Global financial crisis and decoupling hypothesis
Abstract
The purpose of the paper was to present the decoupling hypothesis
which says that the performance of the emerging economies becomes relatively
independent from the changes in advanced economies, and to empirically verify
this hypothesis. The Christiano-Fitzgerald band-pass filter and spectral analyses
have been applied to examine the hypothesis. On the basis of obtained results, if
one compares the deviations of GDPs from their long-term trend, it seems that the
synchronization of cycles between emerging and advanced economies was already high before the crisis. The last global crisis, especially if time shifts between the countries are taken into account, even increased the synchronization of
the economies. Therefore, this paper presents evidence against the decoupling
hypothesis, and at the same time it raises doubts whether the high GDP growth
rates in emerging economies can be sustainable in the presence of the slow-down
in the advanced economies.