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INTRODUCTION 1. GENERAL This publication presents a set of data that specify and summarise the expenditure and revenue of the general government sector in the years 1995-2003. The government sector includes the institutional units and bodies that produce and provide public and community non-market services, and are mainly financed by compulsory payments levied on institutional units belonging to other sectors. The general government sector includes the government ministries, the National Insurance Institute, national institutions, local institutions, and public non-profit institutions. The summaries are based on specific and detailed data for each year. Estimates for previous years have been adjusted after receipt of updated figures and specifications, and as a result of the continued adjustment of accounts to the new System of National Accounts (SNA93). For the entire general government sector, and for each of its sub-sectors separately, summaries are presented according to a combination of two types of classification: 1. Classification by economic category of expenditure – consumption, subsidies, interest, current transfers, gross capital formation, and other expenditures. This classification indicates the share of each sub-sector in the demand for goods and services, supply of services, and allocation of revenue. 2. Classification by function – general public services, defence, public order, financial services, environmental protection, housing and community services, health, culture and religion, education, and social protection. These summaries allow for examination of the purpose of all general government expenditures and of each of its each subsectors. The concentration of expenditures according to a combination of the two types of classification above indicates how expenditure for a specific function is divided among the different types of expenditure on the one hand, and how the expenditure by economic type is divided among the various services provided by the government on the other. Tables 1 and 2 present data on the total expenditure of the general government sector, by function and type of expenditure, as a percentage of the total and as a percentage of the Gross Domestic Product. Tables 3 and 4 present data on consumption in the general government sector, by function and type of expenditure, as a percentage of the total and as a percentage of the Gross Domestic Product. Tables 5 and 6 present the quantitative changes in general government sector consumption, by function and type of expenditure. Tables 7 and 8 display data on total expenditure and consumption in the general government sector in a combined classification, by function and type of expenditure as well as by subsectors: the government, the National Insurance Institute, local authorities, non-profit public institutions, and national institutions. Table 9 summarises the quantitative changes in general government consumption expenditure in a combined classification, by function and type of expenditure. - IX - Table 10 presents the individual and collective consumption expenditure of the general government in a combined classification, by type of expenditure and by function. Table 11 presents data on internal transfers between the different units (sub-sectors) in the general government sector. Tables 12-14 present a summary of income and expenditures in the general government sector, by segments: current account, capital account, as well as a breakdown by subsectors. Table 15 presents the full account of the different types of sources and uses in the government sector, in a format set by the international System of National Accounts (SNA93). 2. MAIN FINDINGS 2003 In 2003, general government expenditures amounted to NIS 268.3 billion (about 53.4% of the GDP). Of that amount, about 56% was consumption expenditure, and the rest of the expenditure was for transfer payments, subsidies, interest payments, fixed capital formation, etc. Of the total general government expenditure, 17.6% was for defence, 24.8% was for social protection, 14.8% was for education, and the rest was for other purposes. General government revenue amounted to NIS 234.7 billion in 2003 – a nominal decline of over 5% compared with the previous year. Revenue from taxes that year was about 82% of the total general government expenditure (38.4% of the GDP). The total deficit of the general government sector, which is defined as revenue less expenditure in the current account and capital account, amounted to NIS 29.8 billion in 2003 – about 6.7% of the GDP, following a deficit of 4.3% of the GDP in 2002. General government consumption expenditure declined by 2.3% in 2003 in quantitative terms, compared with an increase of 5% in 2002. In 2003, general government consumption expenditure comprised about 56% of the total general government sector expenditure (29.9% of the GDP). Of the general government consumption expenditure, about 48% was for compensation of employees, about 44% was for purchase of goods and services, and the rest was for taxes on production and consumption of fixed capital (imputed). The output of the general government sector in 2003 was