A Preview of the 1999 Comprehensive Revision of the National Income and Product Accounts.
Moulton, Brent R. ; Sullivan, David F.
New and Redesigned Tables
ON OCTOBER 28, 1999, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) will
release the initial results of a comprehensive, or benchmark, revision
of the national income and product accounts (NIPA'S). This revision
is the nth of its kind; the last such revision was released in January 1996.
Comprehensive revisions differ from annual NIPA revisions because
of the scope of the changes and because of the number of years subject
to revision. Comprehensive revisions incorporate three major types of
improvements: (1) Definitional and classificational changes that update
the accounts to more accurately portray the evolving U.S. economy, (2)
statistical changes that update the accounts to reflect the introduction
of new and improved methodologies and the incorporation of newly
available and revised source data, and (3) presentational changes that
update the NIPA tables to reflect the definitional, classificational,
and statistical changes and to make the tables more informative.
This article on the presentational changes is the second in a
series of articles about the comprehensive revision. An article in the
August issue described the definitional and classificational changes.(1)
Subsequent articles will describe the statistical changes and other
aspects of the revision, including estimates of the effects of the
definitional, classificational, and statistical changes.
Highlights of the changes in presentation
* New tables on contributions to percent change in real personal
consumption, private fixed investment, exports and imports, and
government consumption and investment will provide additional detail and
supplement the current table on contributions by these components to
percent change in real gross domestic product (GDV).
* New tables will present changes in the relationship between
investment and the net stock of produced assets, motor vehicle output,
and new presentations of government expenditures by function.
* New summary tables will highlight the percent changes in real GDV
and its major components and the component contributions to the percent
changes.
* Redesigned NIPA tables will reflect the changes that will be
introduced in this comprehensive revision, such as the recognition of
business and government expenditures for software as investment and the
new treatment of government employee retirement plans that shifts their
saving to personal saving from government saving.
* New series on computers and their contribution to GDP growth will
be added to several tables.
* The reference year for chain-type quantity and price indexes and
for chained dollars will be updated from 1992 from 1996.
Table 1 at the end of this article provides a complete list of the
revised set of NIPA tables arranged according to the new table
numbers.(2) The table cross-references the new table numbers with the
old ones and identifies the new tables and the tables that are published
monthly in the "Selected NIPA Tables"; the discontinued tables
are shown at the end of table 1. In addition, the table indicates the
major changes to each NIPA, table.
[TABULAR DATA 1 NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII]
The first section of this article discusses several new tables that
will be introduced in the 1999 comprehensive revision. The second
section discusses changes that result from the major definitional and
classificational changes. The third section discusses other major
presentational changes.
New tables
New summary tables.--Two new "summary" tables, tables S.1
and S.2, will be shown as the first tables in the NIPA tables, including
in the "Selected NIPA Tables" that appear each month in the
SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS. Table S.1 will present a summary of the
percent changes in real GDP and its major components, and table S.2 will
present a summary of the contributions to the percent changes in real
GDP. Thus, the new tables will place some of the most cited and
newsworthy information on GDP and its components at the beginning of the
NIPA tables, where they can be easily located. (These tables will
contain information that is first presented in the monthly GDP news
releases; the information presented in these tables will also continue
to be presented in tables 8.1 and 8.2.)
With two exceptions, the series names shown in the two new tables
will be the same as those currently shown in table 1.1. First, the
series name "producers' durable equipment" will be
changed to "equipment and software" to reflect the recognition
of business and government expenditures for software as investment.
Second, the series "change in business inventories" will be
renamed "change in private inventories" to more accurately
indicate that the series covers only private business inventories and
that government enterprise inventories are excluded. These two name
changes will also be made in the other NIPA tables.
Contributions to percent change.--Four new NIPA tables showing
contributions to percent changes in major aggregates will be introduced;
the new tables will complement table 8.2, "Contributions to Percent
Change in Real Gross Domestic Product," which will be expanded to
show additional detail.
The additional information provided in the new tables and in the
expanded table 8.2 is necessary for interpreting the sources of change
in major aggregates because chained-dollar measures are not additive.
