Preview of the 2003 comprehensive revision of the national income and product accounts: statistical changes.
Moylan, Carol E. ; Robinson, Brooks B.
ON December 10, 2003, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) will
release the results of the 12th comprehensive, or benchmark, revision of
the national income and product accounts (NIPAs). The last such revision
was released in October 1999.
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 January 2003 issue described the effects of
incorporating the 1997 benchmark input-output (I-O) accounts and
identified some of the proposals being considered for this comprehensive
revision. (1) An article in the June 2003 issue described major changes
in definitions and classifications that will be introduced as part of
this comprehensive revision. (2) An article in the August 2003 issue
described the new and redesigned tables that will be presented as part
of the comprehensive revision. (3) The results of the comprehensive
revision will be released in December 2003 and an article in the January
2004 SURVEY will describe the revised NIPA estimates, discuss the
effects of the definitional and statistical changes, and present the new
tables.
Statistical changes are changes in estimation procedures that are
generally made to incorporate new methods or techniques or to
incorporate data from new sources; an example is the adoption of
chain-type indexes in the 1996 comprehensive revision, so that the
growth rate of real gross domestic product (GDP) and its components
became invariant to the choice of reference period. (4) Other
statistical changes address data gaps and other shortcomings; an example
is the adoption of the Census Bureau's annual Government
Finances tabulations as the source for most state and local taxes
in the 1999 comprehensive revision; BEA is extending this change as part
of this comprehensive revision (see the section "Changes in
Methodology"). (5)
The major statistical changes that will be introduced in this
comprehensive revision are as follows.
* Incorporate the 1997 benchmark I-O accounts, which provide the
most comprehensive and detailed picture available of the U.S. economy;
these accounts set the level of GDP and other NIPA components for the
benchmark year, and they provide key information for the estimates
before and after the benchmark year
* Convert the estimates of income and employment by industry to the
North American Industry Classification System basis in order to better
measure the changing composition of economic activity, especially for
the services industries
* Incorporate a new adjustment to the estimates of corporate
profits for the most recent year of an annual revision (2002 for this
benchmark revision) in order to reflect available information on the
exercise of employee stock options
* Incorporate new BEA price indexes for deflation of nonresidential
structures and photocopying equipment in order to improve the measures
of real GDP by adjusting for quality change
* Improve the estimates of motor vehicle output to reflect new
methodologies for estimating total dealers' margins and net
transactions in used motor vehicles and for allocating exports and
imports of motor vehicles between autos and trucks
* Improve the estimates of personal consumption expenditures (PCE)
for hotel and motel services to reflect new source data on the consumer
share of U.S. residents' lodging expenditures by sector and on
lodging expenditures by foreign visitors
* Improve the estimates of employer contributions to pension and
profit-sharing plans to reflect the adoption of accrual accounting and
new coverage adjustments (6)
* Improve the estimates of Medicare social benefits to reflect the
adoption of accrual accounting
* Improve the estimates of imputed interest paid by life insurance
carriers to better reflect their investment income
* Incorporate a new methodology for estimating state and local
current taxes to reflect more reliable source data
As described in the June SURVEY, BEA will incorporate two important
definitional changes--one for insurance services and one for banking
services--that will also feature significant statistical changes. (7)
First, property and casualty insurance services (other than health
insurance) will be redefined to recognize the implicit services that are
funded by investment income and to provide a more appropriate treatment
of insured losses. To supplement the value of the premiums received, BEA
plans to add the value of the expected investment income on the funds on
which policyholders have claim. Additionally, in calculating the value
of insurance services, expected losses, rather than actual losses
incurred in a period, will be deducted. (8)
Second, PCE, exports of services, government consumption
expenditures, and interest paid and received will reflect the change in
definition that recognizes the implicit services provided to borrowers
by commercial banks. BEA will allocate a portion of the interest paid by
borrowers to banks as an expenditure for implicit services, and the
interest paid by the borrower and received by the bank will be reduced
by the amount of the imputed expenditures for borrower services. This
reduction in borrower interest will be accomplished by recording
negative imputed interest paid by borrowers and received by banks. (9)
The remainder of this article describes the newly available and
revised source data and the major methodological changes that will be
incorporated in this comprehensive revision (see table 1).
Newly Available and Revised Source Data
In a comprehensive NIPA revision, the number of years subject to
revision is greater than in an annual NIPA revision, when typically only
the estimates for the 3 most recent years are revised. Consequently,
newly available and revised source data that become available less often
than annually or that cover periods outside the scope of annual
revisions are incorporated in comprehensive revisions. Source data that
have become available since the 1999 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
typically available with a long lag, and they generally go back no
further than 10 years; examples include the data from the decennial and
quinquennial censuses.
This comprehensive revision also includes the annual NIPA revision
that would normally have occurred in July 2003. The source data that
would normally have been incorporated in that revision are referred to
as "regular source data for 2000-2002"; an example is the 2001
Statistics of Income (SOI) data from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
The first step in preparing this comprehensive NIPA revision is the
incorporation of the 1997 levels for key components from BEA's 1997
benchmark I-O accounts, adjusted to reflect NIPA changes in definition
and classification. 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 in the abbreviated
commodity-flow, retail-control, and other methods to extrapolate product-side estimates for years after 1997. The NIPA estimates are also
revised to reflect 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 1997 I-O accounts,
data from the 1997 quinquennial economic censuses, and annual source
data that were not available in time for incorporation during the annual
NIPA revisions.
The 1997 benchmark I-O accounts. The benchmark I-O accounts are the
single most important statistical source for the 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. (10) For NIPA
benchmark year estimates, the I-O accounts provide information on the
portion of gross 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).
The 1997 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. (11) 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. (12) In addition, the 1997 I-O estimates
incorporated detailed data that had not been available for the NIPA
estimates. As part of the incorporation into the NIPAs, the I-O
estimates must be modified to account for the changes in definitions and
classifications, such as the change that recognizes the implicit
services provided by property and casualty insurance and the change that
provides a more appropriate treatment of insured losses, as described in
the June article. (13)
The incorporation of the 1997 benchmark I-O accounts will result in
revisions to NIPA estimates for selected components, beginning with
1993; estimates from the 1992 benchmark I-O accounts were incorporated
in the 1999 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 merchandise line, on final industry and product
shipments from the 1997 Economic Census, and on trade margins from both
the 1997 Economic Census and the 1997 annual surveys of merchant
wholesale and retail trade. (24) The data on manufacturing, wholesale
trade, and retail trade--which the Census Bureau has also incorporated
into the corresponding annual and monthly surveys--will affect the NIPA
estimates of PCE for goods, of private fixed investment in equipment,
and of the change in private inventories, beginning with 1993.
In addition, annual series that became available too late for the
annual NIPA revisions in 2000, 2001, and 2002 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 1999 and
that affected years not covered by the annual NIPA revisions. (15)
Similarly, estimates of private structures will be revised to reflect
Census Bureau revisions to the surveys of value-put-in-place data that
go back to 1983. (16) Other data that will be incorporated into the
NIPAs include the following: Data on expenditures and receipts of state
and local governments for fiscal years 1997-99 from the Census Bureau;
final data on employer pension and profit-sharing plans for 1995-98 from
the Department of Labor; revised data on mortgage debt outstanding
beginning with 1982, and on consumer debt outstanding and the effective
rate of interest on consumer debt outstanding beginning with 1980, from
the Federal Reserve Board (FRB); and data for 1996 and 1999 nonfiler
adjustments based on tabulations of IRS tax returns and new
"exact-match" studies. (17)
Regular source data for 2000-2002
The revised estimates for 2000-2002 will reflect the incorporation
of newly available and revised source data that became available since
the last annual NIPA revision in July 2002. The most important of these
data are the following: Census Bureau data from annual surveys of state
and local governments (for fiscal years 2000 (final) and 2001
(preliminary)), of manufactures, of merchant wholesale trade, and of
retail trade (for 2001 (preliminary) and 2000 (revised)); Census Bureau
data from the services annual survey and from the surveys of the value
of construction put-in-place for 2001-02; Federal Government budget data
(for fiscal years 2002 and 2003); ITA data for 2000-2002 (revised);
Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) tabulations of wages and salaries of
employees covered by state unemployment insurance (UI) for 2001-02
(revised); newly available IRS tabulations of corporate tax returns for
2000 (final) and 2001 (preliminary); U.S. Department of Agriculture farm
statistics (for 2002); and newly available IRS tabulations of sole
proprietorship and partnership tax returns for 2001. (18)
Changes in Methodology
This section describes the new and improved methodologies that will
be introduced as part of this comprehensive revision. (19) The
discussion includes changes to product- and income-side components,
changes to price and quantity measures, changes to estimates of
consumption of fixed capital, and extensions of several methodology
changes that were incorporated in the 2000-2002 annual NIPA revisions.
