Annual Revision of the National Income and Product Accounts.
Moulton, Brent R. ; Seskin, Eugene P. ; Sullivan, David F. 等
Annual Estimates, 1998-2000 Quarterly Estimates, 1998:I-2001:I
IN this issue of the SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS, the Bureau of
Economic Analysis (BEA) presents revised estimates of the national
income and product accounts (NIPA's) for 1998-2000 and the first
quarter of 2001.(1) As is usual in annual NIPA revisions, these
estimates incorporate source data that are more complete, more detailed,
and otherwise more appropriate than those that were previously
incorporated. In addition, several methodological and presentational
changes have been made.
Overall, the picture of the U.S. economy for the 3-year period
covered by the revised estimates is similar to that shown by the
previously published estimates. Both sets of estimates show strong
growth in the U.S. economy, reflecting strength in consumer spending and
business investment, and low inflation. In addition, both sets of
estimates show a slowdown in economic growth beginning in the second
half of 2000.
The most important differences between the revised and the
previously published estimates for 1998-2000 are the following:
* The growth rate of real gross domestic product (GDP) from 1997 to
2000 was revised down from 4.5 percent to 4.2 percent. The largest
contributors to the downward revision were downward revisions to the
growth of investment in software, which accounted for about one-half of
the revision, and of personal consumption expenditures (PCE), which
accounted for about one-third.
* For 2000, the revised estimates show real GDP growth of 4.1
percent; the previous estimate was 5.0 percent (chart 1). Lower
inventory investment accounted for about one-third of the downward
revision; lower software investment and lower PCE for services each
accounted for about one-fourth.
[GRAPHS OMITTED]
* For 2000, wage and salary accruals was revised up 1.4 percent,
and corporate profits from current production was revised down 7.4
percent. Compensation of employees as a percent of gross domestic income
was revised up to 57.1 percent from 56.1 percent.
* The decline in the personal saving rate from 1997 to 2000 was
less steep in the revised estimates, falling to a rate of 1.0 percent
for 2000; in the previously published estimates, the rate had been -0.1
percent for 2000. In contrast, the national saving rate for 2000 was
revised down only slightly, as the upward revision to personal saving
was more than offset by downward revisions to government and business
saving.
The revised estimates also incorporated several important changes
in methodology and presentation:
* Much of the source data from Government agencies is now reported
on the basis of the North American Industry Classification System
(NAICS) instead of the Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) system.
This change did not, by itself, affect the estimates of GDP or of other
aggregates, but it did affect the detailed estimates of private
inventories by industry, which are now presented on a NAICS basis.(2)
* Quarterly estimates of fixed investment in prepackaged and custom
software have been improved by using data on receipts from company
reports to the Securities and Exchange Commission and data on monthly
retail sales of business software from a trade source.
* The estimates of communication equipment in private fixed
investment incorporate a newly available price index from the Federal
Reserve Board that reflects quality improvements to local area network
equipment--routers, switches, and hubs.
* A new NIPA table, table 8.30, presents the contributions of the
major components of gross domestic purchases to the percent change in
the gross domestic purchases price index.
The first section of this article discusses the impact of the
revisions on key NIPA measures of economic activity, and the second
section provides a summary of the revisions and the major source data
underlying them. The third section describes the changes in the
methodology used to prepare the estimates, and the fourth section
discusses several changes in the presentation of the NIPA tables.
Appendix A shows, in current dollars, the revised annual estimates and
the revisions for the five summary accounts of the NIPA's. Tables
presenting most of the revised monthly, quarterly, and annual NIPA
estimates and the "advance" estimates for the second quarter
of 2001 follow this article (a list of these tables begins on page 34).
In addition, tables presenting historical estimates for GDP and other
major NIPA series from 1929 forward begin on page 129.
Impact of the Revisions
According to the revised estimates, the economy grew at a slower
rate than was indicated by the previously published estimates: From the
fourth quarter of 1997 to the first quarter of 2001, the growth rate
(average annual rate of change) of real GDP was revised down 0.3
percentage point to 3.8 percent (table 1). This growth rate still
exceeds the average growth over the current economic expansion; from the
cyclical trough in the first quarter of 1991 to the first quarter of
2001, the growth rate of real GDP was 3.5 percent (revised down 0.1
percentage point from 3.6 percent). In the revised estimates, equipment
and software investment, PCE for goods, PCE for services, nonresidential structures, imports of goods and services, change in private
inventories, and Federal Government nondefense consumption expenditures
and gross investment (Federal nondefense spending) were all weaker;
residential investment, exports of goods and services, and Federal
defense spending were stronger; State and local spending was little
revised.
The percent change from the preceding year for real GDP was revised
down for all 3 years: From 4.4 percent to 4.3 percent for 1998, from 4.2
percent to 4.1 percent for 1999, and from 5.0 percent to 4.1 percent for
2000. The revisions for 1998 and 1999 were smaller than average, and the
revision for 2000 was considerably larger than average. (In the annual
NIPA revisions since 1979, the revisions to the annual
estimates--without regard to sign--have averaged 0.3 percentage point.)
On a fourth-quarter-to-fourth-quarter basis, the increase in real
GDP during 1998 was revised up from 4.6 percent to 4.8 percent, the
increase during 1999 was revised down from 5.0 percent to 4.4 percent,
and the increase during 2000 was revised down from 3.4 percent to 2.8
percent.
Both the revised and the previously published estimates show that
real GDP increased in each quarter of the revision period (from the
first quarter of 1998 to the first quarter of 2001). Within this period,
the revisions to the quarterly estimates of real GDP growth for 2000
were particularly notable: For the first quarter, down 2.5 percentage
points to 2.3 percent; for the second quarter, up 0.1 percentage point
to 5.7 percent; for the third quarter, down 0.9 percentage point to 1.3
percent; and for the fourth quarter, up 0.9 percentage point to 1.9
percent. In terms of indicating whether the economy was picking up or
slowing down, the revised estimates mirror the previously published
estimates in 11 of the 13 quarters of the revision period. In the fourth
quarter of 2000, the revised estimates show an acceleration, and the
previously published estimates showed a deceleration; in the first
quarter of 2001, the revised estimates show a deceleration, and the
previously published estimates showed an acceleration.(3)
The revised estimates show about the same rate of increase in
prices as that shown by the previously published estimates. From the
fourth quarter of 1997 to the first quarter of 2001, the average annual
rate of increase in the price indexes for both gross domestic purchases
and GDP was unrevised at 1.8 percent (table 2). The percent change from
the preceding year for the price index for gross domestic purchases was
unrevised at 0.8 percent for 1998, was revised down from 1.6 percent to
1.5 percent for 1999, and was revised up from 2.4 percent to 2.6 percent
for 2000.
Summary of the Revisions
In general, revisions to real GDP reflect four factors: (1)
Revisions to the current-dollar components of GDP for which
chained-dollar estimates are prepared by deflation, (2) revisions to the
prices used in deflation, (3) revisions to the quantities used to
estimate components of real GDP by extrapolation or direct valuation,
and (4) revisions resulting from the use of revised and updated weights
in the calculation of real GDP.(4)
The first part of this section describes the revisions to the
percent changes in the annual estimates of real GDP and its major
components, and the second part describes the revisions to the quarterly
estimates. The third part describes the revisions to the current-dollar
NIPA estimates and discusses the sources of these revisions. The fourth
part describes the revisions to the annual price estimates.
Annual real GDP estimates
The annual percent change in real GDP was revised down 0.1
percentage point to 4.3 percent for 1998, was revised down 0.1
percentage point to 4.1 percent for 1999, and was revised down 0.9
percentage point to 4.1 percent for 2000 (table 3).
For 1998, the largest contributors to the downward revision to real
GDP growth were fixed investment in equipment and software investment
and change in private inventories; the contributions of these components
were partly offset by an upward revision to PCE for services. For 1999,
the largest contributors to the downward revision to real GDP growth
were equipment and software investment and PCE for nondurable goods; the
contributions of these components were partly offset by an upward
revision to change in private inventories. For 2000, the largest
contributors to the downward revision to real GDP growth were change in
private inventories, equipment and software investment, PCE for
services, nonresidential structures, and PCE for nondurable goods; the
contributions of these components were partly offset by upward revisions
to exports of services and to residential investment and by a downward
revision to imports of goods (which is subtracted in the calculation of
GDP).
