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How Does Globalization Affect the Synchronization of Business Cycles?

Abstract
This paper examines the impact of rising trade and financial integration on international business cycle comovement among a large group of industrial and developing countries. The results provide at best limited support for the conventional wisdom that globalization has increased the degree of synchronization of business cycles. The evidence that trade and financial integration enhance global spillovers of macroeconomic fluctuations is mostly limited to industrial countries. One striking result is that, on average, cross-country consumption correlations have not increased in the 1990s, precisely when financial integration would have been expected to result in better risk-sharing opportunities, especially for developing countries.. macroeconomic fluctuations, trade and financial integration, international transmission of shocks, cross-country comovement of output and consumption

Publication details
Download ftp://repec.iza.org/RePEc/Discussionpaper/dp702.pdf
Repository RePEc (Germany)
Type preprint