Paying Not to Go to the Gym
National Bureau of Economic Research · Stanford University
Abstract
How do consumers choose from a menu of contracts? We analyze a novel dataset from three U.S. health clubs with information on both the contractual choice and the day-to-day attendance decisions of 7,752 members over three years. The observed consumer behavior is difficult to reconcile with standard preferences and beliefs. First, members who choose a contract with a flat monthly fee of over $70 attend on average 4.3 times per month. They pay a price per expected visit of more than $17, even though they could pay $10 per visit using a 10-visit pass. On average, these users forgo savings of $600 during their membership. Second, consumers who choose a monthly contract are 17 percent more likely to stay enrolled…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 17.92
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 52
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Overconfidence effect
- Attendance
- Actuarial science
- Economics
- Estimation
- Control (management)
- Marketing
- Microeconomics