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January 12, 2005

Recessions and Recoveries Associated with Asset-Price Movements:
What Do We Know?

Remarks by
Roger W. Ferguson, Jr.
Vice Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

at the
Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research
Stanford, California
January 12, 2005

Thank you for inviting me to address the associates of the Stanford Institute for
Economic Policy Research; it is a pleasure to be here. As you know, the U.S. economy is
currently continuing its recovery from the relatively mild recession in 2001, which ended
the longest period of economic expansion in our nation’s recorded business-cycle history.
The 1990s will be remembered not only for this remarkably long period of prosperity but
also for the excitement of the “new economy” and, less happily, for the sharp decline in
equity prices that marked its end. This market correction was most dramatic in sectors of
the economy associated with new technologies, the very sectors that had experienced the
most pronounced run-up in equity prices.
The quick occurrence of a recession following soon after this significant assetprice correction prompted some observers to suggest that the boom-bust cycle in asset
valuations was the proximate trigger of the economic downturn But a number of aspects
of that argument have not yet been fully examined. In the interest of advancing the
understanding on this issue, I will use this opportunity to provide a retrospective on the
performance of the U.S. economy and of some other industrialized economies during and
following recessions over the past three decades or so. In particular, I will focus on the
role that asset prices may have played in expansions and recessions.1 Before going any
further, however, I should emphasize that the views I will express today are my own and
are not necessarily shared by my colleagues in the Federal Reserve System.
What Happens during Asset-Price Run-Ups?
Asset prices serve multiple roles in a modern economy. They exert a direct
influence by affecting the net worth of the assets’ owners. Consumers who hold assets
become richer during an asset-price advance. This so-called wealth effect--always a key
1

My presentation is based on work with Refet Gurkaynak and Athanasios Orphanides.

-2determinant of consumption--can be quite important during significant asset-price runups as consumers spend out of their capital gains. Historical evidence suggests that this
effect ultimately raises the level of consumption spending by between 2 cents and 5 cents
per dollar of increase in wealth.2
Similarly, asset prices also affect business balance sheets. Rising prices for assets
raise the net worth of companies that own the assets. The value of the assets that a
borrower owns is an important determinant of his or her creditworthiness. In the event of
a default and foreclosure on a secured debt, collateral that caries a high price provides the
lender with a high recovery rate, which makes lending less risky. During an asset-price
boom, the creditworthiness of borrowers rises, the interest rates at which they borrow
decline because of lower risk spreads, and business investment increases as firms take
advantage of the relatively lower interest rates they face.
A consequence of the positive influence of asset prices on investment is that if
prospects for profitability as reflected in asset prices in one sector of the economy are
advancing relative to asset prices in all other sectors, investment in that sector will
outpace investment in the rest of the economy, all else equal. This circumstance may
have important and potentially adverse allocative consequences on the economy. In
particular, if asset prices do not accurately reflect the productive potential of the
underlying asset, investment will be channeled to the wrong sectors. However, an assetprice boom in a specific sector might simply reflect investor expectations of higher
productivity rather than a bubble, a term I will define in a few moments. Investment
would still tend to be channeled to that sector, but for good reason in this instance. One
2

See, for example, Morris A. Davis and Michael G. Palumbo (2001), “A Primer on the Economics and
Time Series Econometrics of Wealth Effects,” Finance and Economics Discussion Series 2001-9
(Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, February).

