Wassily Leontief and His Contributions to Economic Accounting.
Landefeld, J. Steven ; McCulla, Stephanie H.
Wassily W. Leontief, 1906-99
PROFESSOR WASSILY LEONTIEF, the founder of input-output (I-O)
accounts, died last month. During his illustrious career, he contributed
to many areas of economic research, including international trade
theory, business cycle theory, and capital theory. But he is best known
for the creation and refinement of input-output analysis, which has
fundamentally influenced the evolution of economic analysis and economic
accounts.(1)
The technique, which details the structure of the economy through a
matrix of input-output coefficients, is so integral to both that in
1973, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Economics for its development.
In the United States, the major economic accounts produced by the Bureau
of Economic Analysis (BEA) use the input-output accounts as an
integrating principle or as an analytical tool. This use of I-O
accounting is paralleled in the System of National Accounts (SNA)--the
international guidelines for economic accounts. The SNA uses I-O
accounting as a framework for coordinating and checking the conceptual
and statistical consistency of the accounts and for providing a detailed
basis for analyzing industries, products, and other economic
relationships.
Leontief emigrated from the Soviet Union to Germany, where he
received his doctorate in 1928. He came to the United States in 1931,
worked briefly at the National Bureau for Economic Research, and then
joined the Harvard University faculty. After staying at Harvard for 45
years, he founded the Institute for Economic Analysis at New York
University.
Leontief's earliest work contained elements of input-output
accounting, but he developed his first I-O tables in the United States
in order to facilitate his study of the effects of technological change
on the American economy. He collected detailed information--often from
interviews with industry engineers--about production processes and
constructed a matrix that described the transactions of more than 40
economic industry groups or sectors. The completed matrix revealed the
interindustry relationships of inputs and outputs from which
coefficients could be derived so that the direct and indirect effects of
changes in the economy could be traced throughout the economy.
Leontief continued to apply I-O accounts to the study of practical
economic questions throughout his career. One of his primary interests
was in the application of the technique to defense analyses. His
interest in this area began during World War II, when he worked with the
Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) staff to construct I-O accounts for the
United States that could facilitate the planning of post-war
demobilization. This U.S. matrix was also used to guide the construction
of hypothetical I-O accounts for Germany that were used by the Office of
Strategic Services to plan wartime activities.
After the war, interest in I-O accounts grew quickly in the United
States and elsewhere, as their usefulness for policy making in both
centrally planned and free-market economies was recognized. As the I-O
accounts were developed, their usefulness as an integrating tool for,
and a check on the accuracy of, other economic accounts also became
increasingly apparent. In fact, by 1957, input-output tables were being
regularly constructed in the United Kingdom, Norway, Denmark, the
Netherlands, Italy, Canada, and Japan.(2) The first U.S. I-O accounts
were produced by BLS in 1952. BEA's first I-O table, for 1958, was
released in 1964. Since then, BEA has published I-O accounts for all the
years covered by the economic censuses (the primary source of data for
the accounts).(3)
Given the impact of the I-O technique on economic accounting, it is
interesting to note that Leontief's initial motivation had little
to do with improving economic accounts. In a recent interview, he
explained that national income analyses were "not very
disaggregated. Everything gives you one figure, while I thought that to
understand the operation of the system, one figure is not enough.... I
was not interested in improving the system; I was just concentrating on
understanding how it works"(4) But Leontief's creation of
input-output accounts was not driven solely by the practical
requirements of his own research. On the contrary, Leontief considered
himself a theorist, but he felt strongly that the purpose of theory was
to provide a simplified picture of real systems, so he opposed the
growing tendency among economists to formulate theories without a firm
foundation in observable reality. Indeed, in his 1970 presidential
address to the American Economic Association, Leontief warned of the
"palpable inadequacy of the scientific means" with which
economists try to analyze economic problems.(5)
His emphasis on the need for detailed data to support theory is
similar to the scientific method that underlies the physical sciences,
but Leontief noted one important difference: "In contrast to most
physical sciences, we study a system that is not only exceedingly
complex but is also in a state of constant flux.... Without a constant
inflow of new data the existing stock of factual information becomes
obsolete very soon.... What a contrast with physics, biology, or even
psychology, where the magnitude of most parameters is practically
constant and where critical experiments and measurements don't have
to be repeated every year!"(6) While this emphasis may have been
unusual during a time when abstract or speculative economic theory was
gaining widespread acceptance, Leontief's perspective actually led
him to share many of the criticisms of the economic profession held by
other economists.
