How Should Credit Gaps Be Measured? An Application to European Countries in: IMF Working Papers Volume 2020 Issue 006 (2020)
Eurozone Output Gaps and the COVID-19 Shock - Intereconomics
Exploring BIS credit-to-GDP gap critiques: the Swiss case | Swiss Journal of Economics and Statistics | Full Text
Productivity and Potential Output before, during, and after the Great Recession: NBER Macroeconomics Annual: Vol 29
A most unusual recovery: How the US rebound from COVID differs from rest of G7
Global Macro Views: Full Employment Output Gaps > The Institute of International Finance
Output gaps, potential output and the Covid-19 crisis: Policymaking under uncertainty | CEPR
The credit-to-GDP gap and countercyclical capital buffers: questions and answers
Potential GDP and the output gap: what do they measure and what do they depend on?
Eurozone economic rebound narrows gap with US and China | Financial Times
On the normalisation of monetary policy
Potential Growth in Advanced Economies | Bulletin – December 2019 | RBA
Robin Brooks on Twitter: "@Brad_Setser Spain is another example of potential GDP bending down to,validate the slow recovery. That yields an output gap that is small, but this estimate doesn't capture economic
The credit-to-GDP gap and countercyclical capital buffers: questions and answers
Output gaps, potential output and the Covid-19 crisis: Policymaking under uncertainty | CEPR
Spain is navigating through stormy economic waters, but the time for further structural reform has come. | EUROPP
Output gap nonsense
The credit-to-GDP gap and countercyclical capital buffers: questions and answers
How 'output gap nonsense' endangers Germany's recovery from the Corona crisis (news article)
Spain: Selected Issues in: IMF Staff Country Reports Volume 1998 Issue 053 (1998)
The impact of COVID-19 on potential output in the euro area
Exploring BIS credit-to-GDP gap critiques: the Swiss case | Swiss Journal of Economics and Statistics | Full Text
Philipp Heimberger on Twitter: "Robin is right: putting Italy on a positive output gap (“overheating“ economy) is nonsense. And this matters in terms of assessing Italy's policy stance, especially in the context
Growth and imbalances in Spain: a reassessment of the output gap | SpringerLink
Output gap nonsense': Understanding the budget conflict between the EC and Italy's government (news article)
Demand and growth regimes in finance-dominated capitalism and the role of the macroeconomic policy regime: a post-Keynesian comparative study on France, Germany, Italy and Spain before and after the Great Financial Crisis