Selected issues in the measurement of U.S. international services.
Whichard, Obie G. ; Borga, Maria
EACH year since 1990, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) has
published an article in the SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS presenting and
analyzing detailed data on U.S. international sales and purchases of
private services.(1) These articles have sought to present estimates in
as much detail as possible and to provide in a single presentation data
on the two major international channels of services
delivery--cross-border trade and sales through locally established
direct investment enterprises, or affiliates. While the articles have
included some information on the concepts underlying the data, their
primary purpose has been to present the data rather than to discuss
methodological issues in detail. This article is intended to complement
the annual articles by addressing a number of measurement issues
relating to U.S. international services. Its goals are to inform BEA
data users about issues that may affect their interpretation of the data
and to identify alternative methodologies or additional source data that
might be used to improve the data. In some cases, BEA has already begun
to implement changes in data collection that would allow improved
measures to be constructed. In others, the discussion in this article
can be viewed as preparatory work for future improvements.
The series of annual articles on international services
transactions was introduced after a long-term data improvement program
for international services had been initiated, and several of its
elements put in place. (For an annotated chronology of the improvements,
see the appendix.) The improvement program built on existing data
series. This approach maximized data continuity, economized on
resources, and limited increases in reporting burdens. For cross-border
trade, the data were upgraded by building on data included in the
international transactions accounts (ITA's); new surveys were
initiated, existing surveys were improved, and outside information was
used to develop estimates for services not covered by BEA surveys. For
services delivered through affiliates, estimates were developed through
the addition of further breakdowns to existing surveys on the operations
of multinational companies.
While the strategy of building on existing data series has allowed
improvements to be achieved relatively quickly and with relatively
modest increases in cost and burden, in some cases the usefulness of the
estimates has been limited by the reliance on series that were developed
prior to the emergence of some of the current needs of data users. For
some services, the estimates capture aggregate balance-of-payments flows
but do not provide the most useful measures of the services provided.
For example, trade in insurance services is measured as the difference
between premiums and claims, which in a particular period may bear
little or no relationship to the value of the services provided and can
even be negative. For other services, measurement or classification of
cross-border sales differs from that of sales through affiliates,
hampering comparisons of deliveries through the two channels. For
example, cross-border exports in construction are treated as a service
in the ITA's and are recorded net of foreign expenses and related
U.S. exports of goods, but in the data on sales through affiliates,
construction is treated as a goods-producing industry whose sales are
recorded in terms of total operating revenues. This article addresses
these limitations and, where feasible, suggests ways to overcome them.
In several cases, particularly those involving finance and
insurance, the issues discussed in this article have been the subject of
other research conducted both within and outside BEA. (2) Any
implementation of improvements suggested in this article for BEA's
international accounts will be undertaken with a view to maximizing
consistency between these accounts and other accounts produced by BEA,
including the national income and product accounts (NIPA's) and the
various industry accounts.
BEA's ongoing efforts over many years to improve its data on
international services are partly in response to the increasing
importance of these transactions in world markets. The rapid growth in
these transactions has made it increasingly important that services
trade be reflected in statistics in a complete and economically meaningful way. In addition, international guidelines for statistics on
trade in services have become more detailed and more specific in recent
years. (3) These guidelines recommend the services to be identified and
suggest measures that weigh the need for theoretically correct measures
against the practical difficulties in developing such measures. Finally,
new uses of data on trade in services have emerged in recent years. For
example, the addition of services to the agenda in trade negotiations
requires statistics to support the negotiations and to assist in
monitoring the resulting agreements.
This article begins with a brief overview of the data BEA provides
on international services and a general discussion of the limitations of
the different types of data. It then considers measurement issues
specific to five categories of services with unique attributes or
recording methodologies that pose special problems of
measurement--insurance, wholesale and retail trade, finance,
construction, and utilities.
Data on U.S. International Services
BEA's data on U.S. international sales and purchases of
private services cover two major types of transactions--(1) cross-border
exports and imports and (2) sales of services through majority-owned
affiliates of multinational companies. Cross-border exports and imports
represent international trade in the conventional sense and cover
transactions between companies and individuals resident in the United
States and those resident abroad. In addition to being presented in the
annual SURVEY articles, these transactions are recorded in summary form
in the monthly news release on U.S. trade in goods and services and, in
greater detail, in the ITA's, which are presented in the quarterly
releases and in the SURVEY. With only a few exceptions, the most
important of which is travel, these data are disaggregated by type of
service. Most of the data are derived from BEA surveys.
Sales of services through affiliates represent services sold
through the channel of direct investment. These sales are not considered
U.S. international transactions because, under the residency principle
of balance-of-payments accounting, affiliates of multinational companies
are regarded as residents of the countries where they are located rather
than of the countries of their owners. However, this channel is the
major channel for delivering many types of services, and in some cases,
its use is the only practical method of delivery because of the need for
proximity of consumer and producer when the service is performed. The
data on sales of services through affiliates cover nonbank
majority-owned affiliates and are derived from questions on BEA's
annual and benchmark surveys of direct investment that require
affiliates' sales or gross operating revenues to be distributed
among sales of goods, sales of services, and investment income. Data are
collected on affiliates' sales of services to all destinations, but
the data presented in the annual SURVEY articles on services focus on
sales abroad by foreign affiliates of U.S. companies and sales in the
United States by U.S. affiliates of foreign companies--that is, on the
sales that are not included in U.S. cross-border exports or imports.
There are two major differences between the data on cross-border
trade and those on sales through affiliates. First, the data on
cross-border trade are classified by type of service, whereas the data
on sales of services through affiliates are classified on the basis of
the primary industry of the affiliate. Data on the specific types of
services sold by affiliates would be required for service-by-service
comparisons of deliveries through the two major channels, but due to
resource constraints and concerns about respondent burden, these data
have not been collected to date.
Second, the data on cross-border trade treat sales and purchases
alike, whereas the data on sales through affiliates measure the
affiliates' sales but not their purchases. While the primary reason
for providing statistical coverage of affiliates' activities is to
measure the services they produce and deliver, a complete picture of
their activities and the economic impact of these activities would
include information on affiliates' purchases of services as well.
However, information on company record-keeping practices suggests that
it would be difficult to collect these data from the companies that
report on BEA's surveys. (4)
Issues Regarding Specific Services
For most types of services, the service is clearly defined,
explicitly priced, and usually not difficult to isolate statistically
from goods or other nonservice elements with which the service may be
associated. However, one or more of these issues complicates measurement
and interpretation of the five service categories singled out for
discussion in the remainder of this article--insurance, wholesale and
retail trade, finance, construction, and utilities. Of the five,
insurance is the most complex and is treated in the most detail. The
issues that are discussed, possible ways of addressing them, and the
effects on the data of the adoption of alternative methodologies or
development of improved source data are summarized in table 1.
Insurance
Insurance is an important service both in U.S. cross-border trade
in services and in services supplied internationally through foreign
affiliates of U.S. companies and U.S. affiliates of foreign companies.
In 2001, U.S. exports of insurance--measured as premiums received by
U.S. insurance companies on insurance sold abroad net of claims
paid--were $3.2 billion, about 1 percent of total U.S. exports of
private services. (5) However, the underlying gross flows were
larger--$9.9 billion in premiums received and $6.6 billion in claims
paid. In 2001, U.S. insurance imports--measured as premiums paid to
foreign insurers net of claims received from foreign insurers--were $1.3
billion, about 1 percent of total U.S. imports of private services. The
underlying gross flows were much larger--$32.0 billion in premiums paid
and $30.7 billion in claims received. Because of the unusually high
level of claims made by U.S. insurance companies on foreign reinsurers
following the terrorist attacks of September 11,2001, measured
current-dollar imports of insurance services in 2001 were considerably
lower than those in 2000. (6) In 2000, imports of insurance services
were $9.2 billion, about 5 percent of total U.S. imports of private
services. The $9.2 billion was the net of $27.9 billion in premiums paid
and $18.7 billion in claims received.
Sales of services by affiliates in insurance are measured as
services-related operating revenues and mostly consist of premium
income. These sales are larger than the cross-border trade, partly
because of this difference in measurement but also because of the
widespread use of affiliates to comply with regulatory requirements and
to facilitate contacts with customers. In 1999 (the latest year for
which estimates are available), sales of services abroad by U.S.
companies' majority-owned foreign affiliates (MOFA's) in
insurance were $48.0 billion, or 14 percent of total sales of services
to foreigners by all MOFA's, and sales of services in the United
States by majority-owned U.S. affiliates of foreign companies
(MOUSA's) were $78.8 billion, or 27 percent of total sales of
services in the United States by all MOUSA's.
Several questions arise concerning the measurement of U.S.
international sales and purchases of insurance. Should the service be
measured net of claims, as in the ITA's, or on a gross basis, as in
the data on sales through affiliates? Whether the service is net or
gross of claims, the claims must be accounted for in the balance of
payments framework. Should the claims be those actually paid in a given
period, as under BEA's current methodology, or should claims
instead be calculated as an average portion of premiums, computed over
some period? If the claims are not considered a part of insurance
services, how should they be recorded? How should services auxiliary to
insurance, such as claims adjustment services or actuarial services, be
classified--in insurance or in other services categories? Should the
investment income earned by insurance companies on reserves held against
future claims be included in the measure of insurance services? Because
these issues differ somewhat with respect to the two major channels of
delivery, cross-border trade and sales through affiliates are discussed
separately.
Cross-border trade
The ITA's measure cross-border trade in insurance as premiums
less claims, both of which are reported and recorded on an accrual
basis. (7) As with other services, the entries under exports and imports
of insurance should reflect the values of the services provided or
received. However, the measurement of these values is less clear for
insurance than for most other services. Recording insurance services as
premiums less claims implicitly reflects the view that the principal
service provided by an insurance company is that of administering a risk
pool. Under this view, only the portion of premiums not paid out in
claims is treated as output of the insurance industry. The remainder
simply reflects funds that, with the help of insurance companies, flow
from all policyholders to (or for the benefit of) those policyholders
who suffer losses. This view is reflected in all international accounts
guidelines, including BPMS, MSITS, and the SNA (see footnote 3). (8) It
is also consistent with the treatment of domestic insurance transactions
in the U.S. NIPA's. (9)
While the net premiums approach is judged by most to be the
appropriate one for recording cross-border trade in services in the
international accounts, a number of issues arise with respect to its
implementation. Whether insurance services should be measured based on
actual claims or as a percentage of premiums probably is the most
important issue. Other issues include the treatment of income on
reserves held against future claims (usually termed "technical
reserves") and the treatment of commissions and other services
auxiliary to insurance.
Actual versus average or expected claims. The rationale for the use
of premiums less claims as the measure of insurance services is not that
it captures all insurance flows in a single measure, but rather that the
portion of premiums that remains after provision has been made for
claims can serve as a rough proxy for the operating expenses and
profits--or output--associated with this activity. While this view has
plausibility as an expression of a long-term tendency, it could be
argued that a shortcoming of this proxy measure is that claims may
fluctuate from period to period in a way that bears little or no
relation to the services provided. Hurricanes, floods, oil spills,
product liability settlements, and--most recently--terrorist attacks
come to mind as perils whose presence or absence may cause large
fluctuations in claims that do not appear to correspond to changes in
the services provided or received.
