Reconciliation of the U.S.-Canadian current account, 1992-93.
DiLullo, Anthony J. ; Laliberte, Lucie
THE RECONCILIATION of the U.S.-Canadian current account for 1992
and 1993 resulted in a smaller U.S. surplus, or Canadian deficit, for
1992 and a shift to a small U.S. deficit, or Canadian surplus, for 1993.
Before reconciliation, the U.S. current-account surplus with Canada is
$3.3 billion for 1992 and $1.4 billion for 1993; the corresponding
Canadian estimates are $1.9 billion for 1992 and $1.7 billion for 1993.
After reconciliation, the U.S. surplus for 1992 is reduced to $1.0
billion, and the U.S. surplus for 1993 changes to a small deficit (chart
1, table 1).
[TABULAR DATA 1 OMITTED]
This article presents details of the reconciliation of the
U.S.-Canadian current account for 1992 and 1993 by Statistics Canada and
the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA).(1) The reconciliation is
undertaken because of the extensive economic links between Canada and
the United States and the need to explain differences in the Canadian
and U.S. published estimates of bilateral current-account transactions.
In principle, the bilateral current account of one country should mirror
the bilateral current account of the other country.
The reconciliation process has improved the accuracy of the
published estimates of transactions between Canada and the United States
and has increased the efficiency of producing the estimates. The
improvements have been accomplished through the exchange of data between
the two countries and the development of improved estimating techniques.
The exchange of data covers over 8o percent of the value of Canadian and
U.S. current-account transactions. This year, a change in the definition
of direct investment income in the Canadian published estimates
eliminated one of the remaining major definitional differences between
the U.S. and Canadian published estimates.
After reconciliation, revisions are incorporated into the Canadian
and U.S. published estimates as far as possible. A complete exchange of
data or substitution of reconciled estimates for published estimates is
not feasible, because of definitional and methodological differences and
because estimates of transactions with third countries would be affected
in some cases. In addition, protecting the confidentiality of source
data bars the exchange of data for some transactions.
The rest of this article consists of two parts. The first part
briefly discusses the reconciled balances for 1992-93. The second part
summarizes the methodology for reconciliation and discusses the major
reconciliation adjustments to the U.S. and Canadian current accounts.
Reconciled Balances for 1992-93
For 1992, the reconciled U.S.-Canadian current-account balance is a
U.S. surplus, or Canadian deficit, of $1.0 billion; the U.S. published
estimate is a surplus Of $3.3 billion, and the Canadian published
estimate is a deficit of $1.9 billion. For 1993, the balance is not
fully reconciled. The provisional U.S. estimate of the reconciled
balance is a U.S. deficit, or Canadian surplus, of $0.3 billion; the
provisional Canadian estimate is a U.S. deficit, or Canadian surplus, of
$0.1 billion. By comparison, the U.S. published estimate for 1993 is a
$1.4 billion surplus, and the Canadian published estimate is a $1.7
billion deficit. The difference between the provisional reconciled
estimates reflects the preliminary nature of the 1993 data, as well as
difficulties in reconciling some service and direct investment estimates
related to insurance transactions. In the past, those differences have
been offsetting; in 1993, they are not.
Adjustments to the U.S. southbound estimates are larger than those
to the northbound estimates for both years (tables 2 and 3).(2) The
increases in U.S. payments primarily reflect definitional adjustments to
merchandise trade, such as the addition of Canadian reexports to U.S.
merchandise imports, and statistical adjustments to transportation
(inland freight) and "other services" for undercoverage. The
largest adjustments to U.S. estimates of receipts, such as the
reclassification of inland freight and statistical adjustments to
transportation and investment income, are partly offsetting. For 1992,
the reconciliation adjustments resulted in a reduction of $2.3 billion
in the U.S. published surplus; for 1993, they resulted in a shift from a
$1.4 billion surplus to a small deficit (tables 4 and 5).
[TABULAR DATA 2-5 OMITTED]
The only large overall adjustments to the Canadian estimates were
to the 1993 northbound estimates. The reconciled balances mainly reflect
a reduction in the Canadian published deficits. For 1992, the
reconciliation adjustments resulted in a reduction of $0.9 billion in
the Canadian published deficit; for 1993, they resulted in a shift from
a $1.7 billion deficit to a small surplus.