Revisions to the components of real GDP.--The annual percent change
in real PCE was revised up 0.1 percentage point to 4.8 percent for 1998,
was revised down 0.3 percentage point to 5.0 percent for 1999, and was
revised down 0.5 percentage point to 4.8 percent for 2000 (table 4). For
1998, the upward revision was mostly accounted for by small upward
revisions within PCE for services, the largest of which was to
recreation. (Within PCE for nondurable goods, an upward revision to food
was largely offset by a downward revision to "other"
nondurable goods.) For 1999, the downward revision was mostly accounted
for by a downward revision to PCE for nondurable goods, mainly to
"other" nondurable goods, to food, and to clothing and shoes.
For 2000, the downward revision reflected downward revisions to PCE for
services and to PCE for nondurable goods. Within PCE for services, the
largest downward revisions were to "other" services and to
recreation. Within nondurable goods, the largest downward revision was
to "other" nondurable goods.
The change in nonresidential fixed investment was revised down for
all 3 years: 0.5 percentage point to 12.5 percent for 1998, 1.9
percentage points to 8.2 percent for 1999, and 2.7 percentage points to
9.9 percent for 2000. For 1998, equipment and software accounted for
most of the revision. Within equipment and software, the downward
revision was mainly to information processing equipment and software;
software more than accounted for the revision. For 1999, equipment and
software also accounted for most of the revision. Within equipment and
software, the downward revision was more than accounted for by downward
revisions to the major components of information processing equipment
and software (computers and peripheral equipment, software, and
"other" information processing equipment). For 2000, both
equipment and software and nonresidential structures were revised down.
Within equipment and software, the revision was primarily attributable
to the software component of information processing equipment and
software. Within nonresidential structures, the downward revision
reflected downward revisions to mining, exploration, shafts, and wells
and to nonresidential buildings.
The change in residential investment was revised down 0.3
percentage point to 8.0 percent for 1998, was revised up 0.3 percentage
point to 6.7 percent for 1999, and was revised up 1.3 percentage points
to 0.8 percent for 2000. For 2000, the revision was mainly to
improvements to residential structures.
The change in inventory investment was revised down $3.5 billion
(chained 1996 dollars) for 1998, was revised up $16.8 billion for 1999,
and was revised down $10.3 billion for 2000. For all 3 years, nonfarm
inventory investment accounted for most of the revisions. The estimates
of the change in private inventories are now presented on a North
American Industry Classification System (NAICS) basis; thus, for the
detailed estimates by industry, the revised estimates are not directly
comparable with the previously published estimates (see the section
"Changes in Methodology").
The change in exports of goods and services was revised down 0.2
percentage point to 2.1 percent for 1998, was revised up 0.3 percentage
point to 3.2 percent for 1999, and was revised up 0.5 percentage point
to 9.5 percent for 2000. For 2000, an upward revision to exports of
services was partly offset by a downward revision to exports of goods.
Within exports of services, the largest revision was to
"other" services. The revision to exports of goods was more
than accounted for by "other" goods.
The change in imports of goods and services was revised down for
all 3 years: 0.1 percentage point to 11.8 percent for 1998, 0.2
percentage point to 10.5 percent for 1999, and 0.1 percentage point to
13.4 percent for 2000. For 2000, the revision was more than accounted
for by imports of goods. Within imports of goods, downward revisions to
"other capital goods, except automotive" and to
"other" goods were partly offset by an upward revision to
"durable consumer goods, except automotive." (Within imports
of services, an upward revision to "other" private services
was largely offset by a downward revision to travel.)
The change in government consumption expenditures and gross
investment was revised down 0.2 percentage point to 1.9 percent for
1998, was unrevised at 3.3 percent for 1999, and was revised down 0.1
percentage point to 2.7 percent for 2000. For 2000, the largest downward
revision was to State and local government gross investment, reflecting
downward revisions to structures and to equipment and software.
Quarterly estimates
Revisions to the quarterly (and monthly) NIPA estimates reflect the
revisions to the annual estimates that resulted from the incorporation
of newly available annual source data, the incorporation of new and
revised monthly and quarterly source data (including the updating of
seasonal factors that are used to indicate quarterly patterns), and the
introduction of changes in methodology (see the section "Changes in
Methodology").
Although there were some notable revisions to the quarterly
estimates, both the revised and the previously published estimates show
strong growth in real GDP during 1998 and 1999 and a deceleration during
2000. For real GDP, the revisions to the 13 quarterly percent changes
(at annual rates) averaged 0.7 percentage point (without regard to
sign). (In the annual NIPA revisions since 1979, the revisions to the
quarterly estimates have averaged 0.8 percentage point.) The largest
downward revision to the percent changes in real GDP was 2.5 percentage
points, to 2.3 percent, for the first quarter of 2000 (table 5 and chart
2). This revision was largely attributable to PCE for services, to
imports of goods, to change in private inventories, to investment in
nonresidential structures, to PCE for durable goods, and to equipment
and software investment. The largest upward revision to the percent
changes in real GDP was 1.1 percentage points, to 6.7 percent, for the
fourth quarter of 1998. The largest contributor to the revision was an
upward revision to the change in nonfarm private inventories.
[GRAPHS OMITTED]
In general, the quarter-to-quarter pattern of changes in the
featured measure of prices on the revised basis was not markedly
different from that on the previously published basis. For gross
domestic purchases prices, the revisions to the 13 quarterly percent
changes (at annual rates) averaged 0.2 percentage point (without regard
to sign). The largest downward revision was 0.4 percentage point, to 1.5
percent, for the first quarter of 1999; prices of PCE for services
accounted for about one-half of the revision. The largest upward
revision was 0.4 percentage point, to 4.2 percent, for the first quarter
of 2000; prices of PCE for services and of residential investment
accounted for the revision.
Annual current-dollar estimates
Table 6 summarizes the current-dollar revisions to major NIPA
components. It provides a guide to the major revisions by identifying
the subcomponent series for which revisions were $4.0 billion or more
(absolute value) for any of the years covered by this annual revision
and by listing the major source data that underlie the revised
estimates. Note that the incorporation of new and revised source data
for a given year usually results in a revision to the level of an
estimate not only for that year but also for subsequent years.
This annual revision incorporated data primarily from the following
Federal statistical sources: Census Bureau annual surveys of State and
local governments for fiscal years 1998 and 1999, of manufactures, of
merchant wholesale trade, of retail trade for 1999, and of services for
1999 and 2000; Census Bureau monthly surveys of the value of
construction put in place for 1998-2000; Federal Government budget data
for fiscal years 2000 and 2001; Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
tabulations of income tax returns for corporations for 1998 and 1999 and
for sole proprietorships and partnerships for 1999; Bureau of Labor
Statistics (BLS) tabulations of wages and salaries of employees covered
by State unemployment insurance for 2000; U.S. Department of Agriculture
farm statistics for 2000; and BEA international transactions accounts
for 1998-2000.
Details about the sources of the major revisions to the NIPA
components begin on page 18.
Gross domestic product (GDP).--The level of current-dollar GDP was
revised down for all 3 years: $8.7 billion, or 0.1 percent, for 1998;
$30.6 billion, or 0.3 percent, for 1999; and $90.2 billion, or 0.9
percent, for 2000.
By major component, for 1998, downward revisions to equipment and
software investment and to change in private inventories were partly
offset by an upward revision to PCE for services. For 1999, downward
revisions to equipment and software investment, to PCE for nondurable
goods, and to Federal Government consumption expenditures and gross
investment were partly offset by an upward revision to change in private
inventories. For 2000, downward revisions to equipment and software
investment, to PCE for nondurable goods, to nonresidential structures,
to PCE for services, and to Federal Government consumption expenditures
and gross investment were partly offset by upward revisions to
residential structures and to exports of services.
PCE for goods.--PCE for goods was revised up $0.2 billion for 1998,
was revised down $14.6 billion for 1999, and was revised down $21.1
billion for 2000. For 1999 and 2000, downward revisions to "goods
other than motor vehicles and parts" were partly offset by upward
revisions to motor vehicles and parts.
