How Well Does Employment Predict Output?

Economists, policymakers, and financial market analysts typically pay close attention to aggregate employment trends because employment is thought to be an important indicator of macroeconomic conditions. One difficulty is that there are two separate surveys of employment, which can diverge widely f...

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Veröffentlicht in:Review 2007-09, Vol.89 (5), p.433-446
1. Verfasser: Kliesen, Kevin L
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Economists, policymakers, and financial market analysts typically pay close attention to aggregate employment trends because employment is thought to be an important indicator of macroeconomic conditions. One difficulty is that there are two separate surveys of employment, which can diverge widely from one another, as the previous and current economic expansions demonstrate. The conventional wisdom is that, for assessing economic conditions, the survey that counts the number of jobs (establishment survey) is preferable to the survey that counts the number of people employed (household survey). However, results from a one-quarter-ahead forecasting exercise presented in this paper suggest that analysts should question whether employment is a useful indicator for predicting output growth. Adapted from the source document.
ISSN:0014-9187
2163-4505
DOI:10.20955/r.89.433-446