Preview of the Comprehensive Revision of the National Income and Product Accounts: new and redesigned tables.
Parker, Robert P. ; Seskin, Eugene P.
Beginning this November, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA)
will release the results of a comprehensive, or benchmark, revision of
the national income and product accounts (NIPA's). (See the box
"Release Schedule for Revised NIPA Estimates" on this page.)
Comprehensive revisions incorporate three kinds of changes. Definitional
and classificational changes, statistical changes, and new and
redesigned tables. They differ from annual NIPA revisions, such as the
last one released in July 1994, because of the scope of the changes
incorporated and because of the number of years subject to revision.
Three of the most important changes for this comprehensive
revision were previewed earlier in the Survey of Current Business: An
article in the July 1995 issue described Bea's new featured
measures of output and prices, and an article in last month's issue
discussed the recognition of government investment and the incorporation
of a new methodology for calculating depreciation.(1) Subsequent
articles will identify the newly incorporated source data, summarize the
definitional and statistical changes, and discuss other aspects of the
revision in more detail.
This article describes the new and redesigned tables that will
update the presentation of the NIPA's.(2) Table 1 provides a
complete list of the revised set Of NIPA tables arranged according to the new table numbers. The table cross-references the new table numbers
with the old ones, identifies the new tables, and shows, at the end of
the list, the currently published table that will be deleted. The last
column in table 1 identifies the major changes to each table. These
changes primarily result from the introduction of BEA's new
featured measures of output and prices and the recognition of government
investment. The first section of this article discusses changes related
to the new featured measures, the second section discusses changes
related to the recognition of government investment, and the last
section explains the reasons for other major presentational changes.
New series name Old series name
Wages and salary accruals Wages and salaries
Exports and imports of Exports and imports of
goods merchandise
Agriculture, forestry, Agriculture, forestry,
and fishing and fisheries
Agricultural services, Agricultural services,
forestry, and fishing forestry, and fisheries
Tobacco manufactures Tobacco products
Government consumption Government purchases
expenditures and gross
investment
Government current Government expenditures
expenditures
Government current surplus Government surplus or
or deficit (-), national deficit (-), national
income and product income and product
accounts accounts
Bea's new featured measures
For this comprehensive revision, Bea Will feature output and price
measures calculated using weights of adjacent years. Such
"chain-type annual-weighted" measures have been published in
the Survey since 1992 and have been presented as index numbers using
1987 as the base period. For the upcoming revision, these chain-type
indexes will be expressed using 1992 as the base period.(3) To
facilitate use of the chain-type measures of real output, several major
presentational changes will be introduced.
First, "chained (1992) dollar" estimates will be
presented for all, series in the NIPA tables that currently show
estimates in constant dollars.(4) These "chained-dollar,"
estimates will be calculated for most series as the product of the
chain-type annual-weighted output index -- with. 1992 equal to 100 --
and the 1992 current-dollar value of the corresponding series divided by
100.(5)
Second, because the formula used to calculate the new featured
measure uses the geometric mean of weights of more than one period, the
corresponding chained-dollar estimates will not be additive,
Consequently, most NIPA tables showing these estimates also win show a
new line item termed "residual," whose value will be equal to
the difference between the major aggregate in the table and the sum of
the most detailed items presented in that table, (Table 1 identifies the
NIPA tables that will include the residual line item.) Third, a table
(new table 8.2) will be added to show the contributions of major gross
domestic product (GDP) components to the growth in quarterly and annual
real GDP. (Similar information on contributions to growth will appear in
the GDP news release.)
Featuring he chain-type measures also will change the presentation
of quantity and price indexes in the NIPA tables. Currently, tables 7.1,
7.2, and 7.3 present eight indexes for GDP and its major components and
for gross domestic purchases, gross national product (GNP), and other
major aggregates; in the new presentation, these tables will show four
indexes for each component: "Current dollars,"
"chain-type quantity index," "chain-type price
index," and "implicit price deflator."(6) Tables 7.4,
7.6, 7.9, 7.10, and 7.11, which now show price indexes for various
disaggregations of the major GDP components, will expand to show the
chain-type indexes for both quantities and prices.(7) Because of user
interest in fixed-weighted measures, fixed (1992) weighted series will
be available online from STAT-USA soon after each GDP release. In
addition, a new table (table 8.27) showing fixed (1992) weighted
estimates will be presented at the time of annual NIPA revisions and in
the historical volumes.(8)
Adoption of the new featured measures also will require title
changes for tables presenting the new chained (1992) dollar series. The
most noticeable such change will be the renaming of the terms
"constant dollars," "fixed weights," and "1987
dollars" in table titles, series titles, and table headnotes. Table
and series title changes are identified in table 1. Table headnotes,
which identify the units used to present series in the tables, will
generally be changed to substitute "chained (1992) dollars"
for "1987 dollars."
