Alternative frameworks for U.S. international transactions.
Landefeld, J. Steven ; Whichard, Obie G. ; Lowe, Jeffrey H. 等
This article presents alternative measures of U.S. international
sales and purchases of goods and services that combine information on
cross-border trade with information on sales and purchase abroad by
U.S.-owned foreign companies and on sales and purchases in the United
States by foreign-owned U.S. companies. The article explains and
evaluates two previously suggested measures based on ownership,
introduces a new residency-based measure, relates these measures - each
of which is derived from its own distinct framework - to standard
balance of payments measures, and illustrates them with experimental
estimates derived from the most recent Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA)
data.
The new residency-based measure introduced in this article combines
the standard balance on trade in goods and services between residents
and nonresidents of the United States (cross-border trade) with a
measure of the net effect on the U.S. economy of the operations of
U.S.-owned companies abroad and of foreign-owned companies in the United
States. Like the balance on cross-border trade, the new measure
identifies international transactions on the basis of residence, but it
presents a different picture of the U.S. position in world markets:
* Under this new measure, the net balance of the United States on
its global sales and purchases of goods and services was a surplus of
$24 billion in 1991, compared with a deficit of $28 billion on
cross-border trade alone (table 1).
* From 1981 to 1991, the surplus under this measure rose from $8
billion to $24 billion, whereas the deficit on cross-border trade alone
rose from $16 billion to $28 billion.
* In contrast to its effects on balances, this measure has little
effect on U.S. shares of world exports markets. From 1981 to 1991, the
U.S. share of world exports under the new measure rose from 14 percent
to 15 percent; in comparison, the U.S. share of cross-border exports of
goods and services rose from 12 percent to 14 percent. During the same
period, the U.S. share of world imports rose from 13 percent to 14
percent under both the new measure and the measure based on cross-border
trade alone.
This new residency-based measure builds upon previous efforts to
integrate information on cross-border trade with information on
international direct investment. Alternative frameworks suggested by a
National Academy of Sciences (NAS) study panel and by DeAnne Julius use
ownership rather than residency as the basis for identifying
international transactions. They, too, present a different picture of
the U.S. position in world markets from that obtained from analysis of
cross-border trade alone:
* The NAS proposal - which is perhaps more reflective than standard
balance of payments measures of the way companies view their worldwide
sales - indicates a net U.S. sales surplus of $164 billion. In deriving
this measure, affiliates' purchases of goods and services from
foreigners are deducted from their sales, but their payments to foreign
capital and labor are not. Consequently, the surplus under this proposal
should be viewed more as an indicator of the globalization of the
activities of multinational companies - the sales effectively controlled
by U.S.- and foreign-owned firms - than as an indicator of the effects
of these activities on the U.S. and foreign economies.
* The Julius proposal indicates a net U.S. sales surplus of $24
billion, the same figure produced by the new residency-based measure.
Although based on ownership, the framework proposed by Julius results in
the same balance as the residency-based alternative because in
determining the balance, all payments by affiliates to foreigners are
netted out; however, they are included in the gross trade flows rather
than being deducted from sales as in the residency measure.
Overview
Although cross-border exports and imports remain the variables of
primary interest for conducting macroeconomic analysis of output and
employment in a country, there is growing recognition that sales through
foreign affiliates must be considered in conjunction with these
traditional balance of payments variables in order to obtain a complete
picture of the global business activity of a country and of the role its
multinational companies and their foreign affiliates play in delivering
goods and services to international markets. For U.S. multinational
companies, an overwhelming majority of sales to unaffiliated foreigners
are effected through affiliates: In 1991, for example, about 85 percent
of total sales to unaffiliated foreigners by U.S. parent companies and
their majority-owned foreign affiliates took the form of sales by
affiliates, and only about 15 percent were direct exports by the
parents. Information on sales through affiliates is particularly
important for such purposes as supporting negotiations on trade and
investment, monitoring the resulting agreements, and analyzing the
global business activities of multinational companies.