To provide a measure that more closely approximates services flows,
rather than measuring insurance services as premiums less actual claims
(as under BEA's current methodology), these services might be
measured as premiums less average or expected claims. Conceptually,
expected claims would appear to be the most relevant item to include in
the computation, inasmuch as it is a key factor in the determination of
premiums: Insurance firms maximize expected profits by setting premiums
that cover expected claims and other costs. (10) In a practical sense,
no information is available on what the companies expect, and so an
indicator of expectations must be employed. A readily available
indicator is the average of past claims in relation to premiums.
Basing estimates of trade in insurance services on average claims
would involve calculating an "insurance service charge" by
multiplying premiums by a ratio, computed by averaging, over some
period, the ratio of premiums-less-claims to premiums. BPM5 suggests
this approach for imports of insurance other than reinsurance, but it
would seem as useful for exports as for imports, and for reinsurance as
for other types of insurance. Implementing an average-claims approach to
recording insurance services in the ITA's would result in estimates
that provide a more meaningful measure of the value of the services
traded and would tend to reduce movements in measured exports and
imports of goods and services, and thus in current-dollar gross domestic
product (GDP), that, in an economic sense, reflect not only services but
also elements that are more appropriately regarded as another type of
flow, such as transfers or financial flows.
After a portion of premiums has been recorded as an export or
import of insurance services (regardless of whether that portion has
been estimated by deducting actual claims or average claims), claims and
any remaining portion of premiums must be recorded. According to BPM5,
for nonlife insurance, these items should be recorded under current
transfers, while for whole life insurance, (11) these items should be
recorded in the financial account. (12) Under the current BEA
methodology, the entries in transfers or the financial account net to
zero and are not recorded. However, if insurance services were defined
in terms of average claims, they would typically be nonzero and would
have to be recorded (see the "Technical Note" beginning on
page 51 for a discussion of ITA recording mechanisms under
average-claims-based definitions).
Table 2 illustrates how estimates of insurance exports and imports
based on an average claims differ from estimates based on actual claims
in the current year, using data for 1986-2001. (13) A 5-year moving
average is used in deriving the estimates on an average-claims basis, so
estimates can be derived for the years 1991-2001. Entries for the
ITA's are summarized in table 3.
For 1991-2001, exports and imports tend to be less volatile under
the average-claims method, reflecting the smoothing effect of averaging
the ratio of premiums-less-claims to premiums (charts 1 and 2). The
smoothing is particularly evident in the 1991-93 estimates of imports.
Premiums paid rose throughout this period, but because of a spike in
claims recovered in 1992, the net of premiums and claims dropped sharply
from $2.5 billion in 1991 to $1.3 billion in 1992 and then rose even
more sharply to $3.1 billion in 1993. The most dramatic example occurred
in the third quarter of 2001, when extraordinarily large claims on
foreign reinsurance companies in the aftermath of the September 11
attacks resulted in an estimated $11.0 billion shift in insurance
imports, to a negative $7.9 billion in that quarter. (14) For the year
2001, imports fell sharply because of these large claims and not because
of a decrease in the services provided by foreign reinsurance companies.
Under the average-claims methodology, in contrast, measured imports of
insurance services continued to rise.
[GRAPHICS OMITTED]
A measure using an average ratio calculated over a longer period
than 5 years or after the removal of outliers would produce patterns
that tracked the movement in premiums even more closely. A constant
ratio would, of course, track premiums exactly, but it would fail to
capture changes over time in the relationship between premiums and
claims.
Strict adherence to international guidelines would require
estimating transactions in life insurance (excluding term insurance)
separately, to allow the entries in the above examples that were
recorded in current transfers to instead be recorded in the financial
account of the ITA's. However, these transactions probably do not
account for a very large share of U.S. cross-border trade in insurance.
Moreover, whole life insurance cannot be separately identified in the
currently available source data. (15)
Investment income. Just as charges for the services associated with
checking accounts would be imposed, or would be higher, if banks could
not lend out or invest the funds of their depositors, insurance premiums
would be higher if insurance carriers were unable to earn income on
funds held in reserve against future claims. In recognition of this
fact, the 1993 SNA included income on technical reserves in its
recommended measure of output of the insurance industry. (16) The income
is treated as accruing to the policyholders, who pay it back to the
insurers as supplements to premiums. To date, BEA has not reflected this
income in its measures of insurance services, either domestically or
internationally.
The reason for treating income on technical reserves as a component
of insurance trade is to improve the accuracy of estimates of the
insurance services provided to, or procured from, nonresidents. Because
the economic value of these services is unrelated to the source of the
income, the income on reserves that would be added to trade in insurance
services does not itself have to be derived from or directly paid to
nonresidents. If some or all of the reserves are invested with
nonresident institutions, then the associated income flows would be
recorded in the ITA's as separate transactions that would have
their own offsets in the financial account of this double-entry system
of accounts. (17)
Despite its potential significance, both the 1993 SNA and BPM5
allow income on technical reserves to be disregarded in insurance
transactions between residents and nonresidents because of estimation problems, particularly for imports. Nonetheless, it must be acknowledged
that excluding this income imparts some downward bias to the estimates.
Further research into data sources and estimation techniques would
appear worthwhile.
Commissions and other auxiliary services. Under BPM5, insurance
services include agent commissions related to insurance transactions.
MSITS, in a more detailed definition of insurance, includes not only
commissions but also other services auxiliary to insurance, such as for
claims adjustment, actuarial services, and administration of salvage and
recovery services. (18) Currently, none of these elements are recorded
in the U.S. accounts as recommended; however, changes in data collection
have been implemented that will allow the recommended treatment to be
used in the future. Because the situation is different for commissions
than for the other services, they will be considered separately.
Prior to the survey covering transactions in 2001, the BEA survey
on which most international insurance transactions are reported required
that premiums be reported net of commissions paid between residents and
nonresidents. Suppose, for example, that an insurance policy was sold to
a foreigner by a U.S. carrier through a foreign agent and that the agent
retained (or received separately from the U.S. carrier) a $5 commission
out of the foreign customer's payment of a $100 premium. In this
case, $95 would have been reported to BEA as premiums net of commissions
and--ignoring any claims--would have been recorded as a U.S. export of
insurance. Under BPM5 and MSITS, in contrast, a $100 export of insurance
and a $5 import of insurance would have been recorded, the latter
representing the U.S. carrier's purchase of services auxiliary to
insurance from the foreign agent. The latter treatment is consistent
with the general principle--reflected in both BPM5 and MSITS--of
recording current-account transactions on a gross basis. It is also
necessary to avoid an underestimation of total exports and imports of
goods and services, as well as of exports and imports of insurance.
Beginning with transactions in 2001, premiums are being reported
gross of commissions on BEA's survey of international insurance
transactions. In addition, a new reporting category has been created in
its survey of selected services transactions for services auxiliary to
insurance. The new category will also collect data on other services
auxiliary to insurance, such as actuarial services and claims adjustment
services. Previously, these services had been covered in a fragmentary way as parts of other services. (19)
Sales through affiliates
As explained in the section "Data on U.S. International
Services" "sales of services" through affiliates are
defined as services-related sales or gross operating revenues and are
derived from questions that request a breakdown of sales into goods,
services, and investment income (to the extent it is included in
operating revenues). These data are disaggregated according to the
primary industry of the affiliate, but information on the specific types
of services sold is unavailable. Thus, sales in insurance must be
represented by sales of services through affiliates classified in the
insurance industry. In reality, however, affiliates classified in other
industries may have secondary activities in insurance, while affiliates
in insurance may have secondary activities in other industries.
From this description, a number of similarities and differences can
be noted among the measure of insurance available from BEA data on sales
of services through affiliates, the BEA measure of cross-border
insurance transactions, and the measures suggested by international
statistical guidelines. First, the measure of sales through affiliates
is a measure of sales of services by firms classified in the insurance
industry and, unlike the other measures discussed, is not a direct
measure of insurance services provided. Nonetheless, in the absence of
data by type of service, it may be viewed as a proxy for such a measure.
Second (and overlooking the first difference), the measure reflects
premiums on a gross basis, with no deduction for claims. In this regard,
it differs from the measures of insurance-company output recommended for
economic-accounting purposes and used in BEA's data on cross-border
trade. Third, the measure includes revenues derived from the provision
of services auxiliary to insurance, and in this regard, it is consistent
with the treatment recommended in BPM5 and in the MSITS and with the
above-described changes in data collection for cross-border trade.
Fourth, it excludes investment income, and in this regard, it is
consistent with the BEA measure of cross-border trade, with
international standards for measuring external transactions in insurance
(which allow this income to be excluded for practical reasons), and with
the NIPA treatment of property and casualty insurance. (20) However, it
is inconsistent with the SNA recommendation for measuring insurance
output domestically.
From this discussion, it can be seen that the BEA measure of sales
through affiliates in insurance lacks comparability with other measures
with which it might be compared. Compared with either U.S. cross-border
trade in insurance or the NIPA measures of insurance output, it would
tend to exaggerate the relative importance of sales through affiliates,
both as a mode of international supply and relative to the output of
domestic firms. In addition, inasmuch as it does not correspond to
insurance-company output, the measure is difficult to compare with data
on sales of services through affiliates in other industries. For these
industries (with the notable exceptions of wholesale and retail trade
and of finance, discussed in subsequent sections), sales differ from
output only in that they do not include inventory change, which for
services is generally insignificant.
How important are these differences? As can be seen from table 2,
in recent years U.S. insurance exporters have paid out in claims roughly
two-thirds of every dollar received in premiums. Ignoring other
differences, measures of affiliate sales that could be compared with
those on cross-border trade would thus probably be about a third as
large as those now published. For 1999, for example, sales of services
to foreigners by majority-owned foreign affiliates in insurance were $48
billion; taking claims into account would reduce the measure to about
$16 billion. Sales of services in the United States by majority-owned
U.S. affiliates of foreign companies would be similarly reduced, from
$79 billion to about $26 billion. Even with these reductions, sales
through affiliates would still be larger than cross-border trade, though
not by nearly as much.
If constructing measures that correspond more closely to output is
desirable, is there any way it could be done using currently available
data? One possible substitute measure would be gross product (value
added). However, this measure--while available--has several limitations:
It does not distinguish between deliveries to U.S. customers and
deliveries to foreign customers, it does not distinguish between value
added in goods and value added in services, and it does not reflect the
contribution of inputs purchased from outside the firm, such as
advertising, utilities, and computer services. These limitations might
be partly overcome through efforts to construct estimates of output by
supplementing data reported for affiliates with information from such
sources as financial reports, reports to regulatory agencies, and the
input-output accounts, but high-quality estimates clearly require
reported data on premiums and claims. As a first step, BEA is proposing
to collect data on premiums and claims from U.S. affiliates of foreign
companies on the next benchmark survey of foreign direct investment in
the United States, which will cover 2002. If this initial data
collection effort is successful, these items would also be requested on
the follow-on annual survey of foreign direct investment in the United
States and, beginning with the benchmark survey for 2004, on the
counterpart surveys of U.S. direct investment abroad.