"Goods other than motor vehicles and parts" was revised
up $0.2 billion for 1998, was revised down $18.6 billion for 1999, and
was revised down $28.2 billion for 2000. These revisions resulted from
the incorporation of revised 1998 and newly available 1999 annual data
for retail sales and food services sales and revised monthly sales data
for 2000.(5)
For 1999 and 2000, more than one-half of the revisions to
"goods other than motor vehicles and parts" was accounted for
by "other nondurable goods." Within "other nondurable
goods" the largest revisions were to magazines, newspapers, and
sheet music and to nondurable toys and sport supplies.
Motor vehicles and parts was revised down less than $0.1 billion
for 1998, was revised up $4.0 billion for 1999, and was revised up $7.1
billion for 2000. For 1999 and 2000, the revisions were primarily to new
trucks, reflecting the incorporation of newly available product
shipments data from the Census Bureau's annual survey of
manufactures for 1999 and the extrapolation of the revised 1999
estimates, using unit sales and price data from trade sources.
PCE for services.--PCE for services was revised up $5.0 billion for
1998, was revised down $3.9 billion for 1999, and was revised down $7.8
billion for 2000. For 1999, the revision was more than accounted for by
"other services." For 2000, the revision was more than
accounted for by recreation services.
For 1999, the largest downward revision within "other
services" was to personal business services and was primarily
accounted for by "services furnished without payment by financial
intermediaries except life insurance carriers."(6) Within this
category, the revisions were primarily to commercial banks and to
regulated investment companies. The revision to commercial banks was
based on revised data on assets by sector from the Federal Reserve Board
flow-of-funds accounts, and the revision to regulated investment
companies reflected the incorporation of expense data from IRS
tabulations of corporate tax returns.
For 2000, the downward revision to recreation services was
primarily accounted for by Internet service providers (ISP), reflecting
the incorporation of revenue and subscriber data from financial reports
filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and total ISP
subscriber data from a trade source.
Nonresidential structures.--Nonresidential structures was revised
down for all 3 years: $0.8 billion for 1998, $2.1 billion for 1999, and
$10.6 billion for 2000. For 2000, downward revisions to "petroleum
and natural gas well drilling and exploration" and to industrial
structures were partly offset by an upward revision to electric light
and power utilities. The revision to "petroleum and natural gas
well drilling and exploration" reflected newly incorporated trade
source data on drilling footage. The revisions to industrial structures
and to electric utilities primarily reflected the incorporation of
revised Census Bureau data on the value of construction put in place.(7)
Equipment and software.--Equipment and software was revised down
for all 3 years: $5.4 billion for 1998, $26.3 billion for 1999, and
$58.5 billion for 2000. The revisions were mostly accounted for by
downward revisions to software that resulted from the incorporation of
revised 1998 and newly available 1999 and 2000 data from the Census
Bureau's service annual surveys. (The improved methodology for the
quarterly estimates of prepackaged and custom software was not a source
of these revisions, because it only affects the quarterly pattern of the
revised software estimates and the extrapolation from the revised annual
levels; see the section "Changes in Methodology.")
Residential fixed investment.--Residential fixed investment was
revised down $1.0 billion for 1998, was revised down $0.3 billion for
1999, and was revised up $9.1 billion for 2000. For 2000, the revision
was accounted for by upward revisions to single-family structures and to
improvements to residential structures, reflecting revised Census Bureau
data on the value of construction put in place.(8)
Change in private inventories.--The change in private inventories
was revised down $3.9 billion for 1998, was revised up $15.3 billion for
1999, and was revised down $5.1 billion for 2000.(9) As part of this
annual revision, the change in private inventories estimates have been
converted to a North American Industry Classification System (NAICS)
basis from a Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) basis (see the
section "Changes in Methodology").
The revisions to the change in farm inventories were less than $1.5
billion (absolute value) for all 3 years.(10)
The change in private nonfarm inventories was revised down $4.1
billion for 1998, was revised up $16.6 billion or 1999, and was revised
down $4.7 billion for 2000. For 1999, the upward revision reflected
upward revisions to both the change in book value and the inventory
valuation adjustment (IVA). The revision to the change in book value
reflected newly available book value data from the Census Bureau annual
surveys and newly available tabulations of inventory book value data
from IRS tabulations of tax return data for corporations and for sole
proprietorships and partnerships for 1999. The upward revision to the
IVA reflected newly available information from the Census Bureau on the
accounting methods used in inventory reporting and revised BEA unit
labor cost indexes.
Net exports of goods and services.--Net exports of goods and
services was revised down $0.2 billion for 1998, was revised up $3.1
billion for 1999, and was revised up $6.7 billion for 2000. For 2000, an
upward revision to exports of services and a downward revision to
imports of goods were partly offset by a downward revision to exports of
goods and an upward revision to imports of services. The revisions to
exports and imports of goods primarily reflected the incorporation of
revised NIPA adjustments for U.S. territories and Puerto Rico (see
footnote 3 in NIPA table 4.5B). The revisions to exports and imports of
services reflected revised data from BEA's international
transactions accounts (ITA's) (see the section "Changes in
Methodology"). In addition, the revision to exports of services
reflected the incorporation of a revised NIPA adjustment for
"services furnished without payment by financial intermediaries
except life insurance carriers."
Government consumption expenditures and gross
investment.--Government consumption expenditures and gross investment
was revised down for all 3 years: $2.4 billion for 1998, $1.9 billion
for 1999, and $2.7 billion for 2000.
Federal Government consumption expenditures and gross investment
was revised down for all 3 years: $1.4 billion for 1998, $4.6 billion
for 1999, and $5.0 billion for 2000. For 1999 and 2000, the downward
revisions were accounted for primarily by nondefense consumption
expenditures and gross investment. For 2000, the revision reflected a
downward revision to gross investment that was partly offset by an
upward revision to consumption expenditures. The downward revision to
gross investment was accounted for by equipment and software, and the
upward revision to consumption expenditures was more than accounted for
by "other" services. The revisions primarily reflected revised
Federal budget data for fiscal year 2000, preliminary budget data for
fiscal year 2001, and newly available data on software from the Census
Bureau service annual surveys for 1999 and 2000.
State and local government consumption expenditures and gross
investment was revised down $1.0 billion for 1998, was revised up $2.7
billion for 1999, and was revised up $2.2 billion for 2000. For 2000, an
upward revision to consumption expenditures was mostly offset by a
downward revision to gross investment. Compensation of employees
accounted for most of the upward revision to consumption expenditures.
Both structures and equipment and software accounted for the downward
revision to investment. The revision to employee compensation primarily
reflected the incorporation of newly available BLS tabulations of wages
and salaries of employees covered by State unemployment insurance. The
revision to structures reflected revised Census Bureau data on the value
of construction put in place. The revision to equipment and software was
more than accounted for by software, reflecting newly available Census
Bureau service annual survey data on industry receipts.
Net receipts of income.--Net receipts of income from the rest of
the world, which is excluded from GDP but included in gross national
product, was revised up less than $0.1 billion for 1998, was revised up
$4.3 billion for 1999, and was revised down $7.8 billion for 2000. For
2000, a large upward revision to income payments to the rest of the
world was partly offset by an upward revision to income receipts from
the rest of the world. These revisions primarily reflected the
incorporation of the annual revision of the ITA's. The revised
estimates of income receipts primarily reflected improved estimates of
"other" private income receipts for banks and updated source
data; the revised estimates of income payments primarily reflected
improved estimates of "other" private income payments for
banks, improved estimates for nonbank liabilities to foreigners, and
updated source data (see the section "Changes in
Methodology").
Gross national product (GNP).--GNP was revised down for all 3
years: $8.6 billion, or 0.1 percent, for 1998; $26.4 billion, or 0.3
percent, for 1999; and $97.9 billion, or 1.0 percent, for 2000. The
differences between the revisions to GNP and those to GDP reflect the
revisions to net receipts of income.
