Rationalizing Firm Forecasts
Nicholas Bloom,
Mihai A. Codreanu and
Robert Fletcher
No 33384, NBER Working Papers from National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc
Abstract:
We partner with a large US payment-processing company to run a 5-year, 10 wave panel survey of incentivized quarterly sales forecasts on over 6,000 firms. We match firm predictions to proprietary revenue data to assess accuracy. We find firms forecast poorly, with issues of inaccuracy, over-optimism, predictable errors and over-precision. To assess the causes of these forecasting issues we run experiments on: (i) data use, (ii) incentives, (iii) forecasting skill, and (iv) contingent thinking. We find greater data use primarily decreases noise and reduces over-precision, while higher incentives moderate over-optimism. Both moderately increase accuracy. The other two treatments have no impact. These results suggest forecasting biases can be reduced but are hard to eliminate. In a simple simulation model, we show these biases change firm responsiveness to changes in taxes and productivity, highlighting their macro importance.
JEL-codes: J0 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025-01
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-hrm, nep-lab and nep-tid
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