Product-side changes
Motor vehicle output. Estimates of current-dollar and real motor
vehicle output will reflect improved methodologies for net purchases of
used motor vehicles and a new allocation between autos and trucks for
the estimates of exports and imports in the motor vehicle output table.
Net purchases of used motor vehicles by business, government, and
persons consist of dealers' margins on used motor vehicles
purchased and net transactions (purchases less sales) of used motor
vehicles valued at wholesale prices. Dealers' margins affect GDP,
but net transactions do not, because they represent changes in the
ownership of previously produced goods.
The new method responds to user requests for more consistency
between estimates of autos and light trucks, and it responds to the
discontinuance of key source data that were used to prepare the auto
estimates. Dealers' margins. Beginning with 1993, BEA will change
the method used to calculate annual estimates of dealers' margins.
The dealers' margin for total light motor vehicles--autos and light
trucks--will be computed for new (franchised) car dealers and for used
(independent) car dealers, using data on used light motor vehicle sales,
average retail prices, and used-car dealers' margin rates. (20) For
new-car dealers, retail sales of used light motor vehicles will be based
on used-vehicle unit sales and used-vehicle average retail prices from a
trade source; for used-car dealers, retail sales will be based on Census
Bureau data for used-car dealer sales. Margin rates will be interpolated
and extrapolated from the 1997 benchmark I-O estimates using the margin
rates for used-car dealers as the indicator. The total margins will be
allocated to used autos and to used light trucks using data on changes
in used-vehicle registrations and average wholesale auction prices. (21)
Currently, autos are estimated independently from light trucks. For
used light trucks, the new method will replace a judgmental estimate
that assumed a lagged relationship between new-truck purchases and unit
sales of used trucks, adjusted for price change. For used autos, the new
method will replace a judgmental estimate based on trended sales of
new-car dealers, retail prices of used autos sold at new-car dealers
that were based on overall used-vehicle prices, and used-car margins of
used-vehicle dealers based on overall margins of used-vehicle dealers.
Beginning with 1997, monthly and quarterly dealers' margins on
used autos and on used light trucks will be interpolated and
extrapolated using the change in used-vehicle registrations times the
average auction price as the indicator.
The estimates of real margins for used autos and light trucks will
be prepared by direct base-year valuation. (22) New-car dealers'
margins will be estimated using base-year average margin per light
vehicle sold multiplied by unit sales of new-car dealers from a trade
source. Used-car dealers' margins will be estimated using the
base-year average margin per light vehicle sold multiplied by derived
unit sales. (23) Total margins will be allocated to autos and to light
trucks and to PCE and PFI using the current-dollar distribution. For
used trucks, the new method will replace deflation with the BLS consumer
price index (CPI) for new trucks for PCE and with a truck component of
the producer price index (PPI) for new trucks for PFI. For used autos,
the new method will replace a base-year valuation using judgmentally
trended unit sales.
Net transactions. Beginning with 1991, current-dollar net
transactions in used autos and used light trucks by business and by
government will be estimated directly by valuing the change in their
unit stocks using vehicle average auction prices. (24) Net transactions
by persons will be estimated as a residual, after accounting for the
change in the value of stocks held by business and by government,
exports and imports, scrappage, and change in dealers' inventories.
In the current method for used autos' net transactions, the change
in unit stocks is valued using indirectly measured wholesale values.
(25) The current method for net transactions in used trucks is the same
as that for dealers' margins on used trucks.
Estimates of real net transactions in light trucks will be prepared
by deflating the current-dollar estimates using the CPI for used cars
and trucks. (26) The new method will replace deflation with the CPI for
new trucks for PCE and with a truck component of the PPI for new trucks
for PFI.
As a result of these improvements, the motor vehicle output table
will present estimates of used light trucks and of used autos for PCE,
for PEI, and for the change in private inventories. (27) Currently, net
purchases of used light trucks are not shown in this table.
Exports and imports. Beginning with 1985, estimates of exports and
imports of autos and trucks will reflect classifications that are
consistent with those used for estimates of PFI, government investment,
change in private inventories, and PCE; passenger cars, including
station wagons, will be classified as autos, and pickup trucks, vans,
and sport-utility vehicles will be classified as trucks. (28) Currently,
exports and imports of autos and trucks reflect Census Bureau end-use
categories, which classify most vans and sport-utility vehicles as
autos. Consistency between exports, imports, final sales, and change in
private inventories of autos and trucks will improve the measures of
truck output, auto output, and domestic output of new autos.
PCE for hotel and motel services. Annual estimates of PCE for hotel
and motel services will be improved. Beginning with 1990, the consumer
share of lodging expenditures will be updated annually to reflect newly
available trade-source data on U.S. residents' domestic lodging
expenditures by sector, and the consumer shares for 1978-89 will be
recomputed. (29) Currently, the consumer share is based on data for 1977
on overnight accommodations of U.S. residents for U.S. travel from the
quinquennial National Travel Survey. After 1977, the National Travel
Survey was discontinued, and because the consumer shares for 1972 and
1977 were about equal, the consumer share has been held constant since
then.
In addition, spending by foreign visitors on lodging will be
included for the first time using travel exports data from the ITAs.
This change will provide consistency with the general treatment of
expenditures by foreign visitors in the United States, which are
included in the definition of PCE categories and are removed from total
PCE as a deduction in net foreign travel. (30)
PCE for prescription drugs. Beginning with 1997, monthly
expenditures for prescription drugs will be estimated using data on
retail sales of prescription drugs from a continuous trade-source survey
of more than 20,000 retail pharmaceutical outlets. This improvement will
make the monthly estimates of expenditures more comparable with the
annual estimates of expenditures, which are based on the annual retail
sales data from the trade source, beginning with 1998. Currently, the
monthly expenditures are estimated using the CPI for prescription drugs
prices and trended quantities. Prescription drugs continue to be a part
of the "PCE control group," the value of which is not affected
by this change. (31) However, the independent estimate of prescription
drugs affects the other categories in the control group because it
affects the commodity allocation of sales. (32)
PCE for gasoline. Beginning with 1993, the monthly estimates of PCE
for gasoline will be improved by preparing estimates for each of the
three grades (regular, mid-grade, and premium). The estimates are
prepared using seasonally adjusted quantities supplied and average
prices for each grade. The independent estimate of PCE for gasoline,
which is estimated as price times quantity, will remain in the PCE
control group, the value of which is not affected by the change. (33)
This new method will make the monthly estimation of expenditures for
gasoline comparable with the annual estimation of expenditures by
accounting for changes that occur in the mix of gasoline by grade on a
monthly basis.
Nonprofit institutions serving households. In the NIPAs, the
personal sector comprises households and nonprofit institutions serving
households (NPISHs). As part of the comprehensive revision, BEA plans to
introduce a new 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. These estimates will reflect
the introduction of additional data sources and methods to separately
identify households from NPISHs. (34) The primary data sources used for
the NIPAs do not currently provide separate measures for all the income
and outlays of NPISHs. For example, there are no separate measures of
the property income of NPISHs and the property income of households.
Residential improvements. Estimates of residential improvements, a
component of residential structures, will be revised to incorporate a
moving-average methodology that will dampen the volatility in the source
data. Currently, the NIPA benchmark, annual, and quarterly estimates are
based on Census Bureau surveys of value-put-in-place residential
improvements. In recent years, the Census Bureau series has shown
considerable volatility because the permissible upper-bound values for
projects that were included in the survey sample have been increased
periodically.
For the annual estimates beginning with 1987, BEA will adopt the
following methodology. The 1997 benchmark estimate, which is equal to
the Census Bureau value, will be extrapolated forward to 2002 and
backward to 1987 using a weighted 3-year moving average of the Census
Bureau series. (35) The annual estimates for the most recent year (2002)
will be based on the new moving-average methodology, with the value for
that year estimated by BEA on a trend basis. Currently, the NIPA series
is extrapolated using the Census Bureau improvements series as the
indicator.
Software. The following improvements to the measurement of computer
software that were incorporated into the 1997 I-O accounts will be
incorporated into the NIPAs. Software originals used for reproduction
were capitalized, more detailed occupational data were used in
estimating own-account software by industry, the total costs of
producing own-account software were calculated more directly, the
estimates of intermediate consumption of software (embedded or bundled
with other equipment) were improved, and the coverage of international
trade in software was expanded. (36)
Enterprise equipment investment. Estimates of investment in Federal
Government enterprise equipment, which are included in Federal
Government nondefense gross investment, will be improved. Beginning with
1993, judgmental estimates of enterprise equipment will be replaced with
estimates based on Federal budget data. For consistency, BEA will
reconcile the enterprise equipment investment data from the Federal
budget with the enterprise equipment investment data that are published
in the annual reports of Federal enterprises, which are used to
calculate the Federal current surplus of government enterprises. As part
of this change, data on investment in computers from the U.S. Postal
Service, which is a Federal Government enterprise, will be used to
supplement the budget data.
