Time-Varying Business Volatility and the Price Setting of Firms

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP9702

Authors: RĂ¼diger Bachmann; Benjamin Born; Steffen Elstner; Christian Grimme

Abstract: Does time-varying business uncertainty/volatility affect the price setting of firms and, if so, in what way? To address this question, we estimate from the firm-level micro data of the German ifo Business Climate Survey the impact of idiosyncratic volatility on the extensive margin of the price setting behavior of firms. We find that heightened business uncertainty increases the probability of a price change, which suggests that, for price setting, the volatility effect dominates the 'wait-and-see' effect of uncertainty. In a second step, we use structural VAR models to estimate the effects of time-varying business uncertainty on the intensive pricing margin. We find that higher business uncertainty leads to both an increase in price dispersion and in the average size of absolute price changes which is mainly driven by price decreases. Taken together, our results show that higher business uncertainty causes a rise in both the extensive and intensive margins of price setting.

Keywords: survey data; time-varying uncertainty/volatility; price setting; extensive margin; intensive margin

JEL Codes: E30; E31; E32


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
increased business uncertainty (D89)increase in probability of price change (E30)
increased business uncertainty (D89)increase in extensive margin of price setting (L11)
increased business uncertainty (D89)increased price dispersion (D49)
increased business uncertainty (D89)larger absolute price changes (E30)
increased business uncertainty (D89)increase in average size of price changes (E30)
increased business uncertainty (D89)increase in intensive margin of price setting (L11)

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