Saturday, 25 April 2026

The Australian government has 'subscription traps' in its sights

As I noted in a post last week, firms are increasingly selling subscriptions rather than products because consumer inertia can make them substantially more profitable. Once a customer starts a subscription, they tend not to cancel the subscription as soon as they should, simply because it requires some thought and attention (as well as a little bit of time) to execute a cancellation of the subscription. This 'customer inertia' is a form of switching cost, which locks customers into buying the subscription. However, sellers can easily amp up the switching cost by making it more difficult (and therefore more costly) to cancel. This makes customer lock-in more effective, and can 'trap' customers into their subscription.

In this article in The Conversation last year, Jeannie Marie Paterson (University of Melbourne) provides a couple of examples of 'subscription traps', each of which represents an instance of the firm increasing the switching costs for the consumer:

One example is when consumers sign up for a service quickly and easily online, but can only cancel on the phone (sometimes needing to ring another country)...

Another example, known as “confirm shaming”, involves requiring consumers to click through multiple screens before they can cancel.

Typically, each of those screens has a message asking consumers to reconsider, often reiterating the service’s purported benefits and even offering new discounts on the price not previously available.

When the switching costs are higher for the consumer, the customer lock-in is more effective (it is harder for the consumer to cancel, or switch). The firm can then profit through selling at a higher price, or by selling complementary goods and services to the locked-in consumer.

It is deceptively easy for a consumer to get locked in as well. I'm sure that you will have been offered the first month free on a subscription. That is how the firms get you. Firms often offer subscriptions at a low price initially (or free), then once the consumer is locked in, the firm can raise the price (this is referred to as multi-period pricing).

However, governments are wising up to the 'subscription traps' that Paterson highlights. She notes that:

Making it hard to cancel – commonly called a “subscription trap” – isn’t currently illegal. But now the federal government has announced a plan to ban subscription traps and other hidden fees.

Since then, the policy process in Australia has advanced, with draft legislation released in early 2026 that would impose disclosure, notification, and easy-cancellation requirements on subscription contracts from 1 July 2027, if the legislation is passed.

It is worth noting that banning subscription traps is not the only policy solution here. Anything that reduces the switching costs will likely be effective at reducing customer lock-in. One example that Paterson notes is:

California’s “click to cancel” rules also mean consumers must be able to cancel using the same method of communication they used to subscribe. And businesses must offer consumers information on how to cancel.

So, if signing up for a subscription requires a single click, then cancelling a subscription must also require a single click. That minimises the switching costs, and minimises customer lock-in. Making subscriptions easy to cancel would allow consumers to retain the genuine benefits of subscriptions (including lower transaction costs and fewer service interruptions) while reducing the unnecessary costs from subscriptions they no longer use. Firms may still be able to offer discounts or reminders to retain customers, but the cancellation process should inform consumers rather than obstruct them. Reducing these artificial switching costs is therefore likely to improve consumer welfare overall.

Read more:

Friday, 24 April 2026

This week in research #123

Here's what caught my eye in research over the past week:

  • James and Watson (with ungated earlier version here) find using an online survey experiment that state-administered cash transfers (such as Alaska’s Permanent Fund Dividend Program) likely attract new residents
  • Wang et al. find that the online and mobile game Genshin Impact had a significant positive effect on China's product exports, likely by fostering a more favourable perception of China among people in other countries
  • Liu et al. find a significant child penalty in the rental housing market in China, with couples with children 8.0 percentage points less likely to receive a response from landlords, and 5.9 percentage points less likely to be invited to an open house

Wednesday, 22 April 2026

Why do firms increasingly prefer to sell subscriptions, rather than products?

An increasing number of goods and services that were once sold as one-off purchases are now offered as subscriptions. Newspaper subscriptions and gym memberships have existed for a long time, and 'software as a service' is now commonplace. But the model has spread much more widely: consumers can now subscribe to meal kits (such as HelloFresh), razors (such as Dollar Shave Club), and a growing range of other products. Why are firms that once sold products outright increasingly choosing to sell subscriptions instead?

That is the question addressed in this 2025 article by Liran Einav (Stanford University), Ben Klopack (Texas A&M University), and Neale Mahoney (Stanford University), published in the prestigious American Economic Review (ungated earlier version here). They start by noting that the rapid growth in subscriptions is often attributed to the rise of digital products, and the convenience of a subscription for consumers. However, Einav et al. focus their attention on a third factor:

Because subscriptions are automatically renewed, consumers who are inertial may continue to pay for subscriptions they no longer value... If consumers do not fully anticipate their inertia at sign-up, this may create supply-side incentives to offer subscriptions to exploit inertial consumers, amplifying the growth of subscription offerings.

My ECONS101 students will be familiar with this explanation for subscriptions, because we literally covered this in the lecture today. Einav et al. test for the extent to which inertia matters using transaction data from "a large payment card network in the United States between August 2017 and December 2021". Their final dataset includes over 800,000 accounts, and about 870,000 account-service pairs (each account-service pair is a set of observations of a payment card account that subscribes from one of the ten largest subscription services).

