Rigidity, Dispersion and Discreteness in Chain Prices
Working Paper No. 09-W03R
Benjamin Eden and Matthew S. Jaremski
ABSTRACT [article]
This paper studies price setting
within a chain of grocery stores, using a scanner database that
contains observations of retail prices for 435 products within 75
stores over 121 weeks. We find price dispersion within the chain.
Although price dispersion is pervasive 75% of the prices are equal
to the modal price. The mode changes frequently: 35% of the modes
change in an average week. This suggests that the distribution of
prices may react relatively fast to aggregate shocks. Stores
differentiate themselves by the prices of relatively few items.
Typically most prices in the store are at the mode of the cross
sectional price distribution, some are above the mode and some are
below the mode. The probability of a price change is 3.6% when the
price is at the mode and 76.2% when the price is not at the mode.
We explain the apparent attraction to the mode in terms of a model
in which price discreteness plays an important role but there is
no inertia. We also find that the probability of a price change is
higher when the deviation from the mean of the cross sectional
price distribution is large. But unlike conventional wisdom, the
probability of a price change is higher for young prices.
Keywords and Phrases: Price discreteness, price dispersion, price changes, price rigidity
JEL Classification Numbers: E00, L11