U.S. travel and tourism satellite accounts for 1992.
Okubo, Sumiye ; Planting, Mark A.
This article presents prototype travel and tourism satellite
accounts (TTSA'S), which are a second set of extensions developed
in 1998 to the U.S. input-output (I-O) accounts.(1) Satellite accounts
are rearrangements of information from the national economic accounts
and other sources for the purpose of analyzing specific economic
activities more completely than is possible within the structure of the
basic accounts (see the box "Satellite Accounts").(2) The
TTSA'S integrate information on the flows of commodities that are
related to travel and tourism activities but that are not identified in
the standard presentation of the I-O accounts.(3)
There is strong motivation to develop analytical measures of
travel and tourism activities in the United States. Travelers are
important consumers of U.S. production, and the industries that cater to
travelers use a substantial share of output from other industries, add
substantial economic value to other industries' outputs, and employ
large numbers of people. Furthermore, both travel in the United States
by foreigners and travel abroad by U.S. residents have grown
dramatically in recent years.
The TTSA'S define travel and tourism as the economic activity
generated inside the United States by "visitors" of all
types--for business and pleasure, by residents and nonresidents
alike--and outside the United States by U.S. residents.(4) The
TTSA'S extend the I-O accounts in that they attempt to measure an
economic activity (travel and tourism) undertaken by only a subset of
purchasers (visitors) and involving only a subset of purchases (tourism
demand). This task first requires the identification of the commodities
that are purchased by visitors and the corresponding industries that
produce these commodities. This task is further complicated because
tourism is inherently defined in relative geographic terms-like distance
from home--and because many of the activities that are undertaken by
visitors--such as dining out in restaurants--are also undertaken by
nonvisitors, that is, people who are close to their homes. Therefore,
deriving the output and value added of tourism industries is less
straightforward than for a conventional industry producing a
conventional commodity, such as iron and steel.
The basic building blocks of I-O accounts are commodities, most of
which are not readily distinguishable by type of consumer. Therefore, in
developing the TTSA'S, the share of each commodity purchased by
visitors had to be estimated. The information available to allocate commodities between visitors and nonvisitors is generally based on
relatively small sample surveys and indirect methods. In the prototype
TTSA'S, three different methodologies were used, and estimates are
presented as a range, rather than as a single estimate.
The following are highlights from the new TTSA'S for 1992
(table 1):
* Value added in travel and tourism represented 1.9-2.2 percent of
U.S. gross domestic product (GDP). The industry with the highest value
added was the hotels and lodging industry.
* Expenditures for travel and tourism accounted for 4.6-5.3 percent
of U.S. GDP. The largest category of expenditures was expenditures for
passenger air travel services.
* Employment in travel and tourism activities accounted for 3.2-3.7
percent of total employment in the United States. The average
compensation per tourism employee was $21,400 per year, but compensation
varied widely by industry.
Table 1.--Key Indicators of Tourism Activity: Range of
Estimates 1992
De- Value Employ- Percent
mand added ment Share of GDP Share
(billions (billions (thou- of
of of De- Value employ-
dollars) dollars) sands) mand added ment
Method 1. 284.2 120.5 3,749 4.6 1.9 3.2
Method 2. 294.9 124.5 3,933 4.7 2.0 3.3
Method 3. 332.8 135.7 4,353 5.3 2.2 3.7
NOTE.--See the section "Methodological Overview" for a
discussion of the three methods.
The first section of this article describes the development of the
TTSA'S. The second section provides a conceptual overview of the
TTSA'S, including their relationship to the I-O accounts. The third
section describes the major components of the TTSA'S. The fourth
section provides an overview of the methodology used to estimate the
TTSA'S. The fifth section summarizes the TTSA estimates for 1992.
The final section outlines future work and extensions.
Background
The activities of travel and tourism are covered in the national
economic accounts, but the system underlying the classification of
output in the I-O accounts--the Standard Industrial Classification (SIC)
system--does not facilitate separately identifying tourism, as the SIC
was primarily designed to present industry statistics without regard to
the purpose of the purchase of output. A measure of tourism activities
would be understated if it included only the output of industries that
are typically associated with tourism activities--hotels and air, water,
and rail transportation--because it would exclude expenditures on other
types of commodities, such as eating and drinking places, that represent
a relatively important share of tourism expenditures but that cannot be
separately identified. On the other hand, that measure would be grossly
overstated if it included all the expenditures on eating and drinking
because it would also include expenditures by local residents.
Various measures of tourism have been developed, including the
number of travelers, the number of trips made by U.S. residents in the
United States and abroad, and the level of expenditures of U.S. resident
and nonresident visitors on passenger fares, lodgings, and other goods
and services.(5) However, these measures do not provide a consistent way
to compare travel and tourism with other economic activities.
A White House Conference on Travel and Tourism, held in October 1995, highlighted the difficulty in linking these measures to other
production and consumption activities in the economy. The Conference
delegates recommended that the U.S. Department of Commerce, in
partnership with the travel and tourism industries, develop travel and
tourism satellite accounts to provide measures that are consistent with
the U.S. national economic accounts. This recommendation was strongly
supported by the Tourism Policy Council, headed by the Secretary of
Commerce. As a result, in 1997, the Tourism Industries Office of the
International Trade Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce, entered
into an agreement with the Bureau of Economic Analysis to develop the
U.S. TTSA'S.
Efforts to develop travel and tourism satellite accounts
The definitions, framework, and estimating methods used for the U.S.
TTSA'S follow, as closely as practicable, the guidelines for
similar accounts that were developed by the World Tourism Organization
(WTO) and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). Over the past decade and a half, the WTO and the oEcD have
prepared a series of reports that define tourism, provide
recommendations on the collection and organization of tourism
statistics, and establish guidelines for estimating travel and tourism
satellite accounts.(6) The definitions and concepts developed by the WTO
have been followed, with minor modifications, by the OECD, by the
Statistical Office of the European Communities (EUROSTAT), and by
countries collecting tourism statistics and estimating tourism satellite
accounts. The WTO and the OECD are working cooperatively to develop
manuals for estimating tourism satellite accounts. With these
TTSA'S, the United States joins Canada and Norway as countries that
have designed and implemented travel and tourism accounts in accord with
the WTO and OECD initiatives.(7)
The OECD and WTO frameworks include sets of tables that measure
similar aspects of travel and tourism. The measures common to both
frameworks include the production and value added of tourism industries,
purchases of tourism commodities and other commodities by domestic and
international visitors, employment in tourism industries, and investment
and capital stock in tourism industries.(8)
Conceptual Overview of Travel and Tourism Satellite Accounts
The purpose of the travel and tourism satellite accounts is to
provide a framework for analyzing tourism expenditures in a systematic
and consistent way that links tourism demand expenditures to the
industries that produce tourism goods and services.
