this post was submitted on 27 Jul 2025
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The whole argument of "it's cause there's so much variation in tax amount" never really made sense to me as an excuse. Like.. you'd print the labels at the store wouldn't you? So you just put the tax amount in the system for that store and print it.. the only way it makes sense is if for some reason you're shipping price tags across the country
Sales tax varies city by city, which means a business cannot have a central distribution center where price tagging occurs, nor could they move inventory (something that happens in retail quite often) - substantially shifting the burden onto businesses. For better or worse, I'm sure that's how the price tagging discussion went...
Meanwhile, electronic price tags have been introduced in the market.
It's these small e-ink devices that are tethered to a central input station in the backroom, where a person inputs prices.
I've seen tags change in front of my eyes, updating price, adding promotional info or changing the product available on shelf.
Inventory movements are not an excuse, I'd say. Regardless the end sale price, if a product is not sold, it is just inventory, which value is fixed for the company.
Lidl moves tons of non perishable inventory from central wharehouses to stores, daily, and they could not care what the end price was at the store. A given item may cost an X amount in a given season, disappear for a couple of months, then return to the shelves with a different price. The inventory value does not oscilate.
I don't understand how that's better in any way? If customers should know how much an item costs, the cost shouldn't change during store hours at all.
In the US, we're using those tags to implement surge pricing. Even if we included tax on the tag, you still don't know how much it costs until you check out, because these tags let companies change the price at will.
I've seen a tag change price but that price would only take effect the next day, as the store would be having a promotion on peaches. I simply asked for a clarification and the tag was rolled back.
On the day price changes are only done to clear perishables that otherwise will end in the trash, like fresh pastries or bread. And such changes can only take effect near to the closing hours of the store. Price variations throughout the day is a crime and stores have been heavily fined for it.