Reconciliation Adjustments
Reconciliation adjustments to each country's published
estimates are classified in three major categories--definitional,
methodological, and statistical--which reflect the differences that
occur in the published estimates.(3)
Definitional and methodological adjustments are required because of
differences in the definitions and methodologies used to compile the
international accounts in Canada and the United States. These
differences primarily reflect each country's requirements to
integrate the external accounts with the domestic accounts and
differences in compilation conventions due to institutional factors. To
achieve reconciliation, a common definition is selected, and
methodologies are adjusted to a common basis. The choice of one
definition or methodology over another does not necessarily indicate
agreement on the correct definition or the most appropriate methodology.
Often, the choice is based on practical considerations, such as the
availability of data.
Statistical adjustments reflect differences in data sources and
estimation techniques. There are four types of statistical adjustments.
First, some adjustments are based on an evaluation of the quality and
coverage of the source data. When one country's data are believed
to be of better quality, the better data are used to develop the
reconciliation adjustments. Second, some adjustments are based on
detailed information that is available from one country but not the
other. Third, adjustments are made to reflect revisions in source data
that become available after publication of the estimates. Fourth, some
adjustments are essentially pragmatic, particularly when it is not
possible to clearly establish the merits of one country's data
relative to the other country's data. In such cases, reconciled
values are developed that are believed to be within a reasonable range
of measurement error.
The following sections present a discussion of the major
reconciliation adjustments made to the current account. Although
numerous adjustments are made, only those that involve important
definitional, methodological, or statistical differences are discussed.
Definitional and statistical adjustments affect the current-account
balance because they affect the value of transactions. Methodological
adjustments, such as the reclassification or the grossing or netting of
transactions, are necessary to achieve common treatment, but because
they are offsetting, they do not affect the current-account balance.
Merchandise trade
Most of the differences between Canadian and U.S. published
estimates of merchandise trade stem from different treatment of the
source data (tables 6 and 7).(4) Among the definitional adjustments,
U.S. imports are redefined to include Canadian reexports in order to
align them with Canadian estimates of exports to the United States. U.S.
published estimates, which are on a country-of-origin basis, attribute
Canadian reexports to third countries rather than to Canada; the
Canadian published estimates are on a country-of-shipment basis and thus
do not require a similar adjustment. Definitional adjustments are made
to the Canadian published estimates to eliminate timing differences
(including progress payments on certain military equipment imported from
the United States) and valuation differences.
[TABULAR DATA 6 & 7 OMITTED]
Among the methodological adjustments, inland freight charges
(freight charges on overland shipments of exports and imports from the
plant to the border) are reclassified from merchandise trade to the
transportation accounts. This adjustment is made in order to value
merchandise trade in the U.S. accounts at the plant, rather than at the
border as in the U.S. published estimates. In the Canadian published
estimates, merchandise trade, with the exception of natural gas exports,
is valued at the plant, and inland freight charges, except for those on
natural gas exports, are included in transportation; for reconciliation,
inland freight charges on Canadian exports of natural gas are
reclassified to transportation in the Canadian accounts.
Other methodological adjustments include the reclassification of
equipment repairs from services to merchandise trade in the U.S.
accounts. In the U.S. published accounts, all equipment repairs are
classified in services, though some are initially reported in the
merchandise trade source data.
Services
Travel and passenger fares.--The Canadian and U.S. published
estimates of travel and passenger fares are based mostly on the same
source data and on common definitions. Thus, the reconciliation
adjustments are statistical. The U.S. estimates are adjusted to exclude
some transactions for cruise travel that may duplicate similar
transactions in the Canadian source data and to account for differences
in the timing of publication of revised estimates by Statistics Canada
and BEA.
Transportation.--The adjustments to transportation are largely
methodological (reclassification) and statistical (tables 8 and 9). The
methodological adjustments include the previously mentioned
reclassification of inland freight charges from merchandise trade to
transportation. In addition, expenditures for port services by air and
rail carriers are reclassified from business services to transportation
in the Canadian published accounts to align them with the U.S.
treatment. Statistical adjustments are made to reduce the U.S.
northbound estimates of inland freight to the Canadian level because the
Canadian published estimates are believed to be more accurate.