about NIS 164 billion. Trends Between 1995 and 2003, general government consumption in constant prices increased by about 23.8%, whereas the GDP rose by 25% during the same period. The share of payments for wages out of the total general government consumption declined gradually, from over 52% in 1995 to less than 48% of the total consumption in 2003. Individual consumption expenditure comprised 48%-49% of the general government consumption expenditure throughout the last decade. -X- There has been considerable fluctuation in the general government deficit over the years. The amount of the deficit ranged from about 2% of the GDP in 2000, to 6.7% in 2003 – the highest deficit in the last decade in terms of the percentage of the GDP. The total general government expenditure over the last decade ranged from 51% to 55% of the GDP. Analysis of the general government sector expenditure by function reveals a continuous rise in the share of expenditure for social protection over the years – from 21% to about 25% of the total expenditure. At the same time, there was a decline in expenditure for housing and community services, and relative stability in the rest of the expenditure items, including defence (about 17% of the total expenditure), education (about 15%), and health (about 10.5%). The share of income from taxes in the GDP has remained stable since 1995. Over the years, this revenue has amounted to 39%-40% of the GDP. 3. DEFINITIONS AND EXPLANATIONS1 General government consumption expenditure includes consumption expenditure by the Government sector: the government, the National Insurance Institute, local authorities, national institutions and non-profit institutions, where the above mentioned bodies financed the major part of their expenditure. General government consumption expenditure is equal to the value of its intermediate consumption of goods and services, compensation of employees, taxes on production (including tax on wages and employers’ tax), consumption of fixed capital. Compensation of employees includes imputed expenditure, which reflects the government’s obligation to pay pensions to its staff after retirement. General government consumption expenditure can be divided into two main categories: a) The value of individual general government final consumption expenditure; b) The value of collective government final consumption expenditure. Collective consumption expenditure includes expenditure on defence, public order, general public administration, research and development, environment protection, etc. Individual consumption expenditure includes expenditures intended to provide services that can be attributed to specific individuals, such as education services, health services, cultural services, etc. Compensation of employees include all direct payments to employed persons (wages and salary) as well as the employers’ contributions to employed persons’ pension plans, provident funds, National Insurance Institute, etc. Imputed pension payments are equal in value to the sums that should have been transferred to provident funds in order to insure the de facto entitlements to the social benefits they accumulate. 1 The definitions are based on the new System of National Accounts (SNA 93), which was prepared by five international organizations: The United Nations, the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, OECD, and EUROSTAT. The new system is presented in: the System of National Accounts 1993, Commission of the European Communities, International Monetary Fund, Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, United Nations, World Bank, Brussels/Luxembourg, New York, Paris, Washington D.C. 1993. - XI - Other taxes on production: all taxes except taxes on products that enterprises incur as a result of engaging in production such as taxes on payroll, recurrent taxes on land and buildings, business licenses, stamp taxes, taxes on international transactions, etc. Intermediate consumption/purchases of goods and services: the value of goods and services consumed as inputs in the production process, excluding fixed assets whose consumption is recorded as consumption of fixed capital. The goods and services may be either transformed or used up during the production process. Consumption of fixed capital: represents the reduction in the value of the fixed assets whose economic life has not yet ended, as a result of physical deterioration, normal obsolescence and accidental damage. Current transfers: transfers from the current income of the payer, which are added to the current income of the recipient for the purpose of current purchases (e.g., for consumption expenditure). Transfers received from abroad or paid abroad are converted into Israeli currency at the official exchange rate. Current transfers in kind: goods and services for individual consumption produced or purchased by government units and non-profit institutions serving households, and provided to households by these institutions free of charge. Subsidies consist of all grants on current account given by the government and the local authorities to private industries and public corporations, as well as operation deficits of government enterprises. In addition to the