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Consensus Economics

Consensus Economics is a global macroeconomic survey firm that polls more than 700 economists monthly for their forecasts for over 2000 macroeconomic indicators in 115 countries.[1][2] The company is headquartered in London, United Kingdom.

Consensus Economics
Founded1989
Headquarters
London
,
United Kingdom

History Edit

Consensus Economics undertook its first survey in October 1989 and now releases monthly and weekly survey results.[1][3]

Forecasts Edit

Consensus Economics publishes Consensus Forecasts, a widely cited monthly compilation of macroeconomic forecasts and topical analyses by country for 115 economies.[1][2] The countries covered include member countries of the G-7 industrialized nations, Asia Pacific, Eastern Europe, and Latin America.[2] It also has more specialized publications such as the Foreign Exchange forecasts and Energy & Metals Consensus Forecasts.[2] Each publication is distributed in hard-copy format and via email as PDF files and Excel spreadsheets.[2] Once a year the company releases The Consensus Forecasts Global Outlook at the start of November, which covers long-term forecasts, including 2050 forecasts, for countries in Western and Eastern Europe, North and South America and the Asia Pacific.

In addition to the forecasts made available to subscribers, Consensus Economics offers more up to date and detailed forecast data to institutional investors,[3] to corporate planning executives and to governments and international institutions. The history of the forecasts is also licensed for research purposes.

Reports Edit

Consensus Economics’ catalogue of publications covers 115 countries, which appear in the following regions: the G-7 nations, the Euro zone, Western Europe, Middle East, Central Asia, Africa, the Nordic countries, Asia Pacific, Latin America and Eastern Europe. A list of countries that make up the monthly compilations of country economic forecasts can be found below for the following publications:

Consensus Forecasts Edit

United States, Japan, Germany, France, United Kingdom,[4] Italy, Canada,[5] Euro Zone, Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Egypt,[6] Finland, Greece, Ireland, Israel, Nigeria, Portugal, Saudi Arabia and South Africa.

Consensus Forecasts
 
FrequencyMonthly
LanguageEnglish
Websitewww.consensuseconomics.com
ISSN0957-0950

Asia Pacific Consensus Forecasts Edit

Australia, China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, New Zealand, Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, Vietnam, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Pakistan and Sri Lanka.

Asia Pacific Consensus Forecasts
 
FrequencyMonthly
LanguageEnglish
Websitewww.consensuseconomics.com
ISSN1351-0967

Latin America Consensus Forecasts Edit

Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Venezuela, Colombia, Peru, Bolivia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay and Uruguay.

Latin American Consensus Forecasts
 
FrequencyMonthly
LanguageEnglish
Websitewww.consensuseconomics.com
ISSN0968-4972

Eastern Europe Consensus Forecasts Edit

Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Russia, Turkey, Bulgaria, Croatia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Ukraine, Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Cyprus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, North Macedonia, Moldova, Serbia, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.

Eastern Europe Consensus Forecasts
 
FrequencyMonthly
LanguageEnglish
Websitewww.consensuseconomics.com
ISSN1462-4001

Consensus Forecasts – USA Edit

Detailed coverage of the US economy, showing forecasts for 20 macroeconomic variables.

In addition, monthly forecast data is also available for currency exchange rates as well as a range of commodity prices. These appear in Foreign Exchange Consensus Forecasts and Energy and Metals Consensus Forecasts.

