“The Only Way Is Up”: Overoptimism and the Demise of the American Five-and-Dime Store, 1914–1941
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Published:2017
Issue:1
Volume:91
Page:71-103
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ISSN:0007-6805
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Container-title:Business History Review
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Bus. Hist. Rev.
Author:
Scott Peter,Walker James T.
Abstract
We examine a classic “wheel of retailing” episode: the abandonment of the five-and-dime pricing formula by American variety chains. The variety chains switched from a conventional product lifecycle, focusing on cost reduction through standardization, to a reverse path up the “service cost–unit value” continuum. We show that, rather than reflecting deteriorating managerial acumen, this shift was a response to the continued imperative for growth following retail format saturation. Firm-specific (rather than format-specific) competitive advantages were too weak for any chain to be confident it could win a within-format price war, making interformat competition through raising price points more attractive.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
History,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous),Business and International Management
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Cited by
1 articles.
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