"The government says the economy grew by 6.8 percent in the final quarter of 2008, but that is based on an outdated system that measures growth against the same period a year earlier...Compared to the previous quarter, the method used by most major economies, growth was as low as 1 percent and possibly zero, economists say."
Beyond the debates regarding how China is actually doing, this illustrates two different methodologies for looking at GDP growth. From my point of view they're both relevant, and in fact when you look at actually statistical releases, both data points are generally published. I would NOT however call the quarter on last year's quarter methodology as "outdated". There are solid grounds for using this methodology as the main point of reference, just as there are weaknesses. As pointed out, it doesn't capture the momentum of the economy very well. On the other hand it's better at abstracting from "seasonal" effects than a mechanical seasonal adjustment of the raw numbers would. How so?
The problem with applying seasonal adjustment to China data, as for any majority Chinese country, is the enormous impact of Chinese New Year on spending and economic activity. Since CNY follows a lunar calender, the effect falls earlier every year. For Malaysia, we also have the additional effects of Aidil Fitri, which also depends on a lunar calender. This presents a problem for seasonal adjustment since the various methodologies use historical data to calculate the seasonal indices. Just as important, adjusting for strong seasonal effects introduce an element of artificiality into national accounts interpretation. In practice however, these factors don't seem to matter much, at least in the data I've been looking at. What does matter is the q-o-q methodology tends to accentuate momentum too much.
To illustrate this, let's take a look at Malaysian RGDP (2001:1 to 2008:3; 2005 prices):
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjEW4b1Lj6NS1tUO2WDLQhZrdmSYOFIe4ud3oN0iZFsxF4HmHEHZkBFz2B_eg_f1u8kRuOk4adY3xpu2BP9XnsFvzg3vzHE7zJhfsTFOfGFWXGDfAFfOkihaT_YFyk7VIS4VUXVyd3QP14/s320/20090208_RGDP.png)
From the chart, the seasonal effect is obvious and persistent. This is what it looks like after seasonal adjustment (using the US Census Bureau X11 multiplicative method):
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgKIi2Ze-NbuWd6-lm3gBzjW37YufK0OoxnPjnKYPGADJn8-1RJauxlj2q6B1IyH94d_vxxQwY671NWGz8A4d3JRK6jGplyNfTy6MOWhKZUZ9gKxhk2EHcnrpKXITR_ffdg21aMywODfLU/s320/20090208_RGDP2.png)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiOC95UetkEXvy_7-YscBwpvXQi47EgW6PRyIasLF8ov4GtWkNtvC2n1sj1q7JKKrBMoawdhiEIc0xsbvD47w2j6xtFlhcG54MNiw-YVa0AIuzTnmrBBw5xXq4Mps3-E7HZJvhchg0Q-Tg/s320/20090208_RGDP+growth.png)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiZkzRdYU0Pm3T7ucGAxCQ2Nzqa1N1msz8qsNfsSHYYi8wDFcrVfkl31zk2zIxEwal5V7dL-jdcF3gOfW0eT1oN-wvFXVWSG_KwDXkBuf1W17AvEq3ey5f5XuMNStPeM0DRPfT0J4PV5bY/s320/20090208_US+rgdp+growth.png)
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