Year
2016
Abstract
This paper studies the properties of iterated and direct multistep forecasting techniques in the presence of in-sample location shifts (breaks in the mean). It also considers the interaction of these techniques with multistep intercept corrections that are designed to exhibit robustness to the shifts. In a local- asymptotic parameterization for the probability of breaks, we provide analytical expressions for forecast biases and mean-square forecast errors. We also provide simulations which show that breaks provide a rationale for using other methods than iterated multistep. In particular, we study how the relative accuracy of the methods relates to the forecast horizon, the sample size and the timing of the shifts. We show that direct multistep forecasting provides forecasts that are relatively robust to breaks and that its benefits increase with the forecast horizon. In an empirical application, we revisit an oft-used dataset of G7 macroeconomic series and corroborate our theoretical results.
CHEVILLON, G. (2016). Multistep Forecasting in the Presence of Location Shifts. International Journal of Forecasting, 32(1), pp. 121-137.