TTSA definitions
The TTSA'S for the United States rely primarily on the WTO
and OECD definitions of visitors, tourism, and tourism expenditures
(table 2). The TTSA'S define visitors as persons taking a trip or
traveling outside of their "usual environment," and tourism as
the activities of visitors while traveling. The accounts require the
following definitions: The visitor and the usual environment.
Table 2.--Alternative Frameworks For Measuring Travel And Tourism
Activities
BEA
Statistical unit Visitor
Concept of visitor Person traveling outside of
usual environment
for less than 12 months.
Concept of usual environment Place of usual
activities--residence, work,
leisure,
Minimum distance determined
by available data
sources--between 50 and 100
miles from residence.
Criteria distinguishing
tourism from non- Direct contact between visitor
tourism expenditures, and supplier
of tourism commodities.
Tourism demand Expenditures by visitors
Tourism commodities/tourism
industries Determined by what U.S.
visitors do
Infrastructure
investments--private and Future extension of TTSA'S
public.
OECD
Statistical unit Visitor
Concept of visitor Same as BEA
Concept of usual environment Place of usual
activities--residence, work,
leisure.
Tourism determined by
minimum distance
from usual environment.
Minimum distance defined
by country
Criteria distinguishing
tourism from non- Same as BEA
tourism expenditures,
Tourism demand Same as BEA
Tourism commodities/tourism
industries Determined by share of
commodity purchased by
visitors or produced
primarily as an attraction
for visitors.
Infrastructure
investments--private and Private purchases of fixed
public. assets, for example, capital
investment in hotel structures.
Public purchases include
airports, long-distance
bus stations.
List still under discussion
WTO
Statistical unit Visitor
Concept of visitor Same as BEA
Concept of usual environment Same as OECD
Criteria distinguishing
tourism from non- Same as BEA
tourism expenditures,
Tourism demand Same as BEA
Tourism commodities/tourism
industries Same as OECD
Infrastructure
investments--private and Private purchases of fixed
public. assets are same as OECD
BEA Bureau of Economic Analysis OECD Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development WTO World Tourism Organization
Visitor. A visitor is a person who either travels outside of his
or her "usual environment" for a period of less than 1 year or
who stays overnight in a hotel or motel. The visitor may travel for
personal pleasure or on industry or government business. Visitors do not
include travelers whose main purpose is to be compensated within the
place visited--such as migrant workers, persons traveling to new
assignments, and diplomatic and military personnel traveling between
their duty stations and home countries. The 1-year time period is
consistent with the internationally accepted limit that is usually used
to define a "resident."
Usual environment. The usual environment is defined as the place
of normal (or everyday) activities--such as residence, leisure, study,
and work--and the criterion is distance. For the U.S. TTSA'S, the
usual environment is defined as the area within 50-100 miles of home,
depending on available data sources.(9)
Tourism demand, commodities, and industries
In the TTSA'S, tourism activities are measured by tourism
demand, which is defined as the travel-related expenditures made by all
visitors, before, during, and immediately after each trip taken. Tourism
demand consists of business travel and travel by government employees
inside and outside the United States, U.S. resident household travel
inside and outside the United States, and travel in the United States by
nonresidents (international visitors).(10)
Tourism commodities are the commodities that are typically
purchased by visitors directly from producers. The identification of
tourism commodities partly depends on the locale and the activities of
visitors, but several commodities, such as hotels and transportation
services, are obvious. Classification of tourism commodities in the
TTSA'S is based on a list of predominant activities of visitors
that was developed from WTO and OECD recommendations and from five
different sets of surveys of U.S. visitors.(11) The commodities so
classified are grouped into the following broad categories: Tourism
commodities, such as hotels and lodging, eating and drinking places,
other types of leisure activities, and modes of transportation; and
non-tourism commodities, such as gasoline and oil (see table 3).
Table 3.--Classification of Commodities in the Travel and Tourism
Accounts
Description of commodity Content
Tourism commodities:
Hotels and lodging places Includes lodging receipts from
hotels, motels, guestrooms, and
rooming and boarding houses
serving the general
public; other receipts of
hotels and motels, sporting and
recreational camps, and
recreational vehicle parks and
camp sites
Excludes meals served by hotels
or motels
Eating and drinking places Includes food and beverage
receipts and tips
Excludes catering services and
school lunch sales by State and
local governments
Passenger rail Includes receipts from rail
passengers for travel and
dining and tips
Passenger bus and other
local transportation Includes receipts from passengers
for intercity, charter, and
local bus services and subway
and limousine services
Taxicabs Includes taxi fares and tips
Domestic passenger air fares Includes receipts from domestic
air passengers for airfares,
meals and beverages, movies,
and other receipts
International air fares Includes receipts from
international air passengers
Passenger water Includes receipts from passengers
for water transportation
Auto and truck rental Includes receipts for rental of
automobiles and trucks
Other vehicle rental Includes receipts for rental of
recreational vehicles and utility
trailers
Arrangement of passenger
transportation Includes commissions for the
arrangement of passenger
transportation and net receipts
for tours
Recreation and entertainment Includes miscellaneous
entertainment receipts such
as amusement parks, fairs,
museums, gambling, and other
recreation and amusements
Participant sports Includes participant sports
such as golf and tennis
Movie, theater, ballet, and
musical events Includes receipts for admissions
to movies and theater and
music programs
Sports events Includes admissions to sports
events
Petroleum retail margins Includes retail margins on
petroleum sales
Other retail margins Includes retail margin on all
other goods
Travel by U.S. residents
abroad Includes travel expenditures
by U.S. residents abroad
Nontourism commodities:(1)
Gasoline and oil Includes sales of gasoline,
diesel fuel, lubricating
oils, and grease
PCE nondurable commodities Includes sales of all other
nondurable commodities
Selected services Includes receipts for selected
services that may be used by
tourists on, during, or after
a trip, such as parking,
tolls, and automotive repair
services
Wholesale trade margins and
transportation costs Includes wholesale margins and
transportation costs on all goods
All other commodities Includes all other commodities
not considered above
(1.) Nontourism commodities are commodities not classified as tourism
commodities. PCE Personal consumption expenditures
Several commodities are included in order to account for shopping
and other purchases and to provide estimates in purchasers' prices
(that is, to compute values in producers' prices from the
production table). These commodities are petroleum products retail
margins, other retail margins, gasoline and oil, and wholesale trade
margins and transportation costs. Petroleum retail margins and other
retail margins are classified as tourism commodities because the
retailers have direct contact with visitors. Other commodities, while
supplying tourism demand, are classified as nontourism commodities
because the producers do not have direct contact with visitors.
