The OECD Input-Output database and Supply-Use Tables in SNA 1993 Rev 1 OECD-NBS Workshop on National Accounts September 25-28, 2007, Beijing Contact:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Supply and Use Tables in the Czech Republic
Advertisements

1 The OECD STAN Database 1 st World KLEMS Conference 19 th -20 th August 2010 Colin Webb OECD STI/EAS.
1 4th International Trade Statistics Expert Meeting Methodological issues relating to partner countries Presentation by Poland Room document 2.
Offshore outsourcing of production – the problem of fabless enterprises.
8 th OECD International Trade Statistics Expert Meeting September 2007 Changes in the 1993 SNA Rev. 1 Goods for processing Merchanting Charles Aspden,
Implementation of 2008 SNA in Jamaica. Outline Policy issues - relationship with national accounts framework The Jamaican System of National Accounts.
Regional Seminar on Developing a Programme for the Implementation of the 2008 SNA and Supporting Statistics January 30-February 1, 2013 Kingston, Jamaica.
1 WTO Statistics Division Trends in Services Trade under GATS Recent Developments Symposium on Assessment of Trade in Services World.
Measuring Trade in Value Added: Trade in Tasks and Employment Hubert Escaith WTO WTO PUBLIC FORUM Session 14 Value Chains, Labour Rights and Development.
An Introduction to International Economics
Merchanting and other trade- related services SNA Chapter 14 (external transactions)
1 Goods for processing Training Workshop on 2008 SNA for ECO Member States October 2012, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran GULAB SINGH United Nations.
Fabienne Fortanier Head of Trade Statistics OECD
1 BPM5  BPM6 / Global production: processing and merchanting Norway’s experience so far Norway’s experience so far Per Øivind Grindalen Tore Halvorsen.
BEA Advisory Committee
Overview 2008 SNA (cont’d) Training Workshop on System of National Accounts for ECO Member Countries October 2012, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran.
Global Manufacturing and Measurement Issues Raised by the iPhone Robert E. Yuskavage Jennifer Ribarsky May 6, 2011.
PRIME MINISTRY REPUBLIC OF TURKEY TURKISH STATISTICAL INSTITUTE TurkStat NATIONAL ACCOUNTS IN TURKEY 1 TurkStat.
African Centre for Statistics United Nations Economic Commission for Africa Chapter 4: Use Table Ramesh KOLLI Senior Advisor on National Accounts, African.
Mark de Haan Global Production Factoryless Goods Producers (FGPs) 9th AEG Meeting 8-10 September 2014, Washington DC.
International Workshop on Industrial Statistics Dalian, China June 2010 Shyam Upadhyaya UNIDO Statistical units and data items.
Lecture 3. GDP by Production Approach 1. 2 Human R Produced fixed R Natural R Financial R Good & Services from Production COMP CFC OS T-S OUTPUT goods.
African Centre for Statistics United Nations Economic Commission for Africa Chapter 11: Chapter 11: Supply and use tables to input-output tables Ramesh.
Chapter 7. Balancing supply and use Comments and suggestions. By Liv Hobbelstad Simpson. 1. Why SNA 1993 and not 2008 SNA The Global Office has decided.
Regional Coordinators Meeting September 28-30, 2009 Washington DC Defining the National Accounts Framework for the ICP.
Changing the Treatment of Goods Sent Abroad for Processing (GSAP) Practical and Analytical Impacts on Production Accounts Michel Girard - Statistics Canada.
African Centre for Statistics United Nations Economic Commission for Africa Chapter 6: Chapter 6: Data Sources for Compiling SUT Ramesh KOLLI Senior Advisor.
Copyright 2010, The World Bank Group. All Rights Reserved. 1 GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS COVERAGE OF THE GFS SYSTEM Part 1 This lecture defines the concept.
Merchanting The Statistics Department International Monetary Fund June 29, 2005 BOPCOM-05/22.
Copyright 2010, The World Bank Group. All Rights Reserved. Introduction to the SNA, advanced Lesson 8 The 2008 SNA compared with balance of payments (BPM)
