Why Has U.S. Inflation Become Harder to Forecast?
National Bureau of Economic Research · Harvard University · +3 more institutions
Abstract
We examine whether the U.S. rate of price inflation has become harder to forecast and, to the extent that it has, what changes in the inflation process have made it so. The main finding is that the univariate inflation process is well described by an unobserved component trend‐cycle model with stochastic volatility or, equivalently, an integrated moving average process with time‐varying parameters. This model explains a variety of recent univariate inflation forecasting puzzles and begins to explain some multivariate inflation forecasting puzzles as well.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 98.24
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 30
Authors
2- JHJames H. StockCorresponding
National Bureau of Economic Research, Harvard University, International Paper (United States), Princeton University
- MWMark W. WatsonCorresponding
Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Harvard University, International Paper (United States), Princeton University
Topics & keywords
- Univariate
- Inflation (cosmology)
- Econometrics
- Economics
- Volatility (finance)
- Multivariate statistics
- Stochastic volatility
- Inflation rate
- Decent work and economic growth