The relevant property isn’t that someone imposes something on you, but rather that you wish to discourage the behavior in question. Going to the store that charges you less 1) saves you $5 and 2) discourages stores from setting prices that are more expensive than other stores by an amount which is less than the transaction cost of shopping at the other store. This benefits you more than saving $5 does all by itself. In fact, if you make a binding precommitment to shop at the other store even if it costs you $6 more, the store will take this into account and probably won’t set the price at $5 more in the first place. (And “‘irrationally’ but predictably being willing to spend money to spite the store” is the way humans precommit.)
If it costs the shop to provide ther item near you 5$ because they can benefit from mass transit but moving the item to your location costs you 6$ because you can’t. You could be punishing the service of making items available near your location.
Also in this case the price difference is more than the transaction cost to you.
Even in the case that the punishment works you might end up in a situation where you drive the near store to bankruptcy because they can’t afford the lesser price. So you end up getting the same item and paying $1 more for it. This seems like an instance of an empty threat working out only conditional that it will be heeded.
With the shirt the point is not to convince the robber but the order enforcement. Maybe I could understand if the price could somehow be deemed “wrong” but it being financially not perfectly optimal for you in particular is far from being forbidden conduct.
If it costs the shop to provide ther item near you 5$ because they can benefit from mass transit but moving the item to your location costs you 6$ because you can’t. You could be punishing the service of making items available near your location.
Sure. The fact that putting pressure on the other store is an additional benefit beyond your savings doesn’t mean that putting pressure is worth any arbitrary amount. There are certainly scenarios where shopping at the cheaper store that is expensive to reach is a bad idea.
But it’s not bad just because it costs more to reach than you save on price, which is the typical rationalist line about such things.
The relevant property isn’t that someone imposes something on you, but rather that you wish to discourage the behavior in question. Going to the store that charges you less 1) saves you $5 and 2) discourages stores from setting prices that are more expensive than other stores by an amount which is less than the transaction cost of shopping at the other store. This benefits you more than saving $5 does all by itself. In fact, if you make a binding precommitment to shop at the other store even if it costs you $6 more, the store will take this into account and probably won’t set the price at $5 more in the first place. (And “‘irrationally’ but predictably being willing to spend money to spite the store” is the way humans precommit.)
If it costs the shop to provide ther item near you 5$ because they can benefit from mass transit but moving the item to your location costs you 6$ because you can’t. You could be punishing the service of making items available near your location.
Also in this case the price difference is more than the transaction cost to you.
Even in the case that the punishment works you might end up in a situation where you drive the near store to bankruptcy because they can’t afford the lesser price. So you end up getting the same item and paying $1 more for it. This seems like an instance of an empty threat working out only conditional that it will be heeded.
With the shirt the point is not to convince the robber but the order enforcement. Maybe I could understand if the price could somehow be deemed “wrong” but it being financially not perfectly optimal for you in particular is far from being forbidden conduct.
Sure. The fact that putting pressure on the other store is an additional benefit beyond your savings doesn’t mean that putting pressure is worth any arbitrary amount. There are certainly scenarios where shopping at the cheaper store that is expensive to reach is a bad idea.
But it’s not bad just because it costs more to reach than you save on price, which is the typical rationalist line about such things.