Contributions to percent change, unlike chained-dollar measures, provide
accurate estimates of component contributions to real growth,
particularly for components for which relative prices are changing
rapidly. These contributions are additive and are prepared using a
methodology that determines the amount that each detailed component
contributes to the percent change in the major aggregate. The new tables
will be formatted similarly to table 8.2. The percent change in the
aggregate will be shown with one decimal place, and the component
contributions to the percent change will be shown with two decimal places.(3)
The new tables are table 8.3, "Contributions to Percent Change
in Real Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of
Product"; table 8.4, "Contributions to Percent Change in Real
Private Fixed Investment by Type"; table 8.5, "Contributions
to Percent Change in Real Exports and in Real Imports of Goods and
Services by Type of Product"; and table 8.6, "Contributions to
Percent Change in Real Government Consumption Expenditures and Gross
Investment by Type." The detail that will be shown in the new
tables generally corresponds to the detail shown in chained-dollar
tables 2.3, 5.5, 4.4, and 3.8, respectively.
Table 8.2 will show additional detail for component contributions
under personal consumption expenditures, private fixed investment in
equipment and software, change in private inventories, and government
consumption expenditures and gross investment. Table 8.2 will also show
new addenda for goods, services, structures, motor vehicle output, and
final sales of computers.
Changes in net stock of produced assets.--A new table,
"Changes in Net Stock of Produced Assets (Fixed Assets and
Inventories)" (table 5.16), will integrate the NIPA estimates of
the flows of investment and consumption of fixed capital with BEA'S
estimates of the net stocks of produced assets.(4) The table, which will
provide annual estimates beginning with 1951, will include series for
opening balance, accumulation of produced assets, "other changes in
the volume of assets," revaluation, and closing balance. The
"other changes in the volume of assets" will include new
series on the effects of disasters, such as earthquakes and hurricanes,
on the net stock of private and government fixed assets. The revaluation
is the change in the value of assets that results from price changes
(that is, holding gains or losses). The revaluation will be divided into
neutral holding gains, which reflect changes in the "general price
level," as measured by the gross domestic purchases price index,
and real holding gains or losses, which reflect changes in the prices of
produced assets relative to changes in the general price level.
This table will provide fundamental information on the role of
investment and depreciation in determining changes in the value of the
Nation's stock of structures, equipment, software, and private
inventories; thus, it can be used as a tool in analyzing the
accumulation of wealth. The estimates of neutral and real holding gains
or losses will provide information on the effects of price changes on
the value of the net stock of assets.
Adding this table represents a step in BEA's strategic plan of
developing fully integrated accounts of the stocks and flows of
nonfinancial and financial assets.
Motor vehicle output.--Beginning with 1967, a new table for motor
vehicle output (table 8.8B) will replace the existing tables for auto
output (table 8.4) and for truck output (table 8.6), and a new table for
chain-type quantity indexes for motor vehicle output (table 7.18B) will
replace tables 7.18 and 7.19. Beginning with 1987, a new table for real
motor vehicle output (table 8.9B), will replace tables 8.5 and 8.7. The
detailed estimates for auto and truck output will continue to be shown
in the new motor vehicle output tables. In addition, the new motor
vehicle output tables will present several new aggregates, including
"private fixed investment in new autos and new light trucks."
Separate estimates for "light" trucks and for
"other" trucks under private fixed investment and additional
detail under the change in private inventories will also be presented.
For 1946-67, the period for which estimates of truck output are not
available, the estimates of auto output will be shown in tables 8.8A and
7.18A. (Estimates of motor vehicle output and of GDP less motor vehicle
output are shown in tables 1.3 and 1.4.)
Capital transfers.--As part of this comprehensive revision, certain
transactions now included in the NIPA's will be reclassified as
capital transfers. A new table, "Capital Transfers (Net)"
(table 8.29), will present net capital transfers received by total
government, by the Federal Government, by State and local governments,
and by the rest of the world.
