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Why do you need an indicator? Doesn't
looking at GDP tell you everything you need to know about the direction of the
business cycle?
No. Looking at GDP can be misleading. In any given month GDP
growth may be high or low depending on seasonal effects. In August, for example,
GDP falls since most factories in Europe are closed, but this decline does not
tell us that Europe is entering a downturn. In addition, GDP is measured with
error and is subject to large revisions. For Germany, for example, over the
period from 1988 to 1997 estimates of the GDP growth rate based on the final
revised data were on average 0.2 percentage points higher than the growth rate
estimates based on preliminary data. Reliance on preliminary estimates of GDP
growth thus led an excessively pessimistic assessment of German GDP growth.
Finally, euro area GDP can be influenced by factors affecting only a particular
sector or a particular country. These factors are of no importance for assessing
the health of the euro area economy as a whole.
In order to see the underlying direction in which economy is
moving, we need a monthly indicator free from seasonal and other short run
fluctuations, from local and sector-specific shocks and from errors in the
measurement of GDP. The effects of removing this noise can be seen in the
graph below, in which the indicator (black line) and the raw European GDP growth
rate (red line) are plotted together (note that GDP growth is released
quarterly).

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EuroCOIN Versus the Quarterly Growth Rate of GDP: 1988 - 2004
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EuroCOIN is best thought of as a
signal of the underlying direction in which the euro area economy is moving this
month. More precisely, it is an estimate of the cyclical component of GDP (after
the removal of measurement errors).
So if in a particular month the value of the indicator exceeds
GDP growth, it is likely that the low GDP growth is only a temporary phenomenon
- a "blip" - which will die out in the next month or two and have no
impact on the movement of the cycle.
An additional problem with GDP growth is that it
is only available at quarterly frequency, so that not only it does fail to provide information
about this month’s economic conditions, but it is also available only with a
lag. Moreover it is available only with a
lag. In January 2002, for example, we only have information about GDP in the
third quarter of 2001.
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