10th ECB Workshop on Forecasting Techniques: Economic Forecasting with Large Datasets
The European Central Bank (ECB) is holding its tenth Workshop on Forecasting Techniques in Frankfurt am Main on 18 and 19 June 2018.
This biennial conference provides a forum for new theoretical and applied work on forecasting. Macroeconomists today have more – and richer – data at their disposal than ever before. Many of these datasets are not only very large, but also unstructured, not rectangular, or irregularly spaced. Fully tapping the embedded information for forecasters and policymakers requires new methods and tools.
This conference will bring together experts from all fields to exchange new ideas on utilising large datasets for macroeconomic and financial forecasting and to put new insights from econometric and statistical theory into practice in the current macroeconomic environment.
Scientific committee
Barbara Rossi (ICREA – Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona GSE, CREI) and Carlos Montes-Galdon, Georg Strasser and Srečko Zimic (all ECB).
Attendance is upon invitation only.
Programme
Monday, 18 June 2018
* indicates the presenter
- 8:30
- Registration and coffee
- 9:00
-
Welcome address
Matteo Ciccarelli, European Central Bank
- 9:10
-
Part I
Chair: Barbara Rossi, Universitat Pompeu Fabra
Keynote speech
Learning to analyze economic data using machine learning methods
Serena Ng*, Columbia University
- 9:55
-
Common factors, trends, and cycles in large datasets
Matteo Luciani*, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
with Matteo Barigozzi, London School of Economics slidesDiscussant: Siem Jan Koopman, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and Tinbergen Institute
- 10:40
- Coffee break
- 11:00
-
Multivariate Bayesian predictive synthesis in macroeconomic forecasting
Knut A. Aastveit*, Norges Bank and BI Norwegian Business School
with Kenichiro McAlinn, University of Chicago, Booth School of Business;
Jouchi Nakajima, Bank for International Settlements;
and Mike West, Duke University slidesDiscussant: Xuguang S. Sheng, American University
- 11:45
-
On the evolution of the United Kingdom price distributions
Kim Huynh*, Bank of Canada
with Ba M. Chu, Carleton University;
David T. Jacho-Chávez, Emory University;
and Oleksiy Kryvtsov, Bank of Canada slidesDiscussant: Fabrizio Venditti, Banca d'Italia
- 12:30
-
Lunch and poster session
Poster Session
Poster 1: A new approach for detecting shifts in forecast accuracy
Jeremy Chiu*, Bank of England
with Simon Hayes, Bank of England;
George Kapetanios, Kings College London;
and Konstantinos Theodoridis, Cardiff UniversityPoster 2: Nonlinear dynamic factor models
Pablo Guerrón-Quintana*, Boston College
with Alexey Khazanov, Boston College;
and Molin Zhong, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System posterPoster 3: Nonlinear dynamic factor models with interacting level and volatility
Siem Jan Koopman*, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and Tinbergen Institute
with Geert Mesters, Universitat Pompeu Fabra and Barcelona Graduate School of Economics;
and Bernd Schwaab, European Central BankPoster 4: Forecasting with many predictors using message passing algorithms
Dimitris Korobilis*, University of Essex poster
Poster 5: The global component of inflation volatility
Massimiliano Marcellino*, Università Bocconi
with Andrea Carriero, Queen Mary University of London;
and Francesco Corsello, Bank of Italy and Università BocconiPoster 6: A new approach to nowcasting with mixed-frequency Bayesian VARs
Francesca Monti*, Bank of England and Centre for Macroeconomics
with Domenico Giannone, Federal Reserve Bank of New York and Centre for Economic Policy Research;
and Andrej Sokol, Bank of England and Centre for MacroeconomicsPoster 7: Expectation formation following large unexpected shocks
Xuguang S. Sheng*, American University
with Scott R. Baker, Northwestern University;
and Tucker S. McElroy, U.S. Census BureauPoster 8: Adaptive discrete smoothing with an application to (high-dimensional) nonlinear panel data
Martin Spindler*, Universität Hamburg
with Xi Chen, New York University;
Victor Chernozhukov, Massachusetts Institute of Technology;
and Ye Luo, University of FloridaPoster 9: Adaptive state space models with applications to the business cycle and financial stress
Fabrizio Venditti*, Banca d'Italia
with Davide D. Monache, Banca d'Italia;
and Ivan Petrella, Warwick Business School and Centre for Economic Policy Research poster - 14:30
-
Part 2
Chair: Michael Ehrmann, European Central Bank
Keynote speech Invariance and causality for robust predictions
Peter Bühlmann*, Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich
- 15:15
- Coffee break
- 15:35
-
Forecasting with a panel Tobit model
Frank Schorfheide*, University of Pennsylvania
with Laura Liu, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System;
and Hyungsik R. Moon, University of Southern California and Yonsei University slidesDiscussant: Martin Spindler, Universität Hamburg
- 16:20
-
A multiple testing approach to the regularisation of large sample correlation matrices
Natalia Bailey*, Monash University
with Hashem Pesaran, University of Southern California;
and L. Vanessa Smith, University of York slidesDiscussant: Massimiliano Marcellino, Università Bocconi
- 17:05
-
Break
- 17:10
-
Panel discussion: (Macroeconomic) Forecasting with big data: What works? What doesn't? What's next?
