Preview of the comprehensive revision of the annual industry accounts: changes in definitions, classification, and statistical methods.
Mayerhauser, Nicole M. ; Strassner, Erich H.
ON MAY 25, 2010, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) will release
the initial results of its comprehensive revision of the annual industry
accounts. These widely used accounts provide statistics on
industries--their interactions with each other and the roles they play
in the economy. More specifically, the annual industry accounts provide
statistics on 65 industries and commodities, detailing the goods and
services produced and purchased as part of production processes and the
incomes earned from production. The value of the accounts is symbolized
by the "use" table (chart 1), which shows the
interdependencies among industries, the contribution of each industry to
gross domestic product (GDP), and expenditure-based categories of GDP
(consumer spending, exports, investment, government spending).
The annual industry accounts--which include the annual GDP by
industry accounts and the annual input-output (I-O) accounts--are
typically updated once a year in annual revisions. Comprehensive
revisions, which occur every 5 years, typically go beyond annual
revisions by incorporating more detailed methodological and other
changes. Traditionally, comprehensive revisions adopt two major types of
improvements: (1) changes in definitions and classifications that update
the accounts to more accurately portray the evolving U.S. economy and
(2) statistical changes that update the accounts to reflect the
introduction of new and improved methodologies and the incorporation of
newly available and revised source data.
While this comprehensive revision of the annual industry accounts
is in keeping with traditional comprehensive revisions, BEA will soon
move toward "flexible annual revisions;' which will allow for
annual improvements that traditionally were reserved for comprehensive
revisions (see the box "Flexible Annual Revisions").
This article presents the major changes that will be introduced in
the 2010 comprehensive revision of the annual industry accounts (chart
2, page 23). This comprehensive revision incorporates the results from
the 2002 benchmark I-O accounts and the 2009 national income and product
accounts (NIPAs) comprehensive revision as well as a range of other
changes that, taken together, provide more accurate industry statistics.
(1) It also incorporates an improved methodology to prepare an
integrated time series of annual industry accounts for 1998-2008.
[GRAPHIC 1 OMITTED]
An article in the June issue of the SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS will
describe the results of this comprehensive revision and will include the
results of the advance GDP by industry statistics for 2009.
The comprehensive revision of the annual industry accounts will do
the following:
* Incorporate the 2002 benchmark I-O account to reflect structural
changes in the economy and classification changes such as moving to the
2002 North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) and the new
personal consumption expenditures (PCE) classification structure. The
comprehensive revision will also incorporate revised measures of
industry and commodity output and intermediate inputs that reflect 2002
economic census data and improved measurement techniques for a variety
of industry output measures and final use components.
* Incorporate the results of the NIPA comprehensive revision
released in July 2009, which improved misreporting adjustments on
industry output and business income, improved measures of insurance
output for government enterprises, and incorporated a wide range of
statistical improvements throughout the NIPAs.
* Incorporate an improved method for updating the industry-specific
adjustments that were made to account for differences in compensation
statistics that result from classification and methodological
differences between the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)-based NIPA
industry distributions and the Census-Bureau based statistics published
in the 2002 benchmark I-O accounts.
* Incorporate BLS producer prices indexes (PPIs) for retail trade
margin output by type of retailer, replacing BEA's current
methodology of using retail sales prices and improving the annual
industry accounts' measures of the retail trade sector.
* Incorporate available Census Bureau data on detailed industry
operating expenses from the Services Annual Survey (SAS) and Annual
Survey of Manufactures (ASM) in order to update the mix of intermediate
input commodities purchased by an industry annually, providing for a
more accurate deflation of intermediate inputs and a more accurate
measure of real value added by industry.
* Introduce an interpolation methodology in order to develop a
consistent time series of annual industry accounts. The new method will
ensure that the structures of the revised 1997 and 2002 benchmark I-O
accounts inform the preparation of the annual industry statistics for
the years between the benchmarks.
* Incorporate an improved method for reconciling value added in the
revised 2002 benchmark I-O accounts with the annual industry accounts.
The new method will continue to impose the I-O accounting constraints
while considering also the relative quality of the initial estimates.
Relative quality is determined by quantitative and qualitative
information.
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Changes From the 2002 Benchmark I-O Accounts and the 2009 NIPA
Comprehensive Revision
As part of its comprehensive revision, the annual industry accounts
benchmark industry gross output, industry intermediate inputs and
commodity gross output to the 2002 benchmark I-O accounts published in
September 2007. (2) The comprehensive revision also incorporates the
comprehensive revision of the NIPAs, released in July 2009, into its
final use components and value added components. (3) The final use
categories are PCE, private gross investment, and government consumption
expenditures and investment. The value added categories are
compensation, taxes on production and imports less subsidies, and gross
operating surplus (table A).
Source data, classification, and definition changes
Source data. An important improvement to the annual industry
accounts is the incorporation of more accurate data into the measures of
industry and commodity output, industry intermediate purchases, and
commodity final uses, which are provided through detailed 2002 economic
census data and data on industry expenses collected by the Census
Bureau. These data are available every 5 years and provide detailed
information on shipments, revenues, inventories, expenses, and class of
customer--all of which are used to develop the detailed benchmark I-O
accounts and composition of GDP. Along with newly available Census
Bureau data, the annual industry accounts incorporate revised NIPA data
on compensation, taxes on production and imports less subsidies, and the
components of gross domestic income (GDI) by industry. (4)
2002 NAICS. The annual industry accounts' industry and
commodity definitions will be updated to reflect the 2002 NAICS. (5)
NAICS primarily classifies establishments that have similar production
processes in the same industry. NAICS recognizes new and emerging
industries and new and advanced technologies and provides greater
industry detail for the increasingly important services-producing
sector. The annual industry accounts will continue to be published at
roughly the three-digit NAICS industry and commodity level, but the
underlying structure of aggregation is updated to reflect changes
introduced in the 2002 NAICS.
The 2002 NAICS includes major changes to the classification of
industries within the information sector, NAICS 51. The sector was
restructured, and new industries were created to account for new
services and emerging technologies. Internet publishing and broadcasting
was moved from 1997 NAICS 511 and 514 into its own industry, NAICS 5161.
This new industry includes electronic publishing by newspapers,
periodicals, books, databases, greeting cards, and atlases and maps.
"Web search portals" was moved from "other information
services" (NAICS 51419), and a new industry, "Internet service
providers, Web search portals, and data processing" (NAICS 5180),
was created. "Online information services" was renamed
"Internet service providers" to better reflect the activity of
the industry.
New PCE classification. The annual industry accounts reflect the
new classification system for PCE introduced with the 2002 benchmark I-O
accounts and the 2009 NIPA comprehensive revision. This new system
defines new categories of expenditures by type of product and by
function to reflect changes that have occurred in consumer buying
patterns since the 1940s, when the currently used classifications were
developed, and to bring the classifications closer to the SNA 2008. (6)
New treatment of insurance services by government enterprises. In
order to improve consistency with the treatment of the services provided
by private property and casualty insurance companies, the annual
industry accounts revised its measure of gross output of government
enterprises to account for the implicit services funded by investment
income and to provide a more appropriate treatment of insured losses.