-3example of a sector-specific jump in asset prices and an associated investment increase is
the case of the U.S. technology sector in the late 1990s. Over the five years from the end
of 1994 to the end of 1999, prices of nontech stocks tripled while those of tech stocks
more than quintupled.3 Correspondingly, the average level of real investment in
computers and other high-tech capital goods was more than 100 percent higher over the
1995-99 period than its level during 1994, while spending on other types of fixed capital
was only about 15 percent higher than in 1994.
Asset-Price Busts
By definition, an asset-price bust is preceded by an asset-price boom. If a run-up
reflects a bubble, the ensuing price bust could obviously be viewed as its bursting.
Alternatively, asset prices may have been driven up by expectations of a productivity
boom, which would lead to improved earnings. In that case, if the expected productivity
boom does not subsequently materialize, asset prices will fall. The end result in this case
would not be termed the bursting of a bubble. Nonetheless, this case may be
indistinguishable from such an experience: Among other common elements, one could
also see an investment overhang in the sector that saw its asset prices rise and
subsequently fall.
Recessions are almost always accompanied by asset-price declines. But such
declines sometimes appear to be the source of adverse surprises, and asset-price busts
may subsequently have disproportionately adverse consequences. Falling asset prices
create a negative wealth effect and restrain consumption. By making collateral less
valuable, they also increase the risk of lending to businesses and thereby worsen the

3

In this comparison, I use the Nasdaq composite index as a proxy for the high-tech sector and the Dow
Jones industrials index as a proxy for the nontech sector.

-4lending terms faced by borrowers. When asset prices fall substantially, lenders may also
find themselves holding substantial amounts of nonperforming loans that are backed by
what may have become, in some cases, worthless collateral. For this reason, recessions
that are preceded by asset-price booms and busts may also be associated with problems in
the banking industry. In such episodes, the ensuing loss of intermediation may serve as
an additional force acting to prolong and deepen what might otherwise have been a
milder recession.
Concerns about the severity of downturns that follow significant asset-price
collapses suggest that the identification and analysis of boom-bust asset-price cycles
could be useful for policy. For that reason, I would next like to briefly review some of
the issues associated with detecting asset-price bubbles.
Detecting Bubbles
The word bubble is sometimes employed to describe any quick and large increase
in asset prices, but a more precise definition would associate bubbles with only those
increases in asset prices that are not due to economic fundamentals.4 Under such a
definition, a bubble is present when investors buy assets at prices above their
fundamental values in the expectation of being able to sell them at even higher prices in
the future.5 To be sure, such departures from fundamentals may start small, but over time
they could grow explosively. The fundamental price of an asset typically is defined in
terms of the discounted present value of the income stream or equivalent services that the

4

See John H. Cochrane (2001), Asset Pricing (Princeton: Princeton University Press), p. 402.
Such a bubble would be called a “rational bubble.” It is also conceivable that bubbles are present
because some investors are not pricing assets rationally; for an introduction to that notion, see Annette
Vissing-Jorgensen (2004), “Perspectives on Behavioral Finance: Does ‘Irrationality’ Disappear with
Wealth? Evidence from Expectations and Actions,” in Mark Gertler and Kenneth Rogoff, eds., NBER
Macroeconomics Annual 2003 (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press), pp. 139-94.
5

-5asset is expected to provide over time. For stock prices, for example, this is the present
discounted value of dividends; for real estate, it is the discounted value of the rents or
services that are expected to accrue to the owner over time. In theory, the existence of
bubbles, defined in this way, is possible in standard asset-pricing models and may even
be consistent with rational, profit-maximizing behavior.6
Ascertaining the existence of bubbles in practice is a very different matter. An
immediate difficulty is that the theoretical notion of the fundamental price does not have
an easily measured empirical counterpart. In part as a result of this measurement
problem, statistical tests using historical data cannot easily distinguish bubbles from
failures of the standard asset-pricing model in some other dimensions, or no failure of the
model at all. Indeed, for every study of historical data that finds evidence of a bubble,
often another shows that the findings could be explained by an alternative specification of
the fundamentals in the absence of bubbles.7 That is, even with the benefit of hindsight,
statistical tests attempting to confirm the existence of bubbles in historical episodes can
remain inconclusive.
Of greater relevance for policy discussions, however, is not whether economists
can identify a bubble long after it occurs, but whether the presence of a bubble could be
detected in real time, when the information might be useful for policy decisions.
Unfortunately, detection of a bubble, which is problematic even ex-post, is an even more
formidable task and arguably becomes virtually impossible in real time. Indeed, in real
6

