Industrial Sector Mode-Locking and Business Cycle Formation

David D. Selover, Old Dominion University
Roderick V. Jensen, Wesleyan University
John Kroll, Old Dominion University

Abstract

This study investigates the synchronization of business cycles in different sectors of the economy. Business cycles in different industries or sectors have a tendency to synchronize with one another in what appears to be a national business cycle, yet trade between sectors may not be strong enough for one sector to "drive" business cycle fluctuations in another sector. How are these sectors synchronized? This study suggests that the national business cycle results from a "mode-locking" phenomenon between different sectors, a nonlinear process through which weak coupling between oscillating systems (sectors) tends to synchronize the fluctuations between the oscillating systems (sectors). Simulations, statistical analysis, and spectral analysis are used to attempt to verify this hypothesis. Investigation reveals a moderate amount of econometric support for the sectoral mode-locking hypothesis of business cycle formation.

Recommended Citation

David D. Selover, Roderick V. Jensen, and John Kroll (2003) "Industrial Sector Mode-Locking and Business Cycle Formation", Studies in Nonlinear Dynamics & Econometrics: Vol. 7: No. 3, Article 2.
http://www.bepress.com/snde/vol7/iss3/art2

Related Files

selover_datacode.zip (1945 kB)
Data and code

 
 
 
 

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