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Fiscal Sustainability and the Accuracy of Macroeconomic Forecasts: Do Supranational Forecasts Rather than Government Forecasts Make a Difference?Carlos Fonseca MarinheiroUniversity of Coimbra - Faculty of Economics (FEUC) 2011 International Journal of Sustainable Economy, Vol. 3, No. 2, pp. 185-209, 2011 Abstract: Credible fiscal plans that aim at restoring fiscal sustainability will be essential to counter the present increase in debt levels all across Europe. The macroeconomic scenario of such plans will be crucial. This paper assesses whether there is any advantage in delegating (part of) such power to supra-national forecasts. The evidence on the relative performance of the European Commission’s (EC) growth forecast is rather mixed, with considerable variation at the country level. Some national government forecasts (France, Italy, and Portugal) perform worse in terms of descriptive statistics than the EC forecast for all forecast horizons. For the year ahead the EC growth forecast is better than the official forecasts for almost ¾ of the EU-15 countries. All in all, since the EC forecast appears to be a good benchmark, in order to reduce the (optimistic) forecast bias, national governments could be forced to justify any large (optimistic) deviation from this benchmark when presenting their respective national stability and growth programmes.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 32 Keywords: Sustainability of public debt, Fiscal policy, Stability and Growth Pact, Fiscal forecasting, forecast evaluation, real-time data JEL Classification: H68, E17, E61, E62, H6 Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: September 14, 2011Suggested CitationContact Information
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