See, for example, Jean Tirole (1985), “Asset Bubbles and Overlapping Generations,” Econometrica,
vol. 53 (November), pp. 1499-528; and Dilip Abreu and Markus K. Brunnermeier (2003), “Bubbles and
Crashes,” Econometrica, vol. 71 (January), pp. 173-204.
7
See, for example, Lubos Pastor and Pietro Veronesi (2004), “Was There a Nasdaq Bubble in the Late
1990s?” NBER Working Paper Series 10581 (Cambridge, Mass.: National Bureau of Economic Research,
June). They argue that the high level of uncertainty about the future growth rate of dividends of tech firms
helps explain these firms’ stock prices without resorting to a bubble.

-6time, it is not uncommon for economists and market participants to fail to recognize
important shifts in underlying trends that may subsequently be viewed as the source of
significant changes in market fundamentals. Current statistical methods are simply not
up to the task of “detecting” asset-price bubbles, especially not in real time, when it
matters most.8 “Detecting” a bubble appears to require judgment based on scant
evidence. It entails asserting knowledge of the fundamental value of the assets in
question. Unsurprisingly, central bankers are not comfortable making such a judgment
call. Inevitably, a central bank claiming to detect a bubble would be asked to explain
why it was willing to trust its own judgment over that of investors with perhaps many
billions of dollars on the line.
The issue of detecting bubbles notwithstanding, it is of interest to know whether
recessions related to sizeable asset-price busts differ from other recessions in some way
that might be important for policy considerations.
Are Recessions That Are Related to Asset-Price Busts Different?
Two of the longest periods of economic weakness observed in the industrialized
world during the twentieth century are often identified with the asset-price busts that
preceded them: the Great Depression in the United States and the “lost decade” of the
1990s in Japan. In each case, rapidly falling asset prices, exacerbated by banking
problems, marked the beginning of painfully long periods of economic malaise. In part
because of these two experiences, it is sometimes suggested that asset-price booms more
generally lead to imbalances in the economy, and that asset-price busts and the correction

8

The difficulty of satisfactorily “detecting” bubbles is well known in the economics literature. For a
recent survey see Refet Gurkaynak (2005), “Econometric Tests of Asset Price Bubbles: Taking Stock,”
Finance and Economics Discussion Series 2005-4 (Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, January).

-7of these imbalances lead to recessions that are longer, deeper, and associated with a
greater fall in output and investment than other recessions. But what is the evidence on
this question?
Additionally, can one make any other generalizations concerning recessions that
follow asset-price booms and busts and how they differ from other recessions? To
address those questions, it is instructive to examine recession episodes in the Group of
Seven economies since 1970.
Figure 1 presents a bird’s-eye view of the evolution of asset prices and the
economy from 1970 to 2003 for three of these economies, the United States, the United
Kingdom, and Japan.9 For each country, the top panel of the figure shows the evolution
of an aggregate inflation-adjusted index of asset prices--which consists of an average of
stock prices and residential and commercial real estate prices. The shaded areas cover
recession periods, as determined by the business cycle dating committee of the National
Bureau of Economic Research in the United States, and a comparable methodology for
the other countries.10 The bottom panels show the evolution of gross domestic product in

9

For uniformity across countries, all data shown in this figure, and data discussed later on, including
those for the United States, are drawn from international institutions. The asset-price data have been kindly
provided by the Bank for International Settlements (BIS). For detailed explanations of these data see C.
E.V. Borio, N. Kennedy, and S.D. Prowse (1994), “Exploring Aggregate Asset Price Fluctuations across
Countries: Measurement, Determinants, and Monetary Policy Implications,” BIS Economic Papers 40
(Basel: Bank for International Settlements).
10
To be sure, business cycle chronologies may differ somewhat depending on the underlying
methodology. The dates of peaks and troughs in economic activity for the analysis that follows are from the
Economic Cycle Research Institute. For the United States, these match the dates determined by the
National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER). For other nations, the institute’s methodology yields
dates that are comparable to the NBER dates for the United States, which facilitates comparisons across
countries. Recession dating is monthly. To obtain the quarterly time series used here, we converted the
monthly expansion/recession phases to a quarterly frequency by designating the cyclical peak (the first
quarter of recession) as the quarter containing the first full recession month--that is, the month following
the monthly peak designation. Table 1 shows the dates of all recessions in the sample.