The TTSA'S exclude a number of commodities that could be
viewed as tourism commodities--consumer durables, imputed rents from
vacation homes, skiing, health spas, financial services, and retail food
(off-premise food consumption); many of these commodities are not
separately identified in the I-O accounts. However, two of these
commodities--consumer durables and imputed rents from vacation homes and
related lodging accommodations, such as time-shares--are important
tourism commodities, and their exclusion results in an understatement of
travel and tourism activities. Including them would require additional
analysis to develop estimates of tourism's share and, in the case
of consumer durables, to determine which items to include.
Tourism industries are identified by analyzing the relationships
shown in the I-O accounts between tourism commodities and the producing
industries. Industries that include tourism commodities as a primary
product are classified as tourism industries. These industries generally
sell a significant portion of their output to visitors, where
"significant" indicates that the industries' revenues and
profits would be substantially affected if tourism ceased to exist.
Examples include airline transportation, hotels, and local public
transportation.
With modifications, the TTSA'S follow the tables developed by
the OECD. Of the 13 tables suggested by the OECD, the TTSA'S
include 4 that are considered high priority--the tables for production,
demand, value added, and employment. A fifth table, on estimates of
gross domestic investment in tourism industries, is also considered high
priority but is left for future work. The WTO and OECD definitions,
classification of tourism commodities and industries, and tables have
been modified to account for differences in U.S. national accounting
practices, tourism activities in the United States, and the availability
of data on tourism.
Relationship to the I-O accounts
The I-O accounts formed the basis of the preparation of the
TTSA'S in three ways. First, the I-O accounts provided detailed
measures of output by commodity and industry that were used to identify
commodities purchased by visitors. Second, the I-O accounts provided the
detailed estimates of industry and final use expenditures required to
identify tourism expenditures by type of visitor. Third, the I-O
accounts provided the analytical framework that links these expenditures
to industry output and to national aggregates, such as GDP.
The TTSA'S are adapted from the I-O accounts by rearranging
selected outputs and inputs in the I-O accounts to fit the
classification of the TTSA'S. The TTSA'S generally maintain
the conventions of the I-O accounts, but they differ in the following
ways:
* I-O industries and commodities are regrouped to follow the
classification system for the TTSA'S.
* Personal consumption expenditures (PCE) for tourism commodities
is disaggregated into resident and nonresident purchases--a distinction
that is not made in the I-O accounts.
* Resident household and nonresident tourism expenditures from
nonprofit institutions and from government--primarily admissions to
national parks, museums, and other services sold to visitors--are
included as admissions paid by visitors. In the I-O accounts, the
outputs of nonprofit institutions and of government are measured as
current expenditures.(12) Estimates of employment for tourism industries
are included; the I-O accounts do not include employment by industry.
Employee and business travel expenditures are included in tourism
demand. The I-O accounts include these expenditures as intermediate
inputs and not as final expenditures.
In the TTSA'S, there is generally a one-to-one relationship
between industries and commodities (table 4). Exceptions are the
"passenger air transportation" and "automotive
rental" industries, both of which produce more than one tourism
commodity. In addition, the commodity "travel by U.S. residents
abroad" has no industry counterpart, because no U.S. production is
associated with overseas expenditures by U.S. residents.
Table 4.--TTSA Industries and Commodities
Industry Commodity
Hotels and lodging places Hotels and lodging places
Eating and drinking places Eating and drinking places
Railroads and related services Passenger rail
Local and suburban transit and
interurban highway passenger
transportation, except taxicabs Passenger bus and other local
transportation
Taxicabs Taxicabs
Air transportation Domestic passenger air fares
International air fares
Water transportation Passenger water
Automotive rental and leasing,
without drivers Auto and truck rental
Other vehicle rental
Arrangement of passenger
transportation Arrangement of passenger
transportation
Miscellaneous amusement and
recreation services (except
membership sports and
recreation clubs); racing,
including track operation;
marinas; libraries, museums,
art galleries, and botanical
and zoological gardens. Recreation and entertainment
Membership sports and
recreation clubs Participant sports (golf,
tennis, etc.)
Motion picture theaters; dance
studios, schools, and halls;
theatrical producers (except
motion pictures), bands, Movie, theater, ballet, and
orchestras, and entertainers. musical events
Professional sports clubs and
promoters Sports events
Gasoline service stations Petroleum retail margins
Retail, excluding eating and
drinking places and gasoline
service stations Other retail margins
Industries producing nondurable
PCE goods PCE nondurable commodities
Automobile parking, automotive
repair shops and services, and
toll highways Parking, automotive repair,
and highway tolls
All other industries Wholesale trade margins and
transportation costs
Gasoline and oil
(1) Travel by U.S. residents abroad
(1.) Travel by U.S. residents abroad has no industry counterpart.
U.S. residents traveling abroad purchase commodities that are produced
abroad, and the TTSA'S include only domestically produced
commodities.
PCE Personal consumption expenditures
Components of TTSA'S
The TTSA'S expand the four "priority" OECD tables to
five tables to show clearly the major components of tourism. The
production of tourism commodities is shown in table 5; the supply and
consumption of tourism commodities, in table 6; tourism demand, in table
7; tourism gross domestic product (CDP), in table 8; and tourism
employment, in table 9.
[TABULAR DATAS 5 to 9 NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII]
The production account of tourism industries
The production table (table 5) is similar to the I-O make table, but
with three modifications. First, the rows and columns are reversed; TTSA
commodities are shown across the rows, and TTSA industries down the
columns. Second, detail is shown only for TTSA commodities and
industries; the production for all other commodities and industries is
aggregated. Third, the intermediate inputs and the value-added components--compensation of employees, indirect business taxes, and
other value added--are shown as rows at the bottom of the table.