Foreign Exchange Consensus Forecasts Edit

The publication provides coverage for over 90 currencies, which includes the following: US dollar, Euro, Japanese yen, Argentinian peso, Australian dollar, Brazilian real, Canadian dollar, Chilean peso, Colombian peso, Czech Koruna, Danish krone, Hong Kong dollar, Hungarian forint, Indian rupee, Indonesian rupiah, Israeli shekel, Malaysian ringgit, Mexican peso, New Zealand dollar, Norwegian krone, Peruvian sol, Philippine peso, Polish zloty, Romanian leu, Russian rouble, Singaporean dollar, South African rand, South Korean won, Swedish krona, Swiss franc, Taiwanese dollar, Thai baht, Turkish lira, Ukrainian hryvnia, Venezuelan bolivar, Albanian lek, Algerian dinar, Angolan kwanza, Azerbaijani manat, Bahrain dinar, Bangladesh taka, Belarusian rouble, Bolivian boliviano, Bosnia Herz. Marka, Botswana pula, Bulgarian lev, Costa Rica colon, Croatian kuna, Dominican Republic peso, Eyptian pound, Ecuadorian sucre, Egyptian pound, El Salvador colon, Georgian lari, Ghanaian cedi, Guatemalan quetzal, Guyanese dollar, Haitian gourde, Honduran lempira, Icelandic krona, Iranian rial, Iraqi dinar, Ivory Coast CFA franc, Jamaican dollar, Jordanian dinar, Kazakhstani tenge, Kenyan shilling, Kuwaiti dinar, Laos kip, Lebanese pound, Libyan dinar, Macedonian denar, Malawian kwacha, Moroccan dirham, Mozambican metical, Myanmar kyat, Nicaraguan cordoba, Nigerian naira, Oman rial, Pakistani rupee, Paraguayan guarani, Renminbi, Saudi Arabian riyal, Serbian dinar, Sri Lankan rupee, Sterling, Sudanese pound, Tanzanian shilling, Tunisian dinar, UAE dirham, Ugandan shilling, Uruguayan peso, Uzbekistani som, Vietnamese dong and Zambian kwacha.

Energy and Metals Consensus Forecasts Edit

Coverage of over 30 commodities, which includes crude oil (Brent crude as well as West Texas Intermediate crude), US gasoline & heating oil, European gas oil, natural gas (UK and US Henry Hub), coal (Australian coking coal, Australian Steaming coal spot and contract price), uranium, carbon, aluminium, alumina & aluminium alloy, copper, nickel, lead, zinc, steel (US hot rolled coil as well as Asia hot rolled coil), iron ore (North China fines, Australian fines, Australian lump as well as Brazilian fines), tin, cobalt, lithium carbonate, lithium hydroxide, lithium spodumene, manganese, molybdenum, rutile, ilmenite, zircon, gold, silver, platinum and palladium.

Current economics Edit

Besides the publication of monthly reports of country economic forecasts, Consensus Economics also produces a monthly journal which includes articles from some of the world's leading international firms.

A complete list of Consensus Economics' reports can be found on their website.[7]

Reception Edit

Academic research Edit

A 2001 paper by Roy Batchelor of City University Business School, London compared the Consensus Forecasts with forecasts made by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).[8][9] The study found: "With few exceptions, the private sector forecasts are less biased and more accurate in terms of mean absolute error and root mean square error. Formal tests show these differences are statistically significant for forecasts of real growth and production, less so for forecasts of inflation and unemployment. Overall, there appears little information in the OECD and IMF forecasts that could be used to reduce significantly the error in the private sector forecasts."[8][9]

The accuracy and bias in the combined forecasts has been a topic of academic research. A 2009 paper by Ager, Kappler and Osterloh found: "The test for common bias reveals that several countries show biased forecasts, especially with forecasts covering more than 12 months. These results partially confirm the presumption that the macroeconomic forecasts for the past 10 years were severely affected by the pronounced shocks in that period. The fact that for individual countries systematic biases can be observed by applying the Consensus Forecasts reveals that in these countries the forecasting industry on the whole was not able to cope with the shocks specific to the past ten years. Revisions of past months for GDP growth forecasts have significant explanatory power for current revisions for almost all countries. For inflation revisions we find significant past revisions for some countries. Overall, our results imply that a lack of information efficiency is more severe for GDP forecasts than for inflation forecasts."[10][11]

