The missing middle in product price distribution

The IO literature has typically studied the supply-side factors that determine the price structure of products/services competing in a market. This paper pro-poses that the demand-side demographics could play an important role in shaping the product price structure. In particular, we document a “mis...

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Main Authors: CHANG, Pao-li, YI, Xin, YOON, Haeyeon
Format: text
Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2021
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soe_working_paper/7
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1004&context=soe_working_paper
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Institution: Singapore Management University
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spelling sg-smu-ink.soe_working_paper-10042021-08-31T08:25:56Z The missing middle in product price distribution CHANG, Pao-li YI, Xin YOON, Haeyeon The IO literature has typically studied the supply-side factors that determine the price structure of products/services competing in a market. This paper pro-poses that the demand-side demographics could play an important role in shaping the product price structure. In particular, we document a “missing middle” phe-nomenon in both the income and the product price distributions in the U.S., based on the IPUMS ACS dataset (2005–2017) and the Nielsen Retail Scanner Data (2006–2017), for a large set of goods sold in the U.S. at the national, state, or commuting-zone level. We show that the lagged population share of the middle-income class has a positive impact on the market share (in quantity) of middle-priced varieties (and respectively so for the low/high income and price group), after controlling for product category and state (or commuting zone) fixed effects. The impacts are further stronger in commuting zones of higher population density. We then evaluate the cost-of-living implications of the observed missing-middle phe-nomenon, taking into account product entry, exit, and pro-competitive price effects of continuing products, in a framework that allows for non-homothetic preferences across income groups with respective to the price groups. We find that ignoring the non-homothetic demand structure and the missing-middle phenomenon under-states the rise in the cost of living for the period 2006–2017. The downward bias is sizable (as large as 2 percentage points out of 11–13% increase in the cost of living for the period), and particularly noticeable for the middle-income households. 2021-06-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soe_working_paper/7 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1004&context=soe_working_paper SMU Economics and Statistics Working Paper Series eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University missing middle price and income distribution demand demographics cost of living entry/exit Behavioral Economics Economics International Economics
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic missing middle
price and income distribution
demand demographics
cost of living
entry/exit
Behavioral Economics
Economics
International Economics
spellingShingle missing middle
price and income distribution
demand demographics
cost of living
entry/exit
Behavioral Economics
Economics
International Economics
CHANG, Pao-li
YI, Xin
YOON, Haeyeon
The missing middle in product price distribution
description The IO literature has typically studied the supply-side factors that determine the price structure of products/services competing in a market. This paper pro-poses that the demand-side demographics could play an important role in shaping the product price structure. In particular, we document a “missing middle” phe-nomenon in both the income and the product price distributions in the U.S., based on the IPUMS ACS dataset (2005–2017) and the Nielsen Retail Scanner Data (2006–2017), for a large set of goods sold in the U.S. at the national, state, or commuting-zone level. We show that the lagged population share of the middle-income class has a positive impact on the market share (in quantity) of middle-priced varieties (and respectively so for the low/high income and price group), after controlling for product category and state (or commuting zone) fixed effects. The impacts are further stronger in commuting zones of higher population density. We then evaluate the cost-of-living implications of the observed missing-middle phe-nomenon, taking into account product entry, exit, and pro-competitive price effects of continuing products, in a framework that allows for non-homothetic preferences across income groups with respective to the price groups. We find that ignoring the non-homothetic demand structure and the missing-middle phenomenon under-states the rise in the cost of living for the period 2006–2017. The downward bias is sizable (as large as 2 percentage points out of 11–13% increase in the cost of living for the period), and particularly noticeable for the middle-income households.
format text
author CHANG, Pao-li
YI, Xin
YOON, Haeyeon
author_facet CHANG, Pao-li
YI, Xin
YOON, Haeyeon
author_sort CHANG, Pao-li
title The missing middle in product price distribution
title_short The missing middle in product price distribution
title_full The missing middle in product price distribution
title_fullStr The missing middle in product price distribution
title_full_unstemmed The missing middle in product price distribution
title_sort missing middle in product price distribution
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2021
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soe_working_paper/7
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1004&context=soe_working_paper
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