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Should vehicles just have a set price?

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  • Should vehicles just have a set price?

    I was talkng to a friend the other day that had recently bought a used truck. My friend is very mechanically inclined. While on the lot he inspected the vehicle and came up with a few things that were in need of repair. After test driving it he discovered another problem. He "haggled"one of the best deals I've ever seen for a used vehicle. He told me there wasn't many major repairs needed and he could do them at home but he used this stuff as a bargaining chip. I've done this too but not as well as he did.

    I've always wondered about how well people who don't have the skills to work down the price fair with car salesman. As many here know, they have a nice price cushion to work with and are experts at making people think they are getting a great deal when they aren't getting anything of the sort. They also deal differently with people based on what they percieve to be less than knowledgable automotive people.


    Though I haggle whenever I can, this seems like an unfair system to me. I often wonder if vehicles shouldn't just have a set price like a lot of other items we purchase. Where is the fairness in one person paying a better price (at a place where the public shops) based on their bargaining skills . I don't think this can or should apply to personal transactions of any kind by the way.
    "Those who can't remember the past are condemmed to repeat it".- George Santayana.

  • #2
    I absolutely think new cars should have a fixed price. I've always wondered how the current haggle system developed. There are very few other items that don't have fixed prices. It really makes no sense. I believe Saturn still does fixed pricing.

    As for used cars, there are dealers that do fixed pricing on those, like CarMax. Obviously, it is harder to set a price on a used car because there are lots more variables than with a new car.
    Steve

    * Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
    * Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
    * There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.

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    • #3
      It's probably fantasy to ever think that used cars will ever have a fixed price system. The difference in price that some people pay for essentially the same vehicles is incredible. I don't know the history of haggling but I wonder if it isn't a carry over from the days of horse trading.
      "Those who can't remember the past are condemmed to repeat it".- George Santayana.

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      • #4
        Originally posted by GREENBACK View Post
        It's probably fantasy to ever think that used cars will ever have a fixed price system.
        It isn't fantasy at all.CarMax already does it (carmax.com) as do numerous other dealerships.
        Steve

        * Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
        * Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
        * There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.

        Comment


        • #5
          I absolutely hate the whole process of trying to haggle a price on a car. I would love to never have to do that. It is odd to me - I don't go into the clothing store and start haggling, or any other store. Maybe this is why it is so uncomfortable to me - I don't live in an area where haggling price is a cultural norm (except for cars, lol).

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          • #6
            nothing has a fixed price, not even new items. if the demand exceeds the supply as is common in today's economy, the price is very negotiable. Learn to haggle or keep paying high price. Close mouths don't get fed.

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            • #7
              Move to a socialist state and the prices might get fixed. In a capitalist society the fact I can talk someone (negotiate) the price of a car down 5-7k is something which benefits me.

              The reason for different prices is that dealers are competing against other dealers to sell the same product.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by jIM_Ohio View Post
                The reason for different prices is that dealers are competing against other dealers to sell the same product.
                While it's true that dealers are competing against each other, Jim, that's true of any product at all from a $30,000 car to a $1.50 head of lettuce (that might be $1.25 at the store down the street). Some stores do have price-matching policies and will lower their price to meet that of their competition.

                In common practice though, prices are what they are. Since prices are essentially fixed, if I go into store A and see an item I want for price A and then go into store B and price B is lower, I just buy it there. I don't go back to store A and try and bargain with them.

                Also, how do you explain Saturn? They DO have fixed pricing even though they are competing against other Saturn dealerships. It hasn't stopped them from selling lots of cars. In fact, it has probably helped by removing the hassle factor.
                Steve

                * Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
                * Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
                * There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.

                Comment


                • #9
                  I wish new cars had fixed prices too!

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by jIM_Ohio View Post
                    Move to a socialist state and the prices might get fixed. In a capitalist society the fact I can talk someone (negotiate) the price of a car down 5-7k is something which benefits me.

                    The reason for different prices is that dealers are competing against other dealers to sell the same product.

                    I hear what you're saying but They purposely overprice cars knowing that most folks will haggle for a lower price and many won't be very skilled at it. If dealers just put a fair price on the product to begin with it would work well for everyone and the needless haggling game wouldn't be so neccesary.

                    Negotiating is fine but it can really get redicoulus. When people are paying thousands of dollars difference it seems that things are really out of whack.

                    I'm not advocating a law to demand this but I think dealers could do better by their customers if they made it easier for everyone that walks into their buisness and just wants a reasonable deal. As it stands no one trusts car dealers because of this stuff and the other shady dealings they engage in.
                    "Those who can't remember the past are condemmed to repeat it".- George Santayana.

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by disneysteve View Post
                      While it's true that dealers are competing against each other, Jim, that's true of any product at all from a $30,000 car to a $1.50 head of lettuce (that might be $1.25 at the store down the street). Some stores do have price-matching policies and will lower their price to meet that of their competition.

                      In common practice though, prices are what they are. Since prices are essentially fixed, if I go into store A and see an item I want for price A and then go into store B and price B is lower, I just buy it there. I don't go back to store A and try and bargain with them.

