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A TIME SERIES SOCIAL ACCOUNTING MATRIX ASSEMBLY SYSTEM: Application to Turkey, 1996-20051 Çağatay Telli State Planning Organization [email protected] Ebru Voyvoda Middle East Technical University [email protected] and Erinç Yeldan Bilkent University [email protected] First Draft May 2007 1 We thank to Fatih Kaya and Hakan Erten for their valuable assistance in updating the database and colleagues at State Planning Organization for their precious comments and suggestions. 1 Abstract The central issue of this study is to develop an assembly-line system for time series schematic Social Accounting Matrices (SAMs) for the Turkish real economy. We focus on the real side of the economy in the context of national accounting and applied general equilibrium modeling. We utilize a from up to down approach, and implement an integrated and interlocking system to define, collect, classify and manipulate the necessary data, in order to build the time series of annual SAMs over 1996-to date. The study generates three fundamental contributions to practical policy agenda and economic analysis; i) a very detailed, integrated, consistent and flexible structure of public, external and national accounts that can be accommodated to the demands of most modelers is produced, ii) latest socio-economic dynamics have been incorporated when building integrated national accounts; so that time(ly) series of SAMs have been generated; iii) the simulation and decomposition capabilities as well as potential accuracy and reliability of general equilibrium models have been improved by availability of yearly updated SAMs. Key Words: Social Accounting Matrix (SAM), time series, integrated national accounting, applied general equilibrium and policy analysis. 2 1. INTRODUCTION Any scientific inquiry requires an elaborate observation of phenomena being material or social. It is a well-known fact that availability and reliability of a data set is a real limit for policy analysts and most empirical economists. To this end, new methods of data compilation and refreshed information-accounting technologies as well as standardization measures, should be developed and readily incorporated to cure serious potential pitfalls in present databases. Economic and social systems, subject to an increasing complexity and interdepence, urge policy analyst to have quality and reliability in observation to properly and truly explain, conceptualize, understand, make meaning and drive the underlying dynamics of the scientific material. Otherwise “..Unreliable and biased data can result in seriously distorted (if not altogether wrong) development policy recommendations2.” For example if anyone takes the data about factor income shares at face value; Turkish economy would be two to three times more capital-intensive than the U.S. or the Japanese economy. Analysts and academicians unquestionably using these numbers, independent of their methods employed, would find pathological policy recommendations. Official growth statistics too, which reflects high performance of Turkish economy at rates about 8,9 percent annually in 2004, and 7,4 percent in 2005, confronted with increasing share of inventory stocks as an aggregate up to 7,9 percent of GDP. The doubtful character Mercenier J. and Yeldan E. 1996. “How Prescribed Policy Can Mislead When Data Are Defective: A Follow-up to Srinivasan (1994) Using General Equilibrium”. Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Research Department Staff Report 207. 2 3 of this number raises the issue of presence of real measurement and methodological errors in national accounting; even though Turkey is one of the countries having relatively a modern statistical system among other developing nations. This case is unsurprisingly common and even worse in most developing countries, which amplifies the problem at the international level. As Srinivasan states: “[u]nfortunately, it would appear that researchers either are not aware of or, worse still, have chosen to ignore the fact that the published data, national and international, suffer from serious conceptual problems, measurement biases and errors"3. Instead we argue that policy analysts and public officials should always be aware of the fact that whatever the sophistication of the analysis, it is only worth the quality of the supporting data it utilizes. Main Structural Vectors on Applied Research and Statistical System in Turkey In the example of Turkey, structural vectors affecting policy analysis process through the statistical system can be summarized as follows Socio economic environment and structure are subject to an everlasting and fast change in the new emerging market economies, to which statistical system generally may not adopt in time. 3 Srinivasan, T.N., 1994a, "Introduction," Journal of Development Economics 44 (1), 1-2.. 4 Statistical system currently operates in a highly fragmented structural process, sources and-or compilers of data each very resembling to distant islands in an ocean. Time series data of most variables in the Turkish case is available, but unfortunately not perfectly reliable and comparable. Because concepts, definitions and accounting rules adopted and employed are in a continuous movement, thus generating the problem of data break down in most series. Under above circumstances, time series methodology (econometrics) fundamentally produces erroneous results and even contradictory policy formulations4. Hence a strategic set of action is vital to accompany the challenging data-policy environment for empirical researchers and institutional public actors of the field in Turkey: Calibrative (Structural) Modeling should be improved and used in search of relevant policy questions. Cooperative actions between international agencies, public authorities and academicians are to be encouraged. Aiming to feed these models with the “correct” and reliable data, quality investments in applied research of reliable and timely databases must be utilized according to the integrated national accounting framework. It is surely a balance to be achieved between time series and calibration approaches, referring to the limits transmitted to policy modeling through more often than not broken time series in countries like Turkey 5. Telli Ç. 2005a. “A Time Series Social Accounting Matrix Assembly System and Application to Turkey”. P 5-6. Expert Dissertation in State Planning Organization at Turkish Prime Ministry. (In Turkish). 4 5 It is no doubt that for developing institutional and structural capacities for such policy modeling further, researchers will face new problems like having even larger, (more) integrated and timely databases. The principal input of any applied general equilibrium effort is the construction of a micro-consistent benchmark dataset called Social Accounting Matrices (SAMs). The SAM basically can be defined as a matrix version and exposition of integrated national accounts of current and capital flows of production, distribution and accumulation activities in an economy. It is not surprising that such an endeavor is difficult to be estimated and expensive to be built with proficient costs of time, labor and money. The capabilities of applied general equilibrium modeling such as validation, timeliness and domain of applicability to a large extent depend on the availability and qualities of SAMs. In terms of empirical research, one of the most widely debated disadvantages of general equilibrium modeling is the calibration of model behavior to the very historical data. A recent good example of such backbone is Integrated Macro Model for Poverty Analysis (IMMPA) for Turkey, which solves Turkish economy -say in 2005- with the structural dynamics of a 1996 SAM6. Yet structural framework and macroeconomic dynamics of Turkish economy has greatly evolved between these years. 5 For potential synergies of merging two approaches can be further read from Hertel T, Hummels D,Ivanic M, Keeney Roman, How Confident Can We Be In CGE-Based Assessments of Free Trade Agreements, 2004 NBER. 6 Agenor P. R, Jensen H, Verghish M, Yeldan E. (2004). “Disinflation, Fiscal Sustainability and Labor Market Adjustment in Turkey”. Second draft. 6 Thus it is deliberately clear that there is a strategic complementarity between strategic goal one and two, in other words realizing strategic goal one is dependent to the success in goal two. Re-approaching To Construction of SAM As in most other developing countries SAM data in Turkish case is scarce, model-specific, historic, handmade (and hand-balanced), inconsistent and most of the time not reliable. In order to achieve strategic goal 2, SAM data should be: available, compatible to demands of modelers, updated (and annual), consistent and reliable. RAS method (see Bacharach 1971) and entropy method (see Robinson et al. 2001) are first to recall as previous studies of the issue. However these methods are i) driven mainly by model purposes and focuses on the balancing calculus between SAM rows and columns, ii) still lack a broader type, assembly line framework of annually updated and consistent SAMs. An integrated national accounting approach may be fruitful in terms of both developing national accounts and applied general equilibrium models’ accuracy and capabilities. What is the rationale behind such motive? When raw data from different official sources is integrated and reconciled; inconsistencies are readily observed and structural flaws inherent in the system are defined. 7 Corrections and second order actions are employed accordingly, through sequencing relative confidence degree of data itself. Therefore the outline of present study is as follows: Second section gives definitions and basic concepts about SAMs and national accounting frame and clarifies the structural mechanism designed for an assembly line with the purpose of building time series SAM plant called Interlocking System of SAMs (ISSAM). In the third part, we define the necessary adjustments and manipulations for integrating public sector statistics into SAM’s national borders. Section four describes the measures incorporating the foreign sector whereas the fifth one reveals the corrective actions for remaining national statistics such as production and income account as well as input output tables. We end with conclusions on limitations of the current stage of analysis and offer further steps for research. 8 2. SOCIAL ACCOUNTING MATRIX (SAM) A social accounting matrix (SAM) is a comprehensive, economy-wide data framework, typically representing the economy of a nation.7 Being strictly a square matrix, the underlying principle of SAM accounting is double entry bookkeeping by which revenues of any account is depicted along its row whereas expenditures of the same account is shown along its column. Therefore for a consistent SAM table, revenues and expenditures of each account must balance. In this study, the SAM definition we employed by and large depicts a typical aggregated version. Table 2.1. depicts the analytical structure of the aggregated SAM. A number of features worth further zooming: The standard SAM distinguishes between activity account which carries out production and commodity account which those domestically produced goods-services and the goods and services from/to foreign countries are marketed. Activity account is equivalent to productive sectors in input-output tables. Thus activity column allocate total production costs in producer prices whilst activity row collects revenues of production activities from home or foreign consumption. Commodity account’s column represents the supply of composite commodity to home markets that arise from domestic production and import; and its row represents 7 Pyatt and Round (1985) and Reinert and Roland-Holst (1997); Pyatt (1988) and Robinson and Roland-Holst (1988). 9 total interior demand. In other words commodity column disseminate aggregate absorption in the economy to domestic production and world markets and tax revenues of government in market prices whereas its row aggregates total domestic absorption of the economy including intermediate inter-sectoral demands. <Please insert Table 2.1 here> Independent treatment of production activities from commodity accounts is preferred because of (1) the effort to show different behavioral structure of commodity and factor markets, (2) the aim to define the origin of export goods8, and finally (3) the aim to capture the features of real world in which any commodity can be produced by multiple activities and any activity to produce multiple commodities. Factors of production are aggregate labor and aggregate capital. Factor columns represent total factor expenditures (dispersion of income to various economic agents) and factor rows show value added revenues of aggregate labor and capital (functional income distribution). Public sector is disaggregated into first a core government account incurring various tax activities and injecting its expenditures into the economy; second a social security institutions (SSIs) account channeling social security funds into government accounts and to related receivers as a mere intermediary.9 In SAM plant, exports are placed in activities account’s row. In this case, domestic total supply is made up of domestic production and import, and only domestic goods can be exported. 