Similar to the I-O make table, the TTSA production table shows the
value of each commodity produced by each industry in producers'
prices. Each cell on the main diagonal (that is, from the top left to
bottom right) shows the value for the commodity produced by the industry
that has been designated its primary producer. For example, the
"hotels and lodging places" industry (column) produces mostly
the commodity "hotels and lodging places" (row). "Eating
and drinking places" are the main producers of meals and beverages
(the "eating and drinking places" commodity). The other cells
in each column show the value of production by that industry of
commodities for which the industry is a secondary producer. For example,
the industry "participant sports" is a secondary producer of
"hotels and lodging." The sum of the row entries is the total
output for the commodity. Because tourism industries are the primary
producers of tourism commodities, and only a few other industries are
secondary producers, most of the cells outside of the main diagonal are
zero. For example, the "railroad" industry produces only
transportation services sold to visitors.
Supply and consumption of tourism commodities
The table on supply and consumption of tourism commodities (table 6)
rearranges and modifies the I-O use table to show the supply of tourism
commodities and all other commodities, as well as the intermediate and
final demand for these same commodities. Supply is defined as the total
amount of the commodity available to be purchased by business,
households, and government and to be exported. It is the sum of domestic
production, imports, government sales, inventory changes, wholesale and
retail margins, and transportation costs. On the consumption side, it
shows the intermediate (business) and final purchases (personal
consumption expenditures, investment, exports, and government
expenditures excluding sales) of these commodities in purchasers'
prices. The categories of consumption in the TTSA'S are the same as
in the I-O use table.
Tourism demand by type of commodity and type of visitor
The TTSA demand table (table 7), a subset of the I-O use table,
rearranges information from the supply and consumption table (table 6)
and separates tourism demand from nontourism demand. It shows the major
components of tourism demand in purchasers' prices, including the
following: Consumption by business as intermediate use and consumption
by government, resident households, and nonresidents as final uses.
Household consumption is equivalent to PCE that has been adjusted to
exclude the expenses of nonprofit institutions that are not covered by
admissions fees and to exclude travel by nonresidents in the United
States. Nonresident tourism includes PCE nonresident travel expenditures
plus exports of international air and water transportation fares.
Table 7 also shows the proportions of tourism commodities compared
with nontourism commodities. These proportions provide the basis for
estimating tourism value added and tourism employment. They are also
used to derive the "tourism-commodity ratio" for each tourism
commodity--that is, the proportion of the supply of the commodity that
is purchased by visitors. For example, 100 percent of supply of
"hotels and other lodging" was used by visitors, but only 18
percent of the supply of "eating and drinking places" was
purchased by visitors.
Tourism GDP of tourism industries and other industries
The tourism GDP table (table 8), which is derived from the supply and
consumption table (table 6) and the demand table (table 7), shows the
relative importance of tourism industries and other industries in
producing tourism output and tourism value added. For each tourism
industry and for "all other industries" it shows intermediate
consumption, value added, and the "tourism-industry ratio,"
that is, the share of an industry's output that is purchased by
visitors.
The tourism-industry ratio for each industry is derived by
applying the tourism-commodity ratio to each of the tourism commodities
produced by that industry. For example, the hotel industry's ratio
is derived by summing the output of hotel services times 1.0 (the
tourism-commodity ratio for hotel services), the output of eating and
drinking places times 0.18, the output of recreation and entertainment
(gambling) times 0.90, and the output of other retail times 0.03 and
then dividing that sum by hotel industry output. The tourism-industry
ratio for each industry is applied to the industry output, intermediate
consumption, and value added. The ratio applied to the industry value
added is the estimated tourism-industry contribution to GDP.
Tourism employment and compensation of employees
The tourism employment and compensation of employees table (table 9)
has no counterpart in the I-O accounts, but it includes I-O compensation
values. Total employment is equal to the number of full- and part-time
employees; compensation of employees consists of wages and salaries and
supplements to wages and salaries, such as employer contributions to
pension plans, social security, and fringe benefits. The table shows
total employment, tourism employment, tourism compensation, and average
compensation in each tourism industry. Tourism employment is determined
by the total employment in each industry and the tourism-industry ratio
(from table 8). Similarly, tourism compensation is derived by
multiplying compensation of employees in each industry by the
tourism-industry ratio for that industry. Average compensation in each
tourism industry is tourism compensation divided by tourism employment.
Methodological Overview
The TTSA estimates were based on the 1992 benchmark I-O accounts, but
not all were taken directly from them. The estimates that were taken
directly from the I-O accounts include the output of tourism and
nontourism commodities, the output of the industries that produce these
commodities, the value added of these industries, compensation of
employees in these industries, and the consumption of the tourism and
nontourism commodities (tables 5 and 6). The tables show the supply of
output of tourism commodities that are produced and are available for
purchase, and they identify the economic units that consume TTSA
commodities: Business, persons, and government.
The estimates that were not taken directly from the I-O accounts
include tourism demand and tourism aDP (tables 7 and 8). For a number of
tourism commodities, tourism expenditures were separated from nontourism
expenditures on the basis of assumptions about allocations between the
two types of expenditures. There are several sources on which to base
these allocations, and each provides significantly different
allocations. Because BEA was not able to reconcile these differences,
three alternative sets of TTSA estimates were prepared.
Tourism expenditures in the I-O accounts
In the I-O accounts, the expenditures of visitors are included as
purchases by business and final users. Expenditures for business travel
are included in intermediate purchases, and travel by government
employees are included in government final expenditures. Expenditures by
nonresidents for international air and water fares are included in
exports.
All other travel expenditures by visitors (resident and
nonresident) are included in personal consumption expenditures (PCE).
PCE for selected commodities consists of all purchases by resident and
nonresident visitors in the United States, and it excludes purchases
abroad by U.S. residents. In contrast, total PCE consists of all
expenditures by U.S. residents, including expenditures made during
foreign travel, and it excludes expenditures made in the United States
by nonresidents. The differences between PCE for specific commodities
and total PCE are in two PCE categories: "Foreign travel by U.S.
residents" and "Expenditures in the United States by
nonresidents."(13)
Alternative methods of estimating tourism demand
The tourism expenditures in the TTSA'S were derived from the I-O
estimates of consumption. The procedures used to develop the estimates
of the visitors' share of consumption depended on the source of
demand: Consumer demand, business and government demand, and
international demand.
Consumer demand.--The tourism commodities purchased by consumers were
separated into two types. "Pure-tourism" commodities are
commodities for which all or most of the expenditures are by visitors,
such as hotels and lodging places. "Mixed-use" commodities are
commodities for which the expenditures are by both visitors and
nonvisitors, such as restaurant meals.