-8these economies together with a historical estimate of the economy’s potential.11
The relationship of asset prices to the economy near turning points shows varying
patterns (figure 1, top and bottom panels). In some episodes, asset-price declines do not
appear to have preceded the recession. During some recessions, asset prices appear to
have simply moved sideways, not registering substantial declines at all. But in other
episodes, significant asset-price booms and subsequent declines do appear before the
onset of a recession and continue during the downturn. For the United States, for
example, the figure highlights the long run-up and subsequent fall in asset prices before
the 2001 recession. The size of these recent movements dominates earlier boom-bust
cycles in the U.S. economy in this sample. For Japan, one can see the remarkable run-up
of the 1980s and its agonizing reversal during the 1990s. For the United Kingdom, one
may notice the asset-price boom-bust cycle of the early 1970s followed by the painful
recession beginning in 1974. Indeed, these three episodes stand out as perhaps the
clearest suggestions of an asset-price boom-bust cycle significantly influencing or
possibly triggering a subsequent recession and recovery.
How do these three cyclical turning points compare with other recessions? To be
sure, such a comparison rests on (1) our identification of these three episodes as the ones
that appear to have been preceded by significant asset-price booms and busts and (2)
separating these recessions from the rest. Such a classification necessarily involves some
11

Estimates of real gross domestic product (GDP), the output gap, potential output, and real
investment are from the Economic Outlook database of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development. The investment data (shown in later displays) reflect total fixed investment. In figure 1,
both actual and potential output are expressed relative to the value of actual real GDP in 1985. By
definition, output should equal the economy’s potential--and the corresponding measure of the output gap
should equal zero--when productive factors in the economy are employed at their normal levels. Output is
below the economy’s potential when resources are underutilized and above it when the economy is
overheated. To be sure, assessing the economy’s potential with much accuracy is inherently difficult, and
historical estimates of the implicit output gap are highly imprecise; however, these measures can serve as
helpful summary indicators in historical comparisons such as those discussed below.

-9element of ambiguity, but the three episodes highlighted in figure 1, the U.S. recession in
2001, the Japanese recession in 1992, and the U.K. recession in 1974, do appear to stand
out.12
We have compared the average path of asset prices around the onset of the
recession in these three episodes to the average path of asset prices in the other episodes
in our sample (figure 2, top panel). The vertical line marks the quarter in which the
recession began. The dotted curve shows the average of the three asset-price related
episodes, and the solid curve shows the average of the remaining twenty-two recession
episodes in the sample.13 This comparison suggests that in recessions related to assetprice busts, asset prices fall before the recession more, on average, than they do in other
episodes. This is, of course, as it should be, given our selection criteria for the
classification of the three episodes. The more interesting question is whether these
recessions are different in other dimensions as well.
Consider, for example, the average paths of estimated output gaps during assetprice busts relative to the remaining recessions (figure 2, middle panel). The data are
centered as they were for asset prices, but the output gap is normalized to equal zero in
the first quarter of a recession. As one would expect, the output gap for both groups of
episodes on average falls after recessions start, but it falls less for the asset-price-bust

12

There are at least two reasons for the ambiguity in such classifications. The first relates to how one
defines an asset-price bust. The second relates to the dating of cyclical peaks, which, as noted earlier, may
differ somewhat depending on the methodology underlying business cycle chronologies. The three
episodes on which I concentrate my attention are relatively uncontroversial in that the recessions followed
rather substantial asset-price boom-bust cycles. But other recessions, which followed milder boom-bust
cycles, could be added to this list. Examples would be the recessions that started in 1974 in the United
States, in 1981 in Canada, and in 1990 in the United Kingdom.
13
To compute these averages, we first centered the path of asset prices around each recession episode.
The quarter in which the recession began is marked as zero, and quarters from -8 to +8 denote the
preceding and subsequent two years. Asset prices in each episode are normalized to 100 at the quarter
marking the recession start.