8 9 The distinct evaluation of government and social security institutions is because economic interpretation of some payments may otherwise be vague, in terms of our most modeling objectives. 10 Domestic non-governmental institutions consist of households, enterprises and domestic banks. At least one household account is necessary for a SAM, to channel (1) revenues from labor factor income directly, (2) to transfer net of enterprises capital income and distributed profits of domestic banks indirectly (as well as transfers payments of government) into final private consumption, after taxes and savings are incurred. On the other hand, enterprises earn factor incomes and receive domestic/foreign transfers; distribute profits, pay taxes and close foreign liabilities. As contrasted to households enterprises do not consume.10 Domestic Banks account does not have any factor income, assuming a zero interest on their earnings from their activities in marketing financial instruments. As parallel to SSIs account, being a mere intermediary, domestic banks here functions as a primitive banking sector in real world and channels flow of funds among institutions and rest of the world in a way to reflect basic macro investment-saving relations in walrasian matrix. Remaining agents of capital account is generalized under private and public investment accounts to spend available funds to investment goods. Different accounting types of interest are as follows: (1) national income and national product, (2) fund flow tables, (3) balance of payments, (4) national balance sheet tables (wealth), and (5) input-output tables. National income accounting shows double directional cyclic relations obtained from relation of demand and dividing between production and income in current term; fund flow tables show changes in all movement of money and credit in economy, with asset and liability of various institutions; balance 10 Under conditions of available data, it may be more convenient to separately model tax paying and saving behaviors of enterprises rather than the assumption of having an unvaried structure with households. 11 of payments exhibit exchange of all goods and services with exterior world, and lender and borrower relations; national balance sheet tables show real and nominal assets and their distributions; input-output tables exhibit inter-sectoral flow of goods and services. These closely related accounting types have different relation networks of the same economy. SAM unifies these critical balances of the economy generated by various accounting frameworks and different institutions into one single consistent system of national accounts. So that SAM is considered as a highly comprehensive accounting system since it overtly portrays both exterior and interior situation of a nation’s economy. The structure above expresses the equality of (1) cost (distributed earnings included) to obtained incomes; (2) incomes (tax and saving totals included) to expenditure; (3) supply to demand for each goods, in equilibrium when the row and columns totals are equal. It emphasizes when (n-1) account units from n units come to equilibrium; nth unit comes to equilibrium automatically because of Walras Law. However the process of constructing a consistent datum for an economy-wide model is a real burden that researchers should overcome. Greater the extent of disaggregation across sectors, factors and institutions the more difficult task of reconciliation will be. Inconsistencies require modelers to make decisions about relative reliability and accuracy of various data sources. It often occurs that input-output accounts and national and trade accounts differ when various figures in interest are considered. Balance of payments data and national accounts’ foreign trade and net factor income figures rarely 12 converge each other. Governments and other institutions flow of funds data are generally hard to reconcile among different accounts because definition, coverage and accuracy of various accounts are often incompatible. Required technical conditions are further intensive if one is to come up with estimates of SAM tables on annual basis since, for countries like Turkey, production and consumption data depending on input-output balances have not been published at desirable continuity11. Robinson and El Said (2000) propose a GAMS version of balancing method of SAM inconsistencies. Such a computer based reallocation of rows and columns minimizing deviation parameters involved in the process works excellent for modelers, but nevertheless at the last stage of reconciliation sequence. It lacks a complete set of integrated accounts for manufacturing already balanced SAM lines annually, through absorbing the statistics produced by different institutions of the economy. What is our approach and style of SAM Plant? Thus a new method of data assembling and need to sequence steps from starting with the most reliable data sources and compelling others to be consistent with them are necessary. Our method will fundamentally lie on improved usage of a compact reconciliation sequence that is adopted from an integrated national accounting approach. 11 State Institute of Statistics of Turkey, had generated input-output tables for years 1990 and 1996, 1998 and the latest one is about to be completed for 2000. 13 The System of National Accounts (SNA) consists of a coherent, consistent and integrated set of macroeconomic accounts based on standard concepts, definitions, classifications and accounting rules. The primary function of SNA is to facilitate economists and analysts to measure the economic activity in the economy in a given period of time. Thus the system helps policy makers to design various social and economic policies as well as comparing performance of different economies12. In theoretical vocabulary SNA constitutes a full blown system but in real life implementations those vary regarding both sources of statistics and definitions adopted due to various practical concerns. Therefore in many countries statistical process can not be defined as being interlocking and integrated. Within the light of discussion above, Turkish statistical process is not an exception to this issue, having real institutional gaps the worse. As highlighted before, we aim to employ concepts and approach of integrated national accounting into real life praxis with strengthened enthusiasm and creative thinking. We will try to make a system, a coherent and interlocking body from scores of organs, even though there may exist procedural and methodological walls among hundreds of indicators which are in our focus. The objective boundary in our effort then is minimizing the distance between the products of SAM plant and official statistics. The system created should balance between reflections and consolidations; it must mirror 12 For further reading please refer to the SNA Manual by United Nations,...... 14 indispensable macroeconomic indicators as they are used by academic and policy maker majority on the other. Second methodological objective for the study will rely on from top to down approach in manufacturing a SAM structure. A bottom-up methodology is neither practical nor functional for our purpose of unifying statistical clans in a country. Nevertheless one can make use of survey data and-or census data when generating updated micro SAM balances according to diverse modeling cases. Thirdly, the present study aims to construct a SAM “plant” for Turkey starting from 1996 and just for current and capital accounts in other words real economy. Following pace will, with anticipation, smooth the progress of fabricating a full blown consolidated SAM plant for Turkey. Therefore the SAM plant, together with the Interlocking System of SAMs (ISSAM), keeps figures such as GDP, final consumption, public investment and international trade, PSBR and public saving investment gap unchanged. Nevertheless it implements obligatory corrections and linkages in those figures. We finally set up links among various macroeconomic indicators, concepts, definitions and classifications in an iterative process. The process admittingly has to enclose subjective judgment about the soundness of the data and data sources. For example most figures are tied on the public accounts of SPO and macro variables of SIS and conciliatory decisions will need to be made along. 15 3. ADAPTATION OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS WITH INTERLOCKING SYSTEM OF SAM (ISSAM) Public sector general equilibrium (PSGE) defines public sector revenues and disposable income, that is used for government consumption and investment as well as current and capital transfers. The magnitude on these variables will be needed to depict out necessary steps generating some critical macroeconomic and fiscal parameters like public saving investment gap and public sector borrowing requirement (PSBR). It also shows the financing process of these deficits both in institutional and functional terms. The PSBR, most widely used measure of the fiscal deficit, is the difference between public expenditures and public revenues in a period of time, usually a year. Alternatively it can be defined as the portion of public deficits that has to be financed with public sources. It is based on flows and double entry accounting like balance of payments. It is calculated fundamentally with the above-the-line approach. However, as stated above it provides the essential information about the financing breakdown. There are three main types of financing public gap: (1) Domestic borrowing through interest bearing assets, (2) money creation finance through Central Bank (CB) and (3) foreign borrowing. Definition of the Scope of the Public Sector In Turkey PSBR coverage includes central government, local governments, financial and non-financial SEE’s, social security institutions (SSIs), extra budgetary funds 16 (EBF’s) and finally revolving funds (RF’s).13 However, it excludes the Central Bank.14 As of the treatment of CB, in public finances CB is considered as a part of the private sector. Further improved measures of public fiscal deficits may be derived adjusting PSBR 15 by : (1) taking into account the movements in general price level and exchange rates (2) adopting a new approach that is basically concentrated on below-the-line datum (3) a newly treatment of public sector such that isolates Central Bank (and Saving Deposit Insurance Fund) from private sector16 (4) and finally advanced adaptation of public finance accounts (and PSBR) with European Standards of Accounting (ESA) and General Finance Statistics (GFS) in a comprehensive manner.17 13 Following the structural reforms of IMF led 1999-2001 era, financial state economic enterprises (SEE’s) are excluded from SEE’s system, most extra budgetary funds were terminated or rendered to the budget, revolving funds and unemployment insurance funds were contained in public accounts. The reader should pay attention to this issue when comparing annual PSBR figures. 14 Due to quasi-fiscal activities of CB, a more unified emphasis on the public accounts may be to adopt the Consolidated Public Sector Deficits in real or nominal terms which should definitely show the comprehensive public sector claims on private funds. 15 IMF uses some adjusters for PSBR such as net lending of the public sector to private institutions and privatization receipts. Net lending normally having below-the-line position, is treated as an above-the-line item due to (1) it is a consequence of a policy choice thus should be reflected to the measures of fiscal activity and expenditures (2) governments’ lending rate is usually below the market rate (concessional) and generally repayments are not received back fully by public institutions. Privatization revenues are excluded from public revenues since the way is a finance through liquidation of non-financial assets. 16 World Bank Office Memorandum, Turkey, Tevfik Yaprak, Sebnem Akkaya, Sven B. Kjellstrom; Estimation of The Operational Deficit and Alternative Proposal, 26 th October 1989. 17 Towards generating an economy wide SAM assembling system, this section seeks to construct integral bonds between public finance statistics and others, while making necessary corrections and improvements within the implementation of public finance accounting. We present below the verbal structure of PSGE and hence PSBR which is generated by SPO on annual basis. I. Revenues (Normally having debit (positive) accounts)…… (IA+IB+IC) A. Tax Revenues……………………………. ………………… (a+b) a. Direct Taxes (proper) b. Indirect Taxes B. Non-Tax Revenues C. Factor Income (net) II. Expenditures (Normally having credit (negative) accounts)…(IIA+IIB+IIC+IID+IIE+IIF) A. Social Funds (net) 17 Indeed SPO has already initialized studies of the issue and produced some of the necessary adjustments for such a structure in public accounts. Preliminary Economic Programme that has been started to be prepared in line within the context of European Union reforms, gives an ESA defined public budget, mainly adjusting the net revenue and net expenditure items to gross figures of public accounting. But this study (1) does not generate any time series data back to 1996; instead it starts from the year 1999 (2) We use slightly different and more practical measures when adopting PSBR with SAM. GFS also takes profit of accrual basis accounting practice since it provides the best estimate of the macroeconomic impact of government fiscal policy. 