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www.bea.gov GDP Using the Income Approach: the U.S. Experience Brian C. Moyer International Workshop on Household Income, Consumption, and Full Accounting of the Household Sector March 26-28, 2012 Beijing, China
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bea.gov 2 Measuring GDP Expenditures approach GDP = C + I + G + (X-M) Income approach GDP = Compensation of Employees + Gross Operating Surplus + TOPI less Subsidies Production or “value added” approach GDP = Gross Output - Intermediate Inputs
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bea.gov 3 GDP by Expenditures and Income Percent change GDP by Expenditures GDP by Income
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bea.gov 4 Income approach
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bea.gov 5 Components of income Compensation of Employees Wages and salaries Employer contributions to pension and insurance funds Gross Operating Surplus Corporate profits, proprietors’ income, etc. Consumption of fixed capital Taxes on Production and Imports less Subsidies Federal excise taxes; State and local sales taxes Subsidies: grants by government to businesses and government enterprises
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bea.gov Source data 6 Administrative data Mostly data collected for non-statistical purposes Financial statements Regulatory data Tax agencies Utilize a wide range of concepts and definitions that may differ significantly from those used in the national accounts Scope and coverage may differ over time because of changes in business accounting and tax rules
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bea.gov Adjustments to source data 7 Significant adjustments are required to ensure coverage and consistency with national accounts concepts Misreporting adjustments Inventory valuation adjustments Adjustments to exclude capital gains and losses Capital consumption adjustments Adjustments to industry classifications
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bea.gov 8 Nonfarm proprietors’ income Total Nonfarm Proprietors’ Income Compared to Misreported Income Billions of dollars
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bea.gov 9 Corporate profits
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bea.gov 10 Wages and salaries [Growth rts.] Percent Change of Wages and Salaries
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bea.gov 11 Wages and salaries Growth Rates of Real Value Added, 2007 QCEWCBP
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bea.gov 12 Timing of source data GDP by Income ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| GDP by Expenditures 37% based on early source data 63% based on judgmental trend 23% based on judgmental trend 77% based on early source data
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bea.gov 13 Timing of source data GDP by Income source data - estimates for 20072007 Judgmental trend Early source dataDescription of early source data / estimation method (billions)(percent of GDP by Income) GDP by Income14,092.5 Compensation of employees7,863.6 Wages and salaries6,409.7 Nonsupervisory & production workers2,411.4 17.1%BLS Current Employment Statistics: payroll survey Supervisory/nonproduction workers2,909.220.6% Judgmental trend extrapolation based on payroll employment Government1,089.1 7.7%BLS CES payroll survey employment and ECI Supplements1,453.810.3% Judgmental trend extrapolation Taxes on production and imports, less subsidies973.9 Property taxes396.32.8% Judgmental trend extrapolation Other577.6 4.1%Federal Monthly Treasury data; Census data for sales taxes Net interest and misc. payments964.16.8% FDIC data for commercial banks; judgmental trend extrapolation based on interest rates for most of the remainder Business current transfer payments102.20.7% Judgmental trend extrapolation Proprietors' income1,096.47.8% Judgmental trend extrapolation based on BLS payroll data, Census data, and other indicators Rental income of persons144.91.0% Mixture of actual source data and judgmental trend extrapolation Corporate profits1,193.9 8.5% Census Quarterly Financial Report, FDIC, and Compustat data Current surplus of government enterprises-6.60.0% Judgmental trend extrapolation Consumption of fixed capital1,760.012.5% Judgmental trend extrapolation based on BEA capital stocks Total 62.6%37.4% Percent based on early source data that are conceptually consistent with annual/benchmark data 11.8%
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bea.gov Statistical discrepancy 14 Both GDP by income and GDP by expenditures have measurement strengths and weaknesses Consistency with economic concepts Source data timing Consistency with benchmark data Availability of corresponding price measures GDP by Expenditures = GDP by Income + Statistical Discrepancy
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bea.gov Income and Production approaches Income approach GDP = Compensation of Employees + Gross Operating Surplus + TOPI less Subsidies Production approach GDP = Gross Output - Intermediate Inputs 15
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bea.gov Income and Production approaches Value added i = (Compensation i + Gross Operating Surplus i + TOPI less Subsidies i ) = (Gross Output i – Intermediate Inputs i ) GDP = ∑ i Value added i 16
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bea.gov 17 Supply-Use framework
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bea.gov 18 Quality weighting Reliability indicators assigned to components of intermediate inputs and gross operating surplus by industry—in most cases, coefficients of variation Less reliable components adjust more; more reliable components adjust less
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bea.gov 19 Quality weighting
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bea.gov 20 Looking forward … Research on combining GDP by expenditures and GDP by income based on reliability of underlying source data Research on the role of capital gains and losses in financial profits Improved consistency across source data: data synchronization New Quarterly GDP by industry data based on the Income and Production approaches
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