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Journal Article

A Theory of Price Adjustment under Loss Aversion

Authors

  • Ahrens
  • S.
  • Pirschel
  • I.
  • Snower
  • D.J.

Publication Date

DOI

10.1016/j.jebo.2016.12.008

JEL Classification

D21 E31 E50

Key Words

loss aversion

price sluggishness

state-dependent pricing

Related Topics

Business Cycle World

Business Cycle

Behavioral Economics

We present a new partial equilibrium theory of price adjustment, based on consumer loss aversion. In line with prospect theory, the consumers’ perceived utility losses from price increases are weighted more heavily than the perceived utility gains from price decreases of equal magnitude. Price changes are evaluated relative to an endogenous reference price, which depends on the consumers’ rational price expectations from the recent past. By implication, demand responses are more elastic for price increases than for price decreases and thus firms face a downward-sloping demand curve that is kinked at the consumers’ reference price. Firms adjust their prices flexibly in response to variations in this demand curve, in the context of an otherwise standard dynamic neoclassical model of monopolistic competition. The resulting theory of price adjustment is starkly at variance with past theories. We find that – in line with the empirical evidence – prices are more sluggish upwards than downwards in response to temporary demand shocks, while they are more sluggish downwards than upwards in response to permanent demand shocks. The degree of these asymmetries, in turn, depends on the size of the shock.

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