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Integrating Industry and National Economic Accounts Ann Lawson, Brian Moyer, Sumiye Okubo, and Mark Planting Industry Economics Division Presentation for the 2004 OECD National Accounts Expert Meeting October 12-15, 2004 Outline • • • • BEA’s vision for integrating the accounts Methodologies for integration Steps for integration Future research 2 www.bea.gov BEA Accounts Three approaches to estimate GDP 1. Expenditures approach: GDP = C + I + G + (X - M) 2. Income approach: GDP = Compensation of employees + Gross operating surplus + Taxes on production and imports, less subsidies 3. Production approach: GDP = Gross output - Intermediate inputs 3 www.bea.gov BEA’s Vision for Integrating the Accounts • Long-term: Full Integration (2008-2010) – Integration of all industry accounts and integration of industry accounts with the national income and product accounts (NIPAs) – Provide a third independent measure of GDP • Short-term: Partial Integration (2004-2007) – Integration of the Annual I-O and GDP-byindustry accounts 4 www.bea.gov Value Added Estimates Depend on Quality of Data I-O accounts • Value added = Gross output intermediate inputs • Quality of gross output is high, but overall quality of intermediate inputs is not GDP-by-industry accounts • Value added = Compensation of employees + gross operating surplus + taxes on production and imports, less subsidies • Quality depends on source data; gross operating surplus is most problematic 5 www.bea.gov Partial Integration: Five Steps to Integrate Industry Accounts • Develop consistent level of industry detail • Develop revised 1997 benchmark I-O table • Develop time series of gross output and value added by industry • Apply I-O framework to develop time series of annual accounts • Develop real (inflation adjusted) measures 6 www.bea.gov Step 1: Develop Consistent Level of Industry Detail Industries and Commodities in the Integrated Accounts 1997 NAICS sectors 1997 NAICS codes All industries Private industries Agriculture, forestry, fishing, and hunting………….. Mining …………………………………………………. Utilities ………………………………………………… Construction ………………………………………….. Manufacturing ………………………………………… Wholesale trade ……………………………………… Retail trade …………………………………………… Transportation and warehousing …………………… Information ……………………………………………. Finance and insurance ……………………………… Real estate and rental and leasing ………………… Professional, scientific, and technical services ….. Management of companies and enterprises ……… Administrative and waste management services … Educational services ………………………………… Health care and social assistance ………………… Arts, entertainment, and recreation ……………….. Accommodation and food services ………………… Other services, except government ……………….. Government …………………………………………. 7 11 21 22 23 31, 32, 33 42 44, 45 48, 49 51 52 53 54 55 56 61 62 71 72 81 92 www.bea.gov Step 2: Develop Revised 1997 Benchmark I-O Table • Incorporate results of 2003 NIPA revisions • Set best levels and composition of value added for each industry – Incorporate the best estimates from both sets of accounts 8 www.bea.gov Merging Information for Value-Added Levels Benchmark I-O Value Added GDP-byIndustry Value Added Good Benchmark data/ good GDP-by-industry data e.g., Health care Good Benchmark data/ poor GDP-by-industry data e.g., Mining Poor Benchmark data/ good GDP-by-industry data Poor Benchmark data/ poor GDP-by-industry data e.g., Transportation/ Warehousing e.g. Construction 9 www.bea.gov Evaluation Criteria: (1) Benchmark I-O Accounts • Share of an industry’s intermediate inputs covered by quinquennial economic census • Share of an industry’s total gross output accounted for by quinquennial census 10 www.bea.gov Evaluation Criteria: (2) GDP-by-Industry Accounts • Quality and size of adjustments made to convert enterprise-based, profit-type income to establishment basis • Share of an industry’s value added accounted for by proprietors’ income 11 www.bea.gov Merging Information from Benchmark I-O & GDP-by- Industry Accounts • Based on our criteria: – Identify point estimate and variance of value added for each publication-level industry in the benchmark I-O and GDP-by-industry accounts – Develop probability distribution of value added for each industry in each set of accounts – Combine the two distributions to get the “best” estimate of value added for each industry 12 www.bea.gov Merging Information: An Example 13 www.bea.gov Step 3: Time Series of Gross Output and Value Added by Industry • Set levels of industry gross output and value added to the revised 1997 benchmark I-O table • Extrapolate gross output by industry using annual survey data from the Bureau of the Census • Develop time series of value added by industry by applying GDI extrapolators to 1997 levels • Adjust industry estimates to take into account statistical discrepancy and extrapolation errors 14 www.bea.gov Step 4: Develop Time-Series of Balanced Annual I-O Accounts • Prepare annual I-O tables, given estimates of gross output, value added, and final demand • Balance annual I-O tables to establish internal consistency and consistency with GDP-by-industry accounts 15 www.bea.gov Input-Output Use Table Industries Agriculture Mining Constructi on Manufactur Transporta ing tion Final Uses (GDP) Trade Finance Services Other Total Intermediate Use PCE PFI CBI X M GOVT GDP Total Commodity O utput Agriculture Minerals C o m m o d i t i e s Value Added Construction Manufacturing Transportation Trade Finance Services Other Noncomp. imports Total interm inputs Comp Taxes on prod.& imports, less subs Gross op surpl Total Total Industry Output 16 www.bea.gov Step 5: Develop Real Measures • Apply double-deflation procedure to these measures of gross output and intermediate inputs to develop real measures of value added 17 www.bea.gov Future Research • Evaluate coverage, quality, and consistency of source data from statistical agencies • Develop additional procedures to incorporate new data from 2002 Economic Census and intermediate input data from expanded annual surveys • Develop new processes and procedures for incorporating information from a productionbased approach to measuring GDP into the NIPAs 18 www.bea.gov Questions? • [email protected] 19 www.bea.gov