Recognition of government investment
As discussed in last month's Survey, the recognition of
government investment will affect the presentation of NIPA tables in
several ways, the most important of which are described here. In the
presentation of the major expenditure, or product-side, components of
GDP in tables 1.1, 1.2, 7.1, and 8.1, government consumption
expenditures and gross investment" replaces "government
purchases."(9) In addition, the new component will be redefined to
include the consumption of general government fixed capital.(10) The
presentation of consumption of fixed capital (CFC) in tables 1.9 and
1.10 will be revised as follows: The CFC will be redefined to include
the CFC of government fixed capital, and detail for government CFC Will
be added to show separate series for general government and for
government enterprises. The definition of the gross product of general
government, which is shown in tables 1.7, 1.8, and 7.14, will be equal
to the sum of compensation of general government employees plus CFC of
general government fixed capital; it is now defined as equal only to
compensation of employees. The presentation of government receipts and
expenditures (tables 3.1, 3.2, 3.3, 3.18, and 3.19) will be revised as
follows: "Government consumption expenditures," which excludes
gross government investment but includes general government CFC,
replaces "government purchases"; and the titles "current
expenditures" and "current surplus (or deficit)" replace
"expenditures" and "surplus or deficit,"
respectively, because gross investment is no longer included as an
expenditure in the calculation of the surplus or deficit. For the tables
that show government type-of-product detail (tables 3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 3.10.
3.11, 7.11, and 7.12), separate series for consumption expenditures and
for gross investment will be shown. For table 5.1, "Gross Saving
and Investment," government CFC, gross government saving (including
the CFC), and gross government investment will be added, and the
government surplus or deficit renamed. Finally, to show additional
detail for gross government investment, new annual tables -- 5.14, 5.15
and 7.13 -- will be added.
Another change in presentation due to the recognition of
government investment affects the compensation of employees and the
structures estimates that win appear in tables showing gross government
investment. In the new presentation, compensation of
"force-account" employees of general government -- that is,
government employees engaged in the construction of new structures -
will be included in the value of structures and excluded from
compensation of employees. (Total compensation of general government
employees win be shown as addenda items in tables 3.7, 3.8, 3.10, and
3.11.) This change will achieve consistency between government and
private expenditures for structures. In the currently published NIPA
tables, force-account compensation is included in compensation, except
in the annual structures tables (5.6 and 5.7)
Other presentational changes
Several NIPA series will be redefined, though their series titles
will not change. Gross product for the domestic business nonfarm and
nonfarm less housing sectors -- shown in tables 1.7, 1.8, and 7.14 --
will be redefined using GDP instead of gross domestic income, which iS
GDP less the statistical discrepancy. Thus, the gross product of the
nonfarm sector will equal GDP less the gross product of households and
institutions, of general government, and of farm, the gross product of
the nonfarm less housing product sector will equal nonfarm product less
housing product. The change from gross domestic income to GDP reflects
BEA's view that GDP, the product-side measure of output, is more
accurate than gross domestic income, the corresponding income-side
measure, and that therefore the redefined non-farm product series win be
more accurate. The change also will result in the deletion of the
statistical discrepancy from tables 1.7, 1.8, 1.10, and 7.14. In
addition, the estimates of real gross national income, now shown in
table 1.10, and of real gross domestic income, to be added to table
1.10, will be calculated using the IPD's for GNP and GDP,
respectively.
The calculation of the monthly personal saving rate -- shown in
NIPA table 2.9 as personal saving as a percentage of disposable personal
income -- will be changed.(11) Currently, the monthly rate is a centered
3-month moving average of personal saving as a percentage of a centered
3-month moving average of disposable personal income. The new rate will
be personal saving for the month as a percentage of disposable personal
income for that month, thus providing users with a saving rate for the
most recent month.
A "redefinition" of many NIPA series will result from
another definitional change to be introduced in this comprehensive
revision. This change will redefine the Federal Government's
contributions to the retirement programs of both civilian employees and
military personnel. For the civilian retirement programs, contributions
beginning with 1969 will now include payments to the Civil Service
Retirement Fund for interest on unfunded liability. For the military
retirement programs, contributions beginning with the fourth quarter of
1984, when a formal retirement trust fund was established, will now be
the actual contributions to the fund. In the currently published series,
contributions for all periods are "imputed" to equal the value
of benefits that are paid out of the current operating budget. Changing
the values of the Federal Government contributions to the civilian and
military retirement programs win affect all government compensation and
government consumption expenditures series. In addition, the change for
the military programs will affect the "military retirement"
line shown in the "imputations" table, which will appear as
table 8.19.
