Benchmark input-output accounts for the U.S. economy, 1992.
Lawson, Ann M.
This article is the first of two articles that present the 1992
benchmark input-output (i-o) accounts for the U.S. economy.(1) The
second article will be published in the December 1997 Survey of Current
Business.(2) The i-o accounts show the production of commodities (goods
and services) by each industry, the use of commodities by each industry,
the commodity composition of gross domestic product (GDP), and the
industry distribution of value added. These i-o accounts are used in a
variety of analytical and statistical contexts, including in studies of
interindustry relationships within the economy and as the framework and
benchmarks for other statistical series.
This article describes the preparation of the 1992 i-o accounts
and discusses some of the improvements that have been made. In addition,
it describes the make and use tables, illustrates how these tables are
used, and discusses the concepts and methods underlying the i-o
accounts. The 1992 i-o estimates are presented in this article in
summary form; that is, they are aggregated to 97 i-o industries from
498-industry detail. The make (production) of commodities by industries
is shown in table 1; the use (consumption) of commodities by industries,
in table 2.1; and the components of value added by industries, in table
2.2. These tables are available at the summary and detailed levels on
diskette (see the box "Data Availability" on page 37).
This article also presents supplementary tables and two
appendixes. The supplementary tables link the i-o accounts to the
national income and product accounts (NIPA'S).(3) These tables
permit more extensive analyses with the i-o estimates. The first
appendix provides a concordance between the industry codes used in the
i-o accounts and the 1987 Standard Industrial Classification (SIC). The
second appendix provides a list of the value-added and final-use
components that are included in the i-o accounts.
The 1992 Benchmark i-o Accounts
In response to user needs -- as expressed, for example, by the
interagency Working Group on the Quality of Economic Statistics -- the
Bureau of Economics Analysis (BEA) implemented a program to speed up the
availability of benchmark i-o accounts.(4) This goal was later
formalized in BEA'S Strategic Plan, which was developed with data
users and data suppliers in 1995. The Strategic Plan included making the
benchmark i-o accounts available to users within 5 years of the date of
an economic census or within 1 year after the release of all the data
from that census, as part of the goal to develop new and improved
measures of output and prices.(5) The 1992 benchmark i-o accounts have
met this goal.(6)
Source data and procedures
The benchmark i-o accounts are based primarily on data collected
from the economic censuses conducted every 5 years by the Bureau of the
Census. The economic censuses provide comprehensive data -- including
information on industry and commodity production, materials consumed,
and operating expenses -- that are not available on a more frequent
basis. The 1992 benchmark i-o accounts used data from economic censuses
of the following industries: Mining; manufacturing; wholesale trade;
retail trade; transportation, communications, and utilities; finance,
insurance, and real estate; and services. In addition, the i-o accounts
used data from the 1992 Census of Agriculture, the 1992 Census of
Construction Industries, and the 1992 Census of Governments.
In preparing the 1992 benchmark i-o accounts, BEA first estimated
industry and commodity outputs for the i-o make and use tables. The
industry and commodity outputs are represented by the shaded cells in
the i-o make table, shown in the upper panel of chart 1, and in the i-o
use table, shown in the lower panel. Where there are gaps in coverage by
the economic censuses, BEA used data from other sources, such as the
U.S. Department of Agriculture, U.S. Department of Energy, U.S.
Department of Transportation, U.S. Department of Treasury, Office of
Management and Budget, other Government agencies, and private
organizations.
Second, BEA prepared estimates of the commodity inputs required by
an industry to produce its output. In the use table shown in chart 1,
commodity inputs are represented by the upper cells in an industry
column. Most of the detailed data available to estimate commodity inputs
are obtained from the economic censuses, which included selected
purchased services for most industries and materials consumed for
manufacturing. When only aggregate data were available, BEA combined
that information (for example, purchases of fuel by manufacturing
industries) with information on purchases of individual commodities (for
example, purchases of petroleum products, natural gas, and coal in the
category of purchased fuels) to estimate purchases of specific
commodities by an industry (for example, purchases of natural gas by a
manufacturing industry).
Third, BEA prepared estimates of value added by all industries. In
the i-o accounts, value added consists of three components --
compensation of employees, indirect business tax and nontax liability,
and "other value added" -- which are represented by the lower
cells in an industry column of the use table. To estimate compensation
of employees and indirect business tax and nontax liability, BEA used
data from the NIPA'S and from the Bureau of Labor Statistics,
Bureau of the Census, Office of Management and Budget, and the U.S.
Department of Treasury. BEA then derived "other value added"
as a residual by subtracting total intermediate inputs, compensation of
employees, and indirect business tax and nontax liability from total
industry output.
Finally, BEA completed the estimates of detailed final-use
categories. For most final-use categories, BEA used the same data and
procedures as in the past. Most of the estimates of personal consumption
expenditures and gross private fixed investment were prepared using the
commodity-flow method.(7) For example, using the commodity-flow method,
office equipment for private investment was estimated as a residual
after government investment was subtracted from the total supply of
office equipment. The estimates of inventories held by industries were
mostly based on economic census data; these estimates were then
distributed to commodities on the basis of information from previous
benchmark accounts. The estimates of exports and imports of commodities
were based on data from the Bureau of the Census and BEA'S U.S.
balance of payments accounts. For the estimates of Federal Government
and State and local government, total consumption and investment
expenditures by type of purchase were obtained from the NIPA'S;
these estimates were then distributed to i-o commodities on the basis of
information from previous benchmark accounts and the 1992 economic
censuses.
Improvements and changes
The 1992 i-o accounts incorporated three types of changes:
Definitional and classificational, to more accurately reflect the
evolving U.S. economy; methodological, to increase the accuracy and
reliability of the estimates; and statistical, to introduce newly
avoidable and revised source data.
Major definitional and classificational changes. -- The 1992 i-o
accounts incorporated the definitional changes that were introduced as
part of the comprehensive NIPA revision released in January 1996.(8) The
change that most affected the i-o accounts was the new treatment of
government purchases that distinguishes between government investment
and consumption expenditures and that is symmetrical with the treatment
of private fixed assets.(9) Also included are the improved estimates of
contributions by the Federal Government to the retirement programs of
civilian employees and military personnel in employee compensation.(10)
Additional definitional and classificational changes that were
incorporated into the 1992 i-o accounts included the following:
* Expansion of industry detail for construction;
* Expansion of detail for service-producing industries in the
detailed i-o accounts; and
* Improved classification of imported goods that were previously
identified as noncomparable.
