inactive ingredient in the branded and<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">generic versions <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">can differ.<br \/> \u201cThey may have different release mechanisms,<br \/> dyes, pH adjusters and different salt combinations,<br \/> all of which affect the stability and performance of<br \/> the drug and consequently its effect on the patient.<br \/> \u201cThis nuance is well-known in the <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">medical<br \/> community <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">but there is a growing body of medical<br \/> evidence which suggests that just because a drug<br \/> is biologically equivalent, it does not make it<br \/> therapeutically equivalent and thus<br \/> interchangeable.\u201d<br \/> Dr Nabin said medical researchers had highlighted<br \/> issues with generics, particularly for patients<br \/> suffering severe illnesses such as epilepsy and<br \/> depression.<br \/> \u201cAnti-epileptic drugs and some psychotherapeutic<br \/> drugs exhibit a narrow therapeutic index which<br \/> makes it difficult for doctors and patients to<br \/> substitute between the two varieties of drugs,\u201d he<br \/> said.<br \/> \u201cBecause of this the price of branded drugs is likely<br \/> to rise after the <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">generic drugs <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">enter a market, not<br \/> fall.<br \/> \u201cTo overcome this governments need to segregate<br \/> drugs into their drug class when considering the<br \/> effect of generic entry on price.<br \/> \u201cIf they don\u2019t they may find their health costs go up<br \/> because the efficacy of the drug is not the same<br \/> and more money is spent retreating patients as<br \/> side-effects increase.\u201d<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle5\">More information:<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">www.degruyter.com\/view\/j\/bejea \u2026<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">1 \/ 2<\/span><br \/> <span class=\"fontstyle2\">4\/1935-1682.3234.xml<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">Provided by Deakin University<br \/> APA citation: Economists throw doubt on generic drug price advantage over branded version (2013,<br \/> September 16) retrieved 7 November 2020 from <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">https:\/\/medicalxpress.com\/news\/2013-09-economistsdrug-price-advantage-branded.html<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle4\">This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no<br \/> part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org)<br \/> <\/span><span class=\"fontstyle2\">2 \/ 2<\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Consumer behavior in online shopping is affected by sales tax | USAPP 4\/11\/20, 9:59 am https:\/\/blogs.lse.ac.uk\/usappblog\/2014\/01\/14\/sales-tax-internet\/ Page 1 of 4 Credit: Luke Dorny (Creative Commons BY NC ND) Best Buy, or Barnes and Noble, that have stores in Consumer behavior in online shopping is affected by sales tax Profits from the sales tax make up &#8230; <a title=\"Consumer behavior\" class=\"read-more\" href=\"https:\/\/academicwritersbay.com\/writings\/consumer-behavior\/\" aria-label=\"Read more about Consumer behavior\">Read more<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-27","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-essaywr"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/academicwritersbay.com\/writings\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/27","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/academicwritersbay.com\/writings\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/academicwritersbay.com\/writings\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/academicwritersbay.com\/writings\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/academicwritersbay.com\/writings\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=27"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/academicwritersbay.com\/writings\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/27\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/academicwritersbay.com\/writings\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=27"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/academicwritersbay.com\/writings\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=27"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/academicwritersbay.com\/writings\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=27"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}