Preview of the 2009 comprehensive revision of the NIPAs: statistical changes.
McCully, Clinton P. ; Payson, Steven
IN JULY 2009, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) will release
the results of the 13th comprehensive, or benchmark, revision of the
national income and product accounts (NIPAs). The last such revision was
released in December 2003.
This article, which describes statistical changes, is the fourth in
a series of SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS articles about the comprehensive
revision. An article in the March 2008 issue described the effects of
incorporating the 2002 benchmark input-output (I-O) accounts and
identified some of the proposals being considered for this comprehensive
revision. (1) An article in May 2008 described a new classification
system for personal consumption expenditures (PCE). (2) An article in
the March 2009 SURVEY covered changes in definitions and in the
presentation of data, including the change in reference year from 2000
to 2005 for the chain-type quantity and price indexes and for the
chained-dollar estimates. (3) Following the release of the comprehensive
revision results in July, an article in the September 2009 SURVEy will
describe the revised NIPA estimates and present and discuss the effects
of the changes in definitions and the statistical changes.
Statistical changes are changes in estimation procedure that are
generally made to incorporate new methods or techniques, to incorporate
data from new sources, or to address data gaps and other shortcomings.
Major statistical changes in this comprehensive revision include the
following:
* Incorporates the 2002 benchmark I-O accounts, which provide the
most thorough and detailed information on the structure of the U.S.
economy. These accounts are used to benchmark the expenditure components
of gross domestic product (GDP) and some of the income components.
* Improves the estimates of PCE for consumer electronics by using
new retail point-of-sale scanner data from a trade source.
* Improves estimates of wages and salaries by incorporating new
information on employee cafeteria plans.
* Improves estimates of proprietors' income by updating
adjustments for the underreporting and nonreporting of income using more
recent Internal Revenue Service (IRS) data and Census Bureau data.
The remainder of this article describes these newly available and
revised source data and the major methodological changes that will be
incorporated in this comprehensive revision (table 1).
Newly Available and Revised Source Data
In this comprehensive revision, estimates are revised for the years
since the 1997 benchmark I-O estimates and for additional years for
changes in definitions and classifications and for statistical changes.
In contrast, in annual NIPA revisions, only the estimates for the 3 most
recent years have typically been revised. (4) Consequently, newly
available and revised source data that became available for periods
outside the scope of annual revisions will be incorporated in this
comprehensive revision. Source data that have become available since the
2003 comprehensive revision that would not normally be fully
incorporated in a regular annual NIPA revision are referred to as
"regular benchmark source data" These data are usually
available with a long lag but generally go back no further than 10
years, which is typical, for example, of the data from the decennial and
quinquennial censuses.
This comprehensive revision also includes the data that are
normally incorporated in the annual NIPA revision. These source data are
referred to as "regular source data for 2006-2008." An example
is the 2007 Statistics of Income (SOI) data for business tax returns
from the IRS.
The most important step in preparing this comprehensive NIPA
revision is the incorporation of the 2002 levels for key components from
BEA's 2002 benchmark I-O accounts, which are adjusted to reflect
any changes in definitions and classifications in the NIPA estimates,
(5) In addition, detailed industry and commodity information from the
I-O accounts is used to revise the proportions of final and intermediate
purchases that are used to extrapolate product-side estimates for years
after 2002. The NIPA estimates are also revised to account for newly
available and revised source data.
Regular benchmark source data
The revised NIPA estimates will incorporate the following regular
benchmark source data: data from BEA's benchmark 2002 I-O accounts,
selected data from the most recent quinquennial economic censuses,
housing data from the decennial census and from the related Residential
Finance Survey, and annual source data that were not available in time
for incorporation during the annual NIPA revisions.
The 2002 benchmark I-O accounts. For comprehensive revisions of the
NIPAs, the benchmark I-O accounts are the most important data source.
They are used to establish the NIPA level of GDP for the benchmark year
and provide essential information for estimating GDP for periods after
the benchmark year. (6) For NIPA benchmark year estimates, the I-O
accounts provide information on the portion of the value of gross
domestic output going to final uses. As a result, the estimate of GDP
avoids double-counting (of, for example, the semiconductors that go into
computers or the flour that goes into bread). (7)
The 2002 I-O accounts provide the benchmark for the estimates of
PCE, private fixed investment (PFI), and parts of several income
components, and they provide the commodity weights for the change in
private inventories and the type-of-product detail for state and local
government consumption expenditures and gross investment. The I-O
estimates are used as benchmarks because they are based on detailed
industry and commodity statistics collected by the Census Bureau in the
quinquennial economic censuses and because they are prepared within an
internally consistent framework that tracks the flows of inputs and
outputs in the economy. (8) In addition, the 2002 I-O estimates must be
modified to account for the changes in definitions and classifications
that affect GDP, such as the new measure of insurance services provided
by government enterprises. (9) The incorporation of the 2002 benchmark
I-O accounts will result in revisions to NIPA estimates for selected
components, beginning with 1998; estimates from the 1997 benchmark I-O
accounts were incorporated in the 2003 comprehensive revision of the
NIPAs.
Other regular benchmark source data. This comprehensive revision
will incorporate data on inventories, on the receipts and expenses of
business establishments and of governments, on sales by detailed
commodity and by product line, on final industry and product shipments
from the 2002 Economic Census, and on trade margins from both the 2002
Economic Census and from the 2002 annual surveys of merchant wholesale
and retail trade. The data on manufacturing, wholesale trade, and retail
trade--which have also been incorporated into the corresponding annual
and monthly surveys--will affect estimates of PCE for goods and food
services, of private fixed investment in equipment, and of the change in
private inventories, beginning with 1998.
