quality fade

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Coined by Paul Midler, author of Poorly Made in China (2009).

Noun[edit]

quality fade (uncountable)

  1. (business) A gradual, deliberate reduction in the quality of manufactured goods in order to increase profit margins.
    Synonym: skimpflation
    • 2009, Paul Middler, Poorly Made in China: An Insider’s Account of the Tactics behind China’s Production Game, page 96:
      Chinese factories often engaged in this sort of quality fade—the incremental degradation of a product over time. They quietly reduced the amount of materials or else manipulated the quality of raw inputs.
    • 2010 August 16, Judith M. Whipple, Joseph Roh, “Agency theory and quality fade in buyer‐supplier relationships”, in The International Journal of Logistics Management, volume 21, number 3:
      In this paper, quality fade, an element of supply chain vulnerability, is defined as the unforeseen deterioration of agreed to or expected quality levels with respect to product and/or service requirements. The use of outcome‐based, behavior‐based, or mix contracts can be used to reduce the likelihood of quality fade and illustrate preferred scenarios for buyer and suppliers.
    • 2021 November 1, Rotem Naftalovich, Marko Oydanich, Tolga Berkman, Andrew John Iskander, “Quality Fade in Medical Device Manufacturing: Thinness of Airway Breathing Circuit Plastic”, in Biomedical Instrumentation & Technology, →DOI:
      The lack of a defined standard is concerning for quality fade—the phenomenon whereby manufacturers deliberately but surreptitiously reduce material quality to widen profit margins.