Major methodological changes. -- the 1992 i-o accounts incorporated
the results of major methodological changes that were introduced as part
of the comprehensive NIPA revision. For example, the improved estimates
of purchases of new autos and of investment in nonresidential structures
were incorporated into the estimates of final uses, and the new
estimates of voluntary contributions to thrift savings plans were
incorporated into the estimates of compensation of employees.
For estimates of indirect business tax and other nontax liability,
the 1992 i-o accounts incorporated the improved industry assignment of
commodity taxes that was introduced in the comprehensive revision of
gross product originating (GPO) released in August 1996.11 These taxes
are now classified in a more consistent and comprehensive manner than in
the previous benchmark accounts.
In addition, the 1992 i-o accounts incorporated improved measures
of output and inputs for the transportation industries and improved
measures of the freight charges incurred to transport commodities by
different modes. These improvements resulted from a review of the
methods and source data used to prepare transportation estimates for the
i-o accounts by the staff of the Department of Transportation.(12) Where
feasible, BEA incorporated suggested improvements from this review into
the 1992 i-o accounts.
Major statistical changes. -- The 1992 i-o accounts incorporated
newly expanded data from the 1992 economic censuses, which covered about
95 new industries and marked the most significant expansion in scope of
the census in the past 50 years. These data were collected primarily in
the two new economic censuses-financial, Insurance, and Real Estate and
Transportation, Communications, and Utilities. The i-o accounts also
incorporated newly expanded data for the expenses of auxiliary establishments and for the expenses of manufacturing, wholesale trade,
retail trade, and service industries. These data, together with data
from new annual surveys for transportation and for communications, were
used to estimate inputs for these industries.
Introduction to the i-o Accounts
The i-o accounts for the U.S. economy show the production of
commodities by each of 498 industries in the make table and the
consumption of commodities by these industries in the use table. The use
table also shows the commodity composition of gross domestic product
(GDP) and the industry distribution of value added.
The i-o accounts show the relationships between all the industries
in the economy and all the commodities that these industries produce and
use. The estimates of the commodities are shown in producers'
prices.(13) When producers' prices are used, transportation costs
and wholesale and retail trade margins are treated separately as
commodities that are produced and used by industries (see the section
"Definitions and conventions for valuation of transactions").
The i-o accounts consist of five basic tables: (i) Make, (2) use,
(3) commodity-by-industry direct requirements, (4)
commodity-by-commodity total requirements, and (5) industry-by-commodity
total requirements.(14) Only the make and use tables are presented in
this article. The remaining three tables and their descriptions will be
published in the December 1997 Survey.
The make table. -- the make table (shown as a schematic in chart i
and with estimates in table 1) shows the value in producers' prices
of each commodity produced by each industry. In each row, one
"diagonal" cell shows the value of the production of the
commodity for which the industry has been designated the
"primary" producer; in chart 1, these cells are shaded in the
interior of the make table. The entries in the other cells in the row
show the value of the production of commodities for which the industry
is a "secondary" producer.(15) For example, the industry
"newspapers and periodicals" (row 26A in table 1) is the
primary producer of the commodity "newspapers and periodicals"
(column 26A in table 1). This industry is also a secondary producer of
the following commodities: Other printing and publishing (column 26B);
Scientific and controlling instruments (column. 62); advertising (column
73D); and scrap, used and secondhand goods (column 81). The sum of all
the entries in the row is the total output of that industry.
The entries in each column of the make table represent the
production by both primary and secondary producers of the commodity in
the column. For example, computer and data processing services (column
73A) includes the output by the primary producer -- the industry
"computer and data processing services" (row 73A) -- and by
the following secondary producers: Computer and office equipment (row
51); legal, engineering, accounting, and related services (row 73B); and
other business and professional services, except medical (row 73c). The
sum of all the entries in the column is the total output of that
commodity.
An industry's share of the production of a commodity can be
determined from the values in the make table by calculating the entry in
a given column as a percentage of the column total. For example, the
production of the commodity "scientific and controlling
instruments" (column 62) totaled $107.9 billion, of which the
industry "scientific and controlling instruments" (row 62)
produced $100.5 billion or about 93 percent of the total commodity
output.
The estimates of industry and commodity total output are based
primarily on data from the quinquennial economic censuses conducted by
the Bureau of the Census. (Table A shows the principal data sources used
to estimate industry and commodity outputs for the 1992 i-o accounts.)
Economic census data are used for
Table A. -- Principal Data Sources for Industry or Commodity Outputs,
1992 I-O Accounts
Industry or Commodity Source
Agriculture, forestry, Trade sources
and fisheries U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest
Service and Economic Research Service
farm statistics
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration Fisheries of the United
States
Mining Census Bureau 1992 Census of Mineral
Industries
Construction Census Bureau 1992 Census of Construction
industries, 1992 Census of Service
Industries, value of
construction put-in-place series, and
1992
Census of Financial, Insurance, and Real
Estate Industries
Manufacturing Census Bureau 1992 Census of Manufactures
Transportation Association of American Railroads Freight
Commodity Statistics
Census Bureau 1992 Census of
Transportation, Communications, and
Utilities, Motor Freight
Transportation and Warehousing Survey,
and Service Annual Survey
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers 1992
Waterborne Commerce of the United States
Department of Transportation Air Carrier
Financial Statistics and National
Transportation Statistics
Communications Trade sources annual reports
Census Bureau 1992 Census of
Transportation, Communications, and
Utilities Utilities
Department of Energy Financial Statistics
of Major United States Investor-Owned
Electric Utilities, 1992,
and Financial Statistics of Major U.S.
