Effects of incorporating the 2002 benchmark I-O accounts proposed definition and statistical changes.
Kunze, Kurt ; McCulla, Stephanie H.
THIS article presents preliminary revised estimates of the major
aggregates and components of gross domestic product (GDP) for 2002.
These estimates reflect the newly available benchmark input-output (I-O)
accounts for 2002, which were published in the October 2007 SURVEY OF
CURRENT BUSINESS and revised in January 2008. (1) This article also
identifies some of the proposals that are being considered for the
upcoming comprehensive revision of the national income and product
accounts (NIPAs), which BEA plans to release in 2009.
The benchmark I-O accounts are the most important statistical
source of information for comprehensive revisions of the NIPAs. The I-O
accounts are used to establish the NIPA level of GDP for the benchmark
year, and they provide critical information for estimating GDP for
periods after the benchmark year. Specifically, the I-O accounts provide
estimates of the total sales (or gross output) of each industry and
commodity. In addition, the I-O accounts provide estimates of the
division of gross output between final sales and intermediate purchases
for each industry and commodity. As a result, estimates of GDP reflect
final sales only, without double counting inputs, such as the
semiconductors that go into computers or the flour that goes into bread.
GDP thus represents the unduplicated total of output sold to final
users.
The same benchmark year information is the basis for annual and
quarterly estimates of GDP for subsequent years; these estimates are
derived mainly from source data measuring total sales (for example,
manufacturing shipments and wholesale and retail sales). In addition,
information from the I-O accounts on the distribution of final sales
across final-demand components is used in the allocation of final sales
in annual and quarterly estimates.
These preliminary revised estimates for 2002 provide the foundation
for the major GDP components. The estimates will be incorporated into
the NIPA estimates of GDP in the upcoming comprehensive revision, but
they do not reflect the definition changes and other statistical
improvements that will also be incorporated. Highlights of this
preliminary revision include the following:
* The revised estimate of GDP for 2002 is $202.3 billion, or 1.9
percent, higher than the presently published estimate.
* The introduction of a new classification system for personal
consumption expenditures affects the composition of PCE among its
components but does not affect the total estimate of PCE.
Comprehensive revisions of the NIPAs, which occur roughly every 5
years, incorporate the best and final source data for all of the
components in the accounts and thus make the series consistent for all
time periods. The next comprehensive revision is scheduled to be
released in July 2009. Traditionally, comprehensive revisions have also
included changes in definitions and statistical methods designed to
adapt the accounts to an ever changing economy (see the box "NIPA
Revision Cycle"). The most recent strategic plan emphasizes
BEA's efforts to provide new and improved measures of output,
services, investment, prices, saving, and fixed assets; to update
industry and other classification systems; to improve the consistency
and integration of the economic accounts; and to increase the
consistency of the accounts with international guidelines. (2)
Definition changes are changes to the composition or classification
of the components in the accounts. They are primarily made to adapt the
NIPAs to a changing economy; an example is the recognition of the
implicit services provided by property and casualty insurance providers
in the 2003 comprehensive revision. (3) Statistical changes are changes
in estimating procedures that are generally made to incorporate new
measures or techniques or to incorporate data from new sources; an
example is the adoption of new price indexes in 2003, which improved the
deflation of nonresidential structures and of photocopying equipment.
This article is the first in a series of articles about the
upcoming comprehensive revision of the NIPAs. Forthcoming articles will
provide more detailed information on definition changes and statistical
changes and will describe the new and redesigned tables.
Preliminary Revised NIPA Estimates for 2002
The incorporation of the 2002 benchmark I-O act counts has an
appreciable effect on the estimates of the product side of the NIPAs;
the income side is less affected. The revised estimate of GDP for 2002
is $202.3 billion, or 1.9 percent, higher than the presently published
estimate (table 1). A large upward revision to PCE was supplemented by
smaller upward revisions to gross private domestic investment and
government spending; there was a small downward revision to net exports.