18 B. Transfers (proper) (net) Memo: Public Disposable Income18……………………... (I-IIA-IIB) C. Current Expenditures Memo: Public Savings……………………………………(I-IIA-IIB-IIC) D. Public Investment Memo: Public Saving-Investment Balance………………(I-IIA-IIB-IIC-IID) E. Capital Transfers (net) F. Stock Changes Fund 19 Public Sector Borrowing Requirement…………………………(II-I) III. Financing20 A. Consolidated Budget B. SEE's (Including SEE's under privatization) C. Local Administrations D. Social Security Institutions E. EBF's (Extra Budgetary Funds) 18 In the standard SPO format, Public Disposable Income is placed in the revenue block after leaving room for social funds and current transfers as net of revenue items. We have preferred this format for practical purposes and treated social funds and current transfers to come up in expenditure block. 19 In the standard SPO format, stock revaluation fund is shown under financing items but added up to the public expenditures to reach PSBR. 20 SPO has data of financing breakdown both at institutional basis and functional basis. We preferred here to display institutional decomposition. 19 F. Revolving Funds G. Unemployment Insurance Fund. <Please insert Table 3.1 here> The reader should be aware of that some items above are explained as net in parenthesis; referring to the fact the account has material offsets between revenues and expenditures so understates/overstates its true gross volume. Factor income, social funds, current and capital transfers of public sector institutions will constitute our basic focus, for which a developed and consistent version of public accounts can be derived as a fundamental input for the SAM structure. This point will serve as a further step in designing accurate and distortion-proof SAM data in which public sector flows is corrected for its real size over the economy, otherwise the volume of public institutions’ sphere will be underestimated by from 5 up to 12 percent of GDP between 1996-2003 periods. So that true impact of various fiscal measures as well as the accurate general equilibrium effects within the whole economy can be analyzed correctly. Adaptation of Social Funds Figure and Social Security Institutions (SSIs) Social funds in standard SPO PSBR accounts show the net of social security institutions’ proper revenues from social security taxes collected, over the social security expenditures incurred by those institutions. In other words it is a deficit or surplus measure of public sector orienting from proper social security activities within the economy. 20 Scope of social funds figure contains all public social security institutions; The State Pension Fund (Emekli Sandigi), Social Security Organization for Self Employed ( BagKur), Social Security Institution (SSK) and Unemployment Insurance Fund (Issizlik Sigortasi), and at the same time is net of intra-transfer accounts between SSIs. Netting up the revenues with expenditures statistically downsizes the volume of flows attained and spent by public social security sector hence causing to overestimate the space held by non-government units in the economy. <Please insert Table 3.2 here> Table 3.2. exhibits the structural nature of necessary adjustments to tackle with this problem. Revenues and expenditures of social funds are derived in gross terms and on institutional basis. A breakdown of social security receipts and expenditures on factor basis is also obtained in order to capture sub account information required for SAM Hence two major points worth to be focused on; first as Balance row of the Table 3.2 highlights, it is total proper revenues of SSIs minus total proper social security expenditures what is actually presented as Social Funds in SPO‘s PSBR accounts. For example for the year 1996, total social security premium revenues of SSIs was 537.167 billion TL whereas expenditures was 804.063 billion TL and social funds was –266.896 indicating the net revenues of the public social security system as a whole. Instead the link with SAM is settled up on gross incomes and gross expenses of SSIs; 537.167 billion TL and 804.063 billion TL respectively for the same year. 21 Second, social security premium revenues are classified in the way to reflect the burden on primary factors of production, labor and capital. In this respect Employee Share in Table 3.2 shows burden of social security system on labor across SSIs in current prices. Aggregate shares of premiums out of aggregate social security taxes that fix basis for the table are obtained from SPO authorities. By this method, Social Security Institution (SSK) collects 14 points out of 33,5 points total premiums from employees alone; The State Pension Fund (Emekli Sandıgı) raises 6 points of the total 36 points and Unemployment Insurance Fund gets 2 out of 5 points taxes from labor factor.21 Social Security Organization for Self Employed (Bag-Kur) and the remaining portion of social security contributions constitute the Employers Share.22 Linking Social Security Institutions (SSIs) with SAM As revealed in preceding section, public sector is composed of a core government account and a channel account of SSIs by which flows in and out of social security system is tied to the public balances. Table 3.1. gives the merged SAM balances of public sector; total factor payments and supplementary information of the burden on capital and labor received by SSIs is shown under Direct Revenues classification and expenditures out SSIs are placed under general definition of transfer expenditures. As it 21 In 2000-2001 years contribution rates are as follows: Employees 2 points, state 2 points and employers 3 points whereas by 2002 there is 1 point of deduction across all contribution rates. The state share in Unemployment Insurance Fund is shown under the separate account of current transfers hence is not added up in the social funds. 22A more elaborate study will definitely improve the accuracy of this data, although we believe it does not change the general structural picture. 22 can easily be traced out from Table 2.1, labor account will give social security taxes to SSIs; and the government account, by transferring social funds for the excess of SSIs social security transfers to households, will close SSIs account.23 Adaptation of Public Sector Factor Income and Interest Cost Public sector factor income is total net receipts of public institutions under coverage that can be linked economically to the direct value added of public production factors, primarily public financial capital. Public enterprises or institutions attain profits and interest revenue as well as incur loss and bear interest cost. SEE’s, SSIs and EBF’s factor incomes are netted out by their relevant factor expenditures when recording. In parallel to the rationale behind the method we use for correcting SSIs by gross term accounting measures; (1) factor income presented originally in SPO PSBR tables have been cleared from interest costs (2) then these interest outlays have been pooled under a general interest expenditure account. Linking Public Sector Factor Income with SAM Total public sector factor income for 1996 is 713.846 billion TL in net of SEEs, SSIs and EBFs interest costs. In SAM, government account will acquire 713.846 plus 182.042 billion TL interest cost of these institutions and a total of 895.888 billion TL factor income from enterprise sector. The relevant interest cost will be allocated to Payroll taxes cover only employer’s compulsory social insurance contributions and excludes withholding wage from workers on behalf of tax authority. Rather it is preferred to put withholding wages onto household sector. Therefore the labor factor is assumed to be paying the whole burden of social security premiums regardless of the economic identity of the cash payers as employee or employers. 23 23 Domestic Banks account for domestic interest and Rest of The World account for sources obtained from abroad. Adaptation of Public Sector Current Transfers and Linking with SAM The primary portion of current transfers goes to the interest cost of central and local government bodies. The remaining portion is for transfers to households and enterprise sector. Now, we define current transfers to include above adjustments; social security payments and consolidated public sector interest cost by addition of SEE’s, SSIs and EBF’s interest payments. Table 3.3. gives the reader such breakdown of total interest cost across public budget units with the relevant supplementary information about origins of financial sources, which in turn will be used to form SAM data.24 <Please insert Table 3.3. here> For 1996, previous figure of current transfers 2.030.335 billion TL in PSGE accounts now is increased by a 804.063 billion TL social security payments and a 182.042 billion TL interest cost hence totaling 3.016.440 billion TL. In SAM table, government account (including the sub account of SSIs) will allocate this much current transfers among households, enterprises, domestic banks and rest of the world. Through core government account households will receive current transfers SEE’s foreign interest payments are forced to be compatible with CB accounts, the remaining portion is treated as domestic interest to give the total interest cost of SEE’s system in SPO PSGE accounts. EBF’s interest payments do not contain mandatory savings interest. 24 24 related to various fiscal policy measures whereas by channel of SSIs sub account they will be paid for social security expenditures. Enterprises will get transfers in the nature of production subsidies from core government which also link PSGE flows with inputoutput and national income accounting. One major problem arises at this point. 1996 IO publication notes that for the production subsidies, public sources that had been transferred for operating loss finance of SEE system is used. However SAM balances in our study should isolate SEE’s from the enterprise sector. We finally decide to use 1996 IO and national accounts’ production subsidy figure as an approximation of actual production subsidies by government to private enterprise sector. No reliable data is available on the topic, because public accounts usually rely upon a hybrid version of accrual and cash accounting in Turkish practice, it is a complicated task to materialize and measure the amount of subsidies.25 Domestic Banks are paid for government domestic interest bearing assets and rest of the world is received foreign interest of public sector. Balance of payments accounting for the interest cost of public sector is compelled to follow SPO accounts. Fiscal accounts are based on timely exchange rates and are generally valued at the exact times that payments occur. 26 25 GFS and ESA standards encourage analysts and accountants base public finance accounts on accrual basis hence seeing macroeconomic impact of fiscal policies. 26 See Foreign Balance section for an elaborate discussion. 25 After above adjustments and assumptions; enterprises, domestic banks and rest of the world accounts are closed in government column and household transfers are obtained being simply a residual from total current transfers. By this way, we implicitly treat transfers to enterprise sector is financed only by financial assets and borrowing from abroad, leaving sources held through non-financial assets disposal (hence capital transfers) out of our scope. Indeed we are only focused on adopting public finance accounts that are related with saving investment balance which ties public finance accounts to socio-economic structure of SAM in the framework of current national accounts. Remaining Issues: Adopting the Breakdown of Tax Accounts When constructing an economy-wide consistent SAM, government revenues are classified as revenues those levied either on production factors or on enterprises and households directly, and others that come from production activities and sales of good and services indirectly. General breakdown is below: A. Direct Revenues a. Factors’ Payments to SSIs b. Enterprise Taxes Gross Factor Income Corporate Taxes c. Household Taxes Income Taxes (Withholding wages included) 26 Non-tax Revenues of Public Sector B. Indirect Revenues a. Indirect Tax on Activities (Production Taxes) b. Commodity Taxes Sales Taxes Import Tariffs <Please insert Table 3.4 here> Direct Revenues Factors’ payments to SSIs, as explained in preceding section, consists of all social security payments in terms of employees or employers, which is regarded as direct cost to its payers. Enterprises pay gross factor income27 and corporate taxes to government account. The point is that there is no breakdown of corporate taxes in PSGE accounting and Direct Tax definition of PSGE contains both income and corporate taxes without any explicit relevant line items. Only consolidated budget render this kind of information which we have used to obtain a breakdown for the whole public sector. The relative rate of direct taxes held by consolidated budget to the direct taxes held by public sector is assumed to give the relative rate of income (residual is corporate taxes from total direct taxes) tax Factor income is in gross amounts: SEE’s, SSIs and EBF’s interest expenditures were cleaned from net factor income of public sector and transferred to the expenditure items in preceding section. 