How Good Were 2025 Forecasts?

Last January I shared a roundup of forecasts for the year from markets and professional economists. Were they any good? Here was their prediction for the US economy:

WSJ’s survey of economists reports that inflation expectations for 2025 were around 2% before the election, but are closer to 3% now. Their economists expect GDP growth slowing to 2%, unemployment ticking up slightly but staying in the low 4% range, with no recession. The basic message that 2025 will be a typical year for the US macroeconomy, but with inflation being slightly elevated, perhaps due to tariffs.

The verdicts (based on current data, which isn’t yet final for all of 2025):

Inflation: Nailed it exactly (2.7%)

GDP: We’re still waiting on Q4, but 2025 as a whole is on track to be a bit above the 2.0% forecast.

Unemployment: 4.6% as of November 2025, a bit above the 4.3% forecast

Recession: Didn’t happen, making the 22% chance forecast look fine

So the professional forecasters were probably a bit low on GDP and unemployment, but overall I’d say they had a good year. What about prediction markets?

For those who hope for DOGE to eliminate trillions in waste, or those who fear brutal austerity, the message from markets is that the huge deficits will continue, with the federal debt likely climbing to over $38 trillion by the end of the year. This is one reason markets see a 40% chance that the US credit rating gets downgraded this year.

While the US has only a 22% chance of a recession, China is currently at 48%, Britain at 80%, and Germany at 91%. The Fed probably cuts rates twice to around 4.0%.

Deficits: Nailed it, the federal debt is currently around $38.4 trillion.

US Credit Downgrade: It’s hard to score a prediction of a 40% chance of a binary event happening, but in any case Moodys downgraded the US’ credit rating in May, so that all three major agencies now rate it as not perfect.

The Fed: Cut rates a bit more than expected.

Foreign Recessions: China and Britain avoided recessions. Germany had a recession by the technical definition of Kalshi’s market, but not really in practice (FRED shows -0.2% Real GDP growth in Q2 followed by 0.00000% growth in Q3). Britain avoiding recession when markets showed an 80% chance was the biggest miss among the forecasts I highlighted.

Overall though, I’d say forecasters did fairly well in predicting how 2025 turned out, in spite of curveballs like the April tariff shock.

If you think the forecasters are no good and you can do better, you have more options than ever. Prediction markets are getting more questions and more liquidity if you’re up for putting your money where your mouth is; if you don’t want to put your own money at risk, there are forecasting contests with prizes for predicting 2026.

WSJ: Nothing Important Happened in China, India, or AI This Year

I normally like the Wall Street Journal; it is the only news page I check directly on a regular basis, rather than just following links from social media. But their “Biggest News Stories of 2024” roundup makes me wonder if they are overly parochial. When I try to zoom out and think of the very biggest stories of the past five to ten years, three of the absolute top would be the rapid rise of China and India, together with the astonishing growth in artificial intelligence capabilities.

All three of those major stories continued to play out this year, along with all sorts of other things happening in the two most populous countries in the world, and all the ways existing AI capabilities are beginning to be integrated into our businesses, research, and lives. But the Wall Street Journal thinks that none of this is important enough to be mentioned in their 100+ “Biggest Stories”.

To be fair, China and AI do show up indirectly. AI is driving the 4 (!) stories on NVIDIA’s soaring stock price, and China shows up in stories about spying on the US, hacking the US, and the US potentially forcing a sale of TikTok. But there are zero stories regarding anything that happened within the borders of China, and zero that let you know that AI is good for anything besides NVIDIA’s stock price.

Plus of course, zero stories that let you know that India- now the world’s most populous country, where over one out of every six people alive resides- even exists.

AI’s take on India’s Prime Minister using AI

This isn’t just an America-centric bias on WSJ’s part, since there is lots of foreign coverage in their roundup; indeed the Middle East probably gets more than its fair share thanks to “if it bleeds, it leads”. For some reason they just missed the biggest countries. They also seem to have a blind spot for science and technology; they don’t mention a single scientific discovery, and only had two technology stories, on SpaceX catching a rocket and doing the first private spacewalk.

The SpaceX stories at least are genuinely important- the sort of thing that might show up in a history book in 50+ years, along with some of the stories on U.S. politics and the Russia-Ukraine war, but unlike most of the trivialities reported.

I welcome your pointers to better takes on what was important in 2024, or on what you consider to be the best news source today.