direct current subsidies, this item also includes the subsidy component in loans, for financing of current activities such as loans which are granted by the government to the producers under preferred conditions (lower than market interest rates) On the other hand, the subsidy component embodied in non-recurrent loans or in loans that are not given on a regular basis, is not included in this item. The grant components in these loans are defined as capital transfers. Subsidies on products: subsidies payable per unit of goods or services produced, sold, imported, or otherwise used; and calculated as a specific amount of money per unit of quantity, as a specific percentage of the price per unit or as the difference between a specific target price and the market price actually paid by other buyer, etc. Gross fixed capital formation: expenditures (purchases and self production) of industries, general government and non-profit institutions, for the addition of new durable goods to their stocks of fixed assets. Included are acquisitions of durable goods (except land and mineral deposits) for civilian use, work-in-progress on construction projects, major improvements; outlays on the improvement to land and fruit plantations. Also included are intangible assets (mainly expenditures for acquisition and production of software and expenditures for oil and gas exploration). Excluded are government expenditures for buildings and equipment for military use. Capital transfers: transfers intended to finance investments and whose origins are the capital or savings of the donor, or which are non-recurrent for either party to the transaction. Investment grants: capital transfers, in cash or in kind, made by the government to other resident or non-resident institutional units to finance part or all of the costs for acquiring fixed assets. Taxes on income include current levies by the government, the National Insurance Institute and local authorities: - XII - a) On income from wages, property, capital gains, from entrepreneurship and from pensions, as well as levies on financial assets, on net-wealth of enterprises, and on ownership of goods. b) Payments to the National Insurance Institute - both by the insured and by the employer. From 1995, also includes health tax paid by households. c) Mandatory payments for Israeli passports, court fees, etc. Taxes on production and imports consist of taxes on goods and services when they are produced, transferred, delivered, or otherwise used of by the producers or the importers. Taxes and duties on imports are paid when the goods cross the border to Israel, or when services are delivered by non-resident units. Taxes on products: taxes that are payable per unit of goods or services. The tax is specific per unit of quantity of goods or services when they are produced, sold, imported, exported, transferred or used for own capital formation. Examples of taxes on products: V.A.T., sales tax, gasoline tax, and customs. Capital taxes: taxes levied at irregular and infrequent intervals on the values of the assets or net worth owned by institution units or on the values of assets transferred between institutional units as gifts, legacies, or other transfers. Market output: output that is intended to be marketed at an “economically significant” price, i.e., sold at prices intended to cover at least half of the cost of production. Non-market output: goods and services produced by the government or by non-profit institutions and are supplied free of charge or at prices that are not intended to at least half of the cost of production. Net value added: the balancing item in the production account: the value of output less the value of both intermediate consumption and consumption of fixed capital. Value added is intended to measure the additional value created by the production process. Non-produced non-financial assets: non-financial assets that are needed for production but have not themselves been produced. Primary income: accrued income of institutional units as a result of their involvement in the production process or as a result of the ownership of assets that may be used for that process. Net lending is the net amount a unit or sector has, which can be used to finance, directly or indirectly, other units or other sectors. It is a balancing item in the capital account and is defined as: (Net saving plus capital transfers receivable minus capital transfers payable) minus (the value of acquisitions less the value of disposals of non-financial assets, less consumption of fixed capital). Negative net lending may also be described as “net borrowing”. Net saving of the general government: in the current account it is the difference between current receipts and current expenditures of the general government. Government gross disposable income: the balancing item in the secondary distribution of income account. It is derived from the balance of primary income account of the general government sector plus current taxes on income and wealth, social protection contributions, and all current transfers, (except social transfers in kind, received), and less all such transfers paid. - XIII - DEFINITIONS OF WAGES AND LABOUR COMPENSATION A. Wages and salaries: Wages and salaries are defined as remuneration in cash or in kind by the employer to the employee for work carried out during the period of the report, including wages based on units of work-time or on a monthly basis. Wages and salaries include all types of gross payments, as specified below: 1. Basic wages, cost of living allowances, seniority payments, back pay, advance payments, overtime, on-call and shift allowances. 