Leontief devoted considerable attention to economic statistics and,
in his presidential address, discussed many of the issues-such as
budgets, decentralization, and classification-that economic accountants
are still struggling with today. He recognized that shifting from
abstract theory and "casual empiricism" to the
"systematic large-scale factual analysis" that he envisioned
would not be easy and would require a sizable increase in resources for
economic statistics in order to keep pace with the growing complexity of
the economy. He supported the decentralized Federal statistical system
because he felt that it worked well and that it had the advantage of
having specialized information collected by those most closely
associated with it. However, he insisted on the need for uniform
classification systems among all agencies, which is particularly
relevant today as the new North American Industry Classification System
is implemented and as a new product classification system is created.
Leontief also had specific ideas about the full potential of I-O
accounts, and it is a testament to his vision that so much of the
evolution of the accounts at BEA has corresponded to his ideas. In fact,
many of the improvements implemented by BEA in the last three decades
were suggested by Leontief in the comments he contributed to BEA's
50th anniversary issue of the SURVEY or CURRENT BUSINESS.(7) For
instance, based on his experience, he suggested that the increased
computational capacity of computers would allow greater industrial
detail in, and faster compilation of, the accounts. He was correct, and
BEA has continuously expanded the detail of the I-O accounts and worked
to speed up their release.(8) Leontief also characterized BEA's
documentation of the I-O accounts as "all too brief and
general." Like detail and timeliness, the provision of transparent
documentation has always been an important objective at BEA. With the
1979 release of tables for 1972, BEA provided extensive documentation of
the underlying detail and adjustments, and additional documentation was
provided with the 1992 tables.
Leontief's comments also included suggestions for improving
the methodology used to prepare the accounts. For instance, he was
troubled by BEA's use, in its early tables, of "fictitious
transfers" that moved secondary products from the industry that
produces them to the industry in which they are a primary product.
Beginning with the I-O table for 1972, BEA included secondary products
and their associated inputs in the primary industry. Additionally, while
Leontief was satisfied with the industry-to-industry format of the
accounts, he recognized that some analysts need a product-to-product
framework. In the tables for 1972, BEA separated the single transactions
table into a "make" table and a "use" table that
facilitate the derivation of product-to-product tables.(9)
Leontief devoted his career to expanding the applications of I-O
analysis; in particular, he and his group of researchers at Harvard were
among the first to apply I-O accounts to regional impact analysis.(10)
BEA recognized the usefulness of this approach, and in the 1960's,
it expanded its regional program to include an I-O modeling system. By
the 1970's, BEA had introduced its Regional Input-Output Modeling
System (RIMS), which is derived from the I-O tables.(11)
More recently, a new application of the I-O accounts has been
found--the construction of satellite, or supplemental, accounts. The
ability of the I-O framework to provide detail and to reveal the
relationships between industries and products has made it the framework
of choice for satellite accounts that focus on providing more
information about a particular sector or activity. BEA used an I-O
framework in its construction of its integrated economic and
environmental satellite accounts, its transportation satellite accounts,
and its travel and tourism satellite account.(12)
The I-O accounts are also essential to other BEA programs. They are
the primary source of data for the national income and product accounts
(NIPA's): During each comprehensive NIPA revision, the results of
the most recent benchmark I-O accounts are incorporated into the
NIPA's for that reference year, and other years are revised as
required. In addition to this "benchmarking" role, the I-O
accounts provide a method for checking the accuracy of the NIPA's
and the balance of payments accounts. Leontief commended this increased
accuracy as a great advantage of integrating I-O accounts with the other
national accounts.
Leontief also had a more direct connection to BEA. He actively
supported BEA's Foreign Training Program, which offers economic
accounting classes to employees of foreign statistical agencies. In
fact, the students regularly visited Leontief, and he always shared his
experiences enthusiastically.
These visits, his recent interviews, and his dedication to his work
until the time of his death illustrate how much Professor Leontief
enjoyed economics--both theoretical and empirical. Indeed, it is to the
benefit of the entire field that he did.
Selected Bibliography of Wassily W. Leontief
"Economic Statistics and Postwar Policies." In Postwar
Economic Problems, edited by S. Harris, 159-168. New York: McGraw-Hill,
1943.
"Environmental Repercussions and the Economic Structure--An
Input-Output Approach." Review of Economics and Statistics 52
(1970): 262-271.
Input-Output Economics. New York: Oxford University Press, 1966.
Input-Output Economics. 2nd ed. New York: Oxford University Press,
1986.
"Quantitative Input and Output Relations in the Economic
System of the United States." Review of Economics and Statistics 18
(1936): 105-125.
"Some Basic Problems of Empirical Input-Output Analysis."
In Input-Output Analysis: An Appraisal. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1955.