Gross domestic income (GDI).--GDI, which measures the costs
incurred and the incomes earned in the production of GDP, was revised
down for all 3 years: $2.5 billion for 1998, $29.8 billion for 1999, and
$43.4 billion for 2000 (see the addenda to table 6).
For 1998, downward revisions to domestic corporate profits with
inventory valuation adjustment (IVA) and capital consumption adjustment
(CCAdj) and to consumption of fixed capital (CFC) were mostly offset by
upward revisions to domestic net interest and to supplements to wages
and salaries. For 1999, the downward revision to GDI reflected downward
revisions to domestic corporate profits with IVA and CCAdj, to CFC, and
to indirect business tax and nontax liability that more than offset
upward revisions to supplements to wages and salaries and to
proprietors' income with IVA and CCAdj. For 2000, the downward
revision to GDI reflected downward revisions to domestic corporate
profits with IVA and CCAdj, to domestic net interest, to CFC, and to
indirect business tax and nontax liability that more than offset upward
revisions to wage and salary accruals and to supplements to wages and
salaries. "Subsidies less current surplus of government
enterprises," which is subtracted in the calculation of GDI, was
revised up for all 3 years.
Statistical discrepancy.--Revisions to the statistical discrepancy
reflect the differences between the revisions to GDP and those to
GDI.(11) For all 3 years, the downward revisions to GDP were larger than
those to GDI. For 1998, the statistical discrepancy was revised from
-$24.8 billion to -$31.0 billion (from -0.3 percent to -0.4 percent of
GDP). For 1999, the statistical discrepancy was revised from -$71.9
billion to -$72.7 billion (revised less than 0.1 percentage point at
-0.8 percent of GDP). For 2000, the statistical discrepancy was revised
from -$83.7 billion to -$130.4 billion (from -0.8 percent to -1.3
percent of GDP).
Compensation of employees.--Compensation of employees was revised
up for all 3 years: $5.4 billion for 1998, $10.9 billion for 1999, and
$77.0 billion for 2000. For 1998 and 1999, the revisions were mostly
accounted for by upward revisions to other labor income. For 2000, the
very large upward revision was mostly accounted for by an upward
revision to wage and salary accruals, although an upward revision to
other labor income also contributed.
For 1998 and 1999, the upward revisions to other labor income were
mostly accounted for by revisions to employer contributions to pension
and profit-sharing plans that reflected newly available preliminary and
partial tabulations of data from IRS Form 5500 for 1998 and a
judgmental-trend estimate for 1999.
For 2000, the revision to wage and salary accruals was due to
upward revisions to private wages and salaries and to State and local
government wages and salaries, reflecting the incorporation of BLS
tabulations of wages and salaries of employees covered by State
unemployment insurance (UI).(12) The upward revision to other labor
income cannot be attributed to the same level of component detail as the
revisions for 1998 and 1999, because for 2000, the previously published
estimates were prepared at a less detailed level.
Proprietors' income with IVA and CCAdj.--Proprietors'
income with IVA and CCAdj was revised up for all 3 years: $3.1 billion
for 1998, $8.5 billion for 1999, and $4.6 billion for 2000. For 1998 and
1999, the upward revisions were primarily accounted for by nonfarm
proprietors' income.(13) For 2000, an upward revision to farm
proprietors' income was partly offset by a downward revision to
nonfarm proprietors' income.
Rental income of persons with CCAdj.--Rental income of persons with
CCAdj was revised up for all 3 years: $3.2 billion for 1998, $4.3
billion for 1999, and $1.6 billion for 2000.
Corporate profits with IVA and CCAdj.--Corporate profits with IVA
and CCAdj was revised down for all 3 years: $37.6 billion for 1998,
$30.8 billion for 1999, and $69.8 billion for 2000. Most of the downward
revisions were accounted for by profits before tax. For 1998, the CCAdj
was revised down, and the IVA was revised up. For 1999 and 2000, both
the CCAdj and the IVA were revised up. (For more information on the
CCAdj, see the entry "Consumption of fixed capital.")
Corporate profits before tax was revised down for all 3 years,
primarily reflecting downward revisions to domestic profits.
Rest-of-the-world profits was also revised down for 1998 and 2000; it
was revised up for 1999. The revisions to domestic profits primarily
reflected revised IRS tabulations of corporate tax returns for 1998,
newly available preliminary tabulations for 1999, and other data from
regular sources. In addition, the NIPA adjustment to corporate profits
that converts the treatment of expenditures on software from an expense
to an investment was revised down, reflecting the downward revisions to
investment in software.(14)
Net interest.--Net interest was revised up $29.2 billion for 1998,
was revised down $0.6 billion for 1999, and was revised down $34.5
billion for 2000.(15)
For 1998, the revision reflected a downward revision to monetary
interest received by domestic corporate business that was partly offset
by a downward revision to monetary interest paid by domestic corporate
business.
For 1999, downward revisions to monetary interest paid by domestic
nonfarm sole proprietorships and partnerships and to imputed interest paid by domestic business were mostly offset by a downward revision to
monetary interest received by domestic corporate business and an upward
revision to monetary interest paid by domestic nonfinancial corporate
business.
The revisions to monetary interest reflected revised and newly
available IRS tabulations of tax return data for corporations and for
sole proprietorships and partnerships. The revisions to imputed interest
reflected newly incorporated regular source data.
For 2000, the downward revision was attributable to the revised
1999 levels and newly incorporated regular source data from regulatory
agencies, particularly from the Federal Reserve Board flow-of-funds
accounts.(16)
Consumption of fixed capital (CFC).--CFC, which is the charge for
the using up of private and government fixed capital, was revised down
for all 3 years: $5.3 billion for 1998, $9.6 billion for 1999, and $15.8
billion for 2000. Relatively large downward revisions to the private
component of CFC and smaller downward revisions to the government
component reflected the incorporation of revised BEA estimates of fixed
investment, primarily for software, and of revised prices, primarily for
communication equipment. (The estimates of investment and prices are
direct inputs into the calculation of both private and government net
capital stocks, which are used to calculate the CFC.)
Private capital consumption allowances (CCA)--that is,
tax-return-based depreciation for corporations and nonfarm
proprietorships and historical-cost depreciation (using consistent
service lives) for farm proprietorships, rental income of persons, and
nonprofit institutions--was revised down $5.7 billion for 1998, was
revised up $6.7 billion for 1999, and was revised up $3.1 billion for
2000.
Private capital consumption adjustment (CCAdj), which is derived as
the difference between private CCA and private CFC, was revised down
$0.6 billion for 1998, was revised up $14.9 billion for 1999, and was
revised up $13.7 billion for 2000.
Nonfactor income.--Nonfactor income--which comprises indirect
business tax and nontax liability, business transfer payments, and
"subsidies less current surplus of government
enterprises"--was revised down for all 3 years: $0.3 billion for
1998, $8.3 billion for 1999, and $14.4 billion for 2000. For 1999 and
2000, the revisions primarily reflected downward revisions to indirect
business taxes and upward revisions to "subsidies less current
surplus of government enterprises" which is subtracted in
aggregating nonfactor incomes.
The revisions to indirect business taxes were mainly to State and
local indirect business taxes--specifically to general sales
taxes--reflecting newly available and revised data from Census Bureau
surveys of State and local governments.
The revisions to "subsidies less current surplus of government
enterprises" were mostly accounted for by the Federal Government
component--specifically by the current surplus of government enterprises
for the Postal Service--reflecting newly incorporated fiscal year 1999
financial data from the Postal Service and fiscal year 2001 Federal
budget data.
National income.--National income--income that originates from
production--was revised up $3.3 billion for 1998, was revised down $7.6
billion for 1999, and was revised down $21.1 billion for 2000. These
revisions reflected the previously described revisions to compensation
of employees, proprietors' income, rental income of persons,
corporate profits, and net interest.
Personal income and its disposition.--Personal income--income
received by persons from participation in production, from government
and business transfer payments, and from government interest--was
revised up $35.0 billion for 1998, was revised down $12.3 billion for
1999, and was revised up $37.5 billion for 2000. These revisions partly
reflected the previously described revisions to the components of
national income that are included in personal income--wage and salary
disbursements, other labor income, proprietors' income, and rental
income of persons--and to the components of personal income--personal
dividend income and personal interest income--that are derived from
related components of national income. The revisions also reflected
revisions to transfer payments to persons and to personal contributions
for social insurance.