PCE for services was revised up $552.3 billion, PCE for durable
goods was revised up $58.4 billion, and PCE for nondurable goods was
revised down $462.5 billion. These revisions reflect the following: the
incorporation of the comprehensive source data that underlie the
benchmark I-O accounts, the incorporation of improved estimating methods
for several components of PCE, and the incorporation of an important
change to the classification structure used for personal consumption
expenditures that affects the composition of PCE for durable goods,
nondurable goods, and services but does not affect the total for PCE.
Because the new classification structure reclassifies some of the
detailed items and component categories of PCE, only the total revisions
to durable goods, nondurable goods, and services are presented in table
1. The impact of the new classification system used for PCE and the
other changes introduced in the I-O accounts are discussed in the
sections "Changes introduced in the 2002 I-O accounts" and
"Effects of incorporating the I-O changes."
Gross private domestic investment was revised up $40.1 billion,
mainly reflecting an upward revision to fixed investment. Nonresidential
fixed investment was revised up substantially, as an upward revision to
equipment and software more than offset a downward revision to
nonresidential structures. The upward revision of $44.1 billion to
equipment and software reflected an upward revision of $18.4 billion to
information processing equipment and software (primarily software), an
upward revision of $13.9 billion in "other" equipment, and
smaller upward revisions to industrial equipment and transportation
equipment. (4) The downward revision to structures of $12.4 billion
reflected downward revisions that were fairly evenly distributed among
commercial and health care, mining exploration, shafts, and wells, and
"other" structures and that were not fully offset by upward
revisions to manufacturing and power and communication. (5)
Residential investment was revised up $6.5 billion, primarily
reflecting an upward revision to structures. Within structures,
"other" structures was revised up $6.1 billion, and
single-family structures was not revised. (6)
Net exports of goods and services was revised down $1.2 billion,
reflecting an upward revision to imports. (7)
Government spending was revised up $15.4 billion because of an
upward revision to state and local government spending; federal spending
was not revised.
The income side of the I-O accounts has little aggregate impact on
the NIPAs because the I-O accounts use the published NIPA estimates of
total compensation and taxes on production and imports (TOPI) and
because the I-O accounts do not provide any separate data on profits and
other property-type income, which are included in the residual
"other value added." The NIPA estimates of compensation and
TOPI will be revised in the upcoming comprehensive revision.
The I-O accounts and the NIPAs
The recently released 2002 benchmark I-O estimates incorporated
detailed data that were not available for the last comprehensive
revision of the NIPAs. These data included estimates of inventories, of
receipts and expenses, of sales by detailed commodity and by merchandise
line, of final industry and product shipments from the 2002 Economic
Census, and of trade margins from both the Economic Census and the 2002
annual surveys of merchant wholesale and retail trade. (8) In addition,
the detailed commodity-flow method was used to prepare the I-O estimates
of PCE and of private equipment and software. (9) This method enables
the use of data from the economic censuses that are more detailed than
the data available from annual surveys and the use of improved estimates
of the sales of businesses in the mining, manufacturing, and wholesale
trade industries that have no employees and are thus excluded from the
economic censuses. The 2002 I-O estimates of foreign transactions also
reflected the results of the 2006 and 2007 annual revisions of the U.S.
international transactions accounts (ITAs). (10)
Changes in the 2002 I-O accounts
In addition to the use of more comprehensive and more recent source
data, the benchmark I-O accounts incorporate other changes in
definitions, statistical methods, and presentation. The new information
that is contained in the I-O accounts will be incorporated into the
NIPAs as part of the comprehensive revision.
Several changes were introduced in the 2002 benchmark I-O accounts
that impacted the NIPAs. Notable among these changes were the
introduction of a new classification system for personal consumption
expenditures, the incorporation of the 2002 North American Industry
Classification System (NAICS), and statistical changes in two
areas--royalties and personal consumption expenditures.
Classification system. Consumer buying patterns are influenced by
changes in incomes, demographics, and tastes and preferences, by
technological innovations, and by new government programs and
legislation. The new classification system used for PCE allows the
national economic accounts to better reflect these changes. The current
system used in the NIPAs to classify consumer expenditures by function
and product were introduced in 1947 and 1954, respectively. While
numerous changes have been made to the detailed items and commodities
included in the existing classification structure, there have been very
few changes to the major categories of expenditures since 1947 or to the
product categories since 1954.
