• Title of article

    Dynamic cyclical comovements of oil prices with industrial production, consumer prices, unemployment, and stock prices

  • Author/Authors

    Bradley T. Ewing، نويسنده , , Mark A. Thompson، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
  • Pages
    6
  • From page
    5535
  • To page
    5540
  • Abstract
    This paper examines the empirical relationship between oil prices and several key macroeconomic variables. In particular, we investigate the cyclical comovements of crude oil prices with output, consumer prices, unemployment, and stock prices. The methodology involves the use of the Hodrick–Prescott [Hodrick, R.J., Prescott, E.C., 1980. Post-War US Business Cycles: An Empirical Investigation. Working Paper, Carnegie Mellon University] and Baxter–King [Baxter, M., King, R.G., 1999. Measuring business cycles: approximate band-pass filters for economic time series. Review of Economics and Statistics 81, 575–593] filters, as well as the recently developed full-sample asymmetric Christiano–Fitzgerald [Christiano, L.J., Fitzgerald, T.J., 2003. The band pass filter. International Economic Review 44, 435–465] band-pass filter. Contemporaneous and cross-correlation estimates are made using the stationary cyclical components of the time series to make inference about the degree to which oil prices move with the cycle. Besides documenting a number of important cyclical relationships using three different time series filtering methods, the results suggest that crude oil prices are procyclical and lag industrial production. Additionally, we find that oil prices lead consumer prices.
  • Keywords
    Crude oil prices , Time series filters , Economic cycles
  • Journal title
    Energy Policy
  • Serial Year
    2006
  • Journal title
    Energy Policy
  • Record number

    971865