EclectEcon

Economics and the mid-life crisis have much in common: Both dwell on foregone opportunities

C'est la vie; c'est la guerre; c'est la pomme de terre                                     A View from/of the Econochasm by John Palmer

Richard Posner deserves the next Nobel Prize in Economics
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Will the U.S. Have a Recession?
Dueling Forecasts

In March of this year, Ed Leamer predicted that the US would narrowly avoid a recession [link via Newmark's Door, still my first read each day]. This forecast clearly reflects updated information, given his discussion over two years earlier, in which he expressed dismay about the US housing bubble and forecast a recession.


But here are two very different forecasts (among the many) about whether the U.S. will have a recession during the next year or so.


  • Ironman at Political Calculations posted a graph showing (according to his model) that the threat of a recession has passed.
    Forecast Recession Probability vs Applicable Dates, 25 June 2005 through 25 June 2009

  • At the same time, Steven Pearlstein writes,

So much for that second-half rebound.

Truth be told, that was always more of a wish than a serious forecast, happy talk from the Fed and Wall Street desperate to get things back to normal.

It ain't gonna happen.


Not this summer. Not this fall. Not even next winter.


This thing's going down, fast and hard. Corporate bankruptcies, bond defaults, bank failures, hedge fund meltdowns and 6 percent unemployment. We're caught in one of those vicious, downward spirals that, once it gets going, is very hard to pull out of.

Others, especially those at RGE Monitor, tend to share Pearlstein's view. I might, too, but they have been predicting this recession for quite some time. If they are right, how long will we have to wait for it???


Meanwhile, Ironman's model seems to have predicted reasonably well....

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Ironman (mail) (www):
While I wish I could take credit for that recession prediction model, especially as it would seem to have some really good predictive power, credit properly belongs to Jonathan Wright of the Federal Reserve Board who developed the method behind the chart! Other than providing occasional updates as to where Wright's model would place us today, my only real contribution in the area of recession prediction has been in working out how to visualize the probability of recession Wright's model would anticipate using the yield curve and Federal Funds Rate data that the model requires as inputs.
6.30.2008 2:40pm
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