Wholesale and retail trade
Wholesale and retail trade are important service industries in the
U.S. economy. These industries provide distributive services--that is,
selling, or arranging for the sale of, goods to intermediate and final
users. In 2000, the output of these industries accounted for almost 16
percent of total GDP and for 24 percent of all private services produced
in the United States. (21) In contrast, wholesale and retail trade
services are almost unnoticeable in the data on U.S. international sales
and purchases of private services. However, this does not indicate a
lack of importance of these industries. Rather, it reflects the fact
that the value of the distributive services they provide is embedded in
the value of goods they sell through international channels, either in
the value of exports and imports of goods or in the value of sales of
goods through affiliates.
Cross-border trade
While it is not identified as such for statistical purposes,
cross-border trade in distributive services could be said to occur, for
example, when a wholesaler exports a good. Although a significant
portion of U.S. exports and imports of goods may be arranged or
otherwise facilitated by wholesalers and retailers, particularly the
former, the estimates of cross-border trade in services do not include
estimates of the distributive services provided by exporters because
those services are included in the value of trade in goods. Exports are
valued at the f.a.s. (free alongside ship) value of the merchandise at
the U.S. port of exportation, including inland freight, insurance, and
other charges incurred in placing the merchandise alongside the carrier
at the U.S. port. Imports are valued at the price paid or payable for
merchandise at the foreign port of exportation. Thus, any distributive
services (as well as the value of other services that facilitate trade,
such as transportation from the factory to the port), are included in
the accounts for cross-border trade in goods and not in those for
cross-border trade in services.
The inclusion of these services in the value of exports of goods
follows the treatment recommended in BPM5 and MSITS and reflects the
fact that data on cross-border trade are collected by product. In this
case, the product is an export of a good, and its value includes the
distributive services used to arrange for its export. However, it may be
useful for some analytical purposes to know the value of distributive
services rendered in support of trade in goods. A rough estimate of
these services can be constructed using data on the share of exports in
U.S. wholesalers' total sales. These rough estimates suggest that,
in 2001, about $26 billion of the value of exports of goods is accounted
for by the distributive services supplied by U.S. wholesalers in
arranging for the export of the goods and about $41 billion of the value
of imports of goods is accounted for by the services supplied by foreign
wholesalers in arranging the sale of goods to the United States. (22)
Sales through affiliates
The estimates of sales through affiliates show that, for both the
foreign affiliates of U.S. companies and the U.S. affiliates of foreign
companies, wholesalers and retailers accounted for less than 1 percent
of all services provided in 1999. However, as with the data on
cross-border trade, this result is more a reflection of the statistical
conventions employed than a true indication of the importance of these
industries in the delivery of services to international markets through
the channel of affiliates' sales. In particular, the estimates of
services provided by wholesalers and retailers do not include the value
of their distributive services but, instead, cover only secondary
activities of the affiliates. For example, the repair services provided
by a car dealer are included in the estimates of sales of services, but
the distributive services the dealer provides in selling cars are not.
The value of the distributive services is included in the estimates of
sales of goods because the data currently collected do not separate the
value of these services from the value of the goods being sold. When the
data collection system for sales of services through affiliates was
established, BEA defined sales of services as those typical of a
specified group of industries. BEA chose to treat sales in wholesale and
retail trade as sales of goods because most of the value of the sales is
attributable to the goods being sold and not to the distributive
services. Therefore, wholesalers and retailers are actually more
important suppliers of services than the data suggest.
As discussed in the section "Data on U.S. International
Services," the data on sales of services through affiliates are
classified by the primary industry of the affiliate and not by the type
of service. For most industries, sales of services reflect the gross
output of services by affiliates classified in that industry, where
gross output includes the value added by affiliates and their purchases
of intermediate inputs. However, because the value of distributive
services is included in the value of the goods sold, the sales of
services data for affiliates classified in wholesale and retail trade
omit the major portion of the services provided by these affiliates.
Thus, while the inclusion of distributive services in the value of goods
sold is consistent with the treatment of cross-border trade, the
construction of a measure of services supplied by affiliates that
includes these distributive services would be valuable to data users.
In the remainder of this section, estimates of the distributive
services provided by affiliates are constructed that suggest the
importance of these services in the data on affiliates' sales.
However, the estimates had to be constructed indirectly, under the
assumption that affiliates' operations are similar to those of all
U.S. wholesalers and retailers. The estimates were constructed using the
same definitions of output in wholesale and retail trade as are used in
BEA's input-output (I-O) accounts:
* Wholesale trade has one primary product--distributive services
for the sales of goods to retailers, intermediate users, and final users
(other than persons). Distributive services provided by wholesalers
include merchandise handling, stocking, selling, and billing.
* Retail trade has one primary product--distributive services for
the sale of goods primarily to persons.
The distributive services are measured as trade margins--wholesale
or retail sales of goods less the cost of goods resold. In estimating
the gross output of the wholesale and retail trade industries, the goods
for resale are excluded from the value of intermediate inputs consumed in production by wholesalers and retailers because these goods are
subject to only minimal processing, such as cleaning or packaging.
The most direct way to measure the value of distributive services
provided by affiliates would be to subtract the cost of goods resold
from total sales of goods in these industries. However, the cost of
goods for resale is not collected separately from other costs and
expenses on BEA's surveys of affiliate operations. There are two
methods by which the data currently collected for affiliates can be used
together with information from other sources to construct estimates of
the value of distributive services. In the first method, data on
affiliates' value added are used with data from the U.S. I-O
accounts to estimate the trade margins of affiliates. In the second
method, the data on sales are used with margin rates published by the
Census Bureau to estimate trade margins. (See the "Technical
Note" for detailed derivations of the estimates.)
These two methods yield estimates for the value of the distributive
services of wholesalers provided to U.S. residents by U.S. affiliates of
$41.2 billion and $85.0 billion. These estimates indicate that
distributive services may be among the most important services provided
by affiliates; even the lower estimate would rank affiliates in
wholesale trade among the larger suppliers of services to U.S.
residents. However, the large difference between the two estimates
demonstrates that, with the data currently available, it is not possible
to construct an estimate of the value of distributive services provided
by affiliates within an acceptable level of confidence. Instead, it is
necessary to collect the data needed to estimate their values directly.
BEA is proposing to add two questions to the 2002 benchmark survey
of foreign direct investment in the United States to collect data on the
cost of goods purchased for resale, and on changes in inventories of
goods for resale. With these data, the margin output of all wholesale
and retail trade operations of affiliates call be estimated. Because it
would be problematic to assume that foreign affiliates of U.S. companies
behaved similarly to their U.S. counterparts, BEA also plans to propose
that these two questions be added to the 2004 benchmark survey of U.S.
direct investment abroad.
Financial services
Financial services are an important contributor to the U.S surplus
on trade in services. In 2001, U.S. exports of financial services were
$14.5 billion; U.S. imports of financial services were much smaller, at
$3.9 billion.
Sales by affiliates classified in finance are an important
component of sales of services through affiliates. In 1999, sales to
foreigners by foreign affiliates in finance were $25.4 billion, or 7.6
percent of total sales of services to foreigners by foreign affiliates.
Sales to U.S. residents by U.S. affiliates in finance were $15.3
billion, or 5.3 percent of total sales of services to U.S. residents by
U.S. affiliates.
BEA's data on financial services cover those services for
which explicit fees or commissions are charged. However, the data only
partly capture the value of services for which payment is implicit--that
is, reflected in differences between rates charged to borrowers and
rates paid to depositors and other lenders or in differences between
buying and selling rates for financial assets. In addition, the data on
cross-border trade include services provided by banks, but the data on
sales through affiliates do not.
Cross-border trade
BEA's data on trade in financial services include explicit
commissions and fees for a wide variety of services, including funds
management, credit card services and other credit-related activities,
and transactions in securities. The estimates of cross-border trade also
include the value of two services that are only measured indirectly:
Implicit commissions and fees for bond trading and underwriting. For
example, the services provided by an underwriter, who brings securities
to market by buying them from the issuer at an agreed price and
reselling them to investors, are remunerated by the margin generated
from these transactions.
Other implicitly charged financial services are not included in
BEA's estimates of cross-border trade in financial services. For
example, one of the ways in which financial institutions charge
implicitly for services is by paying lower interest rates to those who
lend them money (in the form of deposits and loans) than they charge to
those who borrow from them. The resulting net receipts of interest are
used to defray expenses and provide an operating surplus. Because
financial institutions do not charge explicitly for these services,
their values must be imputed.
The guidance for compiling statistics on trade in services offered
by the SNA, BPM5, and the MSITS differs on the treatment of these
unpriced financial services. The SNA, which refers to these unpriced
financial services as "financial intermediation services indirectly
measured" (FISIM), states:
The total value of FISIM is measured in the System as the total property
income receivable by financial intermediaries minus their total interest
payable, excluding the value of any property income receivable from the
investment of their own funds, as such does not arise from financial
intermediation. Whenever the production of output is recorded in the System
the use of that output must be explicitly accounted for elsewhere in the
System. Hence, FISIM must be recorded as being disposed of in one or more
of the following ways--as intermediate consumption by enterprises, as final
consumption by households, or as exports to non-residents. (23)
The allocation to nonresidents would appear as exports of FISIM in
the foreign transactions account of the SNA. (24)
In compiling the NIPA's, BEA imputes a value for
"services furnished without payment by financial intermediaries except life insurance carriers and private noninsured pension
plans" which consists of the net property income received by
depository institutions less the monetary interest paid by them to
depositors. (25) BEA then allocates a portion of the imputed value of
the "services provided without payment by financial
intermediaries" to the rest of the world. (26) In 2001, this
allocation was $22.9 billion; including it in the estimate of exports of
financial services would have more than doubled that estimate from $14.5
billion.
In contrast to the SNA, BPM5 excludes the imputed value of
"services provided without payment by financial
intermediaries" from exports and imports of financial services
because of concerns that it would be impractical to collect the
necessary data to impute a value for cross-border trade in these
unpriced services. Including these unpriced services in the estimates of
trade in financial services in the ITA's would raise the value of
exports and imports of financial services and would result in offsetting
adjustments to the receipts and payments of interest. (27) Consistent
with BPM5 recommendations, BEA excludes "services provided without
payment by financial intermediaries" in its recording of
cross-border trade in financial services in the ITA's. (However,
consistent with the recommendations of the SNA, it includes the
allocation of these unpriced services to the rest of the world in the
foreign transactions account of the NIPA's.)
MSITS provides memorandum items for "services provided without
payment by financial intermediaries" and for financial services
including these unpriced services. These items were included both to
provide as complete a picture as possible of trade in financial
services--irrespective of whether the services are charged
explicitly--and because of concerns that, over time, financial
institutions may change how they charge for some services. (28) In
addition, the memorandum items should facilitate international
comparisons because financial institutions in some countries may charge
explicitly for services that are only charged implicitly by institutions
in other countries.
BEA is currently conducting research directed at improving the
estimates of "services provided without payment by financial
intermediaries" that are allocated to nonresidents in the
NIPA's (that is, exports of these services) and is considering
whether and how to introduce estimates of these services in the
ITA's. In addition, BEA will consider the issues involved in
estimating imports of "services provided without payment by
financial intermediaries" which would be required if estimates of
these unpriced financial services were to be included in the ITA's.
