Consensus Forecasts and Inefficient Information Aggregation

Consensus forecasts are inefficient, over-weighting older information already in the public domain at the expense of new private information, when individual forecasters have different information sets. Using a cross-country panel of growth forecasts and new methodological insights, this paper finds...

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Veröffentlicht in:IMF working paper 2010-07, Vol.10 (10/178), p.1
1. Verfasser: Crowe, Christopher W
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Consensus forecasts are inefficient, over-weighting older information already in the public domain at the expense of new private information, when individual forecasters have different information sets. Using a cross-country panel of growth forecasts and new methodological insights, this paper finds that: consensus forecasts are inefficient as predicted; this is not due to individual forecaster irrationality; forecasters appear unaware of this inefficiency; and a simple adjustment reduces forecast errors by 5 percent. Similar results are found using US nominal GDP forecasts. The paper also discusses the result’s implications for users of forecaster surveys and for the literature on information aggregation
ISSN:1018-5941
DOI:10.5089/9781455201891.001