For pure-tourism commodities, commodity-flow estimates taken
directly from the relevant PCE categories in the 1992 I-O accounts were
used for each of these commodities.(14) To provide separate figures for
expenditures of resident households and nonresidents, estimates of the
expenditures by nonresidents were subtracted from the total (see the
section "Other procedures" for a description of these
estimates).
For mixed-use commodities, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
Consumer Expenditure Survey (CEX) is the only national source of data
that is available to allocate the shares of consumer spending between
visitors and nonvisitors.(15) The CEX is a quarterly survey of 5,000
U.S. households that collects data on consumer expenditures, including
expenditures on tourism, or out-of-town trips, for selected categories
of commodities.(16)
Surveying households to collect expenditure data is difficult, and
several evaluations of the CEX have highlighted some of these
problems.(17) The problems include small sample size; the length,
complexity, and degree of detail of the questionnaire; high nonresponse
rates; and high rates of recall error. As a result, certain types of
expenditures tend to be underreported or misreported. Large purchases,
such as automobiles, and regular and recurring expenditures, such as
rent and utilities, appear to be well reported. However, smaller and/or
infrequent expenditures (such as food, apparel, public transportation,
alcohol, tobacco, and gambling) appear to be underreported.
Unfortunately, there are few studies that have evaluated the
relative accuracy of the individual components of the PCE and the CEX or
the completeness of reporting in the CEX.(18) The PCE estimates are
largely based on Census Bureau data on sales of goods and services and
BEA input-output estimates of the allocation of purchases of goods and
services between consumers, business, and government. The PCE estimates
may also be subject to errors; for example, some of the PCE estimates
may be overstated because they include purchases by businesses not
correctly identified in the I-O estimates. For a comparable list of
commodities, the CEX estimates tend to be lower than PCE estimates for
less frequently consumed or small-value items, but similar for
big-ticket and frequently purchased items. Overall, the CEX estimates
are about 30 percent lower than the PCE estimates for 1992.
Because the CEX is a general-purpose household survey and was not
designed as a travel survey, it is difficult to assess how well tourism
expenditures are reported. Some of the limitations of the CEX for use as
a travel survey are the following: The questions on out-of-town trips
are at the end of the survey; a single respondent, rather than the
individual traveler, is asked about all expenditures for the household;
the survey is a large questionnaire that covers all household
expenditures rather than a smaller one that focuses on specific types of
expenditures such as travel; and the sample size for households
reporting travel is likely to be far smaller than the samples for other
types of consumer spending. Surveys specific to travel have tended to
yield higher estimates of travel expenditures than has the CEX.
Expanding the sample and making other improvements to the CEX may
help address some of these issues. In the meantime, for purposes of this
study, the following three methods were used to provide a range of
estimates for mixed-use TTSA commodities.
* Under "Method 1" the CEX estimates for tourism
expenditures were assumed to be fully and accurately reported. Thus,
tourism expenditures were estimated under this method as the CEX
estimates minus estimated overseas expenditures.
* Under "Method 2," the CEX estimates for tourism
expenditures were assumed to be as accurate as the estimates of
nontourism expenditures for the same commodities; thus, PCE was used as
the control total for total spending for each commodity. Tourism
expenditures were estimated under this method as the ratio of CEX
expenditures on tourism activities (less estimated overseas
expenditures) to total CEX expenditures (less overseas expenditures),
multiplied by PCE less nonresident expenditures. Under this method, the
tourism estimates for mixed-use commodities were about 16 percent above
those under method 1.
* Under "Method 3," the CEX estimates for tourism
activities were assumed to be more understated than the estimates of
other consumer expenditures; thus, the travel estimates were first
adjusted using trade-source data and information on the reporting ratio
of CEX to PCE for comparable expenditure categories. The adjustment
factor for the CEX was 1.5.(19) Tourism expenditures were estimated
under this method as the ratio of adjusted CEX expenditures on
out-of-town trips (less estimated overseas expenditures) divided by the
total CEX expenditures (less overseas expenditures), multiplied by PCE
less nonresident expenditures.
For eating and drinking places, the method 3 estimates were
further adjusted using estimates from two trade sources--the Travel
Industry Association (TIA) and D.K. Shifflet and Associates.(20) This
adjustment consisted of using a weighted average of the TIA estimate,
the Shifflet estimate, and the method 3 estimate for resident
households.
The estimate of PCE on nondurable commodities, other than gasoline
and oil, by resident households was based on an average of the ratios
from the D.K. Shifflet and Associates survey and the In-Flight Survey
for visitor shopping to the sum of expenditures for hotels, meals, and
recreation.(21) This average ratio was applied to the three sets of
estimates of the sum of resident household purchases that were based on
the three alternative methods of the following TTSA commodities: Hotels
and lodging places; eating and drinking places; arrangement of passenger
transportation (tours); recreation and entertainment; participant
sports; movie, theater, ballet, and musical events; and sports events
(table 7).
For all three methods, the estimate of resident household
purchases of auto repair was based on the ratio of CEX resident
household purchases of gasoline on out-of-town trips to PCE gasoline
purchases, multiplied by PCE purchases of auto repair.
Business and government demand.--The estimates of the share of
business and government expenditures for tourism were based on a variety
of sources and different methods, depending on the commodity.
For pure-tourism commodities, the estimates were taken directly
from the I-O tables, following the method used for consumer demand.
For mixed-use commodities, the business and government tourism
expenditures for various commodities were estimated differently from
those for consumers. Expenditures on "eating and drinking
places" were estimated by applying the ratio of meals and beverage
expenditures to hotel expenditures from the American Express Survey of
Business Travel Management to I-O purchases of this commodity.(22)
Expenditures for "local transportation," "taxicabs,"
and "gasoline and oil" were estimated using the ratio of
resident household tourism purchases to total PCE by category. Because
the resident household tourism purchases were calculated using the three
alternative methods (see the discussion on page 19), the business and
government expenditures also show three different estimates. Business
expenditures on "participant sports, movie, theater, ballet, and
musical events" and on "sports events" were estimated
from underlying data in the I-O accounts on expenditures for business
travel and entertainment by industries.
