(Press-News.org) In 2022, U.S. grocers wasted 5 million tons of food, with 35% of it going to landfills, according to the food waste nonprofit ReFed. More than half of that waste — 2.7 million tons — was past the labels’ expiration dates.
But there’s a potential technological solution to the waste problem, according to new research from Texas McCombs. By moving from paper shelf labels to digital ones, supermarkets can easily lower prices and move older stock from their shelves to consumers’ homes.
Using technology to quickly change prices on labels, a process known as dynamic pricing, benefits more than just consumers, says Ioannis Stamatopoulos, associate professor of information, risk, and operations management.
“Everyone is better off when dynamic pricing is enabled,” he says. “There’s less food waste and less emissions from food ending up in landfills.”
Grocers save time and money, too. They can change digital labels — also called electronic shelf labels — with a few keystrokes on a tablet, compared with printing physical labels and sticking them onto shelves. When it’s easier and cheaper to update prices, Stamatopoulos says, grocers should do it more often.
How much is more often? To find out, Stamatopoulos — with Naveed Chehrazi of Washington University in St. Louis and Robert Sanders of the University of California, San Diego — analyzed two unnamed European grocery chains as they installed the tags.
One, in the United Kingdom, introduced digital labels for 940 perishable products. The labels displayed the base price and added discounts as products got closer to expiring. The researchers found the stores changed prices 54% more often.
Raising the Bar for Barcodes
The second supermarket chain, in the European Union, adopted electronic labels but added a second technology: expanded barcodes.
Unlike a standard barcode, an expanded one can hold inventory details such as packaging dates, lot numbers, and expiration dates. When inventory nears its “sell-by” date, a store can lower prices to stimulate buying.
After the EU stores installed the two technologies, the researchers found, they increased price change frequency 853%.
Rapid price changes aid shoppers, says Stamatopoulos. “If you’re a consumer who really, really cares about price, then you can buy the blueberries that will expire two days later and consume them today.”
By better managing inventories, the barcodes also boost stores’ bottom lines, he adds. “Because the grocery store can put things on discount when they’re about to expire, they can afford larger orders, so they take advantage of economies of scale in ordering.”
The Price of Dynamic Pricing
Although dynamic pricing has long-term benefits, it faces short-term obstacles. One is consumer fear that retailers will jack up prices when demand is high — as ride-hailing companies such as Uber do.
In February, when the fast-food chain Wendy’s announced it would roll out dynamic pricing, it drew backlash. It quickly clarified that it would cut prices during slow periods but not raise them during busy periods.
But unlike restaurants, it’s hard for grocers to pinpoint hours of high demand for individual products, Stamatopoulos notes. “For retailers to estimate demand very finely and dynamically respond accordingly, so as to squeeze every dollar out of it, I think that’s kind of impossible,” he says.
Another barrier is cost. Grocers must invest in digital labels and tablets, while employees must update data daily for thousands of items.
Europe is ahead of the U.S. on adopting these technologies, but that could be changing. In June, Walmart announced it will transition to digital price labels in 2,300 stores by 2026. Amazon Fresh and the Midwestern chain Schnuck’s are also using them.
To speed the transition, Stamatopoulos suggests government subsidies, like those for solar panels and electric vehicles.
“Somebody needs to break this equilibrium,” he says. “Then things will move to a new era where everybody’s using the additional information.”
“Inventory Information Frictions Explain Price Rigidity in Perishable Groceries” is forthcoming in Marketing Science.
Story by Suzi Morales
END
Digital labels can help grocers waste less food
Consumers, stores, and the environment benefit when electronic tags allow speedy price changes
2024-12-20
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Clever trick to cook stars like Christmas puds detected for first time
2024-12-20
Clever trick to cook stars like Christmas puds detected for first time
Royal Astronomical Society press release
RAS PR 24/33
Embargoed until 00:01 GMT on Friday 20 December 2024
The missing ingredient for cooking up stars in the same way you might steam your Christmas pudding has been spotted for the first time by astronomers.