27 27 recorded by these budget bodies respectively.28 979.788 billion TL direct taxes in PSGE accounts is then subdivided between a 764.468 billion TL income tax share and a corporate tax portion which amounts 215.301 billion TL for 1996. The remaining institution, households, will pay income taxes and non tax revenues of public sector to government account. Two major points here stand for further explanation: (1) Income taxes include wage withholdings of labor factor so that labor income channeled to the household sector is gross of wage withholdings. (2) Following general rules of national accounting system, we employed wealth taxes in the capital transfers of conventional PSGE accounting for keeping public sector saving investment balance unchanged. Indirect Revenues Productive sectors incur taxes on activities whereas commodity account pay for sales taxes and import tariffs to government account in SAM. However indirect taxes in PSGE accounts is total of indirect production taxes, sales taxes (VAT) and import tariffs at the public sector aggregation level and no breakdown Consolidated budget, local administrations and EBF’s corporate tax shares are adjusted for negative SEE’s taxes to reach public sector aggregate tax figures. 28 28 is available except for consolidated budget. A relevant system of disaggregation is required which also must be compatible with IO accounting also. Box 1. summarizes the necessary steps to be followed in the process. The method is similar to the one we have used in splitting direct taxes across corporate and income tax portions. Consolidated budget works as a key reference point, and then one makes the tax share ratio among various budget types to be stable over time as far as any structural changes occur. Import tariffs for example is calculated by the addition of custom duties, Support Price Stabilization Fund (SPSF) premiums, other funds premiums and tax shares, transportation and infrastructure duty, stamp duty and non-deductible value added tax.29 Referring to the Table 3.4 for 1997 we have the consolidated budget share of import tariffs 123.622 billion TL; other budget units get a portion of 35.780 billion TL to keep constant the sharing ratio among budget types at 1996. By this method we try to neutralize the impact of our initial assumptions on tax structure since (1) we only try to keep the tax share ratio between different budget types stable (2) and major taxes have been already collected by consolidated budget. 29 1996 IO table manual SIS 29 Box 1. Adopting The Breakdown of Indirect Taxes Input-Output Table 1. If it is available for the current year: Get actual activity and commodity tax structure (Check the total direct taxes equal to the PSGE accounts) 2. Else: Go to the Disaggregation SubBox Disaggregation SubBox 1. Go to the latest available IO; get the latest breakdown of commodity taxes to its line items being sales taxes and import tariffs. 2. Split sales taxes and import tariffs in terms of consolidated budget and other public’s shares. (other public’s portion of taxes will be calculated as a residual from total taxes in excess of consolidated budget tax shares.)30 3. Enlarge import tariffs recorded in the consolidated budget as to keep constant the tax revenue sharing ratio between consolidated budget and other public institutions. 4. Impose structural changes in tax shares in relevant years. 5. Repeat the procedure above for the sales taxes. 6. Derive production taxes by subtracting yearly total of sales taxes and import tariffs from the total indirect taxes. 7. Force national income accounting to follow tax structure and volume obtained above (GDP by value added and by income statistics). 8. Impose the structure onto yearly estimated IO accounting. 30 Other Public Institutions in this context is the merged structure of local governments and EBF’s. 30 The tax shifts across budget units should be taken into account. For example by the end of 2000, major EBF’s were either removed into the budget or terminated permanently. As a result consolidated budget’s fund revenues decreased from 2.933.055 billion TL in 2001 to 1.961.079 billion TL in 2002. After adjusting for the economic growth rate and GDP deflator, it may be concluded that EBF system was downsized by 56.5 percent. This rate, as an exogenous shock, is then imposed to the relative ratios of tax shares between budget units. In table … share ratio between consolidated budget and other public institutions decreased from 0.29 to 0.13.31 <Please insert Table 3.5 here> SAM Public Revenues: SPO Volume + Social security payroll taxes and total employee contribution to social security + SEE’s , EBF’s and SSIs interest expenditures ( for grossing the public factor income) SAM Public Expenditures: SPO Volume 31 One of the valuable contributions to this work may be a study on elaborative tax structures of different types of budgets. 31 + Total social security expenditures related with ‘ Social Funds’ account in SPO balances. - Social Funds + SEE’s , EBF’s and SSIs interest expenditures Table 3.5. makes it clear to trace out the discrepancies between two definitions in terms of saving investment gap and PSBR. When collated with SPO balances, both saving investment gap and PSBR figures remain same in public sector determination of SAM system. 32 4. ADAPTATION OF BALANCE OF PAYMENTS ACCOUNTING WITH INTERLOCKING SYSTEM OF SAM (ISSAM): FOREIGN BALANCE Balance of payments accounting is closely related with national income and flow of funds accounting (public budget). It is known that, national income accounting exposes the relationship between goods and services produced in an economy and the demand that absorbs this supply. Aggregate level of equilibrium is as the conventional algebraic form below: (1) Y = C+I+X-M 32 From national income equation (1) two main types of identities can be derived: Balance of Total Sources and Total Uses (2) Y + (M-X) = C+I Domestic Sources+ Exterior Sources = Domestic Absorption (Total Ultimate Domestic Demand) This identity algebraically forms the underlying sources of domestic capital formation and consumption. The left hand-side of the equation (2) represents total sources 32 C, I: Total (public + private) consumption and investment (stock accumulation included); X, M: Export and import of goods and services respectively Y: Production (Income) 33 available for an economy whilst right hand-side of the equation exposes domestic absorption. Ultimate consumption at home country can only be raised either by larger foreign trade deficits or through an increased production if not both. Total Saving and Total Investment Balance Defining savings (S) as the linear distance between income (Y) and the amount of income that is consumed (C) S = Y-C and substituting into the balance of total sources and uses identity (2) S+C + (M-X) = C+I (3.a.) S + (M-X) = I The third identity overlays total investments in an economy that will be financed by domestic savings and foreign saving inflows. It also can be rearranged in 3.b. below; domestic saving investment gap is going to be closed by current account deficits (deficit in goods and services here) in other words exterior sources. (3.b.) S - I = (X-M) If one wishes to disaggregate between public and private positions and g denoting to public and p to private institutions; 34 S = Sp + Sg, I = Ip +Ig the identity takes the form: (Sp + Sg) – ( Ip +Ig) = (X-M) (3.c.) (Sp– Ip) + (Sg - Ig) = (X-M) When Sg Ig , Sp Ip as in case of Turkey, the identity depicts that public saving investment gap is going to be financed through private saving investment surplus and/or flows of foreign resources into the country.33 In this manner, identity (3.c.) strongly highlights the fundamental linkages between public finance accounting and balance of payments. Definition of Income/Production : GDP, GNP or GNI and Exterior Sources ? What one uses as a definition of production, underlines the definition of exterior sources also, since these two algebraically mirrors on each other. -GDP Used as Income GDP = C+I+(X-M) GDP + (M-X) = C+I 33 If private saving investment surplus can not close public saving investment deficit then the result will be an ultimate current account gap which is called Twin Deficits. 35 When GDP is used for national income the exterior sources will be equal to the term (M-X) or -(X-M) where foreign trade deficit gives trade balance of goods and services other than factor income. -GNP Used as Income GNP = C+I+(X-M) + NFI GNP + (M-X-NFI) = C+I In this context, exterior sources are (M-X-NFI) or -(X-M+NFI), including net factor income from abroad. Net factor income is obtained by subtracting factor expenditures of a nation from its total factor earnings abroad34. If NFI is positive then exterior sources will be less for the given level of domestic absorption. -Gross National Disposable Income (GNI) Used as Income GNI = C+I+(X-M) + NFI+UT GNI + (M-X-NFI-UT) = C+I GNI shows disposable national income in gross terms after addition of Net Unrequited Transfers from Abroad (UT’s). When domestic sources are defined to be GNI, then exterior sources will be exactly equal to the volume of current account balance (CAB) 34 Interest cost (or revenue), workers remittances, profit transfers (into-out of the country), entrepreneur service income are main items of NFI. 36 35 . UT’s are in nature of net current transfers and contain mainly imports with waver and official or private grants. The breakdown of net unrequited transfers as current and capital sub-accounts is key to assembling an accurate national income datum.36 In all GDP, GNP or GNI defined versions of national production above, total resources available for domestic capital formation or consumption do not change. Only the way that ultimate domestic absorption is financed differs. Extending the definition of production from GDP to GNI, the coverage of exterior sources expands towards CAB which in turn shifts the finance between domestically raised funds and foreign capital inflows. So when NFI and UT exist, GNI definition should be used for domestic production to calculate an accurate private disposable income and private savings. 37 Adopting National Income Accounting and Balance of Payments In Turkey SIS is responsible public agency for national system of accounts whereas CB prepares balance of payment statistics. Between SIS and CB there are considerable differences about the coverage of various balance of payments items: (1) SIS assumes that some portion of other income sub-item of Other Invisible Income is not a current account service income. By this method 2/3 of the base which is 35 Following the identity here, Absorption Approach to balance of payments states that GNI(C+I)= CAB: Current Account deficits can be alleviated by increasing domestic production or through increased domestic savings. 36 For the information about the different treatments of balance of payments accounts please refer to the following section. 37 As it is expressed in equation 3.c. public saving investment gap will be given by fiscal accounts and private saving surplus is going to be a residual after a given level of exterior resources. 37 calculated by subtracting entrepreneurs’ service revenues, other transportation and domestic currency conversions from foreign exchange accounts from other incomes; is used for obtaining export and import figures.38 In this study, parallel to the SPO’s conventional adaptation we follow the case of SIS considering relevant foreign trade data. (2) With the Shuttle Trade adjustment in export accounts by CB, the discrepancy further widens between two definitions. SPO and SIS use balance of payments in the way to exclude shuttle trade. We also have selected the same path and displaced shuttle trade from current account. (3) Tourism Revenues data as an integral item of balance of payments, are based on the Foreign Visitors Questionnaires which entail significant differences in terms of target, coverage and method between SIS and CB since 1996. Beginning from January 2003, tourism revenues surveys are carried out with the cooperation of the Central Bank, Ministry of Culture and Tourism and the State Institute of Statistics.39 (4) Workers’ remittances incorporated of the following three transactions of citizen visitors residing abroad: (a) Foreign exchange remittances converted into Turkish Lira (b) Turkish lira conversions from their foreign exchange accounts and (c) Money spent 38 Starting from January 2004, a revision is also associated with the calculation method of “Construction Services”, “Other Business Services” and “Other Services” items under Current Account/Services item within context of a wider rearrangement of balance of payments account by CB. See http://www.tcmb.gov.tr/yeni/announce/2004/ANO2004-20.htm 39 See http://www.tcmb.gov.tr/yeni/announce/2004/ANO2004-20.htm 38 during their visit to Turkey. Following the adoption of the revised balance of payments accounting by CB, last two items were deducted from workers’ remittances. In other words, workers’ remittances and tourism revenues were reclassified and the changes were applied to the years following 2003 data accordingly. 