Abstract

Analyzing representative and rich data on the Indian formal manufacturing sector, this paper tries to establish an empirical relationship between prices of input, output and firm size of the plant. The firm-level data reflect tremendous dispersion in prices that firms pay to purchase material input even within an industry. Price heterogeneity is also observed for prices that firms charge for their output even for narrowly defined products. The paper constructs a model using information on output and input choices by firms to analyze the observed patterns. The paper finds that on average, bigger plants not only pay a premium for the inputs used in the production process, but also charge a premium for their outputs. After documenting the empirical relationship, the paper discusses the possible sources for price dispersion. The paper highlights sectoral variations in the correlation between plant size and prices, which are consistent with the findings in the literature related to the scope for quality differentiation in output as well as inputs. The empirical pattern observed supports the hypothesis that correlation between plant size and price can be driven by market power.

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