
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword by O. Issing
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part 1 Macroeconometric evidence on the transmission mechanism in the euro area
- 1 Some stylised facts on the euro area business cycle
- 2 The monetary transmission mechanism in the euro area: evidence from VAR analysis
- 3 A VAR description of the effects of monetary policy in the individual countries of the euro area
- 4 Analysing monetary policy transmission at the euro area level using structural macroeconomic models
- 5 The effects of monetary policy in the euro area: evidence from structural macroeconomic models
- 6 Financial frictions and the monetary transmission mechanism: theory, evidence and policy implications
- Part 2 Firms' investment and monetary policy: evidence from microeconomic data
- Part 3 The role of banks in the transmission: evidence from microeconomic data
- Part 4 Monetary policy in the euro area: summary and discussion of the main findings
- Appendix
- References
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Subject index
- Author index
1 - Some stylised facts on the euro area business cycle
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword by O. Issing
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part 1 Macroeconometric evidence on the transmission mechanism in the euro area
- 1 Some stylised facts on the euro area business cycle
- 2 The monetary transmission mechanism in the euro area: evidence from VAR analysis
- 3 A VAR description of the effects of monetary policy in the individual countries of the euro area
- 4 Analysing monetary policy transmission at the euro area level using structural macroeconomic models
- 5 The effects of monetary policy in the euro area: evidence from structural macroeconomic models
- 6 Financial frictions and the monetary transmission mechanism: theory, evidence and policy implications
- Part 2 Firms' investment and monetary policy: evidence from microeconomic data
- Part 3 The role of banks in the transmission: evidence from microeconomic data
- Part 4 Monetary policy in the euro area: summary and discussion of the main findings
- Appendix
- References
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Subject index
- Author index
Summary
Introduction
There is a long tradition of describing the main regularities in the economic fluctuations by reporting the standard deviations and cross-correlations of de-trended macroeconomic time series. Economists, originally mostly contributors to the Real Business Cycle (RBC) research programme, have then used these cyclical properties as benchmarks to discriminate across competing theoretical models. Against this background, the cyclical properties of the US economy (Stock and Watson, 1999) and other OECD countries (Baxter, 1995) are well documented. On the contrary, no study has yet described systematically the cyclical properties of the euro area.
This chapter fills this gap by compiling the moments of de-trended euro area macroeconomic time series. For comparison, we also report similar statistics for the USA and for euro area countries.
We find that the cyclical properties of the euro area and the USA are surprisingly similar in mainly three respects: the magnitude of the fluctuations in consumption, investment, prices, inflation, interest rate and monetary aggregates relative to the fluctuations of GDP; the patterns of cross-correlation of GDP components, prices and interest rates with respect to GDP; and the persistence of GDP and of prices.
We also describe the high synchronicity of national cycles and the euro area aggregate cycle. This synchronicity is observed for the main GDP components as well as for the short-term interest rate. It is particularly high for the largest countries of the euro area and for Austria, Belgium and the Netherlands, which belonged to the core ERM.
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- Information
- Monetary Policy Transmission in the Euro AreaA Study by the Eurosystem Monetary Transmission Network, pp. 15 - 35Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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