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(Excerpted from Money Magazine, Sunday,
May 1,
2005)

Those Coupons Are Actually Clipping You

May 2005

If you think they're every savvy and frugal shopper's best friend, time to think again
Your mom isn't the only person who clips supermarket coupons. According to a recent survey by Visa, 72% of Americans who earn more than $125,000 use them, compared with 65% of the population at large.
Problem is, it's not such a great idea. Research suggests that coupons actually cost shoppers money. Tests of a new supermarket scanning gizmo in Syracuse, N.Y. last fall showed that people who used coupons spent 8% more than folks who didn't. This follows a 2002 study co-sponsored by Washington University in St. Louis that found that shoppers spent an extra $8 on unplanned and luxury items for every $1 coupon they used. "Steak, flowers, candy--people were treating themselves because they felt so good after using coupons, and of course they spent a lot more on the treats than they saved on the coupons," says marketing professor Ambar Rao, one of the 2002 study's authors.

Appeared in:

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| Those Coupons Are Actually Clipping You
 May 2005

Money Magazine, Sunday,
May 1,
2005
Byline:
Etelka Lehoczky |
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