Sales through affiliates
The data on sales through affiliates, like those on cross-border
trade, include explicit commissions and fees for financial services and
implicit commissions and fees for underwriting and bond trading. To
allow for a more comprehensive estimate of the value of "services
provided without payment by financial intermediaries" BEA is
proposing to collect data on the total interest received and paid by
U.S. bank affiliates on the 2002 benchmark survey of foreign direct
investment in the United States. BEA is also considering adding these
data items to the 2004 benchmark survey of U.S. direct investment abroad
in order to estimate the value of services provided without payment by
foreign bank affiliates.
The estimates of sales of services through affiliates cover nonbank
affiliates only. Because most of the information on bank affiliates that
is needed for policymaking purposes is already reported to other U.S.
Government agencies, BEA collects only limited data from bank affiliates
in its surveys of direct investment. However, the absence of banks in
the data causes a potentially large gap in the coverage of financial
services sold through affiliates and an understatement in total sales of
services. To close this gap, BEA is proposing that data on sales of
services through U.S. bank affiliates be collected, beginning with the
2002 survey of foreign direct investment in the United States. Parallel
coverage of services sold through foreign affiliates in banking will be
considered for the 2004 benchmark survey of U.S. direct investment
abroad.
Construction
For cross-border trade, construction services currently are
combined with a number of other services--specifically, engineering,
architectural, and mining services. In 2000, U.S. exports of these
services had a combined value of $5.3 billion, computed as $7.9 billion
in gross operating revenues less foreign expenses of $2.3 billion and
less $0.4 billion of related U.S. exports of goods. (29) U.S. imports
were $0.4 billion, which represents gross operating revenues paid to the
foreign providers of these services, without deductions for U.S.
expenses or related U.S. imports of goods.
Sales by affiliates in construction are recorded as gross operating
revenues, unreduced by any items of expenses. In addition, they are
recorded as sales of goods rather than as sales of services, reflecting
the tangible nature of the outputs produced as well as the treatment of
construction in the NIPA's. In the data on sales through
affiliates, "sales of services" by affiliates classified in
construction reflect sales in secondary, nonconstruction, industries. In
1999, U.S. companies' majority-owned foreign affiliates in
construction sold to foreign persons $14.2 billion of goods and $0.7
billion of services. For foreign companies' majority-owned U.S.
affiliates in construction, sales of goods to U.S. persons were an
estimated $24.1 billion, and sales of services were $2.5 billion. (30)
For construction, three measurement issues are considered: (1)
Differences between the data on cross-border trade and the data on sales
through affiliates in the treatment of construction as a good or a
service, (2) the combination of construction with other activities in
the data on cross-border trade, and (3) differences between the two data
sets in methods of recording (gross or net). These are discussed in turn
below.
As noted, construction is treated as a service in the data on
cross-border trade, while in the data on sales by affiliates, sales in
construction are treated as sales of goods. This inconsistency has
arisen from differences in the standards and precedents being followed
in the respective series. In the international guidelines for recording
cross-border trade, construction is treated as a service. In contrast,
construction is treated as a goods-producing industry in BEA's
GDP-by-industry series. The treatment of construction as goods-producing
in national accounts statistics is made in recognition of the tangible
and visible nature of the industry's outputs (buildings, highways,
et cetera). The treatment of construction as a service in statistics on
cross-border trade reflects traditional rules for balance of payments
accounting, which include, with only a few exceptions, as trade in goods
only those transactions that pass through customs. Further, construction
is often treated as a service activity in other contexts. For example,
within U.S. Government agencies responsible for trade policy,
construction is covered by offices that deal with trade in services,
perhaps because trade in construction often involves the movement of
people as well goods across borders and because construction is grouped
with services in trade negotiations. In addition, construction is listed
as a service in a sectoral classification list used in connection with
the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS). (31) To meet the
various needs of diverse users, while at the same time maintaining
consistency with practices in national accounts, one possibility would
be to include memorandum lines in the annual services article that show
sales of goods by affiliates in construction.
A second measurement issue involving construction concerns its
grouping with other types of economic outputs in the data on
cross-border trade. Up until now, the grouping of construction with
architectural, engineering, and mining services has been necessitated by
the combination of these activities in BEA's benchmark and annual
surveys of selected services transactions between U.S. persons and
unaffiliated foreigners, which are the sources of data on U.S.
cross-border imports of construction. For several years, these
activities have been collected separately for U.S. cross-border exports.
Beginning with the benchmark survey covering 2001, imports of these
services are also being reported in three separate categories, covering
(1) construction, (2) engineering, architectural, and surveying
services, and (3) mining services. After the collected data have been
evaluated, BEA will consider whether construction can be shown
separately from the other services, as is recommended by international
guidelines and as done in the series on sales through affiliates.
A third issue for construction relates to the method of recording.
For U.S. cross-border exports, construction is recorded not as the gross
receipts from performing construction work abroad, but as gross receipts
less expenses or disbursements made abroad--such as for labor,
materials, purchased services, and taxes--and less U.S. exports of goods
made in connection with the projects being reported. Although this
method of recording could be said to highlight the services aspects of
the transactions, it is inconsistent with international guidelines and
with BEA statistics on construction imports, which are recorded on a
gross basis. (Data on the U.S. expenses and goods imports of foreign
contractors operating in the United States are not directly collected
but are believed to be small.) Construction sales through affiliates,
while treated as sales of goods, likewise are recorded on a gross basis,
unreduced by any items of expense.
The two international guidelines for recording cross-border
services transactions--BPM5 and MSITS--each recommend that construction
transactions be recorded on a gross basis and in a separate category.
These recommendations can be outlined for the case of construction
abroad by domestic contractors. Both BPM5 and MSITS call for recording
the contractors' gross operating revenues derived from the
fulfillment of foreign contracts as exports of construction services. In
addition, they recommend that the values of any project-related exports
of goods that are reflected in these revenues be deducted from exports
of goods, to avoid duplication. Finally, they recommend that the
contractors' foreign expenses be recorded as services imports.
Construction in the domestic economy carried out by foreign contractors
is treated symmetrically.
The differences among BEA's current method and the methods of
BPM5 and MSITS can be illustrated using U.S. data on exports for the
combination of services for which estimates currently are provided. In
2000, U.S. exports of engineering, architectural, construction, and
mining services were recorded as net receipts of $5.3 billion, which was
derived as gross operating revenues of $7.9 billion less exports of
goods of $0.4 billion and foreign expenses of $2.3 billion. Under both
the BPM5 and MSITS recommendations, exports of these services would be
recorded as the $7.9 billion in gross operating revenues, and exports of
goods would be reduced by $0.4 billion. The $2.3 billion in foreign
expenses would be recorded as a services import. (32)
It could be argued that the methods recommended by the
international guidelines better portray the two-way nature of
cross-border construction activities and are more consistent with gross
output definitions and with the general principle of recording
current-account transactions on a gross basis. However, one issue that
must be considered before such a method is adopted concerns the
deduction of project-related exports from exports of goods. For some
purposes, there may be value in recording all exports of goods together,
whether related to construction projects or not. In this way, it is
possible to discern the portion of domestic goods production that is
being supplied to foreign countries, irrespective of how the goods are
used abroad. One option that would meet the international guidelines,
while at the same time maintaining information on total U.S. shipments
of goods, would be to continue to present the current measure of exports
and then enter an adjustment to eliminate the construction-related
exports.
Utilities
The utilities sector comprises businesses engaged in the provision
of electric power, natural gas, water supply, and sewage treatment. The
output of this sector is composed of the goods provided (for example,
electric power or natural gas) and the services provided in delivering
those goods to consumers. BEA's estimates of cross-border trade and
those of sales through affiliates differ in their treatment of
utilities. In the estimates of cross-border trade, BEA follows the
recommendation of BPM5 and treats trade in products such as electricity
and natural gas as trade in goods. However, in the estimates of sales
through affiliates, the sales of the utilities sector are treated in
their entirety as sales of services. In 1999, sales of services to U.S.
residents by majority-owned U.S. affiliates in utilities were $19.0
billion. In 1998, sales of services to foreigners through majority-owned
foreign affiliates in utilities were $27.3 billion. (33)
BEA is attempting to refine its treatment of utilities in its data
on sales through affiliates in order to separate--to the extent
possible--the value of goods provided from the value of services
provided by this sector. On the 2002 benchmark survey of foreign direct
investment in the United States, BEA is proposing that utilities that
can break out the value of transmission and distribution services report
these as sales of services and report the value of the product that is
distributed as sales of goods. If this initial effort were successful,
BEA would also plan to incorporate these changes in the surveys of U.S.
direct investment abroad, beginning with the benchmark survey for 2004.
Conclusion
This article has attempted to address a number of measurement
issues with respect to BEA's data on U.S. international sales and
purchases of services. It focused on five categories of
services--insurance, wholesale and retail trade, finance, construction,
and utilities. In several cases, options for improving the data were
identified. In some of these, additional data collection that would
support implementation of the improvements has recently begun or has
been proposed. In others, suggestions have been made for changes in
definition and methodology that would result in more useful measures;
some of these changes would require close coordination with the
NIPA's and with BEA's industry accounts. Finally, some of the
issues have been discussed in the article with the objective of
providing methodological information for the benefit of data users. As
time and resources permit, BEA will continue to improve its data on
international services.
Technical Note
This technical note consists of two parts. First, the method for
recording nonlife insurance in the ITA's under an average-claims
methodology is illustrated. Second, detailed descriptions of the two
methods used to estimate the value of distributive services in wholesale
trade provided by U.S. affiliates are presented.
ITA recording mechanisms for insurance
As explained in the section on insurance, if insurance services are
estimated using an average-claims methodology, entries must be made not
only under the account for trade in services but also under another
account. According to existing international guidelines, this other
account is, for nonlife insurance, "current transfers" and,
for life insurance, the "financial account." Because most U.S.
international insurance transactions involve nonlife insurance and
because life insurance cannot be separately identified using currently
available source data, it has been assumed in illustrating how the
various insurance-related transactions would be entered in the
ITA's under the existing guidelines that all of the insurance is
nonlife insurance. (34)
If, as with the measure currently used by BEA, insurance exports or
imports are measured as premiums less actual claims, then the required
entries in transfers consist of equal debit and credit entries, because
the transfers to and from the insurance companies are the same. (35)
Because current transfers are shown in the U.S. accounts on a net basis,
whether or not these offsetting entries are made is immaterial, as they
would neither appear in published tables nor affect larger aggregates.
However, if insurance services are measured as premiums less average
claims, then these entries become essential to avoid statistical gaps.
An example will illustrate what is involved.
Take the following case of nonlife insurance sold by domestic
carriers to foreigners:
Premiums received: $100
Claims paid: $80
-$100 (debit)
Banking flows: and +$80 (credit)
Assumed average share, computed
over some time period, of
premiums not paid out in claims: 35 percent
Using the current measure of insurance services--premiums less
actual claims--but making the entries in current transfers that are
called for by BPM5 would yield the following entries in the ITA's:
Credits Debits
Current account:
Insurance exports $20
Current transfers $80 $80
Financial account:
Banking flows $80 $100
Sum of all flows $180 $180
As can be seen, the debit and credit entries for current transfers
are identical, so their entry is immaterial in a presentation that shows
only net current transfers.
