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Forecasting Brazilian inflation by its aggregate and disaggregated data: a test of predictive power by forecast horizon

Thiago Carlomagno Carlo and Emerson Marçal

Applied Economics, 2016, vol. 48, issue 50, 4846-4860

Abstract: This work aims to compare the forecast efficiency of different types of methodologies applied to Brazilian consumer inflation (Índice de Preços ao Consumidor Amplo; IPCA). We will compare forecasting models using disaggregated and aggregated data from IPCA over 12 months ahead. We used IPCA in a monthly basis, over the period between January 1996 and March 2012. Out-of-sample analysis will be made through the period of January 2008 to March 2012. The disaggregated models were estimated by Seasonal Autoregressive Integrated Moving Average (SARIMA) and will have different levels of disaggregation from IPCA as groups and items, as well as disaggregation with more economic sense used by Brazilian Central Bank as: (1) services, monitored prices, food and industrials and (2) durables, non-durables, semi-durables, services and monitored prices. Aggregated models will be estimated by time series techniques as SARIMA, state-space structural models and Markov-switching. The forecasting accuracy among models will be made by the selection model procedure known as Model Confidence Set developed by Peter Hansen, Asger Lunde and James Nason. We were able to find evidence of forecast accuracy gains in models using more disaggregated rather than aggregate data.

Date: 2016
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Working Paper: Forecasting Brazilian inflation by its aggregate and disaggregated data: a test of predictive power by forecast horizon (2013) Downloads
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DOI: 10.1080/00036846.2016.1167824

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