Publicly Owned Electric Utilities, 1992
and 1993
Census Bureau 1992 Census of
Transportation, Communications, and
Utilities
Rural Electrification Administration 1992
Statistical Report, Rural Electric
Borrowers
Wholesale and retail Census Bureau 1992 Census of Wholesale
trade Trade, 1992 Census of Retail Trade, 1992
Combined Annual
and Revised Monthly Retail Trade, 1992
Annual Wholesale Trade, and 1993 Annual
Retail Trade Survey Finance
Census Bureau 1992 Census of Financial,
Insurance, and Real Estate Industries
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Statistics on Banking
Federal Home Loan Bank Board financial
reports
National Credit Union Administration
Yearend Statistics for Federally Insured
Credit Unions
Annual Report of the New York Stock
Exchange
Securities and Exchange Commission FOCUS
Report data and Annual Report
Insuranre Trade sources financial statements
Health Care Financing Administration
private health insurance data
A. M. Best arid Company Best's 1992
Aggregate and Averages Property/Casualty
Insurance
Mortgage Insurance Companies of America
1994-1995 Factbook
U.S. Department of Labor, Pension Welfare
Benefits Administration
American Council of Life Insurers 1992
Life insurance Fact Book
Real estate Census Bureau 1992 Census of Financial,
insurance, and Real Estate Industries
National income and products accounts data
U.S. Department of Agriculture farm
statistics
Expense data for industries from Census and
other sources
Services Census Bureau 1992 Census of Retail Trade,
1992 Census of Service Industries, 1992
Service Annual
Survey, 1993 Annual Retail Trade Survey
U.S. Department of Education Digest of
Educational Statistics
The Economic Report on Veterinarians &
Veterinary Practices
Government enterprises Federal and State and local government
agency reports
Office of Management and Budget Federal
budget data
National income and product accounts data
Noncomparable imports Estimated as part of the balance of
payments accounts Scrap
Census Bureau 1992 Census of Manufactures
General government Estimated as part of the national income
and product accounts
Household Estimated as part of the national income and
product accounts
Inventory valuation National income arid product account
adjustment estimates and 1992 economic census data
Data Availability
This article presents the summary make and use tables for the 1992
benchmark input-output (i-o) accounts. The summary estimates of the
requirements tables will be presented in the December 1997 Survey of
Current Business.
The estimates included in the make and use tables are available on
diskette at the summary level (97 i-o industries) and at the six-digit
level (498 i-o industries). The "all" diskette contains the
summary make table, use table (including estimates by commodity of
transportation costs and of wholesale and retail trade margins), direct
requirements coefficients table, and industry-by-commodity and
commodity-by-commodity total requirements coefficients. The
"all" diskette also contains an alternative set of summary
make and use tables with industries defined on an approximate 1987
Standard Industrial Classification (sic) basis. The six-digit
"transactions" diskettes contain the make table, use table
(including estimates by commodity of transportation costs and of
wholesale and retail trade margins), and direct requirements table. The
six-digit "alternative transactions" diskettes contain the
make and the use tables, but the industries are defined on an
approximate sic basis. Each product includes information on the
mathematical derivation of the coefficients tables. The BEA product
numbers and the prices for these products are listed below.
To order using Mastercard or Visa, can the BEA Order Desk at
1-800-704-0415 (outside the United States, call (202) 606-9666). To
order by mail, send a check payable to "Bureau of Economic
Analysis, BE-53" tO BEA Order Desk, Bureau of Economic Analysis,
BE-53, U.S. Department of Commerce, Washington, DC 20230.
BEA
Item product Price
number
1992 benchmark summary, all NDN-0180 $20
1992 benchmark six-digit," transactions
(set of three diskettes) NDN-0178 $60
1992 benchmark six-digit, alternative
transactions (set of two diskettes) NDN-0179 $40
Personal Consumption Expenditures and Producers' Durable
Equipment
The estimates of personal consumption expenditures (PCE) and
producers' durable equipment (PDE) and the other components of
final uses are presented in the input-output (i-o) accounts as purchases
of commodities. In the presentation of Pce and PDE in the national
income and product accounts (NIPA'S), these commodities are grouped
into categories either by type of product or by type of expenditure.(1)
Two methods are used to prepare the i-o benchmark estimates of Pce and
PDE: The direct-estimation method and the commodity-flow method.
Direct estimation Selected commodities in the PCE and PDE categories
are directly estimated from source data. Direct estimation is used when
by definition the commodity is purchased only by persons for consumption
or by business for investment; for example, the rental value of
owner-occupied dwellings is attributed exclusively to persons. Direct
estimation is also used when the underlying estimation method results in
a more accurate and reliable estimate; for example, estimates of
gasoline and oil purchases by persons are based on unit sales and
average prices for these commodities.
Commodity-flow method The estimates for many commodities in the PCE
and PDE categories are calculated using the commodityflow method. This
method, which consists of seven steps, converts domestic output (the
value of commodities produced by domestic establishments) in
producers' prices to domestic supply (the value of production
available for sale to domestic purchasers) in purchasers' prices
and therefore includes imports and excludes exports. The domestic supply
is then allocated to domestic purchasers -- that is, to persons,
business, and government.
In step 1, commodities purchased by persons for consumption or by
business for investment are identified. The commodities purchased by
persons are identified on the basis of the nature of the product from
the titles of products included in the quinquennial economic censuses or
in the Standard Industrial Classification Manual 1987. The commodities
purchased by businesses are identified on the basis of two criteria: (1)
The commodity has a life of more than 1 year and is normally capitalized in business accounting records, and (2) the commodity is not an integral
part of a structure and therefore is not included in the value of that
structure (for example, an elevator in an apartment building).
In step 2, an estimate of total domestic output -- that is,
shipments, revenues, or receipts -- is prepared for each commodity. The
value of the domestic output is in producers' prices-that is, it
includes excise taxes and tips but excludes transportation costs and
wholesale and retail trade margins.
In step 3, imports are added, and in step 4, trade margins and
transportation costs are added. Step 4 converts supply into
purchasers' prices, which is the valuation used for the
commodity-flow estimates.
In step 5, exports, which include transportation costs and trade
margins, are subtracted because they are recorded in the Nipa's as
a separate final-demand component.
In step 6, changes in inventories are subtracted, because not all
goods that are produced or imported in a period are consumed in the same
period. In some commodity-flow estimates, a percentage of domestic
supply in purchasers' prices -- the result of steps 2 through 6 --
is then allocated to users.
