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Commodity Prices and the Business Cycle in Latin America: Living and Dying by Commodities?
115
Citations
40
References
2014
Year
TradeAgricultural EconomicsEconomic FluctuationCommodity MarketLatin AmericaEconomic GrowthEconomic HistoryDynamic EconomicsOpen Economy MacroeconomicsEconomic AnalysisEconomicsLatin American StudiesFinanceSize DependentDynamic Economic ModelOutput GrowthMacroeconomicsEconomic PolicyTrade EconomicsShock (Economics)BusinessBusiness Cycle RegimesCommodity Price IndexCommodity Prices
We analyze the dynamic interactions between commodity prices and output growth of the seven biggest Latin American exporters: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Peru, and Venezuela. Using a novel definition of Markov-switching impulse response functions, we find that the response of each country's output growth to commodity price shocks is time dependent, size dependent, and sign dependent. The major evidence of asymmetries in output growth responses occurs when commodity price shocks lead to regime shifts. Thus, we conclude that the design of optimal countercyclical stabilization policies should consider that the reactions of economic activity vary considerably across business cycle regimes.
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