How Professional Forecasters View Shocks to GDP
Economic activity depends on agents’ real-time beliefs regarding the persistence
in the shocks they currently perceive to be hitting the economy. This paper uses an
unobserved components model of forecast revisions to examine how the professional
forecasters comprising the Blue Chip Economic Consensus have viewed such shocks to
GDP over the past twenty years. The model estimates that these forecasters attribute
more of the variance in the shock to GDP to permanent factors than to transitory
developments. Both shocks are significantly correlated with incoming high-frequency
indicators of economic activity; but for the permanent component, the correlation is
driven by recessions or other periods when activity was weak. The forecasters’ shocks
also differ noticeably from those generated by some simple econometric models. Taken
together, the results suggest that agents’ expectations likely are based on broader
information sets than those used to specify most empirical models and that the
mechanisms generating expectations may differ with the perceived state of the business
cycle.