Economic Pulse: How do Treasury’s forecasts stack up?

We will be in surplus by 2016, Treasurer Wayne Swan announced to laughter last week.

Watching from the LeadingCompany newsroom, I could understand the Opposition’s mirth. They were laughing at a man who only 12 months ago had, with much fanfare, promised a tiny budget surplus in the coming year that even then commentators dismissed as unlikely.

How much was Swan wrong by? Well, the forecasted razor-thin budget surplus of $1.8 billion turned into a $19.4 billion deficit, an error to the tune of $21.2 billion.

Swan said the high Australian dollar had taken a “sledgehammer” to the government’s taxation revenues.

Should Swan have seen this coming? Well, not really. Politicians only sprout the forecasts the Treasury Department gives them. It’s Canberra’s Treasury wonks that can be afforded the real blame here.

Blaming economists for their forecasting errors is nothing new. Economic forecasters, after all, exist to make astrologers look good, or so the saying goes.

Which is why I was intrigued last week by a neat little analysis by reporter Andrew Crook over at LeadingCompany’s sister site, Crikey.

Crook tabled Treasury’s forecast budget outcome and the actual budget outcome for every year since 1996.

The biggest blowout over the period was the surprise $48 billion deficit in 2008-2009. Treasury’s also had a lot of trouble forecasting the past two years (out $21.2 billion last year and $20.8 billion the year before).

Throughout most of the previous decade and a half, however, forecasting errors remained small, with only a few billion gained or lost either way.

Average the errors out, and Treasury is off by about $2.24 billion a year on average. That suggests Treasury isn’t biased in its forecasts (i.e. any large deficits were offset by similar larger-than-expected surpluses over the period).

In Treasury’s own analysis of its forecasting, released in February this year, the agency acknowledged it had had difficulty assessing both the extent of the mining boom in 2005/6, and the depth of the global financial crisis from 2008.

Year Budget forecast Budget outcome Forecasting error
1996-97 -$5.65bn -$6.01bn $360m
1997-98 -$3.85bn $149m $3.99bn
1998-99 $2.69bn $3.89bn $1.2bn
1999-00 $5.21bn $13bn $7.79bn
2000-01 $2.84bn $5.87bn $3.03bn
2001-02 $1.52bn -$1.07bn -$2.59bn
2002-03 $2.09bn $7.37bn $5.28bn
2003-04 $3.66bn $7.99bn $4.33bn
2004-05 $2.39bn $13.58bn $11.19bn
2005-06 $8.92bn $15.76bn $6.84bn
2006-07 $10.8bn $17.19bn $6.39bn
2007-08 $10.6bn $19.75bn $9.15bn
2008-09 $21.7bn -$27.01bn -$48.71bn
2009-10 -$57.6bn -$54.49bn $3.11bn
2010-11 -$40.8bn -$47.5bn -$6.7bn
2011-12 -$22.6bn -$43.4bn -$20.8bn
2012-13 $1.8bn -$19.4bn -$21.2bn
Average -$3.31bn -$5.55bn -$2.24bn

“With the benefit of hindsight, Treasury has tended to underestimate growth during economic upswings and overestimate growth during economic downturns,” Access Economics forecaster and former Treasury official David Chessell wrote in the review.

The major problem identified in the report was an inability to accurately forecast company tax revenues months in advance. To this end, the report suggested Treasury develop a Business Liaison program to get in touch with industry groups every month to check in on how much luck or otherwise their members are having.

Overall, though, the report was complimentary, calling the forecasts “reasonably accurate”.

“Over the past two decades, Budget forecasts of nominal economic growth have exhibited a mean absolute percentage error of 1.6 percentage points,” the report found.

This all points to a counter-intuitive reality: when it comes to economic forecasting, Treasury does pretty well. Perceptions of bureaucratic inefficiency aside, its forecasts generally come far closer to reality than many in the private sector do.

In your business, you’d be pretty happy to be able to gauge your bottom line a year ahead with 1.6% accuracy. Imagine doing that for the whole economy.

Aside with some problems assessing company tax, Treasury’s errors are entirely what you would expect from a forecast: it tends towards a conservative estimate of how things have changed, for better or worse.

Back to Swan. Should he have believed the forecast?

He should have been more careful, knowing full well that on average, budgets are around $6 billion off forecast. A $1.5 billion surplus was always a foolhardy thing to build your house on.

But a $21.2 billion forecasting error? That was just unlucky.

This article first appeared on LeadingCompany.

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