The new treatment will be made for two federal government insurance
enterprises--the National Flood Insurance Program and the Federal Crop
Insurance Corporation--and by one state enterprise--the Florida Citizens
Property Insurance Corporation. (7)
Methodological and statistical changes
In addition to classification and definition changes, the 2002
benchmark I-O accounts and 2009 NIPA comprehensive revision incorporate
a number of statistical changes that have improved the accuracy of the
accounts. The annual industry accounts incorporate these changes as part
of its comprehensive revision:
* Improved measures of gross output and operating surplus that
incorporate underreporting and non-reporting of income using more recent
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) data and Census Bureau data. (8)
* Improved measures of royalty output from the 2002 benchmark I-O
accounts that incorporated data on international services on royalties
and licensing fees. These data supplemented economic census data for
royalty and licensing income and payments and IRS Statistics of Income
data to allow the removal of copyright receipts from royalty receipts.
(9)
* Improved estimates of PCE for telecommunications, air
transportation, and "food away from home" which reflect
extensive research into new source data and estimation methodologies.
* Improved estimates of PCE for consumer electronics introduced in
the 2009 NIPA comprehensive revision. Beginning with 2003, new retail
point-of-sale scanner data from a trade group is being used in the NIPAs
to measure the annual composition of goods sold at electronics stores.
The annual industry accounts incorporated these revised PCE values into
its annual process of balancing the use table. (10)
* New treatment of inventory valuation adjustment (IVA) adopted in
the 2002 benchmark I-O account. This new treatment explicitly accounts
for the IVA by holding industry, commodity, and inventory type, which
includes materials and supplies, work-in-process, finished goods, and
merchandise trade inventories. Currently, the IVA is included as a
secondary product in industry gross output and as a separate commodity
in final uses.
* Improved estimates of wages and salaries that incorporate new
information on employee "cafeteria plans" introduced in the
2009 NIPA comprehensive revision. Under these plans, employees may use a
portion of their salaries on a pretax basis to pay for health insurance
and to contribute to "flexible spending arrangements," which
reimburse them for medical care and dependent care expenses. Because
employees' participation is voluntary, these contributions are
included as part of NIPA wages and salaries. (11)
Annual Industry Accounts: Statistical Methods and Source Data
Notable changes in statistical methods and source data that are
incorporated as part of this comprehensive revision of the annual
industry accounts include (1) an improved method for incorporating
BLS-based industry distributions of compensation into the annual
industry accounts, (2) the use of new business expense data from Census
Bureau annual surveys, and (3) the use of retail trade margin PPIs from
BLS.
Compensation in the annual industry accounts
The 2010 comprehensive revision of the annual industry accounts
incorporates a new method to update the industry-specific adjustments
that are designed to account for differences in compensation statistics
between the BLS-based NIPA industry distributions and the Census
Bureau-based statistics published in the 2002 benchmark I-O accounts.
The new method takes into account more of the sources of classification
and methodology differences in industry compensation estimates.
Classification differences arise because of differences between BLS and
the Census Bureau in the industry classifications of establishments,
especially the identification and classification of central
administrative offices (CAOs) and other types of auxiliaries. The
differences primarily affect wages and salaries by industry, but they
can also affect supplements to wages and salaries. Methodological
differences involve differences due to the reporting and processing of
source data and the estimation of adjustments to source data for items
such as misreporting and supplements to wages and salaries.
The new method focuses on two special types of classification
differences related to the classification of CAO auxiliaries and the
treatment of establishments in the professional employer organizations
(PEOs) industry. (12) For both of these industries, data was available
for 2002 on the magnitude of the differences that can, in part, be
attributed to classification. The method determines the size of the
total downward adjustments to the gross output of the CAO and PEO
industries and then adjusts downward the use of these services by other
industries in proportion to their use in the published 2002 benchmark
I-O accounts. In other words, the existing industry distributions remain
the same. The total downward adjustment to the gross output of the CAO
industry equals all of the expenses of Census Bureau CAOs that BLS
classifies in other (non-CAO) industries. This means that all of the
value added and intermediate inputs of CAOs are reduced to match the
dollar value of the gross output adjustment. The total downward
adjustment to the gross output of the PEO industry equals the amount of
compensation paid to the leased employees that BLS classifies in other
(non-PEO) industries. The only adjustment to the inputs of the PEO
industry is a downward adjustment of the same dollar value to its
compensation. Industries that consume CAO and PEO services as
intermediate inputs receive adjustments to their use of these services
that in the aggregate, match the aggregate reduction in the gross output
of these services. For 1997, adjustments to the industrial structure for
CAOs and PEOs and to purchases of CAO and PEO services by other
industries is based on percentages from 2002.
Annual business expense data from the Census Bureau
The 2010 comprehensive revision of the annual industry accounts
incorporates source data for measuring industries' intermediate
purchases. Starting with 2005, the Census Bureau expanded its Services
Annual Survey (SAS) questionnaire to include a standard set of detailed
expense questions aimed at collecting data on the different types of
expenses incurred by industries. These categories cover 13 different
types of expenses including 9 separate intermediate input categories.
This set of consistent intermediate expense data across all SAS-covered
industries will improve the quality of the annual I-O accounts and GDP
by industry accounts by providing more accurate measures of the mix of
intermediate inputs that an industry uses to produce its output on an
annual basis. (13)
Previously, detailed expense data was only available for years
corresponding with the Economic Census. In estimating an industry's
intermediate purchases on a annual basis, the annual industry accounts
assume that the intermediate inputs purchased by an industry move in
line with the real (inflation-adjusted) output of the industry, and the
mix of intermediate inputs an industry purchases to produce its output
does not change from year to year. In other words, an industry's
production function remains relatively the same as that of the benchmark
I-O year from which the subsequent years are extrapolated (currently
1997).
Incorporating annual data on detailed expense categories by
industry will help inform the annual industry accounts about how
industries change their spending on intermediate inputs from year to
year and allow a loosening of the assumption that real inputs move in
line with real industry output. (14) These expense data will provide a
more accurate breakout of the intermediate inputs purchased by an
industry, which will improve the accuracy of real value added by
industry. Currently, BEA measures real value added for an industry by
deflating an industry's gross output and intermediate inputs
separately, known as double deflation. A more accurate mix of
intermediate inputs will provide more accurate weights for calculating
the industry's real value added. These expense data will play a
major role in better distributing the "pot" of intermediate
inputs among different commodity groups. These data also provide an
important first step toward a third independent measure of GDP using a
full production approach in which value added is measured as the
difference between gross output and intermediate inputs.
Retail trade margin price indexes from BLS
The 2010 comprehensive revision of the annual industry accounts
introduces a new method for deflating output of the retail trade sector.
Starting in 2000, BLS introduced new PPIs that better capture the margin
activity of retail trade businesses and that are consistent with
BEA's measure of retail trade sector gross output. Over the past
several years, BLS expanded its coverage of these retail trade prices.
