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Business Cycle Dating Committee of the
Centre for Economic Policy Research
Committee Members:
Michael Artis (European University Institute, Florence)
Fabio Canova (University of Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona)
Jordi Galí (CREI, Pompeu Fabra University, Barcelona)
Francesco Giavazzi (Bocconi University Milan)
Richard Portes (President, CEPR)
Harald Uhlig (Humboldt University, Berlin)–Committee Chair
Philippe Weil (ECARES, Free University of Brussels)
The
Centre for
Economic Policy Research has formed a committee to set the dates of the euro
area business cycle. Its mission is to establish the
chronology of recessions and expansions of the 11 original euro area
member countries for 1970-1998 and of the current euro area as a whole
since 1999. The euro area currently includes: Austria, Belgium, Finland,
France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands,
Portugal, and Spain.
The
Committee defines a recession as a significant decline in the level of
economic activity, spread across the economy of the euro area, usually
visible in two or more consecutive quarters of negative growth in GDP,
employment and other measures of aggregate economic activity for the
euro area as a whole, and reflecting similar developments in most
countries. A recession begins just after the economy reaches a peak of
activity and ends when the economy reaches its trough. Between trough
and peak, the economy is formally in an expansion; between peak and
trough it is in a recession.
- The Committee analyses euro area aggregate
statistics, but it also monitors country statistics to make
sure that expansions or recessions are widespread over the countries
of the area. There is no fixed rule by which country information is
weighted.
- The Committee does not use a fixed
rule to weight different data series, although it gives primary
emphasis to GDP.
The
euro area business cycle since 1970
The
Committee has identified the following cyclical episodes since 1970,
with peaks (P) and troughs (T) dated as follows:
|
PEAK
|
TROUGH
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1974q3
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1975q1
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1980q1
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1982q3
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1992q1
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1993q3
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Table 1. Chronology of euro area business cycles
Thus
the Committee has identified three recessions: 1974q3
to 1975q1, 1980q1 to 1982q3, and 1992q1 to 1993q3.

View Larger Image
Figure
1
shows the level of real GDP (seasonally adjusted) from 1970 to 1998
according to two alternative GDP series constructed by the OECD and the
ECB. Shaded bands indicate recessions.
-
Two
of the three recessions we have declared – in the 1970s and 1990s
– are pronounced and also synchronized across countries and
variables. In both periods employment, investment and industrial
production declined with GDP.
-
The
third recession, in the 1980s, exhibits different and specific
characteristics. The recession in terms of aggregate output is
milder but longer. GDP does not decline sharply but rather stagnates
for almost three years.
-
As to recent years, the Committee judges that, based on currently
available data, it would be premature to declare a peak (and hence a
subsequent recession).
The
euro area since 2001
The
role of the Committee is to establish the chronology of recessions and
expansions, not to forecast. The recent period is a case in which
caution is clearly required.
Euro
area GDP has slowed down since the first quarter of 2001. A weak
resurgence of positive growth at the beginning of 2002 seems to have
come to a new halt. Employment has grown somewhat, while industrial
production, after having fallen sharply in 2001, shows weak signs of
recovery. Investment has been declining for more than two years, but
government consumption rose 2.2% in 2001 and 2.7% in 2002.
Qualitatively,
the recent behavior of GDP resembles that of the 1980s recession.
Employment, however, is not declining.
Based on currently available data, our current judgment is
therefore that the euro area has been experiencing a prolonged pause
in the growth of economic activity, rather than a full-fledged
recession.
Contact
Information:
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(0) 7740519225 or email rlonie@cepr.org.
Notes for Editors:
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is a network of over 550 Research Fellows based throughout Europe, who
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the world economy.
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