3rd ICP 2011 Technical Advisory Group Meeting at the OECD, Paris 10, 11 June 2010.
Goods Sent Abroad for Processing “Goods for processing” in BPM5. Same issues arise for domestic processing. See
1 MERCHANTING Training Workshop on 2008 SNA for ECO Member States October 2012, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran GULAB SINGH United Nations Statistics.
OECD - WGGS Merchanting Michael Connolly – National Accounts, CSO Ireland October 2010.
Merchanting Michael Connolly CSO, Ireland Geneva April 2008 UNECE/EUROSTAT/OECD WGGNA Agenda item 9 Invited paper 15/Rev.1.
Implications of the new treatment of goods for processing in the supply and use tables Discussion Joint UNECE/Eurostat/OECD Meeting on National Accounts.
African Centre for Statistics United Nations Economic Commission for Africa Expert Group Meeting to review the “Handbook on SUT: Compilation, Application.
 Statistical Center of Iran is legal responsible for compilation of economic statistics and national accounts. National accounts compile by Economic.
Physical Energy Accounts Ole Gravgård SEEA Training Seminar for the ECA Addis Ababa 2-5 February 2015.
African Centre for Statistics United Nations Economic Commission for Africa Handbook on Supply and Use Table: Compilation, Application, and Good Practices.
China’s Input-Output Survey and Tabulation Method Comments 13th OECD – NBS Workshop on National Accounts November 40- December 4, 2009 Haikou, China Contact:
Merchanting SNA Chapter 14 (External transactions)
1 The United States Experience in Collecting FATS Anne Flatness U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis 2008 APEC Capacity Building Seminar-Workshop on the Measurement.
China ’ s Input-Output Survey and Its Tabulation Method QI Shuchang Dept. of National Accounts, NBS.
Ancillary units UNSD/NA/MR1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section.
Myriam Broin Insee – National Accounts Department Eurostat Task Force on goods sent abroad for processing France.
METAC Workshop March 14-17, 2016 Beirut, Lebanon National Accounts Compilation Issues Session 10: Households final consumption expenditures.
STATISTICAL UNITS IN DESCRIBING THE PRODUCTION PROCESS: MAIN ISSUES Peter van de Ven Head of National Accounts OECD Advisory Expert Group on National Accounts.
African Centre for Statistics United Nations Economic Commission for Africa Expert Group Meeting: to review “Handbook on Supply and Use Table, Compilation,Application,and.
METAC Workshop March 14-17, 2016 Beirut, Lebanon National Accounts Compilation Issues Session 6: Trade.
The application of Supply and Use Tables
BPM6 and 2008 SNA recommendations on processing and merchanting – data requirements UNECE Workshop on the implementation 2008 SNA in EECCA countries and.
Goods for processing and merchanting
SUTs – data sources and bridge tables
9 TOPICS GROUPED UNDER THE HEADING BASIC ACCOUNTING RULES
Prepared for TF energy accounts meeting by:
General features of the system of the European System of Accounts (ESA 2010) THE CONTRACTOR IS ACTING UNDER A FRAMEWORK CONTRACT CONCLUDED WITH THE COMMISSION.
A SUMMARY NOTE ON REVISED GDP ESTIMATES
Luxembourg, December 12th 2014
SUTs – data sources and bridge tables
CARICOM TRADE IN SERVICES STATISTICS (CTIS)PROJECT June-December 2016
National Accounting 06/04/2019 Dr. Amr Nazieh.
Using FM data for an R&D satellite account
Overview 2008 SNA (cont’d) Training Workshop on System of National Accounts for ECO Member Countries October 2012, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran.
2008 SNA- Main Changes from 1993 SNA
General features of the system of the European System of Accounts (ESA 2010) THE CONTRACTOR IS ACTING UNDER A FRAMEWORK CONTRACT CONCLUDED WITH THE COMMISSION.
MANUFACTURING SERVICES ON INPUTS OWNED BY OTHERS
Item 24a: Symmetrical input/output tables
Introduction to Case study 6: Inward and outward Foreign affiliate trade in services statistics – “FATS” - Overview FATS statistics - Workshop on Statistics.
GENERAL INTRODUCTION TO THE COURSE
Presentation transcript:

