| by
Scott Schuh
Issue Number 1 (January/February) 2001
Despite a significant decline in the pace of economic
growth in the second half of 2000, macroeconomic forecasters
underpredicted real GDP growth and overpredicted the
unemployment rate by a significant amount, for the fifth
consecutive year. On average, real GDP forecasts were
about 2 percentage points below the actual data for
the 1996-2000 period, and unemployment rate forecasts
about 0.5 percentage point above. On a more positive
note, forecasters ended their chronic overprediction
of inflation during much of this period. Nevertheless,
surprisingly large and persistent errors in recent forecasts
of GDP, inflation, and unemployment have perplexed macroeconomists
and policymakers for quite some time, and they merit
closer examination.
This article evaluates forecast errors in an attempt
to understand why recent forecasts have gone awry. The
investigation centers on errors in forecasts of real
GDP growth, inflation, the unemployment rate, and nominal
and real short-term interest rates since 1969. The focus
is on one-year-ahead forecasts because well-known lags
in the effects of monetary policy require the Federal
Reserve to forecast economic activity well ahead when
setting its current interest rate target. In addition
to studying average forecast errors, the author looks
briefly at the time series properties of the work of
some individual forecasters.
Full-text article 
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