An ownership-based disaggregation of the U.S. Current Account, 1982-93.
Whichard, Obie G. ; Lowe, Jeffrey H.
With the growing integration of the world economy, foreign direct
investment has flourished, and the multinational company (MNC) has
become a major force in the delivery of goods and services to overseas
markets. Interest in analyzing foreign trade from the perspective of
MNC's has grown accordingly. In response, BEA has prepared a
supplemental disaggregation of the U.S. current account along ownership
lines by combining information from its direct investment surveys with
information from the standard current account. The new disaggregation
builds on a proposal introduced in an earlier BEA Study of alternative
balance-of-payments frameworks. It presents information on the sales by
MNC's through their affiliates as well as through crossborder
trade, By viewing the activities of MNC's and their affiliates in
the context of a formal economic accounting framework, these activities
can be analyzed in a more consistent fashion than previously was
possible.
This new disaggregation, presented for 1982-93, breaks down
cross-border trade according to whether it is between affiliated parties
-- that is, within MNC's -- or between unaffiliated parties. Trade
within MNC's ("intrafirm trade") is further disaggregated according to whether it is between U.S. parent companies and their
foreign affiliates or between U.S. affiliates of foreign companies and
their foreign parent groups. In addition, details on receipts and
payments of direct investment income are provided to show how the income
is derived from the production and sales of affiliates.
The disaggregation of the current account presented here provides
information not available in the standard disaggregation. The standard
dis-aggregation breaks down cross-border trade in goods and services on
the basis of the commodity classifications of the goods and services
traded and the geographic location of the parties involved, but it
generally does not indicate relationships between the exporters and
importers. Nor does it show how production and sales by foreign
affiliates give rise to income on direct investments.
In a previous Survey of Current Business article, BEA described
and evaluated three frameworks that supplement the information on
cross-border trade shown in the standard balance of payments accounts
with information on sales and purchases abroad by the foreign affiliates
of U.S. companies and on sales and purchases in the United States by the
U.S. affiliates of foreign companies.(1) Two of the frameworks had been
suggested earlier, one by a National Academy of Sciences study panel and
one by DeAnne Julius. Both of these frameworks used ownership as the
basis for determining the nationality of transactors and, thus, the
boundary between domestic (U.S.) and international transactions. The
third framework, introduced in the article, differed from the others in
that -- like the standard balance of payments accounts -- it used
residency rather than ownership to determine this boundary. By doing so,
it retained the linkages to economic activity in specific economies
provided by the standard balance of payments accounts. As with the other
frameworks, however, it provided a number of new details that facilitate
analyses of ownership relationships and of the scope and importance of
intrafirm trade.
The present article focuses on the third framework and extends it
in five ways: First, it places the ownership-based disaggregation of
cross-border trade and net receipts or payments resulting from sales by
affiliates, shown in the framework presented in the previous article,
into the framework of the overall U.S. current account; second, it
further breaks down the ownership-based components of cross-border trade
into trade in goods and trade in services;(2) third, it records net
receipts or payments resulting from sales by affiliates on a
current-cost, rather than on a historical-cost, basis; fourth, it shows
data for affiliates in banking for the first time (though without the
detail provided for nonbanks); and fifth, it presents estimates for the
period 1982-93 rather than for only 1 year.
The following are among the patterns that emerge when the current
account is viewed along ownership lines. Many of these patterns confirm
or reinforce the conclusions of earlier BEA analyses of affiliate
operations.
* Transactions within MNC's accounted for a significant share
-- about one-third -- of both U.S. exports and U.S. imports of goods and
services throughout 1982-93. Intrafirm trade accounted for a growing
share of U.S. imports of goods and services -- 37 percent in 1993,
compared with 32 percent in 1982 -- reflecting the rapid rise in foreign
direct investment in the United States during the late 1980's.
However, much of this trade simply represented goods imported by U.S.
wholesale trade affiliates established by foreign companies to
facilitate the distribution of their goods, largely to unaffiliated
customers, in the United States. The share of intrafirm trade in U.S.
exports fluctuated somewhat, but it ended the 1982-93 period at the same
level -- 30 percent -- as it began.