The classification system for PCE introduced in the 2002 benchmark
I-O accounts reflects the changes that have occurred in consumer buying
patterns and brings the classification of consumption expenditures
closer to the recommendations of the System of National Accounts. (11)
This new structure maintains the current detailed items but makes
numerous changes to commodities and commodity categories as well as to
the functional aggregates and to the type-of-product aggregates.
Specifically, the functional classification structure incorporates the
following:
* Distinct aggregate components for household consumption
expenditures and final consumption expenditures of nonprofit institutions serving households (NPISHs) that facilitate analysis and
continue BEA's efforts to provide separate information on the
income and outlays of households and NPISHs. (12)
* New categories--communication, food services and accommodations,
financial services and insurance, and other goods and services--that
reflect the increasing importance of certain types of expenditures.
* Reorganized and redistributed commodities among category level
aggregates that will better reflect buying patterns and the increased
significance of certain types of expenditures.
These changes do not change the total level of PCE; however, they
do change the composition of expenditures among durable goods,
nondurable goods, and services (table 4). Table 2 shows the new and old
PCE classifications by function at the major category level; table 3
shows the new and old PCE structures by product at the major product
level.
PCE source data and methodologies. In addition to introducing a new
classification system, the 2002 benchmark I-O accounts improved the
estimates of PCE for telecommunications, air transportation, and
"food away from home." The changes reflect the results of
extensive research into new source data and estimation methodologies;
like the new classification structure, these changes better reflect
changes to household purchasing patterns.
For telecommunications, a new methodology was adopted that
estimates and redistributes to intermediate expenditures those
telecommunication expenses that are reimbursed by businesses to
employees for their use of personal telephones and Internet services for
business purposes. In previous I-O accounts, consumer spending on
telecommunications was based on historical expenditure levels that
included the business use of personal (household) telecommunications
services within household expenditures; the business use was not treated
as an intermediate expenditure.
For the 2002 benchmark I-O accounts, information from the Current
Population Survey's Work at Home Supplement and from the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) on household expenditures on local, long
distance, and cellular telephone services was used to estimate personal
telephone service expenditures by workers at home. This estimate was
then combined with information from the Consumer Expenditure Survey from
the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) to estimate the portion of
telephone service expenditures attributable to work activities and
reimbursed to households. (13) Estimates of reimbursed personal Internet
service expenses were similarly derived. Both of these reimbursed
expenses for business use were removed from PCE and redistributed as
inputs or expenses of intermediate industries.
For air transportation, the 2002 benchmark I-O accounts updated the
methodology and source data used to prepare estimates of PCE. Previous
I-O estimates of PCE for domestic passenger air transportation included
only domestic recreational or leisure air travel of U.S. residents.
Nonresident travel and personal non-recreational travel were not
included. The 2002 benchmark I-O accounts incorporated nonresident
travel data from the U.S. travel and tourism satellite accounts and
nonrecreational personal and family business trip activity data from the
Bureau of Transportation Statistics 2001 National Household Travel
Survey. This resulted in qualitative and quantitative adjustments to
include nonresident and nonrecreational domestic air travel in PCE. (14)
As a result, the share of domestic passenger air transportation output
that is attributed to households (PCE) increased significantly, which in
turn increased GDP. Additionally, the estimates of intermediate
consumption by business and government of air travel were reduced, and
their value added was increased. The nonresident travel correction was
included in the I-O accounts as a rest-of-the-world adjustment.
For food away from home, a new methodology was introduced that uses
information from the BLS Telephone Point of Purchase Survey combined
with the Census Bureau's Economic Census class-of-customer data to
estimate household expenditures on food and nonalcoholic beverages in
purchased meals. The Economic Census class-of-customer data were used to
estimate the portion of overall food service industry sales that stem
from households and individuals. The Telephone Point of Purchase Survey
data were then used to measure the portion of food service industry
sales that represent household expenditures at full service and limited
service restaurants. The use of these two data sources updated PCE for
food and beverages in purchased meals to reflect the differences in
pricing and expenditure patterns for food away from home. In previous
benchmark I-O accounts, the PCE estimates of food and beverages in
purchased meals were based on historical household expenditures data.
