Check out the interesting new paper below. Of course I am a fan of predictive densities (e.g., GDP fan charts). Usually I compare them to the "realization" (e.g., "published GDP"). But of course, as the authors emphasize, the realization is just a point estimate of true GDP, whereas in reality true GDP is itself uncertain and has its own density, which can be estimated (maybe...) from revisions. Very interesting. I wonder, for example, how predictive density assessments based on the probability integral transform (e.g., here) would need to be modified to account for uncertainty in the measured realization.
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