Score contribution per author:
α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count
Theory and extant empirical evidence suggest that the cross-sectional asymmetry across disaggregated price indexes might be useful in forecasting aggregate inflation. Trimmed-mean inflation estimators have been shown to be useful devices for forecasting headline PCE inflation. But is this because they signal the underlying trend or implicitly signal asymmetry in the underlying distribution? We address this question by augmenting a “hard to beat” benchmark headline PCE inflation forecasting model with robust trimmed mean inflation measures and robust measures of the cross-sectional skewness, both computed using the 180+ components of the PCE price index. Our results indicate significant gains in the point and density accuracy of PCE inflation forecasts over medium- and long-term horizons, including the COVID-19 pandemic. Improvements in accuracy stem mainly from the trend information implicit in trimmed-mean estimators, but skewness information is also useful. Examining goods and services PCE inflation (using newly constructed trimmed mean and skewness measures of the same) provides similar inference.