NAICS. The 2002 benchmark I-O accounts reflect the 2002 NAICS,
which included major changes from the 1997 NAICS to the classification
of industries in NAICS sector 51, information. 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, 2002 NAICS 516.
This new industry includes electronic publishing by newspapers,
periodicals, books, databases, greeting cards, and atlases and maps.
"Web search portals" was removed from "other information
services" (NAICS 51419), and a new industry, "Internet service
providers, Web search portals, and data processing" (NAICS 5180),
was created. "On-line information services" was renamed
"Internet service providers" to better reflect the activity of
this industry.
Royalties. The measurement of royalties output was improved in the
2002 benchmark I-O accounts by using new source data and by improving
the estimation methodology. Income from royalties (except copyrighted
works) is included in the gross output of the "lessors of
nonfinancial intangible assets" industry and is based on
information from the Economic Census. Because the source data is not
comprehensive, BEA used additional information from corporate income tax
returns (from the Internal Revenue Service Statistics of Income (SOI)
tabulations) to complete the measures of the income from royalties.
The 2002 I-O accounts used data from the BEA international
transactions accounts on royalties and licensing fees to develop a
distribution of payments for the use of U.S. intellectual property by
type. This distribution was applied to the SOI corporate royalty data in
order to estimate and remove copyright receipts from the combined data
for copyright and royalty receipts. Additional adjustments were made to
account for royalty income from individuals, partnerships, and
fiduciaries.
Effects of incorporating the I-O changes
The 2002 benchmark I-O accounts introduced significant changes to
the components of PCE and to estimates of income by industry.
PCE. Like the I-O accounts, the introduction of the new PCE
classification in the NIPAs will change the distribution of PCE among
commodities, commodity categories, and the types of expenditure and
product aggregates; however, it will not change the total level of PCE
(table 4). Durable goods was revised up $35.9 billion, mostly because of
the reclassification of certain nondurable goods to durable goods. For
example, the reclassification of "sporting equipment, supplies,
guns, and ammunition" from nondurable goods to durable goods
boosted durable goods $12.6 billion. Services was revised up $380.6
billion, mostly because of the reclassification of $389.2 billion for
"purchased meals and beverages" from nondurable goods to
services. Nondurable goods was revised down $416.4 billion, mostly
because of the reclassification of certain nondurable goods, such as
those noted above, to durable goods and services.
In addition, the NIPA estimates were affected by the incorporation
of benchmark I-O estimates that were based on more comprehensive,
revised, and newly available source data and that used improved
estimating methods. For example, PCE for housing and utilities was
revised up $134.6 billion, primarily reflecting newly available data
from the Residential Finance Survey for owner-occupied homes. Final
consumption expenditures of nonprofit institutions serving households
was revised up $39.6 billion, primarily reflecting an improved
estimation method for religious organizations and newly available Census
Bureau data for hospital services, social services, social advocacy, and
grantmaking and giving services. PCE for recreational goods and vehicles
was revised up $24.0 billion, primarily reflecting newly available
Census Bureau data for these goods. In contrast, PCE for motor vehicles
and parts was revised down $21.7 billion, primarily reflecting newly
available Census Bureau data for autos and trucks.
NAICS. The implementation of the 2002 NAICS will not affect the
NIPA estimates of final expenditures, because these estimates are not
prepared by industry. However, this implementation will have a minor
impact on the distribution of estimates of national income across
industries. For example, Internet publishing and broadcasting (NAICS
516) will be moved from publishing industries (including software) to
information and data processing services.
Proposed Changes to the NIPAs
In addition to the incorporation of the new classification
structure for PCE and the updated NAICS introduced in the 2002 benchmark
I-O accounts, BEA is considering implementing several definition changes
and statistical changes in the upcoming comprehensive revision of the
NIPAs. These changes will not be reflected in the I-O accounts until
their next release. These changes will likely include a new treatment of
disasters and updated measures of the misreported income of nonfarm
proprietors and misreported wages and salaries.
