The Borneo Post

Economists pilloried for getting forecasts wrong

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PARIS: Economists are taking flak after missing the mark on inflation, failing to anticipate disruption­s in global supply chains and forecastin­g a recession that has not materialis­ed.

The Covid-19 pandemic, Russia’s war in Ukraine and more recently the Middle East conflict have made it tougher for experts to see clearly into their economic crystal balls.

European Central Bank president Christine Lagarde joined the chorus of criticism at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, last month.

“Many economists are actually a tribal clique,” she said, referring to a lack of openness to other scientific discipline­s.

“They quote each other – men more than women but that’s another story,” the former IMF chief and French finance minister said. “But they don’t go beyond that world because they feel comfortabl­e in that world.”

Economists need to get out of their comfort zone of Excel spreadshee­ts and rigid models, some economists say about their own kind.

The world “has changed a little bit”, Peter Vanden Houte, chief eurozone economist at ING bank, said sarcastica­lly.

After years of low inflation, the post-Covid reopening of economies sent prices rising and they soared further after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, belying assurances from Lagarde and US Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell that the increases would only be “transitory”.

The central banks had to launch into a series of interest rate hikes to combat inflation. While price rises have cooled in recent months, policymake­rs have kept the rates elevated as they wait to see whether they can be cut later this year.

Lagarde has admitted that the forecasts used as a basis for ECB policy decisions were not always right and that factors linked to the crises were not taken into account in its models.

“The models we currently use are less reliable because there are many factors that are difficult to integrate,” Vanden Houte said.

He cited the supply chain bottleneck­s following the pandemic, labour shortages and geopolitic­al tensions.

Economists dropped the ball by looking through the prism of the past.

“It’s not economic models that failed. It’s the lack of imaginatio­n of economists,” said Maxime Darmet, economist at Allianz Trade.

“They rested on their laurels” after 30 years of globalisat­ion during which “everything went well”, Darmet said.

With central banks using rate hikes to stop economies from overheatin­g, economists warned that growth in the developed world would fall sharply or even contract in 2023.

Instead, US economic growth accelerate­d last year while the eurozone – Germany excepted – stayed in the green.

Earlier this week, the IMF raised its 2024 global growth forecast to 3.1 per cent, citing unexpected resilience in major advanced and emerging market economies, including the US and China.

“There is a puzzle in all that immaculate disinflati­on,” Princeton University economics professor Alan Blinder told AFP.

All the signs were there: interest rates signalled a US recession and indicators were pessimisti­c. In the 1970s,

recession was the only way out of hyperinfla­tion.

Once again economists were accused of having been too narrow-minded.

Vanden Houte said the weak quality of data and a falling rate of responses to surveys were partly to blame.

New phenomena also threw a curveball: Savings have helped to fuel consumptio­n while companies have “much better managed” high rates than in the past, said Christophe Barraud, director general at Market Securities Monaco SAM.

Nobel economics prize winner Esther Duflo told AFP in a recent interview that economists have fallen to “last place” on the list of most trusted profession­s, less popular than weather forecaster­s. Some are trying to change.

In July, the Bank of England hired former US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke to lead a review of its forecastin­g process after it was criticised for failing to anticipate soaring inflation.

The Bank of Canada has decided to replace its old models with more forward-looking methodolog­ies.

“Everyone knows that the current models are no longer satisfacto­ry to make good forecasts,” Vanden Houte said.

“We need to think differentl­y or at least expand the models by integratin­g other components.”

 ?? ?? Economists warned that growth in the developed world would fall sharply or even contract in 2023. However, US economic growth accelerate­d last year while the eurozone stayed in the green.
Economists warned that growth in the developed world would fall sharply or even contract in 2023. However, US economic growth accelerate­d last year while the eurozone stayed in the green.
 ?? ?? Lagarde (pictured) joined the chorus of criticism of economists missing the mark on inflation, failing to anticipate disruption­s in global supply chains and forecastin­g a recession that has not materialis­ed. –- AFP photos
Lagarde (pictured) joined the chorus of criticism of economists missing the mark on inflation, failing to anticipate disruption­s in global supply chains and forecastin­g a recession that has not materialis­ed. –- AFP photos

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