- Experience good
In
economics , an experience good is a product or service where product characteristics such as quality or price are difficult to observe in advance, but these characteristics can be ascertained upon consumption. The concept is originally due toPhilip Nelson , who contrasted an experience good with asearch good .Experience goods pose difficulties for consumers in accurately making consumption choices. In service areas such as
healthcare , they reward reputation and create inertia. Experience goods typically have lowerprice elasticity than search goods, as consumers fear that lower prices may be due to unobservable problems or quality issues.Post-experience goods, also called
credence good s, are goods for which it is difficult for consumers to ascertain the quality even "after" they have consumed them, such as vitamin supplements. Potential consumers of these goods may require third-party information, provided by private rating agencies or government bodies.References
*Luis M. B. Cabral: Introduction to Industrial Organization, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press, 2000, page 223. ISBN 0-262-03286-4
*Philip Nelson , "Information and Consumer Behavior", 78(2) "Journal of Political Economy" 311-329 (1970).
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