International Business Cycles: Theory and Evidence

44 Pages Posted: 15 Sep 2000 Last revised: 13 Oct 2022

See all articles by David K. Backus

David K. Backus

NYU Stern School of Business (deceased); National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

Patrick J. Kehoe

Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis - Research Department; University of Minnesota - Twin Cities - Department of Economics; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

Finn Kydland

Carnegie Mellon University - David A. Tepper School of Business; Norwegian School of Economics (NHH) - Department of Economics

Date Written: October 1993

Abstract

We review recent work comparing properties of international business cycles with those of dynamic general equilibrium models, emphasizing two discrepancies between theory and data that we refer to as anomalies. The first is the consumption/output/productivity anomaly: in the data we generally find that the correlation across countries of output fluctuations is larger than the analogous consumption and productivity correlations. In theoretical economies we find, for a wide range of parameter values, that the consumption correlation exceeds the productivity and output correlations. The second anomaly concerns relative price movements: the standard deviation of the terms of trade is considerably larger in the data than it is in theoretical economies. We speculate on changes in theoretical structure that might bring theory and data closer together.

Suggested Citation

Backus, David K. and Kehoe, Patrick J. and Kydland, Finn E., International Business Cycles: Theory and Evidence (October 1993). NBER Working Paper No. w4493, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=227309

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