* Trade in goods -- rather than in services -- accounted for the
predominant share of both unaffiliated trade and intrafirm trade, but
the share was higher for intrafirm trade. For exports, goods tended to
account for about 85 percent of intrafirm trade, compared with about 70
percent of unaffiliated trade. For imports, the difference was even more
marked, with goods tending to account for about 95 percent of intrafirm
trade, compared with about 75 percent of unaffiliated trade. The higher
share of goods in intrafirm trade partly reflects the absence of some
types of services -- such as travel and other services sold to
individuals -- from trade within firms.
* Both intrafirm exports and intrafirm imports of goods and
services were largely accounted for by transactions in which affiliates
were used as distribution channels for their parents' output
(sometimes with further processing), rather than as sources of supply.
Exports by U.S. parent companies to their foreign affiliates accounted
for roughly two-thirds to three-quarters of total intrafirm exports,
while imports by U.S. affiliates from their foreign parents accounted
for 55-64 percent of total intrafirm imports.
* Direct investment income -- that is, net returns to direct
investors resulting from sales by their affiliate -- was a small
component of both total exports and total imports of goods, services,
and income: 7-9 percent of exports and less than 2 percent of imports.
The particularly low import share largely reflects the low returns
foreigners have realized on their direct investments in the United
States.
* All account balances -- that on the overall current account and
those on various groupings of its components -- were more negative at
the end of 1982-93 than at the beginning. However, the balance on goods,
services, and net receipts resulting from sales by affiliates was more
favorable than the others in every year since 1985. This balance, which
shows the net result of all active participation of companies in
international markets (that is, through both cross-border trade and
sales by affiliates), went from a $2.2 billion deficit in 1982 to an
$18.5 billion deficit in 1993. By comparison, the deficit on
cross-border trade alone increased from $24.2 billion to $74.8 billion
during the same period. The difference between the two balances is
attributable to the sizable surplus throughout the period on net
receipts and payments resulting from sales by affiliates.
* Notwithstanding the importance of affiliates as distribution
channels for their parents' output, most of the content of
affiliates' sales is of local (or, for foreign affiliates, non-U.S)
origin: 88-92 percent of the content of the output of foreign affiliates
originated abroad, and 80-84 percent of the output of U.S. affiliates
originated in the United States. Most of the local content represented
payments for locally procured inputs.
The remainder of this article consists of four sections and a
technical note. The first section describes in more detail the
differences between the ownership-based disaggregation and the standard
disaggregation of the U.S. current account. The second section explains
the structure of the ownership-based disaggregation. The third section
reviews patterns of transactions, focusing particularly on changes in
composition during 1982-93. The fourth section discusses the derivation of net receipts or payments resulting from sales by affiliates and the
origin of the content of affiliates' sales. The technical note
provides details on the sources and methods used for making the
estimates.
Ownership-Based and Standard
Disaggregation Compared
The ownership-based disaggregation of the U.S. current account
presented in this article covers the same transactions as those in the
standard current account, but it provides a different way of viewing the
information. Perhaps its main distinguishing characteristic is its
grouping of cross-border transactions in goods and services on the basis
of the relationship between importers and exporters rather than on the
basis of the types of goods and services traded. Information on whether
these transactions are in goods or in services is provided, but as a
secondary breakdown.
Another distinguishing characteristic concerns the information
provided on direct investment income. Whereas the standard
disaggregation simply shows the income itself -- the end result, from
the direct investor's perspective, of the activities of its
affiliates -- the disaggregation introduced here adds detail on the
sales, expenses, and other deductions from sales that, taken together,
determine the income. To highlight the link between direct investment
income and the activities that produce it, this income, for purposes of
the presentation, is redesignated as net receipts or payments resulting
from sales by affiliates.
A third distinguishing characteristic of the ownership-based
disaggregation is the inclusion of a balance on cross-border trade and
net receipts resulting from sales by affiliates as a memorandum item.
This balance, like any balance on groups of transactions, may be subject
to different interpretations; however, it highlights two facts:
Cross-border trade and sales through foreign affiliates both represent
methods of active participation in international markets for goods and
services, and both may be contrasted with the more passively generated
income on portfolio investment and the fundamentally different types of
transactions recorded under unilateral transfers.
Finally, the presentation provides addenda to show the source of
the content of both foreign and U.S. affiliates' sales (other than
to affiliates of the same parent). For both types of affiliates, output
sold (or added to inventory) is broken down between U.S. and foreign
content. For foreign affiliates of U.S. companies, foreign content is
further broken down between the affiliates' own value added and
other foreign content; for U.S. affiliates of foreign companies, the
U.S. content is similarly broken down. These content measures do not
enter the current account, but rather complement the information used to
derive net receipts and payments resulting from sales by affiliates.
