Leading Indicator Project : Lithuania

The authors present a method for forecasting growth cycles in economic activity, measured as total industrial production. They construct a series which they aggregate into a composite leading indicator to predict the path of the economy in Lithuania. The cycle is the result of the economy's deviations from its long-term trend. A contractionary phase means a decline in the growth rate of the economy, not necessarily an absolute decline in economic activity. The indicator they select for economic activity is usually the Index of Industrial Production, plus a group of variables that, when filtered and adjusted, becomes the composite leading indicator that forecasts the reference series. Variables include economically, and statistically significant financial, monetary, real sector, and business survey data. They base selection of the components of the leading indicator on the forecast efficiency and economic significance of the series. Once selected, the relevant variables are aggregated into a single composite leading indicator, which forecasts the de-trended Index of Industrial Production. They apply the Hodrick-Prescott filter method for de-trending the series. This is a smoothing technique that decomposes seasonally adjusted series, into cyclical and trend components. One advantage of the Hodrick-Prescott filter is that it provides a reasonable estimate of a series' long-term trend. The OECD uses a system of leading indicators to predict growth cycles in the economies of its member countries. These exercises have been very effective in their forecasting ability and accuracy - but for the technique to work it is essential to have an adequate statistical system that provides many economic variables in a precise and timely manner, preferably monthly. The authors extend the OECD technique, and present an application to a country of the former Soviet Union.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Everhart, Stephen S., Duval-Hernandez, Robert
Language:en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2000-06
Subjects:growth models, cyclical swings, economic growth, industrial production, aggregate variability, economic indicators, growth patterns, economic forecasts, indexes of economic conditions, financial indicators, monetary indexes, real variables, business data processing, statistical information, industrialized societies, transition economies, benchmark, burns, carbon, carbon dioxide, carbon dioxide emissions, central banks, correlations, economic activity, economic development, economic research, emissions, emissions taxes, employment, environmental policy, exchange rate, exercises, forecasts, forestry, free trade, growth rate, interest rate, interest rates, joint implementation, leading indicators, macroeconomics, methodology, modeling, multilateral trade, private sector, reliability, research working papers, survey data, techniques, time series, time series analysis, trade liberalization, trough, unemployment, variability, violence, weighting, welfare effects,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21459
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