Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Preface
- Common acronyms
- 1 An introduction to forecasting
- 2 First principles
- 3 Evaluating forecast accuracy
- 4 Forecasting in univariate processes
- 5 Monte Carlo techniques
- 6 Forecasting in cointegrated systems
- 7 Forecasting with large-scale macroeconometric models
- 8 A theory of intercept corrections: beyond mechanistic forecasts
- 9 Forecasting using leading indicators
- 10 Combining forecasts
- 11 Multi-step estimation
- 12 Parsimony
- 13 Testing forecast accuracy
- 14 Postscript
- Glossary
- References
- Author index
- Subject index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Preface
- Common acronyms
- 1 An introduction to forecasting
- 2 First principles
- 3 Evaluating forecast accuracy
- 4 Forecasting in univariate processes
- 5 Monte Carlo techniques
- 6 Forecasting in cointegrated systems
- 7 Forecasting with large-scale macroeconometric models
- 8 A theory of intercept corrections: beyond mechanistic forecasts
- 9 Forecasting using leading indicators
- 10 Combining forecasts
- 11 Multi-step estimation
- 12 Parsimony
- 13 Testing forecast accuracy
- 14 Postscript
- Glossary
- References
- Author index
- Subject index
Summary
This book is the first of two volumes on macroeconomic forecasting. Its objective is to provide a formal analysis of the models, procedures and measures of economic forecasting with a view to improving forecasting practice. The first volume sets the scene, focusing on forecasting when the underlying process can be described by a stationary representation, perhaps after differencing the data. Our companion volume, entitled The Zeuthen Lectures on Economic Forecasting, will discuss forecasting in the presence of deterministic non-stationarities. Both volumes are the outcomes of Lecture Invitations, the first – the Marshall Lectures – at Cambridge University; the second at Copenhagen University. Of course, the choice of topics for these lecture series was conditioned by our on-going research interests. Our focus on forecasting began in 1991 when David Hendry was invited to act as a Special Adviser to the House of Commons Select Committee on the Enquiry into Official Economic Forecasting, and found a dearth of theory to explain the systematic mis-forecasting that had occurred in the mid and late 1980s. The literature on statistical forecasting also argued that there was a marked discrepancy between theory and practice: see, for example, Fildes and Makridakis (1995) and Makridakis (1982), among others. Thus, we were delighted to take up the implicit challenge of developing a theory of economic forecasting with practical implications.
The two volumes seek to address the key problems facing a theory of forecasting in macroeconomics based on empirical econometric models.
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- Information
- Forecasting Economic Time Series , pp. xvii - xxPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998