The reclassification of capital transfers results in several other
changes to NIPA tables. In the government sector tables, the series name
"receipts" will be changed to "current receipts,"
"estate and gift taxes" will be deleted from tables 3.2 and
3.4, and tables 3.18A, 3.18B, and 3.19 will be revised to show the
exclusion of capital transfers from the NIPA government sector
accounts.(5) In addition, tables 3.1, 3.2, and 3.3 will present new
addenda that show the relation between "current surplus or deficit
(-), national income and product accounts" and "government net
lending or net borrowing (-)." Net lending or borrowing shows the
amount of resources available for lending (after current-account
transactions, gross investment, capital transfers, and purchases of
nonproduced assets) or the amount of resources that need to be
borrowed.(6) In tables 4.1, 5.1, and 9.5, the series "Capital
grants received by the United States (net)" will be deleted.
New presentation of the functions of government.--As part of this
comprehensive revision, BEA plans to provide a new, simpler presentation
for the estimates of government current expenditures and gross
investment by function in tables 3.15, 3.16, and 3.17. The currently
published tables 3.15, 3.16, and 3.17 will be discontinued. The new
presentation will be discussed in a SURVEY article in the spring of
2000.
Each of the three new tables will present estimates by function for
total government, for the Federal Government, and for State and local
government. Table 3.15 will present estimates by function of consumption
expenditures and gross investment. Table 3.16 will present estimates by
function of current expenditures. Table 3.17 will present estimates by
function of transfer payments to persons, Federal grants-in-aid to State
and local governments, and subsidies less current surplus of government
enterprises.
Changes due to other definitional and classificational changes
Business and government expenditures for software.--The recognition
of business and government expenditures for software as fixed investment
will affect the presentation of several NIPA tables. The series for
gross private domestic investment, private fixed investment, and
government gross investment will be redefined to include expenditures
for software by business and government. In addition, government
consumption expenditures will be redefined to exclude expenditures for
software and to include consumption of fixed capital for general
government software as a partial measure of the services of the stock of
government software. The producers' durable equipment component of
nonresidential fixed investment will be renamed "equipment and
software," and the producers' durable equipment component of
residential fixed investment will be renamed "equipment." The
equipment component of gross government investment will be renamed
"equipment and software," and the electronics component of
national defense gross investment will be renamed "electronics and
software."
In the presentation of private fixed investment, a new series,
"software," will be added to tables 5.4, 5.5, 5.8, 5.9, 7.6,
7.8, and 8.4. The new series will be included in "information
processing and related equipment," which will be renamed
"information processing equipment and software." The series
"office, computing, and accounting machinery" will be deleted
from tables 5.8, 5.9, and 7.8.
As a result of the recognition of software as
investment--specifically, the reclassification of own-account software
production--the series name "compensation of general government
employees, except force-account construction" will be changed to
"compensation of general government employees, except own-account
investment" in tables 3.7, 3.8, 310, 3.11, 7.11, 7.12, and 8.6.
Government employee retirement plans.--Government employee
retirement plans will no longer be classified as social insurance funds
within the government sector; instead, they will be treated similarly to
private pension plans. Because of this reclassification, several NIPA
series will be redefined, but the series names will not be changed.
Transfer payments to persons will exclude government employee retirement
benefits; the lines showing government employee retirement benefits will
be deleted from tables 2.1 and 3.12. Employer and personal contributions
for social insurance will exclude contributions to government employee
retirement plans; the lines showing these contributions will be deleted
from table 3.6. The administrative expenses of government employee
retirement plans will be excluded from government consumption
expenditures; instead, they will be included in personal consumption
expenditures. To reflect this change, the series "services
furnished without payment by financial intermediaries except life
insurance carriers and private noninsured pension plans" will be
renamed "services furnished without payment by financial
intermediaries except life insurance carriers," and the series
"expense of handling life insurance" will be renamed
"expense of handling life insurance and pension plans" in
tables 2.4, 2.5, 2.6, 2.7, and 7.5. Government interest and dividends
received will exclude the interest and dividends received by government
employee retirement plans. The series in table 3.14, "Social
Insurance Funds Current Receipts and Expenditures," will exclude
government employee retirement plans; the references to "dividends
received" will be removed, because the only social insurance funds
that currently receive dividends are State and local government employee
retirement plans.