In addition, annual series that became available too late for the
annual NIPA revisions in 2004 through 2008 will be incorporated. NIPA
estimates that are based on the international transactions accounts
(ITAs)--primarily net exports of goods and services and
rest-of-the-world income receipts and payments--will be revised to
reflect improvements to the ITAs that were introduced since 2003 and
that affected years not covered by the annual NIPA revisions. (10) Other
data that will be incorporated into the NIPAs include revised data on
the expenditures and receipts of state and local governments for fiscal
years 2001-2005 from the Census Bureau, and final data on employer
pension and profit-sharing plans for 1999-2006 from the Department of
Labor.
Benchmark source data of particular significance are the 2000
Census of Housing and 2001 Residential Finance Survey (RFS), each of
which is conducted every 10 years. Estimates of rental payments for
tenant-and owner-occupied dwellings that are based on these data will be
revised, beginning with 1991. These estimates enter into the calculation
of PCE for housing services and of the rental income of persons.
Regular source data for 2006-2008
The revised estimates for 2006-2008 will reflect the incorporation
of newly available and revised source data that became available after
the last annual NIPA revision in July 2008. The most important of these
data sources are Census Bureau annual surveys of state and local
governments for fiscal year 2006 (revised) and fiscal year 2007
(preliminary), of manufacturers for 2006 (revised), of merchant
wholesale trade and of retail trade for 2006 (revised) and 2007
(preliminary), and of services and of the value of construction
put-in-place for 2006 and 2007 (revised) and 2008 (preliminary); federal
government budget data for fiscal years 2008 and 2009; ITA data for
2006-2008 (revised); Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Quarterly Census
of Employment and Wages (QCEW) for 2006-2008 (revised); IRS tabulations
of corporate tax returns for 2006 (revised) and 2007 (preliminary) and
of sole proprietorship and partnership tax returns for 2007; and U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) farm statistics for 2006-2008
(revised). (11)
Changes in Methodology
This section describes the new and improved methodologies that will
be introduced in this comprehensive revision. (12) The discussion
includes changes to product-and income-side components, to price and
quantity measures, and to estimates of consumption of fixed capital, and
includes extensions of several methodology changes that were
incorporated in the 2005-2008 annual NIPA revisions.
Product-side changes
Retail-control method for personal consumption expenditures (PCE).
In nonbenchmark years, the retailcontrol method is used to estimate PCE
for most goods and for food services using retail and food services
sales data. In these years, the estimate of total PCE for most goods and
for food services, known as the PCE control group, is derived by
extrapolation from the benchmark year using a total of sales for most
kinds of retail and food services businesses, known as the retailcontrol
group, from the Census Bureau's monthly and annual surveys. (13) In
this comprehensive revision, the PCE control group will exclude tobacco
and motor vehicle fuels, lubricants, and fluids, and the retail-control
group will exclude tobacco stores and gasoline stations. The major
consequence of this change will be to eliminate the volatility in the
estimate of food sold at gasoline stations, which is calculated as a
residual in the current procedure based on the difference between Census
Bureau retail sales data for gasoline stations and the independently
determined estimate of motor fuel. The motor fuel estimate is based on
price and quantity data from the Energy Information Administration
(EIA), and the volatility in food sales at gasoline stations is caused
by measurement differences between the EIA data and the Census Bureau
retail sales data. With the exclusion of motor fuel estimates from the
PCE control group, food sales at gasoline service stations will now be
extrapolated by food sales at grocery stores and other retail industries
that sell food.
Consumer electronics scanner data. Beginning with data for 2003,
within PCE for goods, estimates of the annual composition of goods sold
at electronics stores will be based on retail point-of-sale scanner data
from a trade source. The new method captures variations in the
composition of goods sold by these stores, unlike the current method,
and alters the composition of commodities within PCE goods. The annual
scanner data will be used to adjust the composition of commodities sold
for each of three retail industries: radio, television, and electronics
stores; computer and software stores; and camera and photographic
supplies stores. (14) 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.
Currently, sales by product line for electronics stores are based
on retail sales by kind of business from the Census Bureau and on
commodity sales data from the most recent quinquennial economic census.
The percentages used to allocate sales to commodities by kind of
business are fixed until the next economic census data become available.
The allocations used thus do not capture any variations in the
composition of sales by kind of business between economic census years.
The value of total sales of electronics stores used in the PCE
estimates will continue to be based on the Census Bureau's monthly
and annual surveys of retail trade, and the total current-dollar value
of PCE goods estimates based on retail sales will not be affected by the
new use of scanner data. With this comprehensive revision change, annual
scanner data will now be used to capture variations in the composition
of sales of grocery stores and of electronics stores. (15)
Average rental value of owner-occupied nonfarm housing. Beginning
with data for 2002, BEA will use annual data from the BLS Consumer
Expenditure Survey (CEX) in the estimation of the imputed space rental
value of owner-occupied permanent-site nonfarm housing. BEA measures the
imputed rental value of these units by multiplying the number of units
by an imputed average rental value. The average rental value of
owner-occupied dwellings from the CEX will be used to extrapolate
benchmarked average rent estimates derived from the 2001 Census Bureau
decennial Residential Finance Survey (RFS). The CEX measure of the
average rental value is based on a question that asks homeowners
participating in the survey to estimate the monthly rental value of
their homes.
Currently, annual estimates of average rents are extrapolated from
RFS-based benchmark estimates using the consumer price index (CPI) for
owners' equivalent rent and the per unit value of the real net
housing stock (in prices of the reference year) derived from BEA fixed
assets estimates and housing unit estimates. For the most recent year,
the real net stock is estimated by adding to the previous year's
stock, the real sales of new owner-occupied housing and of residential
improvements and by subtracting real depreciation.
The decision to adopt the CEX average rent data was made in part to
compensate for the discontinuation of the RFS. Historical growth rates in the RFS-benchmarked average rent and the CEX average rent are very
similar. Estimates affected by the change are PCE for the imputed rental
value of nonfarm owner-occupied dwellings, rental income of persons with
capital consumption adjustment, and gross housing value added. Because
the CEX data are not available until the second annual revision,
estimates for the most recent year will be extrapolated, as they are
currently.
