EMLGAPMEMLNov 8, 2020

Do We Exploit all Information for Counterfactual Analysis? Benefits of Factor Models and Idiosyncratic Correction

arXiv:2011.03996v318 citations
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of accurate price elasticity estimation for retailers, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing counterfactual methods with a new statistical approach.

The paper tackles the problem of estimating heterogeneous price elasticities for optimal pricing in retail, using a novel high-dimensional method called FarmTreat on daily sales data from over 400 municipalities in Brazil, and finds high heterogeneity leading to varied pricing strategies across locations.

Optimal pricing, i.e., determining the price level that maximizes profit or revenue of a given product, is a vital task for the retail industry. To select such a quantity, one needs first to estimate the price elasticity from the product demand. Regression methods usually fail to recover such elasticities due to confounding effects and price endogeneity. Therefore, randomized experiments are typically required. However, elasticities can be highly heterogeneous depending on the location of stores, for example. As the randomization frequently occurs at the municipal level, standard difference-in-differences methods may also fail. Possible solutions are based on methodologies to measure the effects of treatments on a single (or just a few) treated unit(s) based on counterfactuals constructed from artificial controls. For example, for each city in the treatment group, a counterfactual may be constructed from the untreated locations. In this paper, we apply a novel high-dimensional statistical method to measure the effects of price changes on daily sales from a major retailer in Brazil. The proposed methodology combines principal components (factors) and sparse regressions, resulting in a method called Factor-Adjusted Regularized Method for Treatment evaluation (\texttt{FarmTreat}). The data consist of daily sales and prices of five different products over more than 400 municipalities. The products considered belong to the \emph{sweet and candies} category and experiments have been conducted over the years of 2016 and 2017. Our results confirm the hypothesis of a high degree of heterogeneity yielding very different pricing strategies over distinct municipalities.

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