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Journal ArticleDOI

Prices Rise Faster than They Fall

Sam Peltzman
- 01 Jun 2000 - 
- Vol. 108, Iss: 3, pp 466-502
TLDR
In this article, the authors found that the immediate response to a positive cost shock is at least twice the response to negative shock, and that difference is sustained for at least five to eight months.
Abstract
Output prices tend to respond faster to input increases than to decreases. This tendency is found in more than two of every three markets examined. It is found as frequently in producer goods markets as in consumer goods markets. In both kinds of markets the asymmetric response to cost shocks is substantial and durable. On average, the immediate response to a positive cost shock is at least twice the response to a negative shock, and that difference is sustained for at least five to eight months. Unlike past studies, which documented similar asymmetries in selected markets (gasoline, agricultural products, etc.), this one uses large samples of diverse products: 77 consumer and 165 producer goods. Accordingly, the results suggest a gap in an essential part of economic theory. As a start on filling this gap, the study finds no asymmetry in the resonse of an individual decision maker (a supermarket chain) to its costs, but it finds above‐average asymmetry where a cost shock is filtered through a fragmented w...

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Journal ArticleDOI

Asymmetric Price Transmission: A Survey

TL;DR: A wide variety of often conflicting theories of, and empirical tests for, asymmetry coexist in this literature as discussed by the authors, and the existing literature is far from being unified or conclusive, and that it has often been largely method-driven, with little attention devoted to theoretical underpinnings and the plausible interpretation of results.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Pricing Behaviour of Firms in the Euro Area: New Survey Evidence

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the pricing behavior of firms in the euro area on the basis of surveys conducted by nine Eurosystem national central banks, covering more than 11,000 firms and found that firms operate in monopolistically competitive markets, where prices are mostly set following markup rules and where price discrimination is common.
Journal ArticleDOI

Menu costs, multiproduct firms, and aggregate fluctuations

TL;DR: In this paper, an extension of the simple menu-cost model to a multiproduct setting in which firms face economies of scope in adjusting posted and regular prices is presented. But the model misses two important features of the data.
Journal ArticleDOI

New evidence on asymmetric gasoline price responses

TL;DR: The authors used the standard Engle-Granger two-step estimation procedure, whereas Borenstein, Cameron, and Gilbert used a nonstandard estimation methodology and found no evidence of price asymmetry in wholesale gasoline prices.
References
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Posted Content

Do Gasoline Prices Respond Asymmetrically to Crude Oil Price Changes

TL;DR: This article found that retail gasoline prices react more quickly to increases in crude oil prices than to decreases, while wholesale gasoline prices exhibit no asymmetry in responding to crude oil price changes, indicating that refiners who set wholesale prices are not the source of the asymmetry.
Posted Content

Asymmetric Price Adjustment and Economic Fluctuations

TL;DR: In this paper, a menu-cost model is presented in which positive trend inflation causes firms' relative prices to decline automatically between price adjustments, and shocks that raise firms' desired prices trigger larger price responses than shocks that lower desired prices.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Behavior of Retail Gasoline Prices: Symmetric or Not?

TL;DR: The perceived asymmetry in retail gasoline price movements is of special concern to consumers who believe that they are being “gouged” by the oil industry as discussed by the authors, and the perception of possible asymmetry focuses on the relationship between the price of oil and the retail price of gasoline.
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