Much like a pressure cooker has a weight on top of its lid to keep the pressure in and get your festive dessert dense, moist and ready to eat, merging galaxies may need magnetic fields to create the ideal conditions for star formation.
Until now, however, the existence of such a force had only been ...
By looking at individual atoms in tooth enamel, UW and PNNL researchers are learning what happens to our teeth as we age
2024-12-19
Teeth are essential for helping people break down the food they eat, and are protected by enamel, which helps them withstand the large amount of stress they experience as people chew away. Unlike other materials in the body, enamel has no way to repair damage, which means that as we age, it risks becoming weaker with time.
Researchers are interested in understanding how enamel changes with age so that they can start to develop methods that can keep teeth happier and healthier for longer.
A research team at the University of Washington and the ...
Volunteers should not become friends with patients
2024-12-19
When a volunteer supports a patient, a special and often rather unequal relationship can develop between the helper and the person receiving the help. Researchers have now investigated this relationship and offer guidance on finding the right balance.
When people get sick, they often depend on family or friends to help them out. In Norway, there are also public services that usually support people who need it.
“But public services or family and friends are not always enough. Volunteers and non-profit organizations are increasingly being used to provide care to the population,” says Associate Professor Gunhild Tøndel at ...
Men and residents of higher crime areas see greater benefit from community parks, in reduction of deaths from heart disease
2024-12-19
There’s a well-established link between greenspace and health benefits, including lower rates of heart disease risk factors, such as high blood pressure and diabetes. Now, according to a recently published study, rates of deaths from heart disease — especially among men — are lower in neighborhoods with more greenspace. The findings, from researchers at Drexel University’s Dornsife School of Public Health, were recently published in the journal Health and Place.
Studying heart disease deaths in Philadelphia from 2008 to 2015, the researchers also found that, ...
Getting rehab earlier improves concussion outcomes, OHSU study suggests
2024-12-19
People who suffer from continued symptoms of concussion should seek a referral to physical therapy as soon as possible, new research from Oregon Health & Science University suggests.
Even though most people naturally recover from concussions within four weeks, the study revealed people who delayed physical therapy had lingering deficits related to their reaction times for balance, motor function — or body movements to perform tasks — and the use of sensory information — as in sight and touch — for balance. The research published this week in the Physical Therapy & Rehabilitation Journal.
“It means they’re ...
Potential culprit identified in lingering Crohn’s disease symptoms
2024-12-19
A study from University of Michigan researchers may provide an explanation for why some patients with Crohn’s disease continue to experience symptoms, even in the absence of inflammation.
The resulting paper, “Why Symptoms Linger in Quiescent Crohn’s Disease: Investigating the Impact of Sulfidogenic Microbes and Sulfur Metabolic Pathways,” appeared in Inflammatory Bowel Disease.
Even in cases of quiescent inflammatory bowel disease—i.e. without the presence of inflammation—nearly one-third of all patients report persistent symptoms.
The problem is especially common ...
Taking a cue from lightning, eco-friendly reactor converts air and water into ammonia
2024-12-19
BUFFALO, N.Y. — There’s a good chance you owe your existence to the Haber-Bosch process.
This industrial chemical reaction between hydrogen and nitrogen produces ammonia, the key ingredient to synthetic fertilizers that supply much of the world’s food supply and enabled the population explosion of the last century.
It may also threaten the existence of future generations. The process consumes about 2% of the world’s total energy supply, and the hydrogen required for the reaction ...
New molecule-creation method a ‘powerful tool’ to accelerate drug synthesis and discovery
2024-12-19
A team of chemists from Scripps Research and Rice University has unveiled a novel method to simplify the synthesis of piperidines, a key structural component in many pharmaceuticals. The study, published in Science, combines biocatalytic carbon-hydrogen oxidation and radical cross-coupling, offering a streamlined and cost-effective approach to create complex, three-dimensional molecules. This innovation could help accelerate drug discovery and enhance the efficiency of medicinal chemistry.