40 We treat workers’ remittances as a part of factor income, and accept the classification of SIS. However with the implementation of new balance of payments method, there are still major obstacles to reconcile CB and SIS data. <Please insert Table 4.1. here> (5) Decomposition of unrequited transfers is key to calculation of an accurate domestic private savings and gross disposable national income (GNI), current and capital transfers should be apart. In general private unrequited transfers are evaluated as current, and unrequited public transfers are recorded as capital transfers moving it down to below-the-line.41 However, CB or SIS still could have not proposed any decayed presentation of unrequited transfers into its current and capital transfer components. The resulting choice in this study; UT’s are assumed to be negligible, thus GNP defines the production-income. In cases of UT’s are positive (there is net unrequited transfers inflows into the country) private savings should have to be leveraged at the same amount. Consequently in CB tables, workers’ remittances declined from USD 2.321 million to USD 729 million, while the tourism revenues increased from USD 9.676 million to USD 13.203 million in 2003. 40 41 Poul HOST-MADSEN, Macro Economic Acounts- An Overview, IMF-1979 39 Linking Foreign Balance with SAM Table 4.1. exposes the primary structure of the foreign flows. Exports, imports and NFI all have SIS defined coverage and decomposed into necessary accounts accordingly. NFI is allocated to receipts from rest of the world and payments to rest of the world accounts. Receipts from rest of the world, collects foreign exchange earnings of domestic institutions through export activities and institutional budget equations. Households account gets net workers’ remittances from abroad42 ; enterprises earn entrepreneur service income and get interest income and the calculation is based on a residual of exterior sources after all institutions earn incomes and incur foreign exchange expenses. Payments to rest of the world contain the uses of foreign exchange fund flows by residents of a country for foreign transactions. Enterprises pay for foreign resources held; make profit transfers to abroad when government is paying foreign interest also. Two primary points stand for detailed focus (1) Debt Service data utilized to sustain necessary breakdown of interest payments for private sector institutions since newly implemented balance of payments method still lacks elaborative explanations and sub accounts for one to calculate interest incurred on institutional basis. (2) Government’s foreign interest cost is established by employing SPO data.43 Timeliness of exchange rate is often the case to form cash-based budgetary process, which also explains the 42 Before 2003 SIS and CB generates exactly equal data for workers’ remittances. 43 SEE’s foreign interest in SPO accounts are obliged to follow CB’s balance of payments data. 40 essential motive behind our preference to do so rather than relying upon an average annual exchange rate only. 41 5. ADAPTATION OF CENTRAL INDICATORS OF NATIONAL INCOME ACCOUNTING WITH INTERLOCKING SYSTEM OF SAM (ISSAM) In former section, indispensable identities were presented that binds national income accounting and balance of payments together and cardinal bonds were settled in dealing with coverage and definition mismatches. In this section prevailing essential points are aimed at being finalized and national income accounting will be reconciled with SAM system. Table 5.1. reveals unadjusted GDP table from expenditure side. Public stock accumulation figure is from PSGE accounting, private stock accumulation is residual from SIS total stock figure. The statistical discrepancy in some years can be sizable so that at first iteration we allocated it onto demand side GDP parameters according to their relative shares at the second iteration remaining sum is transferred onto the public and private stock investments. By this way, Table …Adjusted GDP table is generated and utilized in SAM accounts. Ultimate demand components of IO table(s) and national income and institutional budget identities both employ these figures. Table 5.1. exhibits the value added (cost components) version of GDP and supplements the crucial figures like production cost (value added) and tax structure. Recalling tax structure is a product of PSGE accounting, this table gets taxes as an intermediate input. Value added at factor cost contains labor wages and operating surplus plus depreciation of capital. Based on labor surveys of SIS, an informal labor factor is estimated and 42 assumed to have a constant proportion over time compared with the total wage earnings. Capital value added is got smaller by this amount. GDP at Market Prices is presented in Table 4.3. between years 1996-2005. In the first row of the table, production taxes and import tariffs account is net of production subsidies. Desired adaptation between account of national incomes and balance of payments is also very important with respect to determination of SAM’s macro equilibrium. This relation has been explained mathematically in former sections. Macro economic equilibrium is given the Table 5.2. Foreign flows are transmitted from foreign balance section and when added with GNP it reveals total resources in the economy ready for capital formation or consumption activities. <Please insert Table 5.1. here> <Please insert Table 5.2. here> Then aggregate absorption is decomposed into its instruments and one reaches to private savings from given level of public saving investment gap, private investments and exterior resources obtained. Adaptation of Input-Output Table with SAM: 43 Indeed one can think SAM structures as an advanced version of any input output core. Like many standard SAMs input output tables display supply and use sides of economic activities between various agents. Such economic activities are production of goods and services including intermediate costs of production, generation of income and uses of income by economic agents. By no surprise, the probability of consistency is nearly zero between any years’ national accounts and related I-O tables, although both are products of the same institution in our country. Numerous chief figures of the same period like value added, factor shares, consumption, investment and international trade are subject to serious discrepancies between national accounts and I-O surveys. One may argue that it is neither necessary nor required to depict the accounts in a uniform way because I-O surveys are generally more up-to-date than national accounting database and their purpose are not entirely identical either. But in our intention, building an interlocking system of national accounts in the form of a time series SAM framework, frequently oblige us to sweep out any differential among national statistics. Consequently our efforts in order to manufacture schematic SAMs demand manipulation of I-O tables to facilitate compulsory adjustments of such numbers. The linkage between SAM line and I-O core is set up on the basic rule that whole big box will follow national accounts rather than relying on individual I-O surveys. By this method, our SAM skeleton imposes total production account and income account into 44 any I-O, in turn absorbs their sectoral shares in any account as far as no other survey or external data is available on the issue. The latest official I-O Table belongs to the year 1998 but 1996 I-O is favored for further use in the analysis even though the latter one is not symmetrical. The reason behind such partiality is because 1996 I-O structurally mirrors the fiscal parameters like some tax and subsidy figures much closer to the official public accounts than the fiscal definitions engaged in 1998 I-O. Without a doubt 1998 I-O and that of 1996, are not identical in their treatment and definition of certain fiscal items like production taxes. According to the figures total production taxes by 1998 is well below its level in 1996 in current terms. Subsequently when fabricating aggregated SAM line, what we need from I-O core is nothing but intermediate demand (or cost) share contrasted to total value added. In the above mentioned surround, for 1996-2005 periods only 1996 I-O is employed to invent intermediate supply or demand components. The remaining task of I-O manipulation is the subject of micro SAM generation and it is out of our boundaries at the moment. 45 6. CONCLUSION Generation of I-O tables and SAM structures are commonly based on a down to up approach. This method yet requires large costs of money and time to build up. The advance herein falls apart and lies on a top to down focus. Radically noting, a full blown interlocking system is designed to facilitate yearly production of schematic real SAM tables for Turkish economy starting from 1996. Potential accuracy of any applied CGE activity significantly depends on the availability and reliability of data. This study is assumed to provide confident donations to applied policy modeling, in specific to CGE generations, by maintaining an up-to-date databasemodel surface in countries that has rapid structural transitions. The Interlocking System of SAM (ISSAM) is a system and with reserved evaluations, may be employed for any countries national accounting for any period of time as far as required macro data provided. Analysts and researchers then are with no trouble able to decompose schematic SAMs into micro SAM structures for model purposes. Projects Ahead for Turkey Following the present study, a (consolidated) SAM assembly line should be developed to integrate current, capital, financial and other changes in volume of assets and revaluation accounts, in terms of sectoral units and financial instruments . 46 So that proxy of informal activities and leakages out of statistical system may be traced out in the economy . Modeling financial sector and real sector interdependency elaborately with reference to the informal sector dynamics will be possible . Regional data set of national accounts and SAM balances must be introduced. In the context of European Union membership negotiations, it is supportive and complimentary –if not a cornerstone- to the national and institutional capacities of sectoral and regional planning system. Applied interregional general equilibrium framework must be developed and utilized in search of relevant policy questions in Turkey. Linking strategic management initiative at public organizations via capacities of positive policy making is an issue of extreme importance. By this way a real value added and productive synergy will be created between macro-sectoral (regional) and organizational level policy formulation and management . To conclude, through the example of Turkey, present study tries to propose what necessary action sets are for a methodologically undistorted policy-making; why we should focus on database problem so much and how policy analysts and public officials can give their jobs a real methodological push. 47 What offered is a two way strategic set of actions closely interdependent: i) Structural modeling should be improved and used in search of relevant policy questions, ii) quality investments in applied research of reliable and timely databases must be utilized according to the integrated national accounting framework. 48 Table 2.1 : Schematic (Aggregated) Social Accounting Matrix Factors Activities Activities Commodities Labor Capital Commodities Domestic Supply Labor Households Enterprises Social Sec. Inst. Government Private Consumption Government Consumption Private Investment Public Investment Distributed Profits (Net) Labor Income Social Security Expenditures Capital Income Soc. Security Premiums Social Sec. Inst. Transfers to Households Transfers to Enterprises Distributed Profits (Net) Remittances Private For Transfers Direct Tax + Pub. Sector Factor NonTax Rev Income + +Wealth Taxes Corporate Taxes Public Income Interest Paym on Dom Debt Private savings Domestic Banks Foreign Banking Resources Sector Funds Private Investment Public Investment Private Investment Private Investment Public savings (Pub I-Pub S) Foreign Interest Foreign Interest Payments on Ext Payments on Ext Priv. Pub. Debt Debt Public Investment Imports Production Costs Aggregate Absorption Labor Costs Capital Expenditures Private HH Expenditures Corporate Expenditures Capital Income Private Income Corporate Income Social Security Income Transfers to Soc Sec Institutions Net Indirect Taxes on Sales Taxes Production (VAT) + Tariffs Rest of the World Total Receipts Total Sales Revenue Domestic Absorption Labor Income Wages Operating Surplus + Depreciation Enterprises Total Expenditures ROW Exports Intermediate Inputs Households Government Capital Capital Account Private Public Domestic Banks Investment Investment Social Security Expenditures Public Expenditures Banking Sector Use of Private Funds Investment For. Exch. Earnings Public Investment For. Exch. Expenses 49 Memorandum Table of Sam Accounts, 3.1. 