Adjustments are made to the U.S. southbound estimates of inland freight
to add Canadian estimates of inland freight on U.S. natural gas and
newsprint imports, which are not fully covered in the U.S. source data.
[TABULAR DATA 8 & 9 OMITTED]
A single definitional adjustment is made to the Canadian southbound
estimates to delete estimates of freight charges on U.S. exports in
transit in Canada. In the U.S. treatment, those charges are viewed as
payable by the importer and thus as transactions between Canada and
third countries.
"Other services."--"Other services" include
transactions in royalties and license fees and in a variety of other
services between affiliated, or related, persons and between
unaffiliated persons; they also include government transactions (tables
10 and 11). Affiliated services are reconciled at a highly aggregated
level because of the lack of detailed information by type of transaction
in the U.S. source data. By contrast, the source data on unaffiliated
transactions contain a large amount of detail by type of transaction, so
a detailed reconciliation of unaffiliated transactions is undertaken.
[TABULAR DATA 10 & 11 OMITTED]
Definitional adjustments are made to the Canadian estimates of
affiliated and unaffiliated transactions to exclude nonresident taxes.
In the U.S. accounts, nonresident taxes are included on a global basis,
but they are not allocated by country. In addition, commissions on
merchandise trade are removed from the Canadian estimates to align them
with the U.S. treatment.
Methodological adjustments are made only to unaffiliated
transactions. They include the reclassification of air and rail
carriers' port services to transportation in the Canadian accounts.
In the U.S. northbound accounts, equipment repairs are reclassified to
merchandise trade, and medical services covered by Canadian Provincial
health insurance programs are reclassified to Canadian government
services. Other methodological adjustments include netting the U.S.
estimates of northbound communications transactions against southbound
transactions. detailed comparison of the Canadian and U.S. estimates of
communication transactions cannot be undertaken because of the
confidentiality of source data. The Canadian estimates of insurance
transactions are adjusted to a net basis for comparability with the U.S.
estimates; however, insurance transactions cannot be fully reconciled
because of differences in accounting conventions and data collection
methods for the insurance industry in Canada and the United States.
Statistical adjustments to the U.S. estimates include increases to
account for undercoverage of both affiliated and unaffiliated
transactions. Statistical adjustments to the Canadian estimates are made
mostly to affiliated transactions, which are reduced to reflect removal
of an estimate for undercoverage and to eliminate possible duplication of tooling charges in merchandise trade and services.
Government transactions require only statistical adjustments, which
reflect timing differences in the publication of revised estimates.
Estimates of government transactions are exchanged between Statistics
Canada and BEA.
Investment income
Direct investment income.--This year, the reconciliation of direct
investment income includes the total income--distributed earnings,
reinvested earnings, and interest--of incorporated and unincorporated affiliates. In earlier years, the reconciliation excluded reinvested
earnings of incorporated affiliates because they were not included in
the Canadian published estimates of direct investment income. The
inclusion of reinvested earnings in the Canadian published estimates
eliminates one of the major definitional differences in the Canadian and
U.S. published estimates of investment income.
Statistical adjustments were the largest type of adjustment made to
the direct investment income estimates (tables 12 and 13). U.S.
estimates of northbound reinvested earnings of incorporated affiliates
reflect higher earnings, or smaller losses, than the Canadian estimates.
Until further research on the reasons for the differences can be
undertaken, the estimates were reconciled at an arbitrary value midway between the U.S. and Canadian published estimates. For southbound
reinvested earnings, U.S. estimates are used for reconciliation. For
distributed earnings (dividends), Canadian estimates are used to
reconcile northbound and southbound estimates. Statistical adjustments
to earnings of unincorporated affiliates, which are reconciled in
aggregate, are made mainly to earnings in the banking, insurance, and
real estate industries for both northbound and southbound estimates.
