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RBA Glossary definition for business cycle

business cycle – The period between peaks or troughs of macroeconomic activity.

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The Changing Nature of the Business Cycle

11 Jul 2005 Conference2005
The Reserve Bank of Australia 2005 conference, ‘The Changing Nature of the Business Cycle
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2005/

International Business Cycle Co-movements through Time | Conference – 2005

11 Jul 2005 Conferences
Dan Andrews and Marion Kohler
By themselves, common shocks will tend to lead to synchronisation of business cycles across countries. ... For Australia and the US, business cycles became more synchronised during the 1980s.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2005/andrews-kohler.html

The Australian Business Cycle: A Coincident Indicator Approach | Conference – 2005

11 Jul 2005 Conferences
Christian Gillitzer, Jonathan Kearns and Anthony Richards
While the business cycle could be well characterised by one factor for the quarterly panel of data, in the monthly case there are two factors that each represent different cycles, and ... marginally. 6.2 Dating the business cycle. In this section, we use
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2005/gillitzer-kearns-richards.html

Business Cycle Dynamics in OECD Countries: Evidence, Causes and Policy Implications | Conference – 2005

11 Jul 2005 Conferences
Jean-Philippe Cotis and Jonathan Coppel
Moving from classical to growth cycles modifies the meaning of a turning point and phase, both concepts used to describe the morphology of a business cycle. ... Another aspect of business cycle synchronisation is the proportion of time two cycles are in
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2005/cotis-coppel.html

What Caused the Decline in US Business Cycle Volatility? | Conference – 2005

11 Jul 2005 Conferences
Robert J Gordon
RBA Annual Conference – 2005 What Caused the Decline in US Business Cycle Volatility? ... cast of authors, The American business cycle (Gordon 1986), and began my introduction to that volume with support for Burns' theme that business cycles continued
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2005/gordon.html

Exploring the Link between the Macroeconomic and Financial Cycles | Conference – 2017

16 Mar 2017 Conferences
Adam Cagliarini and Fiona Price
the financial cycle, how these differ from the characteristics of the business cycle, and the relationship between these cycles. ... Table 2: Estimates of Financial and Business Cycles. Average cycle lengths (years) using Bry-Boschan quarterly turning
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2017/cagliarini-price.html

When the US Sneezes, Do We Need to Catch a Cold? Historical and Future Linkages between the Australian and US Business Cycles | Conference…

11 Jul 2005 Conferences
Mark Crosby and Philip Bodman
We also use the historical business cycle dating scheme from the National Bureau of Economic Research, along with some existing dates for business cycles in Australia, to compare cycles in the ... Sources: ECRI; NBER; authors' calculations. Table 4:
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2005/crosby-bodman.html

Introduction | Conference – 2005

11 Jul 2005 Conferences
Christopher Kent and David Norman
pressures. It is not surprising, therefore, that the nature of the business cycle, including the magnitude of fluctuations and the degree of synchronisation of cycles across countries is closely studied by ... The authors use these indices to examine
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2005/intro-2005.html

Table 1 in International Business Cycle Co-movements through Time | Conference – 2005

11 Jul 2005 Conferences
RBA Annual Conference – 2005 International Business Cycle Co-movements through Time. ... Appendix A: Chronology of Classical Cycles. 1970–2003. US. Contraction (peak to trough).
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2005/cotis-coppel-appendix-a.html

Table 6 in What Caused the Decline in US Business Cycle Volatility? | Conference – 2005

11 Jul 2005 Conferences
Table 6: Coefficients from Four-equation Model Estimated for 1962:Q1–2004:Q4. Dependent variable. Nominal federal funds rate. Lags. included. Inflation. rate. 1960:Q1–1979:Q2. ‘Burns’. AR(1) correction? 1979:Q2–1990:Q2. ‘Volcker’. AR(1)
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/confs/2005/gordon-table-6.html