In step 7, government consumption expenditures and gross
investment and purchases by business on current account (intermediate
purchases) are subtracted from the domestic supply in purchasers'
prices to obtain a residual that reflects purchases either by persons
for consumption or by businesses for investment.
(1.) Supplementary tables D and E show the i-o commodity compositions
of the NIPA PCE and PDE categories. For the other NIPA expenditure
components -- not shown in tables D and E -- private and government
structures are presented by type, inventory change is presented by
industry of the establishment holding the inventories, and net exports
of goods and services and government consumption and investment
expenditures are shown by type of product. Acknowledgments most
industries, but data from other Government agencies and private sources
are used for the I-O industries that are not covered by the economic
census data, such as education and religious organizations. In addition,
data from other Government agencies are used to supplement the economic
census data for some industries; for example, data on financial
statistics for major private electric utilities from the U.S. Department
of Energy are used to supplement the data on electric utilities from the
1992 Census of Transportation, Communications, and Utilities.
BEA makes two adjustments to the economic census data. First, it
adds estimates of the output for establishments that are not covered by
the economic censuses. This adjustment includes estimates for nonpayroll
firms in mining, manufacturing, and wholesale trade and for
noncensus-covered industries in agriculture, forestry, and fisheries, in
services (such as education and religious organizations), and in
transportation (such as railroads). Second, BEA adjusts the data for
misreported tax return information, because in some cases, the Census
Bureau data for receipts reflect tax return records rather than
information collected from surveys. Therefore, the tax return data must
be adjusted to account for nonfilers and for filers who misreport receipts to the Internal Revenue Service.(16) The largest adjustments
are to the data for the services industries in which partnerships and
sole proprietorships are more prevalent.
After these adjustments are made, BEA redefines the sic-based
economic census data using the I-O classification system in order to
attain greater similarity in the input structures for commodities
produced by an I-O industry. For example, restaurants in hotels are
redefined to the "eating and drinking places" industry. (See
the section "Definitions and conventions for classification.")
The use table. -- The data in the use table (shown as a schematic in
the lower panel of chart 1) are presented in two parts: Table 2.1 shows
the value in producers' prices of each commodity used by each
industry or by each final user (represented by the upper left and right
quadrants of chart 1); table 2.2 shows detail on the components of value
added and total intermediate inputs that are used by each industry to
produce its output (represented by the lower left quadrant of chart
1).(17) In table 2.1, the entry in each row shows the commodity that is
used by the industry or final user in the column. For example, the
commodity "radio and TV broadcasting" (row 67) is used by the
industries "communications, except radio and TV" (column 66),
"radio and TV broadcasting" (column 67), and
"advertising" (column 73D) and by persons in personal
consumption expenditures (column 91).
To facilitate the presentation, the rows and columns of table 2.2
are reversed from those shown in chart 1 as follows: The industries are
shown in the rows, and the total intermediate inputs, the components of
value added, and the total output for each industry are shown in the
columns. For example, for the industry "radio and TV
broadcasting" (row 67), compensation of employees was $8.4 billion,
indirect business tax and nontax liability was $0.5 billion, and
"other value added" was $2.9 billion. Total intermediate
inputs was $17.6 billion, which is the sum of the intermediate inputs
for industry shown in table 2.1. The total output for this industry was
$29.4 billion.
The column total for industries in table 2.1 equals the industry
output in table 2.2. For example, the industry output for the radio and
TV broadcasting industry (column 67) in table 2.1 equals the total
industry output for that industry (row 67) in table 2.2, or s29.4
billion.
In table 2.1, the sum of the intermediate uses of the commodity by
industries (upper left quadrant of chart 1) and all sales to final users
(upper right quadrant of chart 1) equals total commodity output. The sum
of the intermediate inputs consumed by each industry -- that is, the raw
materials, semifinished products, and services that the industry
purchased-and the value added by the industry equals total industry
output. In the I-O accounts, GDP can be measured either as the sum of
all final uses of commodities or as the sum of value added by
industries.
The use table shows the variation in the share of commodity output
that is sold to final users. In table 2.1, some commodities, such as
apparel (row 18), were sold almost entirely to final users; therefore,
the demand for these commodities is affected primarily by changes in the
buying patterns of the final users. Other commodities, such as
industrial and other chemicals (row 27A), were used almost entirely as
intermediate inputs; for these commodities, production is indirectly
connected to final uses.
The use table also shows the variation in the usage of commodities
by industries. For example, in table 2.1, the commodity "paper and
allied products, except containers" (row 24), with a total
commodity output of $98.5 billion, was used by most industries. The
largest user was "other printing and publishing" (column 26B),
which used $16.1 billion, or 16 percent of the total commodity output.
In contrast, metal containers (row 39), with $13.2 billion of commodity
output, were used by only 17 industries. The largest user was the
industry "food and kindred products" (column 14), which used
$9.4 billion, or 71 percent of the total commodity output.
Finally, the use table shows the variation in the use of total
value-added inputs by industries to produce their outputs. For example,
in table 2.2, the industry "real estate and royalties" (row
71B) required $412.2 billion of value-added inputs, or 75 percent of its
total output; of this total, $48.4 billion was for compensation of
employees, $79.7 billion was for indirect business tax and nontax
liability, and $284.2 billion was for "other value added." In
contrast, the industry "livestock and livestock products" (row
1) required $15.6 billion of total value-added inputs, or 17 percent of
its total output; of this total, $4.5 billion was for compensation of
employees, $1.3 billion was for indirect business tax and nontax
liability, and $9.8 billion was for "other value added."
The estimates of intermediate inputs in the use table are
primarily based on data from the economic censuses. Much of these data
are for broad expense categories, such as office supplies, that must be
allocated to I-O commodities, such as postal services, paper, and
envelopes. In cases in which estimates of expenses are not available,
BEA uses commodity shipments and other related information. For example,
the estimates of the purchases of spark plugs are allocated using the
stock of cars, trucks, and buses by industry. (Table B shows the
principal sources and methods used to estimate intermediate and
value-added inputs for 1992 I-O industries.)
[TABULAR DATA NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII]
The estimates of final uses of commodities are prepared from
source data on purchases or by using the commodity-flow method. For
example, the estimates of exports and imports are based on source data
from the Census Bureau and BEA'S U.S. balance of payments accounts.
