Product differentiation and cost pass-through: industry-wide versus firm-specific cost shocks

This paper investigates the impact of product differentiation on firm-specific and industry-wide cost pass-through in grocery retailing. We use attribute distance measures to model product differentiation based on a unique set of retail scanner data for ready-to-eat soup products in the Canadian mar...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Australian journal of agricultural and resource economics 2020-01, Vol.64 (4), p.1184-1209
Hauptverfasser: Bittmann, Thomas, Loy, Jens-Peter, Anders, Sven
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This paper investigates the impact of product differentiation on firm-specific and industry-wide cost pass-through in grocery retailing. We use attribute distance measures to model product differentiation based on a unique set of retail scanner data for ready-to-eat soup products in the Canadian market. Results from a panel error correction model suggest that product differentiation explains a significant share of the variation in the rate of cost pass-through across products. More differentiated products are associated with lower rates of cost pass-through of industry-wide and higher pass-through of firm-specific costs shocks. The findings validate an oligopolistic model of product differentiation, where firms use differentiation as a non-price competitive factor in strategic pricing decisions.
ISSN:1467-8489
1467-8489
DOI:10.22004/ag.econ.342935