Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP16101
Authors: Gaetano Gaballo; Luigi Paciello
Abstract: This paper reverses the typical firm-centered view on the source of co-movement of output and inflation, assuming instead that consumers face greater frictions than firms in responding to relative price changes. We model consumers as uncertain whether the fluctuations in flexible prices posted by local monopolists are aggregate or idiosyncratic in origin. An aggregate increase in local prices may then drive correlated forecasting mistakes, coordinating households’ decisions to reallocate spending from local monopolistic to a competitive market at the cost of individual-specific shopping effort. We obtain three theoretical results and empirically test a tight prediction of our model. First, a distortion in competition arises, in that firms respond strategically to households’ confusion over the source of posted price volatility, resulting in higher markups. Second, in the more realistic case of households being relatively less informed than firms, our new channel of frictional shopping features positive output-inflation co-movement, which is negative otherwise. Third, we show a new rationale for policies to reduce uncertainty, such as nominal stabilization or communication, counting on an attenuation of the competitive distortion. Finally, we use retailer scanner data to validate a distinctive prediction of the model, namely that the difference between posted and effective price inflation co-moves with an inflationary shock.
Keywords: No keywords provided
JEL Codes: No JEL codes provided
Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.
Cause | Effect |
---|---|
higher consumer uncertainty (D89) | higher markups (D49) |
less informed households (G59) | positive output-inflation comovement (E31) |
nominal stabilization (E63) | lower markups (D43) |
nominal stabilization (E63) | improve welfare (I30) |
inflationary shocks (E31) | correlated misperceptions (D80) |