Income-side changes
Income and employment by industry. The annual estimates of income
and employment by industry will be converted to the 1997 North American
Industry Classification (NAICS) basis from the 1987 Standard Industrial
Classification (SIC) basis, beginning with 1998, and the quarterly
estimates will be presented on a NAICS basis, beginning with 2001.
Through 2000, the annual and quarterly estimates will continue to be
presented on an SIC basis. The August SURVEY article described the new
table stubs for the estimates of income and employment. (37)
Employee stock options. A stock-options adjustment will be made to
corporate profits estimates for the most recent year of an annual NIPA
revision (2002 for this benchmark revision) in order to offset a timing
problem between the treatment of nonqualified stock options (NSOs) in
reported wages and salaries and the exercise of these options in the
corporate profits data. (38) In the NIPAs, when an NSO is exercised, the
difference between the exercise price and the current market price of
the stock is treated as wages and, therefore, as an expense in measuring
corporate profits.
The NIPA treatment of employee stock options is based on the
treatment of stock options in the administrative source data that are
currently used to estimate the wages and salaries and the corporate
profits components of gross domestic income. BLS tabulations of UI data
provide the key source data for BEA's annual and quarterly
estimates of wages and salaries. These tabulations generally include the
employee exercise of NSOs, but they are not separately identified.
Tabulations of Federal corporate income tax returns from the IRS SOI
program provide the key source data for BEA's annual detailed
industry estimates of corporate profits. These tabulations are net of
the expense of NSO stock-option exercises, which are separately recorded
on Schedule M-1, a supporting form to IRS Form 1120 for corporate tax
returns.
Although companies take a tax deduction for the exercising of these
options, the expensing of exercised stock options is not typically
reflected in their public financial reports. (39) Thus, for time periods
for which the estimates of corporate profits are extrapolated using the
data on profits from the public financial reports, the exercising of
NSOs measured in wages and salaries are not offset correctly in
corporate profits.
To correct this reporting mismatch, BEA will incorporate a
stock-options adjustment to corporate profits for the periods that are
estimated using public financial reports. For example, in the NIPA
estimates that will be released at the end of this year, the
extrapolated corporate profits estimates for 2002 and 2003 will be
adjusted for exercised stock options. Because the gains on exercised
stock options declined from 2001 to 2002, this adjustment will increase
BEA's estimate of corporate profits for 2002 from what it would
otherwise have been.
The adjustment to the annual estimates of corporate profits will be
based on an ongoing BEA study to measure the gains on exercised stock
options. Estimates from this study have been developed using a matched
sample of approximately 100 firms that account for approximately 70
percent of the stock-option activity of the S&P 500 corporations.
(40) When the SOI data become available for a particular year, this
adjustment will no longer be needed for that year.
Employer contributions to pension and profit-sharing plans. Two
adjustments will be removed from employer contributions for private
pension and profit-sharing plans--a component of employer contributions
for employee pension and insurance funds--in order to measure these
contributions on an accrual basis rather than on a cash basis. (41) In
addition, new adjustments to the source data will be introduced to
improve the estimates of these contributions.
The Department of Labor Employee Benefits Security Administration
tabulates employer contributions to both defined-benefit plans and
defined-contribution plans for private pension and profit-sharing plans
(Form 5500). BEA adjusts these data for timing and for coverage. Under
the new methodology, two timing adjustments will be removed in order to
measure these contributions on an accrual basis rather than on a cash
basis. Currently, BEA assumes that most employers defer contributions
until the end of their fiscal years, so BEA makes an adjustment that
shifts the contributions of firms with fiscal years that begin in the
second half of a calendar year to the next calendar year. By dropping
this adjustment, these contributions will be shown in the calendar year
in which the fiscal year of the plan begins. Currently, BEA also adjusts
for the timing of accounts receivable because plan administrators report
the amount of contributions owed, but not paid, during the plan year. To
make the contributions net of receivables, BEA assumes that these
receivables are paid during the following year. On an accrual basis,
this adjustment will no longer be necessary.
The coverage adjustment for contributions to multiemployee
Keogh-type plans will be improved, and new adjustments will be added for
the contributions to simplified employee pension plans (SEPs) and to sav
incentive match plans for employees of small employers (SIMPLEs). (42)
Multiemployee Keogh-type plans include employer contributions for both
the proprietors and the employees, but they cannot be separately
identified. BEA treats contributions to the proprietors' plan as
part of proprietors' income, so these contributions must be
subtracted from total employer contributions. Currently, on the basis of
a small one-time study of sample 1987 SOI data, BEA subtracts 50 percent
of the contributions to multiemployee Keogh-type plans as contributions
for proprietors' plans. Based on a new SOI study for 1997-99, BEA
will lower this percentage to 25 percent.
Contributions to SEPs and SIMPLEs are not included in the Form 5500
tabulations and must be added to total employer contributions. (43) BEA
will add an adjustment for the employer contributions to these plans
using SOI information that is available beginning with 1997. Estimates
for employee SEP plans will be extrapolated back to 1978. Currently, BEA
makes no adjustment for employee SEPs and SIMPLEs.
BEA will continue to make a 401(k)-type plan misreporting
adjustment to correct for employee contributions that are included as
part of employer contributions to private pension plans. Until the
mid-1990s, the Form 5500 instructions did not specify how these
contributions should be reported. BEA has determined that several plans
are still reporting both employer and employee contributions.
Employer contributions for health insurance. Beginning with 1987,
estimates of employer contributions for group health insurance, which
accounts for about half of employer contributions for employee pension
and insurance funds, and estimates of PCE for health insurance will be
improved. (44) For 1996-2001, the estimates will reflect the following:
Annual growth rates for total employer contributions to private plans
that will be based on the growth rates for total private plans from the
annual medical expenditure panel survey (MEPS), an adjustment to the
MEPS data to better capture family-plan health insurance costs, and the
removal of a 1996-97 discontinuity in BEA's published estimates for
employer contributions to group health insurance.
In 1999, the Department of Health and Human Services released the
results of the MEPS for 1996 that provided a benchmark for the level of
employer health insurance costs by industry. (45) MEPS covers both
health insurance purchased by employers for their employee and health
insurance provided by employers on a self insured basis.
In the 2000 annual NIPA revision, BEA incorporated MEPS-based
estimates on a "best-level" basis for 1997, which resulted in
a roughly $20 billion discontinuity between the 1996 and the 1997
published estimates of employer contributions to group health insurance
and a smaller discontinuity in the estimate of PCE. (46) The MEPS-based
annual growth rates were not incorporated into the estimates for 1998
forward because a sufficient time series was not available to assess the
quality and reliability of the estimates. Instead, the estimates for
later years were extrapolate using BLS data on employer costs for
employee compensation (ECEC) and BLS tabulations of wages and salaries
of employees covered by UI. (47)
The MEPS-based estimates for 1996-2000 will be adjusted to
incorporate an improvement to the 2001 MEPS, which now provides a better
measure of the value of employer contributions for family-plan health
insurance. For 1996-2000, MEPS provided data on the costs of employer
contributions for enrollees with single coverage and for enrollees with
family coverage. If a plan offered more than one arrangement for family
coverage, employers were required to report the costs of coverage based
on the plan for a family of four, which did not accurately represent the
actual costs or growth pattern of family coverage. Beginning with the
2001 MEPS, the cost of family coverage is shown for a two-person family
(husband and wife or single parent and one child) and for a family of
four. This survey change resulted in a substantial drop in the estimates
of the total cost of family coverage. The 2001 MEPS showed rapid growth
in two-person family coverage from 2000 to 2001. Consequently, the MEPS
annual growth rate for previous years will be revised down to produce a
consistent time series.
After adjusting for two-person family coverage, the MEPS
all-industry annual growth rate will be used for total employer
contributions to private plans. The sample size for MEPS is too small to
use for estimates by industry, which will continue to be calculated
using ECEC industry data and industry wage tabulations. To remove the
discontinuity between 1996 and 1997, the MEPS-based estimates will be
extended back to 1987 using ECEC data and BLS tabulations of UI wages
and salaries.
In addition, beginning with 2002, quarterly estimates of private
employer contributions for group health insurance will be based on newly
available quarterly ECEC data and BLS tabulations of UI wages and
salaries. Currently, these estimates are based on a judgmental trend.
Federal Government health insurance. Beginning with 1993, quarterly
estimates of Federal employer contributions for health insurance, a
component of employer contributions for employee pension and insurance
funds, will be improved by interpolating annual estimates of these
contributions from the Office of Personal Management (OPM) using the
trend in OPM data on Federal employment as an indicator. (48) Currently,
estimates of Federal wages and salaries are used to interpolate this
series. These wage and salary estimates include a number of special
factors--such as pay raises, the wages and salaries of temporary workers
who may not receive health insurance coverage, buyouts, and overtime
pay--that are not directly related to Federal employer contributions for
employee health insurance. Thus, the new method is expected to produce
quarterly estimates that are more representative of these employer
contributions.