"Structural Matrices of National Economies." Econometrica
17 (1947): 273-282.
The Structure of the American Economy, 1919-1939: An Empirical
Application of Equilibrium Analysis. New York: Oxford University Press,
1951.
"Theoretical Assumptions and Nonobserved Facts."
Presidential address to the American Economic Association, Detroit,
Michigan (December 29, 1970). American Economic Review 61 (1971): 1-7.
With Anne P. Carter. "Goals for the Input-Output Data System
in the Seventies" In The Economic Accounts of the United States:
Retrospect and Prospect. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 51, Part II, 50th
anniversary issue (July 1971): 28--32.
With Hollis B. Chenery, Paul G. Clark, James S. Duesenberry, Allen
R. Ferguson, Anne P. Crosse, Robert N. Crosse, Mathilda Holzman, Walter
Isard, and Helen Kisten. Studies in the Structure of the American
Economy. New York: Oxford University Press, 1953.
With Faye Duchin. Military Spending: Facts and Figures, Worldwide
Implications and Future Outlook. New York: Oxford University Press,
1983.
With M. Hoffenberg. "The Economic Effects of
Disarmament." Scientific American 204 (April 1961): 47-55.
For a more complete bibliography of Professor Leontief's work,
see Duncan Foley, "An Interview with Wassily Leontief,"
Macroeconomic Dynamics 2 (1998): 116-140.
(1). For a comprehensive discussion of Leontief's career, see
Anne P. Carter and Peter A. Petri, "Leontief's Contributions
to Economics," Journal of Policy Modeling n (Spring 1989): 7-30.
(2.) U.S. Congress, Joint Economic Committee, Subcommittee on
Economic Statistics, "The National Economic Accounts of the United
States: Review, Appraisal, and Recommendations," in The National
Economic Accounts of the United States, report by the National Accounts
Review Committee, National Bureau of Science Research, 85th Congress,
October 1957, 244.
(3.) See W. Duane Evans and Marvin Hoffenberg, "The
Interindustry Relations Study for 1947," Review of Economics and
Statistics (May 1952), and "The Interindustry Structure of the
United States: A Report on the 1958 Input-Output Study," Survey or
CURRENT BUSINESS 44 (November 1964): 10-17.
(4.) See Duncan K. Foley, "An Interview with Wassily
Leontief" Macroeconomic Dynamics 2 (1998): n8.
(5.) See Wassily Leontief, "Theoretical Assumptions and
Nonobserved Facts," American Economic Review 61 (1971): 1.
(6.) See Leontief, "Theoretical Assumptions," 3-4.
(7.) See Wassily W. Leontief and Anne P. Carter, "Goals for
the Input-Output Data System in the Seventies," The Economic
Accounts of the United States: Retrospect and Prospect, SURVEY 51, Part
II (July 1971): 28-32.
(8.) In 1997, BEA met its goal to release the I-O tables within 5
years of the economic census year by releasing the tables for 1992.
(9.) For more details on the evolution of BEA's input-output
accounts, see Paula Young, "The U.S. Input-Output Experience:
Present Status and Future Prospects," in Problems of Compilation of
Input-Output Tables, ed. Alfred Franz and Norbert Rainer (Vienna,
Austria: Verlag Orac, 1986). See also the article on the 1982 benchmark
input-output accounts in the July 1991 SURVEY, the article on the 1987
accounts in the April and May 1994 issues, and that on the 1992 accounts
in the November 1997 issue.
(10.) See Wassily W. Leontief, "Interregional Theory,"
and Walter Isard, "Some Empirical Results and Problems of Regional
Input-Output Analysis," in Studies in the Structure of the American
Economy (New York: Oxford University Press, 1953).
(11.) RIMS traces the effects of a change in economic conditions
(for example, the closing of a manufacturing plant or a defense base) on
a local area. The RIMS multipliers have been used in numerous studies by
government agencies--such as the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the
Department of Defense, and the Department of Housing and Urban
Development--and by private groups to evaluate the effects of various
development policies or other activities, such as tourism, offshore
drilling, or new business development.
(12.) See "Integrated Economic and Environmental Satellite
Accounts," SURVEY 74 (April 1994): 33-49; "Accounting for
Mineral Resources: Issues and BEA's Initial Estimates," SURVEY
74 (April 1994): 50-72; "U.S. Transportation Satellite Accounts for
1992," SURVEY 78 (April 1998): 16-27; and "U.S. Travel and
Tourism Satellite Accounts for 1992," SURVEY 78 (July 1998): 8-22.
NOTE.--This tribute was prepared by J. Steven Landefeld and
Stephanie H. McCulla.