BEA can now use these indexes to deflate about two-thirds of all gross
output for the retail trade sector.
BEA measures gross output of the retail trade sector using a net
sales concept, which measures the difference between sales and the costs
of those goods purchased for sale; this difference is referred to as
gross margin output. Gross margin output represents the service provided
by retailers of moving goods from distributors to consumers and reflects
the shelving, marketing, convenience, and other activity aimed at
selling merchandise to customers.
Until BLS expanded its PPIs to include retail trade margin
activity, there was no direct measure of retail margin price change, and
BEA had few options for deflating retail margin output. (15) Previously,
BEA prepared retail margin price deflators by type of retailer by
multiplying the retailer's average margin rate times a
corresponding sales price index. Margin rates are developed from the
Census Bureau's Annual Retail Trade Survey data of sales, cost of
goods sold, and inventories; the sales price indexes are retail industry
price deflators calculated as the ratio between nominal industry sales
and inflation-adjusted industry sales, the same sales values used to
measure the real inventory-to-sales ratios published by BEA. (16) Using
these derived retail margin price indexes yields real margin output that
measures changes in each retailer's real sales, but does not
account for changes in its real margin output per unit of real sale.
BEA will now be able to deflate retail margin directly using BLS
retail trade PPIs. These PPIs measure the difference between sales and
acquisition prices. This difference, the gross margin price, reflects
the price for the retailer's services such as marketing, storing,
displaying, and convenience. The BLS method for deriving a retail
business's margin price is to take the total sales for an
individual product and subtract the total purchase of the same product,
yielding the margin. This margin value is divided by the number of units
sold to yield the per unit price. The different margin prices are then
summed to derive an average margin price for the retail industry as a
whole. (17) These retail margin PPIs do not cover the full retail trade
sector, and BEA will continue to use its methodology of applying margin
rates to retail sales prices for those retail businesses for which PPIs
are unavailable.
Methodology to Produce Times Series
This comprehensive revision of the annual I-O accounts and GDP by
industry accounts is the first to include more than 1 year of benchmark
I-O accounts; specifically, it used the benchmark I-O accounts for 1997
and 2002. Benchmark I-O accounts are important because they set the
"best levels" and the relationships for the annual industry
accounts time series. This necessitated an interpolation methodology,
which was developed to ensure that the underlying structure of both the
revised 1997 and 2002 benchmark I-O accounts informs the annual
composition of industrial production, intermediate purchases by
industry, and final demand (see the box "Interpolation").
The methodology can be described in a sequence of five steps: (1)
converting the revised 1997 benchmark I-O accounts to the 2002 NAICS
structure, (2) revising the 1997 benchmark and previously published 2002
benchmark I-O accounts, (3) updating the time series for the annual
estimates of value added by industry for 1998-2008, (4) updating and
balancing the annual I-O accounts for 1998-2008 on the basis of the
revised 1997 and 2002 benchmark I-O accounts and on the 1998-2008
estimates of value added by industry, and (5) preparing price and
quantity indexes and contributions to growth for the GDP by industry
accounts and KLEMS statistics for 1998-2008.
Converting the revised 1997 benchmark I-O accounts to the 2002
NAICS
The first step in updating the annual industry accounts is to
convert the revised 1997 benchmark I-O accounts to the 2002 NAICS basis
because the annual time series of I-O accounts and GDP by industry
accounts are based on the 2002 NAICS. (18)
The conversion of the revised 1997 benchmark I-O accounts is
completed separately for the make and use tables. First, the make table
for 1997 is converted using a concordance between 1997 and 2002 NAICS at
the six-digit industry and detailed product level. This concordance is
used to reallocate the 1997 make table to a 2002 structure using weights
for 1997 that are the result of a back-extrapolation of the 2002
benchmark make table. Second, the 1997 use table is reallocated to a
2002 NAICS basis using concordances that separately convert the
intermediate inputs and final demand structures to be consistent with
that of the 2002 use table.
Revising the benchmark I-O accounts
The second step in updating the annual industry accounts is to
revise the 1997 benchmark and previously published 2002 benchmark I-O
accounts because the annual I-O accounts and GDP by industry accounts
are based on the relationships and levels set by the revised accounts.
The revisions are from two sources.
First, the benchmark I-O accounts are modified to incorporate the
changes in definition, methodology, and statistics from the 2009
comprehensive NIPA revision. Incorporating these changes ensures that
the annual industry accounts for 1998-2008 are consistent with the
levels of GDP in the NIPAs.
Second, after the NIPA revision is incorporated, the level and the
composition of value added for each industry are further modified on the
basis of information from both the I-O accounts and GDP by industry
accounts. For this comprehensive revision of the annual industry
accounts, an improved model--first introduced as part of the 2002
benchmark I-O accounts--was used to "reconcile" independent
measures of value added by industry from the revised 2002 benchmark I-O
accounts and GDP by industry accounts. (19) BEA's new
reconciliation method is based on a generalized least squares framework
that imposes I-O accounting constraints to produce a
"combined" value added by industry that is an average, with
weights determined by the relative quality of the initial estimates from
each set of accounts. (20)
For 2002, value added by industry in the I-O accounts was computed
as the difference between gross output and intermediate inputs by
industry, and value added by industry in the GDP by industry accounts is
computed from the industry distributions of GDI from the NIPAs. (21) In
the reconciliation model, initial estimates of intermediate inputs from
the revised benchmark I-O accounts and initial estimates of the
components of gross operating surplus from the GDP by industry accounts
are assigned a reliability indicator from two sources: (1) coefficients
of variation, which measure sampling errors, from the source data
provided by the Census Bureau and the IRS and (2) qualitative
reliability weights determined by criteria that indicate the relative
quality of underlying data for which there are no coefficients of
variation. (22) The reconciliation method makes adjustments to initial
estimates based on the strengths and weaknesses of the data that
underlie those estimates. Initial estimates that are considered
relatively weak are adjusted more than initial estimates that are
considered relatively reliable. Essentially, the combined measure is an
average of the two initial estimates; the weights are determined by the
relative variances--an initial estimate with a smaller variance receives
a larger weight. In other words, reconciliation results for a given
industry are closer to the initial estimate that has the highest
relative quality.
For 1997, the combined value added for each industry first
established in the 2004 comprehensive revision of the annual industry
accounts was updated to reflect the classification change to the 2002
NAICS and revisions in the GDI-based GDP by industry measures of value
added that were introduced in the 2009 NIPA comprehensive revision.
The revised 1997 and 2002 benchmark I-O accounts are balanced after
the two sets of revisions have been made. For this balancing, each
industry's new measure of value added is fixed, and total
intermediate inputs are estimated. Balancing ensures that the use of
commodities equals the supply of commodities, the sum of value added and
intermediate inputs by industry equals gross output by industry, and the
sum of final uses equals GDR The revised 1997 and 2002 benchmark I-O
accounts then provide a starting point for preparing the annual I-O
accounts for 1998-2008.