Service Annual Survey data for hospital and telecommunications
services. Beginning with data for 2003, Census Bureau Service Annual
Survey (SAS) data will be used to estimate annual changes in two PCE
components: hospital services and telecommunication services. In both
cases, the SAS data are consistent with the economic census data used
for benchmark PCE estimates.
In the case of hospital services, SAS data on revenues of private
taxable and tax-exempt hospitals and on expenses of tax-exempt hospitals
are currently used for estimates of the most recent year but are
replaced by data from the American Hospital Association's (AHA)
"Hospital Statistics" which lag by a year, when these become
available. The SAS data will now be used for all vintages of the annual
estimate. The SAS data are annual data, while the AHA data are fiscal
year data that must be converted to a calendar year basis. In addition,
the receipts of taxable hospitals used for the PCE estimates must be
derived by converting AHA expenses data using fixed ratios, while the
SAS directly provides receipts data for taxable hospitals.
For estimation of landline telephone services, the SAS data will
replace data from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Revenue
Report. The SAS product detail for telecommunications industries using
North American Product Classification System categories allow for more
precise estimation of telephone services by a variety of service
providers. In particular, the SAS data capture broadband telephone
services, which the FCC data on regulated carriers do not.
Tax-exempt hospital and nursing home revenues. Census Bureau
Quarterly Services Survey (QSS) revenue data will be used for quarterly
estimates of nonprofit hospital services and nursing home services to
households. These data will be required because of the inclusion of
household purchases from nonprofit institutions serving households
(NPISH) in the new PCE classification. The use of the QSS data, which
were first reported for the fourth quarter of 2004, will begin with the
data for the first quarter of 2005.
Electricity commodity tax. Beginning with data for 1968, commodity
taxes will be removed from estimates of PCE for electricity. These taxes
were determined to be incorporated in the residential electricity
revenue data from EIA that are used for these estimates.
Change in private inventories (CIPI). Beginning with data for 1997,
a new method will be used for the annual benchmarking of CIPI estimates.
Benchmarking reconciles monthly industry-level CIPI estimates to annual
estimates. (16) The new method will provide more accurate annual
estimates of real CIPI, improve consistency requirements between annual
current-dollar and chained-dollar CIPI estimates and prices, and avoid
including holding gains and losses in the current-dollar CIPI estimates
while preserving as much of the original monthly patterns as possible.
For each industry, the more accurate annual estimates of real CIPI
will be based on annual inventory stocks and the annual average of
monthly prices. Currently, annual real CIPI is summed from monthly
estimates based on benchmarked current-dollar CIPI deflated by monthly
price indexes. The current procedure adjusts each monthly current-dollar
CIPI by the same amount, equal to one-twelfth of the annual difference,
and monthly price indexes are then used to calculate benchmarked
estimates of real CPI. The new method takes advantage of the superior
accuracy and reliability of the annual stocks data, which are taken
largely from annual Census Bureau surveys of manufacturing and trade
industries that have larger sample sizes than the Census Bureau surveys
used for the monthly estimates and in which respondents often use more
precise methods to value their inventory stocks.
For each industry, the new method will adjust monthly estimates of
real CIPI for each industry by one-twelfth of the difference between the
annual estimate and the sum of the monthly estimates and by an
additional amount equal to a proportion of the difference between the
monthly price and the annual average of the monthly prices, based on
statistical regressions. (17) The monthly adjustments will thus vary
based on price differences. In cases of high correlations between
estimates of real CIPI and prices, the proportions applied to the price
differences will be reduced in order to avoid including the holding
gains and losses reflected in current-dollar CIPI. This approach will
retain most of the original pattern of the monthly estimates.
Seasonal adjustment of petroleum import prices. Petroleum import
prices will be seasonally adjusted beginning with 1991. Petroleum import
prices, measured as dollars per barrel, display a seasonal pattern in
which prices tend to be relatively higher in the second and third
quarters than in the first and fourth quarters. In the current
procedure, seasonally adjusted current-dollar petroleum imports are
divided by prices that are not seasonally adjusted, resulting in
seasonality in the estimates of real petroleum imports. (18) The new
procedure will eliminate this seasonality by seasonally adjusting both
current-dollar petroleum imports and petroleum import prices, thus
leading to less volatile estimates of real petroleum imports.
Income-side changes
Employee contributions to cafeteria plans. Beginning with data for
1986, estimates of wages and salaries will incorporate new information
on employee benefit plans, commonly called "cafeteria plans."
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" (FSAs), which reimburse them
for medical care and dependent care expenses. (19) Because
employees' participation is voluntary, these contributions are
included as part of NIPA wages and salaries.
Wage data from the QCEW are the basis for BEA's estimates of
wages and salaries. The QCEW wage data do not include employee
contributions to cafeteria plans whenever the state laws do not count
them as wages for unemployment insurance purposes. This underreporting
of total wages in certain states only applies to private sector and
state and local government employees; federal employee contributions are
reported as wages in all states.
To correct for the underestimate of wages and salaries attributable
to unreported contributions to cafeteria plans, BEA will estimate
employee contributions for health insurance and to FSAs for medical care
and for dependent care. Estimates will be based on enrollments and
average annual contributions from which a national total will be
determined and will then be distributed to states based on employment
levels. Contributions from states whose laws require the reporting of
cafeteria plan contributions will then be removed to derive the
unreported cafeteria plan contributions. Estimates will be made using
this method beginning with 1990 estimates; estimates from the beginning
of the program in 1986 through 1989 will be made by interpolating
between a zero level in 1985 and the 1990 level. Estimates for the 2
most recent years will be extrapolated using BEA employment estimates.
