Price Changes in the Euro Area and the United States: Some Facts from Individual Consumer Price Data

Author:

Dhyne Emmanuel1,Álvarez Luis J2,Bihan Hervé Le3,Veronese Giovanni4,Dias Daniel5,Hoffmann Johannes6,Jonker Nicole7,Lünnemann Patrick8,Rumler Fabio9,Vilmunen Jouko10

Affiliation:

1. Economist, Banque Nationale de Belgique, Brussels, Belgium.

2. Senior Economist, Banco de España, Madrid, Spain.

3. Economist, Banque de France, Paris, France.

4. Economist, Banca d'Italia, Rome, Italy.

5. Economist, Banco de Portugal, Lisbon, Portugal.

6. Senior Economist, Deutsche Bundesbank, Frankfurt am Main, Germany.

7. Economist, De Nederlandsche Bank, Amsterdam, Netherlands.

8. Economist, Banque centrale du Luxembourg, Luxembourg, Luxembourg.

9. Economist, Oesterreichische Nationalbank, Vienna, Austria.

10. Head of Research, Suomen Pankki, Helsinki, Finland.

Abstract

Prices of goods and services do not adjust immediately in response to changing demand and supply conditions. This paper characterizes the average frequency and size of price changes in the euro area and its member countries, investigates the determinants of the probability of price changes, and compares the evidence for the euro area with available U.S. results. The facts documented in this paper are based on evidence from individual price data recorded at the store level in all euro area countries except Ireland and Greece: that is in datasets covering Austria, Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal, and Spain, which together account for around 97 percent of euro area GDP. The data used are the monthly price records underlying the computation of national Consumer Price Indices and Harmonized Consumer Price Indices. These data cover a large number of products selected on the basis of extensive Household Budget Surveys.

Publisher

American Economic Association

Subject

Economics and Econometrics,Economics and Econometrics

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