Price Stickiness

An exploration of the concept of price stickiness, examining its causes and implications in various economic frameworks.

Background

Price stickiness refers to the resistance or failure of prices to adjust instantaneously to changes in the economic environment. This phenomenon leads to certain market inefficiencies and has ramifications for economic policy and theory.

Historical Context

The concept of price stickiness gained prominence with the development of Keynesian economics during the Great Depression. John Maynard Keynes highlighted how rigid prices could lead to prolonged recessions by preventing markets from clearing. This insight challenged the classical view that markets are always flexible and self-correcting.

Definitions and Concepts

  • Price Stickiness: Resistance or delay in the adjustment of prices in response to economic changes.
  • Menu Costs: Costs associated with changing prices, such as the expense of reprinting menus or catalogs.
  • Money Illusion: The tendency of individuals to think of currency in nominal rather than real terms, which can cause slow adjustments of wages and prices.
  • Monopolistic Competition: Market structures where firms have some power to set prices due to product differentiation, leading to price rigidity.
  • Fairness Concerns: Aversion to changing prices due to perceived unfairness, leading to sticky prices even with changes in demand or supply.

Major Analytical Frameworks

Classical Economics

Classical economists believe that prices are flexible and that markets are self-correcting. From this perspective, any price stickiness is usually seen as a short-term phenomenon.

Neoclassical Economics

Neoclassical economics accepts price stickiness in the short run but asserts that prices will adjust in the long run to return the economy to equilibrium.

Keynesian Economics

Keynesian economics places significant emphasis on price stickiness and its effects on output and employment. According to Keynesians, sticky prices prevent economies from achieving full employment, necessitating active fiscal and monetary policy intervention.

Marxian Economics

Marxian economics rarely addresses price stickiness specifically but discusses market imperfections and rigidities as part of broader critiques of capitalist systems.

Institutional Economics

Institutional economics attributes price stickiness to social rules, traditions, and norms that affect business behavior. Factors like contracts, regulatory frameworks, and industry standards contribute to price rigidity.

Behavioral Economics

Behavioral economics examines price stickiness through the lens of human behavior, cognitive biases, and psychological factors such as money illusion, fairness concerns, and loss aversion.

Post-Keynesian Economics

Post-Keynesian economics furthers Keynesian ideas, emphasizing the role of imperfect competition and market power in creating price stickiness.

Austrian Economics

Austrian economists often critique the notion of price stickiness, suspecting it to be the result of unnecessary external interventions or misinformation.

Development Economics

Development economics considers price stickiness in the context of emerging economies, noting that institutional weaknesses and monopolistic practices can exacerbate this problem.

Monetarism

Monetarists acknowledge price stickiness but focus on its implications for inflation and the speed of economic recovery following monetary policy actions.

Comparative Analysis

Different schools of thought agree on the existence of price stickiness but offer varying explanations and policy prescriptions. While Keynesians emphasize government intervention to support demand, neoclassicals lean towards market solutions to address sticky prices.

Case Studies

Empirical examples include:

  • Global Financial Crisis (2007-2009): Price stickiness contributed to prolonged high unemployment rates as prices and wages adjusted slowly to the downturn.
  • Japan’s Economic Stagnation (1990s-Present): Prolonged deflation and stagnant growth partly stem from highly sticky prices.

Suggested Books for Further Studies

  1. Prices and Knowledge: A Market-Process Perspective by Esteban Thomsen
  2. Macroeconomics by N. Gregory Mankiw
  3. Keynes: The Return of the Master by Robert Skidelsky
  4. Principles of Economics by Alfred Marshall
  • Monopolistic Competition: A market structure where firms sell similar, but not identical, products, and each has some control over its prices.
  • Menu Costs: The costs associated with changing listed prices.
  • Money Illusion: The tendency to think of money in nominal rather than real terms.
  • Imperfect Competition: Market structures that fall between pure monopoly and perfect competition, leading to less-than-optimal price adjustments.
  • Fairness Concerns: Reluctance to change prices due to perceptions of fairness or fairness norms.
Wednesday, July 31, 2024