Under an average-claims methodology, the entries would be:
Credits Debits
Current account:
Insurance exports $35
Current transfers $65 $80
Financial account:
Banking flows $80 $100
Sum of all flows $180 $180
Here, the debit and credit entries for current transfers are no
longer equal. Rather, there is a $15 difference between the $65 in
credits (derived as premiums ($100) minus exports ($35)) and the $80 in
debits (claims paid). Because of this difference, the transfers must be
recorded--whether on a net or a gross basis--to avoid a statistical
discrepancy. (36)
Table 2 illustrates the two methods using U.S. data for 1986--2001
and measuring the average share of premiums not paid out in claims as a
5-year moving average. Table 3 summarizes the current-account entries
and includes the current-account balance for insurance under both
methods for the years for which the alternative recording method could
be applied. The table also shows the current-account balance for
insurance, which is the same under both methods of recording.
Estimates of distributive services in wholesale trade provided by
affiliates
As discussed in the section on wholesale and retail trade, two
alternative methodologies were used to generate estimates of the
distributive services in wholesale trade provided by U.S. affiliates of
foreign companies. Detailed derivations of these estimates are presented
below. Similar estimates could be constructed for the value of
distributive services in retail trade provided by U.S. affiliates.
The two estimates are constructed using data collected in the 1997
benchmark survey of foreign direct investment in the United States.
Because many affiliates have operations in multiple industries, it is
necessary to use the data reported by industry of sales, rather than the
sales data based on the primary industry of the affiliates. In the
classification by industry of sales, an affiliate's sales are
distributed across all industries in which it operated. For affiliates
classified in wholesale or retail trade, the industry of sales data
separate the sales in wholesale or retail trade from the sales
associated with other activities. Likewise, for affiliates that are
classified in other industries but have secondary operations in
wholesale or retail trade, the industry of sales data can be used to
estimate sales that are attributable to their wholesale trade
operations.
Method 1: Distributive services can be measured either as sales of
goods less the cost of goods resold or as the sum of value added and the
cost of intermediate inputs (excluding the cost of goods resold). BEA
estimates the value added of affiliates but is unable to estimate the
cost of intermediate inputs with the data currently collected, because
the cost of goods resold is commingled with other costs and expenses.
However, a measure of the cost of intermediate inputs can be constructed
using the I-O accounts for the U.S. economy.
The "Use of Commodities" table from the I-O accounts
decomposes total U.S. industry output into two components--value added
and intermediate inputs (excluding the cost of goods resold). (37) The
estimates for wholesale trade from the annual I-O accounts for 1997 are
shown below:
Billions Percentage
of dollars of the total
Intermediate inputs 271.8 33.8
Value added 532.5 66.2
Total industry output 804.3 100.0
The I-O accounts show that for every $1 of value added, the typical
wholesaler used $0.51 of intermediate inputs. Under the assumption that
the relationship between intermediate inputs and value added was the
same for U.S. affiliates as for domestic industries, this ratio and the
estimates of value added of affiliates in wholesale trade can be used to
estimate the margin output of these affiliates. (38)
The estimate of margin output is constructed in two phases. First,
the trade margin of affiliates in wholesale trade is estimated. Then,
the trade margin of affiliates that are classified in other industries
but have secondary operations in wholesale trade is estimated.
Affiliates classified in wholesale trade in 1997 had value added of
$49.4 billion. However, some of the affiliates in wholesale trade had
sizable secondary operations in other industries, primarily in
manufacturing. Therefore, it is necessary to estimate the portion of
value added that was attributable solely to wholesale trade operations.
For this purpose, the share of whole sale trade in the affiliates'
total employment was taken as an indicator of this industry's share
of total value added. In 1997, affiliates in wholesale trade reported 54
percent of their employment in wholesale trade; the remainder was in
other industries. Multiplying the $49.4 billion in total value added by
0.54 yields $26.7 billion of estimated value added attributable to the
affiliates' wholesale trade operations.
To estimate the intermediate inputs, the value added in wholesale
trade operations is multiplied by the industry-wide ratio of
intermediate inputs to value added from the U.S. I-O accounts ($0.51 of
intermediate inputs for every $1 of value added). This yields an
estimate of the intermediate inputs for U.S. affiliates of $13.6
billion. The estimate of the value of distributive services for
affiliates in wholesale trade is then the sum of the value added and the
intermediate inputs, or $40.3 billion. Sales in wholesale trade by these
affiliates were $421.1 billion. Therefore, for every $1 in sales by
affiliates in wholesale trade, 9.6 cents is estimated to be attributable
to distributive services.
Wholesale trade sales by affiliates classified in other industries
amounted to $68.3 billion in 1997. Under the assumption that the rate of
9.6 cents of distributive services for every $1 of sales also applies to
these sales, the distributive services for these operations is estimated
at $6.5 billion. Adding the two estimates of distributive services
yields a total of $46.8 billion.
Once the total value of distributive services provided by U.S.
affiliates has been estimated, it is necessary to estimate the portion
provided to U.S. residents. Because distributive services are tied to
the sale of goods, it can be assumed that the portion of distributive
services provided to U.S. residents is proportionate to the share of
local sales in the total sales of goods. In 1997, affiliates in
wholesale trade sold 88 percent of their goods locally and exported the
remaining 12 percent. Applying the former percentage to the estimate of
distributive services yields an estimate of $41.2 billion of
distributive services provided to U.S. residents.
Method 2: An alternative way to estimate the trade margins of U.S.
affiliates' wholesale trade operations is by combining the data
collected by BEA on affiliates' sales by industry with the Census
Bureau's estimates of margin rates.
Column 1 of table 4 shows the Census Bureau estimates of margin
rates by four-digit North American Industry Classification System
(NAICS) industry. (39) These industries correspond to the NAICS-based
classifications used by BEA in its surveys of foreign direct investment.
The margin rate is defined as gross margin as a percentage of sales,
where gross margin is total sales less the cost of goods resold. The
rates vary across industries within wholesale trade. For example, motor
vehicle wholesalers had lower margin rates than furniture wholesalers.
Because the estimate uses data on sales by subindustries within
wholesale trade, it is not necessary to assume that the distribution of
U.S. affiliates across the wholesale trade industries was the same as
the distribution of domestic firms across these industries, but it is
necessary to assume that U.S. affiliates operated with the same margin
rates as domestic firms in the same industry. However, there are reasons
for believing that affiliates' margin rates may differ from those
of their domestic counterparts. For example, the average U.S. affiliate
of a foreign company is likely to be larger than the average domestic
firm, so if wholesalers with a higher volume of sales operate with
narrower margins, then affiliates may have lower margin rates than their
domestic counterparts.
Column 2 of table 4 shows the sales of U.S. affiliates in each
wholesale trade industry, and column 3 shows the value of distributive
services calculated by multiplying the sales by the margin rates. The
total estimated value of the distributive services is $96.6 billion. To
estimate the share provided to U.S. residents, this total is multiplied
by 0.88 (the share of goods sold locally by affiliates in wholesale
trade), yielding an estimate of the value of distributive services of
$85.0 billion, or slightly more than double the $41.2 billion estimate
constructed under the first method.
The difference between the two estimates reflects methodological
differences as well as differences in the data that were available to
generate the estimates. The first method, which used data on value added
reported by U.S. affiliates and estimated their intermediate inputs,
yielded an estimated margin rate of 9.6 percent, which is much lower
than the margin rates for all U.S. wholesalers that were assumed to
apply to the U.S. affiliates under the second method. Because the first
method uses data reported by the affiliates on their value added (which
is estimated to account for a majority of their total output) and
because U.S. affiliates probably operate with lower margins than their
domestic counterparts, it is likely that the actual value of the
distributive services provided by U.S. affiliates is closer to the lower
figure and that the $85.0 billion estimate is an overestimate.
Nevertheless, the disparity between the two estimates suggests that
directly collected data are required for accurate estimates of the value
of distributive services provided by affiliates to be constructed.
What are Insurance Services?
"Insurance" is generally understood to refer to
arrangements that reduce risk by transferring cost or liability
associated with particular contingencies to another party in exchange
for a payment, or "premium." A dictionary definition of
insurance is "coverage by contract whereby one party undertakes to
indemnify or guarantee another against loss by a specified contingency or peril." (1) The System of National Accounts, 1993 (SNA)
describes insurance as activity "intended to provide individual
institutional units exposed to certain risks with financial protection
against the consequences of the occurrence of specified events."
(2)
From the perspective of most policyholders, the value of insurance
derives mainly from its protection against catastrophic loss. For most
policyholders, insurance policies are essential. Lenders normally
require proof of insurance from households and businesses, investors
look for and auditors "test" for insurance coverage,
government regulators mandate various types of coverage, and prudent
businesses and households seek out various types of liability
protection. Insurance also reduces the need for expenditures that
households and businesses may otherwise undertake to reduce their
individual risk. Insurance companies may provide a number of types of
insurance contracts, in order to provide businesses and households with
the different types of coverage that they need.
The services provided by insurance companies can be viewed as a
combination of services that pool risk and services that provide
financial intermediation. The intermediary role of an insurance company
derives from the requirement to hold reserves in order to cover
extraordinary losses. These reserves are invested, and the investment
income earned is used to defray operating expenses or increase reserves,
thus enabling lower premiums to be charged. In addition, for whole life
insurance, the policy itself may have an explicit component of saving.
In most periods, the premiums received (plus investment income
earned) provide funding for a continuing "normal" or expected
level of insurance claims and insurance services, plus an amount that is
added to reserves. In other periods, withdrawals must be made out of
reserves for extraordinary losses. Therefore, after taking into account
investment income, premiums must be set to cover the expected costs of
providing the services, settling claims, and establishing or maintaining
reserves against future claims. When catastrophes occur, such as those
associated with the recent terrorist attacks (in the third quarter of
2001) or with Hurricanes Andrew and Iniki (in the third quarter of
1992), premiums net of claims in the period may even turn negative,
though policyholders continue to receive a positive stream of real
insurance services.
(1.) Merriam Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, tenth ed.
(Springfield, MA: Merriam-Webster, Inc., 1996).
(2.) SNA, paragraph 6.135.
Appendix: Improvements to BEA's Data on U.S. International
Services, 1982-2001
1982: Sales by affiliates were broken down between sales of goods
and sales of services for the first time in the 1982 benchmark survey of
U.S. direct investment abroad. Industry codes for this survey and other
BEA surveys of direct investment were revised to provide additional
detail for services industries.
1984: Legislation under which data on investment had been
collected--the International Investment Survey Act of 1976--was
broadened to cover trade in services. The Act was redesignated as the
International Investment and Trade in Services Survey Act.
1986: A new benchmark survey of selected services transactions
between U.S. persons and unaffiliated foreign persons was conducted for
this year. The initial survey covered 18 types of services--mainly
business, professional, and technical services--for which coverage was
lacking or was incomplete. (Over time, more types of services have been
added to this survey and its annual follow-on survey (see below).)
1987: An annual follow-on survey to the benchmark survey of
selected services transactions was instituted.
