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"discriminatory pricing" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to refer to a pricing system that is unfairly discriminatory against certain people or classes of people. For example, "The store was accused of discriminatory pricing for charging different prices for the same item based on the customer's race or gender."
Exact(26)
It prevents Microsoft from entering into certain restrictive and discriminatory pricing agreements.
Over the decades, the burial insurance business has been marred by scams and racially discriminatory pricing.
But what possible justification, then, can there be for that granddaddy of discriminatory pricing, the senior citizen discount?
Insurance needs to be better regulated, especially with regard to consumer protections, to prevent discriminatory pricing and delays in payments, and to ensure availability and affordability of insurance.
Other provisions called on Microsoft to set uniform pricing and royalty fees for the 20 largest personal computer makers, a measure included to make sure Microsoft could not use discriminatory pricing to force PC makers to favor Microsoft over competitors.
Asked if there is a role for antitrust enforcement in other cases -- like monopolies, predatory pricing, discriminatory pricing practices and merger challenges -- Mr. Bush responded with an answer that demonstrated little feeling for the field.
Similar(33)
Industrialization was assisted by a flood of cheap labour from rural areas, where collectivization and discriminatory price-fixing meant that farmers not only lost their own holdings but secured only modest returns as farmworkers.
In our framework, the monopolist chooses the number k ≥ 1 of market segments, but also their design and the discriminatory prices.
However, the heterogeneity in landholders' opportunity costs revealed in the competitive tender trial means a discriminatory price mechanism is more efficient at matching program costs with direct environmental benefits.
It was interesting to find that market-oriented economies and those that practice common law tend to use a uniform method while economies who are less market oriented and practice civil law tend to use discriminatory price auctions.
Non-discriminatory pricing of bits and the clear definition of layers (i.e. the logical separation of conduit and content) that make up the Internet stack are two of the key architectural foundations of the network.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com