Pricing schedule explained
A pricing schedule is a function that maps the quantity of a good purchased to the total price paid.
Types of pricing schedules
- Linear Pricing Schedule - A pricing schedule in which there is a fixed price per unit, such that where total price paid is represented by T(q), quantity is represented by q and price per unit is represented by a constant p, T(q) = pq [1]
- Nonlinear Pricing Schedule - Nonlinear pricing is a pricing schedule in which quantity and total price are not mapped to each other in a strictly linear fashion[2]
- Affine Pricing - An affine pricing schedule consists of both a fixed cost and a cost per unit. Using the same notation as above, T(q) = k + pq, where k is a constant cost.[3]
Notes and References
- http://economics.about.com/library/glossary/bldef-linear-pricing-schedule.htm Linear Pricing Schedule
- http://economics.about.com/cs/economicsglossary/g/nonlinear.htm Nonlinear Pricing
- http://economics.about.com/cs/economicsglossary/g/affine_pricing.htm Affine Pricing