- 10 episodes. Finally, looking at investment (figure 2, bottom panel), the data also suggest
that, on average at least, investment, like the output gap, was not affected more adversely
in the three asset-price-bust episodes. If anything, these three episodes on average appear
to be slightly shallower in terms of output losses and investment declines than the
average of other recessions.
But the comparisons of the averages provided in figure 2 could obscure valuable
insights that might be obtained by looking at each of our three asset-price-bust episodes
individually, as I do next.
Three Asset-Price-Bust Episodes
Let us first examine the U.K. recession of 1974. To put that episode in
perspective, we present an overview of the U.K. economy for the 1970-2003 period
(figure 3). The boom-bust cycle that preceded the 1974 cyclical peak is the most
pronounced (and, by the way, not just for the United Kingdom but for all of the G-7
countries). The large fall in average asset prices (figure 3, top panel) followed the 197374 oil crisis, which is also associated with somewhat smaller asset-price declines in
numerous other nations.
We take a closer look at the components of the aggregate asset-price index and
compare their evolution around this U.K. cyclical peak to their average evolution during
all recessions excluding our three asset-price-bust episodes (figure 4). Equity prices
registered a remarkably sharp decline in this episode. But arguably a more distinctive
characteristic of this asset-price boom-bust episode is the swing in real estate prices.
Residential real estate prices, and especially commercial real estate prices (figure 4,
bottom panels), also registered rather dramatic declines in this episode. It may thus be

- 11 surprising that this recession does not appear to have been deeper than the average of
recessions excluding the three asset-price-bust episodes. The output gap (figure 5) fell
along with asset prices before the recession, but the decline was from an unsustainably
overheated level. And investment (figure 5) stayed relatively strong compared with other
recessions. Despite this episode being associated with rather severe declines in equity
and commercial real estate prices, no evidence of an investment overhang appears in this
comparison.
Next, let us turn to the Japanese experience. The Japanese economy saw rapidly
increasing equity and real estate prices during the 1980s (figure 6), a remarkably long
period of stability and prosperity. These run-ups in asset prices were accompanied by a
rapid expansion of bank credit, which was especially important for financing real estate
purchases. But asset prices collapsed at the turn of the decade. This “bursting of the
bubble,” as the episode is often referred to by Japanese officials, was followed by a
decade of relative stagnation marked by three arguably related recessions. Concentrating
attention on just the first of these three recessions, beginning in 1992, proves insufficient
to capture the severity of the overall problem. The detailed comparisons of the 1992
recession with other episodes (figures 7 and 8) do not indicate unusual weakness
associated with the 1992 recession. Rather, the 1990s in Japan are more notable for the
succession of incomplete recoveries than for the recessions themselves (figure 6).
The bursting of the bubble importantly shaped subsequent developments in this
case. The asset-price collapse hit the Japanese banking system hard, eroding bank
capital. The ensuing disintermediation subsequently proved an important impediment to
the economy’s recovery. However, the extent of the problem was not fully appreciated at

