Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Economists from private sector say they’re not blame if GDP forecast is off

New study underlines how Ottawa writes in $40B ‘adjustment’ factor

- GORDON ISFELD gisfeld@nationalpo­st.com Twitter.com/gisfeld

OT TAWA If you had to make a bet on how Canada’s economy was going to fare in the future, you’d be better off putting your money on privatesec­tor economists’ prediction­s than the forecasts of the federal government.

It seems non-government­al forecasts for nominal growth going back more than 20 years — and used as a guide for Ottawa’s budget planning — have been pretty close to spot on, according to a new study.

Research by Scotiabank Economics attempts to answer some nagging concerns about privatesec­tor forecasts used by the Finance Department for budget planning, including whether these estimates are “steadily bad.”

The short answer is they are not. Government padding of private consensus forecasts is more likely the reason those prediction­s don’t bear out.

“There is enormous leeway in how finance’s budgetary projection­s can unfold in ways that are fully divorced from what economists predict will happen to the economy,” the report states.

In this case, the study looks only at nominal gross domestic product — a reading that often comes in higher than real GDP, which takes inflation into account.

The federal budget includes an annual $40-billion “adjustment” in the growth forecasts.

In the budget released Tuesday, for example, the nominal GDP used by the government is $1.996 trillion — $40 billion less than the average forecast.

“Using private-sector forecast inputs to guide budget planning is a practice that has been in place since 1994 in keeping with best practices internatio­nally and so we have over two decades of forecast performanc­e that we can assess,” Scotiabank says.

So exactly how often did these private-sector analysts over-estimate economic growth by $40 billion or more?

Just once in 22 years, according to the study. But that miss “was a doozy,” with a $66 billion “swing and a miss to the downside” — understand­able, perhaps, given it came in 2009 when the country was still in the so-called “Great Recession.”

“Government­s are naturally more worried about downside risk — blame the economists — than good news — take credit,” the report says.

“The forecast misses neverthele­ss do not always work to the downside of projection­s.”

For example, actual growth beat forecasts by $40 billion or more in 1999, 2000 and 2002. Put another way, the economy outperform­ed estimates by two percentage points or more in 1994, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 and 2004.

“So there have been more periods when actual growth exceeded forecasts by a fair margin than years of disappoint­ment,” says the study, which was done “simply to give a historical perspectiv­e on the private-sector input into the federal budget.”

The moral of the story? “Quit blaming economists,” Scotiabank offers.

“There is enormous leeway in how finance’s budgetary projection­s can unfold in ways that are fully divorced from what economists predict will happen to the economy.”

This includes spending beyond what was forecast in a given budget “and hence outside of what can be assessed by way of forecast accuracy.”

 ?? JUSTIN TANG/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks with Minister of Finance Bill Morneau as he arrives to table the budget.
JUSTIN TANG/ THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks with Minister of Finance Bill Morneau as he arrives to table the budget.

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