For health insurance contributions, enrollments will be estimated
using BEA national employment and estimated eligibility rates and
enrollment rates. For 1990 to 1998, eligibility rates will be based on
BLS data from the National Compensation Survey, and beginning with 2001
on data from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Medical
Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS). Enrollment rates for 1990-98 will be
based on data from the Kaiser Family Foundation Employer Health Benefits
Annual Summary. Enrollment for 1999 and 2000 will be interpolated.
For 1990 to 2000, average contributions of private employees will
be based on 1993 state data from the Centers for Disease Control
National Employer Health Survey; estimates for other years will be based
on changes in health care premiums from the Kaiser Family Foundation
Employer Health Benefits Annual Summary. State and local government
employee contributions for 1990-2000 will be estimated by deflating the
2001 average contributions by the BLS employment cost index for health
insurance. Average contributions beginning with 2001 will be based on
MEPS data.
For contributions to FSAs, estimates will be made of eligibility
rates, enrollment rates, and average contributions, which will be based
on data from the Mercer National Survey of Employer-Sponsored Health
Care for 1990-2006 and from the Employee Benefit Research Institute,
Facts from EBRI for 2003. Average private employee contributions for
medical care and for dependent care will be used for both private
employees and state and local government employees. Identifying the
states for which cafeteria plan contributions are in QCEW wage data will
be based on Bureau of National Affairs information on state unemployment
insurance laws.
Old-age, survivors, and disability insurance (OASDI). Beginning
with data for 1998, annual estimates of the industry distribution of
private employer contributions for OASDI will be improved using detailed
information on employment levels by hourly wage rates. The employment
distributions will be used to estimate taxable wages and to allocate
aggregate OASDI contributions to industries. Under the OASDI program,
also known as social security, employers pay taxes at a rate of 6.2
percent on employee wages up to an annual limit set by law, which in
2008 was $102,000. (20) Wages above this limit are not taxed.
National estimates of private employer OASDI contributions are
based on data from the Social Security Administration. Estimates by
industry are based on BEA wage and salary disbursements data. However,
because the wage and salary data include wages above the taxable limit,
the current methodology overstates employer contributions to OASDI for
high-wage industries. Under the new methodology, industry estimates will
be prepared by state and summed to obtain national estimates by
industry. Taxable wages for each state-level industry will be estimated
as the total wages for employees in that state and industry whose wages
are within the OASDI limit plus the number of employees above the limit
times the OASDI limit. These estimates of taxable wages will be used to
allocate employer contributions to OASDI.
The data used for these estimates will be BEA employment data by
state and industry, data on the distribution of employment by hourly
wage rate intervals by state and industry from the BLS Occupational
Employment Survey (OES), and data on the distribution of employment by
hours worked per week by industry from the Current Population Survey
(CPS), which is conducted by the Census Bureau for BLS. OES data on a
NAICS basis will be used, beginning with 2002 data. Taxable wages for
1998 through 2001 will be made by applying the 2002 OES factors.
Conversion of income and employment by industry from 1997 to 2002
NAICS basis. Annual estimates of income and employment by industry will
be converted to the 2002 NAICS basis from the 1997 NAICS basis, starting
with 1998 estimates, and the quarterly estimates will be presented on a
2002 NAICS basis, starting with 2001 estimates. Through 2000, the annual
and quarterly estimates will continue to be presented on the 1987
Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) basis.
Employer contributions for health insurance by industry. Beginning
with 1998, the industry distribution for employer contributions for
health insurance will be based on industry data from the Medical
Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS). Wages and salaries was the previous
indicator for the industry distribution. MEPS data will continue to be
used for estimates of total employer contributions to private health
insurance plans.
Misreporting adjustments. Estimates of nonfarm proprietors'
income (NFPI) and of wages and salaries will incorporate updated
misreporting adjustments. (21) These adjustments account for
underreported income on tax returns and for nonreported income for
nonfilers. Estimates of underreported income will be revised using IRS
National Research Program (NRP) data for 2001 and IRS data for certain
earlier years that have not been previously incorporated. Estimates of
nonreported income will be updated using newly available data from the
Census Bureau's "exact-match" studies, which compare
records from the CPS with individual IRS tax returns to estimate
nonfiler income for individuals.
The revised underreporting estimates will incorporate the 2001 NRP
data, updated tax gap measures for 1972-85 from a 1988 IRS Taxpayer
Compliance Measurement Program (TCMP) report, and updated measures for
1985 and 1988 and proiections for 1992, from a 1996 TCMP report. (22)
Revised estimates of underreporting will begin with 1984 data for sole
proprietors and partnerships, and with 1979 data for wages and salaries.
Revised estimates of NFPI and of wages and salaries will be interpolated
between TCMP and NRP years and judgmentally trended after 2001. Revised
estimates for nonfilers will incorporate the results of the 2003 through
2007 exact-match studies. Nonreporting estimates for NFPI and for wages
and salaries will be interpolated between 1999 and 2003, and estimates
for 2008 will be judgmentally trended.
Business meals and entertainment. Estimates of corporate profits
and nonfarm proprietors' income will reflect a change in how
nondeductible meal and entertainment expenses are allocated. Estimates
of business income from IRS tabulations of business tax returns on which
NIPA estimates are based reflect 20. Social Security Administration,
Contribution and Benefit Base, www.ssa.gov/OACT/COLA/cbb.html. statutory
requirements for expense deductibility, and business meal and
entertainment expenses are only partially deductible. These expenses
were 100 percent deductible before 1987, 80 percent deductible in
1987-1993, and 50 percent deductible since 1994.
Total business expenses for meals and entertainment are based on
estimates of business intermediate consumption from the benchmark I-O
accounts, which are interpolated and extrapolated using as primary
indicators, food services sales from Census Bureau retail trade surveys.
Estimates of total and nondeductible meal and entertainment expenses of
sole proprietorships, are from IRS tabulations. The remaining meal and
entertainment expenses are accounted for by corporations and by
partnerships, which are included with sole proprietorships in nonfarm
proprietors' income.