Personal dividend income--which consists of dividend income
received by persons from all sources and which equals national income
dividends less dividends received by government--was revised down for
all 3 years: $2.8 billion for 1998, $27.2 billion for 1999, and $17.4
billion for 2000. These revisions reflected newly incorporated IRS
tabulations of corporate tax return data, the annual revision of the
ITA's, and data from public financial statements.
Personal interest income--which consists of monetary and imputed
interest received by persons from all sources and which equals net
interest plus interest paid by persons and interest paid by government
less interest received by government--was revised up $23.6 billion for
1998, was revised down $13.7 billion for 1999, and was revised down
$33.7 billion for 2000. These revisions reflected the previously
described revisions to net interest, and they also reflected upward
revisions to interest paid by government and downward revisions to
interest paid by persons that more than offset small upward revisions to
interest received by government. The only notable revision to interest
paid and received by government was an upward revision to State and
local government interest paid for 2000, reflecting newly available data
from Census Bureau surveys of State and local governments. Downward
revisions to interest paid by persons--$6.1 billion for 1998, $15.1
billion for 1999, and $6.9 billion for 2000--primarily reflected the
incorporation of Federal Reserve Board estimates of the effective rate
of interest paid on consumer debt (see the section "Changes in
Methodology").
Transfer payments to persons was revised up for all 3 years: $0.7
billion for 1998, $3.4 billion for 1999, and $1.3 billion for 2000.
Personal contributions for social insurance--which is subtracted in
calculating personal income--was revised up $0.1 billion for 1998, was
revised down $1.4 billion for 1999, and was revised down $3.0 billion
for 2000.
Personal tax and nontax payments was revised down $0.5 billion for
1998, was revised up $7.2 billion for 1999, and was revised down $3.7
billion for 2000. For 1999, an upward revision to State and local tax
and nontax payments accounted for most of the revision. For 2000, a
downward revision to Federal tax and nontax payments was partly offset
by an upward revision to State and local tax and nontax payments. The
revisions to State and local tax and nontax payments reflected new and
revised data from Census Bureau surveys of State and local governments.
The revision to Federal tax and nontax payments reflected newly
incorporated data from the Treasury Department and the Social Security
Administration.
Reflecting the revisions to personal income and to personal tax and
nontax payments, disposable personal income (DPI) was revised up $35.6
billion for 1998, was revised down $19.7 billion for 1999, and was
revised up $41.2 billion for 2000.
Personal outlays--PCE, interest paid by persons, and "personal
transfer payments to the rest of the world (net)"--was revised down
for all 3 years: $0.6 billion for 1998, $32.9 billion for 1999, and
$35.0 billion for 2000. For 1998, a downward revision to interest paid
by persons was mostly offset by an upward revision to PCE. For 1999 and
2000, the revisions were attributable to large downward revisions to PCE
and to interest paid by persons.
Personal saving--the difference between DPI and personal
outlays--was revised up for all 3 years: $36.1 billion for 1998, $13.3
billion for 1999, and $76.2 billion for 2000. For 1998, the revision
primarily reflected the upward revision to DPI. For 1999, the revision
reflected the downward revision to personal outlays that was partly
offset by the downward revision to DPI. For 2000, the revision reflected
the large upward revision to DPI and the large downward revision to
personal outlays. The revisions to the personal saving rate--personal
saving as a percentage of DPI--reflected the revisions to personal
saving. The rate was revised up from 4.2 percent to 4.7 percent for
1998, was revised up from 2.2 percent to 2.4 percent for 1999, and was
revised up from a negative 0.1 percent to 1.0 percent for 2000.
Gross saving and investment.--Gross saving was revised down for all
3 years: $7.2 billion for 1998, $10.2 billion for 1999, and $39.4
billion for 2000. Gross saving as a percentage of GNP was revised less
than 0.1 percentage point at 18.8 percent for 1998, was revised down 0.1
percentage point to 18.4 percent for 1999, and was revised down 0.2
percentage point to 18.1 percent for 2000.
For 1998, the downward revision to gross saving was primarily
attributable to gross government saving, reflecting a downward revision
to the Federal Government current surplus. Within gross private saving,
a large downward revision to undistributed corporate profits with IVA
and CCAdj and a downward revision to corporate CFC were offset by a
large upward revision to personal saving.
For 1999, the downward revision to gross saving reflected a
downward revision to gross government saving that was partly offset by
an upward revision to gross private saving. The downward revision to
gross government saving reflected downward revisions to the State and
local government current surplus and to the Federal Government current
surplus. Within gross private saving, an upward revision to personal
saving was partly offset by a downward revision to corporate CFC.
(Within undistributed corporate profits with IVA and CCAdj, which was
revised little, a downward revision to undistributed profits was largely
offset by upward revisions to the CCAdj and to the IVA.)
For 2000, a large downward revision to gross government saving was
partly offset by an upward revision to gross private saving. The
revision to gross government saving reflected large downward revisions
to the Federal Government current surplus and to the State and local
government current surplus. Within gross private saving, a large upward
revision to personal saving was partly offset by a large downward
revision to undistributed corporate profits with IVA and CCAdj and a
downward revision to corporate CFC.
Gross investment--the sum of gross private domestic investment,
gross government investment, and net foreign investment--was revised
down for all 3 years: $13.4 billion for 1998, $10.9 billion for 1999,
and $86.0 billion for 2000. The revisions were primarily accounted for
by downward revisions to gross private domestic investment for all 3
years and to gross government investment for 2000.
Annual price estimates
Revisions to the chain-type price indexes result from the
incorporation of newly available and revised source data, the
introduction of methodological changes that affect the use of source
data, and the regularly scheduled incorporation of annual weights for
the most recent year (2000). In this annual revision, the source data
for price indexes that were used for deflation and the source data that
affect implicit prices were revised.(17) Methodological changes included
a new price index for local area network equipment (see the section
"Changes in Methodology"). In addition, the prices used for
deflation reflected updated seasonal factors.
Newly available source data resulted in revisions to the implicit
prices for four types of PCE for services--automobile insurance, health
insurance, brokerage and investment charges, and "services
furnished without payment by financial intermediaries except life
insurance carriers"--and for Federal Government and State and local
government compensation of employees. The revisions to most of these
prices reflected the previously discussed revisions to the corresponding
current-dollar estimates.
The annual percent increase in the chain-type price index for gross
domestic purchases was unrevised at 0.8 percent for 1998, was revised
down 0.1 percentage point to 1.5 percent for 1999, and was revised up
0.2 percentage point to 2.6 percent for 2000 (see the addendum to table
7 and chart 1). For 1999 and 2000, the revisions to the annual percent
increase in the price index for GDP were the same as those to the price
index for gross domestic purchases. For 1998, the percent increase in
the price index for GDP was revised down 0.1 percentage point to 1.2
percent.
The largest contributor to the upward revision to the price index
for gross domestic purchases for 2000 was the upward revision to the
prices of PCE for services; within services, the largest upward revision
was to the price associated with brokerage charges and investment
counseling.
For 1998, the revisions to the prices of all the major components
of GDP were small. For 1999, the largest revision was a downward
revision of 0.7 percentage point to exports of services. For 2000, the
largest upward revisions were 1.1 percentage points to imports of
services (which enter negatively because imports are subtracted in the
calculation of GDP) and 0.9 percentage point to residential investment;
equipment and software was revised down 0.6 percentage point.
Changes in Methodology
This section describes the changes in the source data and in the
estimation methods that were incorporated in this annual revision.(18)
Several of these changes were identified as high-priority items in
BEA's strategic plan for maintaining and improving the
Nation's economic accounts.(19)
Classification by industry.--For this annual NIPA revision,
BEA's industry-based estimates of change in private inventories
were converted to the North American Industry Classification System
(NAICS) basis, beginning with the 1997 estimates. The conversion
reflected the implementation of NAICS by the Census Bureau in its
collection of the major monthly source data that underlie these
estimates. The conversion affects the detailed estimates by industry but
not the aggregate measure of the change in private inventories; thus
current-dollar and real GDP are not affected.(20)
Change in private inventories is the only component of GDP final
expenditures that is presented by industry; the other components
(personal consumption expenditures, private fixed investment, net
exports, and government consumption expenditures and gross investment)
are presented by type of product.
