A basic tenet of microeconomics is that for a competitive industry in equilibrium the market price of a product will be equal to its marginal cost. This paper develops a model framework and a corresponding empirical inference procedure for estimating longrun marginal cost in industries where production costs decline over time. In the context of the solar photovoltaic (PV) module industry, we rely primarily on firm-level financial accounting data to estimate the long-run marginal cost of PV modules for the years 2008{ 2013. During those years, the industry experienced both unprecedented price declines and significant expansions of manufacturing capacity. We compare the trajectory of average sales prices with the estimated long-run marginal costs in order to quantify the extent to which actual price declines were attributable to excess capacity as opposed to reductions in production costs. The trajectory of estimated product costs can then extrapolated to forecast the rate of future price declines for PV modules.