                      Also, how do you explain Saturn? They DO have fixed pricing even though they are competing against other Saturn dealerships. It hasn't stopped them from selling lots of cars. In fact, it has probably helped by removing the hassle factor.
                      In the various cities I have lived in, usually only 1 saturn dealer made sense for me to visit- they are not located that close to one another most of the time (DC, Rochester NY, MI, Cincy, C-bus).

                      Between 2 saturn dealers here in cincy, I would need to drive 40 minutes. In that 40 minutes I would pass 5 ford dealers, 4-5 GM dealers and 3 honda, toyota and nissan dealers (which include the dealers adjacent to saturn).

                      One reason Honda is more profitable is that it is work for me to go to one dealer, get a price, then I have to drive around 30 miles to get to the other dealer to try and beat it.

                      For GM that same drive is 20 minutes, maybe 10 depending on which 2 dealers I choose to pit against each other that day.


                      The price point of a car is 10,000X the cost of that head of lettuce you mentioned. That scale leaves more wiggle room. I also don't need to return to the grocery store to get the lettuce serviced every 3 months or 5000 miles. Not the same "economic market". The poor family needs lettuce just like the rich people do. The poor family may not need a car. The lettuce company probably moves 20,000-50,000 heads of lettuce in a given day within a 30 radius of downtown cincy, where as the car companies might move around 20-50 cars each day in same radius. It's not a good comparison (IMO).

                      Saturn followed that business model to keep the value in its cars (by not having dealers compete). The same way fast food chains pop up 5 miles from one another, the old big 3 dealers had dealers competing with one another too. Saturn wanted to avoid that by removing competition from itself.

                      Look for a Porsche dealer. Where is the "next closest one"- that is the model that Saturn is shooting for (but Saturn has more volume, therefore more dealers). Porcshe probably has 1 dealer per city (every 200 mile radius=1 dealer), with exceptions for huge areas like DC and NYC (which might have 2, maybe 3 dealers to serve around 5-10 million people).

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by GREENBACK View Post
                        I hear what you're saying but They purposely overprice cars knowing that most folks will haggle for a lower price and many won't be very skilled at it. If dealers just put a fair price on the product to begin with it would work well for everyone and the needless haggling game wouldn't be so neccesary.

                        Negotiating is fine but it can really get redicoulus. When people are paying thousands of dollars difference it seems that things are really out of whack.

                        I'm not advocating a law to demand this but I think dealers could do better by their customers if they made it easier for everyone that walks into their buisness and just wants a reasonable deal. As it stands no one trusts car dealers because of this stuff and the other shady dealings they engage in.
                        Dealers aren't trying to "do good by their customers", they are trying to make money.

                        Big difference.

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                        • #13
                          I know they aren't neccesarily interested in doing good by their customers but if I wasn't good at price negotiations(as most aren't) and I knew a dealer that gave a very good, fair deal that's where all my purchases would be made. I think a reasonable no haggle price would be quite a draw. As Steve noted, this has worked quite well for Car Max.
                          "Those who can't remember the past are condemmed to repeat it".- George Santayana.

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by GREENBACK View Post
                            I know they aren't neccesarily interested in doing good by their customers but if I wasn't good at price negotiations(as most aren't) and I knew a dealer that gave a very good, fair deal that's where all my purchases would be made. I think a reasonable no haggle price would be quite a draw. As Steve noted, this has worked quite well for Car Max.
                            Capitalism and supply/demand at its best.

                            If that is what the market wanted, (and it would INCREASE sales), that is what the dealers would do.

                            You want it, but at what price are you willing to pay? Basically you are saying the dealer has to lower their price to a no haggle point (you are not willing to pay more for the car than the price on the sticker now).

                            What is dealer A sold the model you wanted no haggle.
                            Then dealer B opened shop 10 miles away and offered same car at a lower price? People go to dealer B- saves them money and the "no haggle" policy cost dealer A money.

                            It's not in the dealers best interest to do that unless it drove sales thru the roof.

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                            • #15
                              Originally posted by jIM_Ohio View Post
                              What is dealer A sold the model you wanted no haggle.
                              Then dealer B opened shop 10 miles away and offered same car at a lower price? People go to dealer B- saves them money and the "no haggle" policy cost dealer A money.
                              ETA: See my later post below where I clarified my thinking on this point.

                              You are correct. It would have to be done on the corporate level, not at the dealership level, as has been done by Saturn. Prices would be set by the manufacturer, not the retailer. It would be just like shopping at Best Buy or Target or Home Depot. They put out a weekly flyer that is distributed nationwide with the same prices on the same items no matter which of their locations you walk into. Why couldn't cars be sold the same way?

                              As for Saturn, perhaps my perspective is skewed. I just checked. There are 15 Saturn dealerships within 50 miles of my home. I have plenty of choices if I wanted to buy a Saturn. I guess that isn't true in other parts of the country. There is no reason for me to shop around, though, since they all charge the same price. I would just go to the nearest location.
                              Last edited by disneysteve; 02-25-2009, 05:09 AM.
                              Steve

                              * Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
                              * Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
                              * There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.

                              Comment

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