This paper evaluates the consistency of the NBER business cycle reference dates over time. Analysis of the NBER methods suggests that the early turning points are derived from detrended data, while the dates after 1927 are derived from data in levels. To evaluate the importance of this and other changes in technique, the paper derives a simple algorithm that matches the postwar NBER peaks and troughs closely. When this algorithm is applied to data for 1884-1940, the new dates systematically place peaks later and troughs earlier than do the NBER dates. Using the new business cycle chronology, recessions have not become shorter, less severe, or less persistent between the pre-World War I and the post-World War 11 eras. Expansions, however, ha...
The paper develops a non-parametric, non-stationary framework for business-cycle dating based on an ...
This paper constructs a new chronology of the business cycle in the United Kingdom from 1700 on an a...
We want to find a new business cycle dating scheme for pre-World War I Germany. For this purpose we ...
Modern perceptions of 19th century American business cycles have been strongly influenced by the off...
The NBER s pre World War I dating of business cycles implies that the U.S. economy spent nearly ever...
This article extends earlier efforts at redating the US industrial cycles for the prewar period (189...
The NBER Business Cycle Dating Committee and the CEPR Business Cycle Dating Committee date business ...
International audienceThis article extends earlier efforts at redating the US business cycles for th...
A working definition, first formulated in the 1920's by Mitchell and revised in the 1940's, has been...
The Business Cycle Dating Committee (BCDC) of the National Bureau of Economic Research provides a hi...
This paper evaluates the ability of formal rules to establish U.S. business cycle turning point date...
This article extends earlier efforts at redating the US business cycles for the 1790–1928 period usi...
The NIESR's monthly GDP series is an innovative feature; most GDP estimates are published at an annu...
The paper develops a non-parametric, non-stationary framework for business-cycle dating based on an ...
The paper develops a non-parametric, non-stationary framework for business-cycle dating based on an ...
This paper constructs a new chronology of the business cycle in the United Kingdom from 1700 on an a...
We want to find a new business cycle dating scheme for pre-World War I Germany. For this purpose we ...
Modern perceptions of 19th century American business cycles have been strongly influenced by the off...
The NBER s pre World War I dating of business cycles implies that the U.S. economy spent nearly ever...
This article extends earlier efforts at redating the US industrial cycles for the prewar period (189...
The NBER Business Cycle Dating Committee and the CEPR Business Cycle Dating Committee date business ...
International audienceThis article extends earlier efforts at redating the US business cycles for th...
A working definition, first formulated in the 1920's by Mitchell and revised in the 1940's, has been...
The Business Cycle Dating Committee (BCDC) of the National Bureau of Economic Research provides a hi...
This paper evaluates the ability of formal rules to establish U.S. business cycle turning point date...
This article extends earlier efforts at redating the US business cycles for the 1790–1928 period usi...
The NIESR's monthly GDP series is an innovative feature; most GDP estimates are published at an annu...
The paper develops a non-parametric, non-stationary framework for business-cycle dating based on an ...
The paper develops a non-parametric, non-stationary framework for business-cycle dating based on an ...
This paper constructs a new chronology of the business cycle in the United Kingdom from 1700 on an a...
We want to find a new business cycle dating scheme for pre-World War I Germany. For this purpose we ...