Developing a time series of value added
The third step in updating the annual industry accounts is to
develop a time series of value added by industry. This requires (1)
interpolating between the revised 1997 and 2002 value added by industry
and (2) extrapolating forward the revised 2002 value added by industry
to 2008 using the annual percent changes in the GDI-based measure of
value added by industry. The components of GDI that compose value added
by industry and information on the major source data and the industrial
distribution for each component are shown in table B.
GDI-based value added measures consist of compensation of
employees, taxes on production and imports less subsidies, and gross
operating surplus. Gross operating surplus includes several items, such
as corporate profits before tax, corporate net interest, and corporate
capital consumption allowances, that are based on corporate tax return
data from the IRS. Because the consolidated tax return data on an
enterprise may account for activities of several industries, BEA
converts these enterprise-based, or company-based, data to an
establishment, or plant, basis. The conversion is based on the
employment of establishments that are cross-classified by enterprises in
Economic Census years. The annual percent change in gross operating
surplus between 1997 and 2002 reflects an interpolation of
establishment-based business income data based on both the 1997 and the
2002 economic censuses. As a final step, any differences between the sum
of annual value added across all industries and GDP are distributed
across industries.
Annual I-O accounts updates for 1998-2008
The fourth step in updating the annual industry accounts is
updating and balancing the annual I-O accounts, which requires five
steps for each year. Each task provides essential inputs for the next
step. These steps include (1) calculating industry and commodity gross
output, (2) estimating the commodity composition of intermediate inputs
for each industry, (3) estimating the domestic supply of each commodity,
(4) incorporating the commodity compositions of the GDP expenditure
components for PCE, gross private fixed investment, and government
consumption and investment expenditures, and (5) balancing the use
table.
Industry and commodity gross output. A time series of industry and
commodity gross output is prepared by interpolating between the revised
1997 and 2002 benchmark make tables and by extrapolating forward the
revised 2002 make table to 2008. A wide array of source data is used to
prepare annual estimates of industry and commodity gross output. For
manufacturing, trade, and most service industries, the annual source
data are based on surveys from the Census Bureau. For agriculture,
insurance, and government enterprises, and for parts of transportation,
utilities, finance, and real estate, the annual source data are based on
other government and private sources. For the industries and commodities
for which annual source data at the benchmark I-O level of detail are
not available, aggregate source data are used to extrapolate the
industry and commodity gross output. Table C shows the source data used
to prepare annual statistics on industry and commodity gross output.
Commodity composition of intermediate inputs. The estimates of the
composition of intermediate inputs by industry are based on the revised
benchmark I-O relationships and are adjusted for changes in relative
prices and other factors.
First, each industry's current-year output is valued in the
prices for the previous year and is estimated using an industry price
index that is calculated--in a Fisher index-number formula--based on the
commodity price indexes for that industry's output. Generally, the
number of price indexes available for commodities is fewer than the
number of commodities; for commodities for which a price index is
unavailable, an aggregate price index is applied to multiple
commodities.
Second, each industry's output for the current year, valued in
the prices for the previous year, is multiplied by the previous
year's direct requirements coefficient for the industry to yield
current-year intermediate inputs valued in the prices of the previous
year. (23) This procedure assumes that in the current year, the
composition of an industry's intermediate inputs per dollar of
output (valued in the prices of the previous year) is unchanged from the
previous year. The results are then reflated to current-year prices
using the commodity price indexes.
Finally, commodity taxes, transportation costs, and trade margins
for each intermediate input are estimated. Commodity taxes are added to
raise the intermediate inputs from a basic price valuation to a
producers' price valuation. (24) Transportation costs and trade
margins are estimated to provide a purchasers' price valuation of
intermediate inputs.
Domestic supply. Domestic supply is the total value of goods and
services available for consumption as intermediate inputs by industries
or as PCE, private fixed investment, and government consumption and
investment expenditures; it is calculated as domestic commodity gross
output, plus imports, less exports, less the change in private
inventories. The estimates of imports and exports are based on foreign
trade statistics from the Census Bureau and from BEA's
international transactions accounts. For the current year, the change in
private inventories by industry are from the NIPAs, and the commodity
composition of inventories held by industries are based on the revised
benchmark I-O relationships.
Commodity composition of final uses excluding trade and changes in
private inventories. The annual estimates of the major expenditure
components of final uses for PCE, private fixed investment, and
government consumption and investment are obtained from the NIPAs.
Initial commodity compositions for these expenditure components are
estimated using commodity-flow relationships from the revised benchmark
I-O accounts.
Balancing the use table. The use table is balanced with a
biproportional adjustment procedure--that is, with a procedure that
sequentially adjusts rows and columns to equal a set of predetermined
control totals. In a series of iterations, the adjustments are made (1)
until the use of commodities by industries, PCE, private investment, and
government consumption and investment equaled the domestic supply of
commodities, (2) until the sum of value added by industry and
intermediate inputs by industry equals gross output by industry, and (3)
until the sum of the commodity composition of PCE, private fixed
investment, and government consumption and investment equals that for
expenditures in the NIPAs.
After the results are reviewed and verified, the annual I-O
accounts for 1998-2008 are finalized. The measures of gross output,
intermediate inputs, and value added by industry are then incorporated
into the GDP by industry accounts.
Price and quantity indexes for the GDP by industry accounts and
KLEMS statistics
The fifth step in updating the annual industry accounts is
preparing price and quantity indexes for the GDP by industry accounts
and KLEMS statistics for 1998-2008. That requires completing two steps.
First, price and quantity indexes for gross output and intermediate
inputs by industry are prepared. Second, information on gross output and
intermediate inputs by industry are combined using the double-deflation
procedure to derive price and quantity indexes for value added by
industry.
Indexes for gross output and intermediate inputs by industry. Price
and quantity indexes for gross output by industry are derived by
separately deflating each commodity produced by an industry and included
as part of its gross output. This information is obtained from the
annual I-O make tables. Price and quantity indexes for intermediate
inputs are derived by deflating the commodities that compose an
industry's intermediate inputs in the annual I-O use tables. The
domestic and imported portions of intermediate inputs are deflated
separately in order to account for the goods and services purchased as
inputs from domestic and foreign sources separately. For each detailed
commodity used by an industry, the portion attributable to imports is
calculated as a percentage of the total purchase value using the
economy-wide ratio of imports to the total domestic supply of the
commodity. The primary data sources used to prepare the commodity price
indexes for deflation are shown in table C. When a commodity price index
is based on more than one detailed price index, a Fisher index-number
formula is used to prepare the composite index.
Indexes for value added by industry. Price and quantity indexes for
value added by industry are calculated using the double-deflation
method. In the double-deflation method, the separate estimates of gross
output and intermediate inputs by industry are combined in a Fisher
index-number formula in order to generate price and quantity indexes for
value added by industry. (25) This method is preferred for computing
price and quantity indexes for value added by industry because it
requires the fewest assumptions about the relationships among gross
output by industry and intermediate inputs by industry.
