Asymmetry and duration dependence in Australian GDP and unemployment
The per iodic structure of business cycles suggests that significant asymmetries are present over different phases of the cycle. This paper uses markov regime-switching models with fixed and duration dependent transition probabilities to directly model expansions, contractions and durations in Australian GDP growth and unemployment growth. Evidence is found of significant asymmetry in growth rates across expansions and contractions for both series. GDP contractions exhibit duration dependence implying that as output recessions age the likelihood of switching into an expansion phase increases. Unemployment growth does not exhibit duration dependence in either phase. Evidence is also presented that non-linearities in unemployment growth are well explained by the asymmetries in the GDP growth cycle. The analysis suggests that recessions are periods of rapid and intense job destruction, that Australian unemployment tends to ratchet up in recessionary periods and, in contrast to US and UK studies, that shocks to Australian unemployment growth are more persistent in recessions than expansions. [E37 C5 C41].
| Year of publication: |
1998-01-01
|
|---|---|
| Authors: | Bodman, PM |
| Subject: | Macroeconomic Time-series | Business-cycle | Transitory Components | Models | Trends | Gnp | Fluctuations | Permanent | Output | Phases |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by subject
-
Reading the Recent Monetary History of the United States, 1959-2007
Rubio-Ramirez, Juan F., (2010)
-
Regime-switching and interest rates in the European monetary system
Dahlquist, Magnus, (2000)
-
Output volatility in Australia
Bodman, P, (2009)
- More ...
Similar items by person