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Forecasting Facing Economic Shifts, Climate Change and Evolving Pandemics
Author(s) -
Jennifer L. Castle,
Jurgen A. Doornik,
David F. Hendry
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
econometrics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.842
H-Index - 17
ISSN - 2225-1146
DOI - 10.3390/econometrics10010002
Subject(s) - climate change , pandemic , imperfect , econometrics , greenhouse gas , climatology , series (stratigraphy) , time series , economics , meteorology , covid-19 , environmental science , computer science , geography , geology , machine learning , medicine , paleontology , linguistics , oceanography , philosophy , disease , pathology , infectious disease (medical specialty)
By its emissions of greenhouse gases, economic activity is the source of climate change which affects pandemics that in turn can impact badly on economies. Across the three highly interacting disciplines in our title, time-series observations are measured at vastly different data frequencies: very low frequency at 1000-year intervals for paleoclimate, through annual, monthly to intra-daily for current climate; weekly and daily for pandemic data; annual, quarterly and monthly for economic data, and seconds or nano-seconds in finance. Nevertheless, there are important commonalities to economic, climate and pandemic time series. First, time series in all three disciplines are subject to non-stationarities from evolving stochastic trends and sudden distributional shifts, as well as data revisions and changes to data measurement systems. Next, all three have imperfect and incomplete knowledge of their data generating processes from changing human behaviour, so must search for reasonable empirical modeling approximations. Finally, all three need forecasts of likely future outcomes to plan and adapt as events unfold, albeit again over very different horizons. We consider how these features shape the formulation and selection of forecasting models to tackle their common data features yet distinct problems.

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