Currently, partnership expenses are estimated by first calculating
the ratio of total business meal and entertainment expenses of sole
proprietorships to their total deductions and by then applying this
ratio to partnership deductions. Corporate meal and entertainment
expenses are then calculated by subtracting sole proprietor and
partnership expenses from total business expenses. Nondeductible
expenses for partnerships and for corporations are estimated by applying
the statutory nondeductible percentage to estimated total expenses.
Under the new method, BEA will directly estimate corporate expenses
on meals and entertainment beginning with 2005, using data from
Schedules M-1 and M-3 of IRS Form 1120 for corporate income tax returns.
Schedule M-1 is filed by corporations with assets of less than $10
million, and Schedule M-3 by corporations with assets above $10 million.
(23) For 1987 to 2004 data, corporate meal and entertainment expenses
will be extrapolated using total expenses. Sole proprietors'
expenses on meals and entertainment will be measured as before, based on
IRS data, while the expenses by partnerships will be estimated as the
residual when the expenses of proprietorships and corporations are
subtracted from the total for all businesses.
Securities trading adjustments. NIPA estimates of corporate profits
are based on source data that follow the rules of tax accounting. To
create estimates of profits that are consistent with national accounting
concepts, various adjustments need to be made to the source data. (24)
The securities trading adjustment converts tax data, which treat
expenses for brokers' corn missions as a reduction in future
capital gains income, to a current-period expense for the purchases of
brokers' services. Capital gains and losses are also excluded from
all national accounts measures of income because they represent changes
in the value of existing assets rather than income from current
production.
Most corporate capital gains are excluded by subtracting net gains
reported on IRS tax forms using IRS source data associated with Schedule
D of IRS Form 1120. However, this adjustment does not include capital
gains on own-account trading of securities brokers and dealers, which
reflect the imputed financial service charge paid by corporations to
domestic securities dealers who do not charge an explicit commission.
(25) Thus, a separate adjustment is needed to exclude these types of
capital gains.
Starting with 1988 data, estimates of securities trading costs and
capital gains used to adjust corporate profits from a tax-reporting to a
NIPA basis will be revised based on 2002 estimates derived from economic
census and SAS data. The securities trading costs adjustment treats
commissions to brokers, commercial banks, and savings institutions from
securities trading as an expense in the current period rather than as a
reduction in future capital gains income. The trading cost adjustment
applies to both explicit commissions and commissions indirectly charged
through markups or "spreads" between the cost of acquiring a
security and its same-day sales value.
The 2002 estimates of trading costs will be based on product-line
data on gains from brokering and dealing equities, debt securities, and
derivatives from Census Bureau economic census data. These data will be
used to estimate total indirect commissions received. These indirect
commissions, which are treated as expenses of those corporations
purchasing securities from broker-dealers, are allocated by type of
buyer using Federal Reserve Board flow-of-funds data on securities
holdings. Estimates of direct commissions will be derived similarly. The
2002 estimates of capital gains of securities brokers and dealers will
be based on SAS data on gains from dealing and trading accounts less
indirect commissions. For commercial banks and for savings institutions,
capital gains will be estimated as total trading account gains and fees
and securities gains from Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
data, less indirect commissions from the economic census.
Between 1987 and 2002, the difference between the published and
revised 2002 estimates and the unrevised 1987 estimate will be
interpolated, and the interpolated difference will be added to the
currently published estimate for each year. After 2002, estimates of
indirect commissions for security brokers and dealers will be
extrapolated using the same data on trading volume for equities, debt
securities, and options used in the current estimates. Capital gains for
2003 and 2004 will use the same procedure as 2002; estimates after 2004
will be extrapolated with own-account trading gains from the SAS. For
commercial banking and for savings institutions, data from FDIC
securities gains and trading gains will be used.
Profits of Indian casinos. Beginning with data for 1989, annual
estimates of the surplus of Indian casinos will use new source data. In
the NIPAs, Indian tribal governments are classified as local governments
and Indian casinos as local government enterprises. The surplus of these
enterprises is equal to net earnings less payments to federal, state,
and other local governments and represents payments accruing to tribal
governments.
These earnings will be estimated as the product of Indian casino
gaming revenues and a net earnings ratio. Indian casino gaming revenues
are included in PCE for casino gambling, based on data from the National
Indian Gaming Commission (NIGC). Net earnings ratios, beginning with
those for 1999, are from the Indian Gaming: Cost of Doing Business
Report, published by Joseph Eve, Certified Public Accountants. The net
earnings ratio for 1989 to 1998 will be based on the average of the net
earnings ratios for 1999 forward.
Payments to state, local, and federal governments will be estimated
as the product of Indian casino gaming revenues and ratios for each of
the government levels. The ratios beginning with 2004 are from the
Analysis Group's Indian Gaming Industry Report. Ratios for 1989 to
2003 will be based on the 2004 ratios. Payments to the federal
government are used to finance the NIGC, while payments to state and
other local governments tend to support improvements to the
infrastructure near casinos.
Taxes on production and imports (TOPI) and nontax payments.
Estimates of the industry distribution of TOPI and of other government
receipts from business will be estimated directly on a NAICS basis
rather than converting data to NAICS from the earlier SIC basis. The
changes will affect NIPA estimates of gross value added of corporate
business and personal consumption expenditures but will not affect total
TOPI.
TOPI consists of excise taxes and customs duties and of state and
local sales taxes, property taxes, motor vehicle licenses, severance
taxes, special assessments, and other taxes. Other government receipts
from business include current transfer receipts and rents and royalties.
