Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
995452 Energy Policy 2015 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The paper examines the adjustment of German retail fuel (gasoline and diesel) prices to international crude oil price changes.•An error correction model with threshold cointegration is used to investigate the price dynamics.•The findings generally point to a competitive retail fuel pricing, notwithstanding the oligopolistic market structure.

Consumers in Germany often complain that retail fuel prices usually adjust quickly to crude oil price increases than decreases and characterize this pricing pattern as market power exploitation. In this paper, we use both weekly national and daily city-specific (Berlin, Hamburg, Munich and Cologne) data to investigate the extent to which retail fuel prices in Germany adjust to changes in the international crude oil price. At the national level with weekly prices, we find positive asymmetries for both gasoline and diesel within the period 2003–2007, reflecting that retail prices react more swiftly to crude oil price increases than decreases. In contrast, for 2009–2013, we observe symmetric adjustment and negative asymmetry for retail diesel and gasoline prices, respectively. The city level analysis supports our findings in the latter time period. Thus, regulatory measures aimed at the retail fuel market over recent years seem to have been effective, and, contrary to consumers' perception, we find no evidence for excessive market power or collusion.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Energy Engineering and Power Technology
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