Volume 19, Issue 5 December 2023

Global and Domestic Financial Cycles: Variations on a Theme

Abstract

We compare and contrast two prominent notions of financial cycles: a domestic variant, which focuses on how financial conditions within individual economies lead to boom-bust cycles there, and a global variant, which highlights how global financial conditions affect individual economies. The two notions share a common analytical basis—the “procyclicality” of the financial system. Yet a number of distinguishing features stand out. These include differences in (i) the underlying components—financial asset prices and capital flows for the global financial cycle (GFCy) versus credit and property prices for the domestic financial cycle (DFC); (ii) their empirical properties—the GFCy has a shorter duration and is primarily linked with traditional business cycles, while the DFC has a longer duration and is predominantly linked with medium-term business cycles; and (iii) the policy focus—“dilemma versus trilemma” for the GFCy, “lean versus clean” for the DFC. Despite these differences, the two cycles tend to come together around crises. Finally, we show that traditional GFCy measures mainly reflect developments in advanced economies and that a simple alternative measure is much more relevant for emerging market economies.

Authors

  • Iñaki Aldasoro
  • Stefan Avdjiev
  • Claudio Borio
  • Piti Disyatat

JEL codes

  • F30
  • F40
  • E32
  • E50

Other papers in this issue

Iñaki Aldasoro and Leonardo Gambacorta and Paolo Giudici and Thomas Leach

Takahiro Hattori and Jiro Yoshida

Takuji Kawamoto and Taichi Matsuda and Koji Takahashi and Yoichiro Tamanyu

Stijn Claessens and Giulio Cornelli and Leonardo Gambacorta and Francesco Manaresi and Yasushi Shiina

Enisse Kharroubi and Christian Upper and Fabrizio Zampolli and Claudio Borio