KLEMS statistics. Intermediate inputs are disaggregated into the
cost categories of energy, materials, and purchased services by
assigning each detailed product that is used as an intermediate input
according to the consuming industry's production process. (26) The
assignment of cost categories is generally based on business expense
data from economic censuses and annual surveys by the Census Bureau. For
most industries, a detailed product is consumed as an energy input,
materials input, or purchased-service input. However, in a few cases,
detailed products may be assigned to different cost categories,
depending on the using industry. (27) The computation of chain-type
price and quantity indexes for energy, materials and purchased services
uses the same procedures as that for total intermediate inputs, but with
the additional step of aggregating by cost category within the Fisher
index-number formula.
Flexible Annual Revisions
As part of its goal to accurately portray the changing U.S.
economy, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) in 2010 will introduce
"flexible" annual revisions that will retain the features of
the current annual revisions but that will also allow for the kind of
improvements that previously were reserved for comprehensive revisions.
(1) For example, when necessary, the current 3-year period of revision
will be expanded to earlier periods. In some cases, changes in
definitions and presentations, as well as new and improved estimating
methodologies, may also be incorporated as part of the flexible annual
revisions. To keep BEA's customers up to date, BEA will continue to
announce these planned improvements and the periods subject to revision
in advance of their implementation to ensure that users have adequate
time to prepare.
Comprehensive revisions and the future "flexible" annual
revisions provide the opportunity to introduce major changes that are
outlined in BEA's strategic plan for maintaining and improving its
economic accounts. In discussing the national and industry accounts,
BEA's strategic plan outlines several major objectives, including
addressing data gaps and other shortcomings, improving consistency and
integration with other accounts, and improving consistency with
international guidelines. The changes in definitions and presentations
described in this article and the planned statistical improvements
constitute important steps toward meeting each of these objectives.
(1.) See "Improving BEA's Accounts Through Flexible
Annual Revisions," SURVEY Or CURRENT BUSINESS 88 (June 2008):
29-32.
Interpolation
The interpolation methodology used by the Bureau of Economic
Analysis is known as the modified Denton proportional first difference
method. (1) This method preserves the pattern of the annual growth
series (indicator series) by minimizing the proportional
period-to-period change, while meeting the benchmark year level
constraints. The advantage of this method is that it makes full use of
the wide array of high-quality annual source data available from the
federal economic statistical system and other sources, including the
Census Bureau annual survey data, to estimate the changes in the
underlying structure of the U.S. economy, while ensuring that the best
levels and relationships introduced through comprehensive, economic
census-based benchmark year statistics are met.
The interpolation methodology is used to prepare a time series of
annual industry and commodity gross output statistics in the make table
and value added and intermediate inputs statistics in the use table. For
each series, interpolation occurs after each series has been updated to
reflect definitional, classification, and statistical changes introduced
in the 2002 benchmark I-O accounts and in the 2009 NIPA comprehensive
revision.
(1.) For more information on temporal distribution and
interpolation procedures, see Baoline Chen and Stephen H. Andrews,
"An Empirical Review of Methods for Temporal Distribution and
Interpolation in the National Accounts," SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS
88 (May 2008): 31-37.
(1.) For a complete discussion of the changes made in the 2002
benchmark input-output accounts, see Ricky L. Stewart, Jessica Brede
Stone, and Mary L. Streitwieser, "U.S. Benchmark Input-Output
Accounts, 2002," SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 87 (October 2007):
19-48. For a complete discussion of the changes made in the 2009 NIPA
comprehensive revision, see Eugene P. Seskin and Shelly Smith,
"improved Estimates of the National Income and Product Accounts:
Results of the 2009 Comprehensive Revision," SURVEY 89 (September
2009): 15-35.
(2.) See Stewart, Stone, and Streitwieser, 19-48.
(3.) See Seskin and Smith, 15-35.
(4.) See Seskin and Smith, 15-35.
(5.) This is consistent with 2002 Economic Census data.
(6.) See Clinton P. McCully and Teresita D. Teensma, "Preview
of the 2009 Comprehensive Revision of the National Income and Product
Accounts: New Classifications for Personal Consumption
Expenditures," SURVEY 88 (May 2008): 6-17.
(7.) For more information on this change, see Brent R. Moulton and
Eugene P. Seskin, "Preview of the 2003 Comprehensive Revision of
the National Income and Product Accounts: Changes in Definitions and
Classifications," SURVEY 83 (June 2003): 19-23 and Baoline Chen and
Dennis I. Fixler, "Measuring the Services of Property-Casualty
Insurance in the NIPAs," SURVEY 83 (October 2003): 10-26.
(8.) For more information, see Clinton E McCully and Steven Payson,
"Preview of the 2009 Comprehensive Revision of the NIPAs:
Statistical Changes," SURVEY 89 (May 2009): 6-16.
(9.) See Stewart, Stone, and Streitwieser, 19-48.
(10.) The annual scanner data is used to adjust the composition of
commodities sold for each of three retail industries: NAICS 443112
(radio, television, and electronics stores), NAICS 443120 (computer and
software stores), and NAICS 443130 (camera and photographic supplies
stores). The primary goods sold through these industries are
televisions, other video equipment, audio equipment, computers and
peripherals, telephones and facsimile equipment, other information
processing equipment, and cameras and other photographic equipment. As
part of the integration efforts between the annual industry accounts and
the NIPAs, the annual industry accounts use the PCE category estimates
derived in the NIPAs as controls when balancing commodity and industry
output within the annual use table.
(11.) For more information, see McCully and Payson, 6-16.
(12.) For all other industries, the compensation differences for
each industry are offset in each industry's initial estimate of
gross operating surplus in the revised 2002 benchmark I-O accounts,
which is then reconciled with the gross domestic income-based GDP by
industry measure of gross operating surplus.
(13.) Along with the SAS expense data, the annual industry accounts
also incorporates existing materials and energy expense data collected
in the Census Bureau's Annual Survey of Manufactures (ASM).
Together, materials and energy purchases provide coverage of about 80
percent of the intermediate inputs purchased by manufacturers.
Currently, data on purchased services by the manufacturing industries is
limited. Starting in 2006, the ASM questionnaire was expanded to include
questions on purchased service expenses, and BEA hopes to begin
incorporating these data into the annual industry accounts in the
future.
(14.) The methodology for extrapolating initial intermediate inputs
at a detailed item level (see the methodology section of this article)
will not change. These expense categories represent groups of expenses
to which the annual industry accounts have matched detailed intermediate
purchases. These expense categories will act as controls during the
balancing of the use table (see the methodology section of this article)
such that the detailed intermediate inputs matched to these expense
categories will be scaled during the balancing process. For those
industries where expense category data are not available, the detailed
intermediate inputs will continue to reflect the assumption that real
inputs move in line with real industry gross output.
(15.) See Robert E. Yuskavage, "Distributive Services in the
U.S. Economic Accounts" (paper prepared for the National Bureau for
Economic Research Conference on Research in Income and Wealth Summer
Institute 2006, July 17, 2006).
