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It is widely accepted that episodes of social unrest, conflict, political tensions and policy uncertainty affect the economy. Nevertheless, the real-time dimension of such relationships is less studied, and it remains unclear how to incorporate them in a forecasting framework. This can be partly explained by a certain divide between the economic and political science contributions in this area, as well as the traditional lack of availability of timely high-frequency indicators measuring such phenomena. The latter constraint, though, is becoming less of a limiting factor through the production of text-based indicators. In this paper we assemble a dataset of such monthly measures of what we call “institutional instability”, for three representative emerging market economies: Brazil, Colombia and Mexico. We then forecast quarterly GDP by adding these new variables to a standard macro-forecasting model using different methods. Our results strongly suggest that capturing institutional instability above a broad set of standard high-frequency indicators is useful when forecasting quarterly GDP. We also analyse relative strengths and weaknesses of the approach.
Policy uncertainty, Social Unrest, Social Conflict, Forecasting GDP, ddc:330, E37, HG1501-3550, Geopolitical risk, Natural language processing, forecasting, Geopolitical Risk, N16, Banking, Social conflict, Social unrest, D74, Policy Uncertainty, Forecasting, Natural Language Processing
Policy uncertainty, Social Unrest, Social Conflict, Forecasting GDP, ddc:330, E37, HG1501-3550, Geopolitical risk, Natural language processing, forecasting, Geopolitical Risk, N16, Banking, Social conflict, Social unrest, D74, Policy Uncertainty, Forecasting, Natural Language Processing
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