New series will be added to other tables. The most important of
these series will be additional detail for exports and imports of
services, GDP less motor vehicle output, a national "saving
rate," additional quarterly detail on corporate profits, and
additional price indexes. Tables 1.1, 1.2, and 7.1 will be expanded to
include detail, on goods and on services for both exports and imports,
and additional detail for both types of services will be shown in tables
4.3 and 4.4. An addenda will be added to tables 1.3 and 1.4 to show
motor vehicle output, which will be derived from the auto and truck
output series in tables 8.4-8.7, and to show GDP less motor vehicle
output. Table 5.1 will be expanded to show total saving as a percentage
of GNP. Table 6.16 will be expanded to show detail on profits of the
following industries: Transportation; communications; electric, gas and
sanitary services; wholesale trade; and retail trade. Table 7.2 -- which
now shows the price index for gross domestic purchases, BEA's
featured measure of price change -- will now include a price index for
all food components of gross domestic purchases, a price index for all
energy components of gross domestic purchases, and a price index for
gross domestic purchases less food and energy. Similar indexes for
personal consumption expenditures will also be added to table 7.4.
The preparation of constant-dollar estimates for one grouping of
components - indirect business tax and nontax liability, business
transfer payments, subsidies, and the current surplus of government
enterprises -- as well as for national and domestic incomes win be
discontinued. This change primarily reflects weaknesses in the
underlying methodologies and a lack of user interest in these
series.(12) As a result, the constant-dollar components listed above
will be deleted from tables 1.10, 1.12, 1.13, 1.16, 8.8, and 8.10.
In addition to the new tables resulting from changing the featured
measures of real output and prices and the recognition of government
investment, two other tables win be added, one table will be deleted,
and the frequency of publication will be changed for two tables. The
first of the new tables (table 7.16) will show implicit price deflators
(IPD's) for the inventory series now shown in tables 5.12 and 5.13;
these deflators will provide information about prices used to estimates
real inventories. The second new table (table 8.25) will show the
relationship between the major source data for estimating wage and
salary disbursements -- Bureau of Labor Statistics tabulations of wages
and salaries of employees covered by State unemployment insurance -- and
the BEA wage and salary series in the NIPA's. The deleted table
showed IPD's for GDP, GNP, net national product, and national
income, most of these deflators will appear in other NIPA tables, and,
as previously noted, the real national income series will be dropped.
Table 3.1, "Government Receipts and Current Expenditures,"
will include quarterly data and will be published monthly instead of
annually; table 7.12, "Price Indexes for National Defense
Consumption Expenditures and Gross Investment by Type," will no
longer include quarterly data and will be published annually instead of
monthly.
Series names
The names of several NIPA series will be changed as a result of
the comprehensive revision. Because these changes affect many tables,
they are not mentioned in table 1; instead, the following list provides
the new and old names for these series.
Release Schedule for Revised NIPA Estimates
The results of the forthcoming comprehensive NIPA revision will be
released in 1995 as follows:
* On November 21, revised estimates for the following quarterly and
annual NIPA series for 1959-92 are scheduled to be released: Most
quarterly seasonally adjusted NIPA series (and the corresponding annual
series), as well as annual NIPA series for personal consumption
expenditures by type (tables 2.4, 2.5, 2.6, and 7.5), for private
structures and producers' durable equipment by type (tables 5.6,
5.7, 5.8, 5.9, 7.7, and 7.8), and for gross government fixed investment
by type (tables 5.14, 5.15, and 7.13). (The remaining tables will be
available on November 28).
* On December 15, revised estimates for 1993 through the third
quarter of 1995 for the same quarterly series released in November and
for 1993 and 1994 for the same annual series.
* On December 21, revised monthly estimates of personal income and
outlays for 1959 forward (tables 2.8-2.11).
* Also on December 21, the schedule for the remaining NIPA series
will be released.
Calculated on Implicit Price Deflators
For the forthcoming comprehensive revision, the calculation of
implicit price deflators (IPD's) will change. IPD's are
weighted averages of the most detailed price indexes used in estimating
real output, and the currently published IPD's are calculated as
the ratio of current- to constant-dollar output multiplied by 100. the
new IPD's will be calculated as the ration of current-to
chained-dollar output multiplied by 100. For all but the most recent
estimates, the new IPD's will be identical to the chain-type price
indexes because the weights used to aggregate the detailed prices for
the two measures will be the same.
For the revised estimates beginning with the third quarter of
1994, the weights used for the chain-type output and price measures will
be those for 1994 because weights for 1995 are not available.(1) Thus,
the weights, and those used for the IPD's will be the
chained-dollar weights for each period.
