Monday, November 22, 2021
“Virtual live-stream only! Thursday, December 2nd, 2021, 12:30 pm – 2 pm ET: Neil R. Ericsson (Federal Reserve Board) will present “Evaluating the Federal Reserve’s Tealbook Forecasts”Co-authors: Maia Crook, Emilio J. Fiallos, J E. Seymour, Charlotte Singer, Ben Smith, François de Soyres.
Abstract: This paper examines publicly available Federal Reserve Board Tealbook forecasts of GDP growth for the United States and several foreign countries, focusing on potential time-varying biases and evaluating the Tealbook forecasts relative to other forecasts. Tealbook forecasts perform relatively well at short horizons, but with significant heterogeneity across countries. Also, while standard Mincer-Zarnowitz tests typically fail to detect biases in the Tealbook forecasts, recently developed indicator saturation techniques that employ machine learning are able to detect economically sizable and highly significant time-varying biases. Estimated biases differ not only over time, but by country and across the forecast horizon. These biases point to directions for forecast improvement. Chong and Hendry’s (1986) forecast-encompassing tests of the Tealbook forecasts relative to JP Morgan’s forecasts reveal distinct value added by each institution’s forecasts. For most countries and forecast horizons examined, each institution’s forecast can be improved by utilizing information from the other institution’s forecast.”
For more details read here.
“Virtual live-stream only! Thursday, December 2nd, 2021, 12:30 pm – 2 pm ET: Neil R. Ericsson (Federal Reserve Board) will present “Evaluating the Federal Reserve’s Tealbook Forecasts”Co-authors: Maia Crook, Emilio J. Fiallos, J E. Seymour, Charlotte Singer, Ben Smith, François de Soyres.
Abstract: This paper examines publicly available Federal Reserve Board Tealbook forecasts of GDP growth for the United States and several foreign countries, focusing on potential time-varying biases and evaluating the Tealbook forecasts relative to other forecasts.
Posted by 11:10 AM
atLabels: Forecasting Forum
While it has been postulated for long that wealth and aggregate income in the economy go hand in hand, developments in the last several decades point to a different phenomenon as the wealth to GDP ratio has been rising rapidly, reaching 6.1 times the GDP currently.
In a recent column for the Conversable Economist, Timothy Taylor writes on the issue, drawing insights from a 2021 McKinsey Global Institute report.
“…At the level of the global economy, the historical link between the growth of wealth, or net worth, and the value of economic flows such as GDP no longer holds. Economic growth has been sluggish over the past two decades in advanced economies, but net worth, which long tracked GDP growth, has soared in relation to it. This divergence has emerged as asset prices rose sharply—and are now almost 50 percent higher than the long-run average relative to income. The increase was not a result of 21st-century trends such as the increasing digitization of the economy. Rather, in an economy increasingly propelled by intangible assets, a glut of savings has struggled to find investments offering sufficient economic returns and lasting value to investors. These (ex-ante) savings have instead found their way into a traditional asset class, real estate, or into corporate share buybacks, driving up asset prices.”
Source: McKinsey Global Institute. (2021). The rise and rise of the global balance sheet: How productively are we using our wealth?
Real estate, rather than an ongoing investment boom in the 10 countries under study, is attributed to this rapid rise in global wealth. Furthermore, the study offers possible explanations for the consequences that such a trend might bring with it in the future- some happy and some not so happy ones.
Read on to know more. Click here.
While it has been postulated for long that wealth and aggregate income in the economy go hand in hand, developments in the last several decades point to a different phenomenon as the wealth to GDP ratio has been rising rapidly, reaching 6.1 times the GDP currently.
In a recent column for the Conversable Economist, Timothy Taylor writes on the issue, drawing insights from a 2021 McKinsey Global Institute report.
“…At the level of the global economy,
Posted by 8:03 AM
atLabels: Inclusive Growth
Saturday, November 20, 2021
When it comes to questions on the perception of inequality, it has been shown in the report that there is overwhelming concern regarding income distribution and the lack of equal opportunities in the average world citizen. However, far from being an umbrella statement, there are instead a multitude of layers shaping people’s understanding of the phenomenon and factors affecting it.
In this report, emphasis is laid on providing an explanation to several such factors such as whether people care about inequality, how connected is their perception of inequality to the actually prevailing reality, how supportive is the general public for increased governmental action to bridge income gaps and how far are the people ready to go to hold governments accountable for failing to do so. It then moves on to providing interesting policy insights about the reform process and some hitherto ignored policies that have worked well.
Click here to read the full report.
Through cross-country evidence, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has shown that economic inequality has risen in most OECD countries in the last thirty years or so while social mobility has stagnated or worsened. In its most recent report, the OECD turns its gaze to the question of how people perceive inequality and social mobility.
When it comes to questions on the perception of inequality, it has been shown in the report that there is overwhelming concern regarding income distribution and the lack of equal opportunities in the average world citizen.
Posted by 8:17 AM
atLabels: Inclusive Growth
From a joint IMF, World Bank, and 1818 Society event:
From a joint IMF, World Bank, and 1818 Society event:
Posted by 5:54 AM
atLabels: Book Reviews
Friday, November 19, 2021
The Centre for Sustainable Development at The Brookings Institution and The Rockefeller Foundation convened the fourth annual 17 Rooms global flagship process to augment action, insight and community initiatives across the realm of the 17 sustainable development goals (SDGs). 17 working groups or “rooms” were developed, one per SDG, and leaders came together to advance action on each goal while also expanding opportunities to cooperate across goals.
Several themes were discussed and deliberated upon, some of which are as follows.
Besides, several rooms also called for reframing the SDG ambitions, reflecting a desire for ongoing improvement in how the SDGs can promote human dignity, opportunity, and co-benefits across Goals.
Click here to read the full report.
Forging new paths to action for the Sustainable Development Goals
The Centre for Sustainable Development at The Brookings Institution and The Rockefeller Foundation convened the fourth annual 17 Rooms global flagship process to augment action, insight and community initiatives across the realm of the 17 sustainable development goals (SDGs). 17 working groups or “rooms” were developed, one per SDG, and leaders came together to advance action on each goal while also expanding opportunities to cooperate across goals.
Posted by 7:51 AM
atLabels: Inclusive Growth
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