In the commodity-flow method, which is used mainly for personal
consumption expenditures and producers' durable equipment, domestic
output is adjusted for exports and imports; trade margins and
transportation costs are added to estimate supply in purchasers'
value. Then, either a percentage of this supply is attributed to final
users, or the supply is adjusted for intermediate purchases and the
residual is attributed to final users.(18)
Two of the components of value added by industry are estimated
directly using a variety of data sources (table B). Most of the
estimates of compensation of employees by industry are based on census
data. The estimates of indirect business tax and nontax liability by
industry are prepared in two parts: For excise and general sale taxes,
the values are estimated as part of each industry's output; for
other indirect business taxes, such as property taxes, estimates are
distributed on the basis of a variety of source data, including State
government tax collections and highway statistics. The remaining
component is shown as "other value added," which is derived as
a residual by subtracting the total intermediate inputs, compensation of
employees, and indirect business tax and nontax liability from total
industry output.
The uses of the I-O accounts
The I-O accounts have a variety of uses that range from an analytical
tool to study industry production to a framework for benchmarking other
economic statistics programs. This section describes the uses of the I-O
accounts in studying interindustry relationships in the U.S. economy and
in preparing economic statistics. It also describes some of the
assumptions that analysts must make when they use I-O accounts as an
economic tool for analysis.
Analytical uses. -- The I-O accounts are an important analytical tool
because they show the interdependence among the producers and consumers
in the economy. Using the I-O accounts, analysts can estimate the direct
and indirect effects of changes in final uses on industries and
commodities.
For example, the I-O accounts can show how an increase in consumer
demand for motor vehicles will affect the rest of the economy. It will
likely cause an increase in the production of motor vehicles that could
result in increased steel production and that, in turn, could require
increases in the production of chemicals, iron ore, limestone, and coal.
It could also require an increase in the production of upholstery fabrics that could require more natural fibers, more synthetic fibers,
and more plastics and that, in turn, could require increases in the
production of "electric services (utilities)" and
"plastics materials and resins." In the I-O accounts, these
effects are quantified in the total requirements tables.(19)
Similarly, the requirements tables can be used to estimate the
effects of a strike or natural disaster on the economy or, supplemented
with additional information, to estimate the effects of an increase in
demand for U.S. exports on employment. The Federal Emergency Management
Agency, the Department of Defense, and the Census Bureau, among others,
have used the I-O accounts for such studies.
When the I-O accounts are augmented with regional data by BEA,
they can show economic effects by region. For example, the regional I-O
accounts can be used to estimate the potential impact of a planned
Federal Government shutdown of a military base.(20) When the I-O
accounts are augmented with international data, they can be used to
estimate the effects of exchange-rate changes on the profitability and
activities of manufacturing industries that rely on imported inputs.(21)
Analysts using the I-O tables to estimate the effects of changes
in final uses on industries and commodities need to be aware of the
underlying I-O assumptions. For example, the I-O tables are based on a
set of relationships that exist between producers and consumers in a
given year; these relationships reflect constant technology and relative
prices. The interindustry relationships reflect the average input
structure in each industry for that year, but these relationships do not
necessarily reflect those of an additional unit of production.
Therefore, for analyses that require alternative assumptions, other
economic tools may be required.
Statistical uses. -- the I-O accounts are used in several ways to
prepare economic statistics. For example, the final-use components of
personal consumption expenditures and of gross private domestic
investment -- adjusted to reflect the definitional, classificational,
and statistical changes made after the completion of the benchmark I-O
accounts -- provide the benchmarks for the NIPA'S.
The benchmark i-o accounts are also used as a framework to weight
and to calculate index numbers for price, volume, and value. For
example, the Bureau of Labor Statistics uses data from the I-O accounts
as weights in compiling industry price indexes.
Definitions and conventions for classification
The I-O accounts use two classification systems -- one for industries
and another for commodities -- and both systems generally use the same
I-O numbers and titles. This section first discusses the I-O industry
classification system and then the I-O commodity classification system.
The I-O industry classification system. -- This system is based on
the Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) system, which classifies
establishments into industries on the basis of the primary activities of
the establishments. Establishments are defined as economic units that
are typically at a single location where business is conducted or where
services or industrial operations are performed.(22)
The I-O industry classification system differs from the sic system
in three major ways. First, the i-o industry system redefines some
secondary production of some sic industries to other industries. Second,
the I-O industry classification system includes "special
industries" that are not considered to be industries in the sic
system. Third, because of data limitations, the I-O industry system
includes three industries -- agriculture, construction, and real estate
-- that are defined on an activity basis rather than an establishment
basis.
Redefinitions result in the shift of output and inputs related to
the secondary activities of some establishments to the sic industries in
which they are primary activities. (A primary activity must make up the
largest proportion of the establishment's output; all the other
activities are secondary.) The I-O industry classification system only
redefines the secondary activities of an sic industry for which the
related inputs are very different from those required for the
industry's primary activity. For example, both the output and
related inputs of restaurants in hotels are moved from the sic industry
"hotels and lodging places" (in which "hotels and
lodging" is the primary activity) to the industry "eating and
drinking places' (in which "eating and drinking" is the
primary activity), because the input structure of "meals and
beverages" is very different from that of the industry's
primary activity. After the redefinition is completed, the total outputs
for both I-O industries -- that is, "eating and drinking
places" and "hotels and lodging places" -- are different
from their SIC industry counterparts. However, total outputs for the I-O
commodities remain unchanged from their counterparts in the sic system.
The purpose of redefinitions in the I-O analytical framework is to
attain a greater degree of homogeneity in the inputs required by an I-O
industry to produce its commodities.
The following activities are redefined:
* Construction work (both new and maintenance and repair)
performed by all establishments (including government) is redefined to
the construction industries. Construction work performed by and for
establishments classified in nonconstruction industries is referred to
as "force-account construction."
* Manufacturing in trade and service establishments is redefined
to the appropriate manufacturing industries.
* Retail trade in service establishments is redefined to the
retail trade industry. Services in trade establishments are redefined to
service industries. Some services are also redefined within the service
industries.
* Manufacturers' sales of purchased goods (resales) are
redefined to the wholesale trade industry.
* Rental activities of all establishments are redefined to the
real estate and rental industries.