Structure of the Ownership-Based
Disaggregation
At its highest level, the ownership-based disaggregation of the
current-account is identical to the standard disaggregation.
Specifically, it is broken down into three components: Exports of goods,
services, and income; imports of goods, services, and income; and net
unilateral transfers (table 1). At the next level of disaggregation,
however, the breakdown is quite different from the standard one. Exports
and imports of goods, services, and income are first disaggregated into
two categories: (1) U.S. receipts or payments from cross-border trade
and net receipts or payments resulting from sales by affiliates and (2)
other income receipts or payments. The first category -- which records
the results of activities involving direct participation by enterprises
in the production or sale of goods and service -- is further
disaggregated into U.S. cross-border exports or imports of goods and
services and net receipts or payments resulting from sales by
affiliates. Each of these categories is, in turn, disaggregated in a
unique manner.
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Cross-border transactions in goods and services are disaggregated
to show transactions with unaffiliated foreigners separately from
intrafirm transactions. For intrafirm transactions, a further
disaggregation breaks down transactions into those between U.S. parent
companies and their foreign affiliates (that is, intrafirm trade related
to U.S. direct investment abroad) and those between U.S. affiliates and
their foreign parents (intrafirm trade related to foreign direct
investment in the United States). Separate estimates of trade in goods
and trade in services are provided for each of these categories.
For net U.S. receipts resulting from sales by foreign affiliates,
separate estimates are provided for nonbank and bank affiliates, For
nonbank affiliates, net receipts are derived as affiliates' sales
less their purchases from the United States, their costs and profits
accruing to foreigners, and their sales to other foreign affiliates of
the same U.S. parent company. For bank affiliates, only total net
receipts are shown, because annual information on sales and deductions
from sales is unavailable. Information on net U.S. payments to foreign
companies resulting from sales by their U.S. affiliates is presented in
a parallel fashion.
Other receipts or payments consist of other private and U.S.
Government transactions. These transactions differ from those recorded
under cross-border trade and net receipts from sales by affiliates in
terms of the nature of the transactor's involvement: Rather than
entailing an active involvement in the production or sale of goods and
services by the cross-border exporter or by the direct investor and its
affiliates, these receipts and payments cover transactions in which
individuals or firms make an investment and receive a return, but
without being actively involved in the activities generating the return.
Patterns of Transactions
This section focuses on changes in the composition of the various
ownership-based categories that comprise the current account. Before
examining these changes, however, it can be noted that during the period
covered, each major category of transactions roughly doubled. From 1982
to 1993, U.S. exports of goods, services, and income increased by a
factor of 2.1; imports of goods, services, and income, by a factor of
2.3; and net unilateral transfers, by a factor of 2.0. Over the same
period, the current-dollar value of overall U.S. economic activity --
whether measured by gross domestic product or gross national product --
increased by a factor of 2.0, roughly the same as the growth in exports
and imports.
Reflecting the tendency for differences in growth of opposing flows to result in much larger relative movements in the corresponding
net balances, changes in the balances on the current account and its
components were, in relative terms, quite large, even though the major
components from which the balances are derived grew at similar rates.
Although there were several years in which they moved in a positive
direction, all of the balances were more negative in 1993 than in 1982.
The total deficit on current account rose from $11.4 billion to $99.9
billion (chart 1 and table 1, line 43), while the balance on goods,
services, and income shifted from a surplus of $5.6 billion to a deficit
of $65.8 billion (line 42). The deficit on goods, services, and net
receipts resulting from sales by affiliates increased from $2.2 billion
to $18.5 billion (line 41). Throughout 1982-93, this measure showed a
smaller deficit (or, in 1991 and 1992, a surplus) than was recorded for
the balance on cross-border trade in goods and services alone, because
net U.S. receipts from sales by foreign affiliates consistently exceeded
net U.S. payments to foreign companies from sales by their U.S.
affiliates. The deficit on cross-border trade in goods and services
increased from $24.2 billion to $74.8 billion (line 40).
