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What's
a Recession? Defining a Recession:
Our definitions of recession, expansion, peaks and troughs correspond to the so called “growth cycle”. We define a recession, for example, as a prolonged period of declining growth in the cyclical component of GDP (as measured by the movements of
EuroCOIN). Analogously, an expansion is a prolonged period of increasing growth. Troughs and peaks are defined as the ending points of expansions and recessions respectively, i.e. as points of minimal or maximal growth. There is, of course, an alternative approach to defining the business cycle, based on the concept of the “classical business cycle”. The "classical" approach defines recessions as periods of low (or even negative) growth, and expansions as periods of high growth. This is, for example, the
definition
adopted by the NBER’s Business Cycle Dating Committee. Hence expansions - as we define them - anticipate classical expansions. Expressing the indicator in terms of quarterly changes has an important advantage: it reveals all the information necessary to determine the cyclical turning points for both concepts of the cycle (classical and growth). An indicator expressed in levels would not, on the other hand, reveal the "growth cycle" turning points. Dating the Euro Area Business Cycle: The indicator reveals three cycles in euro area activity since 1988. These cycles average 43 months in length - 20 months of expansion and 23 months of contraction.
The Euro Area Business Cycle: Expansions and Contractions The size of the cyclical fluctuations in the euro area seems to have decreased during the 1990s. Identifying new turning points in the economy: This requires additional data, which is only available after the turning point is reached. As a result, these turning points can only be identified with a lag. Once sufficient data have become available, the new turning points will be announced on the website. You can subscribe to these announcements here.
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