A 2011 paper by Filip Novotny and Marie Rakova for the Czech National Bank compared the accuracy of the Consensus Forecasts estimates with those of the International Monetary Fund and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Echoing the result of Ager, Kappler, and Osterloh, it found: "In the period from 1994 to 2009 Consensus forecasts for effective euro-area consumer price inflation and GDP growth beat the alternatives by a difference which is typically statistically significant. The results are more diverse for the pre-crisis sample (1994–2007). The Consensus forecast for euro-area producer price inflation significantly outperforms the naïve forecast in the short-term. Finally, the Consensus forecast for the USD/EUR exchange rate during the period from 2002 to 2009 is more precise than the naïve forecast and the forecast implied by the forward rate."[12]

A 2007 paper by Batchelor used Consensus Forecasts data to consider various theories of bias in macroeconomic forecasts, and concluded: "In all countries there is evidence that individual forecasters converge on the consensus forecast too slowly. However, the persistent optimism of some forecasters, and the persistent pessimism of others, is not consistent with the predictions of models of “rational bias” that have become popular in the finance and economics literature."[13]

Consensus Forecasts data has been cited by other academic literature, such as discussion of the Asian financial crisis.[14]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c . Consensus Economics. Archived from the original on 15 April 2014. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
  2. ^ a b c d e . Consensus Economics. Archived from the original on 15 April 2014. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
  3. ^ a b . Consensus Economics. Archived from the original on 15 April 2014. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 17 April 2015. Retrieved 28 May 2015.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 7 March 2015. Retrieved 28 May 2015.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 28 May 2015. Retrieved 28 May 2015.
  7. ^ "Global Coverage". Consensus Economics. Retrieved 12 June 2014.
  8. ^ a b Batchelor, Roy (2001). "How useful are the forecasts of intergovernmental agencies? The IMF and OECD versus the consensus". Applied Economics. 33 (2): 225–235. doi:10.1080/00036840121785.
  9. ^ a b Batchelor, Roy (August 2000). (PDF). Consensus Economics. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 October 2015. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
  10. ^ Ager, Philipp; Kappler, Marcus; Osterloh, Steffen (January–March 2009). "The Accuracy and Efficiency of the Consensus Forecasts: A Further Application and Extension of the Pooled Approach" (PDF). International Journal of Forecasting. 25 (1): 167–181. doi:10.1016/j.ijforecast.2008.11.008.
  11. ^ Ager, Philipp; Kappler, Marcus; Osterloh, Steffen. "The Accuracy and Efficiency of the Consensus Forecasts: A Further Application and Extension of the Pooled Approach" (PDF). ZEW Discussion Papers, No. 07-058. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
  12. ^ Novotny, Filip; Rakova, Marie (2011). (PDF). Finance a Uver: Czech Journal of Economics & Finance. 61 (4): 348–366. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 December 2014. Retrieved 1 May 2014.
  13. ^ Batchelor, Roy (April–June 2007). "Bias in macroeconomic forecasts". International Journal of Forecasting. 23 (2): 189–203. doi:10.1016/j.ijforecast.2007.01.004.
  14. ^ Goldstein, Morris (June 1998). "THE ASIAN FINANCIAL CRISIS: Causes, Cures, and Systemic Implications" (PDF). Institute for International Economics. Retrieved 14 April 2014.

