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July 16, 2019

MSU teams with state’s top universities to provide economic forecasting for Detroit

Michigan State University joins the University of Michigan and Wayne State University in a collaboration that will provide Detroit-specific economic data analysis and forecasting services to the state’s largest city.

The City of Detroit University Economic Analysis Partnership brings together the economic forecast and modeling power from the three schools in a new five-year agreement.

The MSU effort will be led by the MSU Extension Center for Local Government Finance & Policy, which works closely with municipal governments on fiscal analyses and increasing public understanding of fiscal issues.

“The research team will make the core forecasting model available to city staff for the city’s use,” said Eric Scorsone, director of the MSU Extension center. “They will be able to change forecast assumptions to produce their own forecasts or to perform scenario analysis.”

The Research Seminar in Quantitative Economics, or RSQE, at University of Michigan will spearhead partnership and guide collaborative efforts, while  MSU’s Center for Local Government Finance and Policy will contribute revenue modeling and forecasting, and Wayne State’s Department of Economics will bring locally relevant data and its housing and property tax modeling.

As part of the project, the universities will accomplish three main tasks:

  • Build an econometric forecasting model for the city of Detroit economy and the city’s major tax revenues
  • Develop local economic indicators, indices and reports 
  • Present the city’s economic forecast each year

The researchers will use public data, including that collected by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, American Community Survey, Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages, County Business Patterns, Internal Revenue Service, Bureau of Economic Analysis, Federal Housing Finance Agency, and data from the city of Detroit and other local sources such as Data Driven Detroit, the Detroit Economic Growth Corp. and Detroit Future City.

Michigan State and Wayne State researchers have extensive experience using local governments’ internal data in economic analyses.

The universities will work with the city’s forecasting and economic analysis unit within the Chief Financial Officer’s budget office. Most public economic data is at the county or regional level. Detroit-specific data can allow the city government and community stakeholders to quantify local economic conditions and to plan, design, finance, and evaluate programs to improve economic opportunities for Detroiters.

“The city and the universities envision creating one of the nation’s leading partnerships between a major city and its regional research universities,” said Steven Watson, Detroit’s director of forecasting and economic analysis.

For more information, visit http://www.msue.msu.edu

To contact an MSU expert in your area, visit https://www.canr.msu.edu/outreach/experts/, or call 888-MSUE4MI.

By: Sean Corp