Treatment of disasters. Disasters--such as hurricanes, earthquakes,
and other major catastrophes--affect economic activity because
production is interrupted, and buildings and other assets that are
damaged or destroyed must be replaced. These effects are reflected in
GDP and in the NIPAs. However, the actual destruction caused by the
disaster is not production and should not directly affect either GDP or
the income measures of the NIPAs, which are intended to reflect only the
value of production and the income related to production and transfers.
A change to the measurement of insurance services output as part of the
2003 comprehensive revision of the NIPAs ensured that such disasters
would not affect GDP. (15) However, the value of the losses and the
insurance payments that cover or partially cover them are reflected in
the income measures of the NIPAs. During the 2009 comprehensive revision
of the NIPAs, the treatment of these losses and of the insurance
payments will be changed to eliminate their impact on current-period
income.
Currently in the NIPAs, the value of the damage or destruction of
fixed assets due to disasters is recorded as consumption of fixed
capital (depreciation) during the period in which the disaster occurred.
The insurance payouts related to the disaster--including payouts to
cover losses of fixed assets, consumer durable goods, or business
interruption--are recorded as current transfer payments (by business)
and as current transfer receipts (of business and of persons). To the
extent that losses are insured, the entries for consumption of fixed
capital and transfer receipts cancel each other, but the incurrence of
losses that are not covered reduces the NIPA measures of national income
and its components, including corporate profits, proprietors'
income, rental income of persons, and personal income.
BEA plans to change this treatment in the upcoming comprehensive
revision of the NIPAs. The value of damages and destruction will be
recorded as "other changes in the volume of assets" in NIPA
"Table 5.9. Changes in Net Stock of Produced Assets." This
entry will not affect any of the current-period measures of production
or income. The value of insurance payouts will be recorded as capital
transfer payments (and receipts) in "Account 6. Domestic Capital
Account" rather than as current transfer payments (and receipts).
Because insurance payouts and receipts among domestic sectors will
offset each other at the national level, only payments to and from the
rest of the world will affect this account. Two subcomponents will be
added to the account to provide detail: (1) capital account transactions
(net) on the income side of the account will include transfer payments
for catastrophic losses and (2) other capital account transactions. The
new treatment will eliminate the large swings in NIPA measures of income
that result from disasters, make the income side treatment of disasters
consistent with the product side treatment, and bring the NIPAs in line
with the recommendations of the SNA.
Misreporting. BEA adjusts the NIPA measures of income, primarily
nonfarm proprietors' income and wages and salaries, to account for
income that meets IRS filing requirements but is either underreported or
not reported on tax returns. Measures of underreported income are
derived from IRS studies based on the taxpayer compliance measurement
program (TCMP) and the National Research Program. These IRS studies
provide comparisons of reported income to income measures corrected by
audits. Measures of nonreported income are based on exact-match studies
conducted by the Census Bureau, which match the validated social
security numbers of those who reported self-employment income in the
Current Population Survey with the social security numbers of those who
did not file tax returns. Published measures of income reflect
adjustments for underreporting that have been extrapolated since 1988
(the date of the last TCMP study). Published income measures also
reflect adjustments for nonreporting that include the results of
exact-match studies for 1996 and 1999 and that have been extrapolated
for subsequent years.
In the upcoming comprehensive revision of the NIPAs, BEA will
update estimates of underreported income by incorporating updated
estimates of underreported income for 1985 and 1988, projected estimates
for 1992 (from TCMP reports), and the results of the National Research
Program for 2001. In addition, BEA will update estimates of nonreported
income by incorporating the results of exact-match studies for 2003 and
2004. Estimates of nonfarm proprietors' income will be revised,
beginning with 1984 estimates; estimates of wages and salaries will be
revised, beginning with 1978 estimates.
NIPA Revision Cycle
The comprehensive revision of the NIPAs marks the culmination of an
estimating cycle that typically takes 5 years. The cycle begins with
three "current" estimates for each quarter, continues with
annual revisions of the estimates for the 3 most recent years, and
concludes with the comprehensive revision. This cycle reflects the
time-dependent nature of the quantity and quality of the source data on
which the NIPAs rely.