[TABULAR DATA 12 & 13 OMITTED]
Definitional adjustments are made to the Canadian published
estimates only. The Canadian estimates are adjusted to exclude
nonresident taxes; in addition, the Canadian estimates of earnings of
insurance affiliates are adjusted to an accrual basis from a cash basis.
Methodological adjustments are made to the Canadian estimates;
these include the reclassification of certain dividends from portfolio
income to direct investment income and the adjustment of interest
receipts and payments to a net basis for comparability with the U.S.
estimates.
"Other investment (portfolio) income."--The
reconciliation adjustments to "other investment income" are
mostly statistical to account for differences in source data (tables 14
and 15). Definitional adjustments consist primarily of the removal of
nonresident taxes from the Canadian estimates.
[TABULAR DATA 14 & 15 OMITTED]
Methodological adjustments are made primarily to the estimates of
income on bank claims and liabilities. With one exception, the Canadian
estimates are converted from a net basis (receipts on claims less
payments on liabilities) to a gross basis to align them with the U.S.
treatment; the exception is income receipts and payments between
affiliated U.S. and Canadian banks, which are reconciled on a net basis.
On a gross basis, the Canadian estimates substantially exceed the U.S.
estimates, but on a net basis, they are almost identical. The divergence in the estimates on a gross basis may be due to differences in reporting
definitions for banks in Canada and in the United States.
Several statistical adjustments are made, primarily to income on
securities. First, the U.S. estimates of northbound dividends are raised
to the Canadian level, and the Canadian estimates of southbound
dividends are raised to the U.S. level; these adjustments reflect the
general assumption that a country's source data on payments of
dividends are more comprehensive than its source data on receipts.
Second, U.S. northbound estimates of income receipts on holdings of
Canadian bonds are raised to the Canadian level; the Canadian estimates
are based on an inventory of individual bonds held by nonresidents that
is more detailed and more comprehensive than the U.S. inventory. Third,
the Canadian and U.S. estimates of payments on U.S. Government
liabilities are arbitrarily adjusted to a midpoint. The Canadian
estimates are lower than the U.S. estimates because compilers of the
Canadian accounts assume that some U.S. Government securities are
purchased by Canadian parents on behalf of their U.S. insurance
affiliates; thus, the income would accrue to U.S. residents. Based on
indications in the U.S. source data, compilers of the U.S. accounts
assume that those purchases and the income are entirely for the accounts
of the Canadian parents.(5) Finally, some adjustments are made to the
Canadian and U.S. estimates to reconcile miscellaneous commercial
transactions.
Unilateral transfers
In a definitional adjustment, the Canadian estimates of unilateral
transfers are reduced by the removal of nonresident taxes. In a
methodological adjustment, the U.S. estimates are converted to a gross
basis from a net basis to align them with the Canadian treatment. Small
statistical adjustments are made to the U.S. northbound estimates and to
the Canadian southbound estimates to compensate for a lack of coverage
in the source data.
(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, December 1981 through 1991, November 1992, and October 1993.
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 1993.
(2.) In this article, the term "northbound" refers to U.S.
receipts, or Canadian payments; "southbound" refers to
Canadian receipts, or U.S. payments. All values are expressed in U.S.
dollars.
(3.) A detailed article on the methodology used to reconcile the
U.S.-Canadian current account was published by BEA in the November 1992
issue of the Survey and by Statistics Canada in Reconciliation of the
Canada-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
(4.) The source data are the same for both countries, except for
those used by Statistics Canada to compile petroleum and natural gas
exports. The data, except as noted, are compiled from U.S. and Canadian
customs documents filed by U.S. and Canadian importers. U.S. merchandise
imports are compiled from U.S. customs documents, and U.S. exports
(Canadian imports) are compiled from data provided from Canadian customs
documents. Similarly, Canadian merchandise imports are compiled from
Canadian import documents, and Canadian exports (U.S. imports) are
compiled from data provided from U.S. customs documents.
(5.) In 1993, the difference between the U.S. and Canadian estimates
of payments on U.S. Government liabilities widened considerably. The
U.S. estimate increased substantially, whereas the Canadian estimate
decreased. The U.S. estimate reflects a much larger increase in Canadian
purchases of U.S. Government securities than the Canadian estimate, and
a much smaller decline in yields.