Has the Euro changed business cycle synchronization? Evidence from the core and the periphery
Using a Bayesian dynamic factor model, I examine the comovement of output, investment and consumption growth among Euro area countries before and after the introduction of the Euro. For that purpose, I compare a pre-Euro period (1991-1998) to a Euro period (2000-2010) and identify a common Euro factor for each period separately. I find that the co-movement of main macroeconomic variables and the common factor increases for core Eurozone countries from the first to the second period, while it decreases for most peripheral economies. This can be interpreted as a rise in business cycle synchronization for the core and a respective decline for the periphery. Different to the implications made by the endogeneity argument of currency areas (Frankel and Rose, Economic Journal, 1998, 108(449), pp. 1009-1025), my evidence suggests that the introduction of the Euro has fostered imbalances between core and peripheral Eurozone countries.