Using a model of dynamic price competition, this paper provides an explanation from the supply side for the well-established observation that retail prices adjust faster when input costs rise than when they fall. The opportunity of profitable storing for the next period induces competitive firms to immediately increase their prices in anticipation of higher future input costs. This relaxes competition and firms earn positive profits. Conversely, when input costs are expected to decline, firms adjust their prices only after a cost reduction materializes, and the firms' incentives for price undercutting lead to the standard Bertrand outcome
We develop a model of retail competition in which retailers select prices and investments in cost re...
Asymmetric price adjustment Empirical evidence suggests that prices are sticky with respect to cost ...
This paper provides some theoretical grounds to relate asymmetries in cost structures and incentives...
Using a model of dynamic price competition, this paper provides an explanation from the supply side ...
Using a model of dynamic price competition, this paper provides an explanation from the supply side ...
Using a model of dynamic price competition, this paper provides an explanation from the supply side ...
Using a model of dynamic price competition, we provide an explanation from the supply side for the w...
In many retail markets, prices rise faster than they fall. We develop a model of search with learnin...
International audienceAsymmetric pricing or asymmetric price adjustment is the phenomenon where pric...
In a model of price competition with a most-favored-customer clause we show that cost-change induced...
Asymmetric pricing is the phenomenon where prices rise more readily than they fall. We articulate, a...
We model the temporal pricing strategies for two firms with asymmetric costs and differing market po...
Asymmetric pricing is the phenomenon where prices rise more readily than they fall. We articulate, a...
We present a new partial equilibrium theory of price adjustment, based on consumer loss aversion. In...
Preliminary and incomplete. In an infinite horizon model with stochastic costs, moderate inflation, ...
We develop a model of retail competition in which retailers select prices and investments in cost re...
Asymmetric price adjustment Empirical evidence suggests that prices are sticky with respect to cost ...
This paper provides some theoretical grounds to relate asymmetries in cost structures and incentives...
Using a model of dynamic price competition, this paper provides an explanation from the supply side ...
Using a model of dynamic price competition, this paper provides an explanation from the supply side ...
Using a model of dynamic price competition, this paper provides an explanation from the supply side ...
Using a model of dynamic price competition, we provide an explanation from the supply side for the w...
In many retail markets, prices rise faster than they fall. We develop a model of search with learnin...
International audienceAsymmetric pricing or asymmetric price adjustment is the phenomenon where pric...
In a model of price competition with a most-favored-customer clause we show that cost-change induced...
Asymmetric pricing is the phenomenon where prices rise more readily than they fall. We articulate, a...
We model the temporal pricing strategies for two firms with asymmetric costs and differing market po...
Asymmetric pricing is the phenomenon where prices rise more readily than they fall. We articulate, a...
We present a new partial equilibrium theory of price adjustment, based on consumer loss aversion. In...
Preliminary and incomplete. In an infinite horizon model with stochastic costs, moderate inflation, ...
We develop a model of retail competition in which retailers select prices and investments in cost re...
Asymmetric price adjustment Empirical evidence suggests that prices are sticky with respect to cost ...
This paper provides some theoretical grounds to relate asymmetries in cost structures and incentives...