International demand.--The estimates of total travel expenditures by
U.S. residents abroad and by foreign residents in the United States were
largely based on BEA balance of payments data. Data from the In-Flight
Survey were used to separate total travel expenditures in the United
States into five categories: Hotels and lodging places; eating and
drinking places; transportation within the United States; recreation and
entertainment; and shopping. Expenditures for transportation,
recreation, and entertainment in the United States were disaggregated
into TTSA commodities using weights calculated from resident household
tourism expenditures. A single value for each category was estimated
under all three methods.
Estimating tourism employment and compensation of employees
The TTSA estimates of tourism employment were developed from BLS
estimates of average monthly employment by industry at the four-digit
sic level and from BEA estimates at the two-digit SIC level. Employment
was estimated at the four-digit SIC level by applying employment weights
from the BLS estimates to the BEA estimates.(23) Employment by SIC
industry was assigned to the TTSA industries. Tourism employment and
compensation of tourism employees were each estimated by multiplying
industry employment and industry compensation, respectively, by the
tourism-industry ratio for each of the three methods. Estimates of
compensation of employees were from the I-O accounts.
Estimates of Travel and Tourism for 1992
The 1992 estimates of tourism expenditures help to gauge the size and
importance of travel and tourism in the United States. Because three
different methods were used in estimating tourism expenditures (see the
section "Alternative methods for estimating tourism demand"),
these estimates are presented as ranges.
In terms of output, travel and tourism represented 2.1-2.4 percent
of total U.S. production or output in 1992 ($230.8--$259.5 billion as a
share of total industry output) and 1.9-2.2 percent of U.S. GDP (tourism
value added of $120.5-$135.7 billion as a share of GDP). These shares
are similar to those derived in Canada's tourism satellite
accounts, which showed a 2.3-percent share of Canadian GDP;
Norway's tourism satellite accounts showed a 4.3-percent share.(24)
The "hotels and lodging" industry had the highest value
added among the tourism industries, at $41.6-$42.7 billion, or 31-35
percent of tourism GDP (table 8). The second highest industry was
"passenger air" (domestic and international), at $30.5
billion, or 22-25 percent of tourism a GDP. Third was "eating and
drinking places;" at $17.7-$22.7 billion, or 15-17 percent of
tourism GDP. Shopping ("retail excluding eating and drinking
places, and gasoline service stations") was fourth, at $9.0-$11.3
billion, or 7.4-8.3 percent of tourism GDP. In terms of employment
(table 9), "hotels and lodging" was the largest tourism
industry employer, with 1.3-1.4 million employees, and "eating and
drinking places" was the second largest, with 1.1-1.4 million
employees. "Air transportation" employment was only 0.5
million, less than half that of hotels.
In terms of demand, the TTSA'S show that tourism purchases in
the United States were $284.2--$332.8 billion, or 4.6-5.3 percent of
GDP. The TTSA'S also show expenditures by type of visitor. In 1992,
resident households' expenditures in the United States accounted
for 30-47 percent of domestic tourism expenditures (total tourism demand
less travel expenditures by U.S. residents abroad); business sector
expenditures, for 27-30 percent; and government expenditures, for 5-6
percent. Expenditures by nonresidents were $71.5 billion, or 21-25
percent of tourism expenditures in the United States. Expenditures by
U.S. residents overseas accounted for 11-12 percent of total tourism
purchases (table 7).
By category, the largest expenditures were in passenger air
travel, followed by hotels and lodging, meals and beverages, and
shopping (table 7). Expenditures for passenger air travel services
(domestic air, at $48.5 billion, plus international air, at $32.2
billion) were 22-25 percent of total tourism expenditures. Expenditures
for hotels and lodging places were $56.6 billion, or 15-17 percent, and
those for meals and beverages were $45.4-$58.5 billion, or 14-15
percent. Shopping expenditures (personal consumption expenditures on
nondurable, nontourism commodities) were $35.4-$47.4 billion, or 11-13
percent.
Tourism employment in 1992 was 3.8-4.4 million in 1992, or 3.2-3.7
percent of total employment in the United States; this is similar to the
3.9-percent share of employment estimated in Canada's tourism
satellite accounts. Tourism's share of employment is much higher
than its share of value added to GDP (1.9-2.2 percent), indicating that
tourism industries are more labor intensive than the economy as a whole.
Compensation of tourism employees was 2.2-2.5 percent of total
compensation of employees. The average compensation per tourism employee
was $21,393 per year, but it ranged from a high of $80,783 in
professional sports clubs and promoters to a low of $11,917 in eating
and drinking places. The average compensation per tourism employee is
lower than the average compensation per employee for the economy as a
whole ($30,891).
Future Work and Extensions
This prototype satellite account represents a first step in producing
satellite accounts for travel and tourism for the United States.
Depending on additional funding, the next steps may include the
following: Developing point estimates to replace ranges of travel and
tourism expenditures; updating the TTSA'S annually; improving the
quality of the estimates by collecting additional data; adding estimates
of investment in tourism industries; expanding tourism commodities to
include consumer durables, imputed rents for vacation homes, and the
provision of public facilities used by visitors; and adding estimates by
U.S. region (or by State).
Point estimates, updates, and additional data requirements
To develop point estimates, the accuracy and reliability of source data by tourism commodity must be examined to determine the adjustments
required for a number of commodities, especially for "eating and
drinking places," "shopping," "recreational"
activities, and business expenditures. Over time, the proposed expansion
of the CEX should provide improved data on tourism expenditures.
Updates of the TTSA'S could be made annually using NIPA
estimates of final uses and gross product by industry estimates. This
updating would require assuming that the input-output relationships in
producing tourism commodities remain the same, that the proportions of
tourism demand for many tourism commodities do not change, and that the
mix of output by the tourism industries does not change.
Improved estimates of tourism demand are needed in a number of
categories of tourism commodities. Specifically, better estimation approaches or the collection of additional data would improve measures
of "eating and drinking places" "shopping on out-of-town
trips, "recreation and entertainment," "participant
sports," "movie theater, ballet, and musical events,"
"sports events," and business expenditures made on trips.
Investment in tourism industries
One important estimate that could be added is private and public
investment in fixed capital by tourism industries. The OECD- and
WTO-recommended criterion for the inclusion of this investment in the
satellite accounts is that the main use of the output of the industry
should be by tourism or by visitors. For private investment, investment
in fixed capital by hotels, airlines, and restaurants should be
included. For public investment, investment in airports and
long-distance bus stations should be included. Both public and private
investment in railroads, highways, and seaports should also be included
if a method could be developed to separate use for freight
transportation services from use for passenger travel.