As a result of the reclassification, other labor income will
include employer contributions to government employee retirement plans,
and lines will be added to table 6.11 that present the employer
contributions to Federal civilian, to Federal military, and to State and
local government plans. Estimates of the benefits paid by, and personal
contributions to, these plans will be shown in the addenda of table
6.11. Table 6.11A will show estimates for 1929-47. In table 8.19,
additional components, "publicly administered government employee
retirement plans" and "other," will be shown under
"dividends received by persons." In table 8.20, additional
components, "publicly administered government employee retirement
plans" and "other," will be shown under "monetary
interest received by persons." In tables 3.18a,, 3.18B, and 3.19,
additional lines will show the exclusion of the transactions of
government employee retirement plans from the NIPA government sector
accounts.
Private noninsured pension plans.--The treatment of noninsured
pension plans as it relates to the measurement of corporate profits and
to the recording of property income--rents, dividends, and
interest--will be modified. Because of this change, the following NIPA
series will be redefined, but the series names will not be changed:
Corporate profits, net interest, rental income of persons, personal
dividend income, and personal interest income.
In table 8.20, the series names that refer to "life insurance
carriers and private noninsured pension plans" will be renamed
"life insurance carriers." In tables 819 and 8.20, the new
lines "other" dividends received by persons and
"other" monetary interest received by persons, respectively,
will reflect the revised treatment of noninsured pension plans. Table
8.28 will be redesigned to reflect the revised treatments of government
employee retirement plans and of private noninsured pension plans.
Other changes in presentation
Updated reference year.--For this comprehensive revision, will
feature output and price measures that use 1996 as the reference year;
currently, 1992 is used as the reference year.(7) The estimates for most
tables showing "real," or chained-dollar, estimates will begin
with 1987.
Updating the reference year will not, by itself, affect the percent
changes in the price or quantity indexes (or the chained-dollar
estimates), because these changes are measured with chain-type
indexes.(8) Revisions to the growth rates of NIPA aggregates will
reflect the definitional and statistical changes and not the change in
reference year.
Personal consumption expenditures (PCE).--Several changes will be
made to the presentation of PCE. The new series "gasoline, fuel
oil, and other energy goods" that will be derived from the existing
series "gasoline and oil" and "fuel oil and coal"
will be shown in several tables. Two new items, "energy goods and
services" and "personal consumption expenditures less food and
energy," will be shown in addenda to tables 2.2, 2.3, and 8.3; the
quantity and price indexes for both of these items will be shown in
table 7.4. Within ECU. services, "recreation"--which is
currently under "other" services in tables 2.6, 2.7, and
7.5--will be shown separately from "other" services in these
tables and will be added to tables 2.2, 2.3, 7.4, 8.2, and 8.3;
"other" services will be redefined to exclude recreation in
these tables.
Two new series--"video and audio goods, including musical
instruments" and "computers, peripherals, and
software"--will be added to tables 2.4, 2.5, 2.6, 2.7, and 7.5. As
a result, the aggregate series--"video and audio products,
computing equipment, and musical instruments"--will be renamed
"video and audio goods, including musical instruments, and computer
goods."
Changes to tables 1.16 and 7.15.--In tables 1.16 and 7.15,
"gross domestic product of corporate business" will be renamed
"gross product of corporate business," and "gross
domestic product of nonfinancial corporate business" will be
renamed "gross product of nonfinancial corporate business."
The names, but not the content, will be changed for consistency with the
terminology used for other BEA estimates, such as gross product by
industry.(9) The chained-dollar measure of the gross product of
nonfinancial corporate business will be calculated using a new method,
which, for most periods, uses price indexes developed for BEA'S
gross-product-by-industry series; the new method will be described in
the October SURVEY.
In addition, table 7.15 will be reorganized to emphasize the
distinctions among compensation (or unit labor cost), unit nonlabor cost
(for example, consumption of fixed capital, indirect business tax
liability, and net interest), and corporate profits (or unit profits
from current production). (This redesign will result in a format similar
to that currently used in table 12 of the GPU news release.)
Computer addenda.--New series that present information on
computers, which have become an increasingly important component of GDP
growth in recent years, have been added to several tables. As noted
earlier, the contribution of final sales of computers to GDP growth will
be shown in table 8.2. In addition, tables 7.2 and 8.1 will show
quantity and price indexes and corresponding percent changes for final
sales of computers, GDP less final sales of computers, and gross
domestic purchases less final sales of computers.