For this annual NIPA revision, a concordance between NAICS and the
NIPA expenditures by type of product was developed for the estimates of
private fixed investment in equipment and software.(21) The estimates of
net exports and government consumption expenditures and gross investment
were not affected by the conversion to NAICS. For the other NIPA
industry-based estimates--such as profits, nonfarm proprietors'
income, and net interest for 1998 and 1999--industry concordances between NAICS and SIC were developed. The NIPA estimates of income and
employment by industry will remain on an SIC basis until the next
comprehensive revision of the NIPA's, which is currently scheduled
for late 2003.(22)
NAICS and PCE.--The NAICS conversion also affected the estimation
of PCE for most goods other than motor vehicles.(23) These categories of
PCE goods, termed the "control group" are estimated using
Census Bureau data on retail sales to extrapolate an overall value; the
commodity composition is determined by merchandise-line allocations by
kind of business.(24)
The revised estimates incorporate data on retail sales and on food
services sales on a NAICS basis; previously, the retail sales data were
on an SIC basis. Under NAICS, establishments using similar production
processes are classified in the same industry; therefore, selling
methods rather than class of customer (used under the SIC) determine
whether establishments are classified in retail trade or in wholesale
trade. As a result, many establishments that were classified as
wholesale trade are now classified as retail trade--notably, motor
vehicle parts and accessory stores and office supply stores. A small
number of establishments were reclassified from retail trade to
wholesale trade and to the manufacturing sector. Eating and drinking
places, which were part of retail trade, have become part of a newly
defined NAICS sector, accommodations and food services. Under the SIC,
the retail control group consisted of retail sales excluding new- and
used-auto dealers and building materials stores; military commissary and
exchange sales were then added to the control group. Under NAICS, food
services sales are retained in the control group, even though they are
no longer part of retail sales. In addition, the control group now
excludes office supplies and stationery stores and "food service
contractors and mobile food services" because only a small
percentage of their sales are to individuals.
Prescription drugs in PCE.--Expenditures for prescription drugs are
now estimated using data on retail sales of prescription drugs from a
continuing survey of more than 20,000 retail pharmaceutical outlets by a
trade source. Previously, these expenditures were estimated based on
Census Bureau retail sales data, using the retail control method (see
the preceding section "NAICS and PCE"). Prescription drugs
remain in the PCE control group, the value of which is not affected by
this change. However, the independent estimate of prescription drugs
affects the other categories in the control group because it affects the
commodity allocation of sales.(25)
Software investment.--The quarterly estimates of fixed investment
in prepackaged software and in custom software have been improved. The
estimates of prepackaged software are now interpolated and extrapolated
using data on receipts from company reports to the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) and data on monthly retail sales of business
software from a trade source. The estimates of custom software are now
interpolated and extrapolated using the SEC data. Previously, the
quarterly estimates of prepackaged software and of custom software were
interpolated and extrapolated using BLS tabulations of State
unemployment insurance data on wages and salaries of workers in the
prepackaged software and computer programming services industries (SIC
7372 and SIC 7371, respectively). The Census Bureau service annual
survey continues as the primary data source for the annual estimates of
prepackaged and custom software.
Net exports of goods and services and net receipts of income.--The
major source of the NIPA estimates of foreign transactions is BEA's
U.S. international transactions accounts (ITA's). In this
year's annual ITA revision, newly available data from regular
sources and from surveys conducted by BEA, the U.S. Treasury Department,
and the Federal Reserve System were incorporated, and several changes in
the estimating methodologies were introduced.
The methodological changes included improved estimates of
"other" private income receipts and payments for banks,
improved estimates for nonbank liabilities to foreigners (which affects
"other" private income payments), improved estimates of the
balance of payments adjustments to the Census-basis goods data, and the
reclassification of goods in the end-use commodity categories.(26) The
reclassification involved two significant changes for both exports and
imports: Cellular phones, previously part of capital goods, were
reclassified to consumer goods, and off-the-road construction vehicles,
previously part of automobiles, engines, and parts, were reclassified to
capital goods. In addition, the NIPA's also incorporated revisions
to the items that adjust for the differences between the NIPA's and
the ITA's (these differences are identified in NIPA table 4.5B).
As usual, the ITA revisions were incorporated into the NIPA's
at their "best level" beginning with estimates for 1998. (The
revisions to the ITA's for years before 1998 will be incorporated
in the next comprehensive NIPA revision.) As a result, there are
discontinuities between the NIPA estimates for 1997 and those for 1998
(table 8). The change in current-dollar net exports of goods and
services (and in current-dollar GDP) from 1997 to 1998 is understated by
$1.6 billion. The discontinuity is primarily accounted for by exports of
"other" goods, reflecting the improved estimates of the
balance of payments adjustments to the Census-basis goods data.
For net receipts of income, the change from 1997 to 1998 is
overstated by $2.6 billion. The discontinuity is more than accounted for
by interest received from the rest of the world, reflecting the improved
estimates of "other" private income receipts for banks. For
GNP, which includes both net exports of goods and services and net
receipts of income, the change is overstated by $1.0 billion.
Nonfiler income adjustment.--The adjustment to nonfarm
proprietors' income that accounts for the undercoverage of business
income because of the nonfiling of tax returns has been improved. IRS
tabulations of sole proprietorship and partnership income tax returns
are the primary source for the estimates of nonfarm proprietors'
income. The nonfiling of tax returns by self-employed persons results in
an undercoverage of income in tax return tabulations. The nonfiler
adjustment incorporated in the revised estimates of nonfarm
proprietors' income is based on information from the most recent
"exact-match" study, which was conducted for 1996. In the
previously published estimates, the nonfiler adjustment was prepared by
extrapolating the results of a similar study for 1990.(27)
"Smoothing" irregular payments.--Quarterly tobacco
settlement payments (except the first payment) and quarterly (and
monthly) agricultural subsidy payments disbursed as emergency assistance
are now interpolated and extrapolated across the quarters (and months)
of the year, reflecting the accruals of these payments over time rather
than their disbursements in a particular period.(28) Using interpolation and extrapolation minimizes the variation in the resulting
quarter-to-quarter (and month-to-month) changes. Previously, certain
tobacco settlement payments and the emergency agricultural subsidies were recorded on a disbursements basis, a treatment that is generally
reserved in the NIPA's for one-time or unusual transactions.(29)
The tobacco settlement payments reduce the estimates of corporate
profits and increase the estimates of State and local government
indirect business tax and nontax accruals (specifically, in nontaxes) by
offsetting amounts. The agricultural subsidy payments are a component of
Federal Government current expenditures ("subsidies less current
surplus of government enterprises"), of farm proprietors'
income, and of rental income of persons (nonoperator farm landlords); in
addition, they are implicitly included in the source data for corporate
profits.
Interest paid by persons.--The revised estimates of interest paid
by persons, which are a source of revisions to both personal interest
income and personal outlays, now incorporate the Federal Reserve
Board's (FRB's) estimates of the effective rate of interest
paid on consumer debt.(30) Interest paid by persons is mainly estimated
by multiplying the effective rate of interest on consumer debt by the
FRB's estimate of the value of consumer debt outstanding.
Previously, the effective rate of interest was judgmentally estimated.
New prices.--In this annual revision, the price measures of some
components of private fixed investment, Federal Government spending, and
State and local government spending are improved.
A newly available price index from the FRB that reflects quality
improvements to local area network (LAN) equipment--routers, switches,
and hubs--is now used in the deflation of communication equipment, which
is a component of equipment and software within private fixed
investment. The improved deflator, which is a weighted geometric mean of
the FRB LAN equipment index and the producer price index (PPI) for
telephone and telegraph apparatus, is now used to deflate the LAN
portion of communication equipment; previously, the PPI for telephone
and telegraph apparatus was used to deflate LAN equipment.