Partnership income. An adjustment to nonfarm proprietors'
income that removes a double-counting of the income remitted by other
partnerships will be improved. In SOI tabulations of partnership income,
net income received from other partnerships is counted twice--once by
the receiving partnership and again by the remitting partnership.
Currently, in the calculation of nonfarm proprietors' income, SOI
partnership income is reduced by the ordinary income from other
partnerships less the ordinary loss from other partnerships to eliminate
double counting. However, no adjustment is made to account for other
types of income received by partnerships from other partnerships,
including guaranteed payments to partners, portfolio interest, real
estate rental income, and net income from other rental activity.
Beginning with 1987, the adjustment to account for the double-counting
of partnership income received from other partnerships will take into
account these other types of income.
Portfolio interest. The estimates of nonfarm proprietors'
income and of net interest will reflect a change to fully incorporate
portfolio interest received by financial partnerships. (49) Currently,
estimates for these components do not fully reflect SOI-based source
data on portfolio interest that are available from Schedule K, a
supporting form to IRS Form 1065 for partnership tax returns.
The Tax Reform Act of 1986 resulted in several tax reporting
changes for partnerships, one of which was the move of portfolio
interest income of partnerships from Form 1065 to Schedule K. BEA did
not recognize at the time that the SOI category of "other holding
companies" comprises establishments engaged in financial activities
and that the interest received by these establishments should be
included in nonfarm proprietors' income. Consequently, beginning
with 1987, nonfarm proprietors' income was understated. (50) For
net interest, the data from Schedule K will replace an indirect
extrapolation.
Imputed interest. The revised estimates of net interest will
reflect a change in the source data used for estimating imputed interest
paid by life insurance carriers. These carriers earn investment income
on policyholders' reserves, and an interest imputation is made to
pass this investment income through to persons as it is earned. (51)
Beginning with 1977, the imputation for monetary interest, dividends,
net rent, and royalties earned on policyholders' reserves will be
estimated using investment income reported by the American Council of
Life Insurance (ACLI). (52)
Currently, the portion of the imputation related to dividends, net
rent, and royalties earned on policyholders' reserves is based on
IRS tabulations of corporate income tax returns for life insurance
companies from the SOI program. Beginning with 1990, the portion of the
imputation related to monetary interest is based on interest receipts
from tabulations of income statements for life insurance carriers
prepared by the ACLI; this portion will now be carried back to 1977.
(53)
The use of ACLI data on investment income is preferable to the use
of IRS data. ACLI investment income, compiled from regulatory filings of
life insurance companies with state agencies, covers only life insurance
operations, whereas the SOI life insurance industry data, which are from
consolidated tax returns, are affected by changes in the industry
classification of enterprises that have both life insurance and nonlife
insurance operations. (54)
State and local current taxes. Beginning with 1988, the Census
Bureau's Government Finances (GF) survey will become the primary
source for all annual estimates of state and local current taxes, a
receipt within the government receipts and expenditure account. BEA
considers the GF tax data to be more accurate than the tax data
available from the Census Bureau's Quarterly Summary of State and
Local Government Tax Revenue (QS), which is the current source for
several state and local tax series. The adoption of GF as the primary
source for tax data will result in greater internal consistency for the
estimates of state and local receipts and expenditures because most of
the expenditure estimates are derived from GF.
The new methodology for estimating state and local current taxes
will have three steps. First, categories of GF taxes will be compared
with tax collections series from the QS and from the Nelson A.
Rockefeller Institute of Government's State Revenue Report (SRR).
The series that is most closely related on the basis of estimates of
coefficients of determination will be used for interpolation and
extrapolation. (55) Second, quarterly interpolations of the GF fiscal
year data will be prepared using the matched QS or SRR series as
indicators. Third, calendar year GF-based tax estimates will be
calculated by averaging the interpolated fiscal year quarters.
Preliminary annual estimates for 1988-99 indicated that this procedure
generated revisions to total state and local current taxes that did not
exceed $7.0 billion in absolute value.
Quarterly estimates will be prepared by interpolation using as
indicators the matched QS and SRR data, seasonally adjusted by BEA.
Current quarterly estimates will be prepared by extrapolating seasonally
adjusted quarterly data from the QS and SRR. Monthly estimates will be
prepared by interpolating quarterly estimates without an indicator.
Estimates of personal current taxes for the most recent months will
continue to be prepared by extrapolation using wage and salary
disbursements.
Federal Medicare social benefits. Estimates of Federal Government
Medicare social benefits (formerly Medicare transfer payments)--a
current transfer payment within the government receipts and expenditures
account--will be converted from a cash-accounting basis to an
accrual-accounting basis. (56) Under the new method, the source for the
annual estimates of Medicare social benefits for all but the 2 most
recent years will be the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), which prepares these estimates on an "incurred" or
accrual basis. Currently, the NIPA estimates of Medicare social benefits
are based on Monthly Treasury Statement (MTS) and Federal budget data,
which are on a cash-accounting basis. The annual accrual-based CMS
estimates will be incorporated beginning with 1967, and the quarterly
and monthly NIPA estimates will be prepared by interpolation without an
indicator.
Because the CMS estimates of Medicare social benefits for the most
recent 2 years are subject to large revisions, the NIPA estimates for
these years will continue to be based on MTS data. In addition, the
current quarterly and monthly estimates will continue to be based
primarily on interpolations of fiscal year Federal budget projections
without an indicator.
State and local Medicaid social benefits. The current quarterly and
monthly estimates of Medicaid social benefits (formerly Medicaid
transfer payments)--a current transfer payment within the government
receipts and expenditures account--will be improved. (57) The revised
estimates will be based on data on Federal Medicaid grants to states
from the MTS, adjusted to account for timing differences in billings and
payments. (58) The parameters that will be used to adjust the MTS data
for these differences were derived from a regression model of quarterly
CMS Medicaid transfer payments for period t on two independent
variables: Federal Medicaid grants for period t and a variable
representing the difference between CMS Medicaid transfer payments and
MTS Medicaid grants in period t-1. (59)
The current quarterly and monthly estimates of state and local
government Medicaid social benefits are now based on interpolations of
annual projections developed from forecasts of Medicaid social benefits
by CMS, the Congressional Budget Office, and others.
Quantities and prices
Most current-dollar NIPA estimates are based on source data that
represent the value of market transactions in current prices. To remove
the effects of price change from the value of these transactions--that
is, to measure real economic activity--BEA relies heavily on price and
quantity indexes. (60) In comprehensive revisions, BEA introduces
changes that produce updated, new, and improved real NIPA estimates. As
part of this comprehensive revision, the following changes will be
introduced: The incorporation of an improved composite deflator for PCE
for medical care and hospitalization insurance benefits, the
introduction of new supplemental market-based PCE price and quantity
measures, a modification to the price index used to deflate change in
farm inventories, the development of new hedonic price indexes by BEA
for private and government investment in nonresidential structures and
equipment, and the incorporation of newly available PPIs from BLS into
the estimates of real Federal Government consumption expenditures.
New price index for PCE for medical care and hospitalization
insurance benefits. Beginning with 1988, the annual composite index that
is used to deflate PCE for medical care and hospitalization insurance
benefits will be improved. The new annual price index will be a weighted
average of CPIs and PPIs for eight types of care. The weights will be
based on estimates of private insurance benefits by type of care from
CMS. The additional detail enables the benefit deflators to be more
closely matched to the types of benefits. The new index will account for
changes over time in private insurance payments by type of care and for
all types of care. Currently, the annual price index is a fixed-weighted
average of the CPI for hospital and related services and the CPI for
physicians' services.
Beginning with 1994, the monthly deflator for these benefits will
be based on interpolation and extrapolation of the weighted average of
the PPIs for general medical and surgical hospitals and for offices of
physicians. For earlier years, the monthly deflator will continue to be
a fixed-weighted average of the CPI for hospital and related services
and the CPI for physicians' services.
Market-based PCE prices and quantities. New supplemental PCE price
and quantity indexes that are based on market transactions for which
there are corresponding price measures will be introduced. Specifically,
the price index will provide a measure of the prices paid by persons for
domestic purchases of goods and services, which may be a useful measure
of consumer prices for some analytical purposes. The index will be
composed of PCE components that are deflated by either a detailed CPI or
a PPI. It will exclude expenses of nonprofit institutions serving
households, most insurance purchases, gambling, margins on used light
motor vehicles, expenditures by U.S. residents working and traveling
abroad, and imputed expenditures other than owner-occupied nonfarm
housing. (61)
Two price indexes will be prepared: An overall market-based PCE
measure and a market-based PCE measure that excludes food and energy.
