Official Web Site

  1. For questions, statistics, and future access to the data please check here:

  2. BulletThe Billion Prices Project (official web page)


  1. Other web sites of interest

  2. BulletAlberto Cavallo’s web page

  3. BulletInflacion Verdadera (Argentina’s Food Inflation)


What is the Billion Prices Project?

  1. The Billion Prices Project is an academic initiative that collects daily price data from hundreds of retailers around the world to conduct economic research about pricing behavior, daily inflation, pass-through, sales behavior, and green markups.

  2. At some point in time (steady state), we expect to download nearly 40 million prices a day – hence, a billion a month. Our goal is to have a reliable picture of over 60 percent of CPI categories retailed in each country.


How did we start?

  1. We started in October 2007 collecting data from supermarkets in 4 Latin American countries. Our original objective was to study price stickiness, food inflation, and pass-through across Latin American countries. In early 2008, we expanded our scope to other countries around the world.

  2. Today, we have data from over 50 countries, in five different categories: supermarkets, electronics, apparel, furniture, and real estate. On a smaller scale, we are also collecting data on real estate, clothing, medicines, cosmetics, hardware products, toys, and books. We typically collect product prices, ids, descriptions, package sizes, and detailed indicators, including whether the item is new, on sale, or has government imposed price controls.


Our Projects?

  1. BulletPricing Behavior:  What drives price stickiness around the world? How much can be explained by current inflation, and inflation histories? How much by competition and industries’ structure? Are prices synchronized? How strong are strategic complementarities?

  2. BulletAsset Prices, Inflation, and Real Exchange Rate: What relationship exists between asset and retail prices? We are constructing aggregate inflation indexes in each of the sectors and countries for which we have data. We want to study the behavior of these aggregate prices and their relationship with other financial indicators. We also plan to publish inflation rates and real exchange rates at daily frequencies.

  3. BulletPass Through: How much do prices adjust internally when the exchange rate, or the international price of commodities change?

  4. BulletSales Behavior:  What role do sales play in pricing strategies? Are they affected by macro shocks? Are they used for price discrimination? We have daily information on sales and price controls in many countries. Sales tend to last only a few days in most retailers, so daily data can provide a much better characterization of sales and their effects on pricing behaviors than other data.

  5. BulletGreen Markups:  What premium is paid in stores for “green” or “organic” products? Since we have data from multinational retailers, we can compute premium differences -for exactly the same items- in different places.


Who is working on it?

  1. BulletAlberto Cavallo and I are leading the project. In fact, it was Alberto’s initiative that started this project.

  2. BulletWe have received incredible help from Mark Riedesel and Chay Caso from STS.

  3. BulletSeveral students have been involved in the process (we thank all of them): HaeJin Chang, Tong Chen, Helen Chen, Yang Jiang , Jenny Poon , Anthony Rindone, Adnan Shahid, Cesar Sosa, and Amy Zhang. They have been a superb team.

  4. BulletFinancial support for the project: MIT Sloan School, MIT UROP office, Harvard University, and the Real Estate Academy Initiative in Harvard.