2. Bonuses and special allowances such as education and proficiency allowances, “13th month” salary, retirement pay, compensation for unused sickness day quota, etc. 3. Transportation allowance, vacation allowance, car compensation, per diem expenses, clothing allowance, etc. allowance, telephone 4. Payments in kind (only subject to income tax), such as: meals, housing services, holiday gifts, etc. B. Supplementary expenses for wages and salaries/employers’ social contributions include social contributions payable by employers, such: actual contributions to the National Insurance Institute, to pension plans, provident funds, study funds, etc. In addition, these expenses include imputed contributions to pension expenses for employees, which derive from the employer’s obligation to pay the workers’ retirement pensions instead of contributing to pension funds, for example, imputed contributions to budgetary pension schemes for civil servants. C. Taxes on wages and salaries: Taxes levied on employers for wage and salary expenses, such as payroll tax and employers’ tax. D. Other components of labour cost: Expenses for vocational training, welfare, recruiting workers, and providing work clothes, maintaining a cafeteria, payments to professional organizations, etc. E. Compensation of employees: Compensation of employees is defined as the total expenditure for wages and salaries and supplementary expenditures for wages and salaries (items A + B). F. Labour Cost: Labour cost includes compensation of employees, taxes on wages and salaries, and other components of labour cost (items E + C + D). There may be cases in which reported labour costs include only compensation of employees and taxes on wages and salaries (items C + E). In those cases, it is recommended to classify the item as a labour cost for employees as well. - XIV - CLASSIFICATION OF THE FUNCTIONS OF GOVERNMENT – COFOG1 01 General public services 01.1 Executive and legislative organs, financial and fiscal affairs, external affairs 01.2 Foreign economic aid 01.3 General services 01.4 Basic research 01.5 R&D general public services 01.6 General public services n.e.c. 01.7 Public debt transactions 01.8 Transfers of a general character between different levels of government 02 Defence 02.1 Military defence 02.2 Civil defence 02.3 Foreign military aid (CS) 02.4 R&D defence 02.5 Defence n.e.c. 03 Public order and safety 03.1 Police services 03.2 Fire-protection services 03.3 Law courts 03.4 Prisons 03.5 R&D public order and safety 03.6 Public order and safety n.e.c. 1 United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Classification of the Functions of Government. - XV - 04 Economic affairs 04.1 General economic, commercial and labour affairs 04.2 Agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting 04.3 Fuel and energy 04.4 Mining, manufacturing and construction 04.5 Transport 04.6 Communication 04.7 Other industries 04.8 R&D economic affairs 04.9 Economic affairs n.e.c. 05 Environmental protection 05.1 Waste management 05.2 Waste water management 05.3 Pollution abatement 05.4 Protection of biodiversity and landscape 05.5 R&D environmental protection 05.6 Environmental protection n.e.c. 06 Housing and community amenities 06.1 Housing development 06.2 Community development 06.3 Water supply 06.4 Street lighting 06.5 R&D housing and community amenities 06.6 Housing and community amenities n.e.c. - XVI - 07 Health 07.1 Medical products, appliances and equipment 07.2 Outpatient services 07.3 Hospital services 07.4 Public health services 07.5 R&D health 07.6 Health n.e.c. 08 Recreation, culture and religion 08.1 Recreational and sporting services 08.2 Cultural services 08.3 Broadcasting and publishing services 08.4 Religious and other community services 08.5 R&D recreation, culture and religion 08.6 Recreation, culture and religion n.e.c. 09 Education 09.1 Pre-primary and primary education 09.2 Secondary education 09.3 Post-secondary non-tertiary education 09.4 Tertiary education 09.5 Education not definable by level 09.6 Subsidiary services to education 09.7 R&D education 09.8 Education n.e.c. 10 Social protection 10.1 Sickness and disability 10.2 Old age 10.3 Survivors 10.4 Family and children 10.5 Unemployment 10.6 Housing 10.7 Social exclusion n.e.c. 10.8 R&D social protection 10.9 Social protection n.e.c. - XVII - 4. SOURCES OF THE DATA AND METHODS OF CALCULATION General government consumption expenditure is estimated by the analysis of the Accountant General’s reports, and of the budget provisions, also using complementary data received from the Ministries of Finance and of Defence. The estimate of expenditures by local authorities, national institutions, and non-profit institutions is based on data obtained from analysis of financial and budget