Current-dollar estimates, chained (2000) dollar estimates, and
chained-type price and quantity indexes will be shown as addenda items
in the underlying detail PCE tables on BEA's Web site. (62)
New price index for change in farm inventories. Beginning with
1977, the quarterly composite index of crop prices that is used to
calculate real change in private inventories for farm crops will be
improved. In order to more accurately reflect the composition of crop
inventories, the new index will exclude the prices of fruits,
vegetables, and other perishable crops. Currently, the quarterly
composite index of crop prices is calculated by weighting the quarterly
market prices of all crops reported by the Department of Agriculture on
the basis of the composition of annual real open market sales of crops.
New price indexes for selected types of nonresidential structures.
The absence of quality-adjusted, directly measured, output price indexes
for preparing real estimates of investment in nonresidential structures
has been a persistent shortcoming in the NIPAs Currently, to deflate
nonresidential buildings, BEA uses an indirect index that is an
unweighted average of the Census Bureau price index for single-family
houses under construction and a three-quarter moving average of the
Turner Construction Company's building-cost index. (63)
BLS has initiated a research program on construction output price
indexes and plans to begin publishing PPIs for warehouses, light
industrial and factory buildings, office buildings, and schools within
the next few years.
BEA has conducted research on construction price indexes
intermittently over several decades. (64) Recently, BEA has produced
cost-based price indexes for selected types of nonresidential buildings.
Although the new indexes are cost based rather than output based, they
represent a better match of costs to building types than the current
indirect index, so they will be used for deflating nonresidential
buildings in the comprehensive revision. BEA will link the new indexes
to BLS construction PPIs when they become available.
BEA will introduce annual price indexes for four building
types--warehouses, factories, office buildings, and schools; these
indexes are derived using ordinary least squares hedonic regressions,
and they therefore embody adjustments for quality change. (65) The
specific model is a regression of the natural logarithm of the cost per
square foot on the following independent variables: The natural
logarithm of the total square feet excluding the basement; dummy variables for the six possible combinations of exterior wall and
interior supporting-frame type; and a dummy variable for the year. (66)
The data used to estimate the regressions were from R.S. Means
Company's Square Foot Costs for 1997 and 1999-2003. (67) Separate
regressions were estimated for the four building types, for building
types with and without basements, and for selected building types by
height class. (68) All regression coefficients had p-values of less than
0.001 and the appropriate signs.
Consistent with standard practice, coefficient estimates for the
constant term and for the year dummy variables were used to construct
price indexes for the four building types, which were then weighted
together judgmentally to produce the final indexes for the four building
types for 1997 and for 1999-2003. (69) For 1998, the R.S. Means national
30-city average price index was used to interpolate the new BEA price
indexes between 1997 and 1999.
Because the cost data used in the regressions represented costs at
the beginning of a year, BEA averaged adjacent-year indexes that were
derived from the regressions. Quarterly indexes were prepared by
interpolating the annual indexes using the current indirect index as an
indicator.
BEA will use the newly developed construction price indexes to
deflate related structure types for private nonresidential structures
and for Federal Government and state and local government gross
investment in structures. Table 2 provides details on how the new price
indexes will be matched with structure types for deflation purposes.
New price index for photocopying equipment. BLS introduced a PPI
for photocopying equipment in 1993, but this index has only been
available sporadically. Consequently, BEA undertook research to fill the
gap using 1992-2002 trade-source data and a biennial hedonic regression model in which the natural logarithm of the price of a model of
photocopying equipment is regressed on the following independent
variables: The natural logarithm of the multicopy speed;
quality-characteristic dummy variables for color, capability,
multifunctionality, and capacity; and a time dummy variable that takes
on the value 1 if the ith photocopy model was sold in the second year of
the biennial regression data sets. (70)
The nine biennial regressions averaged over 200 observations each;
they produced coefficients of determination that averaged 0.84, and they
yielded highly significant p-values for the estimated coefficients. BEA
used the antilog of the time dummy coefficients to construct price
indexes for 1992-2001. The price indexes for periods after 2001 are
prepared by extrapolation using the BLS PPI for photographic equipment
and supplies with a BEA adjustment. The new BEA price index for
photocopying equipment, which declines 7.2 percent at an average annual
rate in 1992-2002, will be used to deflate annual estimates of both
domestic and imported photocopying equipment. Quarterly estimates will
be prepared by interpolation using the PPI for photographic equipment
and supplies as an indicator.
Currently, real estimates of photocopying equipment, which is
included in private equipment and software, are prepared by deflation
using a related BLS PPI. Real estimates of imports of photocopying
equipment, which is included in the business machinery and equipment
end-use category, are prepared by deflation using the BLS international
price index (IPI) for that category.
New price index for own-account software. BEA will incorporate a
new price index for own-account investment in software that will reflect
productivity changes. Currently, the price index for own-account
software investment is calculated from a weighted average of
compensation rates for computer programmers and systems analysts and the
costs of intermediate inputs associated with their work; it assumes no
changes in productivity over time. (71)
Beginning with 1998, the new price index will be constructed as a
weighted average of the percentage changes in the current input-cost
index (75-percent weight) and the BLS PPI for "prepackaged software
applications sold separately" (25-percent weight), which reflects
changes in productivity. (72) For 1959-97, the price index will be
constructed as a weighted average of the percentage changes in the
improved input-cost index (75-percent weight) and the BEA prepackaged
software price index (25-percent weight), which also reflects
productivity changes. Quarterly indexes will be prepared by
interpolation; the input-cost subcomponent will be interpolated using
related BLS employment cost indexes and PPIs as indicators, and the
prepackaged software subcomponent will be interpolated using the related
PPI as an indicator.
The new price index, which shows a slower average annual growth
rate for 1959-2002 (0.6 percent) than the published price index (4.0
percent), will be incorporated beginning with 1959. It will be used to
deflate investment in own-account software in private equipment and
software and in Federal Government and state and local government gross
investment in equipment and software. (73)
New prices for Federal Government consumption expenditures. Newly
available PPIs will replace indexes of average hourly earnings (AHEs) as
deflators for two categories of Federal Government nondefense services.
First, beginning with the fourth quarter of 1998, Federal Housing
Administration (FHA) sales of services will be deflated using an index
derived as a weighted average of PPIs for real estate agents and
managers (10-percent weight) and surety and financial guaranty insurance
(90-percent weight). Currently, FHA sales of services is deflated using
an index of AHEs for insurance services.
Second, beginning with the first quarter of 1997, sales of
nondefense "other" services will be deflated using an index
derived as the weighted average of PPIs for accounting, auditing, and
bookkeeping services and for engineering design, analysis, and
consulting services. The weights used to combine the PPIs were derived
from the current-dollar value of the transactions in these service
categories. Currently, sales of nondefense "other" services is
deflated using an index derived as a weighted average of AHEs for
business services, for miscellaneous repair services, and for engineer
and management services.
Changes to estimates of consumption of fixed capital
Three key statistical changes will be incorporated into the NIPA
estimates of private consumption of fixed capital (CFC): New expected
service lives will be adopted for private aircraft; CFC for light trucks
will be estimated separately for the first time; and the estimates of
autos will reflect a revised depreciation schedule. These changes will
be reflected in the aggregate CFC estimates for corporate profits and
nonfarm proprietors' income.
Aircraft. Recent research at BEA indicated that expected service
lives for private aircraft in the air transportation, depository and
nondepository institutions, insurance carriers, and business service
industries should be lengthened. Accordingly, the current geometric
depreciation rate for aircraft in these industries of 0.0825 will be
replaced by a new rate of 0.0660, beginning with 1960 investment. In
addition, the expected service lives for these aircraft will be extended
to 25 years from the current 20 years, also beginning with 1960.
Light trucks. Estimates of CFC for light trucks used in the private
sector will be prepared separately for the first time as part of this
comprehensive revision. Currently, light trucks are included in the
"truck, buses, and truck trailer" category. Beginning with
1992, light trucks will be assigned a geometric depreciation rate of
0.1925 and an expected service life of 17 years.
Autos. Estimates of CFC for autos used in the private sector will
be based on a revised depreciation schedule, beginning with 1991
investment. On average, the estimates for autos will reflect a longer
depreciation schedule based on longer service lives, and they will
reflect purchasers' values rather than producers' values.
Extending the changes from the annual NIPA revisions
Between comprehensive revisions, BEA conducts annual NIPA
revisions. Changes in methodology are sometimes adopted in annual NIPA
revisions, but because annual revisions are limited to the most recent 3
years, these changes cannot be carried back to earlier years. In a
comprehensive revision, BEA has the opportunity to incorporate more
fully the changes that were adopted since the last comprehensive
revision. The following sections describe extensions of methodology
changes that were introduced in the annual revisions since the 1999
comprehensive revision. (74)
NAICS. BEA has incorporated the following changes as the NIPAs and
their source data moved toward fully reflecting NAICS. In the 2001
annual revision, estimates of change in private inventories and the
source data for estimating PCE for most goods other than motor vehicles
were converted to a NAICS basis back to 1997 (other NAICS-based source
data were converted to an SIC basis). (75) In the 2002 annual revision,
the source data for estimating PCE for services were converted to a
NAICS basis back to 1998 (other NAICS-based source data were converted
to an SIC basis). In the upcoming comprehensive revision, the
NAICS-based source data for estimating PCE for services will be
incorporated back to 1997 on a best-level basis.
