This paper offers a framework for judging when the discrepancy embodied in current account forecasts is large. The first step in implementing this framework involves developing an econometric model explaining the components of the aggregate discrepancy, estimating the associated parameters, and generating the aggregate discrepancy's conditional expectation. The second step is to compare this model-based forecast with the discrepancy embodied in countries' current-account forecasts. If the gap in discrepancies is below a critical value, then the discrepancy embodied in the countries' current account forecasts is not large. Otherwise, the discrepancy is large and calls for a careful reexamination of the associated current account forecasts. C...
Using forecasts from Consensus Economics Inc., we provide evidence on the efficiency of real GDP gro...
Global current account imbalances widened before the 2007/2008 crisis and have narrowed since. While...
The statistical discrepancy in the U.S. international transactions accounts has tended to be both la...
The rising current account deficit in the USA has attracted considerable attention in recent years. ...
Data published in IMF country reports and International Financial Statistics (IFS) may differ for se...
The global economy has, in recent times, continued to face large and unprecedented external imbalanc...
The recent global financial crisis has been described as the abrupt unwinding of the macroeconomic i...
Large shifts in countries’ external current account positions can be disruptive, often reflecting su...
This paper assesses some of the explanations that have been put forward for the global pattern of cu...
We examine whether the behavior of current account balances changed in the years preceding the globa...
Despite the fact that international imbalances are not a new phenomenon, their development after the...
Intertemporal models of the current account generally assume that global shocks do not affect the cu...
This Working Paper should not be reported as representing the views of the IMF. The views expressed ...
This paper describes a new analytical framework for the quantitative assessment of international ext...
We undertake a quantitative analysis of the dispersion of current accounts in an open economy versio...
Using forecasts from Consensus Economics Inc., we provide evidence on the efficiency of real GDP gro...
Global current account imbalances widened before the 2007/2008 crisis and have narrowed since. While...
The statistical discrepancy in the U.S. international transactions accounts has tended to be both la...
The rising current account deficit in the USA has attracted considerable attention in recent years. ...
Data published in IMF country reports and International Financial Statistics (IFS) may differ for se...
The global economy has, in recent times, continued to face large and unprecedented external imbalanc...
The recent global financial crisis has been described as the abrupt unwinding of the macroeconomic i...
Large shifts in countries’ external current account positions can be disruptive, often reflecting su...
This paper assesses some of the explanations that have been put forward for the global pattern of cu...
We examine whether the behavior of current account balances changed in the years preceding the globa...
Despite the fact that international imbalances are not a new phenomenon, their development after the...
Intertemporal models of the current account generally assume that global shocks do not affect the cu...
This Working Paper should not be reported as representing the views of the IMF. The views expressed ...
This paper describes a new analytical framework for the quantitative assessment of international ext...
We undertake a quantitative analysis of the dispersion of current accounts in an open economy versio...
Using forecasts from Consensus Economics Inc., we provide evidence on the efficiency of real GDP gro...
Global current account imbalances widened before the 2007/2008 crisis and have narrowed since. While...
The statistical discrepancy in the U.S. international transactions accounts has tended to be both la...