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The Oxford Handbook of Economic Forecasting

Sofort lieferbar | Lieferzeit: Sofort lieferbar I
ISBN-13:
9780199875511
Veröffentl:
2011
Seiten:
0
Autor:
Michael P. Clements
Serie:
Oxford Handbooks in Economics
eBook Typ:
PDF
eBook Format:
EPUB
Kopierschutz:
2 - DRM Adobe
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

This Handbook provides up-to-date coverage of both new and well-established fields in the sphere of economic forecasting. The chapters are written by world experts in their respective fields, and provide authoritative yet accessible accounts of the key concepts, subject matter, and techniques in a number of diverse but related areas. It covers the ways in which the availability of ever more plentiful data and computational power have been used in forecasting, in terms of the frequency of observations, the number of variables, and the use of multiple data vintages. Greater data availability has been coupled with developments in statistical theory and economic analysis to allow more elaborate and complicated models to be entertained; the volume provides explanations and critiques of these developments. These include factor models, DSGE models, restricted vector autoregressions, and non-linear models, as well as models for handling data observed at mixed frequencies, high-frequency data, multiple data vintages, methods for forecasting when there are structural breaks, and how breaks might be forecast. Also covered are areas which are less commonly associated with economic forecasting, such as climate change, health economics, long-horizon growth forecasting, and political elections. Econometric forecasting has important contributions to make in these areas along with how their developments inform the mainstream.
Introduction, Michael Clements and David HendryPart 1. Forecasting models and methods1. VARs, cointegration and common cycle restrictions, Heather Anderson and Farshid Vahid2. Dynamic factor models, James Stock and Mark Watson3. Forecasting with non-linear models, Anders Kock and Timo Ter?svirta4. Forecasting with DSGE models, Kai Christoffel, G?nter Coenen and Anders Warne5. Unobserved components, Siem Jan Koopman and Marius Ooms6. Judgmental forecasting, Paul Goodwin, Dilek ?nkal and Michael LawrencePart 2. Data issues7. Nowcasting, Marta Banbura, Domenico Giannone and Lucrezia Reichlin8. Forecasting with mixed-frequency data, Elena Andreou, Eric Ghysels and Andros Kourtellos9. Forecasting with real-time data vintages, Dean CroushorePart 3. Forecasting and structural breaks10. Forecasting and structural breaks, Michael Clements and David Hendry11. Forecasting breaks and forecasting during breaks, Jennifer Castle, David Hendry, and Nicholas Fawcett12. Forecast combination, Marco Aiolfi, Carlos Capistr?n and Allan TimmermannPart 4. Forecast evaluation13. Multiple forecast model evaluation, Valentina Corradi and Walter Distaso14. Testing for unconditional predictive ability, Todd Clark and Michael McCracken15. Testing for conditional predictive ability, Raffaella Giacomini16. Interpreting and Combining Heterogeneous Survey Forecasts, Charles Manski17. Use and Evaluation of Panels of Forecasts, Antony Davies, Kajal Lahiri and Xuguang ShengPart 5. Financial forecasting18. Forecasting Financial Time Series, Terence Mills19. Volatility Forecasting Using High Frequency Data, Peter Hansen and Asger LundePart 6. Special interest areas20. Economic value of weather and climate forecasts, Richard Katz and Jeff Lazo21. Long-horizon growth forecasting and demography, Thomas Lindh22. Energy market forecasting, Derek Bunn and Nektaria Karakatsani23 Models for health care, Andrew Jones24 Political and election forecasting, Michael Lewis-Beck and Charles Tien25 Marketing & sales, Philip-Hans Franses

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