articleAmerican Economic ReviewNov 1, 2008Closed access

Pricing-to-Market, Trade Costs, and International Relative Prices

University of California, Los Angeles · UCLA Health

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Abstract

International relative prices across industrialized countries show large and systematic deviations from relative purchasing power parity. We embed a model of imperfect competition and variable markups in a quantitative model of international trade. We find that when our model is parameterized to match salient features of the data on international trade and market structure in the United States, it can reproduce deviations from relative purchasing power parity similar to those observed in the data because firms choose to price-to-market. We then examine how pricing-to-market depends on the presence of international trade costs and various features of market structure. (JEL F12, F14, F31)

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Authors

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Purchasing power parity
  • Economics
  • Imperfect competition
  • Imperfect
  • Relative price
  • Salient
  • Relative purchasing power parity
  • Econometrics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
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