How Does a Cost Shock Show in a Diagram

Cost Pass-Through to Buyers

Shock to Consumer Taste

A Look into Shock Pass-Through

We need to account for the fact that shocks can pass through from one side of the market to the other.

Almost No Pass-Through to Buyers

What does a “steep” supply curve mean?

Steep supply curve: supply changes only little when the price changes

  • supply is price-insensitive or price-inelastic

What is the economics behind that?

  • natural limits on capacity (e.g. oil)
  • entry barriers
  • scarce production factor (e.g. shipping)

Steepness depends on time horizon.

Almost Full Pass-Through to Buyers

What does a “steep” demand curve mean?

Steep demand curve: demand changes only little when the price changes

  • demand is price-insensitive or price-inelastic

What is the economics behind that?

  • Few available substitutes
  • Essential (or addictive) products
  • High-income buyers

Steepness depends on market definition

Caveat

The framework is relevant when

  • Firms are relatively homogenous
  • Shocks affect them in roughly uniform way

Not useful for studying an oil shock if firms use different technologies (e.g. some relying on green energy much more than others) Not useful for studying innovation if one firm’s innovation gives it competitive edge