Moderator: Giorgio Primiceri, Northwestern University
Peter Bühlmann, Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich
Francis X. Diebold, University of Pennsylvania
Serena Ng, Columbia University
Hal Varian, Google Inc. - 19:15
- Dinner (by invitation only)
- 9:00
- Registration and coffee
- 9:30
-
Part 3
Chair: Isabel Vansteenkiste, European Central Bank
Keynote speech Out of controls
Hal Varian*, Google Inc.
- 10:15
-
Macroeconomic nowcasting with big data through the lens of a sparse factor model
Laurent Ferrara*, Banque de France
with Anna Simoni, Centre de Recherche en Economie et en Statistiques and Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique slidesDiscussant: Francesca Monti, Bank of England and Centre for Macroeconomics
- 11:00
- Coffee break
- 11:20
-
Does modeling a structural break improve forecast accuracy?
Andreas Pick*, Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam, Tinbergen Institute, De Nederlandsche Bank and CESifo Institute
with Tom Boot, University of Groningen slidesDiscussant: Jeremy Chiu, Bank of England
- 12:05
- Lunch
- 13:30
-
Part 4
Chair: Geoff Kenny, European Central Bank
Keynote speech Big data tools and small data surveys
Francis X. Diebold*, University of Pennsylvania
- 14:15
-
Economic predictions with big data: the illusion of sparsity
Giorgio Primiceri*, Northwestern University
with Domenico Giannone, Federal Reserve Bank of New York and Centre for Economic Policy Research;
and Michele Lenza, European Central Bank slidesDiscussant: Pablo Guerrón-Quintana, Boston College
- 15:00
- Coffee break
- 15:20
-
Large-scale dynamic predictive regressions
Daniele Bianchi*, University of Warwick
with Kenichiro McAlinn, University of Chicago, Booth School of Business slidesDiscussant: Mike West, Duke University
- 16:05
-
Predictive density combinations with dynamic learning for large data sets in economics and finance
Herman van Dijk*, Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam, Norges Bank and Tinbergen Institute with
Roberto Casarin, Università Ca' Foscari Venezia;
Stefano Grassi, Università degli Studi di Roma "Tor Vergata";
and Francesco Ravazzolo, Free University of Bozen-Bolzano and Norges Bank slidesDiscussant: Dimitris Korobilis, University of Essex
- 16:50
-
Concluding remarks
Geoff Kenny, European Central Bank
- End of workshop
General information
European Central Bank
Main building – Press centre, room C5.01
Sonnemannstrasse 20
60314 Frankfurt am Main
[email protected]
English
Marta Bańbura, European Central Bank
Carlos Montes-Galdón, European Central Bank
Barbara Rossi, Universitat Pompeu Fabra
Georg Strasser, European Central Bank
Srečko Zimic, European Central Bank
Participants are requested to arrange their own transfers from and to the airport, unless indicated otherwise.
Press room foyer
For each paper, the author will speak for 25 minutes and the discussant for 15 minutes. This will be followed by a general discussion lasting five minutes.
Ms Iris Bettenhäuser
Directorate General Research
Monetary Policy Research Division
[email protected]
Please note that this programme may be subject to change without notice.