Why Are Prices Sticky? The Dynamics of Wholesale Gasoline Prices.
The menu-cost interpretation of sticky prices implies that the probability of a price change should depend on the past history of prices and fundamentals only through the gap between the current price and the frictionless price. We find that this prediction is broadly consistent with the behavior of nine Philadelphia gasoline wholesalers. Nevertheless, we reject the menu-cost model as a literal description of these firms' behavior, arguing instead that price stickiness arises from strategic considerations of how customers and competitors will react to price changes.
Year of publication: |
2004
|
---|---|
Authors: | Davis, Michael C ; Hamilton, James D |
Published in: |
Journal of Money, Credit and Banking. - Blackwell Publishing. - Vol. 36.2004, 1, p. 17-37
|
Publisher: |
Blackwell Publishing |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Measuring the Liquidity Effect.
Hamilton, James D, (1997)
-
Estimation of Unobserved Expected Monthly Inflation Using Kalman Filtering.
Burmeister, Edwin, (1986)
-
On Testing for Self-fulfilling Speculative Price Bubbles.
Hamilton, James D, (1986)
- More ...