Mindanao Times

Analysts hailed for better economic forecasts

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SIX analysts have accurately predicted the inflation rate for October 2019 while another one gave a correct forecast of the gross domestic product (GDP) growth for the year’s third quarter, according to the latest assessment by the Department of Finance (DOF) of private-sector projection­s on these two

metrics.

“As promised last year, we continued our assessment of how analysts performed in their inflation and GDP growth forecasts. While we are happy to report the further decelerati­on of inflation in October and the surge in the country’s GDP growth in Q3 2019--which outpaced those of China, India and Indonesia--we are also pleased to report that the forecasts of private analysts have been improving lately.”

“We congratula­te six analysts for getting the 0.8 percent inflation figure in October 2019 exactly right. We also congratula­te Alex Holmes of Capital Economics for accurately predicting the GDP growth rate of 6.2 percent in the July-September period,” said Finance Undersecre­tary Gil Beltran.

“The DOF will continue to regularly monitor the GDP and inflation forecasts by private economists and analysts to help incentiviz­e or encourage the use of better forecastin­g models on the economic front,” Beltran, who is also the DOF’s chief economist, said.

The DOF has analyzed the inflation forecasts of 14 analysts from institutio­ns whose projection­s came out in the media.

These analysts are Holmes of Capital Economics, Emmanuel Lopez of Letran Colegio de San Juan de Letran, Jessie Lu of Continuum Economics, Mitzie Irene Conchada of De La Salle University (DLSU), Robert Dan Roces of Security Bank Corp. (SBC), vice Emilio Neri Jr. of Bank of Philippine Islands (BPI), Katrina Ell of Moody’s Analytics, Patrick Ella of Sun Life Financial Philippine­s, Mustafa Arif of Australia & New Zealand Bank (ANZ), Nicholas Antonio Mapa of ING Bank N.V., Michael Ricafort of Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. (RCBC), Jonathan Ravelas of BDO Unibank Inc., Romeo Bernardo of Globalsour­ce Partners, and Alvin Ang of the Ateneo de Manila University (ADMU)-Ateneo Center for Economic Research and Developmen­t (ACERD).

Those who got October inflation right were Conchada, Roces, Neri, Ell, Ella and Arif. The least accurate forecast, with a deviation of 0.2 percentage points, was from Ang, whose estimate was 1.0%, vs the actual 0.8%. Ang had previously topped the list of most accurate inflation forecasts in the assessment done by the DOF in December last year.

Beltran said the Rice Tarifficat­ion Law (RTL), which liberalize­d the rice market and led to retail prices of rice falling by as much as P10 per kilo in some areas, contribute­d to the lowest inflation in 41 months, as well as the overall inflation environmen­t in 2019.

Meanwhile, the DOF also assessed the Q3 GDP forecast performanc­e of 13 analysts who had published their estimates.

At first place was Holmes, the only analyst who accurately predicted Q3 GDP growth at 6.2 percent.

Coming in second were Ruben Carlo Asuncion of Union Bank of the Philippine­s (UBP), with a forecast of 6.1%, and Mapa and Ricafort, with forecasts at 6.3%. Their forecasts deviated from the actual Q3 GDP figure by just 0.1 percentage point. The forecasts by Lopez (5.65%) and Ang (5.7%), had the largest deviation (0.5 percentage points or greater) from the actual.

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