External links Edit

  • Official website  

consensus, economics, this, article, contains, content, that, written, like, advertisement, please, help, improve, removing, promotional, content, inappropriate, external, links, adding, encyclopedic, content, written, from, neutral, point, view, february, 201. This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view February 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Consensus Economics is a global macroeconomic survey firm that polls more than 700 economists monthly for their forecasts for over 2000 macroeconomic indicators in 115 countries 1 2 The company is headquartered in London United Kingdom Consensus EconomicsFounded1989HeadquartersLondon United Kingdom Contents 1 History 2 Forecasts 3 Reports 3 1 Consensus Forecasts 3 2 Asia Pacific Consensus Forecasts 3 3 Latin America Consensus Forecasts 3 4 Eastern Europe Consensus Forecasts 3 5 Consensus Forecasts USA 3 6 Foreign Exchange Consensus Forecasts 3 7 Energy and Metals Consensus Forecasts 3 8 Current economics 4 Reception 4 1 Academic research 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditConsensus Economics undertook its first survey in October 1989 and now releases monthly and weekly survey results 1 3 Forecasts EditConsensus Economics publishes Consensus Forecasts a widely cited monthly compilation of macroeconomic forecasts and topical analyses by country for 115 economies 1 2 The countries covered include member countries of the G 7 industrialized nations Asia Pacific Eastern Europe and Latin America 2 It also has more specialized publications such as the Foreign Exchange forecasts and Energy amp Metals Consensus Forecasts 2 Each publication is distributed in hard copy format and via email as PDF files and Excel spreadsheets 2 Once a year the company releases The Consensus Forecasts Global Outlook at the start of November which covers long term forecasts including 2050 forecasts for countries in Western and Eastern Europe North and South America and the Asia Pacific In addition to the forecasts made available to subscribers Consensus Economics offers more up to date and detailed forecast data to institutional investors 3 to corporate planning executives and to governments and international institutions The history of the forecasts is also licensed for research purposes Reports EditConsensus Economics catalogue of publications covers 115 countries which appear in the following regions the G 7 nations the Euro zone Western Europe Middle East Central Asia Africa the Nordic countries Asia Pacific Latin America and Eastern Europe A list of countries that make up the monthly compilations of country economic forecasts can be found below for the following publications Consensus Forecasts Edit United States Japan Germany France United Kingdom 4 Italy Canada 5 Euro Zone Netherlands Norway Spain Sweden Switzerland Austria Belgium Denmark Egypt 6 Finland Greece Ireland Israel Nigeria Portugal Saudi Arabia and South Africa Consensus Forecasts nbsp FrequencyMonthlyLanguageEnglishWebsitewww wbr consensuseconomics wbr comISSN0957 0950Asia Pacific Consensus Forecasts Edit Australia China Hong Kong India Indonesia Japan Malaysia New Zealand Philippines Singapore South Korea Taiwan Thailand Vietnam Bangladesh Myanmar Pakistan and Sri Lanka Asia Pacific Consensus Forecasts nbsp FrequencyMonthlyLanguageEnglishWebsitewww wbr consensuseconomics wbr comISSN1351 0967Latin America Consensus Forecasts Edit Argentina Brazil Chile Mexico Venezuela Colombia Peru Bolivia Costa Rica Dominican Republic Ecuador El Salvador Guatemala Honduras Nicaragua Panama Paraguay and Uruguay Latin American Consensus Forecasts nbsp FrequencyMonthlyLanguageEnglishWebsitewww wbr consensuseconomics wbr comISSN0968 4972Eastern Europe Consensus Forecasts Edit Czech Republic Hungary Poland Russia Turkey Bulgaria Croatia Estonia Latvia Lithuania Romania Slovakia Slovenia Ukraine Albania Armenia Azerbaijan Belarus Bosnia amp Herzegovina Cyprus Georgia Kazakhstan North Macedonia Moldova Serbia Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan Eastern Europe Consensus Forecasts nbsp FrequencyMonthlyLanguageEnglishWebsitewww wbr consensuseconomics wbr comISSN1462 4001Consensus Forecasts USA Edit Detailed coverage of the US economy showing forecasts for 20 macroeconomic variables In addition monthly forecast data is also available for currency exchange rates as