Reconciliation of the U.S.-Canadian current account, 1994 and 1995.
DiLullo, Anthony J. ; Laliberte, Lucie
THE RECONCILIATION of the U.S.-Canadian current account resulted in
increases in the U.S. deficit, or the Canadian surplus, for both 1994
and 1995. Before reconciliation, the U.S.-published current-account
balance with Canada showed a deficit of $6.0 billion for 1994 and a
deficit of $8.4 billion for 1995. After reconciliation, the U.S. deficit
increases to $6.7 billion for 1994 and to $10.4 billion for 1995 (chart
1, table 1). The corresponding Canadian-published balance showed a
surplus Of $3.1 billion for 1994 and a surplus of $6.5 billion for 1995;
after reconciliation, the surplus increases to $6.7 billion for 1994 and
to $10.5 billion for 1995.
This article presents the results of the reconciliation of the
bilateral current-account estimates of Canada and the United States for
1994 and 1995.(1) The reconciliation is undertaken because of the
extensive economic links between the two countries and the need to
explain differences in the published Canadian and U.S. estimates of the
bilateral current account. In principle, the bilateral current account
of one country should mirror the bilateral current account of the other
country.
Differences occur in the bilateral U.S. and Canadian current
accounts as published by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) and by
Statistics Canada because of differences in the definitions,
methodologies, and statistical sources used by each agency. In addition,
some of the differences for 1995 are in components of the current
account for which data are still preliminary and subject to revision;
these differences may be eliminated when final data for these components
become available. The reconciled estimates are intended to assist
analysts who use both countries' statistics and to reflect how the
current-account estimates would appear if both countries used common
definitions, methodologies, and data sources.(2) (A few differences,
mainly related to investment income transactions, cannot be
satisfactorily reconciled, because of differences in accounting
conventions and survey methods in each country.)
The longstanding Canadian-U.S. current-account reconciliation is
among the leading examples of the benefits that can be derived from
international data sharing. The reconciliation process and the exchange
of data have resulted in greater accuracy of the published estimates o
transactions between Canada and the United States and in increased
efficiency in producing the estimates. Exchange of data between Canada
and the United States for transactions such as trade in goods, travel
and passenger fares, Canadian and U.S. Government transactions, and some
transportation transactions covers over 80 percent of the value of the
Canadian and U.S. current account and has led to the elimination of some
differences in Canadian and U.S. published estimates. Wider
opportunities for international data sharing may result from the
upcoming 1997 yearend coordinated benchmark survey of international
portfolio investment to be undertaken by more than 30 countries,
including Canada and the United States, under the auspices of the
International Monetary Fund.
Although the U.S. and Canadian published estimates are reconciled
and there is extensive exchange of data between Canada and the United
States, differences in the published estimates remain. Complete
substitution of reconciled estimates for published estimates and
complete exchange of data are not feasible for several reasons. For
trade in goods, imports in the U.S. accounts would be affected because
the United States attributes Canadian reexports to the country of origin
rather than to Canada, the last country of shipment. For direct
investment data, protection of the confidentiality of source data bars
the exchange of data. Finally, some requirements, such as valuation
adjustments, for the integration of the international and national
(domestic) accounts in each country differ.
The details of the current-account reconciliation for 1994 and 1995
are presented in the following tables. Tables 2.1 and 2.2 show the major
types of reconciliation adjustments - definitional, methodological, and
statistical - made to the major current-account components. Tables 3.1
and 3.2 present the published estimates, the reconciled estimates, and
the amounts of adjustments for each major component. Tables 4-8 present
the reconciliation details for each current-account component.(3)
Reconciled Current-account Balances for
1994 and 1995
In the U.S. current account, the reconciliation adjustments
resulted in an increase of $0.7 billion in the deficit for 1994 and in
an increase of $2.0 billion in the deficit for 1995. The changes reflect
larger adjustments to the U.S. southbound estimates (payments) than to
the northbound estimates (receipts) (tables 2.1 and 2.2).(4) The largest
increases in the U.S. southbound estimates result from the addition of
Canadian reexports to U.S. imports of goods (a definitional adjustment)
and from increases in transportation and "other services" for
undercoverage (statistical adjustments). The largest adjustment to the
U.S. northbound estimates was an upward statistical adjustment to
investment income, which was partly offset by a downward adjustment to
transportation.
In the Canadian current account, the reconciliation adjustments
resulted in an increase of $3.6 billion in the surplus for 1994 and in
an increase of $4.0 billion in the surplus for 1995. The changes reflect
larger increases to Canadian southbound estimates (receipts) than to
Canadian northbound estimates (payments). The Canadian southbound
estimates were adjusted to account for statistical differences, mostly
in investment income, and for definitional differences in trade in
goods. For Canadian northbound estimates, upward adjustments to
investment income for statistical differences were partly offset by
downward adjustments to services for definitional differences.
(1). The reconciliation of the current account has been undertaken
each year since 1970. Summary results of the reconciliations were
published in the United States in the following issues of the SURVEY OF
CURRENT BUSINESS: June 1975, September 1976 and 1977, December 1979,
June 1981, and December 1981 through 1991. Complete details of the
reconciliations for 1990 and later years were published in the November 1992 and the October 1993 through 1995 issues Of the SURVEY. In Canada,
the results were published in the following issues of Canada's
Balance of International Payments (catalogue 67-001), a publication of
Statistics Canada: Fourth Quarter 1973, Second Quarter 1976 and 1977,
Third Quarter 1978 and 1979, First Quarter 1981, and Third Quarter 1981
through 1995. (2). A detailed article on the methodology used to
reconcile the U.S.- Canadian current account was published by BEA in the
November 1992 SURVEY and by Statistics Canada in Reconciliation of the
Canadian-United States Current Account, 1990-91. Statistics Canada also
published a shortened version in the December 1992 Canadian Economic
Observer and in Canada's Balance of International Payments, Third
Quarter 1992. (3). For reconciliation purposes, some of the details in
the tables in this article differ from those in balance-of-payments
tables regularly published by BEA and Statistics Canada. (4). In this
article, the term "northbound" refers to U.S. receipts, or
Canadian payments; the term "southbound" refers to U.S.
payments, or Canadian receipts. All values are expressed in U.S.
dollars.