(16.) For more information on BEA's measures of
inventory-to-sales ratios, see Enrico Tan, "Real Inventories,
Sales, and Inventory-Sales Ratios for Manufacturing and Trade,"
SURVEY 89 (October 2009) 15-20.
(17.) For more information on the BLS PPI program and details on
retail trade PPIs, see "Chapter 14, Producer Prices," BLS
Handbook of Methods at www.bls.gov.
(18.) Preparing a revised 1997 best-level benchmark I-O accounts
was the first step in integrating the annual I-O accounts and GDP by
industry accounts during the 2004 comprehensive revision of the annual
industry accounts. However, these statistics were not formalized into a
full set of accounts.
(19.) The estimates of "compensation of employees" and
"taxes on production and imports, less subsidies" in the
revised benchmark I-O accounts are consistent with those published in
the NIPAs. For census-covered industries, the compensation in the
previously published 2002 benchmark I-O accounts was based on the 2002
Economic Census.
(20.) Initial work on reconciling gross operating surplus by
industry using the improved method is described in Dylan G. Rassier,
Thomas E Howells III, Edward T. Morgan, Nicholas R. Empey, and Conrad E.
Roesch, "Integrating the 2002 Benchmark Input-Output Accounts and
the 2002 Annual Industry Accounts" SURVEY 87 (December 2007):
14-22.
(21.) In general, these two measures of value added for an industry
will differ because of differences in implementation of the 2002 NAICS
classification by agencies within the federal economic statistical
system and because of differing source data and statistical methods.
(22.) The qualitative criteria used to evaluate data that do not
have coefficients of variation are consistent with that used in the
reconciliation of value added for the revised 1997 benchmark I-O
accounts. For more information, see Brian C. Moyer, Mark A. Planting,
Mahnaz Fahim-Nader, and Sherlene K. S. Lum, "Preview of the
Comprehensive Revision of the Annual Industry Accounts: Integrating the
Annual Input-Output Accounts and Gross-Domestic-Product-by-Industry
Accounts," SURVEY 84 (March 2004): 50-51.
(23.) The direct requirements coefficient is the amount of a
commodity required by the industry to produce a dollar of the
industry's output.
(24.) The basic price is the price received by the producer for
goods that are sold; it excludes the taxes collected by the producer
from purchasers as well as transportation costs and trade margins.
(25.) See Moyer, Planting, Fahim-Nader, and Lum, 50-51.
(26.) For information on the BEA KLEMS statistics, see Erich H.
Strassner, Gabriel W. Medeiros, and George M. Smith, "Annual
Industry Accounts: Introducing KLEMS Input Estimates for
1997-2003," SURVEY 85 (September 2005): 31-65.
(27.) For example, the assignment of petroleum-derived inputs
depends on the consuming industry: When a petroleum-derived product is
consumed by most industries, it is categorized as an energy input, but
when consumed by the petroleum refining industry and the chemical
manufacturing industry, it is categorized as a material input.
Table A. Major Annual Industry Accounts Changes
Type of change Effect of change
From the 2002 benchmark input-output (I-O) accounts
Incorporated the following data Benchmarked industry and
on industry and product commodity gross output,
receipts and shipments intermediate inputs, and gross
and industry expenses: operating surplus for all
2002 Census Bureau industries to the 2002
2002 Business Expense Survey benchmark I-O accounts.
2002 Services Annual Survey
Shifted to 2002 North American Reclassified industry and
Industry Classification System commodity gross output,
(NAICS) from 1997 NAICS intermediate inputs, and gross
operating surplus, mainly for
industries in NAICS sector
51.
Improved measures Improved measures of industry
of royalty output and commodity gross output of
rental and leasing services
and all industries' purchases
of rental and leasing services
(NAICS 532).
New treatment of inventory Included inventory valuation
valuation adjustment. adjustments on specific
commodities in industries'
intermediate inputs.
Updated methods for Benchmarked all industries'
distributing passenger air intermediate inputs of
transportation services, telecommunication services,
purchases of food away from food purchases away from home,
home, and telecommunications and air passenger travel to
services across intermediate the new 2002 benchmark I-O
business use and final demand. distributions.
From the 2009 comprehensive NIPA revision
New personal consumption Added new PCE categories in
expenditures (PCE) the annual industry accounts
classification. use table.
New estimates of Improved industry and
underreporting and commodity gross output,
nonreporting of income using industry intermediate inputs,
more recent Internal Revenue and industry value added
Service (IRS) data and Census across the annual industry
Bureau data. accounts.
New treatment of insurance Improved measures of industry
services by government and commodity output and gross
enterprises. operating surplus of federal
and state and local government
enterprises.
From the annual industry accounts
New method for adjusting Improved measures of industry
compensation by industry to output, intermediate inputs,
BLS-based NIPA distribution and gross operating surplus
from Census Bureau-based for central administrative
distribution. offices (NAICS 55) and
professional employer
organizations (NAICS 56) and
industries supported by these
establishments.
New retail trade margin prices Improved measures of real
from BLS. gross output and value added
of the retail trade industry.
New business expense data from Improved the commodity mix of
Census Bureau. most industries' intermediate
inputs.
BLS Bureau of Labor Statistics
NIPAs National income and product accounts
Table B. Principal Source Data for Value-Added Extrapolators
Component gross
domestic income Major source data
Compensation of
employees, paid
Wage and salary For most private industries and state
accruals (1) and local government, BLS tabulations
from the Quarterly Census of Employment
and Wages (QCEW). For other private
industries, a variety of sources. For
military wages, OPM.
Supplements to
wages and salaries
Employer For health insurance, HHS Medical
contributions Expenditure Panel Survey; for pension
for employee plans, DOL tabulations of IRS Form 5500;
pension and for other types, trade associations.
insurance funds
Employer Tabulations from the SSA and other
contributions agencies administering social insurance
for government programs.
social insurance
Taxes on production
and imports
less subsidies
Taxes on production For state and local government, Census
and imports Bureau. For federal government excise
taxes, Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade
Bureau collections from the OTA and IRS.
For customs duties, Treasury Department
Monthly Treasury Statement.
Subsidies For federal government, USDA Commodity
Credit Corporation subsidy payments and
OMB Budget of the United States. For
state and local government, Census
Bureau and California administrative
records.
Gross operating surplus
Private enterprises
Net interest and
miscellaneous
payments,
domestic
industries
Corporate IRS tabulations from corporate tax
returns (Form 1120), adjusted for
misreporting on tax returns and for
conceptual differences, FFIEC call
report data on commercial banks, and
trade association data.
Noncorporate IRS tabulations of tax return data from
sole proprietorships (Form 1040 Schedule
C) and partnerships (Form 1065),
adjusted for misreporting on tax returns
and for conceptual differences, FFIEC
call report data on commercial banks,
FRB mortgage debt times BEA interest
rate for residential mortgage interest.
Business current IRS tabulations from business tax
transfer returns; OMB Budget of the United
payments (net) States; Census Bureau Census of
Governments and annual surveys; other
government agency reports; trade
sources.