Current transfer receipts consist of deposit insurance premiums, fines,
fees such as regulatory and inspection fees, settlements received from
tobacco companies, donations, and net insurance settlements. Rents and
royalties are included in interest and miscellaneous receipts. An
example of rents and royalties is funds received by the Department of
the Interior from oil and gas leases. (26)
National totals of TOPI and other government receipts from business
are estimated as part of government current receipts and are allocated
to states by industry, using state and local government finance data
from the Census Bureau, published and unpublished data from several
federal agencies, data from state revenue departments, and information
provided by private industry. The currently used allocations are done on
an SIC basis and then converted to a NAICS basis using the 1997 economic
census national concordance.
For estimates other than general sales taxes, the conversion to a
direct NAICS basis will be relatively straightforward because many of
the data sources have been classified on both an SIC and a NAICS basis.
For general sales taxes, accounting for about 30 percent of TOPI, the
conversion to direct estimates on a NAICS basis is facilitated by the
increased availability of data from state revenue departments on a NAICS
basis. The majority of states now report sales tax data on a NAICS
basis; for those remaining on the SIC basis, the SIC to NAICS conversion
will still be necessary.
The new methodology will lead to revisions beginning with 1998 data
for national income by industry, sector, legal form of organization, and
type of income; gross value added of corporate business by financial and
nonfinancial business; and PCE. The PCE revisions will result from the
use of retail sales tax estimates as the indicator series for most of
the PCE goods estimates. The estimates of TOPI by industry are published
as part of BEA's annual industry accounts, and the revised
estimates will be available in the comprehensive revision of those
accounts, which is scheduled for the spring of 2010. The revisions to
estimates of overall TOPI and other government receipts from business
estimates will be minimal.
Quantities and prices Monthly input cost indexes. Monthly input
cost indexes will be incorporated for the gross output for all
categories of nonprofit institutions serving households and for expenses
of life insurance and of pension funds. The indexes will be weighted
averages of indexes of compensation costs and of purchased materials and
services. Weights for the indexes will be based on the 2002 benchmark
I-O estimates. Indexes of compensation costs will be based on average
wages by industry from quarterly QCEW data except for hospitals and
nursing homes, which will be based on the BLS Employment Cost Index.
Current-dollar estimates of expenses will use QCEW total industry wages
for each PCE category except for hospitals and nursing homes and some
trended series. Current-dollar estimates for hospitals and nursing homes
will be based on QSS data. Monthly interpolation of the quarterly
compensation indexes and extrapolation for current estimates will be
done for all categories except education with average hourly earnings
from the BLS Current Employment Survey (CES); indexes for education
categories will be interpolated and extrapolated with CES employment
times the BLS all-items CPI. For purchased materials and services,
producer price indexes (PPIs) and CPIs will be used for the associated
expenses, and for expenses that cannot be associated with specific price
indexes, the all-items CPI will be used.
Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) transactions. Estimates of SPR
transactions, which are included in federal government nondefense
consumption expenditures and in federal government current receipts,
will be improved through the use of a single price measure for all
transactions. The SPR, established by an act of Congress to safeguard
the nation against disruptions of oil imports, maintains reserves of
crude oil through purchases on the open market and, beginning in 1999,
through a royalty-in-kind program in which lessees of government-owned
property pay their fees by providing oil to the SPR. The SPR also
periodically loans or sells crude oil to private companies in the event
of a supply disruption or other adverse shock.
In the NIPAs, acquisitions of crude oil for the SPR are included in
federal government nondefense consumption expenditures. Loans and sales
of oil to private companies are treated as deductions in calculating
federal nondefense consumption expenditures. In-kind royalty payments
that the SPR receives are recorded as "rents and royalties" in
federal current receipts as well as nondefense consumption expenditures.
Because crude oil prices fluctuate substantially, BEA's
valuation of such transactions is highly dependent on the prices applied
to the oil added or removed from the SPR. Currently, SPR transactions
are priced using DOE data that apply only to SPR transactions, where
purchases and sales are valued at market cost and loans at historical
cost. Historical cost reflects the per-barrel average price of all the
oil in the reserve, which in many instances is far lower than the market
price. Royalty-in-kind payments are priced close to market cost.
SPR transactions are also reflected in CIPI estimates, where loans
and sales from the SPR are additions to inventories, and purchases by
the SPR are reductions. In the CIPI estimates, transactions with the SPR
are valued according to current-replacement costs, based on PPIs from
BLS. As a result, there are inconsistencies between SPR withdrawals
recorded in the federal estimates and the CIPI estimates. To remedy this
inconsistency, BEA will use the same price data for all SPR transactions
in the government accounts. It will use DOE data on the "refiner
acquisition cost of crude oil," which is a weighted average of the
domestic and imported crude oil cost per barrel that includes
transportation and other fees paid by the refiner. The revisions will
begin with 1998 estimates because before then, there are no significant
inconsistencies.
Consumption of fixed capital
Classification of improvements in farm owner-occupied housing.
Improvements made by owners of farm residential structures will be
reclassified from the farm industry to the real estate industry for
consistency with the classification of farm housing. These improvements
will also be reclassified from the sole proprietorships and partnerships
legal form to the households legal form. As a result, consumption of
fixed capital (CFC) will have offsetting revisions between the farm
industry and the real estate industry, and CFC by legal form will have
offsetting revisions between the business sector and the household
sector. The industry reclassification of CFC will increase farm
proprietors' income and will reduce rental income of persons by
offsetting amounts.
Changes from annual NIPA revisions
Motor vehicle valuation. BEA will carry back to 2002 an improvement
in the source data used in the valuation of unit sales and inventory
change for new domestic and foreign autos that was incorporated in the
2008 annual revision. During a calendar year, the new autos and trucks
sold usually include vehicles for the preceding, current, and next model
years. The improved estimates, based on more detailed and comprehensive
data from J.D. Power, now incorporate average price data for all three
model years. Previously, the price data for valuing new domestic autos
were based on a 2-modelyear split from a large auto manufacturer that
was then applied to other manufacturers. (27) The price data for valuing
new foreign autos were based only on the 1 model year that corresponded
to the calendar year. The improved procedure is consistent with the
methodology used to value new domestic and foreign light trucks.