* The preparation of meals and beverages in most establishments is
redefined to the eating and drinking industry.
The redefinitions affected most industries, but the total output
that was redefined for most industries was small for the 1992 I-O
accounts. Redefinitions had a significant effect on the following
industries: Automotive repair and services (I-O industry 75) has $138.4
billion in total industry output after $1.0 billion was removed and
$48.1 billion was added from wholesale and retail trade; eating and
drinking places (I-O industry 74) has $280.7 billion in total output
after $1.0 billion was removed and $45.6 billion was added; wholesale
trade (I-O industry 69A) has $569.0 billion in total output after $51.0
billion was removed and $31.0 billion was added; and retail trade (I-O
69B) has $522.5 billion in total output after $82.7 billion was removed
and $13.9 billion was added.
Special industries are included in the I-O system, but they are
not considered industries in the SIC system. In the sic, government
establishments engaged in business-like activities (defined in divisions
1-8), such as the U.S. Postal Service and the local water authorities,
are classified in the same sic industry as private establishments. In
the I-O system, these establishments are classified in Federal
Government enterprises (I-O 78) and State and local government
enterprises (I-O 79.(23)
Another special industry created for the I-O accounts, general
government (I-O 82), covers all other government establishments and is
similar in scope to sic industry division 9, Public Administration. The
output and value added of this industry are defined as compensation of
employees and consumption of fixed capital of general government
agencies.
The I-O system also includes a special industry for the inventory
valuation adjustment (I-O 85), which is an adjustment needed to
eliminate inventory profits or losses from the change in the inventory
component of output.
Activity-based industries are necessary for agriculture,
construction, and real estate. Agriculture industries are classified by
commodity, such as dairy farm products, because source data on the
production of agriculture commodities by establishment, such as data on
the production of milk products by dairy farms, are not available.
Construction is classified by type of activity, such as the
construction of new highways and streets, rather than by the type of
construction contractor, such as heavy construction contractors who pave asphalt roads, partly because source data are not available, but more
importantly, because construction is an atypical activity in that it is
performed in almost all industries; most establishments perform
maintenance and repairs, and some perform their own new construction.
Therefore, this type of activity is referred to as force-account
construction.
To adequately represent construction activities in the U.S.
economy, the output associated with all construction activities
performed by the nonconstruction industries is redefined to the
construction industry. Similarly, the intermediate and value-added
inputs for this work are moved to the construction industries.
The real estate industry includes all real estate rental receipts
and all imputed rents for owner-occupied housing and for buildings and
equipment owned and used by nonprofit institutions primarily serving
households. Rental receipts are included in this industry because of a
lack of data for individual industries. Imputed rents are included in
the I-O accounts to make them consistent with the NIPA'S.
The I-O commodity classification system. -- In this system, each
commodity is assigned the code of the industry in which the commodity is
the primary product. This code is then used to group the production of
the commodity in the industry in which it is the primary product with
its production in other industries in which it is a secondary product.
In a few cases, the I-O system reclassifies SIC-defined commodity
groups, and a secondary product is created from an SIC-defined primary
product. The output of the SIC-defined product is moved to the
I-O-defined primary product group; therefore, the output represents the
total output of the product, regardless of the classification of the
establishments that produce it.
For example, in the sic system, the primary product of the
newspaper industry is defined as newspaper sales and newspaper
advertising. In the I-O system, the primary product of the newspaper
industry is newspaper sales. The advertising component is considered to
be a secondary activity; therefore, advertising receipts or output are
moved to the advertising commodity group. The total output for the I-O
newspaper industry remains unchanged.
Reclassifications affected a small percentage of commodities, and
for most of these commodities, the values were not very large. However,
some commodities had significant reclassified sales. For example, the
commodity "newspapers and periodicals" (I-O 26A) has $19.9
billion in total commodity output after $35.4 billion was moved to the
advertising commodity (I-O 73D).
In several cases, there is no I-O commodity classification that
corresponds to an industry classification. If a commodity is the primary
product of more than one sic industry, then the commodity is
reclassified and given the I-O commodity number that corresponds to the
I-O industry that is the largest producer of the commodity. As a result,
the following detailed I-O commodities have no commodity output: Forest
products (commodity 2.0701); knit outerwear mills (commodity 18.0201);
knit underwear and nightwear mills (commodity 18.0202); knitting mills,
n.e.c. (commodity 18.0203); fertilizers, mixing only (commodity
27.0202); cold-rolled steel sheet, strip, and bars (commodity 37-0104);
steel pipe and tubes (commodity 37-0105); secondary nonferrous metals
(commodity 38.0600); copper foundries (commodity 38.1200); nonferrous
castings, n.e.c. (commodity 38-1300); Federal electric utilities
(78.0200); State and local government passenger transit (commodity
79-0100); and State and local government electric utilities (commodity
79.0200).
Definitions and conventions for valuation of transactions
This section describes the underlying definitions and conventions for
valuation that are used in preparing the estimates of transactions in
commodities. It also describes the valuation used in wholesale trade,
retail trade, imports of goods and services, exports of goods and
services, and the change in business inventories.
Transactions in commodities are valued at producers' prices
in the I-O accounts. These prices exclude distribution costs (wholesale
and retail trade margins and transportation costs), but they include
excise taxes collected and remitted by producers. Transportation costs
and trade margins are shown as separate purchases by the users of the
commodities. The sum of the producers' value, transportation costs,
and trade margins equals the purchasers' value. Thus, the flows of
commodities for resale to and from wholesale trade and retail trade are
not shown. If trade were shown as buying and reselling commodities,
industrial and final users would make most of their purchases from a
single source -- trade.
To show the relationship between the production of commodities and
their purchase by intermediate and final users, commodities are shown as
if they move directly to users. Wholesale and retail trade margins on
commodities are shown as purchases by users and are included in the
trade rows of use table 2.1 (rows 69A and 69B). Transportation costs are
the freight charges paid to move the commodity from the producer to the
intermediate user or the final user. All transportation costs are shown
as a purchase by users, and are included in the transportation rows of
the use table (rows 65A-E and 68B).