Other BEA services surveys were brought under the International
Investment and Trade in Services Survey Act.
Estimates of medical services receipts were introduced into the
ITA's, based on information obtained through consultations with the
industry.
A survey that previously had covered only reinsurance transactions
was expanded to cover sales of primary insurance.
1989: Estimates of expenditures of foreign students in the United
States and of U.S. students abroad were introduced into the ITA's.
A variety of outside sources were used to derive the estimates.
1990: In the presentation of the current account,
"services" were redefined to exclude investment income. This
redefinition aligned the term more closely with general usage and was
consistent with work then underway to harmonize the classification
systems of foreign sector accounts in the International Monetary
Fund's Balance of Payments Manual and the United Nations'
System of National Accounts.
The first of what became an annual series of articles on U.S.
international sales and purchases of services was published in the
September issue of the SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS. The article provided
more detail than that found in the ITA's, and it included data on
services delivered through foreign affiliates as well as data on
services trade in the conventional sense of exports and imports.
1992: Trade in services between affiliated enterprises began to be
recorded on a gross basis. Previously, services transactions between
U.S. parent companies and their foreign affiliates had been netted and
recorded under services exports, while similar transactions between U.S.
affiliates of foreign companies and their foreign parents had been
netted and recorded under services imports. This treatment obscured the
two-way flows of intrafirm services trade and caused an understatement
of total exports and imports of services. The adoption of a gross
methodology for recording these transactions was implemented both for
royalties and license fees and for transactions recorded in the
"other private services" account.
Better source data improved the coverage and accuracy of the
travel, passenger fares, and transportation accounts. Partner-country
data began to be used in developing estimates of travel transactions
with Mexico. New estimates of U.S. international cruise transactions, of
interline settlements between U.S. and foreign airlines, and of U.S.
rail carriers' revenues for transporting foreign-owned goods
shipped through the United States from one foreign destination to
another were introduced.
Results of the second benchmark survey of "Selected Services
Transactions with Unaffiliated Foreign Persons," covering 1991,
were presented. The coverage of the benchmark survey was expanded by
introducing a new exemption criterion and by adding several new types of
services.
1994: Monthly estimates of U.S. international services transactions
were introduced in a joint news release with the Bureau of Census on
"U.S. International Trade in Goods and Services." The release,
which replaced a Census Bureau release on trade in goods, responded to
the increased emphasis placed on services by economic analysts and
policymakers and the need for more timely measures of services
activity'. It provided a few highly aggregated series on services,
which were mainly estimated using indicator series.
1995: Estimates of freight charges for the transportation of goods
by truck between the United States and Canada were introduced. The
addition of these charges recognized the following: The impact of
deregulation in the United States and Canada in the 1980s, which opened
truck transportation in each country to the other's carriers; the
growing importance of transportation of goods by truck as the volume of
U.S.-Canadian trade expanded; and the encouragement of commerce between
the United States and Canada due to the U.S.-Canada Free Trade Agreement
(1989) and the North American Free Trade Agreement (1993).
1996: More accurate and complete estimates of transactions in
financial services were introduced, based on BEA's first
"Benchmark Survey of Financial Services Transactions Between U.S.
Financial Services Providers and Unaffiliated Foreign Persons." The
estimates replaced partial estimates that had been prepared by indirect
methods. The benchmark survey covered 1994 and was to be repeated every
5 years. A less comprehensive annual survey of financial services was
instituted beginning with 1995 to provide survey coverage for
non-benchmark years.
1997: Results of the third "Benchmark Survey of Selected
Services Transactions with Unaffiliated Foreign Persons" were
released. The survey, which covered 1996, provided data that filled gaps
in several new, growing, and volatile services categories.
Several improvements to the transportation estimates were made by
incorporating newly available source data. Census Bureau data on freight
charges for the transportation of goods by truck between the United
States and Canada replaced BEA projections that were previously used to
estimate truck receipts and payments. In addition, estimates of
foreign-operated ocean carriers' expenses in U.S. ports were
revised to reflect newly available detail--obtained from a BEA survey of
ocean transportation--on the types of expenses incurred in U.S. ports by
foreign ocean carriers.
1998: Computer software royalties and license fees were
reclassified to royalties and license fees from "other private
services." The purpose of the reclassification was to better
reflect the nature of these transactions as involving intangible assets
and to combine them with other such transactions.
"Operational leasing of transportation equipment without
crew" was reclassified from the transportation accounts to
"other private services." This reclassification consolidated most types of operational leasing in one account, and it is consist with
international guidelines. The reclassification reflected the
availability of improved source data--from BEA's surveys of
selected services--on leasing of other types of equipment.
New detail on intrafirm trade in services that identified some of
the specific types of services traded within multinational firms was
published. This detail was first collected in the 1994 benchmark survey
of U.S. direct investment abroad and was presented in the final data
publication for that survey. An annual series was introduced in the 1998
article on U.S. international sales and purchases of services. (Similar
data for U.S. affiliates were first collected on the 1997 benchmark
survey of foreign direct investment in the United States.)
1999: Compensation of employees, which was previously included
indistinguishably in services, was reclassified to the income account to
achieve consistency with international guidelines.
Improved estimates of medical services provided to foreign
residents at U.S. hospitals were introduced. The new estimates used both
an improved methodology and newly available source data.
Estimates of U.S. residents' expenditures while traveling
overseas were revised to incorporate the results of a one-time survey by
D.K. Shifflet & Associates covering 1998. The results of the survey,
which was completed by U.S. residents after they returned from their
trip, were compared with the results of the International Trade
Administration's in-flight survey, which BEA uses to estimate U.S.
travelers' expenditures and which is completed by travelers upon
their departure. BEA used the data from the Shifflet survey to develop
adjustment factors that can be applied to the in-flight survey data.
2000: Improved estimates were introduced for several items,
including financial services, non-compensation expenditures of foreign
embassies and consulates and of international organizations in the
United States, and expenditures of temporary nonagricultural workers in
the United States. The improvement in the estimates of financial
services reflected the incorporation of the 1999 benchmark survey of
financial services transactions.
2001: For the benchmark survey of selected services transactions
with unaffiliated foreigners covering 2001, the instructions were
revised to make clear that transactions related to e-commerce and
Internet-related transactions were to be covered. A new category was
added for trade-related services to cover such services as online
auctions. Instructions on other services surveys were similarly revised,
as appropriate, when they came up for renewed clearance.
Estimates of intrafirm trade in services for U.S. affiliates of
foreign companies were presented for the first time, and a new table of
intrafirm trade in services by type that better integrated these data
with the ITA's was introduced.
Table 1. Summary of Measurement Issues for Five Types of Services
Channel of Possible action to
Service delivery Issue address the issue
Insurance Cross-border Above- or below- Reflect claims as a
trade average claims may proportion of
cause variations in premiums (or as
the measure of the average claims),
service--premiums rather than actual
less claims--that claims.
are unrelated to
changes in the level
of services provided.
Premiums are recorded Record premiums
net of commissions, gross of
though international commissions, and
guidelines call for record the
gross recording. commissions
separately as
services auxiliary
to insurance.
Data on other Collect more
services auxiliary to complete data, and
insurance are record in a new,
incomplete and are separate category.
recorded under other
services categories.
Sales Sales largely reflect Collect separate
through premium income, with data on premiums
affiliates no deduction for and claims;
claims. The value of construct measures
the service is that net claims from
consequently premiums.
overstated relative
to the measures used
for cross border
trade and for
domestic output.
Both Services implicit in Construct estimates
channels income derived by and include them in
insurance companies measures of
on reserves held insurance services.
against future claims
are not included.
Wholesale Cross-border Distributive services Construct rough
and retail trade provided in estimates using
trade connection with trade information from the
in goods are not U.S. input-output
identified as such, accounts.
but are included
indistinguishably in
the value of the
goods.
Sales Distributive services Collect data on cost
through are not identified of goods resold and
affiliates separately, but are use them to
included in the value construct estimates
of goods sold through of distributive
affiliates. services.
Financial Cross-border Estimates exclude the Conduct research
services trade value of some into improving the
financial services methodology for
provided without estimating exports
explicit charge. of these services
and developing a
methodology for
estimating imports
of these services.
Sales Data do not include Collect data from
through any information on bank affiliates on
affiliates services supplied by sales of services,
bank affiliates. both explicit
commissions and fees
and information
needed to estimate
the value of
unpriced services.
Construction Cross-border The category is Collect the data as
trade commingled with a separately
architectural, reported category.
engineering, and
mining services.
Recording is on a net Adopt a method of
basis for exports. gross recording, if
Related exports of deemed desirable
goods and foreign after taking into
expenses are deducted account the
from operating adjustments that
revenues. would have to be
International made totrade in
guidelines specify goods to avoid
gross recording. double counting of
project-related
goods exports.
Imports are not While information on
adjusted for foreign the expenses of
contractors' expenses foreign contractors
in the United States, is unavailable,
and these expenses estimates might be
are not recorded constructed based on
elsewhere in the the relationships
accounts. between expenses and
operating revenues
reported for
exports.
Both The treatment of The present
channels construction as a treatment is
good or as a service consistent with
is inconsistent international
between the two existing
channels: guidelines.
Construction is
treated as a service
in the international
transactions
accounts, but as a
goods-producing
industry in the data
on sales through
affiliates.
Utilities Sales The sales of services Ask affiliates to
through include the value of report the value of
affiliates the good (for the product that is
example, electricity) distributed as sales
that is being sold as of goods and the
well as the services value of the
provided in distribution
distributing that services as sales
good. of services, if
possible.
Service Channel of Effect on the Steps taken;
delivery estimates future plans
Insurance Cross-border Reduce volatility Work toward
trade stemming from implementing an
unusually high or low average claims
claims. The average approach has begun,
effect on trade flows with a goal of
would be small, but introducing revised
the effect in estimates in 2003.
particular periods Coordinate
could be sizable. statistics,
implementation with
domestic statistics.
Raise exports and Surveys have been
imports of insurance revised to collect
by equal, and premiums gross of
probably by commissions and to
relatively small, collect commissions
amounts. as part of a new
category for
services auxiliary
to insurance.
Raise exports and A new reporting
imports of insurance, category has been
probably by added for services
relatively small auxiliary to
amounts, partly insurance.
offset by reductions
offset by services.
Sales Substantially reduce Proposals have been
through insurance services developed to collect
affiliates sold through separate data on
affiliates. premiums and claims
on BEA surveys.
Both Raise exports and Conduct further
channels imports of insurance research on
and raise insurance developing
sold through methodology and
affiliates. identifying data
sources.
Coordinate
implementation with
domestic statistics,
which currently also
exclude these
services.
Wholesale Cross-border These services were The estimates in the
and retail trade estimated at about 4 previous column
trade percent of the value would not be
of both U.S. exports deducted from trade
of goods and U.S. in goods, but would
imports of goods in be made available as
2001. supplementary
information for
analytical purposes.
Sales Raise significantly Proposals have been
through the sales of services developed to collect
affiliates through affiliates in data on the goods
wholesale and retail purchased by
trade. affiliates for
resale, which would
enable estimates of
margin output to be
developed.
