果冻传媒麻豆社

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Assessing GDP and sub-component revisions

Completed

Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is a measure of economic activity published by Statistical Agencies (SAs). It is one of the key data series followed by Central Banks (CBs) to inform monetary policy decisions. Official estimates of economic growth serve as a basis on which CBs forecast future growth. They are regularly revised and therefore forecasts for GDP growth are done on the basis of ever-changing data. The revisions would ideally respond to the incorporation of additional and improved data over time. But is it really so? Users of data understand the uncertainty surrounding the early GDP announcements. In order to make a good use of them, they need to understand how reliable subsequent revisions of GDP data are. The economic literature has intensively studied the properties of GDP and other macroeconomic aggregate revisions. These revisions feed into the various forecasting models with significant implications.

However, it is much less known about the reasons why Statistical Agencies (SAs) decide to revise their estimates beyond the timeliness of their data collection. Our project sheds more light on this topic and hypothesizes that SAs also behave as risk managers who have an implicit interest (loss function) in not revising their GDP estimates after their initial releases while being much more open to revising GDP sub-components over time.

Our research is going to test the properties of GDP and their sub-component revisions. We aim to shed light on how Statistical Agencies behave when they produce their initial quarterly announcements and subsequent revisions. The outcome of this study will equip academics, policy-makers and professionals with better knowledge of how these estimates change over time and thus construct better and more accurate forecasts.


Meet the Principal Investigator(s) for the project

Professor Stylianos Asimakopoulos
Professor Stylianos Asimakopoulos - I joined Brunel University Department of Economics and Finance in January 2023 as Professor of Macroeconomics and Finance. Prior to this I was an Associate Professor of Financial Economics at the University of Bath, Department of Economics, the leader of the Applied Econometrics research group and the Finance stream leader of the Macroeconomics and Finance research group. I was also employed as an Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of Stirling, Economics Division; as a temporary Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of Nottingham, School of Economics; and as an external consultant and researcher at the European Central Bank. My research has been published in highly ranked academic journals, i.e. Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, Journal of Corporate Finance, Review of Economic Dynamics, Journal of International Money and Finance, Journal of Financial Stability, Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, Canadian Journal of Economics, Scandinavian Journal of Economics, European Journal of Finance, Economics Letters etc.; and it is mainly focused in the area of Financial Economics (corporate finance, sustainable/green finance, capital structure and payout poicy) and applied Macroeconomics (DSGE modelling, business cycles, optimal fiscal/monetary policy, cryptocurrencies).

Related Research Group(s)

money

Macroeconomics - The focus of the centre is to conduct first-rate research into macroeconomics aspects of a range of issues such as unemployment, debt and financial instability.


Partnering with confidence

Organisations interested in our research can partner with us with confidence backed by an external and independent benchmark: The Knowledge Exchange Framework. Read more.


Project last modified 14/11/2023