Title of article :
Menu costs and Markov inflation: A theoretical
revision with new evidence
Author/Authors :
Christian Ahlin، نويسنده , , Mototsugu Shintani، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
We revisit a foundational theoretical paper in the menu-cost literature, Sheshinski and Weiss
[1983. Optimum pricing policy under stochastic inflation. Review of Economic Studies 50(3),
513–529], one of the few to treat stochastic inflation with persistent deviations from trend. In contrast
to the original finding, we show that optimal pricing in this environment entails using different ðs; SÞ
bands in high-inflation and low-inflation states of the world. The low-inflation band is strictly
contained within the high-inflation band. This revised solution has very different implications from
the original one. Firms are generally risk loving, not risk averse, with respect to inflation. An increase
in the variance of inflation increases price dispersion when inflation is high and decreases price
dispersion when inflation is low. On an aggregate level, this optimal pricing would lead to bunching
of prices and non-neutrality of money in the setting of Caplin and Spulber [1987. Menu costs and the
neutrality of money. Quarterly Journal of Economics 102(4), 703–725]. To test the main finding, we
construct an establishment-level dataset from the months surrounding Mexico’s ‘‘tequila crisis’’ in
1995. In the high-inflation state, price increases are larger and establishments allow their prices to
vary more widely around their respective long-run mean relative prices. Cross-establishment price
dispersion is lower, but this result seems due to decreased establishment heterogeneity rather thannarrower ðs; SÞ bands. Overall, the evidence suggests that establishments employ wider ðs; SÞ bands in
the high-inflation state.
r 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
Keywords :
Markov inflation , Menu cost , Optimal pricing
Journal title :
Journal of Monetary Economics
Journal title :
Journal of Monetary Economics