The uses and abuses of ‘consensus’ forecasts

The uses and abuses of ‘consensus’ forecasts

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Article ID: iaor19932480
Country: United Kingdom
Volume: 11
Issue: 8
Start Page Number: 703
End Page Number: 710
Publication Date: Dec 1992
Journal: International Journal of Forecasting
Authors:
Abstract:

Clemen’s review of the forecast-combining literature amply illustrates both the interest in and the importance of this subject. This article stresses the tautological properties of various consensus measures that assure their success relative to most individual forecasts. It confirms the finding of earlier studies that for each specific macroeconomic variable roughly one-third of individual forecasters are more accurate than a consensus. However, each individual does relatively poorly for some variable while the consensus, in contrast, necessarily never fails relative to most individuals. These results, like most previous studies, describe consensus measures that are synthetic constructs derived from a pre-existing set of individual forecasts. Strictly speaking, this contemporaneous consensus is not available to individual forecasters when their forecasts are made. A prior consensus measure, which is in their information sets, was relatively much less accurate than the contemporaneous measure. Nevertheless, a small subset of individual forecasters were generally inferior to the known, prior consensus forecast.

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