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'Stall Speed' and 'Escape Velocity': Empty Metaphors or Empirical Realities?

Paul Diggle and Luke Bartholomew

No 14290, CEPR Discussion Papers from C.E.P.R. Discussion Papers

Abstract: ‘Stall speed’ and ‘escape velocity’ are commonly heard but often vaguely defined physics metaphors used to describe apparent business cycle dynamics. Using GDP data for the OECD economies, we find evidence for the existence of a weak and a strong form of stall speed in the majority of these economies, but reject weak and strong form escape velocity everywhere. Specifically, we find higher probabilities of recession following periods of low growth, including nonlinear increases in these probabilities around certain thresholds; but no equivalent decrease in recession probabilities after periods of high growth. We then employ Markov switching models as a secondary technique to test for distinct business cycle phases that might equate to stalls and escapes. This analysis rarely picks out stall speed and escape velocity as separate business cycle regimes, and instead points to a broader and more idiosyncratic suite of regimes rooted in individual economies’ economic history. Taken together, these results suggest that stall speed dynamics are present in the GDP data generating process for many OECD economies, but they are not a strong enough feature to emerge as a defining characteristic of the business cycle. Our findings caution against the overuse of the stall speed and escape velocity metaphors in a macroeconomic context.

Keywords: Stall speed; Escape velocity; Business cycle asymmetry; Kernel densities; Conditional probabilities; Markov switching (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: C14 C22 E32 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022-01
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-mac
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