PERG economists are developing a macroeconometric model to track the evolution of the US economy over the medium term, which is 3-5 years:
The model belongs to the family of “financial balances models”, an approach pioneered by Wynne Godley and collaborators at Cambridge University (UK) and then successfully developed by the macroeconomics team of the Levy Institute – led by Godley himself.
At its heart, the KFBM (Kingston Financial Balances Model) is characterised by a set of thorough accounting matrices that gather the major stocks and flows of the US economy as well as their links across institutional sectors. This results in three key strengths of the KFBM:
The aim of the model is not to provide short-term economic growth forecasts. Instead the model allows to assess the implications of current economic trends and shed some light on their sustainability. Results are published in economic reports aimed at the general public, at financial practitioners, at investors in general and at policy-makers. Reports are published twice a year.
The model is being developed by the economists Javier López Bernardo and Rafael Wildauer.