Financial Times FT.com

Dear Economist

Published: February 3 2006 10:15 | Last updated: February 3 2006 10:15

Dear Economist,

I recall watching a famous TV chef breaking the woody stems off asparagus and ripping the leafy tops off leeks before paying for the produce. Since supermarkets charge by weight, this saves money. I have an ethical dilemma. Should I do this or not? It seems to me that I need the money more than the supermarket does.

Darryl Tiverton, Darlington

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Dear Darryl,

Your moral compass is obviously spinning, but before we let it settle let’s be clear about one thing: this is not a zero-sum game between you and the supermarket.

The supermarket does not set the price of asparagus depending on how greedy the shareholders are feeling: it does so based on the cost of getting the stuff on the shelves, and on your willingness to pay.

In a world where no customers broke asparagus stems, the supermarket would be able to charge one price per kilo. In a world where every customer broke the stems and threw the inedible half away, the supermarket would charge twice as much per kilo - or the same price per pre-broken kilo. As long as all customers do the same, it makes no difference to anybody except the man who sweeps up the vegetable section.

In the real world, some customers will rip leeks and some - lazy, high-minded or nervous - will not. That’s fine by the supermarket, which likes it when customers signal their willingness to pay. The leek-rippers are proving they’re sensitive to the price and they’re rewarded for their efforts with an automatic discount. If you’re tight for cash I suggest you join them. If you don’t have the chutzpah to do so, then you obviously don’t need the money as much as you claim.

Questions to economist@ft.com

www.timharford.com

More in this section

Middleman in the Middle East

Secrets of the auction room

Happiness and wisdom through solitary living

The great liquidity crisis – 94 years ago

Resolve to eat Japanese – with chopsticks

The middle ground for DIY hair-dyeing

Jah Wobble: world fusion’s creative pioneer

Stay healthy in 2009 (in 10 easy steps)

Jobs and classifieds

Jobs

Search
Type your search criteria below:

Head of Communications

Workforce Directorate - DOH

Head of Design

Furniture Retailer

Recruiters

FT.com can deliver talented individuals across all industries around the world

Post a job now