The OECD Input-Output database and Supply-Use Tables in SNA 1993 Rev 1 OECD-NBS Workshop on National Accounts September 25-28, 2007, Beijing Contact:

OECD Input-Output Database History 2006 Edition Creating Symmetric Tables Data Sources Why Industry by Industry? Dissemination

History 1995 Edition –10 countries –SNA68 –ISIC Rev 2 –36 sectors –Up to Edition -20 Countries (2 non member) -SNA 93 -ISIC Rev Sectors -Up to 1998

2006 Edition –37 countries (9 non members) –SNA93 –ISIC Rev 3 –48 sectors –Up to 2003

2006 Edition - Country Coverage Country coverage corresponds to over 90% of global GDP (80% in 2002 Ed and 70% in 1995). Population coverage (66% versus 40 and 10 respectively)

2006 Edition - Tables

2006 Edition – Industry Coverage

2006 Edition - Value-Added & Final Demand VAFD

Creating Symmetric Tables Requests for Industry by Industry (IxI) (preferably 48x48 at BP) –Or: Supply-Use, or Commodity by Commodity (CxC) and Supply, or CxC Conversion Steps: –S-U at purchasers prices – Convert use table to BP. –S-U at BP (total economy only) – Convert Use table into separate domestic and import use tables –Convert S and Domestic Use tables into IxI tables usingFixed Product Sales Structures assumption. – Aggregate to 48x48 –CxC and Supply – (reverse engineer the Use table and follow steps above) –CxC - aggregate only (Japan, Korea. Chinese Taipei and Indonesia) –Other: e.g. FISIM, c.i.f/f.o.b

Transforming Supply Use into Input-Output Tables SU tables are CxI not CxC or IxI So for CxC, its necessary to convert output by industries into output by products And for IxI, its necessary to convert demand by products into demand by industries. If each industry produced only one product this would be trivial. Unfortunately this is rarely the case.

(CxC) Input-Output Tables Two assumptions prevail in constructing CxC tables, which can be used in isolation or often in combination: –Product technology - Each product is produced in its own specific way, irrespective of the industry where it is produced –Industry technology - Each industry has its own specific way of production, irrespective of its product mix.

Product technology This illustrates one of the biggest practical problems with the implementation of the product technology assumption – although it could of course be used to identify problems with the original SU balance Agriculture produces 20 units of manufacturing – we assume the same structure as in manufacturing, hence (minus) 80/200*20=-8 etc

Industry technology Agriculture produces 20 units of manufacturing – we assume the same structure as in agriculture, hence zero for agricultural products and (minus) 60/150*20=-8 etc Note there are no negatives. A strength of the industry technology assumption.

(CxC) Input-Output Tables A third assumption is the hybrid technology which uses parts of the industry and product technology assumptions.

(CxC) Input-Output Tables These transformations can be described algebraically as Where U is the original SU IC CxI Table; VA is the VA vector (VA by I); q, the vector of domestically produced products and g, the vector of the output of industries Product TechIndustry Tech IO IC (C by C) U(Make) -1 diag(q)U(diag(g)) -1 Make' IO VA (VA by C) VA(Make) -1 diag(q)VA(diag(g)) -1 Make'

(IxI) Input-Output Tables Like CxC two assumptions prevail in constructing IxI tables Fixed Product Sales Structures – Each product has its own specific sales structure, irrespective of the industry where its produced. Fixed Industry Sales Structures - Each industry has its own specific sales structure, irrespective of its product mix.

Fixed Product Sales Structures Agriculture produces 20 units of manufacturing – we assume that it produces 20/220 per cent of all products and that each consumer purchases this share of manufactured products from the agriculture industry, so, of the 60 purchased by agriculture 60*20/220 =5.5 is from the agriculture industry.

