Gasoline prices jump up on Mondays : an outcome of aggressive competition?
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Date
2009-04Metadata
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Abstract
This paper examines Norwegian gasoline pump prices using daily station-specific
observations from March 2003 to March 2006. Whereas studies that have analyzed
similar price cycles in other countries find support for the Edgeworth cycle theory
(Maskin and Tirole, 1988), we demonstrate that Norwegian gasoline price cycles
involve a form of coordinated behavior. Retail gasoline prices follow a fixed weekly
pattern, where retail outlets all over Norway simultaneously increase their prices to
the same level every Monday at noon. Consequently, the sharp price increase is tied to
time rather than the current price level. The gasoline companies’ headquarters publish
a recommended price that de facto is a RPM arrangement towards the retail outlets.
The vertical arrangement is industry-wide adopted, and is used to coordinate the time
and the level for retail price increases among the big four gasoline companies.
Monday changed from being the low-price day to becoming the high-price day almost
‘overnight’ in April 2004, and we empirically establish that the change corresponds to
a significant jump in the gross margin.
Publisher
Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration. Department of Finance and Management ScienceSeries
Discussion paper2009:2