well as a range of commodity prices These appear in Foreign Exchange Consensus Forecasts and Energy and Metals Consensus Forecasts Foreign Exchange Consensus Forecasts Edit The publication provides coverage for over 90 currencies which includes the following US dollar Euro Japanese yen Argentinian peso Australian dollar Brazilian real Canadian dollar Chilean peso Colombian peso Czech Koruna Danish krone Hong Kong dollar Hungarian forint Indian rupee Indonesian rupiah Israeli shekel Malaysian ringgit Mexican peso New Zealand dollar Norwegian krone Peruvian sol Philippine peso Polish zloty Romanian leu Russian rouble Singaporean dollar South African rand South Korean won Swedish krona Swiss franc Taiwanese dollar Thai baht Turkish lira Ukrainian hryvnia Venezuelan bolivar Albanian lek Algerian dinar Angolan kwanza Azerbaijani manat Bahrain dinar Bangladesh taka Belarusian rouble Bolivian boliviano Bosnia Herz Marka Botswana pula Bulgarian lev Costa Rica colon Croatian kuna Dominican Republic peso Eyptian pound Ecuadorian sucre Egyptian pound El Salvador colon Georgian lari Ghanaian cedi Guatemalan quetzal Guyanese dollar Haitian gourde Honduran lempira Icelandic krona Iranian rial Iraqi dinar Ivory Coast CFA franc Jamaican dollar Jordanian dinar Kazakhstani tenge Kenyan shilling Kuwaiti dinar Laos kip Lebanese pound Libyan dinar Macedonian denar Malawian kwacha Moroccan dirham Mozambican metical Myanmar kyat Nicaraguan cordoba Nigerian naira Oman rial Pakistani rupee Paraguayan guarani Renminbi Saudi Arabian riyal Serbian dinar Sri Lankan rupee Sterling Sudanese pound Tanzanian shilling Tunisian dinar UAE dirham Ugandan shilling Uruguayan peso Uzbekistani som Vietnamese dong and Zambian kwacha Energy and Metals Consensus Forecasts Edit Coverage of over 30 commodities which includes crude oil Brent crude as well as West Texas Intermediate crude US gasoline amp heating oil European gas oil natural gas UK and US Henry Hub coal Australian coking coal Australian Steaming coal spot and contract price uranium carbon aluminium alumina amp aluminium alloy copper nickel lead zinc steel US hot rolled coil as well as Asia hot rolled coil iron ore North China fines Australian fines Australian lump as well as Brazilian fines tin cobalt lithium carbonate lithium hydroxide lithium spodumene manganese molybdenum rutile ilmenite zircon gold silver platinum and palladium Current economics Edit Besides the publication of monthly reports of country economic forecasts Consensus Economics also produces a monthly journal which includes articles from some of the world s leading international firms A complete list of Consensus Economics reports can be found on their website 7 Reception EditAcademic research Edit A 2001 paper by Roy Batchelor of City University Business School London compared the Consensus Forecasts with forecasts made by the International Monetary Fund IMF and Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development OECD 8 9 The study found With few exceptions the private sector forecasts are less biased and more accurate in terms of mean absolute error and root mean square error Formal tests show these differences are statistically significant for forecasts of real growth and production less so for forecasts of inflation and unemployment Overall there appears little information in the OECD and IMF forecasts that could be used to reduce significantly the error in the private sector forecasts 8 9 The accuracy and bias in the combined forecasts has been a topic of academic research A 2009 paper by Ager Kappler and Osterloh found The test for common bias reveals that several countries show biased forecasts especially with forecasts covering more than 12 months These results partially confirm the presumption that the macroeconomic forecasts for the past 10 years were severely affected by the pronounced shocks in that period The fact that for individual countries systematic biases can be observed by applying the Consensus Forecasts reveals that in these countries the forecasting industry on the whole was not able to cope with the shocks specific to the past ten years Revisions of past months for GDP growth forecasts have significant explanatory power for current revisions for almost all countries For inflation revisions we find significant past revisions for some countries Overall our results imply that a lack of information efficiency is more severe