Grocery store scanner data. BEA will carry back to 2003 the use of
annual retail scanner data from trade sources to estimate the commodity
composition of grocery store sales introduced in the 2008 annual
revision. Scanner data captures the variation in the composition of
goods sold by grocery stores (mainly food and beverage items) and alters
the composition of commodities in PCE goods. Previously, the composition
of PCE food and beverage items was adjusted annually using CEX data,
which are not available by industry and are only available with a 1-year
lag. Total sales of grocery stores used in the PCE estimates will
continue to be based on the Census Bureau's monthly and annual
retail trade surveys.
Federal nondefense expenditures. BEA will carry back to 1993 a
methodological change implemented in the 2005 annual revision that
affects the allocation of certain federal nondefense expenditures. This
change to annual and quarterly estimates will affect the distribution of
nondefense expenditures among intermediate goods and services and
investment in equipment and software but will not affect total
expenditures. The change will use contract awards data from the General
Services Administration to allocate these expenditures.
Seasonal adjustment of federal nondefense motor vehicles. BEA will
carry back to 1993 the seasonal adjustment of federal nondefense vehicle
investment, a change that was incorporated in the 2006 annual revision.
Seasonal adjustment of petroleum imports. The seasonal adjustment
of petroleum imports, introduced in the 2004 annual revision, will be
carried back to 1989.
Prices of health services by state and local governments. The use
of the PPI for home health care services to deflate state and local
government sales of these services, introduced in the 2007 annual
revision, will be carried back to 2000. This change is consistent with
the deflation of home health care services in the PCE estimates. (28)
Benefits paid by the Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation (PBGC).
BEA will carry back to 1985 a new method of estimating government social
benefits paid by the PBGC that was incorporated in the 2006 annual
revision. The methodology change removes from government social benefits
the portion of PBGC payments funded by private pension fund assets,
which the NIPAs treat as assets of the household sector.
The PBGC pays pension benefits to participants in failed private
pension funds from two funds: a revolving fund and a trust fund. The
revolving fund relies on insurance premiums paid by employers with
defined benefit pension plans and the investment income that the fund
generates. The trust fund relies on assets that the PBGC receives from
terminated pension plans. In the NIPAs, assets of the trust fund belong
to the household sector, because those funds were originally financed by
employees' pension plans. The portion of the PBGC benefits funded
by these assets will not be included in government social benefits.
(1.) Kurt Kunze and Stephanie H. McCulla, "Preview of Revised
NIPA Estimates for 2002: Effects of Incorporating the 2002 Benchmark I-O
Accounts and Proposed Definition and Statistical Changes," SURVEY
OF CURRENT BUSINESS 88 (March 2008): 10-17.
(2.) 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.
(3.) Eugene P. Seskin and Shelly Smith, "Preview of the 2009
Comprehensive Revision of the National Income and Product Accounts:
Changes in Definitions and Presentations," SURVEY 89 (March 2009):
10-27.
(4.) In 2010, BEA will introduce "flexible" annual
revisions that will retain the features of the current annual revisions,
but will also allow for the kinds of improvements that have been
reserved for comprehensive revisions. See "Improving BEA's
Accounts Through Flexible Annual Revisions," SURVEY 88 (June 2008):
29-32.
(5.) For the reclassification of PCE, the benchmark I-O estimates
used the new classifications, so no further adjustments will be
necessary for this comprehensive revision.
(6.) Benchmark years occur at 5-year intervals, for years ending in
2 and 7. Quinquennial economic censuses are taken for these years, and
benchmark estimates are prepared using data from these censuses.
(7.) For background on the distinction between GDP and gross
output, see "Concepts and Methods of the U.S. National Income and
Product Accounts" (July 2008);
www.bea.gov/national/pdf/NIPAhandbookchl4.pdf.
(8.) See Ricky L. Stewart, Jessica Brede Stone, and Mary L.
Streitwieser, "U.S. Benchmark Input-Output Accounts, 2002,"
SURVEY 87 (October 2007): 19-48.
(9.) See Seskin and Smith, 2009, 17-18.
(10.) The annual revisions of the ITAs are usually published in the
July issue of the SURVEY, most recently in Christopher L. Bach.
"Annual Revision of the U.S. International Accounts,
1974-2007" SURVEY 88 (July 2008): 36-52.
(11.) For a more detailed list of the "regular source
data" incorporated in an annual revision, see "Updated Summary
NIPA Methodologies," SURVEY 88 (November 2008): 8-25.
(12.) These changes update the methodologies that are described in
"Updated Summary NIPA Methodologies" and in the series of NIPA
methodology papers.
(13.) The PCE control group as currently defined includes PCE goods
except for motor vehicles, imputed food and clothing expenditures, meals
at schools, and net expenditures abroad by U.S. residents. The
retail-control group includes total retail and food services sales
except for automobile dealers, building material and garden equipment
and supplies dealers, office supply and stationery stores, manufactured
(mobile) home dealers, food service contractors, and mobile food
services.
(14.) The NAICS codes for these industries are 443112 (radio,
television, and electronics stores), 443120 (computer and software
stores), and 443130 (camera and photographic supplies stores).
(15.) The use of scanner data to estimate the composition of goods
bought at grocery stores was introduced in the 2008 annual revision and
will be carried back to 2003 in this comprehensive revision. See Eugene
P. Seskin and Shelly Smith, "Annual Revision of the National Income
and Product Accounts: Annual Estimates for 2005-2007 and Quarterly
Estimates for 2005:I-2008:I," SURVEY 88 (August 2008): 18 and the
section, "Extending the changes from the annual NIPA
revisions" in this article.
(16.) CIPI is estimated monthly but only quarterly estimates are
published in the NIPAs. Monthly estimates are published in the
underlying detail tables.
