Cross-Border Shopping: Evidence and Welfare Implications for Switzerland
Consumers access foreign goods by purchasing them domestically or shopping abroad. We present new facts on cross-border shopping by Swiss households showing, for example, that prices of identical products are lower in neighboring countries, cross-border shopping shares fall with distance to the border, and price gaps and cross-border shopping shares rose following the 2015 Swiss Franc appreciation. We use a simple model of cross-border shopping to quantify how variation across space in cross-border shopping results in heterogeneous changes in cost-of-living in response to changes in international prices such as the 2015 Swiss Franc Appreciation and the 2020 Covid-19-related closing of the border.
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Copy CitationAriel Burstein, Sarah M. Lein, and Jonathan Vogel, "Cross-Border Shopping: Evidence and Welfare Implications for Switzerland," NBER Working Paper 33006 (2024), https://doi.org/10.3386/w33006.
Published Versions
Ariel Burstein & Sarah Lein & Jonathan Vogel, 2024. "Cross-border shopping: Evidence and welfare implications for Switzerland," Journal of International Economics, . citation courtesy of