Home Economy An example for your classes: All of those economists @Amazon and they still got “burned” by loss aversion (or did they?)

An example for your classes: All of those economists @Amazon and they still got “burned” by loss aversion (or did they?)

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From the WSJ ( Alexa, That Isn’t Elvis! New Music Shuffle Irks Amazon Prime Users):

Dustin Bingham loves to play music when he cooks. Recently, he asked one of his eight Amazon Echo smart speakers to play Michael Bublé while he prepared some pasta.

Sure enough, sounds of the Canadian crooner filled the kitchen, courtesy of his Amazon Prime music account. But what was that next tune? Not Mr. Bublé, and not anything Mr. Bingham had ever heard before. Was something broken?

Irritated, he asked his smart speaker to play Luke Combs, and the same thing happened: first a song from the country singer, then something else entirely.

Before long, he was yelling at Alexa, Amazon’s virtual voice assistant. “There was a lot of cussing going on,” said Mr. Bingham, 44 years old. The pasta, he said, burned.

First, do you really “burn” pasta or do you overcook it into a sloppy mess? I checked Google and here is the answer from Quora:

Assuming that you don’t let the pot run dry, you can still burn parts of the pasta if you heat strongly and don’t stir it. Parts of the pasta stick to the bottom and get burnt by the heat from the stove. One of many reasons to stir constantly when cooking pasta.

OK, so don’t let “burning” pasta derail you from the article:

Like many other customers, Mr. Bingham has discovered the hard way that Amazon had changed its options for streaming music. Customers of Amazon Prime, its broad perk service, no longer can play on demand most of the songs in the company’s catalog. That feature is now limited to customers willing to pay more for Amazon’s “Unlimited” music tier.

Nice! You pay $139 for Amazon Prime, up $20 from 2018 to 2021, and they take something away and then offer to give it back (along with other features) for $8.99/month. This is a good example of loss aversion: 

Mr. Bingham, who lives near Folsom, Calif., wasn’t a fan, and he didn’t want to pay another $8.99 a month for an Unlimited subscription (the price is going up in February). He gathered all but one of his Echo speakers, he said, and moved them to the garage. He replaced them with two Google Nest devices and subscribed to YouTube Music Premium.

This makes me think this behavior, and there are more examples from the WSJ article, is an example of loss averson. From the Decision Lab

Loss aversion is a cognitive bias that describes why, for individuals, the pain of losing is psychologically twice as powerful as the pleasure of gaining. The loss felt from money, or any other valuable object, can feel worse than gaining that same thing.

Here is the short run outcome (from the WSJ):

Amazon Music has been the fastest-growing competitor to Spotify and Apple Music. But its share of the music subscription market decreased from 21% in January 2022 to 17% in November, the month that Amazon introduced the updates, according to data tracker Antenna.

Amazon is famous for hiring a bunch of economists who, apparently, do stuff that increases Amazon’s profits:

In the past few years, Amazon has hired more than 150 PhD economists, making it probably the largest employer in the field behind institutions like the Federal Reserve, which has hundreds of economists on staff. It was the only company with a recruiting booth at the American Economics Association’s annual conference in January, handing out free pens and logoed stress balls.

Amazon’s economists game out real estate decisions, set the lowest prices that will deliver a profit, precisely determine what customers care about and whether advertisements are working — all using machine-learning algorithms that automate decisionmaking on a massive scale. It’s the kind of asset that smaller companies can’t always pay for, allowing Amazon to pull further and further away from the competition.

I attended parts of the Causal Inference Methods and Applications in Tech session at the AEA and heard this paper (“The Science of Pricing Experimentation at Amazon”): 
In order to improve prices at Amazon, we created Pricing Labs, a price experimentation platform. Since we do not price discriminate, we must run product-randomized experiments. In this presentation, I will discuss how we randomize to prevent spillovers, run different experimental designs (i.e. crossovers) to improve precision, and control for demand trends and differences in treatment groups to get more precise treatment effect estimates.
The speaker said that they do a lot of cool stuff but couldn’t tell us the results because they were proprietary (yawn). Someone, maybe it was a panelist, said that all of these randomized experiments were very expensive.
 
Here is an alternative. Write a short survey with some stated preference questions and present it to 500 marketing panelists and I bet you could find that consumers don’t like when something that they were paying for is being taken away. The problem is that it’s not as cool as an A/B test (but it is cheaper).
 
But, maybe I don’t know enough (or anything) about how this all (i.e, the private sector) works. There is a good chance that the revenue from Amazon Music more than offsets whatever losses may be felt because something has been taken away from Amazon Prime (from the WSJ): 
Amazon appears to be trying to push its music streamers to the higher-cost Unlimited tier. When users click on a song they no longer can listen to on demand in the Prime tier, an ad for its Unlimited service pops up.
In fact, my bet is that it was all market tested and Amazon is making more money. Amazon Prime Music (which doesn’t cost anything extra) has lost market share (so there is no lost revenue unless people drop Prime) but I wonder how many new subsribers there are for Amazon Unlimited Music? Someone remind me to check the 4Q earnings report (here is the 3Q).  

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