PCE for net foreign travel. As part of the 2002 annual NIPA
revision, BEA began to separately deflate the two components of
"air fares foreign travel"--imports and the value of payments
to U.S. carriers--in the PCE category of net foreign travel. The imports
component was deflated using a BLS import price index (MPI) for air
passenger fares, and the value of payments to U.S. carriers was deflated
using a BLS IPI for international air passenger fares of U.S. carriers.
(76) In this comprehensive revision, BEA will incorporate this
methodology back to 1987. For periods prior to 1987, the combined
category of "air fares foreign travel" will continue to be
deflated using the MPI for air passenger fares.
Closing costs in rental income of persons. In this comprehensive
revision, BEA will carry back to 1998 a methodological change that
affects closing costs and that was incorporated in the 2002 annual
revision. Closing costs, a deduction in deriving rental income of
persons, consists of mortgage origination fees and "all other"
closing costs. (77) Beginning with 1998, annual estimates of mortgage
origination fees will be derived from data from the Federal Home Loan
Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac), as reported under the Home Mortgage
Disclosure Act, with an adjustment by BEA for underreporting. These data
are available with a 1-year lag. Prior to 1998, estimates of mortgage
origination fees will be derived from the discontinued Department of
Housing and Urban Development survey on mortgage lending activity
(SMLA).
Quarterly estimates will be interpolations and extrapolations as
follows: Prior to 1998, using SMLA data as an indicator; for 1998-2001,
using Freddie Mac data on mortgage originations as an indicator; and
beginning with 2002, using an index of mortgage loan applications from
the Mortgage Bankers Association as an indicator.
Interest paid by persons to business. In this comprehensive
revision, BEA will carry back the method used to estimate interest paid
by persons to business, a component of both personal interest income and
personal outlays, that was adopted on a best-change basis in the 2001
annual revision. Estimates of interest paid by persons are calculated as
the product of consumer debt outstanding and of the effective rate of
interest based on data from the FRB. Prior to the 2001 annual revision,
the effective rate of interest was estimated judgmentally. The
FRB's effective rate of interest is a weighted average of interest
rates charged by commercial banks and finance companies on eight types
of consumer loans and is incorporated into its measure of
households' debt-service burden. BEA will adopt the new methodology
on a best-level basis beginning with 1983, and it will judgmentally
interpolate the estimates of interest paid by persons to business
between 1980 and 1983.
Improvements to NIPA foreign transactions. Statistical differences
that have arisen as a result of updated source data being incorporated
into the ITAs, but not into the NIPAs, since the 1999 comprehensive NIPA
revision will be eliminated. However, a new difference will arise
because of a temporary difference in the definition of insurance
services. (78) With this comprehensive revision, the NIPAs will reflect
an estimate of "premium supplements" back to 1986. BEA plans
to incorporate estimates of premium supplements into the ITAs in June
2004. However, with this comprehensive revision, the NIPAs and ITAs will
reflect consistent historical estimates of insurance premiums and of
"normal losses" and "net settlements" back to 1992.
New prices. The following are descriptions of extensions of new
prices that were incorporated since the 1999 comprehensive revision.
An FRB price index for local area network (LAN) equipment that
reflects quality improvements, which was adopted in the 2001 annual
revision, will be incorporated back to 1992. The index is used to
deflate communications equipment within private equipment and software.
(79)
PPIs and employment cost indexes, which replaced indexes based on
AHEs as deflators for certain components of Federal Government defense
and nondefense consumption expenditures and gross investment in the 2002
annum revision, will be incorporated back to 1993.
Table 1. Major Methodological Changes
Initial
year
of
Changes Components revision
Product-side changes
Improved estimates of
property and casualty
insurance services Personal consumption
expenditures, exports and
imports of services,
state and local
government consumption
expenditures 1929
Improved estimates of
banking services Personal consumption
expenditures, exports of
services, Federal and
state and local
government consumption
expenditures 1929
Improved estimates of motor
vehicle output Personal consumption
expenditures, private
equipment and software,
change in private
inventories 1985
Improved estimates of hotel
and motel services Personal consumption
expenditures 1978
Improved estimates of
gasoline Personal consumption
expenditures 1993
Improved estimates of
prescription drugs Personal consumption
expenditures 1997
Improved estimates of output
and income of nonprofit
institutions serving
households Personal consumption
expenditures, components
of personal income 1992
Improved estimates of
software Private equipment and
software, Federal and
state and local
government gross
investment 1977
Improved estimates of
residential improvements Residential structures 1987
Improved estimates of
nondefense gross
investment in enterprise
equipment Federal nondefense gross
investment, current
surplus of government
enterprises 1993
Income-side changes
Incorporation of NAICS data Income and employment 1998
Improved estimates of
employer contributions to
pension plans Employer contributions for
employee pension and
insurance funds 1978
Improved estimates of
private and state and
local government employer
contributions for health
insurance Personal consumption
expenditures, employer
contributions for
employee pension and
insurance funds 1987
Improved estimates of
Federal employer
contributions for health
insurance Employer contributions for
employee pension and
insurance funds 1993
Improved estimates of
partnership income Nonfarm proprietors' income 1987
New employee stock-options
adjustment Corporate profits 2002
Improved estimates of
property and casualty
insurance services Rental income of persons,
net interest, business
transfer payments to
persons and government,
personal interest income,
rest-of-the-world income 1929
Improved estimates of
banking services Net interest 1929
Improved estimates of
portfolio interest Nonfarm proprietors' income,
net interest 1987
Improved estimates of
imputed interest Personal consumption
expenditures, net
interest 1977
Improved estimates of state
and local government
current taxes State and local government
current taxes 1988
Improved estimates of
Federal Medicare social
benefits Federal current transfer
payments 1967
Improved estimates of state
and local Medicaid social
benefits State and local government
current transfer payments 2003
Quantities and prices
New PCE market-based prices
and quantities Personal consumption
expenditures 1929
New prices:
For medical care and
hospitalization
insurance benefits Personal consumption
expenditures, state and
local government
consumption expenditures 1988
For change in farm
inventories Change in farm inventories 1977
For selected types of
nonresidential
structures Nonresidential, Federal, and
state and local
government gross
investment in structures 1997
For photocopying equipment Private equipment and
software, imports of
goods 1992
For own-account software Private equipment and
software, Federal and
state and local
government gross
investment in equipment
and software 1959
For Federal nondefense Federal nondefense consumption 1998
sales of services
Consumption of fixed
capital
Improved estimates of
aircraft Corporate profits, nonfarm
proprietors' income 1960
New estimates of light
trucks separately
identified Corporate profits, nonfarm
proprietors' income 1992
Improved estimates of autos Corporate profits, nonfarm
proprietors' income 1991
Changes carried back
from the 2000-2002 annual
revisions (1)
NAICS-based estimates of
services (2001) Personal consumption
expenditures 1997
Improved estimates of
closing costs (2002) Rental income of persons 1998
Improved estimates of
interest paid by persons
to business (2001) Personal interest payments 1980
Improvements to the
international
transactions accounts
(2000-2002) Exports and imports of goods
and services 1982
New prices:
For net foreign
travel (2002) Personal consumption
expenditures 1987
For local area network
equipment (2001) Private equipment and
software 1992
For Federal defense and
nondefense consumption
expenditures (2002) Federal consumption
expenditures 1993
(1.) The year in parentheses refers to the August SURVEY in which the
change was described.
NAICS North American Industry Classification System
Table 2. New Construction Price Indexes Used to Deflate Private,
Federal, and State and Local Structures
New construction Private nonresidential structure
price indexes types (5.4.B) (1)
Warehouses Food and beverage; multimerchandise shopping;
warehouse and other commercial
Factories Manufacturing
Office buildings Office
Schools Educational
New construction Federal structure State and local structure
price indexes types (5.8.B) types (5.8.B)
Warehouses
Factories "Other" manufacturing "Other" manufacturing
Office buildings Office Office
Schools Educational Educational
(1) The numbers in parentheses represent NIPA table groups in which the
structure types will appear.
(1.) Stephanie H. McCulla and Carol E. Moylan, "Preview of
Revised NIPA Estimates for 1997: Effects of Incorporating the 1997
Benchmark I-O Accounts and Proposed Definitional and Statistical
Changes," SURVEY 83 (January 2003): 10-16.
(2.) Brent R. Moulton and Eugene E Seskin, "Preview of the
2003 Comprehensive Revision of the National Income and Product Accounts:
Changes in Definitions and Classifications," SURVEY 83 (June 2003):
17-34.