Consumer durables
Consumer durables--such as recreation vehicles, automobiles, and
sports equipment (for example, skis)--are currently not included in the
TTSA'S. Whether and how consumer durables might be incorporated
requires additional analysis. First, which consumer durables to include
needs to be determined. Should only small, low-value items such as
cameras be included? Should large, single-purpose consumer durables such
as recreational vehicles be included, or should multipurpose consumer
durables such as personal automobiles be included? Second, how these
durables would be included needs to be determined. Should they be
treated as a final consumption item, as they are now in the I-O accounts
and the NIPA'S, or should they be treated as investment, as is
owner-occupied housing and government purchases of plant and
equipment?(25)
Rental of vacation homes
Rents from vacation homes used for tourism purposes conceptually
should be included in the TTSA'S. The inclusion of imputed rents
for owner-occupied homes is a standard treatment in the NIPA'S, but
applying this approach to vacation homes is difficult. One difficulty is
separating vacation homes from primary residence homes. A second
difficulty is the lack of data on the length of time the vacation home is used by the owner and the time it is rented to others. If the home is
rented to others, information on rental costs is needed; these costs are
not readily available, and indirect estimates are difficult to make.
Public facilities used by visitors
Public facilities, such as parks and museums, are attractions to
visitors as well as nonvisitors. However, the costs of providing these
public facilities are not included in the TTSA'S. Estimating these
expenditures would be a lengthy and time-consuming project.
Regional analysis
One extension of the TTSA'S would be to estimate travel and
tourism expenditures by region (or by State) in the United States. It
would focus on tourism CDP and employment and employee compensation by
State.
(1). The first set of extensions covered transportation activities;
see Bingsong Fang, Xiaoli Han, Ann M. Lawson, and Sherlene K.S. Lum,
"U.S. Transportation Satellite Accounts for 1992," Survey of
Current Business 78 (April 1998): 16-27. These accounts were developed
jointly with the Bureau of Transportation Statistics, U.S. Department of
Transportation.
The TTSA'S were developed by the Bureau of Economic Analysis
with the support of the Tourism Industries Office of the International
Trade Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce.
(2.) For descriptions of the other satellite accounts that have been
developed by BEA, see "Integrated Economic and Environmental
Satellite Accounts" and "Accounting for Mineral Resources:
Issues and BEA'S Initial Estimates," Survey 74 (April 1994):
33-72; and "A Satellite Account for Research and Development,"
Survey 74 (November 1994): 37-71.
(3.) For a description of the I-O accounts, see Ann M. Lawson,
"Benchmark Input-Output Accounts for the U.S. Economy, 1992: Make,
Use, and Supplementary Tables," Survey 77 (November 1997): 36-82;
and Ann M. Lawson, "Benchmark Input-Output Accounts for the U.S.
Economy, 1992: Requirements Tables," Survey 77 (December 1997):
22-47.
(4.) The term "visitor" is used because it is more
descriptive of the travel activities included in the TTS'S than the
term "tourist" which connotes a person who travels for leisure
only.
(5.) U.S. Travel Center, Travel Industry Association, National Travel
Survey (Washington, DC: Travel Industries Association of America, 1992);
U.S. Department of Commerce, International Trade Administration, Tourism
Industries Office, Summary and Analysis of International Visitors to the
United States (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1992);
U.S. Department of Transportation, Bureau of Transportation Statistics,
American Travel Survey (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office,
1995).
(6.) See World Tourism Organization, "Tourism Satellite Account
(TSA)," 3rd Draft, Rev. 1 (Madrid, January 1998) for the most
recent description of WTO definitions and guidelines, and Tourism
Committee, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development,
Manual on Tourism Economic Accounts, OECD/GD(91)82 (Paris, 1991).
(7.) See Jocelyn Lapierre and Duane Hayes, "The Tourism
Satellite Account," National Income and Expenditure Accounts,
Quarterly Estimates, Second Quarter 1994 (Ottawa: Statistics Canada);
and Trude Nygaard, "Satellite Accounts for Tourism in Norway"
(Division of National Accounts, Statistics Norway, August 1996). Other
OECD countries that are currently developing their own accounts include
Australia, Spain, France, New Zealand, Switzerland, and Poland.
More recently, the European Union issued a directive to its member
states to collect harmonized European Community statistical information
on tourism supply and demand; EUROSTAT began collecting data in 1997.
(8.) The OECD recommends a set of 13 tables that show the following:
The production account of tourism industries; the demand for tourism
commodities; the value added of tourism industries; employment in
tourism industries; visitor characteristics; investment by tourism
industries; capital stock; and 6 other tables measuring these variables
in real terms. The WTO recommends a set of 12 tables that consist of the
following: Domestic tourism consumption by commodity and origin
(domestic and foreign); outbound tourism consumption; inbound tourism
consumption; internal and national tourism consumption by
forms--summary; tourism consumption by payer (by sector, or households,
business, government); tourism consumption by function (domestic
tourism, outbound tourism, and inbound tourism); importance of tourism
consumption within supply; supply of tourism commodities according to activities; production accounts of tourism industries; tourism-related
net acquisition of nonfinancial assets; employment in tourism
industries; and imports and exports of goods and services generated by
tourism.
(9.) The distance criterion differs by survey: The Consumer
Expenditures Survey (Bureau of Labor Statistics) uses 75 miles from
home; the American Travel Survey (Bureau of Transportation Statistics),
100 miles from home; private surveys by the Travel Industry Association,
50 or 100 miles from home; and surveys by D.K. Shifflet and Associates,
50 miles from home.
(10.) Resident household travel refers to tourism of residents within
the country, and travel by nonresidents refers to tourism of
nonresidents within the country (inbound international tourism).
(11.) The WTO and OECD recommendations were modified to agree with
the U.S. national income and product accounts and expanded where
additional data on tourism demand were available. The five sets of
surveys reviewed were the Consumer Expenditures Survey, prepared by the
Bureau of Labor Statistics; the In-Flight Survey, prepared by the
International Trade Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce; the
American Travel Survey, prepared by the Bureau of Transportation
Statistics, U.S. Department of Transportation; the National Travel
Survey of the Travel Industry Association; and surveys by D.K. Shifflet
and Associates.
(12.) In the I-O accounts, government expenditures are the net of
expenditures less government sales.
