articleAmerican Economic ReviewFeb 1, 2014BRONZE OA

Do Consumers Respond to Marginal or Average Price? Evidence from Nonlinear Electricity Pricing

Boston University

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

Nonlinear pricing and taxation complicate economic decisions by creating multiple marginal prices for the same good. This paper provides a framework to uncover consumers’ perceived price of nonlinear price schedules. I exploit price variation at spatial discontinuities in electricity service areas, where households in the same city experience substantially different nonlinear pricing. Using household-level panel data from administrative records, I find strong evidence that consumers respond to average price rather than marginal or expected marginal price. This suboptimizing behavior makes nonlinear pricing unsuccessful in achieving its policy goal of energy conservation and critically changes the welfare…

Citation impact

815
total citations
FWCI
256.60
Percentile
100%
References
70
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Nonlinear pricing
  • Economics
  • Electricity pricing
  • Microeconomics
  • Pricing schedule
  • Electricity
  • Marginal cost
  • Exploit
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