Measuring business cycles intra-synchronization in US: a regime-switching interdependence framework

Measuring business cycles intra-synchronization in US: a regime-switching interdependence framework

Series: Working Papers. 1726.

Author: Danilo Leiva-Leon.

Topics: Quantitative methods | Regional analysis | Monetary policy | International Economy | Economic growth and convergence.

Published in: Oxford Bulletin of Economics and StatisticsOpens in new window

Full document

PDF
Measuring business cycles intra-synchronization in US: a regime-switching interdependence framework (795 KB)

Abstract

This paper proposes a Markov-switching framework to endogenously identify periods where economies are more likely to (i) synchronously enter recessionary and expansionary phases, and (ii) follow independent business cycles. The reliability of the framework is validated with simulated data in Monte Carlo experiments. The framework is applied to assess the timevarying intra-country synchronization in US. The main results report substantial changes over time in the cyclical affiliation patterns of US states, and show that the more similar the economic structures of states, the higher the correlation between their business cycles. A synchronization-based network analysis discloses a change in the propagation pattern of aggregate contractionary shocks across states, suggesting that the US has become more internally synchronized since the early 1990s.

Previous The propagation of industri... Next Model averaging in Markov-S...