Proprietors' income
with inventory
valuation
adjustment (IVA)
and without capital
consumption
adjustment (CCAdj)
Farm USDA farm income data.
Nonfarm
Proprietors' IRS tabulations of tax returns from sole
income without proprietorships (Form 1040 Schedule C)
IVA and CCAdj and partnerships (Form 1065), adjusted
for misreporting on tax returns and for
conceptual differences.
Inventory BLS PPI prices and IRS inventory data.
valuation
adjustment
Rental income of Census Bureau data on housing units and
persons without rents from the American Housing Survey,
CCAdj FRB mortgage debt data, BEA interest
rate data, USDA data, and IRS
tabulations from individual tax returns
(Form 1040).
Corporate profits
before tax with
IVA and without
CCAdj, domestic
industries
Corporate profits IRS tabulations from corporate tax
before tax returns (Form 1120 series) and
without IVA and regulatory agencies and public financial
CCAdj reports.
Inventory valuation BLS PPI prices and IRS inventory data.
adjustment
Capital consumption
allowances
Corporate IRS tabulations from corporate tax
returns (Form 1120 series), adjusted for
misreporting on tax returns and for
conceptual differences.
Noncorporate IRS tabulations from sole
proprietorships (Form 1040 Schedule C)
and partnerships (Form 1065).
Current surplus For federal government, reports from
of government various agencies and BEA consumption of
enterprises fixed capital. For state and local
governments, Census Bureau surveys of
government finances.
Consumption of
fixed capital
Households and
institutions (2) BEA capital stock data.
Government BEA capital stock data.
Industrial distribution
Component gross Distribution Data or assumption
domestic income available in source used if distribution
data by establishment is
unavailable in
source data
Compensation of
employees, paid
Wage and salary Establishment.
accruals (1)
Supplements to
wages and salaries
Employer For pension plans, BLS employer cost
contributions company; for the index; BLS QCEW.
for employee others, none.
pension and
insurance funds
Employer None. SSA and BLS
contributions tabulations.
for government
social insurance
Taxes on production
and imports
less subsidies
Taxes on production Establishment. Property taxes are
and imports based on SEA capital
stock distributions.
Subsidies None. Payments are
assigned to the
industries being
supported.
Gross operating surplus
Private enterprises
Net interest and
miscellaneous
payments,
domestic
industries
Corporate Company. Census Bureau
company-
establishment
employment matrix.
Noncorporate Company. Assumed to be
equivalent to an
establishment
distribution.
Business current Company. Industry-specific
transfer payments are
payments (net) assigned to those
industries; others
are based on IRS
company industry
distribution.
Proprietors' income
with inventory
valuation
adjustment (IVA)
and without capital
consumption
adjustment (CCAdj)
Farm Establishment.
Nonfarm
Proprietors' Company. Assumed to be
income without equivalent to an
IVA and CCAdj establishment
Inventory distribution.
valuation
adjustment Establishment/
Rental income of company.
persons without Establishment.
CCAdj
Corporate profits
before tax with
IVA and without
CCAdj, domestic
industries
Corporate profits Company. Census Bureau
before tax company-
without IVA and establishment
CCAdj employment matrix.
Inventory valuation Establishment/
adjustment company.
Capital consumption
allowances
Corporate Company. Census Bureau
company-
establishment
employment matrix.
Noncorporate Company. Assumed to be
equivalent to an
establishment
distribution.
Current surplus Establishment.
of government
enterprises
Consumption of
fixed capital
Households and
institutions (2) Establishment.
Government Type of agency.
(1.) Includes wage and salary disbursements to the rest of
the world and excludes wages and salaries received from the
rest of the world.
(2.) Consists of owner-occupied housing and nonprofit
institutions primarily serving households.
BEA Bureau of Economic Analysis
BLS Bureau of Labor Statistics
DOL Department of Labor
FFIEC Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council
FRB Federal Reserve Board
HHS Department of Health and Human Services
IRS Internal Revenue Service
PPI Producer Price Index
OPM Office of Personnel Management
OTA Office of Tax Analysis, Treasury Department
SSA Social Security Administration
USDA U.S. Department of Agriculture
Table C. Principal Sources of Data for Industry and
Commodity Output and Prices
Industry and Source data for Source data
commodity extrapolator for price index
Agriculture,
forestry,
fishing and
hunting
Farms U.S. Department USDA prices
of Agriculture received by
(USDA). farmers; Bureau of
Labor Statistics
(BLS) Producer
Price Index (PPI).
Forestry, fishing For forestry, USDA; BLS PPI;
and related fishing, hunting, personal
activities trapping, and consumption
support expenditures (PCE)
activities, USDA price indexes from
data; for logging, the national
Census Bureau income and product
Annual Survey of accounts (NIPAs);
Manufactures (ASM) for fisheries for
and Manufacturers aquaculture,
Shipments, National Oceanic
Inventories, and and Atmospheric
Orders Survey Administration.
(M3).
Mining
Oil and gas Energy Information BLS PPI; EIA.
extraction Agency (EIA) data
on quantities
produced and
prices.
Mining, except For coal mining, EIA; USGS; BLS
oil and gas EIA U.S. Coal PPI.
Supply and Demand
in Review, for
uranium, EIA
Uranium Marketing
Annual Report; for
all others, U.S.
Geological Survey
(USGS) Mineral
Commodity
Summaries.
Support activities For mining EIA; USGS; BLS
for mining exploration, trade PPI; trade
source data on sources.
drilling costs and
footage drilled;
for all other
support
activities, USGS
Mineral Commodity
Summaries.
Utilities For electric power BLS Consumer Price
generation, Index (CPI) and
transmission, and PPI; EIA.
distribution, EIA
forms 861 and 826;
for natural gas
distribution, EIA
Natural Gas
Monthly: for water
and sewage and
other systems,
NIPA PCE water and
sanitary services
and water and
sewage
maintenance.
Construction
Residential Census Bureau Census Bureau
construction price deflator for
spending (value new single-family
put in place) houses under
survey. construction; NIPA
price index for
multifamily home
construction.
Nonresidential Census Bureau NIPA composite
construction price indexes
spending survey; based on cost per
Department of square foot; cost
Defense (DOD) indexes from trade
expenditures; USDA source data; for
expenditures. single family
houses under
construction,
Census Bureau
price deflator;
BLS PPI.
Manufacturing Census Bureau ASM, BLS PPI; NIPA
M3 survey, and price indexes
Economic Census. based on DOD
prices paid for
military
equipment; NIPA
hedonic price
indexes.
Wholesale trade Census Bureau Census Bureau AWTR
Annual Wholesale and MWTR data to
Trade Report derive margin
(AWTR), Monthly rates; IRS
Wholesale Trade Statistics of
Report (MWTR), and Income (SOI); NIPA
Wholesale Trade sales prices and
Economic Census. import prices; IRS
SOI commodity
taxes.