1996 1.Taxes 2.671.876 A.Direct 979.788 B.Indirect 1.692.089 2.Nontax Revenues 168.400 3.Factor Incomes 713.846 4.Social Funds -266.896 5.Current Transfers -2.030.335 I.Public Sector Disposable Income 1.256.891 II.Current Expenditures -1.477.841 III.Public Saving -220.950 IV.Investments -795.969 A.Gross Fixed Investment -763.420 B.Stock Changes -32.549 V.Saving Investment Gap -1.016.919 VI.Capital Transfers -105.697 1.Wealth Taxes 31.957 2.Other Capital Transfers -56.824 3.Expropration and Others -80.831 VII.Financing 1.122.616 1.Cash and Banks -377.985 2.Foreign Borrowing NET -186.979 -Repayment -650.310 -Borrowing 463.331 3.Receivables and Payables NET 1.859.142 4.Stock Changes Fund -171.562 VIII.Financing Requirement 0 Public Sector Borrowing Requirement (NET) 1.294.178 1997 1998 1999 5.735.999 10.901.408 17.084.521 2.122.651 4.775.833 7.218.413 3.613.349 6.125.575 9.866.108 341.928 676.171 1.193.786 1.462.539 2.687.241 3.722.130 -671.249 -1.253.672 -2.370.118 -3.406.562 -8.062.811 -14.415.476 3.462.656 4.948.337 5.214.843 -3.167.000 -5.922.674 -10.438.349 295.656 -974.337 -5.223.506 -1.923.737 -3.638.333 -5.200.504 -1.782.699 -3.359.433 -5.172.831 -141.038 -278.899 -27.673 -1.628.080 -4.612.670 -10.424.010 -235.872 188.115 -688.366 51.896 179.258 329.932 -94.285 203.238 -529.936 -193.483 -194.381 -488.362 1.863.952 4.424.555 11.112.376 -543.101 -718.639 -998.500 -289.286 -491.577 1.426.825 -892.480 -2.224.237 -2.747.977 603.194 1.732.660 4.174.801 3.090.394 6.226.952 11.760.848 -394.055 -592.181 -1.076.797 0 0 0 2.258.007 5.016.735 12.189.173 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 (In Current Billion TL) 29.672.535 44.732.053 11.616.600 18.001.607 18.055.935 26.730.446 2.796.822 3.859.986 4.363.705 9.572.830 -2.411.122 -4.306.531 -24.661.305 -47.829.009 9.760.636 6.029.330 -15.481.452 -23.141.351 -5.720.815 -17.112.021 -8.667.291 -9.835.396 -8.602.119 -11.300.047 -65.172 1.464.651 -14.388.106 -26.947.417 653.340 772.795 497.834 602.839 751.089 328.719 -595.583 -158.762 13.734.767 26.174.621 -1.136.198 -2.410.542 4.409.718 -3.868.850 -4.419.586 -11.082.628 8.829.303 7.213.778 11.575.290 35.309.867 -1.114.043 -2.855.854 0 0 14.848.810 29.030.476 59.756.761 20.934.081 38.822.680 8.358.913 20.169.651 -8.836.903 -61.752.413 17.696.011 -34.686.871 -16.990.860 -17.222.808 -17.307.674 84.865 -34.213.668 1.100.297 1.166.915 -92.741 26.123 33.113.371 -1.773.702 17.400.427 -10.871.469 28.271.897 19.380.919 -1.894.272 0 35.007.644 80.663.413 26.467.698 54.195.715 10.040.484 20.660.827 -13.961.501 -72.248.778 25.154.446 -43.999.678 -18.845.232 -16.714.839 -17.287.520 572.681 -35.560.071 3.099.743 3.158.287 390.765 -449.309 32.460.328 -1.388.092 2.360.617 -12.351.701 14.712.318 32.382.535 -894.732 0 33.355.060 97.790.169 30.400.267 67.389.903 12.619.689 24.405.488 -16.707.554 -71.749.401 46.358.391 -51.476.631 -5.118.240 -17.941.049 -18.051.594 110545,157 -23.059.290 3.867.290 2.677.766 1.172.503 17.021 19.192.000 -3.691.886 4.503.630 -11.151.141 15.654.772 19.291.049 -910.793 0 20.102.793 116.620.925 35.513.108 81.107.816 14.169.477 29.968.396 -21.089.014 -64.376.240 75.293.545 -57.802.172 17.491.373 -25.949.241 -24.539.620 -1409621,22 -8.457.868 9.166.995 3.778.236 4.324.664 1.064.095 -709.127 -1.911.327 -969.636 -18.411.452 17.441.817 2.307.068 -135.233 0 -573.894 Source: SPO data and own calculations 50 Memorandum Table of Sam Accounts, 3.2. Total Social Security Revenues BAĞKUR Social Insurance Institution Pension Fund Premiums Receivables Unemployment Insurance Fund Total Social Security Expenditures BAĞKUR Social Insurance Institution Pension Fund 1996 1997 1998 1999 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 537.167 1.223.522 2.366.976 41.790 280.821 214.556 214.556 0 126.012 640.923 456.587 456.587 0 214.814 1.254.108 898.054 733.054 165.000 402.963 2.246.165 1.490.328 1.301.328 189.000 628.879 4.402.160 1.912.217 1.657.217 255.000 238.569 804.063 1.894.772 3.620.648 6.509.574 9.592.947 15.343.588 25.396.422 37.564.010 46.386.821 53.831.469 89.826 459.898 254.339 292.499 1.025.755 576.518 622.310 1.898.640 1.099.698 1.000.702 3.475.993 2.032.879 1.508.102 5.084.252 3.000.590 Unemployment Insurance Fund Balance 2000 (In Current Billion TL) 4.139.456 7.181.825 11.037.057 16.559.519 23.602.509 29.679.267 32.742.455 1.155.379 6.158.198 2.945.213 2.530.213 415.000 778.267 1.884.811 2.731.624 3.776.455 3.547.781 9.597.501 13.613.000 17.397.000 19.865.378 4.318.699 6.222.668 7.157.642 7.824.204 3.818.699 5.498.116 6.357.642 7.285.847 500.000 724.552 800.000 538.357 758.509 1.035.217 1.348.170 1.505.092 2.323.292 3.945.630 6.881.484 8.385.175 9.383.317 8.163.028 13.305.799 19.329.387 24.373.934 29.220.542 4.856.873 8.089.302 11.200.248 13.386.813 14.902.079 3 394 55.692 152.891 240.899 325.531 -266.896 -671.250 -1.253.672 -2.370.118 -2.411.122 -4.306.531 -8.836.903 -13.961.501 -16.707.554 -21.089.014 Premiums on Employee Social Insurance Institution Pension Fund Unemployment Insurance Fund 209.311 117.358 91.953 463.529 267.848 195.680 838.271 524.105 314.166 1.496.408 938.696 557.712 2.645.372 1.839.709 710.236 95.428 3.969.259 2.573.575 1.084.377 311.307 Premiums on Employer BAĞKUR Social Insurance Institution Pension Fund Unemployment Insurance Fund 327.856 41.790 163.463 122.603 759.993 126.012 373.075 260.907 1.528.705 214.814 730.003 583.888 2.643.048 402.963 1.307.469 932.616 4.536.453 628.879 2.562.451 1.201.981 143.142 7.067.798 10.659.202 15.142.996 19.133.870 20.700.654 1.155.379 1.884.811 2.731.624 3.776.455 3.547.781 3.584.623 5.586.605 7.923.985 10.126.612 11.563.429 1.860.836 2.682.114 3.797.242 4.332.023 4.586.050 466.960 505.672 690.145 898.780 1.003.395 5.900.317 4.010.896 1.636.585 252.836 8.459.513 10.545.397 12.041.801 5.689.015 7.270.388 8.301.949 2.425.426 2.825.619 3.238.154 345.072 449.390 501.697 Source: SPO data and our own calculations 51 Memorandum Table of Sam Accounts, 3.3. Public Sector Total Interest Payments Interest on Foreign Liabilities Interest on Domestic Liabilities Consolidated Budget Interest Payments Interest on Foreign Liabilities Interest on Domestic Liabilities SEE's Interest Payments Interest on Foreign Liabilities Interest on Domestic Liabilities SSI's Interest Payments Interest on Foreign Liabilities Interest on Domestic Liabilities EBF's Interest Payments Interest on Foreign Liabilities Interest on Domestic Liabilities Local Government's Interest Payments Interest on Foreign Liabilities Interest on Domestic Liabilities 1996 1.725.413 224.779 1.500.635 1.497.401 168.314 1.329.087 115.803 27.684 88.119 27.446 0 27.446 38.793 9.370 29.423 45.970 19.411 26.559 1997 2.613.294 391.366 2.221.928 2.277.917 299.950 1.977.967 171.671 45.429 126.242 6.605 0 6.605 79.450 13.200 66.250 77.651 32.788 44.863 1998 1999 6.763.371 12.015.335 698.627 1.178.353 6.064.745 10.836.982 6.176.595 10.720.840 547.081 896.218 5.629.514 9.824.622 244.313 720.817 65.530 113.854 178.783 606.963 48.799 49.059 0 3 48.799 49.056 158.591 191.683 28.981 27.696 129.610 163.987 135.073 332.936 57.034 140.582 78.039 192.354 2000 2001 (In Current Billion TL) 21.832.436 42.886.752 2.091.537 4.420.854 19.740.899 38.465.899 20.439.862 41.062.226 1.648.000 3.567.925 18.791.862 37.494.301 653.631 649.777 192.725 352.919 460.906 296.858 67.093 3.041 93 16 67.000 3.025 156.248 110.775 33.007 52.015 123.241 58.760 515.602 1.060.933 217.713 447.978 297.889 612.955 2002 2003 2004 2005 54.024.191 5.877.823 48.146.368 51.870.659 5.063.621 46.807.038 521.199 305.685 215.514 95 95 0 570.250 59.998 510.252 1.061.988 448.424 613.564 60.983.460 6.732.603 54.250.857 58.609.163 5.890.277 52.718.886 516.960 267.259 249.701 34 34 0 624.634 54.539 570.095 1.232.669 520.493 712.175 58.313.908 6.826.800 51.487.108 56.578.001 6.256.953 50.321.048 480.782 248.556 232.226 289 289 0 597.248 43.336 553.912 657.588 277.666 379.922 47.276.984 7.012.741 40.264.243 45.731.076 6.388.914 39.342.162 476.304 246.241 230.063 323 323 0 254.560 33.248 221.312 814.722 344.016 470.706 Source: SPO data and own calculations 52 Memorandum Table of Sam Accounts, 3.4. 1996 1997 159.402 123.622 386.358 415.502 35.780 0,29 0,04 1998 1999 227.005 308.351 176.051 239.138 644.988 1.149.314 557.414 630.420 50.954 69.213 0,29 0,29 0,04 0,04 2002 2003 2004 2005 (In Current Billion TL) 497.891 492.870 669.535 386.134 382.240 594.697 2.220.151 3.048.711 3.063.106 1.174.991 2.042.396 294.449 111.757 110.630 74.838 0,29 0,29 0,13 0,03 0,02 0,02 2000 2001 1.001.275 889.356 3.642.674 0 111.919 0,13 0,03 1.373.463 1.219.942 5.574.670 0 153.521 0,13 0,03 1.541.947 1.369.594 7.315.765 0 172.353 0,13 0,02 Public Sector Import Tariffs Consolidated Budget Import Tariffs (A) Indirect Taxes to Local Governments (B) Indirect Taxes to EBF's (C) Total Other Public's Import Tariffs (D) RATE to Consolidated Budget (D)/A RATE to Other Public Indirect Taxes D/(B+C) 80.085 62.109 180.963 153.083 17.976 0,29 0,05 Public Sector Sales Taxes (VAT) Consolidated Budget Sales Taxes (VAT) (A) Indirect Taxes to Local Governments (B) Indirect Taxes to EBF's (C) Total Other Public's Sales Taxes (D) RATE to Consolidated Budget (D)/A RATE to Other Public Indirect Taxes D/(B+C) 864.862 1.817.616 3.171.922 4.847.171 9.753.572 14.478.495 21.854.640 28.958.291 743.026 1.561.562 2.725.083 4.164.334 8.379.554 12.438.861 20.400.201 27.031.100 180.963 386.358 644.988 1.149.314 2.220.151 3.048.711 3.063.106 3.642.674 153.083 415.502 557.414 630.420 1.174.991 2.042.396 294.449 0 121.836 256.054 446.839 682.837 1.374.018 2.039.634 1.454.439 1.927.191 0,16 0,16 0,16 0,16 0,16 0,16 0,07 0,07 0,36 0,32 0,37 0,38 0,40 0,40 0,43 0,53 31.480.436 33.827.257 29.385.394 31.576.033 5.574.670 7.315.765 0 0 2.095.042 2.251.224 0,07 0,07 0,38 0,31 Source: SPO data and own calculations 53 Memorandum Table of Sam Accounts, 3.5. 1996 1997 1998 1999 9.021.714 17.083.500 27.101.452 7.798.192 14.716.524 22.961.996 1.223.522 2.366.976 4.139.456 5.408.366 10.957.925 17.235.345 4.184.844 8.590.949 13.095.889 2.164.823 3.985.355 6.427.784 2.020.021 4.605.594 6.668.105 1.223.522 2.366.976 4.139.456 1.223.522 2.366.976 4.139.456 3.613.349 6.125.575 9.866.108 1.636.331 2.726.648 4.710.585 1.977.017 3.398.927 5.155.523 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 (In Current Billion TL) 44.891.860 69.965.520 105.936.389 136.108.862 165.572.933 194.232.440 37.710.035 58.928.463 89.376.870 112.506.353 135.893.665 161.489.985 7.181.825 11.037.057 16.559.519 23.602.509 29.679.267 32.742.455 26.835.925 43.235.074 67.113.708 81.913.146 98.183.030 113.124.623 19.654.100 32.198.017 50.554.189 58.310.637 68.503.763 80.382.168 8.065.510 14.569.732 27.298.084 30.702.736 34.282.254 40.600.526 11.588.590 17.628.284 23.256.105 27.607.901 34.221.509 39.781.642 7.181.825 11.037.057 16.559.519 23.602.509 29.679.267 32.742.455 7.181.825 11.037.057 16.559.519 23.602.509 29.679.267 32.742.455 18.055.935 26.730.446 38.822.680 54.195.715 67.389.903 81.107.816 7.804.472 11.759.081 16.298.505 24.236.149 34.536.004 45.738.612 10.251.463 14.971.365 22.524.175 29.959.566 32.853.899 35.369.204 I. Revenues Public Sector Other Than SSI SSI 1.Direct Revenues Public Sector Other Than SSI Taxes from Enterprises Taxes from Households SSI Factors Payments to SSI's 2.Indirect Revenues i. Indirect Taxes on Production ii. Indirect Taxes on Sales 4.273.331 3.736.164 537.167 2.581.243 2.044.076 1.111.190 932.886 537.167 537.167 1.692.089 747.142 944.947 II. Expenditures Public Sector Other Than SSI SSI 1. Public Consumption 2. Public Investment 3. Transfers i. Total Household Transfers Transfers By Public Sector Other than SSI Transfers By SSI ii. Enterprises Production Subsidies Domestic Interest on Gov. Bonds iii. Interest on Foreign Liabilities 5.290.250 10.649.795 21.696.169 37.525.462 59.279.967 96.912.937 140.150.057 171.668.933 188.632.222 202.690.307 4.486.187 8.755.024 18.075.522 31.015.888 49.687.020 81.569.349 114.753.635 134.104.923 142.245.402 148.858.839 804.063 1.894.772 3.620.648 6.509.574 9.592.947 15.343.588 25.396.422 37.564.010 46.386.821 53.831.469 1.477.841 3.167.000 5.922.674 10.438.349 15.481.452 23.141.351 34.686.871 43.999.678 51.476.631 57.802.172 795.969 1.923.737 3.638.333 5.200.504 8.667.291 9.835.396 17.222.808 16.714.839 17.941.049 25.949.241 3.016.440 5.559.059 12.135.162 21.886.609 35.131.224 63.936.190 88.240.378 110.954.416 119.214.542 118.938.895 1.047.618 