An improved price index is now used in the deflation of custom
software, a component of private fixed investment, of Federal Government
gross investment, and of State and local government gross investment.
The price index is based on a weighted average of the own-account
software price index and the PPI for prepackaged software applications
sold separately (nonsuite).(31) The use of the index for nonsuite
applications more appropriately reflects the type of existing programs
or program modules that are often incorporated into custom software.
Previously, the PPI for all prepackaged software applications, together
with the own-account software price index, was used to deflate custom
software.
Presentational Changes
Inventory tables.--As part of this annual revision, BEA's
industry-based estimates of change in private inventory have been
converted to a NAICS basis from an SIC basis. Because the implementation
of NAICS results in significant discontinuities at the detailed industry
level, new NIPA tables are introduced that show the inventory estimates
by SIC industry group and by NAICS industries.(32) The estimates for
1929-97 on an SIC basis are presented in tables 5.10A, 5.11A, 5.12A,
5.13A, and 7.16A. The estimates for 1997 forward on the NAICS basis are
presented in tables 5.10B, 5.11B, 5.12B, 5.13B, and 7.16B.
Table 8.30.rain this annual revision, a new NIPA table, table 8.30,
is introduced that shows contributions to percent change in the price
index for gross domestic purchases. The new table facilitates the
analysis of the sources of change in the aggregate price level in much
the same way as NIPA table 8.2, "Contributions to Percent Change in
Real Gross Domestic Product" facilitates the analysis of the
sources of change in real output. In table 8.30, the component's
contribution indicates the difference between the actual change in the
gross domestic purchases price index and the change in the index if the
price of the component were held constant.
Analyses of price change that simply compare the rates of change in
various chain-type indexes should be avoided, because the sum of
individually calculated price effects will not usually equal the change
in the aggregate price index. The new table provides contributions to
percent change in the price index that are accurate and exactly
additive. Users of the new table should note, however, that the
contributions of particular subaggregates to the rate of price change in
an aggregate will often be similar from one period to the next.
The formula used to calculate the contributions to percent change
in the price index is
[MATHEMATICAL EXPRESSION NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII]
where [MATHEMATICAL EXPRESSION NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] denotes
the Fisher quantity index for gross domestic purchases in period t
relative to period t-1, [P.sub.i, t] denotes the price of the ith
component in period t, and [q.sub.i, t] denotes its quantity. The range
of subscript j in the denominator includes all the deflation-level
components of gross domestic purchases. The values shown in table 8.30
for particular subaggregates are sums of the [MATHEMATICAL EXPRESSION
NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] for their most detailed components.
Other presentational changes.--Several new price index series have
been added to the addenda of NIPA tables 7.2 and 8.1. In table 7.2, the
chain-type price indexes for GDP food, for GDP energy goods and
services, and for GDP less food and energy are added. In table 8.1, the
percent changes in the price indexes for those GDP components and for
gross domestic purchases indexes for food, for energy goods and
services, and for purchases less food and energy are added. (Some of
these series are already included in the monthly GDP news release.)
The format of the monthly "Selected NIPA Tables" in the
SURVEY will be changed to show estimates for the 2 most recent years and
the five most recent quarters; previously, the "Selected NIPA
Tables" showed estimates for the 2 most recent years and the six
most recent quarters. This change, which will be implemented in the
September 2001 SURVEY, is being made to accommodate the larger numerical values in many tables in the space available.
Acknowledgments
Brent R. Moulton, Associate Director for National Income,
Expenditures, and Wealth Accounts, supervised the preparation of this
year's annual revision of the national income and product accounts.
Karl D. Galbraith, Chief of the Government Division, and Carol E.
Moylan, Chief of the National Income and Wealth Division, directed major
parts of the revision. Kali K. Kong--assisted by Arnold J. Katz, Janet H. Kmitch, Randall T. Matsunaga, Denise A. McBride, Karin E. Moses, Mary
L. Roy, David F. Sullivan, and Ernest D. Wilcox--coordinated and
conducted the estimation and review process.
Brent R. Moulton, Eugene P. Seskin, and David F. Sullivan wrote the
article. Duane G. Hackmann, Kali K. Kong, and Teresa L. Weadock prepared
analyses and other review materials for both the article and the news
release. Herb L. Cover--assisted by Mary Carol Barron, Michael J. Boehm,
James J. Raley III, John Sporing, Jr., and Mary D. Young--developed and
operated the computer systems that were used to compile, check, analyze,
and report the final estimates. David F. Sullivan coordinated the
presentational improvements and table changes.
Other BEA staff who made significant contributions to the revision
are listed
below.
Personal consumption expenditures: Clinton P. McCully. Goods: M.
Greg Key, Harvey Davis, Everette P. Johnson, James J. Raley III.
Services: Aaron C. Catlin, Robert N. Ganz III, Farah Hameed, George M.
Smith.
Investment and Foreign transactions: Paul R. Lally. Inventories.
Leonard J. Loebach, Debra M. Blagburn, Tony Troy. Structures: Velma P.
Henry, Christopher Lucas. Foreign transactions, equipment, software, and
prices: David B. Wasshausen, Jeffrey W. Crawford, Randal T. Matsunaga,
Nadia F.P. Sadee, Linden L. Webber.
Federal Government: Pamela A. Kelly, W. Robert Armstrong, Laura M.
Beall, Peter G. Beall, James E. Boucher, Ann M. Groszkiewicz, Doris N.
Johnson, Sean P. Keehan, Raymen G. LaBella, Claire G. Pitzer, Michelle
D. Robinson, Mary L. Roy, Shelly Smith, Benyam Tsehaye, Andrew E. Vargo.
State and local government: Bruce E. Baker, Steven J. Andrews,
Benjamin D. Cowan, Eric C. Erickson, Janet H. Kmitch, Donald L. Peters.
Chain-type quantity and price measures: Christian Ehemann, Michael
J. Boehm, Karl V. Rohrer.
Income: Brooks B. Robinson.
Personal income: Kurt Kunze, Thae S. Park, Toui C. Pomsouvan.
Employee compensation: Kurt Kunze, M. Terri Davenport, Mollie B.
Knight, James E. Rankin, Ernest D. Wilcox.
Business income: Kenneth A. Petrick, Willie J. Abney, Scott Okrent,
Jerry L. Stone, Garth K. Trinkl.
Property income: George M. Smith. Farm output and income: Shaunda
M. Villones. Interest income: Mary Kate Catlin. Rental income of persons
and housing output: Denise A. McBride.
Consumption of fixed capital: Shelby W. Herman. Private:
Phyllistine M. Barnes, Michael D. Glenn, Leonard J. Loebach, Dennis R.
Weikel. Government: D. Timothy Dobbs, Jennifer A. Bennett, Charles S.
Robinson.
NIPA information: Marilyn E. Baker, Phyllistine M. Barnes, Virginia H. Mannering, Teresa L. Weadock.
Secretarial: Esther M. Carter, Katherine Dent, Angela P. Pointer,
Dorothy A. Wilson.
Availability of Revised Estimates and Related Information
The estimates shown in the NIPA tables that follow this
article and the estimates for earlier periods (for most tables,
beginning with 1929 for annual estimates and with 1946 for
quarterly estimates) are available on BEA's Web site at
<www.bea.doc.gov>. Later this year, the NIPA estimates
will be available on a CD-ROM.
Publication of the revised estimates and related estimates
will continue in subsequent issues of the SURVEY OF CURRENT
BUSINESS. The September SURVEY will present table 5.16,
which shows changes in the net stock of produced assets;
reconciliation table 8.28, which shows the relationship
between personal income in the NIPA's and adjusted gross
income from the Internal Revenue Service; and new estimates
of fixed assets and consumer durable goods for 2000
and revised estimates for 1998-99.
The October SURVEY will present "Updated Summary
NIPA Methodologies," which lists the principal source data
and estimating methods used in preparing the current-dollar
and real estimates of GDP; tables 3.15-3.17 (government
spending by function), tables 3.18-3.20 (government
sector reconciliation tables), and tables 9.1-9.6 (seasonally
unadjusted estimates); revised real inventories, sales, and
inventory-sales ratios for manufacturing and trade for
1997:I-2001:I; and revised estimates of State personal
income that incorporate the results of this annual revision
of the NIPA's.