Expanded tables. Beginning with 1986, the table "Relation of
Foreign Transactions in the National Income and Product Accounts
(NIPA'S) to the Corresponding Items in the Balance of Payments
Accounts (BPA's)" (table 4.5) will be replaced by a more
detailed reconciliation table that presents separate reconciliations for
goods, services, incomes, and unilateral transfers (table 4.5). The
improved table, which will reflect the presentational changes introduced
in this year's annual revision of the BPA'S, will enable users
to better understand the detailed relationships between the NIPA's
and BPA'S.(10) The estimates for 1946-86 will be presented in table
4.5 in the same format as that used in the currently published table
4.5. In tables 1.9, 1.10, 1.11, 4.1, 4.2, 4.5A, 4.5B, 7.3, 7.9, and 9.5,
"receipts of factor income" will be changed to "income
receipts," and "payments of factor income" will be
changed to "income payments" to improve consistency with the
BPA's.
The table "Imputations in the National Income and Product
Accounts" (table 8.21) will be expanded. This table shows the
amounts included in gross national product (GNP) and other major NIPA
aggregates as imputations for transactions that do not occur in the
market economy. Imputations are recorded in the NIPA'S either to
account for production that is not otherwise recorded or to keep GNP
invariant to how certain activities are carried out. Because of
imputations, for example, P is invariant to whether households rent or
own their homes or whether or not depositors pay an explicit charge for
the services provided by banks.
In the expanded table 8.21, the imputations will include the value
of the services of general government investment (measured as the
consumption of fixed capital), which was incorporated into the
NIPA'S as part of a definitional change that was made in the 1996
comprehensive revision of the NIPA'S but was not included in this
table; the imputations will also reflect the reclassification of
government employee retirement plans. For the major NIPA aggregates, all
the components that are affected by imputations will be shown. In
addition, the effects of the specific imputations will be expanded to
show imputations gross rather than net, and the section "Specific
imputations" will be expanded to include a new presentation of
interest-related imputations.
Discontinued tables. Eight NIPA tables will be discontinued, but
most of the information they contain will still be available. The table
"Quantity Indexes and Percent Change from Preceding Period in
Selected Series, Fixed 1992 Weights" (table 8.9.7) will no longer
be published in the SURVEY; the series, which will be updated to reflect
1996 weights, will continue to be made available. The decision to
discontinue the publication of fixed-weighted quantity measures reflects
the widespread adoption of the chain-type measures. As noted in the
section "Motor vehicle output," tables 7.19, 8.5, 8.6, and 8.7
will be discontinued, and the estimates currently shown in these tables
will be included in the new motor vehicle output tables. As noted in the
section "New presentation of the functions of government,"
tables 3.15, 3a6, and 3.17 will be discontinued and replaced by new
tables on government current expenditures and gross investment by
function.
Series names
The names of several pa series will be changed as a result of the
comprehensive revision. Most of these changes have been already
discussed. The list on the opposite page presents the new and old names
for these series.
Table 1 follows.
Availability of Redesigned Table
The redesigned NIPA tables will be available in hard copy, on
diskette, and on BEA'S Web site at <www.bea.doc.gov> on
October 1. To get the hard copy or diskette, write to National Income
and Wealth Division (BE-54), Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S.
Department of commerce, Washington, DC 20230, or call 202-606-9700.
GDP News Release Tables
The changes to the NIPA series and series names described in this
article will also be incorporated into the tables in BEA'S monthly
GDP news release. In tables 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, and 7, "producers'
durable equipment" will be renamed "equipment and
software," and "change in business inventories" will be
renamed "change in private inventories." In table 3, under
personal consumption expenditures, lines will be added for
"gasoline, fuel oil, and other energy goods" under nondurable goods and for "recreation" under services. In tables 3 and 8,
"receipts of factor income from the rest of the world" will be
renamed "income payments from the rest of the world," and
"payments of factor income from the rest of the world" will be
renamed "income payments from the rest of the world."
The following series will be added to the addenda to tables 6 and
7: Gross domestic purchases, final sales to domestic purchasers, and
gross national product. The price index for GDP less final sales of
computers will be added to the addenda to appendix table A.
