Discussion paper

DP5304 How Useful is Bagging in Forecasting Economic Time Series? A Case Study of US CPI Inflation

This paper explores the usefulness of bagging methods in forecasting economic time series from linear multiple regression models. We focus on the widely studied question of whether the inclusion of indicators of real economic activity lowers the prediction mean-squared error of forecast models of US consumer price inflation. We study bagging methods for linear regression models with correlated regressors and for factor models. We compare the accuracy of simulated out-of-sample forecasts of inflation based on these bagging methods to that of alternative forecast methods, including factor model forecasts, shrinkage estimator forecasts, combination forecasts and Bayesian model averaging. We find that bagging methods in this application are almost as accurate or more accurate than the best alternatives. Our empirical analysis demonstrates that large reductions in the prediction mean squared error are possible relative to existing methods, a result that is also suggested by the asymptotic analysis of some stylized linear multiple regression examples.

£6.00
Citation

Kilian, L and A Inoue (2005), ‘DP5304 How Useful is Bagging in Forecasting Economic Time Series? A Case Study of US CPI Inflation‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 5304. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp5304