threshold price
1threshold price — UK US noun [C] ECONOMICS, COMMERCE ► the lowest price that a product can be sold for: »A threshold price is set for imports a little below the target price …
2threshold price — See Common Agricultural Policy. Collins dictionary of law. W. J. Stewart. 2001 …
3Threshold price-point — In economics, a threshold price point is the psychological fixing of prices to entice a buyer. The most common example in the United States is the $??.99 phenomenon e.g. setting the price for a good at $9.99. Though it is effectively ten dollars… …
4Threshold Price — The minimum guaranteed price fixed for cereals, milk products and sugar within the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) …
5threshold price — / θreʃhəυld praɪs/ noun in the EU, the lowest price at which farm produce imported into the EU can be sold …
6threshold price — See Common Agricultural Policy …
7price — A fixed value of something. Prices are usually expressed in monetary terms. In a free market, prices are set as a result of the interaction of supply and demand in a market; when demand for a product increases and supply remains constant, the… …
8price — n 1. cost, expense, charge, Inf. damages, fee, rate; check, Inf. tab, bill, Fr. addition; pay, payment, hire, rent, fare, toll, tax, levy, duty, assessment; consideration, compensation, recompense, remuneration; outlay, expenditure; value, worth …
9Price Band — A value setting method in which a seller indicates an upper and lower cost range, between which buyers are able to place bids. The price band s floor and cap provides guidance to the buyers. This type of auction pricing technique is often used… …
10Sluicegate Price — Similar to the threshold price, but applying to eggs, pigmeat and poultry. Imports to the EC of these products are liable to a levy to raise them to the level of the sluicegate price …