Modern medicinal chemists face increasing challenges as they target complex molecules to address difficult biological targets. Traditional methods for synthesizing ...
New study highlights ethical challenges in conducting cannabis research in Canada
2024-12-19
December 18, 2024 (Toronto, Canada) – In the first study of its kind, research led by the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) sheds light on the ethical complexities and systemic barriers facing scientists conducting cannabis research funded by the for-profit cannabis industry.
Recently published in the journal Social Science & Medicine, the qualitative study titled Canadian cannabis researcher perspectives on the conduct and sponsorship of scientific research by the for-profit cannabis industry reveals that while researchers are driven by a commitment to public health and high-quality ...
U of A Health Sciences researchers receive $3.4 million grant to improve asthma care in schools
2024-12-19
A University of Arizona Health Sciences-led program that provides schools with asthma inhalers to help students experiencing respiratory distress will be expanded and improved thanks to a $3.4 million grant from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, a division of the National Institutes of Health.
In 2021, 38.7% of children ages 18 and younger who had asthma reported having one or more asthma attacks in the past year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Even though asthma is controllable, research from the National Asthma Control Program estimated that 44% of children with asthma have uncontrolled asthma.
“Respiratory ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
House sparrows in northern Norway can help us save other endangered animals
Crohn's & Colitis Foundation survey reveals more than 1/3 of young adults with IBD face step therapy insurance barriers
Tethered UAV autonomous knotting on environmental structures for transport
Decentralized social media platforms unlock authentic consumer feedback
American Pediatric Society announces Vanderbilt University School of Medicine as host institution for APS Howland Visiting Professor Program
Scientists discover first method to safely back up quantum information
A role for orange pigments in birds and human redheads
Pathways to net-zero greenhouse gas emissions for Southeast Asia
A JBNU–KIMS collaborative study on a cost-effective alloy matches superalloys for power plants and energy infrastructure
New study overturns long-held model of how plants coordinate immune responses.
New AI model predicts disease risk while you sleep
Scientists discover molecular ‘reshuffle’ and crack an 80-year-old conundrum
How stressors during pregnancy impact the developing fetal brain
Electrons lag behind the nucleus
From fungi to brain cells: one scientist's winding path reveals how epigenomics shapes neural destiny
Schizophrenia and osteoporosis share 195 genetic loci, highlighting unexpected biological bridges between brain and bone
Schizophrenia-linked genetic variant renders key brain receptor completely unresponsive to both natural and therapeutic compounds
Innovative review reveals overlooked complexity in cellular energy sensor's dual roles in Alzheimer's disease
Autism research reframed: Why heterogeneity is the data, not the noise
Brazil's genetic treasure trove: supercentenarians reveal secrets of extreme human longevity
The (metabolic) cost of life
CFRI special issue call for papers: New Frontiers in Sustainable Finance
HKU Engineering scholar demonstrates the smallest all-printed infrared photodetectors to date
Precision empowerment for brain "eavesdropping": CAS team develops triple-electrode integrated functional electrode for simultaneous monitoring of neural signals and chemical transmitters during sleep
Single-capillary endothelial dysfunction resolved by optoacoustic mesoscopy
HKU three research projects named among ‘Top 10 Innovation & Technology News in Hong Kong 2025’ showcasing excellence in research and technology transfer
NLRSeek: A reannotation-based pipeline for mining missing NLR genes in sequenced genomes
A strand and whole genome duplication–aware collinear gene identification tool
Light storage in light cages: A revolutionary approach to on-chip quantum memories
Point spread function decoupling in computational fluorescence microscopy
[Press-News.org] Digital labels can help grocers waste less foodConsumers, stores, and the environment benefit when electronic tags allow speedy price changes