Changes in composition
The period 1982-93 saw numerous developments that might have been
expected, directly or indirectly, to have had a material impact on the
composition of the ownership-based current-account components: Major
movements in exchange rates, rising trade and investment in services,
growing integration of the world economy and of global financial
markets, emergence of newly industrialized economies and liberalization of trade and investment policies by a number of developing countries,
the political and economic transformation of Eastern Europe, rapid
increases in foreign direct investment in the United States, and
cyclical fluctuations in economic activity. Given these developments and
the length of the period studied, significant changes in the composition
of these components would have been expected. As described in this
section, some changes did occur; however, somewhat surprisingly, the
overall picture is one more of stability than of change.
Throughout 1982-93, cross-border exports of goods and services
accounted for a substantially larger share of total exports of goods,
services, and income than either net receipts from sales by affiliates
or other income receipts (chart 2). The share of exports of goods and
services remained in the range of 74-78 percent through 1990 and then
rose to a peak of over 84 percent in 1993. The rise in share toward the
end of the period came at the expense of the share of "other income
receipts," which fell not only relatively but also in absolute
terms in the early 1990's, as interest rates and lending to
foreigners by U.S. banks declined in response to sluggish economic
conditions in several major borrowing areas. The share of receipts from
sales by affiliates was relatively stable, ranging from just under 7
percent to over 9 percent.
For U.S. imports of goods, services, and income, similar patterns
held. Trade in goods and services accounted for an even larger share of
imports than of exports, ranging from 81 percent to 87 percent. The
share of "other income payments" was next largest, ranging
from nearly 13 percent to over 18 percent. The share of payments
resulting from sales by U.S. affiliates was consistently the smallest --
less than 2 percent in all years; although foreign direct investment in
the United States grew rapidly in the late 1980's and early
1990's, this growth generally did not translate into commensurately higher earnings for U.S. affiliates.(3)
For both exports and imports, goods consistently accounted for a
much larger share of total trade in goods and services than did
services, probably because of the generally greater
"trade-ability" of goods (which usually are transportable and
storable) than of services (which usually are not) in foreign markets.
The share of goods in imports was particularly high -- 80-83 percent.
For exports, the share of goods was somewhat lower, and it tended to
decline as growth in services exports outpaced growth in goods
exports.(4) The share of goods did rise noticeably in 1988, when U.S.
merchandise exports grew at an unusually high 28-percent rate because of
a convergence of favorable price and demand factors, but it fell
steadily thereafter.
By type of transactor. -- Most trade in goods and services
represented trade with unaffiliated foreigners rather than intrafirm
trade. For exports, the share of unaffiliated transactions ranged from
66 to 71 percent, ending the period at the same level as it began (chart
3). For imports, the share of unaffiliated transactions trended downward
over much of the period, from 68 percent in 1982 to 63 percent in 1993.
The decline was reflected in both goods and services and mostly occurred
in the late 1980's; during this period, foreign direct investment
in the United States was growing very rapidly, boosting imports by U.S.
affiliates from their foreign parents.
The aforementioned tendency for goods to account for the
predominant share of total trade in goods and services holds for both
unaffiliated and intrafirm trade, but the share is higher for intrafirm
trade than for unaffiliated trade. For exports, goods accounted for
82-88 percent of intrafirm trade, compared with 66-72 percent of
unaffiliated trade. For imports, the differences were even more marked:
Goods accounted for 94-97 percent of intrafirm trade, compared with
72-77 percent of unaffiliated trade.
The tendency for goods to dominate intrafirm trade held for trade
involving both inward and outward investment. In all cases, the share
accounted for by services was less than 20 percent, and in many cases,
particularly for imports, the services share was much lower. Although
the services shares were uniformly rather low, it is noteworthy that
they were larger for exports than for imports in the case of both trade
between U.S. parents and foreign affiliates and trade between U.S.
affiliates and foreign parents. Thus the overall U.S. comparative
advantage in services evidently is a more significant determinant of the
distribution of intrafirm trade between goods and services than the type
of affiliation between transactors.
To some extent, the larger share of goods in intrafirm trade than
in unaffiliated trade reflects the fact that some services -- most
notably travel, which is the largest services item in the U.S. balance
of payments accounts -- by their very nature are not applicable to trade
within multinational firms. It also reflects exporters' use of
locally established wholesale trade affiliates as conduits for
distributing their goods abroad. This practice is particularly
widespread among foreign exporters to the United States and helps to
explain the extremely large share of goods in U.S. imports from
affiliated foreigners.(5)
Intrafirm exports accounted for 29-34 percent of total U.S.
exports of goods and services and largely comprised transactions
associated with outward investment. U.S. parents' exports to their
foreign affiliates accounted for roughly two-thirds to three-quarters of
total intrafirm exports (chart 4). In most years, U.S. parents'
exports to their foreign affiliates accounted for over 20 percent of
total U.S. exports of goods and services, compared with a share of 10
percent or less for U.S. affiliates, exports to their foreign parents.