Fixed Industry Sales Structures Agriculture produces 20 units of manufacturing – we assume that the shares are split equally between consumers of agricultural products, so 80/130*20=12.3 goes to manufacturing, 50/130*20=7.7 to final demand etc. This can also result in negatives.

(IxI) Input-Output Tables These transformations can be described algebraically as Where U is the original SU IC CxI Table; fd is the final demand vector; q, the vector of domestically produced products and g, the vector of the output of industries FPSSFISS IO IC (I by I) Make'(diag(q) -1 Udiag(g)(Make) -1 U IO FD (FD by I) Make'(diag(q) -1 Udiag(g)(Make) -1 fd

So why do the OECD choose Industry by Industry? i. Linkages to other OECD industrial database: –STAN, ANBERD, SDBS, IEA (emissions) etc ii. Policy focus – –Structure of businesses, Entrepreneurship etc iii. Statistical Quality – whether CxC or IxI, assumptions are needed: –Information sources, typically, business (industry) based. IxI using Fixed Product Sales assumption (FPSA) preserves observed VA relationships. CxC does not. –Equally the CxC assumption of heterogeneity in products is intrinsically linked to empirical facts – classification systems are too aggregate and businesses rarely have the same cost structures. iv. Simplicity – –IxI tables easily produced using FPSS (no negatives)

Sources

Dissemination –2002 Edition available now (on request) from –1995 Edition available on-line –2006 Edition release imminent See also Ahmad & Yamano, 2006 for more information.

Special Issues SNA93 – Rev 1 implications Although the SU tables are not in themselves subject to change in the SNA revision, a number of changes in other areas will have an effect.

Special Issues SNA93 – Rev 1 implications Ancillary Units The 1993 SNA specifies that units conducting only a specified list of activities designated as ancillary should not be treated as separate units but their costs should be consolidated with the units they serve. This means that when accounts for a region are compiled, head offices and other ancillary units located there are excluded if the units they serve are located outside the region. This results in a difference between ancillary units located abroad, which are treated as separate units, and those that are resident but distant from their related enterprises.

Special Issues SNA93 – Rev 1 implications Ancillary Units The AEG recommended that ancillary units can be establishments in their own right if they satisfy the normal requirements of an establishment – allocated to the main service classification provided by the unit.

Special Issues SNA93 – Rev 1 implications Goods sent abroad for processing The 1993 SNA and BoP treat goods sent abroad for processing differently. The SNA records gross flows only in the case of substantial processing (reclassification of the good at three-digit CPC). The Balance of Payments Manual, as a practical matter, suggests a convention that all processing be assumed substantial and therefore gross flows are recorded. Further, the position is that when goods are sent abroad for processing, no change in ownership takes place and thus there are no actual transactions. Does the advent of globalization and the increasing amount of goods processed abroad suggest a change in practice would be appropriate?

Special Issues SNA93 – Rev 1 implications Goods sent abroad for processing The AEG has decided to resolve this issue by never imputing a change of ownership, and, so, not recording gross flows. Further the AEG also recommended that the same approach should be used in dealing with goods processed domestically even if between related enterprises,

Special Issues SNA93 – Rev 1 implications Merchanting Merchanting is defined in BoP as the purchase of a good by a resident of country A from a resident of country B which is then sold to a resident of country C, without the good entering the merchants economy. The SNA does not cover this topic. There is a need for a clear and precise definition of merchanting; arising out of this there needs to be clear guidance on whether merchanting (when redefined) should be recorded on a net or a gross basis and under goods or services.

Special Issues SNA93 – Rev 1 implications Merchanting The AEG has recommended that, the acquisition of goods by the merchanter should be recorded as an import, identified as a negative export, of the merchanter. The resale of these goods is then shown as an export with the difference in values (exclusive of holding gains/losses) allocated to wholesale/retail exports.