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Task Force on Data Presentation and Seasonal Adjustment Recommendations for the presentation of growth rates. Outline. 1 Introduction 2 General Assumption 3 Recommendations Rate of change with respect to previous period Rate of change with respect to the same period of previous year
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Task Force on Data Presentation and Seasonal AdjustmentRecommendations for the presentation of growth rates
Outline 1 Introduction 2 General Assumption 3 Recommendations • Rate of change with respect to previous period • Rate of change with respect to the same period of previous year • Annualised growth rates
1 Introduction • Task Force on Data Presentation and Seasonal Adjustment was set up 2 years ago • Last year: presentation of thoughts on the presentation of growth rates • Meeting at the beginning of this year • Today: Task Force recommendations
2 General Assumption Focus on presenting economic indicators to the general public
3 Recommendations • Motivation for the recommendations • Recommendations in detail
Rate of change with respect to previous period - motivation I • What is the general public interested in? • News = seasonally adjusted data = trend-cycle and irregular movements • To deal with irregular movements that blur the trend-cycle, the following rate of change can be used (Xt+Xt-1+Xt-2)/(Xt-3+Xt-4+Xt-5)100-100
Rate of change with respect to previous period - motivation II • An estimation of the trend-cycle can convey misleading information about the true current movement since they are usually estimated by extrapolating the underlying trend of the recent past. This is not in line with the presentation of news.
Rate of change with respect to previous period - recommend. I For rate of change with respect to previous period, seasonally adjusted data is the best way of presenting information about a time series (trend-cycle and irregular movements) and of presenting short-term developments, even if the irregular component is relatively large.
Rate of change with respect to previous period - recommend. II To deal with irregular movements that blur the trend, the “rate of change based on two or three month’s worth of values” can be utilised.
Rate of change with respect to previous period - recommend. III Percentage changes based on the trend-cycle component should be avoided if presenting current developments since the trend-cycle values at the current end of the series are usually estimated by extrapolating the underlying trend of the recent past and can therefore convey misleading information about the true current movement.
Rate of change with respect to previous period - recommend. IV Though seasonally adjusted time series are also revised over time, they reveal the cyclical movements at turning points sooner than raw or trend-cycle series do.
Rate of change with respect to the same period of previous year - motivation I • YoY very common in current practice of users and media • Warning I: YoY can be misleading in assessing the cyclical movements of an indicator owing to the compounding of movements over a 12-month period.
Rate of change with respect to the same period of previous year - motivation II • Warning II: Base effects • Warning III: Trading-day effects
Rate of change with respect to the same period of previous year - recommendation • For rate of change with respect to the same period of the previous year, the year-on-year changes should be applied to raw data and to data adjusted for calendar effects if the latter are available. Where necessary, special effects contained in the base period should be highlighted when presenting YoY (base effect).
Rate of change with respect to the same period of previous year - open question • YoY based on seasonally adjusted data versus YoY based on raw (or only trading-day adjusted) data • Common practice • Conflicting signals • Additional information
Annualised growth rates - motivation I • Annualised growth rates help to answer the question of which annual percentage change would occur if the development established during the year were to continue unchanged. • Problems • Seasonal patterns • Trading-day influences • Irregular movements
Annualised growth rates - recommendation I For annualised growth rates, data should only be annualised on the basis of seasonally adjusted and calendar adjusted time series which contain just minor irregularities. This means that annualising the growth rate of a single month can result in misleading signals.
Annualised growth rates - recommendation II If special effects result in problems when annualising, the limited informative value of these annualised growth rates would have to be indicated separately.