2.567.805 4.499.407 8.275.062 11.627.452 18.712.430 32.975.710 49.020.457 60.096.277 70.751.634 243.555 673.034 878.760 1.765.488 2.034.505 3.368.843 7.579.287 11.456.447 13.709.456 16.920.165 804.063 1.894.772 3.620.648 6.509.574 9.592.947 15.343.588 25.396.422 37.564.010 46.386.821 53.831.469 1.744.043 2.599.888 6.937.128 12.433.194 21.412.235 40.802.906 49.386.846 55.201.356 52.291.465 41.174.520 243.409 377.960 872.384 1.596.212 1.671.336 2.337.008 1.240.478 950.499 804.357 910.277 1.500.635 2.221.928 6.064.745 10.836.982 19.740.899 38.465.899 48.146.368 54.250.857 51.487.108 40.264.243 224.779 391.366 698.627 1.178.353 2.091.537 4.420.854 5.877.823 6.732.603 6.826.800 7.012.741 Public Saving-Investment Gap Public Sector Borrowing Requirement(PSBR) 1.016.918 1.294.178 1.628.081 2.258.008 4.612.670 10.424.010 14.388.106 26.947.417 5.016.735 12.189.173 14.848.810 29.030.476 34.213.668 35.007.644 35.560.071 33.355.060 23.059.290 20.102.793 8.457.868 -573.894 Source: SPO data and own calculations 54 Adjusted SAM Data:Table 4.1. Receipts from Rest of World Exports of goods and services Household Foreign Receipts Enterprise Foreign Receipts Payments to Rest of World Imports of goods and services Enterprise Foreign Interest Payments Enterprise Profit Transfers Abroad Government Foreign Payments 1996 1998 1999 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 (In Current Billion TL) 35.152.119 67.427.254 29.959.128 60.150.878 2.844.090 3.413.997 2.348.901 3.862.379 43.464.995 65.066.545 39.284.673 55.861.684 2.088.785 4.784.008 -55.510 -63.721 2.091.537 4.420.854 2000 88.831.485 81.134.076 2.915.305 4.782.103 95.469.611 85.232.383 4.359.405 134.020 5.877.823 106.484.265 98.496.338 1.088.446 6.899.480 121.404.331 110.334.367 4.337.362 604.692 6.732.603 133.292.866 124.348.181 1.143.562 7.801.123 159.822.928 149.299.109 3.697.019 1.132.184 6.826.800 143.912.714 133.575.227 1.141.012 9.196.474 176.706.696 165.567.880 4.126.075 1.098.107 7.012.741 3.751.866 3.182.305 287.555 282.006 4.474.188 4.110.584 138.825 14.207 224.779 8.381.146 7.088.355 635.545 657.245 9.498.235 8.762.823 344.046 21.503 391.366 15.333.308 12.713.300 1.392.772 1.227.236 15.899.846 14.573.224 627.996 59.029 698.627 21.278.494 17.972.068 1.902.751 1.403.675 23.239.887 20.801.155 1.260.378 70.161 1.178.353 722.322 722.322 1.117.089 1.117.089 566.538 566.538 1.961.392 1.961.392 8.312.875 8.312.875 -2.360.710 -2.360.710 6.638.126 6.638.126 14.920.067 14.920.067 26.530.062 26.530.062 32.793.982 32.793.982 3.182.305 4.110.584 205.957 7.088.355 8.762.823 557.379 12.713.300 14.573.224 1.293.386 17.972.068 20.801.155 867.695 29.959.128 39.284.673 1.012.670 60.150.878 55.861.684 -1.928.485 81.134.076 85.232.383 -2.539.820 98.496.338 110.334.367 -3.082.038 124.348.181 149.299.109 -1.579.134 133.575.227 165.567.880 -801.330 340.974 202.149 174.465 27.684 62.512 76.313 694.754 350.708 305.280 45.429 138.254 205.791 1.254.171 626.175 560.645 65.530 226.494 401.501 2.289.688 1.029.309 915.455 113.854 410.463 849.915 3.928.711 1.839.927 1.647.202 192.725 533.891 1.554.894 8.742.088 3.958.080 3.605.162 352.919 1.528.089 3.255.919 9.640.385 5.280.979 4.975.294 305.685 1.819.054 2.540.351 10.429.078 6.091.716 5.824.457 267.259 2.054.461 2.282.901 10.158.361 6.461.342 6.212.786 248.556 1.765.125 1.931.893 10.663.303 6.537.227 6.290.987 246.241 1.545.931 2.580.145 4.200 2.490 2.149 341 770 940 4.588 2.316 2.016 300 913 1.359 4.823 2.408 2.156 252 871 1.544 5.450 2.450 2.179 271 977 2.023 6.299 2.950 2.641 309 856 2.493 7.134 3.230 2.942 288 1.247 2.657 6.402 3.507 3.304 203 1.208 1.687 6.985 4.080 3.901 179 1.376 1.529 7.142 4.543 4.368 175 1.241 1.358 7.953 4.876 4.692 184 1.153 1.924 81.184 81,2 151.429 151,4 260.040 260,0 420.126 420,1 623.704 623,7 1.225.412 1225,4 1.505.840 1505,8 1.493.068 1493,1 65,96910119 1.422.341 1422,3 1.340.790 1340,8 3.542 287.555 905 73.472 555 45.057 350 28.414 -175 -14.207 4.197 635.545 669 101.306 314 47.549 355 53.757 -142 -21.503 5.356 1.392.772 371 96.475 159 41.346 212 55.128 -227 -59.029 4.529 1.902.751 646 271.401 362 152.086 284 119.316 -167 -70.161 4.560 2.844.090 665 414.763 214 133.473 451 281.290 89 55.510 2.786 3.413.997 2.006 2.458.176 207 253.660 1.799 2.204.516 52 63.721 1.936 2.915.305 2.962 4.460.297 500 752.920 2.462 3.707.377 -89 -134.020 729 1.088.446 2.920 4.359.758 298 444.934 2.622 3.914.824 -405 -604.692 804 1.143.562 4.649 6.612.464 323 459.416 4.326 6.153.048 -796 -1.132.184 851 1.141.012 4.503 6.037.577 617 827.267 3.886 5.210.310 -819 -1.098.107 Foreign Savings Inflows(uptodown) Foreign Savings Inflows(downtoup) Exports of goods and services Imports of goods and services Net Factor Income 1997 Billion TL Interest Payments Public Sector General Government SEE's CB Private Sector Million USD Interest Payments Public Sector General Government SEE's CB Private Sector Average Exch. Rate =E (TL/Dolar) ER Scale =E/1000 Sub Account Information: Workers Remittances (Mil. USD) Workers Remittances (Bil. TL) Unrequited Transfers (Mil. USD) Unrequited Transfers (Bil. TL) Official Public Transfers (Mil. USD) Official Public Transfers (Bil. TL) Private Unrequited Transfers (Mil. USD) Private Unrequited Transfers (Bil. TL) Profit Transfers (Mil. USD) Profit Transfers (Bil. TL) Source: SPO, CB and SIS data and own calculations 55 Unadjusted SAM Data of National Accounts 5.1. 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 (In Current Billion TL) Unadjusted GDP from Expenditure Side 14.345.413 28.720.649 53.522.970 82.925.538 127.844.312 188.141.291 278.220.631 358.699.629 427.151.940 480.922.787 3.706.404 7.618.372 12.839.212 16.930.592 27.847.893 32.408.979 46.043.018 55.618.335 76.722.408 95.307.113 Private Sector 3.019.239 5.982.097 9.636.188 12.488.072 20.377.462 22.410.367 31.258.910 40.626.213 60.664.380 74.606.738 Public Sector 687.164 1.636.275 3.203.024 4.442.520 7.470.431 9.998.612 14.784.108 14.992.122 16.058.028 20.700.374 -79.656 -377.455 -211.639 1.148.533 2.685.223 -2.475.258 13.133.761 26.328.924 33.973.663 25.394.479 Private Stock Accumulation -112.205 -518.493 -490.538 1.120.861 2.620.050 -1.010.607 13.218.626 26.901.605 34.084.208 23.984.858 Public Stock Accumulation 32.549 141.038 278.899 27.673 65.172 -1.464.651 -84.865 -572.681 -110.545 1.409.621 11.646.944 23.154.200 42.755.321 67.675.499 106.636.742 153.918.375 223.142.158 288.590.399 341.406.798 392.213.847 Private Cons. 9.937.697 19.619.096 36.122.555 55.927.761 89.097.791 128.513.017 184.420.201 239.585.900 284.631.317 328.560.589 Public Cons. 1.709.247 3.535.104 6.632.766 11.747.738 17.538.951 25.405.358 38.721.957 49.004.499 56.775.481 63.653.258 Exports of Goods and Serv. 3.182.305 7.088.355 12.713.300 17.972.068 29.959.128 60.150.878 81.134.076 98.496.338 124.348.181 133.575.227 Imports of Goods and Serv. 4.110.584 8.762.823 14.573.224 20.801.155 39.284.673 55.861.684 85.232.383 110.334.367 149.299.109 165.567.880 426.698 115.234 -1.298.025 -5.510.265 -3.260.854 -9.728.852 -646.573 1.063.297 3.359.537 6.279.575 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Gross Fixed Capital Formation Total Stock Accumulation Total Consumption Statistical Discrepancy of GDP Gross National Product Sectors (In Current Billion TL) Agriculture 2.489.774 4.170.001 9.113.454 11.851.055 17.540.631 21.521.043 32.114.870 42.126.246 48.394.672 49.957.330 Industry 3.716.528 7.293.186 11.970.299 17.973.866 29.027.782 45.881.462 70.034.336 88.813.240 107.061.273 123.669.004 Mining & Quarrying 183.080 336.889 563.270 883.737 1.422.903 2.135.427 2.914.077 3.858.087 5.174.424 6.962.712 3.123.034 6.218.627 10.128.256 14.839.451 23.888.136 36.730.882 55.764.399 71.910.797 87.609.625 101.246.002 410.414 737.669 1.278.773 2.250.677 3.716.743 7.015.153 11.355.859 13.044.356 14.277.224 15.460.290 857.762 1.743.240 3.124.593 4.362.039 6.483.106 9.240.878 11.398.698 12.662.006 15.380.670 21.311.774 Trade 3.022.315 5.985.402 10.404.501 14.750.945 24.906.513 37.403.001 55.935.190 71.329.760 88.714.047 99.739.960 Transport & Communication 1.941.574 4.018.613 7.102.826 10.868.376 17.645.564 28.159.160 41.820.643 53.846.171 62.009.162 71.654.589 Financial Institutions 732.340 1.474.426 3.280.526 4.228.349 4.698.024 6.639.387 12.944.723 17.884.644 21.603.584 21.484.542 Ownership of Dwellings 442.935 850.332 1.761.711 3.465.420 5.772.955 8.491.897 11.637.781 14.653.025 18.398.553 22.393.509 Business & Personel Services 554.080 1.067.451 1.956.339 2.830.826 4.430.360 6.592.344 9.753.592 12.429.089 14.889.331 16.914.421 (-) Imputed Bank Serv. Charges 709.235 1.371.710 3.049.158 4.284.141 4.097.693 11.534.431 8.095.559 7.911.747 10.821.250 12.477.618 13.048.072 25.230.941 45.665.092 66.046.733 106.407.242 152.394.742 237.544.273 305.832.435 365.630.042 414.647.511 1.238.527 2.579.910 4.915.736 8.781.478 12.633.650 18.525.724 27.838.383 36.561.477 42.548.483 47.719.600 26.922 53.021 98.742 272.486 477.141 918.063 1.663.999 3.610.383 3.530.102 2.996.961 458.588 972.011 1.545.375 2.314.575 5.065.425 6.573.910 10.527.402 13.758.630 18.802.850 21.838.290 G.D.P. (In Purchasers' Value) 14.772.110 28.835.883 52.224.945 77.415.272 124.583.458 178.412.438 277.574.057 359.762.926 430.511.477 487.202.362 N.F.I. From Abroad G.N.P. (In Purchasers' Value) 205.957 14.978.067 557.379 29.393.262 1.293.386 53.518.332 867.695 78.282.967 1.012.670 125.596.129 -1.928.485 176.483.953 -2.541.692 275.032.366 -3.082.038 356.680.888 -1.579.134 428.932.343 -801.330 486.401.032 Manufacturing Energy Construction Sectoral Total Government Services Private Non-Profit Institutions Import Duties Source: SIS data 56 Adjusted SAM Data of National Accounts GDP NFI GNP FF(Foreign Flows) GNI (Ass:Unreq. Tr=0) Aggregate Absorbtion Private Consumption Private Savings Private Investment Public Consumption Public Savings Public Investment Public Saving-Investment Gap Private Saving-Investment Surplus Adjusted GDP from Expenditure Side Total Gross Investment Private Investment Public Investment Total Stock Accumulation Private Stock Accumulation Public Stock Accumulation Total Consumption Private Cons. Public Cons. Exports of Goods and Serv. Imports of Goods and Serv. GDP from Income Side Indirect Taxes Activity Taxes Commodity Taxes Value Added Formal Labor Informal Labor Capital (+depreciation) GDP at Market Prices Taxes on Production and Imports (NET) Consumption of Fixed Capital Compensation of Employees Operating Surplus Memo: Production Subsidies: Informal labor wages 5.2. 1996 1997 1998 1999 14.772.110 205.957 14.978.067 722.322 15.700.389 15.700.389 10.533.245 3.187.931 2.893.335 1.477.841 -220.950 795.969 1.016.919 294.596 14.772.110 3.756.807 2.993.387 763.420 -67.503 -100.052 32.549 12.011.086 10.533.245 1.477.841 3.182.305 4.110.584 28.835.883 557.379 29.393.262 1.117.089 30.510.351 30.510.351 20.061.580 5.869.026 5.358.034 3.167.000 295.656 1.923.737 1.628.080 510.992 28.835.883 7.641.051 5.858.353 1.782.699 -359.281 -500.318 141.038 23.228.580 20.061.580 3.167.000 7.088.355 8.762.823 52.224.945 1.293.386 53.518.331 566.538 54.084.869 54.084.869 35.986.031 12.583.962 8.537.831 5.922.674 -974.337 3.638.333 4.612.670 4.046.132 52.224.945 12.613.366 9.253.933 3.359.433 -437.203 -716.102 278.899 41.908.706 35.986.031 5.922.674 12.713.300 14.573.224 77.415.273 867.695 78.282.968 1.961.392 80.244.360 80.244.360 53.643.445 19.424.679 10.962.062 10.438.349 -5.223.506 5.200.504 10.424.010 8.462.617 77.415.273 16.128.156 10.955.325 5.172.831 34.409 6.736 27.673 64.081.795 53.643.445 10.438.349 17.972.068 20.801.155 1996 1997 1998 1999 14.772.110 1.692.089 747.142 944.947 -1.690.093 3.534.765 1.755.326 -6.980.184 14.772.110 1480217,44 930.442 3.534.765 8.826.686 243.409 1.755.326 28.835.883 3.613.349 1.636.331 1.977.017 -3.611.352 7.440.184 3.694.715 -14.746.250 28.835.883 3188893,613 1.747.711 7.440.184 16.459.094 377.960 3.694.715 52.224.945 6.125.575 2.726.648 3.398.927 -6.123.577 13.297.031 6.603.161 -26.023.769 52.224.945 5505409,627 3.270.051 13.297.031 30.152.454 872.384 6.603.161 77.415.272 9.866.108 4.710.585 5.155.523 -9.864.109 23.749.549 11.793.769 -45.407.427 77.415.272 8.521.227 5.338.965 23.749.549 39.805.531 1.596.212 11.793.769 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 (In Current Billion TL) 124.583.458 178.412.439 1.012.670 -1.928.485 125.596.128 176.483.954 8.312.875 -2.360.710 133.909.004 174.123.244 133.909.004 174.123.244 89.037.224 123.976.535 26.798.268 46.478.089 20.723.037 17.169.962 15.481.452 23.141.351 -5.720.815 -17.112.021 8.667.291 9.835.396 14.388.106 26.947.417 6.075.231 29.308.126 124.583.458 178.412.439 27.363.472 31.223.096 18.761.353 19.923.049 8.602.119 11.300.047 2.026.856 -4.217.737 1.961.684 -2.753.087 65.172 -1.464.651 104.518.675 147.117.886 89.037.224 123.976.535 15.481.452 23.141.351 29.959.128 60.150.878 39.284.673 55.861.684 277.574.057 -2.539.820 275.034.237 6.638.126 281.672.364 281.672.364 188.032.924 69.305.303 41.729.761 34.686.871 -16.990.860 17.222.808 34.213.668 27.575.542 277.574.057 45.971.428 28.663.755 17.307.674 12.981.141 13.066.006 -84.865 222.719.794 188.032.924 34.686.871 81.134.076 85.232.383 359.762.926 -3.082.038 356.680.888 14.920.067 371.600.954 371.600.954 245.278.238 