Financial Cross-border Raise significantly Research is being
services trade the value of cross- conducted into
border trade in developing a
financial services. methodology for
estimating the value
of cross-border
trade in these
unpriced services.
Sales Raise significantly Proposals have been
through the estimates of developed to collect
affiliates sales through data on sales of
affiliates in services by bank
financial services. affiliates and on
interest received
and paid by these
affiliates.
Construction Cross-border None, but the service Data have recently
trade will be separately begun to be reported
identifiable in the separately for
data. construction.
Raise significantly This issue will
the value of trade in remain under review.
construction.
However, the
increases would
reflect grossing
within the accounts
that would be offset
by other, new
entries, rather than
reflecting the
closure of any gaps
in coverage.
The amounts involved The feasibility of
are believed to be constructing
small. estimates on foreign
contractors' U.S.
expenses will be
reconsidered after
the more
disaggregated data
(see above)
have been reviewed.
Both None. The present
channels treatment is
consistent
with existing
international
guidelines. However,
consideration will
be given to
including memorandum
lines in tables on
sales of services
through affiliates
to show sales of
"goods" in
construction.
Utilities Sales Lower the estimate of Proposals have been
through sales of services developed to request
affiliates through affiliates. that the value of
the product be
reported to BEA as
sales of goods and
that the value of
the distribution
services be reported
as sales of
services, if
possible.
Table 2. Insurance Entries Under Current Recording Based on Actual
Claims and Under Alternative Recording Based on Average Claims
[Millions of dollars]
Share of premiums
not paid out in claims
Premiums Claims Current Average
year (1) for last
(percent) 5 years (2)
(percent)
(1) (2) (3) (4)
Insurance sold (exports):
1986 3,424 2,039 40.4 ...
1987 3,615 2,042 43.5 ...
1988 3,534 2,687 24.0 ...
1989 3,117 3,015 3.3 ...
1990 3,388 3,158 6.8 ...
1991 3,365 2,874 14.6 23.6
1992 3,852 3,170 17.7 18.4
1993 3,981 2,961 25.6 13.3
1994 4,921 3,245 34.1 13.6
1995 5,491 4,195 23.6 19.8
1996 5,929 3,761 36.6 23.1
1997 6,118 3,645 40.4 27.5
1998 7,278 5,054 30.6 32.1
1999 7,282 5,983 17.8 33.0
2000 8,898 6,486 27.1 29.8
2001 9,855 6,646 32.6 30.5
Insurance purchased (imports):
1986 7,217 5,017 30.5 ...
1987 8,538 5,297 38.0 ...
1988 8,954 6,326 29.4 ...
1989 9,909 9,086 8.3 ...
1990 10,222 8,312 18.7 ...
1991 11,207 8,740 22.0 25.0
1992 11,738 10,414 11.3 23.3
1993 12,093 8,998 25.6 17.9
1994 14,075 10,041 28.7 17.2
1995 15,284 9,925 35.1 21.2
1996 14,522 10,637 26.8 24.5
1997 15,211 9,338 38.6 25.5
1998 20,398 11,158 45.3 30.9
1999 21,568 18,362 14.9 34.9
2000 27,923 18,734 32.9 32.1
2001 32,021 30,680 4.2 31.7
Measure of exports Addendum: Current
or imports transfers
under alternative
recordings (5)
Under
Under current alternative
recording (3) recording (4) Credit Debit
(5) (6) (7) (8)
Insurance sold (exports): ... ... ...
1986 1,385 ... ... ...
1987 1,573 ... ... ...
1988 847 ... ... ...
1989 103 ... ... ...
1990 230 ... ... ...
1991 491 794 2,571 2,874
1992 682 710 3,142 3,170
1993 1,020 528 3,453 2,961
1994 1,676 669 4,252 3,245
1995 1,296 1,085 4,406 4,195
1996 2,168 1,371 4,558 3,761
1997 2,473 1,683 4,435 3,645
1998 2,224 2,333 4,945 5,054
1999 1,299 2,406 4,876 5,983
2000 2,412 2,651 6,247 6,486
2001 3,209 3,006 6,849 6,646
Insurance purchased (imports):
1986 2,200 ... ... ...
1987 3,241 ... ... ...
1988 2,628 ... ... ...
1989 823 ... ... ...
1990 1,910 ... ... ...
1991 2,467 2,797 8,740 8,410
1992 1,324 2,731 10,414 9,007
1993 3,095 2,168 8,998 9,925
1994 4,034 2,417 10,041 11,658
1995 5,360 3,247 9,925 12,037
1996 3,885 3,561 10,637 10,961
1997 5,873 3,874 9,338 11,337
1998 9,240 6,310 11,158 14,088
1999 3,206 7,522 18,362 14,046
2000 9,189 8,968 18,734 18,955
2001 1,341 10,146 30,680 21,875
(1.) ((Column 1-column 2)/column 1) x 100.
(2.) Excludes the current year.
(3.) Column 1-column 2.
(4.) Column 1 x column 4.
(5.) Entries for current transfers under alternative recording. For
insurance sold, credit entries are premiums received less the
alternative measure of exports (that is, column 1-column 6); debit
entries are claims paid (column 2). For insurance purchased, credit
entries are claims recovered (column 2); debit entries are premiums
paid less the alternative measure of imports (that is, column 1-column
6), As noted in the text, under the current-recording method,
insurance-related transfer credits and debits net to zero, and so no
entry appears for net current transfers in the international
transactions accounts. For this reason, columns are not shown in the
table for current transfers under the current-recording method. If
they were, the figures for both credits and debits would equal those
shown as claims in column 2.
Table 3. Summary of Entries Under Current and Average Claims
Approaches, 1991-2001
[Millions of dollars]
Current approach
Current-
Exports Imports trans- Current-
fers account
(net) balance
1991 491 2,467 0 -1,976
1992 682 1,324 0 -642
1993 1,020 3,095 0 -2,075
1994 1,676 4,034 0 -2,358
1995 1,296 5,360 0 -4,064
1996 2,168 3,885 0 -1,717
1997 2,473 5,873 0 -3,400
1998 2,224 9,240 0 -7,016
1999 1,299 3,206 0 -1,907
2000 2,412 9,189 0 -6,777
2001 3,209 1,341 0 1,868
Average claims approach
(5-year averaging)
Current-
Exports Imports trans- Current-
fers account
(net) balance
1991 794 2,797 27 -1,976
1992 710 2,731 1,379 -642
1993 528 2,168 -435 -2,075
1994 669 2,417 -610 -2,358
1995 1,085 3,247 -1,901 -4,064
1996 1,371 3,561 473 -1,717
1997 1,683 3,874 -1,209 -3,400
1998 2,333 6,310 -3,039 -7,016
1999 2,406 7,522 3,209 -1,907
2000 2,651 8,968 -460 -6,777
2001 3,006 10,146 9,008 1,868
(1.) For any given year, equal to the sum of credit
entries for exports and imports in table 2 minus the sum
of debit entries for exports and imports in table 2.
Table 4. Margin Rates, Sales of U.S. Affiliates, and Estimated
Distributive Services of U.S. Affiliates by Wholesale Trade Industry,
1997
Margin Billions of dollars
rates
(percent)
Affiliates'
sales Distributive
by industry services
(1) (2) (3)
Total n.a. 489.4 96.6
Motor vehicles and motor
vehicles parts and supplies 21.1 98.7 20.8
Furniture and home furnishings 29.2 1.6 0.5
Lumber and other construction
material 18.5 8.4 1.6
Professional and commercial
equipment and supplies 23.5 38.9 9.1
Metals and minerals (except
petroleum) 20.2 39.5 8.0
Electrical goods 22.3 51.6 11.5
Hardware, and plumbing and
heating equipment and
supplies 24.8 5.0 1.2
Machinery, equipment, and
supplies 27.9 38.3 10.7
Miscellaneous durable goods 24.2 21.6 5.2
Paper and paper products 22.6 9.1 2.1
Drugs and druggists' sundries 14.0 12.0 1.7
Apparel, piece goods, and
notions 31.3 7.5 2.4
Grocery and related products 16.2 30.6 5.0
Farm product raw materials 8.5 32.1 2.7
Chemical and allied products 24.5 17.8 4.4
Petroleum and petroleum
products 9.2 55.5 5.1
Beer, wine, and distilled
alcoholic beverages 24.6 5.4 1.3
Miscellaneous nondurable goods 21.9 15.7 3.4
n.a. Not applicable.
NOTE. Estimates of distributive services for U.S. affiliates from
method 2 using margin rates estimated by the U.S. Census Bureau.
(1.) The first article in this series was Obie G. Whichard and
Anthony J. DiLullo, "U.S. International Sales and Purchases of
Services," SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 70 (September 1990): 37-72.
The most recent article was Michael A. Mann and Maria Borga, "U.S.
International Services: Cross-Border Trade in 2000 and Sales Through
Affiliates in 1999", SURVEY 81 (November 2001): 49-95.
(2.) Among the ongoing outside research activities are a Brookings
Institution research program on Productivity in the Services Sector,
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) expert
group meetings on trade-in-services statistics (held jointly with
Eurostat), and OECD task forces on finance and on insurance. BEA is
participating in all of these activities. In addition, BEA made
contributions to the forthcoming Manual on Statistics of International
Trade Services and has participated in meetings held over the years in
connection with periodic revisions to the International Monetary
Fund's Balance of Payments Manual (see footnote 3).
(3.) Guidance for compiling statistics on trade in services for
balance of payments accounts is provided in International Monetary Fund,
Balance of Payments Manual (BPMS), 5th ed. (Washington, DC: 1993). More
detailed guidance is provided in the forthcoming Manual on Statistics of
International Trade in Services (MSITS), which is being jointly
published by the Commission of the European Communities, International
Monetary Fund, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development,
United Nations, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, and
World Trade Organization. (As of June 2002, a substantively final, but
unedited, version of this manual was available on the United Nations
Statistics Division Internet site,
<http://esa.un.org/unsd/tradeserv/manual.asp>.) MSITS provides
guidance for compiling data on both cross-border trade in services and
services delivered through affiliates. For cross-border trade in
services, MSITS is consistent with BPM5 but is more detailed. For
services delivered through affiliates, MSITS' recommendations draw
on the international System of National Accounts (SNA) (Commission of
the European Communities, International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, United Nations, and World Bank,
System of National Accounts, 1993 (Brussels/Luxembourg, New York, Paris,
and Washington, DC, 1993)).
(4.) BEA does provide estimates of affiliates' output by
origin of the content--specifically, between the affiliate's own
value added and other content, with the latter being further broken down
into U.S. and foreign components. The content other than the
affiliate's own value added represents the affiliate's
purchased inputs of both goods and services. For content estimates
covering all nonbank U.S. and foreign affiliates, see the addenda to
table 1 in "An Ownership-Based Framework of the U.S. Current
Account," SURVEY 82 (April 2002): 27.
(5.) The estimates for 2001 reported in this article are
preliminary and do not reflect reported survey data for that year.
Revised estimates reflecting survey results will be published in the
July 2002 SURVEY.