accounts. The estimate of consumption of non-profit institutions (labour expenditures and purchases of goods and services), at current prices, is based on findings of a survey of expenditures of non-profit institutions. This survey summarises consumption expenditures from financial reports of the institutions or from special questionnaires sent to them. For those years in which reports had not yet been received, the value of services in the last year for which data were available was extrapolated according to changes in wages as reported to the National Insurance Institute. The estimates for labour expenditures of non-profit institutions at constant prices, were obtained by extrapolating according to the change in the number of work hours of employees in each type of institution. Purchases of goods and services, at constant prices, were calculated using price indices adjusted for the composition of the purchases made by the institutions. Estimates of gross capital formation in fixed assets are based mainly on data obtained from government ministries, local authorities, and government institutions, or on analysis of the financial reports of those institutions. Regarding years for which the above-mentioned information has not yet been received, extrapolation was conducted using the following indicators: a) Data on imports of transport equipment, machinery and other equipment; b) Reports on revenue from sales of domestically produced investment goods; c) Quarterly estimates on areas of building begun and completed; d) Financial data on investment in residential building carried out by the Ministry of Construction and Housing. Estimates at constant prices The estimates are calculated each year, at the prices of the previous year, and are presented in the tables as chained estimates at 2000 prices, to allow comparisons between nonconsecutive years. Because of the chaining, estimates for each category of the consumption components do not add up to the total expenditure for consumption. For general government consumption expenditure estimates, quantitative changes in the expenditure on wages were computed according to the change in labour inputs. Other current expenditures were usually deflated by the wholesale price index of manufacturing output, which was weighted in accordance with the characteristic production industries of the various expenditure items. The estimates of gross capital formation, at constant prices, was based on the price indices of construction costs and on the price indices of equipment in Israel and in the main countries from whom Israel imports. Estimates of the changes in the number of employed persons, employees, and work hours are usually based on findings from the Labour Force Survey in Israel and on data from the National Insurance Institute. - XVIII - The following are some additional explanations regarding the methods of calculating the various series: 5. 1) The classification of the functions of the central government and other public institutions is based on the manual of the United Nations Statistical Office. The expenditure was classified by the typical function of each type of expense, without considering the administrative unit in which the financial reports were recorded. 2) Estimates of the expenditure for defense consumption were conducted in 1995 on the basis of a new classification of the expenditure items for defence, according to budget performance records of the Ministry of Defence. 3) In the general government sector accounts, the calculation of the general government sector deficit has included capital protection components on nominal interest. 4) In the series on government transfer payments, rent subsidies for residents of public housing (Amidar, Amigur, and other public housing companies) were imputed. Additionally, the series on income from property and income from capital accounts were adjusted following the new classification of the items included in those series. 5) Health institutions whose main income derives from sale of services to the government or to households not included in the general government sector. 6) Expenditures deriving from the government’s obligation to pay pension to its workers after they retire were imputed. 7) The expenditure includes interest payments, but does not include payments on account of principal, which are also included as expenditures in the report of the accountant general. Interest payments were not classified in the various functions, and appear in the item “other functions”. COMPARISON WITH PREVIOUS PUBLICATIONS In contrast with the data presented in previous publications, the data here were presented according to the new international system of national accounts – SNA93. Therefore, the presentations and definitions of income and expenditure in this publication are substantially different from those in previous publications. In addition, several revisions were made in the estimates as of 1995, following updated details and data. In addition to these updates, several methodological changes were introduced in accordance with the above explanations, in order to adjust the general government sector accounts of Israel to internationally accepted requirements. - XIX -