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UK
Inflation
Turning-points
The study of turning-points in the business cycle and the
construction of leading indicators to provide advance warnings of them
is a long-established tradition in economics, but many other economic
series also follow cyclical paths in modern developed economies. In
Discussion Paper No. 880, Research Fellow Michael Artis, Robin
Bladen-Hovell, Denise Osborn, Graham Smith and Wenda
Zhang apply the methodology associated with business cycle analysis
to UK inflation. They first identify turning-points in the retail price
inflation cycle during 1959-90 to show that downswings were consistently
shorter than upswings over eight cycles of varying amplitude, so
inflation fell much faster than it rose on average. They construct a
composite short leading indicator from M0, import unit values and
unemployment and a longer leading indicator from vacancies, retail
sales, industrial production and world commodity prices. These yield
only one `false signal' of a future inflation cycle (although there are
more for the individual series).
The authors simulate the use of their indicators to forecast inflation
turning-points for both a standard `3CD' method which requires three
months of consecutive decline (increase) in the leading indicator before
calling the trough (peak) and also a Bayesian approach which also
employs information about the distribution of observations within the
upswing and downswing regimes. While the Bayesian method improves upon
the predictive power of the 3CD approach by sustaining and hence
clarifying turning-point signals, the simple method also performs very
well. While these results promise improved identification of
turning-points in inflation forecasting, a full test can only be
conducted in real time in conjunction with conventional forecasts. These
results also demonstrate the existence of asymmetry in inflation cycles,
despite its absence from the leading indicator series. This suggests
that linear time-series modelling is inadequate in this context and
highlights the need to develop more appropriate modelling techniques in
a non-linear framework.
Predicting Turning Points in the UK Inflation Cycle
Michael J Artis, Robin C Bladen-Hovell, Denise R Osborn, Graham W Smith
and Wenda Zhang
Discussion Paper No. 880, January 1994 (IM)
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