The Memorization Problem: Can We Trust LLMs' Economic Forecasts?

Abstract

Large language models (LLMs) cannot be trusted for economic forecasts during periods covered by their training data. Counterfactual forecasting ability is non-identified when the model has seen the realized values: any observed output is consistent with both genuine skill and memorization. Any evidence of memorization represents only a lower bound on encoded knowledge. We demonstrate LLMs have memorized economic and financial data, recalling exact values before their knowledge cutoff. Instructions to respect historical boundaries fail to prevent recall-level accuracy, and masking fails as LLMs reconstruct entities and dates from minimal context. Post-cutoff, we observe no recall. Memorization extends to embeddings.

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