The release schedule for GDP and related estimates is planned to
allow for the incorporation of revised or newly available source data.
For GDP and most other NIPA series, "advance" quarterly
estimates (based on incomplete monthly data) are released near the end
of the first month after the end of the quarter. These estimates are
revised in the next 2 months to incorporate revised and newly available
monthly and quarterly data.
Similarly, annual estimates of GDP that are first available as the
sum of the quarterly estimates for the preceding year are usually
revised in the annual revision in July and in the next two annual
revisions. These annual revisions incorporate newly available annual
source data and quarterly data that are released too late to be used in
the "current" quarterly estimates. The monthly, quarterly, and
annual data are usually based on sample surveys.
Comprehensive NIPA revisions are carried out at about 5-year
intervals and are timed to incorporate the benchmark I-O accounts, which
provide the levels of the components of GDP for the benchmark year. The
I-O accounts incorporate the most comprehensive and complete source data
available--primarily data from the every-5-year economic census, the
census of governments, and the every-10-year censuses of population and
housing.
Flexible annual revisions
Traditionally, comprehensive revisions have also incorporated
changes in definition, concepts, and statistical methods designed to
better measure a constantly evolving economy. Comprehensive revisions
also opened up the entire time series to revision. In the future, BEA
will embrace a new "flexible annual revisions" approach, which
will allow BEA to incorporate these kinds of changes in annual
revisions.
There are several advantages to this approach: Users will be
provided more up-to-date data, the results of important revisions will
be delivered earlier, and users will have fewer major changes to grapple
with at once. In addition, because flexible annual revisions will occur
in the summer, they will satisfy requests from users that BEA avoid
major revisions at the end of calendar years.
Schedule
BEA will release a regular annual revision in July 2008, revising
estimates for 2005-2007. In 2009, BEA will release a comprehensive
revision that will incorporate the 2002 benchmark I-O and various
conceptual and statistical changes. It will revise the entire time
series back to 1929. In 2010, flexible annual revisions will begin.
(1.) Ricky L. Stewart, Jessica Brede Stone, and Mary L.
Streitwieser, "U.S. Benchmark Input-Output Accounts, 2002,"
SURVEY 87 (October 2007): 19-48. Revised estimates are available on the
BEA Web site. A description of the revisions is available at
<www.bea.govlindustry/ Make Use table_revisions.htm>.
(2.) For detailed information on the international guidelines for
national accounts, see Commission of the European Communities,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development, United Nations, and the World Bank, System of National
Accounts 1993 (Brussels/Luxembourg, New York, Paris, and Washington, DC,
1993).
(3.) In the 2003 comprehensive revision, definition changes more
than accounted for the $14.1 billion downward revision to GDP for the
benchmark year 1997.
(4.) "Other" equipment consists primarily of furniture
and fixtures; agricultural, construction, mining and oilfield, and
service industry machinery; and electrical equipment not elsewhere
classified.
(5.) "Other" nonresidential structures consists primarily
of religious, educational, vocational, lodging, railroads, farm, and
amusement and recreational structures, net purchases of used structures,
and brokers' commissions on the sale of structures.
(6.) "Other" residential structures consists primarily of
manufactured homes, improvements, dormitories, net purchases of used
structures, and brokers' commission on the sale of residential
structures.
(7.) The treatment of certain foreign transactions on a NIPA basis
differs from the treatment of these transactions in the I-O accounts.
NIPA exports and imports include, and the I-O accounts exclude, the
value of U.S. goods that are returned to the United States from other
countries, foreign goods that are reexported from the United States to
other countries, and certain transactions between foreigners that
involved U.S. intermediaries. These adjustments do not cause differences
between the NIPA and I-O estimates of net exports. For more information,
see appendix E in Stewart, Stone, and Streitweiser, 58.
(8.) The 2003 comprehensive revision did incorporate preliminary
sales for retail trade and product shipments for computers from the 2002
Economic Census.
(9.) The commodity-flow method first converts domestic sales, which
is the value of sales of commodities produced by domestic firms at
producers' prices, to domestic supply, which is the value of sales
to domestic purchasers at producers' prices and, therefore,
includes imports and excludes exports. Then, it allocates domestic
supply among domestic purchasers--that is, persons, business, and
government.