Intrafirm imports accounted for 32-37 percent of total U.S.
imports of goods and services and largely comprised transactions
associated with inward investment. Imports by U.S. affiliates from their
foreign parents accounted for 55-64 percent of total intrafirm imports.
These imports accounted for roughly 20 percent of total U.S. imports of
goods and services, somewhat above the 13-15 percent share accounted for
by U.S. parents' imports from their foreign affiliates.
From these figures, it can be seen that for both exports and
imports, the larger share of intrafirm trade was accounted for by sales
by parents -- whether U.S. or foreign -- to their affiliates. Although
affiliates are often established to provide goods and services to their
parent companies, these figures suggest that it is more common for them
to receive goods and services from their parents. Put another way, using
affiliates as conduits for the parents' output (sometimes with
further processing) appears to be a more common business practice among
both U.S.-based and foreign-based multinational companies than does
using affiliates as sources of supply.
Supplemental Details
on Affiliate Operations
In addition to providing an alternative disaggregation of U.S.
current-account transactions, table 1 provides a variety of details that
assist in describing affiliate operations and analyzing the role of
direct investment as a vehicle for supplying international markets. Two
related types of information are given: Estimates used in deriving net
receipts and payments resulting from sales by nonbank affiliates, and
estimates of the content of nonbank affiliates, output.
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Net receipts and payments resulting from
affiliates' sales
As explained earlier, net U.S. receipts from sales by foreign
nonbank affiliates are derived as sales less three items: Purchases from
the United States, costs and profits accruing to foreigners, and sales
by foreign affiliates to other foreign affiliates of the same U.S.
parent (lines 11-16 of table 1). Purchases from the United States and
costs and profits accruing to foreigners represent outlays that must be
deducted from sales in order to arrive at the earnings that accrue to
the U.S. parent company. The deduction for sales to other foreign
affiliates of the same U.S. parent is made to avoid duplicating goods
and services that are embodied in the sales of more than one
affiliate.(6) Net U.S. payments to foreign companies from sales by their
U.S. affiliates are derived in a parallel fashion.
Turning to the specific results under this methodology, the
relationships among the items used to derive net receipts or payments
changed relatively little over time and were similar for U.S. and
foreign affiliates. Compared with total sales by nonbank affiliates, net
receipts tended to be quite small -- 1 percent or less for U.S.
affiliates and 2-4 percent for foreign affiliates. For both types of
affiliates, the largest portion of the sales dollar went to
"locally" supplied factors of production (in the case of
foreign affiliates, to all factors supplied by countries other than the
United States). For foreign affiliates of U.S. companies, 70-80 percent
of sales went to costs and profits accruing to foreigners, and the
shares tended to be higher during the earlier years; most of these costs
and profits represented items other than employee compensation --
probably payments for locally procured inputs for the most part. For
U.S. affiliates of foreign companies, 79-85 percent of sales went to
costs and profits accruing to U.S. residents; as with outward
investment, most of these costs and profits were for items other than
employee compensation and probably were largely payments for locally
procured goods and services.
Content of affiliates' sales
The addenda to table 1 examine nonbank affiliates' sales from
a related, but somewhat different, perspective from that taken above.(7)
These items focus on the output of affiliates and, in particular, on the
output's geographic origin and whether it represents production by
affiliates themselves or by firms that supply them with intermediate
inputs. Specifically, sales (plus the change in inventories) of U.S. and
foreign nonbank affiliates, excluding sales to other affiliates of the
same parent, are separated into two components: U.S. content and foreign
content. The U.S. content of U.S. affiliates' sales to
nonaffiliates is then further broken down into the affiliate' own
value added and other U.S. content, and the foreign content of foreign
affiliates' sales is broken down in a parallel fashion.