(17.) See Marshall Reinsdorf and Jennifer Ribarsky, "How
Should Inventory Investment be Measured in National Accounts?" BEA
working paper (July 2007); www.bea.gov/papers/working_papers.htm.
(18.) Seasonal adjustment of current-dollar petroleum imports began
in the 2004 annual revision and will be carried back to 1989 in this
comprehensive revision. See the section "Changes from the annual
NIPA revisions" in this article.
(19.) Under such plans, contributions from an employee's
salary are not subject to federal income taxes, federal unemployment
taxes, social security taxes, or Medicare taxes. These plans must meet
the requirements of section 125 of the Internal Revenue Code.
(20.) Social Security Administration, Contribution and Benefit
Base, www.asa.gov/OACT/COLA/cdd.html.
(21.) For a description of previous adjustments, see Robert E
Parker, "Improved Adjustments for Misreporting of Tax Return
Information Used to Estimate the National Income and Product Accounts,
1977," SURVEY 64 (June 1984): 17-25; "The Comprehensive
Revision of the U.S. National Income and Product Accounts: A Review of
Revisions and Major Statistical Changes" SURVEY 71 (December 1991):
39-40; and "Improved Estimates of the National Income and Product
Accounts for 1959-95: Results of the Comprehensive Revision" SURVEY
76 (January/February 1996): 24-25.
(22.) The TCMP was the predecessor to the NRE The two TCMP reports
are IRS, Income Tax Compliance Research: Supporting Appendices to
Publication 7285, IRS publication no. 1415 (Washington, DC, July 1988);
and IRS, Federal Tax Compliance Research: Individual Income Tax Gap
Estimates for 1985, 1988, and 1992, IRS publication no. 1415
(Washington, DC, revised April 1996);
www.irs.gov/pub/irs-soi/p141596.pdf.
(23.) The M-3 schedule was introduced on a voluntary basis in tax
year 2004 and was mandatory starting in tax year 2005.
(24.) See NIPA table 7.16 on "Relation of Corporate Profits,
Taxes, and Dividends in the National Income and Product Accounts to
Corresponding Measures as Published by the Internal Revenue
Service."
(25.) For additional information on BEA's treatment of capital
gains in the NIPAs, see "Corporate Profits: Profits Before Tax,
Profits Tax Liability, and Dividends," Methodology paper (September
2002); www.bea.gov/scb/pdf/ national/nipa/methpap/methpap2.pdf.
(26.) For additional information on TOPI and other government
receipts from business, see Government Transactions (September 2005);
www.bea.gov/national/pdf/mp5.pdf.
(27.) Specifically, for January-July, the current and preceding
model years were used; for August-December, the current and next model
years were used.
(28.) Government sales of health care services are part of PCE, as
are all personal health care services purchased from private and public
providers, including those financed through government programs, such as
Medicare and Medicaid, and through employer-sponsored health insurance.
Table 1. Major Methodological Changes
Initial
year of
Changes Components change
Product side
Change in coverage of PCE 2003
retail-control method
Use of consumer electronics PCE 2003
scanner data
Improved estimates of imputed PCE, rental income of 2002
rental value of owner-occupied persons
nonfarm housing
Use of Service Annual Survey data PCE 2003
for estimates of hospitals and
telecommunications services
Use of Quarterly Services Survey PCE 2005
data for tax-exempt hospital
and nursing home revenue
Removal of electricity commodity PCE 1968
tax
Improved interpolation of change Change in private 1997
in private inventories inventories
Seasonal adjustment of petroleum Imports 1991
import prices
Income side
Improved estimates of employee Wages and salaries 1986
contributions to cafeteria
plans
Improved estimates of industry Employer contributions 1998
distribution of employer for government social
contributions for old-age, insurance by industry
survivors, and disability
insurance
2002 NAICS-based industry All income estimates 1998
estimates
Improved distribution of employer Employer contributions 1998
contributions for health for employee pension
insurance by industry and insurance funds by
industry
Improved misreporting adjustments Nonfarm proprietors' 1984
income, wages and
salaries
Improved allocation of business Corporate profits, 1987
meals and entertainment nonfarm proprietors'
expenses income
Improved estimates of capital Corporate profits, PCE 1988
gains and indirect commissions
of securities brokers and
dealers
Improved estimates of the profits Current surplus of 1989
of Indian casinos government enterprises
NAICS-based taxes on production National income by 1998
and imports and nontax payments industry; gross value
added of financial and
nonfinancial domestic
corporate business;
national income by
sector, legal form of
organization, and type
of income; PCE
Quantity and price indexes
Monthly input cost indexes PCE 2001
Improved pricing methods for Government consumption 1998
Strategic Petroleum Reserve expenditures and gross
transactions investment, change in
private inventories
Consumption of fixed capital
New classification of Net housing value added, 1929
improvements in farm net farm value added
owner-occupied housing
Changes carried back from
the 2004-2008 annual
revisions (1)
Improved estimates of motor PCE, private equipment 2002
vehicle valuation (2008) and software, change
in private inventories
Use of grocery store scanner PCE 2003
data (2008)
Updated ratios to allocate Federal nondefense 1993
federal nondefense expenditures consumption
(2005) expenditures and
gross investment
Seasonal adjustment of federal Federal nondefense gross 1993
nondefense motor vehicles investment
(2006)
Seasonal adjustment of petroleum Imports 1989
imports (2004)
Improved prices for state and State and local 2000
local government "other health government consumption
services" (2007) expenditures
Improved estimates of benefits Government social 1985
paid by the Pension Benefit benefits
Guarantee Corporation
(2006) (2)
(1.) The year in parentheses refers to the August SURVEY OF CURRENT
BUSINESS in which the change was described.
(2.) The change was incorporated in the 2006 annual revision, but it
was not described in the August 2006 SURVEY article.
NAICS North American Industry Classification System
PCE Personal consumption expenditures