(10.) For the upcoming comprehensive revision of the NIPAs, the
estimates for 2002 (and earlier years) will also reflect the results of
the 2007 annual revision of the ITAs.
(11.) The new functional classification reflects a combination of
the Classification of Individual Consumption by Purpose (COICOP) and the
Classification of the Purposes of Nonprofit Institutions Serving
Households (COPNI) systems used in the SNA.
(12.) As part of the 2003 comprehensive revision of the NIPAs, BEA
introduced an annual table that separates the income and outlays of
households from those of NPISHs. This information can be used to answer
questions about differences in economic behavior of households and
nonprofit institutions in the U.S. economy. For more information, see
Charles Ian Mead, Clinton P. McCully, and Marshall B. Reinsdorf,
"Income and Outlays of Households and of Nonprofit Institutions
Serving Households," SURVEY 83 (April 2003): 13-17.
(13.) The Current Population Survey is conducted by the Census
Bureau for BLS. It provided estimates of the number of wage and salary
workers and self-employed workers who worked at home and used a
telephone or the Internet. The FCC's Reference Book of Rates, Price
Indices, and Household Expenditures for Telephone Service provided the
average annual household expenditures on local, long distance, and
cellular telephone services, The 2002 Consumer Expenditure Survey
provided percentages of those deducting telephone and Internet services
as business expenses and the average annual internet household
expenditures.
(14.) See "Table 3. Demand for Commodities by Type of
Visitor" in Peter D. Kuhbach, Mark A. Planting, and Erich H.
Strassner, "U.S. Travel and Tourism Satellite Accounts for
1998-2003," SURVEY 84 (September 2004): 58.
(15.) As part of the 2003 NIPA comprehensive revision, BEA changed
its measure of property and casualty insurance output to use expected
losses, rather than actual losses, in the calculation of insurance
output. As a result, the large insurance payouts covering the actual
destruction and damage caused by major catastrophic events no longer
affect the estimates of GDP.
Table 1. Gross Domestic Product and Components, 2002
[Billions of dollars]
Preliminary
Published revised Revision
Gross domestic product 10,469.6 10,671.9 202.3
Personal consumption expenditures 7,350.7 7,498.8 148.1
Durable goods. 923.9 982.3 58.4
Nondurable goods 2,079.6 1,617.1 -462.5
Services 4,347.2 4,899.4 552.3
Gross private domestic investment 1,582.1 1,622.2 40.1
Fixed investment 1,570.2 1,608.4 38.2
Nonresidential 1,066.3 1,098.0 31.7
Structures 279.2 266.8 -12.4
Commercial and health
care 116.8 111.3 -5.5
Manufacturing 17.8 22.7 4.90
Power and communication 49.5 51.0 1.50
Mining exploration,
shafts, and wells 35.6 30.2 -5.4
Other structures 59.5 51.6 -7.9
Equipment and software 787.1 831.2 44.1
Information processing
equipment and
software 399.4 417.8 18.4
Computers and
peripheral equipment 77.2 79.7 2.5
Software 167.6 181.0 13.4
Other 154.5 157.0 2.5
Industrial equipment 135.7 141.8 6.1
Transportation equipment 126.3 132.0 5.7
Other equipment 125.7 139.6 13.9
Residential 503.9 510.4 6.5
Structures 496.3 502.4 6.1
Permanent site 298.8 298.8 0.0
Single family 265.9 265.9 0.0
Multifamily 33.0 33.0 0.0
Other structures 197.5 203.6 6.1
Equipment 7.6 8.0 0.4
Change in private inventories 11.9 13.7 1.8
Net exports of goods and services -424.4 -425.6 -1.2
Exports 1,005.9 1,005.9 0.0
Imports 1,430.3 1,431.6 1.2
Government consumption
expenditures and gross
investment, 1,961.1 1,976.5 15.4
Federal 679.7 679.7 0.0
National defense 437.1 437.1 0.0
Nondefense 242.5 242.5 0.0
State and local 1,281.5 1,296.9 15.4
Table 2. Current and New Classifications for Personal Consumption
Expenditures by Type of Function
Current classification New classification
Food and tobacco Household consumption expenditures
Clothing, accessories, and jewelry Food and beverages purchased
