Path-Explosive Behaviour in Economic Time Series: A Realization-Centred Exploratory Framework
TLDR
This paper introduces a realization-centred framework to detect and characterize path-explosive behavior in economic time series without distributional assumptions.
Key contributions
- Proposes a "path-explosive" framework for detecting explosive and co-explosive behavior in economic time series.
- Departs from DGP-based methods by analyzing observable path properties directly, avoiding distributional assumptions.
- Utilizes four diagnostic layers (geometry, growth, curvature, log-space) to identify self-reinforcing growth.
- Assesses co-explosive behavior using Jaccard co-occurrence and non-parametric intensity concordance.
Why it matters
This framework offers a novel, assumption-free way to understand explosive economic trends, especially relevant where institutional decisions shape growth. It provides a more epistemically appropriate characterization than traditional DGP-based tests, distinguishing genuine self-reinforcing growth from other dynamics.
Original Abstract
We propose a descriptive, realization-centred framework for detecting and characterising explosive and co-explosive behaviour in economic time series, which we term path-explosive behaviour. Departing from the data-generating-process (DGP) perspective that underlies recursive unit root testing, the approach operates directly on observable path properties of the realised series. Four diagnostic layers -- level geometry, growth rate dynamics, normalised curvature, and log-space behaviour -- yield statistics that discriminate between genuine self-reinforcing multiplicative growth and I(2) dynamics without distributional assumptions or asymptotic critical values. Two theoretically motivated absolute gate thresholds screen detected episodes before a composite intensity score is assigned. Co-explosive behaviour between pairs of series is assessed at the episode level through a Jaccard co-occurrence index and non-parametric intensity concordance measures. The theoretical motivation draws on the path dependence and planning irreversibility literatures to argue that, in settings where discrete institutional decisions shape growth trajectories, a realization-centred characterisation is epistemically more appropriate than a DGP-based test. A simulation study across four DGP regimes validates the framework's discriminating power and conservatism. An empirical application to real house prices, commodity prices, public debt, and Spanish tourism destinations illustrates the empirical content of the path-explosive concept and distinguishes it from speculative bubble detection.
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