In addition to differences between the IPD's and the
chain-type price indexes for the most recent periods, there also will be
small differences for earlier quarters because the quarterly chain-type
output and price indexes are based on annual weights and because both
quarterly indexes are independently adjusted for consistency to the
corresponding annual indexes.
(1.) The estimates for the year 1995 to be released in January 1996
also will be based on 1994 weights. Weights for 1995 will be
incorporated during the annual NIPA revision currently scheduled for
release in July 1996. (For a more detailed discussion of the weights
used for current periods, see Allan H. Young, "Alternative Measures
of Change in Real Output and Prices, Quarterly Estimates for
1959-92" in the March 1993 Survey.)
Availability of Redesigned Tables
A complete set of the redesigned tables (in hard copy or on
diskette) with all changes identified is now available; write to
National Income and Wealth Division (BE-54)0, Bureau of Economic
Analysis, U.S. Department of Commerce, Washington, DC 20230, or call
(202) 606-9700.
(1.) See Preview of the Comprehensive Revision of the National
Income and Product Accounts: BEA's New Featured Measures of Output
and Prices," Survey 75 (July 1995): 21-38, and 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.
(2.) The "NIPA tables" discussed in this article refer to
the following tables: Tables showing quarterly seasonally adjusted
series that are published monthly in the Survey in "Selected NIPA
tables"; tables showing monthly, annual, and quarterly not
seasonally adjusted series that are published annually in the Survey,
usually in the summer, as part of the annual revision of the
NIPA's; and tables covering all NIPA series for past periods
published in National Income and Product Accounts of the United States.
(3.) The base period will be 1992 because that is the latest year for
which the current-dollar estimates will not be subject to revision until
the next comprehensive revision. Quantity and price indexes for the most
detailed component level will be expressed with 1992 equal to 100 and
will provide the inputs used for calculating higher level chain-type
measures.
(4.) The change in the featured measure of real output does not
affect the presentation of any current-dollar NIPA series.
(5.) The following "real" series will continue to be
calculated using deflation, the procedure in which the current-dollar
value of the series is divided by an appropriate implicit price
deflator: The chained value of gross national income (table 1.10), gross
domestic income (table 1.10), command-basis exports of goods and
services and receipts of factor income (table 1.11), gross and net
domestic product of nonfinancial corporate business (table 1.16), and
disposable personal income (tables 2.1 and 2.9). For the following
series, real values will be calculated as the difference between
chained-dollar series: Change in business inventories (tables 1.2 1.4,
1.6, 5.3, 5.11, 8.5, 8.7 and 8.9), net exports (tables 1.2, 8.5, and
8.7), command-basis gross national product (table 1.11), foreign travel
and other, net (table 2.5), net foreign travel (table 2.7), and
nondefense consumption expenditures for nondurable goods and for
Commodity Credit Corporation inventory change (table 3.8). (6.) The
calculation of implicit price deflators will be changed for this
benchmark revision; see the box "Calculation of Implicit Price
Deflators" on this page.
(7.) Index numbers to be presented in the raised NIPA tables will be
expressed with one decimal place. The same indexes, expressed to three
decimal places, will be used to calculate the chained (1992) dollar
output series and the percent changes in the quantity and price indexes
shown in table 8.1; these indexes will be available online from STAT-USA
soon after each GDP release.
(8.) The benchmark-years-weighted indexes will not be included in the
NIP, tables at this time. BEA Will Study calculations based on this and
other index-number formulas and may decide to publish a new set of
"alternative" measures to assist users in analyzing the
effects of different formulas on measures of real output and prices.
(9.) The titles of this and other NIPA series affected by the
recognition of government investment may differ slightly from those
shown in last month's Survey.
(10.) The consumption of fixed capital (CFC) will be used as a
partial measure of the value of services of general government fixed
assets. Although this value should equal depreciation, or CFC, plus a
net return on the assets, this return will be assumed to be zero. A
similar estimate for the services of fixed assets for government
enterprises will not be necessary, In the NIPA's, these government
agencies, which cover a substantial proportion of their operating costs by selling goods and services to the public, are treated as businesses.
Consequently, their income, the current surplus of government
enterprises, includes the value of the services of their fixed assets.
For a further discussion, see pages 34-36 of the September 1995 Survey.
(11.) This change also will affect table 2 in the "Selected
Monthly Estimates" section of the Survey and table 2 in the
personal income and outlays news release.
(12.) Most of these constant-dollar estimates are prepared by
base-year extrapolation; for example, base-period product taxes that
were levied in 1987 are now extrapolated forward and backward to all
periods by constant (1987) dollar estimates of sales of the product,
even if the tax did not exist in all periods.