小规模的不对称价格调整:理性忽视的暗示

Daniel Levy, H. Chen, Sourav Ray, M. Bergen
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引用次数: 72

摘要

我们分析了中西部一家大型连锁超市8年期间27种产品类别的扫描仪价格数据,发现了数据中一个令人惊讶的规律——小价格上涨比小价格下跌发生得更频繁。我们发现,这种不对称适用于平均高达10美分的价格变化。对于较大的价格变化,不对称性消失。我们为整个数据集以及单个产品类别记录了这一发现。此外,我们发现,即使从数据中排除了与通货膨胀期有关的观察结果,并且在允许不同长度的滞后价格调整之后,这种不对称性仍然存在。这些发现对用来衡量通胀的价格水平(PPI或CPI)也不敏感。为了解释这些发现,我们将理性不注意文献的含义扩展到个人价格动态。具体来说,我们认为对价格变化信息的处理和反应是一项代价高昂的活动。理性不注意的一个重要含义是,消费者可能会理性地选择忽略——因此不会对价格的微小变化做出反应,从而在需求曲线上形成一个“不注意范围”。我们认为,消费者的这种注意力不集中,激励了零售商“在小范围内”进行不对称的价格调整。然而,这些激励在大幅度的价格变化中消失,因为大幅度的价格变化是由消费者处理的,因此引发了他们的反应。因此,“在大范围内”没有观察到不对称。理性不注意的另一个含义是,“在小范围内”发现的不对称程度可能在商业周期中有所不同:它可能在衰退期间减弱,在扩张期间增强。我们发现数据确实与这些预测一致。本文的另一个贡献是,我们的理论可能为小额价格变化的存在提供一种可能的解释,这一直是文献中一个长期存在的难题。我们发现,相对于一年中的其他时间,在圣诞节和感恩节假期期间,自有品牌产品的零售价格刚性明显高于全国性品牌产品。这一发现不能用节日促销活动的变化来解释,因为我们发现自有品牌的促销活动似乎至少与国家品牌一样减少。自有品牌产品相对于全国品牌的刚性增加只是批发价格刚性增加的部分原因。在排除了其他可能的解释后,我们认为自有品牌价格刚性较高可能是由于假期期间社会消费的增加,提高了消费者对国家品牌产品的价值相对于自有品牌。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Asymmetric Price Adjustment in the Small: An Implication of Rational Inattention
Analyzing scanner price data that cover 27 product categories over an eight-year period from a large Mid-western supermarket chain, we uncover a surprising regularity in the data—small price increases occur more frequently than small price decreases. We find that this asymmetry holds for price changes of up to about 10 cents, on average. The asymmetry disappears for larger price changes. We document this finding for the entire data set, as well as for individual product categories. Further, we find that the asymmetry holds even after excluding from the data the observations pertaining to inflationary periods, and after allowing for various lengths of lagged price adjustment. The findings are insensitive also to the measure of price level used to measure inflation (the PPI or the CPI). To explain these findings, we extend the implications of the literature on rational inattention to individual price dynamics. Specifically, we argue that processing and reacting to price change information is a costly activity. An important implication of rational inattention is that consumers may rationally choose to ignore—and thus not to respond to—small price changes, creating a "range of inattention" along the demand curve. This range of consumer inattention, we argue, gives the retailers incentive for asymmetric price adjustment "in the small." These incentives, however, disappear for large price changes, because large price changes are processed by consumers and therefore trigger their response. Thus, no asymmetry is observed "in the large." An additional implication of rational inattention is that the extent of the asymmetry found "in the small " might vary over the business cycle: it might diminish during recessions and strengthen during expansions. We find that the data are indeed consistent with these predictions. An added contribution of the paper is that our theory may offer a possible explanation for the presence of small price changes, which has been a long-standing puzzle in the literature. chain, we find significantly higher retail price rigidity for private label products than for nationally branded products during the Christmas and Thanksgiving holiday periods relative to the rest of the year. The finding cannot be explained by changes in holiday period promotional practices because we find that private label promotions appear to diminish at least as much as national brands. The increased rigidity of private label products relative to national brands is only partially accounted for by increased rigidity of wholesale prices. After ruling out other potential explanations, we suggest that the higher private label price rigidity might be due to the increased emphasis on social consumption during holiday periods, raising the customers’ value of nationally branded products relative to the private labels.
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