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Global Business Cycles : : Convergence or Decoupling? / / Ayhan Kose, Eswar Prasad, Christopher Otrok



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Autore: Kose Ayhan Visualizza persona
Titolo: Global Business Cycles : : Convergence or Decoupling? / / Ayhan Kose, Eswar Prasad, Christopher Otrok Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: Washington, D.C. : , : International Monetary Fund, , 2008
Descrizione fisica: 1 online resource (51 p.)
Disciplina: 339.015195
Soggetto topico: Business cycles - Econometric models
Globalization
Econometrics
Finance: General
Macroeconomics
Prices, Business Fluctuations, and Cycles: General (includes Measurement and Data)
Macroeconomics: Consumption
Saving
Wealth
Globalization: General
General Financial Markets: General (includes Measurement and Data)
Classification Methods
Cluster Analysis
Principal Components
Factor Models
Economic growth
Finance
Econometrics & economic statistics
Business cycles
Consumption
Emerging and frontier financial markets
Factor models
Economics
Financial services industry
Econometric models
Soggetto geografico: United States
Altri autori: PrasadEswar  
OtrokChristopher  
Note generali: Description based upon print version of record.
Nota di contenuto: Contents; I. Introduction; II. Methodology and Data; A. A Dynamic Factor Model; B. Advantages of Dynamic Factor Models; C. Variance Decompositions; D. Data; III. Dynamic Factors and Episodes of Business Cycles; A. Evolution of the Global and Group-Specific Factors; B. Country Factors and Domestic Economic Activity; IV. Sources of Business Cycle Fluctuations: 1960-2005; A. Common Cycles: Global and Country-Specific Factors; B. National Cycles: Country and Idiosyncratic Factors; C. Summary; V. Globalization and the Evolution of International Business Cycles; A. Convergence or Decoupling?
B. Consumption ComovementC. Dynamics of Investment; D. Summary; VI. Sensitivity Experiments; A. Results for Sub-groups of Countries; B. Changes in the Importance of Global and Group Factors; C. Implications of Crises; D. Alternative Breakpoints; VII. Conclusion; References; Appendices; I. A Bayesian Approach to Estimating Dynamic Factor Models; II. Testing for Structural Breaks; III. List of Countries; Tables; 1. Variance Decompositions-All Groups; 2. Variance Decompositions-Industrial Country Subsamples; 3. Variance Decompositions-All Groups
4. Variance Decompositions-Industrial Country Subsamples5. Variance Decompositions-Emerging Economy Subsamples; 6. Variance Decompositions-Other Developing Economy Subsamples; Figures; 1. Global and Group-Specific Factors; 2. Output Growth and Estimated Factors for Selected Countries; 3. Average Variance Explained by the Global and Group Factors; 4. Average Variance Explained by Global and Group Factors; 5. Average Variance Explained by Global Factor; 6. Average Variance Explained by Group Specific Factors; 7. Average Variance Explained by Global and Group-Specific Factors-All Countries
8. Output Variance Explained by Global Factor9. Output Variance Explained by Group Factor
Sommario/riassunto: This paper analyzes the evolution of the degree of global cyclical interdependence over the period 1960-2005. We categorize the 106 countries in our sample into three groups-industrial countries, emerging markets, and other developing economies. Using a dynamic factor model, we then decompose macroeconomic fluctuations in key macroeconomic aggregates-output, consumption, and investment-into different factors. These are: (i) a global factor, which picks up fluctuations that are common across all variables and countries; (ii) three group-specific factors, which capture fluctuations that are common to all variables and all countries within each group of countries; (iii) country factors, which are common across all aggregates in a given country; and (iv) idiosyncratic factors specific to each time series. Our main result is that, during the period of globalization (1985-2005), there has been some convergence of business cycle fluctuations among the group of industrial economies and among the group of emerging market economies. Surprisingly, there has been a concomitant decline in the relative importance of the global factor. In other words, there is evidence of business cycle convergence within each of these two groups of countries but divergence (or decoupling) between them.
Titolo autorizzato: Global Business Cycles  Visualizza cluster
ISBN: 1-4623-3965-4
1-4527-8339-X
1-4518-7001-9
9786612840944
1-282-84094-0
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910820699303321
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Serie: IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ; ; No. 2008/143