New series name Old series name
Change in private inventories Change in business inventories
Compensation of general Compensation of general
government employees, except government employees, except
own-account investment force-account construction
(government) (government)
Current receipts (government) Receipts (government)
Electronics and software Electronics (government)
(government)
Energy goods and services (PCE) Energy (PCE)
Equipment (residential) Producers' durable equipment
(residential)
Equipment and software Equipment (government)
(government)
Equipment and software Producers' durable equipment
(private nonresidential) (private nonresidential)
Expense of handling life Expense of handling life
insurance and pension insurance (PCE)
plans (PCE)
Information processing equipment Information processing and
and software (equipment related equipment (producers'
and software) durable equipment)
Income payments from the rest Payments of factor income from
of the world (foreign the rest of the world
transactions) (foreign transactions)
Income receipts from the Receipts of factor income
rest of the world (foreign from the rest of the
transactions) world (foreign transactions)
Manufactured homes Mobile homes (residential
(residential structures) structures)
Private fixed investment Private purchases of
in equipment and software producers' durable equipment
Private fixed investment Private purchases of structures
in structures
Transportation equipment Transportation and related
(equipment and software) equipment (producers'
durable equipment)
Video and audio goods, Video and audio products,
including musical computing equipment, and
instruments, and computer musical instruments (PCE)
goods (PCE)
PCE Personal consumption expenditures
(1.) 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 OF CURRENT BUSINESS 79 (August 1999): 7-20.
(2.) The "NIPA tables" discussed in this article refer to
the following tables: Tables showing quarterly seasonally adjusted series that are published monthly in the SURVEY in "Selected NIPA
Tables"; tables covering all the NIPA series that are published in
the SURVEY as part of the annual revision of the NIPA'S; and tables
covering all the NIPA series for past periods that are published in
National Income and Product Accounts of the United States. Changes to
tables presenting NIPA-related estimates, such as the estimates of fixed
reproducible tangible wealth, will be announced later.
(3.) The method of calculating contributions to percent change will
be revised slightly in the comprehensive revision; the new methodology
will be described in the October issue of the SURVEY.
(4.) A new treatment will exclude the effects of the abandonment of
nuclear power plants from the consumption of fixed capital. The new
treatment will be discussed in the October SURVEY.
The estimates of the net stock of produced assets are presented in
Fixed Reproducible Tangible Wealth in the United States, 1925-94
(forthcoming).
(5.) Because some data users are specifically interested in the
series on estate and gift taxes, quarterly estimates will be continue to
be made available.
(6.) Government net lending or borrowing is conceptually similar to
the "Net financial investment" measure in the flow-of-funds
accounts prepared by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System. The two sets of estimates will differ primarily because
government net lending or borrowing will be estimated from information
concerning transactions, whereas the net financial investment estimates
are derived from information concerning financial assets. There are also
small conceptual differences, such as the classification of the Federal
Government's railroad retirement and veterans life insurance
programs. The flow-of-funds estimates are shown in Board of Governors of
the Federal Reserve System, "Federal Reserve Statistical Release Z.1, Flow of Funds Accounts of the United States, Flows and
Outstandings, First Quarter 1999" (June 11, 1999).
(7.) The reference year will be 1996 because that is the latest
year for which the current-dollar estimates will not be subject to
revision until the next comprehensive revision. Quantity and price
indexes at the most detailed level will be expressed with 1996 equal to
100 and will provide the inputs used for calculating higher level
chain-type measures.
The reference years used in tables 1.2A, 1.2B, and 1.2c (1937,
1952, and 1972, respectively) will not be changed. Table 1.2D, which
will present real estimates for 1972-92 using 1982 as the reference
year, will be added.
(8.) See J. Steve Landefeid and Robert P. Parker, "Preview of
the Comprehensive Revision of the National Income and Product Accounts:
BEA'S New Featured Measures of Output and Prices," SURVEY 75
(July 1995): 31-38.
(9.) For information on gross product by industry, see Sherlene
K.S. Lum and Brian C. Moyer, "Gross Product by Industry,
1985-97," SURVEY 78 (November 1998): 20-40.
(10.) See Christopher L. Bach, "U.S. International
Transactions, Revised Estimates for 1982-98," SURVEY 79 (July
1999): 63-64.3