Explaining metals prices : economic analysis of metals markets in the 1980s and 1990s

Bibliographic Information

Explaining metals prices : economic analysis of metals markets in the 1980s and 1990s

Paul W. MacAvoy

(Rochester studies in economics and policy issues)

Kluwer Academic Publishers, c1988

Available at  / 7 libraries

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Note

"Published in cooperation with The Bradley Policy Research Center, William E. Simon Graduate School of Business Administration, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York"--Added t.p.

Bibliography: p. [89]-91

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Work on this book began in the Spring of 1983, not long­ after an Amax Corporation annual budget meeting. As a member of the Amax board of directors since 1979, I had been present at such meetings in which the molybdenum price had been forecast to move higher than $7.00 per pound. The actual annual average prices were $9.70 in 1980, $8.50 in 1981, and $4.00 in 1982. The forecast for 1983 called for prices to return to higher levels, but as both dealer and producer prices declined further, my research began in earnest. Initially, the research was to address the question of why the molybdenum price had declined by more than half in a short period. More fundamental, as other metals prices also declined, was an impelling need to know the causes of the abrupt and sustained reduction in metals price levels that year. As prices stayed at low levels, while those of other materials recovered over the 1983-1986 period, the question became that of why metals prices had remained at startlingly low levels for over five years.

Table of Contents

One The Metals Price Collapse of the Early 1980s.- What are Prices?.- Specifying Price Determinants in an Equilibration Process.- Disequilibrium Price Behavior.- Two Explanatory Price Equations.- The Price Level Equation.- Demand Contraction.- Exchange Rates and Inventories.- Supply Expansion during the Post-1980 Period.- The Dynamic Price Equation.- Conclusion.- Three Price Reductions in Response to Increased Competition.- Deconcentration in Metals Markets.- Competitive Price Behavior.- Conclusion.- Four The Permanency of Low Prices.- References.- Appendix A Data Sources.- Appendix B Statistical Procedures for Fitting the Price Level Equations.- Appendix C Market Supply Shocks.- Appendix D Calculation of the Market Model Residuals.- Appendix E Data Series.

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