During 1982-93 foreign affiliates' output and U.S.
affiliates' output had similar, quite stable structures. As would
be expected, the location of the affiliate largely determines the origin
of the output: The bulk -- 88-92 percent -- of the output of foreign
affiliates originated abroad, while the bulk -- 80-84 percent -- of the
output of U.S. affiliates originated in the United States. The tendency
for the U.s.-content share of the output of U.S. affiliates to be lower
than the foreign-content share of the output of foreign affiliates
appears largely to reflect U.S. affiliates' higher import
propensities; however, it also reflects U.S. affiliates' lower
profitability (profits are included in local content as a component of
the affiliates' own value added) and the fact that the
"foreign" content of the output of foreign affiliates includes
content attributable to third countries.
Affiliates' own value added accounted for a minority of both
the foreign content of foreign affiliate output and the U.S. content of
U.S. affiliate output. For foreign affiliates, own value added accounted
for roughly 40 percent of foreign content. For U.S. affiliates, own
value added accounted for a somewhat lower share of U.S. content --
roughly 25 percent. in addition to low profitability, the lower
value-added share for U.S. affiliates may reflect the influence of age.
Overall, U.S. affiliates tend to be newer than foreign affiliates, and
it is possible that as they mature they will tend to rely more on their
own production and less on local suppliers (as well as on foreign
suppliers). There is little evidence for such a pattern in the available
data, which show only a small variation in the value-added share of
local content over an 11-year period; however, because the period
includes several years of rapid growth in foreign direct investment in
the United States, entries into the direct investment universe may have
reduced or eliminated growth in the average age of an affiliates.
Technical Note:
Sources and Methods
Most of the data shown in table 1 are taken directly from either
the U.S. balance of payments accounts or from BEA's annual surveys
of financial and operating data of U.S. parents, their foreign
affiliates, and foreign-owned U.S. affiliates. Some items had to be
estimated because data were not available for them in the form required.
A few items were derived as residuals. The sources for the various line
items of table 1 follow; line references appear in parentheses. Except
where specifically noted, data on import items have been taken from the
same sources as the data on exports or from corresponding sources.
Total cross-border exports of goods and services (3, 3a, and 3b)
were taken from the balance of payments accounts. Cross-border exports
of goods and services to affiliated foreigners (5, 5a, and 5b) were
derived as follows: Exports of goods to foreign affiliates of U.S.
companies (6a) were taken from BEA'S annual surveys of U.S. direct
investment abroad., exports of services to foreign affiliates of U.S.
companies (6b), from BEA'S quarterly surveys of transactions
between U.S. parents and their foreign affiliates; exports of goods by
U.S. affiliates to their foreign parent groups (7a), from BEA'S
annual surveys of foreign direct investment in the United States; and
exports of services by U.S. affiliates to their foreign parent groups
(7b), from BEA'S quarterly surveys of transactions between U.S.
affiliates and their foreign parents. Cross-border exports of goods and
services to unaffiliated foreigners (4, 4a, and 4b) were derived as a
residual, by subtracting export to affiliated foreigners from total
exports, companies' net receipts resulting from sales their foreign
affiliates (8) are equivalent to direct investment income as shown in
the balance of payments accounts. Estimates of this income are derived
from BEA'S quarterly surveys of transactions between U.S, parents
and their foreign affiliates Before being entered into the balance of
payments accounts, the estimates are adjusted to a current-cost basis.
Distribution of the current cost adjustment among industries is not
possible, and in table 1, the adjustment has been allocated entirely to
nonbank affiliates; the affected lines are lines 9 and 14.
Sales by (nonbank) foreign affiliates (10) and employee
compensation (13) were taken from BEA'S annual surveys of U.S.
direct investment abroad. U.S, companies, net receipts resulting from
sales by their foreign bank affiliates (16) were taken from BEA'S
quarterly surveys of transactions between U.S. parents and their foreign
affiliates. Foreign affiliates, purchases of goods and services from the
United States (11) were taken from BEA'S annual survey of U.S.
direct investment abroad (for goods) and from BEA'S quarterly
survey of U.S. direct investment abroad (for services). U.S. companies,
net receipts resulting from sales by their foreign nonbank affiliates
(9), cost and profits accruing to foreigners (12), and other costs and
profits accruing to foreigners (14) were derived from other lines as
follows: Line 9 is the residual derived by subtracting line 16, from
line 8; line 12 is derived as line 10 minus lines 8, 11, and 15 plus
line 16, and line 14 is the residual derived by subtracting line 13 from
line 12. Finally, survey data on sales by foreign affiliates to other
foreign affiliates of the same parent (15) were obtained from the annual
surveys of U.S. direct investment abroad but were only available for
majority-owned affiliates; an estimate for all nonbank affiliates was
extrapolated from these data, based on the relationship between total
sales by all nonbank affiliates and total sales by nonbank
majority-owned affiliates.