Einav et al. exploit the fact that when a card expires and is replaced, consumers typically have to update the billing information for their subscriptions, prompting them to either update or cancel each subscription. To the extent that card replacement decreases the retention rate of subscriptions, this provides evidence of customer inertia. If consumers cancelled subscriptions whenever they stopped making use of them, then there would be no difference in subscription retention between months with card replacements and months without.

Unsurprisingly, Einav et al. find evidence of customer inertia, and the effects are large and consequential for firms selling subscriptions:

We use the estimated model to perform counterfactual exercises that assess how much more quickly consumers would cancel their subscriptions if there was no inertia, which corresponds to fully attentive consumers (inattention model) or default cancellation every month (switching cost model). We find that seller revenues (or equivalently average subscription durations) are significantly higher due to subscriber inertia with important heterogeneity across services. Specifically, in the inattention model, we find that inertia increases seller revenues by 87 percent on average, with increases that range from 14 percent to more than 200 percent depending on the service. In the switching cost model, inertia raises revenue by 120 percent on average, with a range of 17 percent to 259 percent.

So, there are strong incentives for firms to engage in the selling of subscriptions, and to take advantage of customer inertia in subscriptions. However, many consumers are clearly spending more on subscriptions than they need or necessarily want to. Think about yourself as an example - how many subscriptions do you have right now that you rarely use and probably should cancel? I don't have any, but that's only because writing this post made me think about this and cancel one that I was no longer really using!

Subscriptions can provide important benefits for consumer though, including reducing transaction costs (it is simpler to pay a monthly subscription than to buy goods or services individually over and over), and reducing service interruptions (because a subscription makes it more likely that the consumer won't run out of the good they are buying a subscription for). However, we might still be concerned that customer inertia makes some customers with subscriptions worse off overall. So, Einav et al. then turn to evaluating what the most appropriate policy response is. They focus attention on a rule requiring firms to provide consumers with an active renewal decision at regular intervals. Using their two models, Einav et al. find that:

In the inattention model, we find that requiring active choices at a six-month frequency would reduce the excess revenue from inattention by 45 percent. The switching cost model makes a similar quantitative prediction; moving from default renewal to default cancellation once every six months would reduce excess revenue by 48 percent.

Those are quite substantial effects, which again illustrates just how much consumers are giving away to subscription firms for subscriptions that they no longer make the best use of and should be cancelling. What becomes clear from this paper is that one important reason why firms that previously would have sold products instead prefer to sell subscriptions is that consumer inertia can make them substantially more profitable.

Read more:

Tuesday, 21 April 2026

A surprising example of block pricing with heterogeneous demand

My wife and I just got back from holiday in Europe, and stopped in the duty-free store at Auckland Airport to pick up some bottles of gin for my mother-in-law. The price was $45 for one bottle, $69 for two bottles, or $95 for three bottles.

Standard block pricing (as described in this post) calls for the seller to sell at a declining marginal price per unit. In this case, the first bottle is $45, and the second bottle is $24 (for a total of $69 for two bottles). However, the third bottle is $26 (for a total of $95 for three bottles). Did the duty-free store get its block pricing wrong?

Certainly, their pricing is inconsistent with the standard block pricing story, because the third bottle should be less expensive (or, at least, not more expensive) than the second bottle. However, as Nobel Prize winner George Stigler noted, the pricing strategies that we see in the real world are likely to be those that work fairly well (otherwise, the strategy wouldn't persist and we wouldn't see them). So, there must be something about this pricing strategy that makes it work.

I think that the duty-free store is doing a bit of a mix of block pricing and menu pricing. Menu pricing is a form of price discrimination, where consumers sort themselves into those who are high-demand consumers and low-demand consumers. Low-demand consumers buy one bottle (or perhaps two), and pay a relatively high price per unit, while high-demand consumers buy three bottles and pay a lower price per unit.

Now, as I noted in this post, block pricing doesn't typically work when there is heterogeneous demand, because low-demand consumers are unaffected by block pricing (they buy the same quantity as if there was no block pricing), while high-demand consumers may buy more of the good, but spend less overall (because of the lower price per unit). The duty-free store avoids this negative outcome because consumers can only buy three bottles of gin duty-free. If they buy any more than that, they have to pay duty on the additional bottles. So, that effectively caps the number of bottles that high-demand consumers can buy to three. So, the high-demand consumers are stopped from buying four, or five, or six, or twenty bottles at the lower price. That means that the high-demand consumers may buy more bottles than if there wasn't block pricing, but they don't end up spending less overall.

That also helps explain why the third bottle can be priced a little higher than the second. A plausible interpretation is that the two-bottle deal is designed to attract moderate-demand consumers, while the three-bottle deal is aimed at the highest-demand consumers who are constrained by the duty-free limit. If that is the case, then the store does not need the third bottle to be cheaper than the second. Instead, it needs the three-bottle bundle to be attractive to a different group of buyers than the two-bottle bundle or a single bottle. Again, this points to menu pricing as part of the explanation.

So, while the duty-free store isn't conducting block pricing exactly as I describe in my ECONS101 class, we can nevertheless puzzle out what they are doing. And it makes sense, even if it is surprising to see a seller that is able to use block pricing when there is heterogeneous demand.