The December SURVEY will present revised and updated
estimates of GDP by industry.
Later this year, BEA will publish National Income and
Product Accounts of the United States, 1929-97, which will
present the full set of NIPA tables and will describe definitions
and statistical conventions.
The availability of the CD-ROM and the volume will be
announced in the SURVEY and on BEA's Web site.
(1.) For information on the structure, definitions, presentation,
and methodologies that underlie the NIPA's, go to BEA's Web
site at <www.bea.doc.gov>, click on "Methodologies," and
under "National programs," see "An Updated Guide to the
NIPA's." For the definitional changes that were made in the
1999 comprehensive revision of the NIPA's, see Brent R. Moulton,
Robert P. Parker, and Eugene P. Seskin, "A Preview of the 1999
Comprehensive Revision of the National Income and Product Accounts:
Definitional and Classificational Changes," SURVEY 79 (August
1999): 7-20.
(2.) For information on NAICS and its implementation, see John R.
Kort, "The North American Industry Classification System in
BEA's Economic Accounts," SURVEY 81 (May 2001): 7-13. For
information on the new NIPA tables for private inventories, see the
section "Presentational Changes."
(3.) For an analysis of the reliability of the estimates of real
GDP, see Bruce T. Grimm and Robert P. Parker, "Reliability of the
Quarterly and Annual Estimates of GDP and Gross Domestic Income,"
SURVEY 78 (December 1998): 12-21.
(4.) For the GDP components for which chained-dollar estimates are
prepared by extrapolation or direct valuation, the current-dollar and
chained-dollar estimates are based on independent source data;
consequently, the corresponding revisions are unrelated. For a list of
these components, see table 2 in "Updated Summary NIPA
Methodologies," SURVEY 80 (October 2000): 34-40; an updated version
of this table will be published in the October 2001 SURVEY.
(5.) The revised annual data are on a NAICS basis; for further
details, see the section "Changes in Methodology, NAICS and
PCE."
(6.) This PCE category consists of imputed payments made by persons
to depository institutions--that is, commercial banks, mutual savings
banks, savings and loan associations, credit unions, and regulated
investment companies--to purchase checking, bookkeeping, and investment
services for which they do not pay an explicit service charge. For
additional information, go to BEA's Web site at
<www.bea.doc.guv>, click on "Methodologies" and under
"National programs," see "MP6: Personal Consumption
Expenditures," 11-12.
(7.) The Census Bureau data on value of construction put in place
are the major source data for the estimates of both nonresidential and
residential structures. The revised estimates of structures are based on
the "best period-to-period change" rather than on the
"best level" of the appropriate Census Bureau series; see the
box "Incorporating Source Data on the Basis of `Best
Change'" in Eugene P. Seskin and David F. Sullivan,
"Annual Revision of the National Income and Product Accounts,"
SURVEY gO (August 2000): 16.
(8.) See footnote 7.
(9.) Change in private inventories is calculated by adjusting
inventories reported by businesses on a non-LIFO (last-in-first-out)
book-value basis to a current-period replacement-cost basis; this
revaluation eliminates gains or losses that result from holding
inventories when prices change. The inventory valuation adjustment,
which is calculated as the change in private inventories less the change
in book values, reflects inventory price changes for firms that value
inventory withdrawals at acquisition (historical) cost.
(10.) The inventory valuation adjustment is not needed for farm
inventories, because they are measured on the basis of current market
price.
(11.) For a further discussion, see the box "The Statistical
Discrepancy" in Robert P. Parker and Eugene P. Seskin, "Annual
Revision of the National Income and Product Accounts," SURVEY 77
(August 1997): 19.
(12.) The incorporation of the more comprehensive quarterly UI data
in the NIPA estimates of wages and salaries was previewed in the box
"BEA Estimates of Wages and Salaries for 2000" in the
"Business Situation," SURVEY 81 (May 2001):6.
(13.) The revised estimates of nonfarm proprietors' income
incorporated an improved adjustment for the nonfiling of tax returns
(see the section "Changes in Methodology").
(14.) For a discussion of BEA's treatment of expenditures on
software as fixed investment, see Moulton, Parker, and Seskin, "A
Preview of the 1999 Comprehensive Revision," 8-11.
(15.) Net interest is calculated as the sum of monetary interest
paid by domestic business and by the rest of the world and imputed
interest paid by domestic financial corporate business, less monetary
interest received by domestic business and by the rest of the world and
imputed interest received by domestic business and by the rest of the
world.
(16.) For 2000, the revision cannot be attributed to the same level
of component detail as for 1999, because for 2000, the previously
published estimates were prepared at a less detailed level.
(17.) The implicit prices are computed by dividing the
current-dollar estimates by the chained-dollar estimates that are
derived from the quantity data used in quantity extrapolation and direct
valuation. Thus, differences between the current-dollar revisions and
the chained-dollar revisions to these components are reflected as
revisions to their implicit prices.
(18.) These changes update the methodological information in the
two tables that were published in "Updated Summary NIPA
Methodologies" 18-40; updated tables will be published in the
October 2001 SURVEY.
(19.) See "BEA's Mid-Decade Strategic Plan: A Progress
Report," SURVEY 76 (June 1996): 52-55.
(20.) For additional details about the implementation of NAICS in
the inventory estimates, see "An Upcoming Change in the NIPA
Presentation of Private Inventories by Industry," SURVEY 81 (June
2001): 22-26.
(21.) The concordance between the NAICS product coding scheme and
the one used in the 1992 input-output table was developed because NAICS
is an industry, not a product, classification system and because NIPA
final expenditure categories are based on aggregations of purchases
commodities in the 1992 input-output table.
(22.) These estimates are based on data from various statistical
agencies, each of which has its own NAICS implementation schedule. In
order to maintain a consistent industry classification, these estimates
will be converted to NAICS after the major source data for each income
estimate have been converted.
(23.) School lunches, food furnished to employees (including
military), food produced and consumed on farms, clothing issued to
military personnel, and net foreign remittances are also excluded.
(24.) The revised estimates of PCE for goods other than motor
vehicles incorporate merchandise-line allocations by NAICS-based kind of
business, on the basis of 1997 Economic Census.
(25.) The new treatment for prescription drugs is similar to that
used for tobacco products; the value of the drugs is removed from the
control group before the commodity composition of the remainder is
determined using a two-stage process as described in "MP6: Personal
Consumption Expenditures," 41.
(26.) See Christopher L. Bach, "U.S. International
Transactions, Revised Estimates for 1989-2000," SURVEY 81 (July
2001): 30-36.
(27.) Exact-match studies provide tabulations for persons who did
not file income tax returns by matching information from the annual
income supplement of the Current Population Survey with individual
income tax returns. For more information on the previous adjustment, see
"Improved Estimates of the National Income and Product Accounts for
1959-94: Results of the Comprehensive Revision" SURVEY 76
(January/February 1996): 24-25.
(28.) Beginning in 1998, the emergency assistance agricultural
subsidies have been disbursed on a continuing basis under three Federal
supplemental appropriations; these subsidies accounted for 27 percent of
total agricultural subsidies disbursed in 1998, for 45 percent in 1999,
and for 41 percent in 2000.
(29.) As part of the 1996 comprehensive revision, all other Federal
agricultural subsidy payments were "smoothed" across the year.
(30.) These FRB estimates are weighted averages of the interest
rates charged by commercial banks and finance companies on eight types
of consumer loans. These estimates, which are also reflected in the
FRB's quarterly measure of households' debt-service burden,
will be incorporated in the "final" quarterly NIPA release.
(31.) A weighted average is used because custom software consists
of a mixture of new programming and existing programs or program modules
(including prepackaged software) that are incorporated into new systems.
For a discussion of the estimation of software prices, go to BEA's
Web site at <www.bea.doc.gov>, look under "Papers &
presentations," and click on "Recognition of Business and
Government Expenditures for Software as Investment: Methodology and
Quantitative Impacts, 1959-98" by Robert Parker and Bruce Grimm.
(32.) See "An Upcoming Change," 22-26.