Publication | Closed Access
CONSUMER SEARCH, PRICE DISPERSION, AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIVE PRICE FLUCTUATIONS*
77
Citations
41
References
2009
Year
EconomicsMacroeconomicsPriceTradeMarket EquilibriumConsumer SearchRelative Price FluctuationsEconomic AnalysisBusinessPrice FormationInternational DemandConsumer Search ConsistentInternational PricingMarket PowerMarketingInternational DeviationsFinanceMicroeconomics
This article develops a model of consumer search consistent with the evidence of substantial price dispersion and time spent shopping within countries to study international deviations from the law of one price (LOP) and relative price fluctuations. Search frictions lead firms to price discriminate across markets based on the opportunity cost of search, which depends on the local wage. With productivity and taste shocks estimated from the data, deviations from the LOP are as volatile and persistent as in the data. Fluctuations in relative wages, real exchange rates, and the terms of trade are also consistent with the data.
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