(6.) In the ITA's and the NIPA's, current-dollar imports
included an estimate for the unusually high level of claims expected to
be recovered from foreign reinsurers. In the NIPA's, BEA treated
this estimate as a change in the corresponding implicit price for
insurance services, so real GDP was not affected. For details, see the
boxes "The Terrorist Attacks of September 11th as Reflected in the
National Income and Product Accounts," SURVEY 81 (November 2001):
2-3; and "Effects of September 11th Terrorist Attacks on U.S.
International Transactions," SURVEY 82 (January 2002): 31.
(7.) The use of accruals means that premiums are reported as
premiums are earned and claims are reported as losses are sustained,
rather than these items being reported on the basis of cash flows
involving premiums and claims. For ease in exposition, in the remainder
of this section, premiums and claims are referred to as being
"received" and "paid," but it is with the
understanding that these terms refer to accruals rather than actual cash
flows. The use of accruals is consistent with international statistical
guidelines and--for other services as well as for insurance--helps to
ensure that services are recorded against the periods in which they are
provided.
(8.) Some analysts have suggested measures of insurance output that
are based on gross rather than net premiums, but for reasons of
consistency with the economic-accounting guidelines and the U.S.
NIPA's, these are not considered here as options for measuring
cross-border services transactions. For further discussion and
references to other literature, see Jack E. Triplett and Barry P.
Bosworth, "Productivity in the Services Sector," in Services
in the International Economy, ed. Robert M. Stern (Ann Arbor: University
of Michigan Press, 2001): 23-52, and Mark K. Sherwood, "Output of
the Property and Casualty Insurance Industry," Canadian Journal of
Economics: 32 (April 1999): 518-546.
(9.) In the NIPA's, the current-dollar gross output of a
property and casualty insurance carrier is defined as net premiums
received, or gross premiums received less claims paid. For a life
insurance carrier, premiums (which may include an element of saving) and
benefits are disregarded. Instead, the output is measured in terms of
the carrier's operating expenses and profits.
(10.) As discussed later, investment income earned on insurance
companies' reserves also would be considered in setting premiums.
(11.) In economic-accounting literature, "life" insurance
excludes term insurance and thus covers only insurance in which there is
an element of saving and the eventual payment of a benefit is a
certainty. Term life insurance may or may not result in a claim,
depending on whether or not a specified contingency materializes; in
this regard, it is like property and casualty insurance, with which it
is grouped.
(12.) See paragraph 257 of BPM5. For additional details and
discussion, see Peter Harper, "Recording Insurance Transactions in
the Balance of Payments," International Monetary Fund Statistics
Department, Working Paper no. 95/72, July 1995. Other views of the
economic character of these items, and thus of the appropriate account
in which to record them, may also be legitimate. For example, claims
resulting from catastrophes could be regarded as capital transfers
rather than current transfers, and there may be flows in addition to
those associated with whole life insurance that might be appropriately
recorded as financial account transactions. It is beyond the scope of
this article to evaluate such alternatives to the current international
standards. However, the treatment of these items in national accounts
statistics is among the issues being studied by an Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development's task force on insurance. In
any implementation of an alternative approach to measuring insurance
services, either domestically or internationally, BEA will consider the
various treatments that have been suggested, in addition to the
treatments outlined in the current standards.
(13.) Table 2 is intended as an illustration of the average-claims
methodology. In any actual application of the methodology, a variety of
implementation issues would have to be addressed, including whether to
estimate separate ratios for different types of insurance or for
different geographic areas, the number of years used in the moving
average, the specific type of moving average (for example, a simple
average as used here or a weighted average), and the treatment of
outliers.
(14.) The negative $7.9 billion figure is a preliminary estimate
that is based largely on press reports and industry information. A
revised estimate based on survey data will be published in the July
SURVEY.
(15.) On BEA's survey of international insurance transactions,
reporters identify their principal line of insurance (life, property and
casualty, or "other"), but many companies provide multiple
lines of insurance, and many companies whose principal line is reported
as life insurance primarily provide term insurance, whose recordation in
the accounts should parallel that of property and casualty insurance.
(16.) The SNA (paragraph 7.123) indicates that technical reserves
"consist of the actuarial reserves against outstanding risks in
respect of life insurance policies, including reserves for with-profit
policies which add to the value on maturity of with-profit endowments or
similar policies, prepayments of premiums and reserves against
outstanding claims." The SNA excludes income derived from the
investment of the insurance company's own funds from its measure of
insurance output.
(17.) For U.S. exports of insurance, for example, a share of U.S.
insurance companies' income on technical reserves (perhaps
calculated in proportion to premiums from foreigners relative to total
premiums) would be treated as a part of exports of insurance and would
be offset in the accounts by an imputed payment of investment income to
nonresidents. This method of recording these transactions would reflect
the view that the income accrues to the foreign policyholders (hence the
entry under payments of income), who then use it to provide supplements
to premiums to the domestic (U.S.) insurance carriers, thus raising the
measure of insurance services exported.
(18.) Although auxiliary services other than commissions are not
specifically mentioned in BPM5, the MSITS characterizes its definition
as "a disaggregation of the BPM5 classification."
(19.) For example, data on claims adjustment services were
collected as a part of legal services, and data on actuarial services
were collected as part of a residual ("other") category that
also included other services.
(20.) The inclusion of investment income in the measure of sales of
services by affiliates in insurance could raise sales significantly,
judging from the data for 1999 on sales by affiliates. These data show
that, for majority-owned foreign affiliates classified in insurance,
investment income accounted for $19 billion of gross operating revenues
of $68 billion, and for majority-owned U.S. affiliates classified in
insurance, investment income accounted for $35 billion of gross
operating revenues of $133 billion. While some of these amounts could
have been derived from operations in secondary industries, such as
finance, or may not qualify as "income on technical reserves,"
they nonetheless point to the significance of this type of income.
(21.) Sherlene K.S. Lum and Brian C. Moyer, "Gross Domestic
Product by Industry for 1998-2000," SURVEY 81 (November 2001): 20.
(22.) According to the 1997 Economic Census (U.S. Census Bureau,
Wholesale Trade Subject Series, Miscellaneous Subjects, EC97W42S-SB,
Washington, DC, 2001), U.S. wholesalers exported about 37 percent of
total U.S. exports of goods. Under the assumption that U.S. wholesalers
accounted for the same share of exports of goods in 2001 as they did in
1997, it is estimated that in 2001 U.S. wholesalers arranged for the
export of about $270 billion of goods. Assuming that the rate of 9.6
cents of distributive services for every $1 of sales estimated for U.S.
affiliates (derived in the "Technical Note") applies to these
wholesalers, the value of distributive services supplied by wholesalers
in the support of goods exports was about $26 billion. No data are
available for the share of imports arranged by foreign wholesalers.
However, under the assumption that the same share of goods was imported
through foreign wholesalers as was exported through U.S wholesalers,
then foreign wholesalers arranged about $425 billion of imports of goods
in 2001. Assuming the same rate of 9.6 cents of distributive services
for every $1 of sales for foreign wholesalers implies distributive
services of about $41 billion.
(23.) SNA, paragraph 6.125.
(24.) For cross-border trade in services, a parallel imputation would be made of imports of FISIM by residents from nonresident
financial institutions. However, it is not necessary to estimate imports
of FISIM when estimating GDR because imports of FISIM are not included
in the source data for consumption. (Generally, when estimating GDP, it
is necessary to remove the value of imports from the estimates of
private and government consumption and investment because the source
data of these components include purchases of imports.)
(25.) BEA also includes in the NIPA's the imputed values of
other services provided by financial intermediaries without explicit
charge, such as services furnished without payment by domestic
securities dealers and the expenses of handling life insurance and
private pension plans. For details on these imputations, see Bureau of
Economic Analysis, Personal Consumption Expenditures, Methodology Paper
MP-6, Washington, DC, June 1990: 9-12 (www.bea.gov/bea/mp.htm).
(26.) The allocation to the rest of the world is based on the share
of checking and savings deposits that are foreign-owned. BEA assumes
that financial intermediaries pay, as interest, the difference between
the property income earned on the investment of deposits and the
interest paid to depositors, who then use it to purchase the services
for which they do not pay an explicit service charge. That is, the
depositors, and not the borrowers, pay all implicit service charges.
Therefore, a corresponding upward adjustment (equal to the exports of
"services provided without payment by financial
intermediaries") is made to income payments to the rest of the
world representing these imputed payments of interest to foreign
depositors. For more on the estimation and allocation of these unpriced
services, see Brent R. Moulton, "Measurement of Banking Services in
the U.S. National Income and Product Accounts: Recent Changes and
Outstanding Issues," presented to the BEA Advisory Committee, May
5, 2000 (www.bea.gov/bea/papers/bank.pdf).
(27.) This discussion assumes that both borrowers and depositors
purchase "services provided without payment by financial
intermediaries." For purchases of these unpriced services by
borrowers, some of the interest nonresident borrowers pay on their loans
would be recharacterized as purchases of these unpriced financial
services. For purchases of "services provided without payment by
financial intermediaries" by depositors, it would be assumed that
depositors receive, as interest, an amount equal to their purchases of
these unpriced services. The imputed values for interest paid to
depositors and their purchases of these unpriced services would raise
the estimates of both receipts of interest and payments for financial
services (or payments of interest and receipts for financial services)
by equal amounts.
(28.) For example, if financial institutions begin to charge
explicitly for services that had previously been charged implicitly,
financial services excluding these unpriced services would show growth
greater than if there had been no change in charging policies.
(29.) The apparent discrepancy is due to rounding.
(30.) Sales of goods by U.S. affiliates are not collected according
to the location of the customer, but an estimate was made by subtracting
exports of goods from total sales of goods.
(31.) See GATT Secretariat, "Services Sectoral Classification
List," document MTN.GNS/W/120,Geneva, GATT, 1991. (The list is
reproduced in MSITS, Annex 6.) The GATS, which became effective in
January 1995, is the principal World Trade Organization agreement on
trade in services. It has been described as "the first set of
legally enforceable disciplines and rules ever negotiated and agreed at
the world level to cover international trade in services" (MSITS,
paragraph 2.5).
(32.) Under BPM5, the expenses would be recorded as an import of
"other business services." Under MSITS, they would be recorded
as an import of construction services, listed opposite the operating
revenues under the heading "construction abroad."
(33.) The 1998 estimate of these sales is given because the 1999
estimate had to be suppressed to avoid the disclosure of data of
individual companies.
(34.) Were the nonservice entries to be treated differently (see
footnote 12), similar entries would still be made, but in different
accounts.
(35.) Transfers to insurance companies consist of the portion of
premiums not recorded as insurance exports or imports--that is, premiums
minus the difference between premiums and claims. Algebraically, this
amount is simply equal to claims, which represent transfers from
insurance companies.
(36.) The ITA's are based on double-entry accounting
principles, under which all of the entries related to a given
transaction must sum to zero.
(37.) The "Use of Commodities" table shows the
commodities that are consumed in production by each industry.
(38.) Even if the relationship between intermediate inputs and
value added of affiliates differs significantly from that of domestic
industries, the impact will be lessened by the fact that the
intermediate inputs--the portion of output that must be
estimated--represent only about one-third of total output.
(39.) See U.S. Census Bureau, Current Business Reports, Series
BW/01-A, Annual Benchmark Report for Wholesale Trade: January 1992 to
February 2002, Washington, DC, 2002.