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The discontent with discounts comes at a time when many Americans are struggling with job losses and stagnant wages. Many shoppers simply have less money to spend this holiday season: The median U.S. household income was $49,445 last year, down from $50,303 two years before. And deals just don't seem as good if the iPad tablet computer you want is still outside of your budget. A $1,000 TV marked down 20 percent might seem like a good deal for a shopper who has $800 to spend. But it's not such a fab find for someone with only $700 in his pocket. "Discounts are supposed to mean, 'I can get it,'" says Michael Norton, a Harvard Business School professor specializing in consumer psychology. "So if you can't get it, it doesn't feel like a very good discount." Cost-conscious shoppers also have a long memory about the better sales they've seen in the last few years, says Alison Jatlow Levy, retail strategist with consulting firm Kurt Salmon. For instance, teen retailer Aeropostale offered discounts on Black Friday of 50 percent off everything and another 20 percent off until mid-afternoon. But that may not have been enough for Aeropostale shoppers who remember that the chain slashed prices up to 70 percent all day in previous years. "Customers probably remember that last year things were 60 percent off, and this year maybe they're only 25 or 40 percent off," Levy says of some store discounts. "But those things probably weren't 60 percent off until closer to Christmas." Rebecca Walden of Birmingham, Ala., learned that lesson the hard way. Last year, she and her husband stayed up late on Thanksgiving night buying Christmas gifts online for their daughter, who was then one-years-old. They were patting themselves on the back about the discounts of 10 to 20 percent off they got on toys like a rocking horse, a play kitchen and a set of 150 building blocks. That is, until they found many of those same items on sale for half off later in the season. Walden, 33, decided not to repeat that mistake. So she's done virtually none of her Christmas shopping yet. She's waiting it out for a deal on a few items, like a sale on a Wiggles guitar, which generally runs at least $65. "I'm not convinced they've hit rock-bottom prices yet and Christmas is still several weeks away," Walden says. "I think the phrase is
'playing chicken.'"
[Associated
Press;
Sarah Skidmore reported from Portland, Ore. Christina Rexrode reported from New York.
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