86.248.204 65.608.199 43.999.678 -18.845.232 16.714.839 35.560.071 20.640.005 359.762.926 55.734.916 38.447.396 17.287.520 26.588.122 27.160.803 -572.681 289.277.916 245.278.238 43.999.678 98.496.338 110.334.367 430.511.477 -1.579.134 428.932.343 26.530.062 455.462.405 455.462.405 292.045.238 90.528.715 93.999.488 51.476.631 -5.118.240 17.941.049 23059289,79 -3.470.773 430.511.477 77.173.199 59.121.605 18.051.594 34.767.337 34.877.883 -110.545 343.521.869 292.045.238 51.476.631 124.348.181 149.299.109 487.202.362 -801.330 486.401.032 32.793.982 519.195.014 519.195.014 338.434.212 72.673.276 97.009.390 57.802.172 17.491.373 25.949.241 8457867,727 -24.336.114 487.202.362 96.220.516 71.680.896 24.539.620 26.738.115 25.328.494 1.409.621 396.236.383 338.434.212 57.802.172 133.575.227 165.567.880 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 (In Current Billion TL) 124.583.458 178.412.438 18.055.935 26.730.446 7.804.472 11.759.081 10.251.463 14.971.365 -18.053.935 -26.728.445 36.368.142 50.562.315 18.060.025 25.108.698 -72.482.103 -102.399.458 124.583.458 178.412.438 16758516,55 25044393,67 8.162.148 14.758.317 36.368.142 50.562.315 63.294.651 88.047.412 1.671.336 2.337.008 18.060.025 25.108.698 277.574.057 38.822.680 16.298.505 22.524.175 -38.820.678 72.923.558 36.213.048 -147.957.285 277.574.057 41945074,85 23.982.154 72.923.558 138.723.270 1.240.478 36.213.048 359.762.926 54.195.715 24.236.149 29.959.566 -54.193.712 93.978.003 46.668.457 -194.840.172 359.762.926 58530498,97 27.294.182 93.978.003 179.960.243 950.499 46.668.457 430.511.477 67.389.903 34.536.004 32.853.899 -67.387.899 113.261.757 56.244.560 -236.894.215 430.511.477 72828598,91 30.168.984 113.261.757 214.252.137 804.357 56.244.560 487.202.362 81.107.816 45.738.612 35.369.204 -81.105.811 128.176.363 63.650.992 -272.933.166 487.202.362 82418860,65 34.141.716 128.176.363 242.465.423 910.277 63.650.992 2000 Source: SPO, SIS data and own calculations 57 Table: Aggregated Social Accounting Matrix for Turkey, 1996, Billions TL Factors Activities Comm. Formal Labor Informal Labor Capital Account Capital Househ. Enterp. Social Sec. Inst. Govern. Domestic Banks Private Invest. Public Invest. 22.427.648 Activities 10.533.245 Total Receipts 3.182.305 25.609.954 Commodities 11.782.790 Formal Labor 3.534.765 3.534.765 Informal Labor 1.755.326 1.755.326 Capital 7.789.931 7.789.931 2.997.598 Households 1.755.326 7.204.156 804.063 7.789.931 Enterprises Social Sec. Inst. Government 1.477.841 ROW 944.947 932.886 4.110.584 3.534.765 282.006 8.315.345 1.755.326 7.789.931 14.654.063 804.063 1.500.635 Public Invest. 27.483.180 14.654.062 3.736.164 3.187.931 25.609.954 287.555 1.111.190 8.315.345 804.063 722.322 5.410.888 2.893.335 2.893.335 -220.950 1.016.919 795.969 224.779 138.825 4.474.188 3.736.164 5.410.888 Private Invest. Total Expenditures 1.361.809 266.896 Domestic Banks Rest of the World 27.483.180 795.969 243.409 537.167 747.142 243.555 2.893.335 2.893.335 795.969 4.474.188 58 Table: Aggregated Social Accounting Matrix for Turkey, 1997, Billions TL Factors Activities Comm. Formal Labor Informal Labor Capital Account Capital Househ. Enterp. Social Sec. Inst. Govern. Domestic Banks Private Invest. Public Invest. 42.667.845 Activities 20.061.580 Total Receipts 7.088.355 49.756.201 Commodities 22.897.335 Formal Labor 7.440.184 7.440.184 Informal Labor 3.694.715 3.694.715 Capital 14.087.636 14.087.636 6.216.662 Households 3.694.715 12.958.018 1.894.772 14.087.636 Enterprises Social Sec. Inst. Government 3.167.000 ROW 1.977.017 2.020.021 8.762.823 7.440.184 657.245 15.122.842 3.694.715 14.087.636 27.950.626 1.894.772 2.221.928 Public Investment 53.407.685 27.950.627 7.798.192 5.869.026 49.756.201 635.545 2.164.823 15.122.842 1.894.772 1.117.089 9.208.042 5.358.034 5.358.034 295.656 1.628.080 1.923.737 391.366 344.046 9.498.235 7.798.193 9.208.042 Private Investment Total Expenditures 1.877.882 671.250 Domestic Banks Rest of the World 53.407.685 1.923.737 377.960 1.223.522 1.636.331 673.034 5.358.034 5.358.034 1.923.737 9.498.235 59 Table: Aggregated Social Accounting Matrix for Turkey, 1998, Billions TL Factors Activities Comm. Formal Labor Informal Labor Capital Account Capital Househ. Enterp. Social Sec. Inst. Govern. Domestic Banks Private Invest. Public Invest. 76.702.200 Activities 35.986.031 Total Receipts 12.713.300 89.415.501 Commodities 40.589.483 Formal Labor 13.297.031 13.297.031 Informal Labor 6.603.161 6.603.161 Capital 26.199.178 26.199.178 10.930.055 Households 6.603.161 24.313.443 3.620.648 26.199.178 Enterprises Social Sec. Inst. Government 5.922.674 ROW 3.398.927 4.605.594 14.573.224 13.297.031 1.227.236 28.298.798 6.603.161 26.199.178 53.175.588 3.620.648 6.064.745 Public Investment 94.674.352 53.175.588 14.716.524 12.583.962 89.415.501 1.392.772 3.985.355 28.298.798 3.620.648 566.538 19.215.245 8.537.831 8.537.831 -974.337 4.612.670 3.638.333 698.627 627.996 15.899.846 14.716.523 19.215.245 Private Investment Total Expenditures 5.436.749 1.253.672 Domestic Banks Rest of the World 94.674.352 3.638.333 872.384 2.366.976 2.726.648 878.760 8.537.831 8.537.831 3.638.333 15.899.846 60 Table: Aggregated Social Accounting Matrix for Turkey, 1999, Billions TL Factors Activities Comm. Formal Labor Informal Labor Capital Account Capital Househ. Enterp. Social Sec. Inst. Govern. Domestic Banks Private Invest. Public Invest. 114.509.276 Activities 53.643.445 Total Receipts 17.972.068 132.481.344 Commodities 60.221.595 Formal Labor 23.749.549 23.749.549 Informal Labor 11.793.769 11.793.769 Capital 32.005.847 32.005.847 19.610.093 Households 11.793.769 28.577.951 6.509.574 32.005.847 Enterprises Social Sec. Inst. Government 10.438.349 ROW 5.155.523 6.668.105 1.403.675 35.005.735 20.801.155 11.793.769 32.005.847 79.736.229 6.509.574 10.836.982 Public Investment 23.749.549 79.736.229 22.961.996 19.424.679 132.481.344 140.465.954 1.902.751 6.427.784 35.005.735 6.509.574 1.961.392 32.223.053 10.962.062 10.962.062 -5.223.506 10.424.010 5.200.504 1.178.353 1.260.378 23.239.887 22.961.996 32.223.053 Private Investment Total Expenditures 9.576.603 2.370.118 Domestic Banks Rest of the World 140.465.954 5.200.504 1.596.212 4.139.456 4.710.585 1.765.488 10.962.062 10.962.062 5.200.504 23.239.887 61 Table: Aggregated Social Accounting Matrix for Turkey, 2000, Billions TL Factors Activities Comm. Formal Labor Informal Labor Capital Account Capital Househ. Enterp. Social Sec. Inst. Govern. Domestic Banks Private Invest. Public Invest. 184.868.575 Activities 89.037.224 Total Receipts 29.959.128 214.827.702 Commodities 100.495.708 Formal Labor 36.368.142 36.368.142 Informal Labor 18.060.025 18.060.025 Capital 52.099.355 52.099.355 29.186.317 Households 18.060.025 48.054.083 9.592.947 52.099.355 Enterprises Social Sec. Inst. Government 15.481.452 ROW 10.251.463 11.588.590 2.348.901 56.119.593 39.284.673 18.060.025 52.099.355 127.424.081 9.592.947 19.740.899 Public Investment 36.368.142 127.424.081 37.710.035 26.798.268 214.827.702 234.404.711 2.844.090 8.065.510 56.119.593 9.592.947 8.312.875 54.852.042 20.723.037 20.723.037 -5.720.815 14.388.106 8.667.291 2.091.537 2.088.785 43.464.995 37.710.035 54.852.042 Private Investment Total Expenditures 17.652.114 2.411.122 Domestic Banks Rest of the World 234.404.711 8.667.291 1.671.336 7.181.825 7.804.472 2.034.505 20.723.037 20.723.037 8.667.291 43.464.995 62 Table: Aggregated Social Accounting Matrix for Turkey, 2001, Billions TL Factors Activities Comm. Formal Labor Informal Labor Capital Account Capital Househ. Enterp. Social Sec. Inst. Govern. Domestic Banks Private Invest. Public Invest. 233.965.790 Activities 123.976.535 Total Receipts 60.150.878 294.116.668 Commodities 130.675.594 Formal Labor 50.562.315 50.562.315 Informal Labor 25.108.698 25.108.698 Capital 76.010.980 76.010.980 39.525.258 Households 25.108.698 67.640.634 15.343.588 76.010.980 Enterprises Social Sec. Inst. Government 23.141.351 ROW 14.971.365 17.628.284 3.862.379 82.210.366 55.861.684 25.108.698 76.010.980 188.082.909 15.343.588 38.465.899 Public Investment 50.562.315 188.082.908 58.928.463 46.478.089 294.116.668 304.798.838 3.413.997 14.569.732 82.210.366 15.343.588 -2.360.710 82.583.278 17.169.962 17.169.962 -17.112.021 26.947.417 9.835.396 4.420.854 4.784.008 65.066.545 58.928.463 82.583.278 Private Investment Total Expenditures 33.681.891 4.306.531 Domestic Banks Rest of the World 304.798.839 9.835.396 2.337.008 11.037.057 11.759.081 3.368.843 17.169.962 17.169.962 9.835.396 65.066.545 63 Table: Aggregated Social Accounting Matrix for Turkey, 2002, Billions TL Factors Activities Comm. Formal Labor Informal Labor Capital Account Capital Househ. Enterp. Social Sec. Inst. Govern. Domestic Banks Private Invest. Public Invest. 385.304.605 Activities 188.032.924 Total Receipts 81.134.076 466.438.681 Commodities 211.388.799 Formal Labor 72.923.558 72.923.558 Informal Labor 36.213.048 36.213.048 Capital 129.614.770 129.614.770 56.364.039 Households 36.213.048 108.339.267 25.396.422 129.614.770 Enterprises Social Sec. Inst. Government 34.686.871 ROW 22.524.175 23.256.105 4.782.103 135.637.351 85.232.383 36.213.048 25.396.422 48.146.368 Public Investment 72.923.558 280.594.332 89.376.870 69.305.303 466.438.681 493.061.163 2.915.305 27.298.084 129.614.770 280.594.332 135.637.351 25.396.422 6.638.126 124.089.797 41.729.761 41.729.761 -16.990.860 34.213.668 17.222.808 5.877.823 4.359.405 95.469.611 89.376.870 124.089.797 Private Investment Total Expenditures 43.786.963 8.836.903 Domestic Banks Rest of the World 493.061.163 17.222.808 1.240.478 16.559.519 16.298.505 7.579.287 41.729.761 41.729.761 17.222.808 95.469.611 64 Table: Aggregated Social Accounting Matrix for Turkey, 2003, Billions TL Factors Activities Comm. Formal Labor Informal Labor Capital Account Capital Househ. Enterp. Social Sec. Inst. Govern. Domestic Banks Private Invest. Public Invest. 510.185.214 Activities 245.278.238 Total Receipts 98.496.338 608.681.552 Commodities 278.878.192 Formal Labor 93.978.003 93.978.003 Informal Labor 46.668.457 46.668.457 Capital 164.920.751 164.920.751 70.375.494 Households 46.668.457 142.067.993 37.564.010 164.920.751 Enterprises Social Sec. Inst. Government 43.999.678 ROW 29.959.566 27.607.901 6.899.480 172.770.730 110.334.367 46.668.457 37.564.010 54.250.857 Public Investment 93.978.003 359.134.343 112.506.353 86.248.204 608.681.552 650.479.147 1.088.446 30.702.736 164.920.751 359.134.343 172.770.730 37.564.010 14.920.067 155.419.128 65.608.199 65.608.199 -18.845.232 35.560.071 16.714.839 6.732.603 4.337.362 121.404.331 Private Investment Total Expenditures 49.913.495 13.961.501 Domestic Banks Rest of the World 650.479.146 16.714.839 950.499 23.602.509 24.236.149 11.456.447 65.608.199 112.506.353 155.419.128 65.608.199 16.714.839 121.404.331 65 Table: Aggregated Social Accounting Matrix for Turkey, 2004, Billions TL Factors Activities Comm. Formal Labor Informal Labor Capital Account Capital Househ. Enterp. Social Sec. Inst. Govern. Domestic Banks Private Invest. Public Invest. 615.123.730 Activities ROW Total Receipts 124.348.181 739.471.911 Commodities 341.814.333 292.045.238 Formal Labor 113.261.757 113.261.757 Informal Labor 56.244.560 56.244.560 Capital 193.615.258 193.615.258 83.582.489 Households 56.244.560 167.938.483 46.386.821 193.615.258 Enterprises Social Sec. Inst. Government 51.476.631 32.853.899 34.221.509 416.795.461 7.801.123 202.220.737 51.487.108 Public Investment 149.299.109 56.244.560 46.386.821 135.893.665 90.528.715 739.471.911 797.276.738 113.261.757 1.143.562 34.282.254 193.615.258 416.795.461 202.220.737 46.386.821 26.530.062 168.545.885 93.999.488 93.999.488 -5.118.240 23.059.290 17.941.049 6.826.800 3.697.019 159.822.928 Private Investment Total Expenditures 47.790.090 16.707.554 Domestic Banks Rest of the World 797.276.738 17.941.049 804.357 29.679.267 34.536.004 13.709.456 93.999.488 135.893.665 168.545.885 93.999.488 17.941.049 159.822.928 66 Table: Aggregated Social Accounting Matrix for Turkey, 2005, Billions TL Factors Activities Comm. Formal Labor Informal Labor Capital Account Capital Househ. Enterp. Social Sec. Inst. Govern. Domestic Banks Private Invest. Public Invest. 707.902.158 Activities ROW Total Receipts 133.575.227 841.477.386 Commodities 389.644.228 338.434.212 Formal Labor 128.176.363 128.176.363 Informal Labor 63.650.992 63.650.992 Capital 214.267.191 214.267.191 95.433.908 Households 63.650.992 183.773.416 53.831.469 214.267.191 Enterprises Social Sec. Inst. Government 57.802.172 35.369.204 39.781.642 450.889.130 9.196.474 224.373.942 40.264.243 Public Investment 165.567.880 63.650.992 53.831.469 161.489.985 72.673.276 841.477.386 908.839.242 128.176.363 1.141.012 40.600.526 214.267.191 450.889.130 224.373.942 53.831.469 32.793.982 145.731.501 97.009.390 97.009.390 17.491.373 8.457.868 25.949.241 7.012.741 4.126.075 176.706.696 Private Investment Total Expenditures 36.138.168 21.089.014 Domestic Banks Rest of the World 908.839.242 25.949.241 910.277 32.742.455 45.738.612 16.920.165 97.009.390 161.489.985 145.731.501 97.009.390 25.949.241 176.706.696 67 REFERENCES Adelman, I., and S. Robinson. 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