Personal care for off-premise consumption
Housing Clothing and footwear
Household operation Housing and utilities
Medical care Furnishings, household
Personal business equipment, and routine
Transportation household maintenance
Recreation Health care
Education and research Transportation
Religious and welfare activities Communication
Foreign travel and other, net Recreation
Education
Food services and accommodations
Financial services and insurance
Other goods and services
Net foreign travel and
expenditures abroad
by U.S. residents (net)
Final consumption expenditures
of nonprofit institutions
Table 3. Current and New Classifications for Personal
Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product
Current classification New classification
Durable goods Durable goods
Motor vehicles and parts Motor vehicles and parts
Furniture and household Furnishings and durable
equipment household equipment
Other Recreational goods and vehicles
Other durable goods
Nondurable goods Nondurable goods
Food Food and beverages purchased for
Gasoline, fuel oil, off-premise consumption
and other energy goods Clothing and footwear
Gasoline and oil Gasoline and other energy goods
Fuel oil and coal Other nondurable goods
Other
Services Services
Housing Household consumption expenditures
Household operation Housing and utilities
Electricity and gas Health care
Other household operation Transportation services
Transportation Recreation services
Medical care Food services and accommodations
Recreation Financial services and insurance
Other Other services
Final consumption expenditures on
nonprofit institutions
serving households
Addenda:
Energy goods and services (1)
Personal consumption expenditures
excluding food and energy (2)
(1.) Consists of gasoline, fuel oil, and other energy goods
and of electricity and gas.
(2.) Food excludes purchased meals and beverages, which is
classified in food services.
Table 4. Personal Consumption Expenditures, 2002
[Billions of dollars]
Revision
due to
Published reclassi-
estimates Reclassified fication
Personal consumption
expenditures 7,350.7 7,350.7 0.0
Durable goods 923.9 959.8 35.9
Motor vehicles and parts 413.6 ...
Furnishings and
durable household
equipment ... 205.8 ...
Recreational goods
and vehicles ... 228.2 ...
Other durable goods ... 112.3 ...
Nondurable goods 2,079.6 1,663.2 -416.4
Food and beverages
purchased for off-
premise consumption ... 589.1 ...
Clothing and footwear ... 293.6 ...
Gasoline and other
energy goods ... 178.7 ...
Other nondurable goods ... 601.8 ...
Services 4,347.2 4,727.8 380.6
Household consumption
expenditures for
services ... 4,565.1 ...
Housing and utilities ... 1,277.3 ...
Health care ... 1,099.0 ...
Transportation services ... 241.4 ...
Recreational services ... 282.3 ...
Food services
and accommodations ... 442.7 ...
Insurance and other
financial services ... 573.7 ...
Other services ... 648.7 ...
Final consumption
expenditures of
nonprofit
institutions serving
households ... 162.7 ...
Revision
due to
Preliminary other
revised changes
Personal consumption
expenditures 7,498.8 148.1
Durable goods 982.3 22.5
Motor vehicles and parts 391.9 -21.7
Furnishings and
durable household
equipment 223.2 17.4
Recreational goods
and vehicles 249.7 24.0
Other durable goods 117.5 5.2
Nondurable goods 1,617.1 -46.1
Food and beverages
purchased for off-
premise consumption 570.0 -19.1
Clothing and footwear 275.5 -18.1
Gasoline and other
energy goods 177.5 -1.2
Other nondurable goods 594.1 -7.7
Services 4,899.4 171.7
Household consumption
expenditures for
services 4,697.1 132.0
Housing and utilities 1,412.0 134.6
Health care 1,082.5 -15.9
Transportation services 257.5 16.0
Recreational services 274.9 -13.5
Food services
and accommodations 438.8 -3.9
Insurance and other
financial services 567.7 -6.0
Other services 663.9 15.2
Final consumption
expenditures of
nonprofit
institutions serving
households 202.3 39.6