(13) The expenditures in these two PCE categories are also included
in net exports. Expenditures in the United States by nonresidents
consist of both travel and other (not travel-related) expenditures. For
the purposes of the TTSA'S, only travel expenditures are included
as part of tourism demand. Excluded are medical expenditures by
nonresidents, nonresident student expenditures, expenditures by
nonresidents in the U.S. working for foreign governments and
international organizations, expenditures by Mexican, West Indian, and
Puerto Rican workers in the United States, and expenditures by foreign
ocean and air crews in the United States.
(14.) Household tourism expenditures from nonprofit institutions
include only the portion of expenses of nonprofit institutions covered
by admissions.
(15.) The acronym "CEX" is used for this survey because the
acronym "CES" is usually used for the BLS Current Employment
Survey.
(16.) The CEX includes overseas trips and trips within the United
States that are greater than 75 miles and that are not reimbursed by an
employer. Data collected on expenditures made on out-of-town trips
include lodging, food, alcoholic beverages, intercity train fares,
intercity bus fares, local transportation, taxi fares, airline fares,
ship fares, auto rental, truck rental, rental of campers and other
vehicles, boat and trailer rental, recreation expenses and other
entertainment, participant sports, movie and other admissions,
admissions to sports events, gasoline and oil purchases, and parking and
tolls. For additional information on this survey, see U.S. Department of
Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, BLS Handbook of Methods,
"Consumer Expenditures and Income" (Washington DC: U.S.
Government Printing Office, September 1992): 170-175, and U.S.
Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Consumer Expenditure
Survey, 2992-93, Bulletin 2462 (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing
Office, September 1995): 1-13, 224-234:
(17.) See E. Raphael Branch, "The Consumer Expenditure Survey: A
Comparative Analysis,"Monthly Labor Review (December 1994): 47-55;
Jack E. Triplett, "Measuring Consumption: The Post-1973 Slowdown
and the Research Issues" Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review
(May/June 1997): 15-22; and Constance F. Citro and Robert T. Michael,
ed., Measuring Poverty, A New Approach (Washington, DC: National Academy
Press, 1995): 85-88, 392-95.
(18.) Triplett, 16.
(19.) This factor was calculated by (1) computing the average ratio
of the CEX estimate to the PCE estimate for all corresponding
expenditure categories; (2) identifying the expenditure categories with
a CEX-to-PCE ratio that was less than the average ratio; (3) computing
the average CEX-to-PCE ratio for the expenditure categories; and (4)
dividing the average CEX-to-PCE ratio from (1) by the average CEX-to-PCE
ratio from (3).
(20.) The TIA estimate was the product of the number of travelers
staying in hotels by state (monthly survey of 20,000) times an average
cost for three meals in each state, summed for all states. The D.K.
Shifflet estimates were based on a monthly survey sample of 25,000.
(21.) This ratio equaled 0.35 for the D.K. Shifflet and Associates
survey and 0.57 for the In-Flight Survey; see footnote 11.
(22.) The 1992 American Express Survey of Business Travel Management,
unpublished.
(23.) BEA adjusts the four-digit BLS data to extend coverage to
partially covered industries, such as membership organizations, and to
excluded industries, such as railroads. Other adjustments include the
addition of excluded nonprofits as well as misreporting adjustments.
(Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. Department of Commerce, State
Personal Income, 1929-93 (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing
Office, 1995): M-9--M-13.)
(24.) See footnote 7.
(25.) If these durables were treated as investment, the services of
these assets would be included in GDP. For estimates of the stock of
consumer durables that would be used to estimate these services, see
U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, Fixed
Reproducible Tangible Wealth in the United States, 1925-96, CD-ROM
(Washington, DC: Bureau of Economic Analysis, 1998). For the treatment
of owner-occupied housing in the I-O accounts and the NIPA's, see
U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, Personal
Consumption Expenditures, Methodology Paper Series MP-6 (Washington, DC:
U.S. Government Printing Office, 1990): 8.
Acknowledgments
The U.S. Travel and Tourism Satellite Accounts for 1992 were
prepared by the staff of the Bureau of Economic Analysis under the
direction of Sumiye Okubo, Associate Director for Industry Accounts. The
project was initiated by J. Steven Landefeld, Director of nut,, Robert
Parker, Chief Statistician of BEA, and Helen N. Marano, Director of
Tourism Development, Tourism Industries Office, International Trade
Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce.
At BEA, Mark A. Planting, Branch Chief, Industry Economics
Division, developed the framework for the production, demand, and
value-added accounts, and the estimates of these accounts. David I. Kass
developed the method for estimating tourism expenditures on eating and
drinking places, the framework for measuring tourism employment and
compensation of employees, and the estimates for the accounts for
employment and compensation of employees; he also drafted the sections
of the article describing tourism employment and compensation of
employees. John Turner assisted in the data processing of the accounts.
Michael Mann from the Balance of Payments Division provided assistance
on evaluating data from the In-Flight Survey, and Clint McCully from the
National Income and Wealth Division, on evaluating the data from the
Consumer Expenditures Survey.
RELATED ARTICLE: Satellite Accounts
BEA has developed several satellite accounts for transportation
services, environment and mineral resources, and research and
development. Satellite accounts are frameworks designed to expand the
analytical capacity of the national accounts without overburdening them
or interfering with their general-purpose orientation. In this role,
satellite accounts organize information in an internally consistent way
that suits the particular analytical focus at hand, yet they maintain
links to the existing national accounts. Further, because they
supplement the existing accounts, rather than replace them, they can
serve as a laboratory for economic accounting in that they provide room
for conceptual development and methodological refinement.
Satellite accounts can add detail or-other information about a
particular aspect of the economy to that in the existing accounts; for
instance, they can integrate monetary and physical data. They can
arrange information differently, perhaps by cutting across sectors to
assemble information on both intermediate and final consumption. For
example, a satellite account can assemble business expenditures on
training--treated as intermediate consumption in the existing
accounts--and education-related expenditures by households and
government to analyze the role of education in the economy. They can use
a classification other than that used in the existing accounts. For
example, they can identify expenditures on "research in
education" as part of research expenditures even though they are
included in education expenditures in the national accounts.
The terminology and concepts associated with satellite accounts
reflect the experiences of several countries that have constructed them,
largely on an ad hoc basis, for fields such as health, education,
agriculture, research and development, and transportation. The System of
National Accounts 1993, which presents the newly revised international
accounting guidelines, includes a chapter that provides a general
framework for satellite accounts and demonstrates how that framework can
be used for some of the fields in which such accounts would be most
useful. This chapter represents, in a real sense, the coming of age of
satellite accounts as an analytical tool.