Abstract

Agustín Maravall Herrero (Madrid, 1944) is one of the world’s authorities in seasonal adjustment and automatic forecasting of economic time series. He studied Agricultural Engineering and completed a doctorate at the Universidad Politécnica de Madrid. With a Ford-Fulbright fellowship he moved to the University of Wisconsin-Madison to obtain a Ph.D. in Economics in 1975. He worked at the Research Division of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors (the Fed) in Washington D.C. and in 1979 returned to Madrid as a Senior Economist in the Research Department of the Banco de España (BE). In the period 1989-96, he was a full professor in the Department of Economics of the European University Institute (EUI) in Florence. He returned to the BE as Chief Economist and Head of the Time Series Analysis Unit and retired in December 2014.Maravall has done outstanding research in time series and has been a pioneer in developing methodology and writing computer programs for automatic estimation and model selection, seasonal adjustment, and forecasting of time series. His programs “Time Series Regression with ARIMA noise, Missing observations and Outliers” (TRAMO) and “Signal Extraction in ARIMA Time Series” (SEATS), jointly developed with Victor Gómez, have had a large influence in applied forecasting, including adjusting series for seasonality and possibly other undesirable effects, such as outliers, or missing observations, and have been used in many economic institutions around the world. He has been very active in promoting the automatic analysis of time series, teaching short courses in many countries. Also, he has stimulated research in this field being on the editorial board of the Journal of Business and Economic Statistics and the Journal of Econometrics. He has been a Special Advisor to the European Central Bank (ECB) and Eurostat in time series analysis. His research contributions have been recognized as Fellow of the Journal of Econometrics, 1995; Fellow of the American Statistical Association, 2000; Julius Shiskin Award for Economic Statistics, 2004, and the highest prizes for Economic Research in Spain: The Rey Jaime I Prize in Economics, 2005 and the Rey Juan Carlos Prize in Economics, 2014.

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