- 12 the time by policymakers. Despite steps toward an expansionary policy, the monetary
easing of the early 1990s was insufficient to mitigate the underlying weakness during the
expansion from 1994 to 1996. The continued fragility of the financial system arguably
left the Japanese economy especially vulnerable to additional disturbances that could
have otherwise been easily weathered. An economic crisis in Southeast Asia, coupled
with a previously planned increase in consumption taxes, resulted in a larger-thananticipated drag on domestic demand and set the stage for the recession that started in
1997. Following a brief recovery, monetary policy was tightened in 2000, and the third
recession in a decade followed soon after.
The Japanese experience offers a reminder of the importance of monitoring the
health of the financial system and the need to be especially wary of signs of fragility
following a period of sharp asset-price declines. It also serves to highlight how the
behavior of the banking system during the asset-price run-up may influence subsequent
outcomes. Lastly, it points to the potentially crucial role played by fiscal and monetary
policies in recoveries following asset-price-bust recessions.
Last, let us examine the U.S. recession of 2001 and the subsequent, ongoing
recovery. We have prepared the U.S. data in the same manner as in the U.K. and
Japanese cases (figures 9-11). The evolution of disaggregated asset prices (figure 10)
shows that the unusually large changes surrounding the 2001 recession reflected the
movement of equity prices alone. Relative to the average episode, commercial real estate
prices neither fell much during the recession nor rose a lot during the expansion. And
instead of declining during the recession, residential real estate prices continued their
upward trend. The behavior of real economic activity around the recent cyclical peak

- 13 (figure 11) suggests a second interesting comparison. Relative to other recessions, this
recession was shallow and did not appear to impart an unusual drag on investment,
despite the sharp asset-price correction.
Why was the 2001 recession relatively short and shallow even though the
preceding swing in asset prices was so severe? In my opinion, two reasons stand out.
The first regards the health of the financial sector. During the 1980s and early 1990s, the
U.S. banking sector faced a succession of challenges: the savings and loan crisis of the
early 1980s, the international debt crisis of the mid-1980s, waves of bank failures and
consolidation, and the need to build capital in response to the adoption of the Basel I
standards in 1988. But by the mid-1990s the banking sector had regained a solid footing,
and regulators were careful to keep it that way. Prudential regulation coupled with good
risk management meant that financial firms limited their exposure to risk during the
boom years of the late 1990s. This approach paid off handsomely when the asset-price
break occurred. Despite the recession, banks remained well capitalized, and their
strength eliminated the threat of a vicious credit crunch or the risk of fragility in the
system.
As a result, the elements that appear to have been so detrimental for the recovery
of the Japanese economy during the 1990s were absent during this episode. Following
the “bursting of the bubble” in Japan, the banking system found itself holding a
substantial amount of bad loans. And, as already seen, the woes of the banking system
turned into a recessionary force in itself, curtailing the recovery. This comparison points
to a useful policy lesson: A healthy financial sector and strong prudential regulation

- 14 during an asset-price boom offer valuable insurance in case the boom turns to bust with
an asset-price break.
The second, and perhaps equally important, reason that the recent U.S. episode
was unusually benign was, in my view, the quick response of policy. Both fiscal and
monetary policy were eased quickly and effectively in this episode. The Federal Reserve
cut the federal funds rate rapidly to create monetary accommodation and maintained
conditions of substantial monetary policy ease for a considerable period well into the
expansion. As well, the Administration and the Congress took quick steps early in the
recession to provide fiscal stimulus that helped to prop up aggregate demand.
Placing the policy response in its proper historical context may be critical for
drawing the appropriate policy lessons for the future. Countercyclical fiscal and
monetary policies are unlikely to have been as swift and strong during 2001 had earlier
policies not set the stage for such action. On the fiscal side, the budgetary prudence of
the 1990s yielded comfortable surpluses at the onset of the 2001 recession that facilitated
the large fiscal policy easing. And on the monetary side, the successful completion of the
last stage on the long path to price stability during the 1990s allowed substantial easing in
response to the downturn. As policymakers stressed repeatedly, the prevalence of lowand well-anchored inflation expectations ultimately facilitates pursuit of such
countercyclical policy. A clear lesson emerges from this experience for policy over the
long haul. By pursuing fiscal prudence and price stability during booms, policymakers
greatly enhance their ability to take swift, effective countercyclical action when it is
needed most.

