posted on 2012-01-01, 00:00authored byMark Coppejans, Donna Gilleskie, Holger Sieg, Koleman Strumpf
The goal of this paper is to analyze consumer demand in markets with large price
uncertainty. We develop a demand model for goods that are subject to habit formation. We
show that consumption plans of forward looking individuals depend not only on preferences
and current period prices, but also on individual beliefs about the evolution of future prices.
Moreover, a mean preserving spread in the price distribution and, hence, an increase in price
uncertainty reduces consumption along the optimal path. With smoking as our application,
we test the predictions of our model using a combination of data sets. First, we use a unique
data set of prices for cigarettes collected by the Bureau of Labor Statistics to characterize
price uncertainty and price expectations of individuals. Second, we have obtained access
to the restricted use version of the National Education Longitudinal Study, which provides
detailed information on smoking behavior of teenagers in the U.S. Our estimation results
suggest that teenagers who live in metropolitan areas with a large amount of cigarette price
volatility have, on average, significantly lower levels of cigarette consumption. Moreover,
these individuals are less likely to start consuming cigarettes. Models based on forecasted
price volatility fit the data better than models based on historical volatility measures.
Our results also provide evidence that young individuals are forward looking. Myopic
individuals would not respond to an increase in uncertainty about future prices by reducing
consumption.