(3.) Nicole Mayerhauser, Shelly Smith, and David E Sullivan,
"Preview of the 2003 Comprehensive Revision of the National Income
and Product Accounts: New and Redesigned Tables," SURVEY 83 (August
2003): 7-31.
(4.) See Improved Estimates of the National Income and Product
Accounts for 1959-95: Results of the Comprehensive Revision,"
SURVEY 76 (January/ February 1996): 19-20.
(5.) See Brent R. Mouhon and Eugene E Seskin, "A Preview of
the 1999 Comprehensive Revision of the National Income and Product
Accounts: Statistical Changes," SURVEY 79 (October 1999): 13.
(6.) Leading up to this comprehensive revision, BEA undertook
research to improve the accrual-accounting basis of the NIPA estimates.
Accrual accounting records flows at the time economic value is created,
transformed, exchanged, transferred, or extinguished. This effort was
called for in BEA's Strategic Plan for FY 2003-FY 2007 in order to
improve the consistency between the NIPAs and international guidelines.
(Go to BEA's Web site <www.bea.gov>, click on "About
BEA," and find the bullet for "Strategic Plan for
2003-2007" near the bottom of the page.)
(7.) See Moulton and Seskin, 19-27.
(8.) An article that provides the methodology for preparing NIPA
estimates of property and casualty insurance services under the new
definition will appear in a forthcoming issue of the SURVEY.
(9.) For the methodology used to prepare NIPA estimates of the
implicit services provided by commercial banks under the new definition,
see Dennis J. Fixler, Marshall B. Reinsdorf, and George M. Smith,
"Measuring the Services of Commercial Banks in the NIPAs: Changes
in Concepts and Methods," in this issue.
(10.) Benchmark years occur at about 5-year intervals. Quinquennial
economic censuses are taken for these years, and benchmark estimates are
prepared using data from these censuses.
(11.) For a discussion of the preliminary effects of the I-O
accounts on the NIPA estimates for 1997, see McCulla and Moylan, 10-14.
(12.) See Ann M. Lawson, Kurt S. Bersani, Mahnaz Fahim-Nader, and
Jiemin Guo, "Benchmark Input-Output Accounts of the United States,
1997," SURVEY 82 (December 2002): 19-109.
(13.) Moulton and Seskin, 17-34.
(14.) In the 1999 comprehensive revision, preliminary retail sales
data and product shipments for computers from the 1997 Economic Census
were incorporated.
(15.) 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,
1992-2002" SURVEY 83 (July 2003): 32-45.
(16.) In 2000, the Census Bureau introduced significant revisions
to selected value-put-in-place series: One-unit housing, residential
improvements, and private industrial buildings. The revisions, which
extended back to 1983, could not be incorporated fully in the 2000-2002
annual NIPA revisions. See U.S. Bureau of the Census, Current
Construction Reports--Value of New Construction Put in Place, May 2000.
(17.) For information on previous nonfiler adjustments, see
"Improved Estimates of the National Income and Product Accounts for
1959-94: Results of the Comprehensive Revision," SURVEY 76
(January/February 1996): 24-25. The 1996 nonfiler adjustment was
incorporated on a best-change basis in the 2001 annual NIPA revision.
(18.) For a more detailed listing of the "regular" source
data incorporated in an annual revision, see "Updated Summary NIPA
Methodologies," SURVEY 82 (October 2002): 20-38.
(19.) These changes update the methodologies that are described in
"Updated Summary NIPA Methodologies" and in the series of NIPA
methodology papers.
(20.) In this article, "light trucks" refers to the NIPA
category "light trucks (including utility vehicles)," which
includes pickup trucks, sport-utility vehicles, and vans.
(21.) A change in registration occurs when a used auto or a used
light truck is registered with a new owner name and address. The changes
are believed to be a reliable indicator of used-vehicle sales.
(22.) In direct base-year valuation, quantity indexes are derived
by multiplying the base-year price by actual quantity data for the index
period, then expressing the results as an index with the reference year
equal to 100.
(23.) Unit sales are derived by dividing Census Bureau retail sales
(less margins) by an average value based on average auction prices.
(24.) Motor vehicles are grouped by age--determined by year of
original sale--and the calculations are made by age group. Motor vehicle
sales in a given year generally include sales from 3 model years: The
model year corresponding to the previous calendar year; the model year
corresponding to the current calendar year; and the model year
corresponding to the next calendar year. For example, in 2001, vehicles
were sold for model year 2000, model year 2001, and model year 2002.
(25.) These wholesale values are based on deflated new-car values
adjusted for depreciation and restated to current dollars using the CPI
for used vehicles.
(26.) Net transactions in used autos will continue to be deflated
using the CPI for used cars and trucks.
(27.) See Mayerhauser, Smith, and Sullivan, 24.
(28.) Trucks consists of "light trucks" and "other
trucks, buses, and truck trailers," which include medium duty and
heavy-duty trucks over 15,000 pounds.
(29.) The consumer share represents the portion of total hotel and
motel guestroom rentals that are purchased by U.S. consumers. Business,
government, and foreign visitors are assumed to account for the
remainder.
(30.) PCE measures total purchases of U.S. residents wherever the
goods and services were produced. In the source data underlying many of
the estimates of detailed PCE components, the expenditures of foreigners
traveling in the United States are indistinguishable from those of U.S.
residents. These outlays are removed in the aggregate from PCE and are
shown instead as exports. Purchases abroad of goods and services by U.S.
residents are included in total in the PCE category, "foreign
travel and other, net" and are also shown as imports; these
purchases are not distributed among the individual commodities in PCE.
(31.) The PCE control group consists of most PCE goods other than
motor vehicles, school lunches, food furnished to employees (including
military), food produced and consumed on farms, clothing issued to
military personnel, and net foreign remittances. The PCE control group
is estimated using Census Bureau data on retail sales to extrapolate an
overall value. The commodity composition of the PCE control group is
determined by merchandise-line allocations by kind of business on the
basis of the 1997 Economic Census. See U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis,
Personal Consumption Expenditures (Washington, DC: U.S. Government
Printing Office, June 1990): 41.
(32.) Under the new treatment, the value of the drugs is removed
from the control group before the commodity composition of the remainder
of the group is determined.
(33.) The treatment of gasoline within the PCE control group is
similar to the treatment of prescription drugs; see footnote 32.
(34.) Preliminary estimates for 1992-2001 were presented in Charles
Ian Mead, Clinton R McCully, and Marshall B. Reinsdorf, "Income and
Outlays of Households and of Nonprofit Institutions Serving
Households," SURVEY 83 (April 2003): 13-17.
(35.) The weights for the 3-year moving average are 50 percent for
year t and 25 percent each for years t-1 and t+1.
(36.) See Lawson et al., "Benchmark Input-Output
Accounts," 26-28.
(37.) Mayerhauser, Smith, and Sullivan, 22-24.
(38.) For details on NSOs and the NIPAs, see Carol E. Moylan,
"Treatment of Employee Stock Options in the U.S. National Economic
Accounts" (paper presented at the Organisation for Economic
Cooperation and Development Meeting of National Accounts Experts, Paris,
September 26-29, 2000); <www.bea.gov/bea/papers/empstop.pdf>.
(39.) However, a growing number of firms are starting to include
information about the expensing of the fair value of newly granted stock
options in their public financial reports.
(40.) In the notes to their annual financial statements,
corporations are required to disclose information on their stock-option
activity for the most recent 3 fiscal years. This information includes
the number of options out standing at the beginning of the year, the
number granted, the number exercised, the number canceled, and the
number outstanding at the end of the year. Corporations are required to
disclose the weighted-average exercise price for each category, but they
are not required to disclose the weighted-average market price at
exercise.
(41.) Ideally, for accrual estimates, it would be appropriate to
incorporate a timing adjustment based on the starting date of the
plan's fiscal year. However, over 80 percent of the plans have
fiscal years beginning on January 1, and BEA does not have the resources
to reprocess the Form 5500 data to implement this adjustment.
(42.) Small employers are firms with less than 100 employees.
(43.) SEP plans began in 1978, and SIMPLE plans began in 1997.
(44.) Employer contributions for employee pension and insurance
funds, formerly "other labor income," will consist of employer
payments (including payments-in-kind) to private pension and
profit-sharing plans, publicly administered government employee
retirement plans, private group health and life insurance plans,
privately administered workers' compensation plans, and
supplemental unemployment benefit plans. Miscellaneous compensation of
employees will be reclassified as wages and salaries, as noted in
Mayerhauser, Smith, and Sullivan, 12-13.
(45.) MEPS, an annual survey of about 50,000 respondents, provides
estimates of the direct expenditures by employers for health insurance
for their employees.
(46.) For the 2000 annual revision, 1997 was the earliest year open
to revision. For more information on the implementation of MEPS in the
2000 annual revision, see Eugene P. Seskin and David E Sullivan,
"Annual Revision of the National Income and Product Accounts,"
SURVEY 80 (August 2000): 28.