Wholesale trade has one primary product -- distributive services
for the sales of goods to retailers, intermediate users, and final
users. Distributive services provided by wholesalers include merchandise
handling, stocking, selling, and billing. Wholesale trade output
consists of trade margins and nonmargin output; both exclude the cost of
resales. They are included in the wholesale trade row of use table 2.1
(row 69A).
The trade margin output occurs when an establishment buys and
resells the good. It is measured in two parts. For merchant wholesalers
and agents and brokers (on their own account), the trade margin is
measured as wholesale sales less the cost of goods sold plus taxes
collected by the distributor. For manufacturers' sales branches, it
is measured as expenses plus taxes collected by the sales branches.
Nonmargin output occurs when the wholesale trade service is
purchased separately from the commodity, such as when a wholesaler acts
as a broker between buyer and seller. It is measured as the sum of the
expenses on goods sold by manufacturers' sales offices, commissions
on goods sold by agents and brokers, and customs duties. Customs duties
are considered to be taxes collected by wholesalers and are included in
output.
Retail trade has one primary product -- distributive services for
the sale of goods. Its output consists of the retail trade margins,
which are measured as retail sales less the cost of goods sold plus the
taxes collected by retail trade establishments. All retail trade margins
are included in the retail trade row of use table 2.1 (row 69B).
Retail trade margins apply primarily to purchases by persons.
However, some retail trade margin is applied to purchases by business
and government; for example, retail trade margins are applied to some
purchases of personal computers by business for gross private fixed
investment; retail trade margins also are applied to some intermediate
purchases by business, for example, office supplies and gasoline.
Imports of goods and services, a component of final uses, are
measured by commodity at domestic port values. The domestic port value
of an import commodity is considered to be equivalent to the
producers' price of a domestically produced commodity. Adjustments
to convert the commodity imports of goods to foreign port value are
included in the imports of transportation and wholesale trade. For
example, the imports of apparel (row 18, column 95) in table 2.1 is --
$38.5 billion, the value of imports at the port of entry to the United
States. This value consists of a foreign port value of -- $31.8 billion,
vessel charges of -- $O.7 billion, air charges of -- $0.9 billion, and
customs duty of -- $5.1 billion. The vessel and air charges are
subtracted from the transportation rows (rows 65C and 65D, column 95) to
be netted against balance of payments estimates of the total imports of
transportation services. The duty is subtracted from the wholesale trade
row (row 69A, column 95). The net result of including domestic port
value in the commodity row and subtracting the transportation charges
and duty in the transportation and wholesale rows is the foreign port
value for the import.
Imports of services are valued at producers' prices. There
are no margins or transport costs associated with services.
Imports also include a special category referred to as
"noncomparable imports." Noncomparable imports consist of
goods purchased by U.S. residents abroad and of service imports with no
domestic counterparts, such as port expenditures by U.S. airlines in
other countries. These imports are distributed directly to industries
and final users and are shown as noncomparable imports in use table 2.1
(row 80). All other imports are assumed either to be consumed within the
U.S. boundaries or to have domestic equivalents.
In past benchmarks, noncomparable imports also included
domestically consumed imported goods, such as bananas and coffee, that
had no significant domestic counterparts. However, most imported goods
now have domestic counterparts, so the 1992 benchmark I-O accounts do
not include domestically consumed imports of goods in this category.
Exports of goods and services, a component of final uses, are
measured by commodity at producers' prices -- the same as other
domestically produced commodities. Transportation and trade commodities,
which are required to move exports from the producer to the port of
exit, are included in the transportation and trade rows of use table
2.1. For example, exports of computer and office equipment are $22.9
billion (row 51, column 94), which represents the value of the computer
and office equipment in producers' prices. The transportation
costs, $0.2 billion, and the trade margins, 3.7 billion (row 51 and
under the column exports of goods and services in table C), required to
move the exports of computers and office equipment from producer to the
[TABULAR DATA NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] port of exit are included
in the rows for transportation (rows 65A-E and 68B) and for trade (rows
69A and 69B) in table 2.1.
Change in business inventories, another component of final uses,
is measured by commodity at the book-value change reported by industries
in the economic censuses. The inventory valuation adjustment, which is
needed to remove inventory profits or losses from total gross domestic
product in the I-O accounts, is shown as a single entry in table 2.1
(row 85, column 93). In the 1992 I-O accounts, the inventory valuation
adjustment is -- $8.0 billion.
Supplementary tables
Four supplementary tables are presented in this article -- tables
C, D, E, and F. Tables C, D, and E are bridges between the I-O accounts
and the NIPA's. They present the I-O commodity composition of NIPA
final demand in producers' and purchasers' prices.
Specifically, table C presents the composition of all NIPA final-demand
components; table D, the composition of personal consumption
expenditures categories shown in NIPA table 2.4; and table E, the
composition of NIPA producers' durable equipment categories shown
in NIPA table 5.8.(24)
Table F presents a reconciliation of the I-O estimates of exports
and imports with those in the NIPA's. Both exports and imports are
adjusted so that total GDP is unchanged. The adjustments are necessary
because the NIPA's -- unlike the I-O accounts -- include the U.S.
merchandise that is returned to the United States from other countries
in imports and because the NIPA exports include the foreign merchandise
that is reexported from the United States to other countries.(25)
Appendixes A and B and tables 1, 2.1, and 2.2 follow.
Appendix A. -- Classification of Industries in the 1992
Benchmark
Input-Output Accounts
[The titles in boldface represent the industries for the summary
version of the 1992 tables. An asterisk preceding a Standard Industrial
Classification (SIC) code indicates that the SIC industry in more than
one I-O industry. For a description of the systems used in the I-O
accounts, see the section "Definitions and conventions for
classification."]
[TABULAR DATA NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII]
Appendix B. -- Classification of Value Added and Final Uses in
the 1992
Benchmark Input-Output Accounts
[The titles in boldface represent the value added and final use
components used for the summary version of the 1992 tables.]
[TABULAR DATA NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII]
(1.) Earlier benchmark i-o accounts covered 1947, 1958, 1963, 1967,
1972, 1977, 1982, and 1987. The 1987 i-o accounts were presented in the
April and May 1994 issues of the Survey of Current Business.
(2.) The December Survey will present the following summary i-o
tables: Commodity-by-industry direct requirements per dollar of industry
output; commodity-by-commodity total requirements, direct and indirect,
per dollar of delivery to final use; and industry-by-commodity total
requirements, direct and indirect, per dollar of delivery to final use.
