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Posts tagged with: "GDPC1"

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GDP revisions

Measuring GDP and its components is tricky business. GDP is supposed to measure all economic activity of a country, but of course not all activity is well monitored. So one has to work with proxies and estimates based on various indicators and surveys. Those efforts take time, and GDP estimates must be corrected after they’re first released. Everyone knows the initial GDP measure is imprecise and that revisions can be rather dramatic, yet the initial release receives the lion’s share of press coverage. Later revisions receive little attention, yet they matter quite a bit.

The latest GDP release included revisions going all the way back to 2012. ALFRED, a sibling of our FRED database, allows comparison of different historical “vintages” of data for many series included in FRED. The graph above shows the quarter-to-quarter growth rates for the two latest releases of U.S. real GDP. One can easily see that there have been some stark changes: In particular, the measure for the first quarter of 2015 was initially a much-discussed negative growth rate but was then revised to reveal a positive growth rate.

If these revisions average out to zero, we simply have an imprecise measure of GDP and that’s that. But if these revisions lean in one particular direction, then we may have some systematic bias in the initial estimates. One way to look for a significant bias is to examine the levels of GDP across data vintages. (The levels are the cumulation of the growth rates.) The graph below shows these levels, and one can see a difference between the two series all the way to the last data point.

How these graphs were created: For the first graph, search “real gross domestic product” on ALFRED. Choose “Series” instead of “Site” on the drop down menu (which is to the left of the search field). Click on the first choice and then on “% Chg” under “Units” below the graph. The second graph is simply the default version of the first graph, which has units in billions of dollars.

Suggested by Christian Zimmermann

View on FRED, series used in this post: GDPC1

A new trend in GDP?

Let’s look at real gross domestic product for the United States. To help us, we’ll also use a new feature of FRED graphs: custom lines. This feature can be useful to highlight a new trend that emerges as additional data points are added. The graph shows that the U.S. economy seems to be on a new trend, with a similar growth trend as before but a notch lower. It looks as if the economy lost a few years of growth during the previous recession and is now back on track. It this the whole story? Of course not. There’s much more to measuring the health of the economy than just GDP. But this particular development is quite startling.

How this graph was created: Start with a graph of quarterly real GDP. Select the starting date of 1994-10-01, either by typing that date in the box above the graph or by moving the ruler below the graph. For the first trend line, use the “Add a Series” feature and select “Trend Line” from the pull-down menu. By default, it creates a line from the first to the last data point in the visible range. Change the end date of that line to 2007-10-01 and associate with it the value of GDP at that date. (To do so, hover over the graph to find the value for that date and then add that end value to the trend line.) Add the second trend line in a similar way, but start at 2009-10-01. Finally, change the color of the second trend line to burgundy to match the first.

Suggested by Christian Zimmermann

View on FRED, series used in this post: GDPC1

The GDP residual

GDP is intended to serve as a measure of all economic activity in an economy. But not every transaction is tracked, so one has to rely on estimates and models for parts of GDP. There are three ways one can measure GDP: adding up all expenditures, adding up all incomes, and adding up all value-added in the economy. All three should give you the same number. In practice, they don’t quite match up because of measurement issues. The difference between the expenditure and income approaches is called the statistical discrepancy. It is graphed above as a share of GDP, shown in red.

Another issue occurs when converting nominal values to real values: This is accomplished by applying a calculation to a basket of GDP components for a particular base year and keeping those prices constant for the other years. (The actual calculation is a bit more complex than this.) Adding up these GDP components does not exactly achieve GDP, and this difference is called the GDP residual. It is graphed above as a share of GDP, shown in blue. It is very small around the base year, but it deviates more substantially in earlier years, up to 6%.

How this graph was created: Search for GDP residual and add “Real Gross Domestic Product: Residual” (billions of chained 2009 dollars, quarterly, seasonally adjusted) to the graph. Then add real GDP (billions of chained 2009 dollars, quarterly, seasonally adjusted) to series 1 and apply transformation a/b. For the second line, search for GDP discrepancy and add “Gross Domestic Product (GDP); statistical discrepancy…” (quarterly, millions of dollars, seasonally adjusted) to the graph. Then add nominal GDP (quarterly, billions of dollars, not seasonally adjusted; not real GDP, as the discrepancy is nominal) to series 2 and apply transformation a/b/1000 . The division by 1000 here is because one series is in billions of dollars and the other is in millions of dollars.

Suggested by Christian Zimmermann

View on FRED, series used in this post: A959RX1Q020SBEA, GDP, GDPC1, GDPSDCQ027S


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