Hicks: Sluggish economy complicates forecasting

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Around this time in an election year, many people anxiously await economic data releases, hoping to uncover some fact that can be twisted to advantage.

Economic forecasting almost exclusively uses large macroeconomic models. These are simply equations, often several hundred, that outline relationships in the economy. For example, we know that the demand for new cars will depend on gas prices, interest rates, consumer expectations, household incomes and historical purchasing patterns. These factors allow us to hypothesize an equation for car sales.

The large model attempts to capture these types of relationships across the economy in things as diverse as individual household decisions to retire and the changing price of gas.

Economists use actual data to calibrate the model. This is applied statistical work, which often incorporates non-linearities associated with chaos theory. In this way, we can nail down the relationship—say, gas prices and new-car sales—to an actual number.

Once that is done, the forecast involves solving a few hundred simultaneous equations, which is nothing more than the algebra I taught in every middle school in Indiana. This is what we do each year at Ball State, producing national, state and regional forecasts.

Forecasting is a costly enterprise, so much of the valuable analysis lies in interpreting the data releases between forecasts.

The forecast process gives us actual relationships to give us the most likely values for things we care about, like unemployment, incomes, population growth and the like.

The forecast also gives a likely range of outcomes. Once new data is released, an economist can compare those numbers with the forecast to see how well the forecast performs.

All forecasts are wrong, but the most important part of evaluating the forecast lies in examining the errors. Some of this bleeds into media reports; for example, as the unemployment data are released each month, they are compared to forecasts.

Most of last year’s economic forecast called for faster GDP growth, less inflation and higher unemployment rates than we have seen. The poor GDP growth, modestly growing inflation and much lower unemployment rates send mixed signals to forecasters.

When the economy is getting much better or much worse, the trend is obvious even if there are occasional mixed signals. When the economy changes little, almost every piece of new data can be confusing.

That is where we now find ourselves, in a very slow-growing national economy with poor job growth, weak incomes and a hint of inflation. That won’t change in the coming months no matter what the pundits say.•

__________

Hicks is the George and Frances Ball distinguished professor of economics and director of the Center for Business and Economic Research at Ball State University. His column appears weekly. He can be reached at cber@bsu.edu.

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