- 15 Conclusions
In closing, let me reiterate some of the key points and lessons I draw from this
review. First, as already understood, detecting asset-price overvaluations and
undervaluations is controversial in hindsight and arguably impossible in real time. As a
result, although asset-price booms and busts are often linked to recessions, a clear-cut
policy response to suspected waves of exuberance cannot be suggested.
Second, sweeping generalizations regarding asset-price-bust recessions and
subsequent recoveries are not easily made. Idiosyncrasies dominate comparisons in the
historical data. As such, each recession-and-recovery episode would seem to call for its
own tailor-made policy response.
Third, to the extent that comparisons across recessions are informative, assetprice-bust recessions do not appear to be necessarily more costly than other recession
episodes. Specifically, at a macroeconomic level, recessions that follow swings in asset
prices are not necessarily longer, deeper, and associated with a greater fall in output and
investment than other recessions. That said, particular industrial segments and classes of
investment, such as the high-tech sector in the recent U.S. episode, may suffer
disproportionately during such recessions. Also, the health of the financial system, the
strength of the banking sector, and the ability and willingness of policy to take
appropriate countercyclical action seem to importantly influence the economic outcomes
of an asset-price-bust.
Which brings me to my last point: Over the long haul, preparation for a potential
problem seems to be the best course of action. Prudential supervision and good risk
management in banking, and the pursuit of fiscal prudence and price stability during

- 16 booms, may ultimately serve as the best insurance for dealing with the inevitable
occasional asset-price breaks observed in our modern economy.

1975

1980

1985

1970

1975

1980

Actual
Potential

1985

Actual and Potential GDP

1970

1990

1990

United States

Aggregate Asset Prices

2000

1995

2000

Index, 1985=100

1995

Index, 1985=100

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

200

100

150

200

250

300

Figure 1

1975

1980

1970

1975

1980

Actual
Potential

1985

1990

1990

Japan

1985

Actual and Potential GDP

1970

Aggregate Asset Prices

2000

1995

2000

Index, 1985=100

1995

Index, 1985=100

Asset Prices and the Economy

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

80

100

120

140

160

180

1975

1980

1985

1970

1975

1980

Actual
Potential

1985

Actual and Potential GDP

1970

1990

1990

United Kingdom
Aggregate Asset Prices

2000

1995

2000

Index, 1985=100

1995

Index, 1985=100

80

100

120

140

160

180

80

100

120

140

160

180

200

220

Figure 2

Asset Prices and the Economy: Average Behavior around Cyclical Peaks
Aggregate Asset Prices
140

Average excluding three episodes
Average for three episodes

130
120
110
100
90
80

-8

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Output Gap
6

Average excluding three episodes
Average for three episodes
4
2
0
-2
-4
-6
-8

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Investment
110

Average excluding three episodes
Average for three episodes
105

100

95

90
-8

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

Notes: Quarterly data. Quarter relative to cyclical peak shown on horizontal axis.

4

5

6

7

8

Figure 3

Asset Prices and the Economy: United Kingdom
Aggregate Asset Prices

Index, 1985=100
220

200

180

160

140

120

100

80

1970

1972

1974

1976

1978

1980

1982

1984

1986

1988

1990

1992

1994

1996

1998

Output Gap

2000

2002

Percentage Points
6

4

2

0

-2

-4

-6

1970

1972

1974

1976

1978

Note: Shaded areas denote recessions.