for GDP forecasts than for inflation forecasts 10 11 A 2011 paper by Filip Novotny and Marie Rakova for the Czech National Bank compared the accuracy of the Consensus Forecasts estimates with those of the International Monetary Fund and the Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development Echoing the result of Ager Kappler and Osterloh it found In the period from 1994 to 2009 Consensus forecasts for effective euro area consumer price inflation and GDP growth beat the alternatives by a difference which is typically statistically significant The results are more diverse for the pre crisis sample 1994 2007 The Consensus forecast for euro area producer price inflation significantly outperforms the naive forecast in the short term Finally the Consensus forecast for the USD EUR exchange rate during the period from 2002 to 2009 is more precise than the naive forecast and the forecast implied by the forward rate 12 A 2007 paper by Batchelor used Consensus Forecasts data to consider various theories of bias in macroeconomic forecasts and concluded In all countries there is evidence that individual forecasters converge on the consensus forecast too slowly However the persistent optimism of some forecasters and the persistent pessimism of others is not consistent with the predictions of models of rational bias that have become popular in the finance and economics literature 13 Consensus Forecasts data has been cited by other academic literature such as discussion of the Asian financial crisis 14 See also EditEconomic forecasting Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development that publishes its own macroeconomic forecasts International Monetary Fund that publishes its own global macroeconomic forecasts Blue Chip Economic Indicators that publishes macroeconomic forecasts for the economy of the United States Survey of Professional Forecasters that publishes macroeconomic forecasts for the economy of the United States ECB Survey of Professional Forecasters that publishes macroeconomic forecasts for the EurozoneReferences Edit a b c Consensus Economics Consensus Economics Archived from the original on 15 April 2014 Retrieved 14 April 2014 a b c d e Consensus Economics about page Consensus Economics Archived from the original on 15 April 2014 Retrieved 14 April 2014 a b Data For Institutional Investors Consensus Economics Archived from the original on 15 April 2014 Retrieved 14 April 2014 United Kingdom Economic Forecasts Archived from the original on 17 April 2015 Retrieved 28 May 2015 Canada Economic Forecasts Archived from the original on 7 March 2015 Retrieved 28 May 2015 Egypt Economic Forecasts Archived from the original on 28 May 2015 Retrieved 28 May 2015 Global Coverage Consensus Economics Retrieved 12 June 2014 a b Batchelor Roy 2001 How useful are the forecasts of intergovernmental agencies The IMF and OECD versus the consensus Applied Economics 33 2 225 235 doi 10 1080 00036840121785 a b Batchelor Roy August 2000 The IMF and OECD versus Consensus Forecasts PDF Consensus Economics Archived from the original PDF on 28 October 2015 Retrieved 14 April 2014 Ager Philipp Kappler Marcus Osterloh Steffen January March 2009 The Accuracy and Efficiency of the Consensus Forecasts A Further Application and Extension of the Pooled Approach PDF International Journal of Forecasting 25 1 167 181 doi 10 1016 j ijforecast 2008 11 008 Ager Philipp Kappler Marcus Osterloh Steffen The Accuracy and Efficiency of the Consensus Forecasts A Further Application and Extension of the Pooled Approach PDF ZEW Discussion Papers No 07 058 Retrieved 14 April 2014 Novotny Filip Rakova Marie 2011 Assessment of Consensus Forecasts Accuracy The Czech National Bank Perspective PDF Finance a Uver Czech Journal of Economics amp Finance 61 4 348 366 Archived from the original PDF on 31 December 2014 Retrieved 1 May 2014 Batchelor Roy April June 2007 Bias in macroeconomic forecasts International Journal of Forecasting 23 2 189 203 doi 10 1016 j ijforecast 2007 01 004 Goldstein Morris June 1998 THE ASIAN FINANCIAL CRISIS Causes Cures and Systemic Implications PDF Institute for International Economics Retrieved 14 April 2014 External links EditOfficial website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Consensus Economics amp oldid 1172423799, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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