(47.) The ECEC--a quarterly survey of around 4,000
respondents--provides the cost of health insurance as a percentage of
wages.
(48.) Annual estimates of Federal employer contributions for health
insurance will not be affected by this change.
(49.) In the NIPAs, portfolio interest income received by financial
partnerships is considered to be related to the business operation and
is included in "income receipts on assets" and, thus, in
nonfarm proprietors' income and in the calculation of net interest;
in contrast, portfolio interest income received by nonfinancial
partnerships is considered to be unrelated to the business operation and
is excluded from nonfarm proprietors' income and from the
calculation of net interest.
(50.) For 1986 and earlier years, portfolio interest was included
in total receipts as an item on Form 1065, and it was subtracted from
the income of nonfinancial partnerships; no adjustment was needed to
financial partnerships. Beginning with 1987, because portfolio interest
was no longer included in total receipts, it was no longer necessary to
subtract this interest from the income of nonfinancial partnerships, but
it was necessary to add this interest to the income of financial
partnerships.
(51.) This imputation consists of the monetary interest, dividends,
net rent, and royalties earned on policyholders' reserves, plus
imputed interest received on life insurance carriers' deposits with
commercial banks and investment companies, less profits of mutual life
insurance companies.
(52.) The SOI data remain the source for the net interest
components of monetary payments and receipts for the life insurance
industry in order to be consistent with the SOI-based NIPA estimates of
monetary interest payments and receipts of other industries.
(53.) For further details on the earlier methodology change for
monetary interest, see "Annual Revision of the U.S. National Income
and Product Accounts," SURVEY 73 (August 1993): 29.
(54.) In the IRS data, some life insurance carriers are classified
in the casualty insurance industry and others are classified in
industries not related to insurance, because the IRS information is
based on the filing of consolidated tax returns.
(55.) Coefficients of determination--also known as [R.sup.2]s--are
statistical indicators of the strength of the relationship between
variables.
(56.) Medicare social benefits also appear in the personal income
and outlay account.
(57.) Medicaid social benefits also appear in the personal income
and outlay account.
(58.) Timing differences are defined as the differences between the
CMS Medicaid social benefits data and the MTS Medicaid grants data.
(59.) The model's variables were constructed on a
percent-change basis using data from the first quarter of 1991 through
the first quarter of 2002. The coefficient of determination for the
regression model is 0.82; the coefficients for the Medicaid grants
variable and for the timing difference variable are 1.059 and--0.638,
respectively. Both coefficients had p-values of less than 0.001.
(60.) For more details on preparing real NIPA estimates, see U.S.
Bureau of Economic Analysis, National Income and Product Accounts of the
United States, 1929-97: Volume 1 (Washington, DC: U.S. Government
Printing Office, September 2001): M-14--M-19.
(61.) Household insurance premiums, which is deflated by the CPI
for tenants' and household insurance, will be included in
market-based PCE; medical and hospitalization and income loss insurance,
expense of handling life insurance, motor vehicle insurance, and
workers' compensation will be excluded.
(62.) Go to <www.bea.gov>, click on "Gross Domestic
Product" under "National," scroll down and click on
"NIPA underlying detail and key source data tables," and then
dick on "Historical underlying detail files for personal
consumption expenditures"
(63.) The Turner Construction Company's building-cost index,
which represents changes in the cost of constructing nonresidential
buildings, is intended to capture changes in the costs associated with
constructing large nonresidential buildings, such as office and
industrial buildings, hospitals, and hotels. The Census Bureau price
index for single-family houses under construction is intended to capture
changes in costs associated with constructing smaller nonresidential
buildings, such as commercial buildings (restaurants, gasoline service
stations, and shopping centers) and religious buildings.
(64.) For example, see "Revised Deflators for New
Construction," SURVEY 54 (August 1974): 18-27; Frank de Leeuw,
"New Price Indexes for Construction" (discussion paper no. 50,
Washington, DC: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, June 1991); Frank de
Leeuw, "Price Indexes Based on the Dodge Major Project File,"
(discussion paper no. 51, Washington, DC: U.S. Bureau of Economic
Analysis, June 1991); and Frank de Leeuw, "A Price Index for New
Multifamily Housing," SURVEY 73 (February 1993): 33-42.
(65.) For details on the use of hedonics in the NIPAs, see David W.
Cartwright, "Improved Deflation of Purchases of Computers"
SURVEY 66 (March 1986): 7-9; R. Cole, Y. C. Chen. J. Barquin-Stolleman,
E. Dullberger, N. Helvacian, and J. H. Hodge, "Quality-Adjusted
Price Indexes for Computer Processors and Selected Peripheral
Equipment," SvrtvEY 66 (January 1986): 41-50; Jack E. Triplett,
"The Economic Interpretation of Hedonic Models," SURVEY 66
(January 1986): 36-40; Bruce T. Grimm, "Price Indexes for Selected
Semiconductors, 1974-96," SURVEY 78 (February 1998): 8-24; and J.
Steven Landefeld and Bruce T. Grimm, "A Note on the Impact of
Hedonics and Computers on Real GDP," SURVEY 82 (December 2000):
17-22.
(66.) The data sets for each of the four types of buildings were
pooled time-series cross-sectional observations for 6 years (1997 and
1999-2003). Depending on the building type, the hedonic regressions
included from three to five quality-characteristic dummy variables. In
addition, separate regressions were estimated for each height class.
(67.) Data for 1998 were not available. A minimum of 648
observations were available for pooled regressions for 1997 and
1999-2003 for warehouses, factories, office buildings, and four types of
schools.
(68.) There were two height classes for factories and three height
classes for office buildings.
(69.) The methodology used to construct price indexes for schools
differed slightly. Separate hedonic regressions were calculated for four
types of school buildings--elementary, junior high, high, and
vocational--on a with-and without-basement basis. The price indexes
derived from the with-and without-basement regressions were weighted
together using unpublished data from the Census Bureau to form
subindexes by school type. The school-type subindexes were weighted
together to form a summary index for schools using Census Bureau data on
school enrollment by age and assuming that vocational school enrollment
was equal to 20 percent of high school enrollment.
(70.) The biennial regression technique allows for changes in
products and for changes in the composition of products sold.
(71.) For information on BEA's price index for own-account
software see Eugene E Seskin, "Improved Estimates of the National
Income and Product Accounts for 1959-98: Results of the Comprehensive
Revision," SURVEY 79 (December 1999): 37-39; Robert P. Parker and
Bruce T. Grimm, "Recognition of Business and Government
Expenditures for Software as Investment: Methodology and Quantitative
Impacts, 1959-98" (paper presented at the May 5, 2000, meeting of
the BEA Advisory Committee, Washington, DC,
<www.bea.gov/bea/papers/software.pdf>); and Bruce T. Grimm, Brent
R. Moulton, and David B. Wasshausen, "Information Processing Equipment and Software in the National Accounts" (paper prepared
for the Conference on Measuring Capital in the New Economy, sponsored by
the NBER/ CRIW, April 26-27, 2002, at the Federal Reserve Board,
Washington, DC, <www.bea.gov/bea/papers/IP-NIPA.pdf>).
(72.) The input-cost index will also be improved. National median
wage rates that are calculated from current population statistics will
be replaced by mean wage rates calculated from detailed BLS
occupation-employment statistics.
(73.) In addition, this index is used to deflate custom software.
(74.) See Eugene E Seskin and Stephanie H. McCulla, "Annual
Revision of the National Income and Product Accounts," SURVEY 82
(August 2002): 29-31; Brent R. Moulton, Eugene E Seskin, and David E
Sullivan, "Annual Revision of the National Income and Product
Accounts," SURVEY 81 (August 2001): 25 28; and Eugene P. Seskin and
David E Sullivan, "Annual Revision of the National Income and
Product Accounts," SURVEY 80 (August 2000): 27-29.
(75.) PCE is estimated on a commodity basis rather than on an
industry basis. Data collected on an industry basis, such as those
reported in the Census Bureau annual retail trade survey and service
annual survey, are allocated to commodities using
"merchandise-line" and "source of revenue" data from
the 1997 Economic Census. The NAICS-based industry data improve the
estimates of PCE by providing expanded coverage and greater detail than
the SIC based data.
(76.) BEA seasonally adjusts the quarterly IPI and interpolates the
quarterly estimates into months without using an indicator. Monthly IPIs
are now available beginning with 2001, but the quarterly series is
considered more reliable.
(77.) The change in the method for estimating closing costs will
not affect "all other" closing costs.
(78.) For details on the new treatment of insurance services in the
NIPAs, see Moulton and Seskin, 19-23. For details on the ITA treatment,
see Bach, 35-37.
(79.) Beginning with 2001, the FRB's LAN price will be
replaced with a newly available BLS PPI.