1980

1982

1984

1986

1988

1990

1992

1994

1996

1998

2000

2002

Figure 4

United Kingdom
Aggregate Asset Prices

Equity Prices
160

350

Average excluding three episodes
UK 1974

Average excluding three episodes
UK 1974

300

140
250

120

200

150
100
100

50

80
-8

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

-8

Residential Real Estate Prices

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Commercial Real Estate Prices
160

130

Average excluding three episodes
UK 1974

Average excluding three episodes
UK 1974

120

140
110
120

100

90

100

80
80
70

60

60
-8

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

-8

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Figure 5

United Kingdom
Output Gap

Investment
110

8

Average excluding three episodes
UK 1974

Average excluding three episodes
UK 1974
6
105
4

2
100
0

-2
95
-4

-6
-8

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

90
-8

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Figure 6

Asset Prices and the Economy: Japan
Aggregate Asset Prices

Index, 1985=100
180

160

140

120

100

80

1970

1972

1974

1976

1978

1980

1982

1984

1986

1988

1990

1992

1994

1996

1998

Output Gap

2000

2002

Percentage Points
6

4

2

0

-2

-4

1970

1972

1974

1976

1978

Note: Shaded areas denote recessions.

1980

1982

1984

1986

1988

1990

1992

1994

1996

1998

2000

2002

Figure 7

Japan
Aggregate Asset Prices

Equity Prices
130

200

Average excluding three episodes
JP 1992

Average excluding three episodes
JP 1992

180

120
160

110

140

120
100
100

80

90
-8

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

-8

Residential Real Estate Prices

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Commercial Real Estate Prices
120

110

Average excluding three episodes
JP 1992

Average excluding three episodes
JP 1992
105

110

100

100

95

90

80

90
-8

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

-8

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Figure 8

Japan
Output Gap

Investment
110

8

Average excluding three episodes
JP 1992

Average excluding three episodes
JP 1992
6
105
4

2
100
0

-2
95
-4

-6
-8

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

90
-8

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Figure 9

Asset Prices and the Economy: United States
Aggregate Asset Prices

Index, 1985=100
300

250

200

150

100

1970

1972

1974

1976

1978

1980

1982

1984

1986

1988

1990

1992

1994

1996

1998

Output Gap

2000

2002

Percentage Points
6

4

2

0

-2

-4

-6

-8
1970

1972

1974

1976

1978

Note: Shaded areas denote recessions.

1980

1982

1984

1986

1988

1990

1992

1994

1996

1998

2000

2002

Figure 10

United States
Aggregate Asset Prices

Equity Prices
140

Average excluding three episodes
US 2001

140

Average excluding three episodes
US 2001

130

120
120

110

100

100
80
90

60

80
-8

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

-8

Residential Real Estate Prices

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Commercial Real Estate Prices
120

Average excluding three episodes
US 2001

120

Average excluding three episodes
US 2001

115

110
110

100

105

100
90
95

90
-8

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

80
-8

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Figure 11

United States
Output Gap

Investment
110

8

Average excluding three episodes
US 2001

Average excluding three episodes
US 2001
6
105
4

2
100
0

-2
95
-4

-6
-8

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

90
-8

-7

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Table 1

Business Cycles of G7 Countries*
Peak
United States 1969:Q4
1973:Q4
1980:Q1
1981:Q3
1990:Q3
2001:Q1
Japan 1973:Q4
1992:Q2
1997:Q1
2000:Q3

1974:Q4
1993:Q4
1999:Q2
2003:Q1

Britain 1974:Q3
1979:Q2
1990:Q2

1975:Q2
1981:Q1
1992:Q1

Canada 1981:Q4
1990:Q1

1982:Q3
1992:Q1

Germany 1973:Q3
1980:Q1
1991:Q1
2001:Q1

*

Trough
1970:Q3†
1975:Q1
1980:Q2
1982:Q3
1991:Q1
2001:Q3

1975:Q2
1982:Q3
1994:Q1‡
2003:Q2

Italy 1970:Q4
1974:Q2
1981:Q2
1992:Q1

1971:Q2
1975:Q1
1983:Q1
1993:Q3

France 1974:Q3
1979:Q3
1982:Q2
1992:Q1

1975:Q2
1980:Q2
1984:Q4
1993:Q2

The quarterly peak and trough dates shown are based on the monthly business cycle
chronology from the Economic Cycle Research Institute.
†
This episode is excluded because it begins outside of the sample period.
‡
This episode is excluded because it coincides with German reunification.