Inflation and Price Setting in a Natural Experiment
Jerzy Konieczny and
Andrzej Skrzypacz
No 1132, Econometric Society World Congress 2000 Contributed Papers from Econometric Society
Abstract:
We analyze the behaviour of prices using a large disaggregated data set for Poland during transition from a planned to a market economy. The size of price changes and the frequency of adjustment both fall as the inflation rate declines. Price setters follow a mixture of state- and time-contingent policies. We find that price setters are forward-looking. Intermarket price variability increases with inflation and the effect of expected inflation is much stronger than the effect of unexpected inflation. So the bottom line is this: it takes sellers of sausage, eggs, toothpaste, vacuum cleaners, car-wash operators etc. just a few years to figure out how to adjust prices in a market environment. Our results support both the menu cost, and the rational expectations, hypotheses.
Date: 2000-08-01
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Journal Article: Inflation and price setting in a natural experiment (2005) 
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