In my country they have to be called out on it, but to verify a discount, they have to prove that they were actively selling it at the undiscounted price for a period of about 4 weeks or so.
Unfortunately a lot of this is subverted by brands inflating the recommended retail price and then the stores just show a discount from RRP
They need to survive a month trying to sell something at inflated prices to then discount it. That generates losses for them - storage, space on the shelves, delayed new stuff etc. It's long enough to force them to actually discount shit.
The industry convinced FDR to move thanksgiving forward one week to increase Christmas shopping so it’s been going on longer. Thankfully the holiday was moved back to original
I mean in reality. Will that be enforced? Isn't there some loophole, where this technically isn't the same article because they took it off the shop for an hour?
I just bought a new washing machine. The price on the site said something of 40-50% discount. The store I bought it at has a policy that, if you see an item for cheaper on the Internet (like Amazon or ebay), they sell if for the same price or lower.
When I checked a website for price comparisons that also shows a price history you see the the prices where nearly the same the past year. And since they're always among the cheapest seller, the discount is complete and utter BS.
I hate that the stores who do that will often get the same item with a different SKU so that there isn't anything online that they actually match. It could be the exact same product, but different SKU.