(3.) The 1992 i-o estimates will be incorporated into the NIPA'S
during the next comprehensive NIPA revision.
(4.) See "Improving the Quality of economic Statistics: The 1992
Economic Statistics Initiative," Survey 71 (March 1991): 4-5.
(5.) See "Mid-Decade Strategic Review Of BEA'S Accounts:
Maintaining and Improving Their Performance," Survey 75 (February 1995): 36-66; "Mid-Decade Strategic Review Of BEA' Economic
Accounts: An Update," Survey 75 (April 1995): 48-56; and
"BEA'S Mid-Decade Strategic Plan: A Progress Report,"
Survey 76 (June 1996): 52-55.
(6.) The 1987 benchmark i-o accounts were released in the spring of
1994 -- 7 Years after the i987 economic census and 3 years after the
publication of the 1992 benchmark i-o accounts. To speed up the
availability of the 1987 i-o accounts, BEA devised a set of procedures
that captured the most important parts of the 1987 economic census data,
but that abbreviated the process of assembling the wide variety of other
non-census data needed to complete a full benchmark. The use of these
abbreviated procedures to prepare the 1987 benchmark i-o accounts
enabled BEA to more quickly turn its resources towards preparing a
complete set of benchmark accounts for 1992.
(7.) See the box "Personal Consumption Expenditures and
Producers: Durable Equipment" below.
(8.) See "Improved Estimates of the National Income and Product
Accounts for 1959-95: Results of the Comprehensive Revision,"
Survey 76 January/February 1996): 1-27.
(9.) The services of general government fixed assets, measured as
depreciation, are now included in government consumption expenditures.
However, the use of depreciation as a measure of the value of services
of government fixed assets is only a partial measure of the total value.
In theory, the service value of an asset should equal the reduction in
the value of the asset due to its use during the current period
(depreciation) plus a return equal to the current value the asset could
earn if invested elsewhere (net return). The consumption of fixed
capital by government does not provide an estimate of the hill value of
the services of government fixed assets, because the net rate of return
on these assets is assumed to be zero. See Robert P. Parker and Jack E.
Triplett, "Preview of the Comprehensive Revision of the National
Income and Product Accounts: Recognition of government Investment and
Incorporation of a New Methodology for Calculating Depreciation:"
Survey 75 (September 1995): 33-41.
(10.) See "Preview of the Comprehensive Revision of the National
Income and Product Accounts: New and Redesigned Tables," Survey 75
(October 1995): 31-34.
(11.) Robert E. Yuskavage, "Improved Estimates of Gross Product
by Industry, 1959-94," Survey 76 (August i996): 140.
(12.) The staff of BEA and of the Bureau of Transportation Statistics of the U.S. Department of Transportation are developing a set of
transportation satellite accounts for the United States, which are
tentatively scheduled for release next year. These accounts will be
based on the 1992 Benchmark i-o accounts.
(13.) Estimates of purchases of i-o commodities in purchasers'
prices can be derived by adding transportation costs and wholesale and
retail trade margins to the values in producers' prices. These
estimates are shown in table C for all i-o commodities included in NIPA
final demand; in table D, for all i-o commodities included in personal
consumption expenditures; and in table E, for all i-o commodities
included in producers' durable equipment.
(14.) In the designation that is used for i-o tables, the content of
the rows is referred to first, and that of the columns, second. For
example, in a "commodity-by-industry" table, the commodities
are in the rows, and the industries are in the columns.
(15.) Primary and secondary products and the classification of
industries are discussed further in the section "Definitions and
conventions for classification."
(16.) See Robert P. Parker, "Improved Adjustments for
Misreporting of Tax Return Information Used to Estimate the National
Income and Product Accounts, 1977," Survey 64 (June 1984): 17-25.
(17.) Estimates of industry value added, referred to as "gross
product originating," provided in Sherlene K.S. Lum and Robert E.
Yuskavage, "Gross Product by Industry, 1947-96" in this issue.
A comparison of the GPO estimates with those from the 1992 I-O accounts
is presented in "Note on Alternative Measures of Gross Product by
Industry."
(18.) For more detailed information, 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, June 1990): 31-34.
(19.) In an open economy, the production effects are likely to be
reflected as an increase in both domestic production and imports. To
separate the effects on domestic production from those on imports,
analysts generally use a special set of I-O tables that includes an
import matrix that identifies the intermediate purchases by producers
that are obtained from foreign sources.
(20.) Estimates of regional economic effects derived from BEA'S
Regional Input-Output Modeling System are based mainly on two data
sources: The U.S. benchmark I-O accounts and BEA'S county estimates
of wage and salary disbursements at the four-digit sic level. These
estimates are available from the BEA'S Regional Economic Analysis
Division. For more information, see U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau
of Economic Analysis, Regional Multipliers: A user Handbook for the
Regional Input-Output Modeling System (RIMS II), Third Edition
(Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1997).
(21.) Jose Campa and Linda S. Goldberg, "The Evolving External
Orientation of Manufacturing: A Profile of Four Countries,"
Economic Policy Review 2 (1997): 53-81.
(22.) Appendix A provides a list of I-O industries and the
relationships of these industries to the 1987 SIC codes. For more
information on the SIC, see Office of Management and Budget, Statistical
Policy Division, Standard Industrial Classification Manual 1987
(Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1987): 11-18.
(23.) Establishments defined as government enterprises follow the
same classification used in the NIPA'S. For more information, see
U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, Government
Transactions, Methodology Paper Series MP-5 (Washington, DC: U.S.
Government Printing Office, November 1988): 6.
(24.) NIPA tables 2.4 and 5.8 are published annually in the Survey,
most recently in the August 1997 issue.
(25.) Returned U.S. merchandise consists of domestically produced
goods that were exported for processing, or assembly, or both and then
returned to the United States. Reexports consists of the commodities
that were previously imported into the United States and then exported
from the United States in substantially the same condition as when they
were imported. A timing adjustment is made for reexports that entered
the country in an earlier year. The I-O accounts measure this value as
general imports less imports for consumption, and the value is shown as
a transaction between noncomparable imports and inventory change.