On the import side of the accounts, sales by U.S. affiliates to
other U.S. affiliates of the same foreign parent (34) could not be
estimated. (However, due to the consolidated basis for reporting by U.S.
affiliates, it is probably safe to assume that these sales were
relatively small.) The other lines that are related to net payments to
foreign companies for sales by their U.S. affiliates (27-35) were
derived in a manner analogous to those for net receipts.
Other income receipts (17-19) other income payments (36-38), and
net unilateral transfers (39) were taken directly from the balance of
payments accounts.
The balance on goods and services (40), balance on goods,
services, and income (42), and balance on current account (43) were also
taken from the balance of payments accounts. They also can be derived
from other lines as line 3 minus line 22, line i minus line 20, and line
i minus line 20 plus line 39, respectively. The balance on goods,
services, and net receipts resulting from sales by affiliates (41) the
new balance shown in this article, was derived by subtracting line 21
from line 2.
The addenda items were derived mainly from data shown in the main
body of table 1. Out put sold or added to inventory (excluding sales to
other foreign affiliates of the same parent) (44) by nonbank foreign
affiliates is equal to line 10 minus line 15 plus the annual change in
inventory (estimated for all nonbank affiliates by extrapolating data
for majority-owned affiliates from BEA'S annual surveys of U.S.
direct investment abroad, based on the relationship between total assets
of all nonbank affiliates and total as sets of nonbank majority-owned
affiliates). U.S. content (48) is equal to line 11. Foreign con tent (48) is the residual obtained by subtracting line 48 from line H. Value
added by foreign affiliates of U.S. companies (46) was estimated from
BEA'S annual surveys of U.S. direct investment abroad (by
extrapolation of estimates for majority-owned affiliates). Other foreign
content (47) is a residual derived by subtracting line 46 from line 45.
The addenda items for U.S. affiliates were derived analogously from the same or corresponding sources. However, because BEA publishes
value added by all nonbank U.S. affiliates, no special estimates for
minority-owned affiliates had to be prepared.
(1.) See Alternative Frameworks for US. International
Transaction," Survey of Current Business 73 (December 1993): 50-61,
which discusses technical issues pertaining to the three frameworks and
presents estimates of U.S. sales and purchases under each framework for
1991.
(2.) For technical reasons, an acceptable estimate of this breakdown
could not be made for net receipts resulting from sales by affiliates.
One reason is that the data on affiliates, activities are classified
according to the primary industry of the affiliate rather than according
to the type of good or service sold. Another is that some of the income
from a given affiliate may reflect the affiliate's earnings that
are derived from its ownership of other affiliates in different
industries. Similar considerations preclude a geographic breakdown of
the ownership-based presentation: In some cases, income from one country
may partly derive from the operations of indirectly owned affiliates
located in other countries.
(3.) For further discussion of the returns on foreign direct
investment in the United States, see Rates of Return on Direct
Investment" SURVEY 72 (August 1992): 79-86.
(4.) Some of the decline in the share of goods is a statistical
artifact resulting from improvements in coverage of services
transactions instituted in 1986. The Improvements raised estimates of
both exports and imports of services, but the effect on exports was
larger. Even after allowing for this statistical factor, however, the
services share of exports still would have increased over the period, as
it did in every year except 1988, when special factors boosted
merchandise exports.
(5.) The role of U.S. affiliates in facilitating the distribution in
the United states of goods produced by their foreign parents is
discussed in Merchandise Trade of U.S. Affiliates of Foreign
Companies," Survey 73 (October); 52-65.
(6.) Rather than being treated as an item to be eliminated through
consolidation, sales between affiliates of the same parent company could
have been recorded as a "purchases" item, to be deducted as a
cost accruing to foreigners (because, according to the rules of
residency used in the U.S. international accounts, foreign affiliates
are regarded as "foreigners" even though they are U.S. owned).
However, so doing would have had no effect on total exports, total
imports, or any of the balances presented in table i.
(7.) This information is not available on an annual basis for bank
affiliates.