Retail trade Census Bureau BLS PPI; NIPA
Annual Retail retails sales
Trade Survey prices; Census
(ARTS) and Monthly Bureau ARTS and
Retail Trade MRTS; IRS SOL
Survey (MRTS); IRS
SOI.
Transportation
and warehousing
Air transportation Bureau of BLS PPI; BTS
Transportation prices.
Statistics (BTS)
Air Carrier
Financial
Statistics (ACFS)
and Air Carrier
Traffic Statistics
(ACTS); foreign
trade statistics.
Rail For rail For rail
transportation passenger, Amtrak passengers, BLS
Annual Report; for CPI; for freight,
rail freight, BLS PPI.
trade sources.
Water For freight, U.S. BLS PPI and BLS
transportation Army Corps of CPI; trade source
Engineers data.
Waterborne
Commerce of the
United States; for
inland passenger
travel on ferry
boats and cruise
ships, NIPA PCE;
trade source data
on receipts.
Truck Census Bureau BLS PPI.
transportation Services Annual
Survey (SAS).
Transit and BTS National NIPA PCE price
ground passenger Transportation indexes; BLS QCEW.
transportation Statistics; BLS
Quarterly Census
of Employment and
Wages (QCEW) data;
for ground
passenger
transportation,
NIPA PCE.
Pipeline Trade source data BLS PPI.
transportation on receipts;
Federal Energy
Regulation
Commission Form 6.
Other transportation NIPA PCE; trade NIPA PCE price
and support source data on index; BLS PPI.
activities receipts; BTS ACFS
and ACTS.
Warehousing Census Bureau SAS. BLS PPI.
and storage
Information
Publishing Census Bureau SAS. BLS PPI.
industries
(includes
software)
Motion picture Census Bureau SAS. BLS CPI; NIPA PCE
and sound price indexes.
recording
industries
Broadcasting and Census Bureau SAS. BLS PPI; for radio
telecommunications and TV
broadcasting, NIPA
PCE price index
based on BLS PPI.
Information and Census Bureau SAS. BLS CPI and PPI;
data processing for publishing and
services broadcasting
content on the
Internet, NIPA PCE
price indexes.
Finance and insurance
Federal Reserve Federal Deposit For financial
banks, credit Insurance services, NIPA PCE
intermediation, Corporation price index based
and related commercial bank on BLS quantity
activities call report data; output indexes for
Federal Reserve commercial banks
Board data; Office and employee hours
of Thrift for other
Supervision data; depository
NIPA financial institutions; BLS
services PPI and CPI.
indirectly
measured; private
trade source data.
Securities, Securities and BLS PPI and CPI;
commodity Exchange NIPA PCE price
contracts, Commission Focus indexes.
investments Report; Census
Bureau SAS.
Insurance carriers For reinsurance For life
and related carriers, life insurance, NIPA
activities insurance, and PCE data on input
property and prices; for health
casualty insurance,
insurance, private quantity
trade source data; extrapolations of
for all other premiums and
insurance carriers benefits deflated
and related with BLS PPI; for
activities, BLS all other property
QCEW. and casualty
insurance, BLS
PPI; for agents,
brokers, and
services,
composite indexes
based on trade
source data and
NIPA PCE price
indexes.
Funds, trusts, For imputed BLS CPI; NIPA PCE
and other service charges price indexes.
financial for other
vehicles financial
institutions, NIPA
PCE.
Real estate and For residential For residential
rental and leasing dwellings, Census dwellings, BLS
Real estate Bureau's biannual CPI; for
American Housing nonresidential
Survey and monthly dwellings, BLS
Current Population PPI; for real
Survey data on estate managers
housing stock and and agents, BLS
rental prices and PPI and trade
USDA data on farm source data.
housing; for
nonresidential
dwellings, IRS SOI
tabulations of
business tax
returns and NIPA
rental value of
buildings owned by
nonprofit
institutions.
Rental and For rental and BLS PPI.
leasing services leasing services,
and lessors of Census Bureau SAS;
intangible assets for royalties, IRS
SOI tabulations of
business tax
returns.
Professional,
scientific, and
technical services
Legal services Census Bureau SAS. BLS PPI.
Computer systems Census Bureau SAS. NIPA price indexes
design and for prepackaged,
related services custom, and own
account software.
Miscellaneous Census Bureau SAS. BLS PPI and QCEW.
professional,
scientific and
technical services
Management BLS QCEW. BLS QCEW.
of companies and
enterprises
Administrative Census Bureau SAS; NIPA PCE price
and waste index based on BLS
management
services
Administrative BLS QCEW. CPI data; BLS
and support QCEW; BLS PPI.
services
Waste Census Bureau SAS; NIPA PCE price
management and BLS QCEW. index based on BLS
remediation CPI data; BLS QCEW
services and PPI.
Educational Services Department of NIPA PCE price
Education; BLS index based on
Consumer trade source data
Expenditure for input costs.
Survey.
Health care and
social assistance
Ambulatory health Census Bureau SAS. NIPA PCE price
care services index based on BLS
CPI; BLS PPI.
Hospital and Census Bureau SAS. NIPA PCE price
nursing and index based on BLS
residential CPI and Centers
care facilities for Medicare and
Medicaid Services.
Social assistance Census Bureau SAS. NIPA PCE price
index based on
trade source data
on input costs.
Arts, entertainment,
and recreation
Performing arts, Census Bureau SAS. NIPA PCE price
spectator sports, index based on BLS
museums and CPI.
related industries
Amusement, gambling, Census Bureau SAS. NIPA PCE price
and recreation index based on BLS
industries CPI.
Accommodation and food
services
Accommodations For hotels and BLS PPI; NIPA PCE
motels, NIPA PCE; price index based
for recreational on BLS CPI.
vehicle parks and
for bed and
breakfasts, BLS
QCEW.
Food services Census Bureau Census Bureau
and drinking ARTS. ARTS; BLS PPI
places composite price
index.
Other services except For religious, BLS CPI; NIPA PCE
government grant making, price indexes
civic, and other based on BLS CPI.
nonprofit
services, personal
services, and dry
cleaning services,
Census Bureau SAS
and National
Center for
Charitable
Statistics; for
repair and
maintenance, BLS
QCEW; for private
household
services, NIPA
PCE.
Federal
General government NIPA government NIPA price index
expenditure based on BLS PPI
statistics; for and CPI; for
federal military
structures, DOD facilities, DOD
investment data on
expenditures. employment, prices
for military
construction;
construction cost
indexes from trade
sources.
Government U.S. Postal BLS PPI; NIPA PCE
enterprises Service receipts; price indexes
for electric based on BLS PPI
utilities; EIA; and agency data.
for specific
enterprises,
Overseas Private
Investment
Corporation,
Federal Housing
Administration,
and other
government
agencies.
State and local
General NIPA government BLS PPI; NIPA PCE
Enterprises expenditure price index based
statistics. on CPI. BLS PPI.
NIPA statistics on
government
enterprises based
on Census Bureau
Annual Survey of
Government
Finances; for
electric
utilities, EIA;
for state and
local government
structures, Census
Bureau
construction
spending survey.