In recognition of facts such as these, a study panel of the NAS,
chaired by Robert E. Baldwin, has recommended that BEA develop an
ownership-based supplement to the existing residency-based balance of
payments framework for the United States.(1) As envisioned by the panel,
this supplement would measure U.S.-owned companies' and U.S.
individuals' "net sales" to foreign-owned companies and
foreign individuals. The net sales measure would cover both cross-border
sales as defined for balance of payments purposes and sales through
locally established direct investment enterprises (net of certain
overseas expenses and excluding sales between entities with the same
country of ownership). As explained later, the balances produced under
this supplement differ from those under the standard, residency-based
framework; they should be viewed as indicators of activities effectively
controlled by U.S.- and foreign-owned firms, rather than, as in the
standard balance of payments, as indicators of returns to domestic
versus foreign factors of production from these activities. (The NAS
supplement, like the other frameworks discussed in this article,
confines itself to current-account transactions in goods and services
and to transactions involving direct investment. It does not include
information on other current-account transactions (specifically,
unilateral transfers and income on portfolio investment), nor does it
attempt to construct ownership-based measures of capital-account
transactions.)
Prior to the NAS proposal, a somewhat different ownership-based
framework was proposed by DeAnne Julius.(2) Julius' proposal is
similar to the NAS proposal in that it explicitly identifies and
separately tabulates sales and purchases of direct investment
enterprises. However, if differs in its method of recording transactions
and in its definition of local expenses. Also unlike the NAS proposal,
Julius' proposal produces a net sales balance equal to the sum of
the balances on goods, services, and direct investment income as
conventionally measured.
Considerable interest in alternative accounting frameworks for
trade in goods and services has also arisen outside the United States. A
working party of the Industry Committee of the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development and professional staff at the Statistical
Office of the European Communities (EUROSTAT) are studying the
collection and preparation of ownership-based data. In both cases,
information on sales through direct investment enterprises, sometimes
referred to as "establishment trade," is viewed in conjunction
with information on cross-border trade flows.
Although applicable to both goods and services, the concepts
reflected in these proposals are particularly important for many types
of services - such as advertising, engineering, legal, and other
services - that are difficult, and sometimes virtually impossible, to
deliver to foreign markets through cross-border trade.(3) For most of
these business, professional, and technical services, delivery typically
must take the form of face-to-face transactions adapted to local laws,
customs, and needs. As a result, with a few exceptions (travel and
transportation are the largest), services tend to be delivered
internationally mainly through direct investment enterprises located in
the country of the purchaser rather than through cross-border
transactions between residents and nonresidents.
After briefly explaining standard methods of accounting for
direct-investment-related activity, this article reviews the NAS and
Julius proposals for supplementing the balance of payments framework,
illustrates them using the most recent BEA data available, and then
introduces and illustrates an alternative measure that provides
additional information on ownership while retaining the concept of
residency as its fundamental organizing principle.(4) By retaining the
residency concept, this new measure also maintains consistency with
internationally recognized standards for measuring production and
determining its location, and it maintains the focus of attention on the
effects of direct investment activities on the U.S. economy rather than
shifting the focus to measurement of the relative performance of U.S.-
and foreign-owned firms.
Although these frameworks are different methodologically, they each
explicitly record sales totals for direct investment enterprises that,
together with the totals for cross-border trade, can be used to analyze
the worldwide operations of multinational companies and the channels
they use to deliver goods and services to international markets. Each of
the proposals should be viewed as potentially supplementing, rather than
supplanting, the existing balance of payments accounts, which are
integrated with the national income accounts and are needed for
macroeconomic analysis of the effect of international transactions on
the domestic economy. There may be some basis for viewing the new
measures, along with the conventional trade measures, as indicators of
the ability of a country's companies to compete in world markets;
however, it should be kept in mind that the performance of specific
groups of firms, although important, may be overshadowed in the
determination of these measures by broader macroeconomic factors, such
as exchange rates, differences in rates of economic growth, and
differences between rates of saving and investment in the United States
and abroad. Furthermore, a trade surplus or deficit, however defined, is
not necessarily indicative of success or failure in world markets: For
example, in a country with national saving that is insufficient to
finance its domestic investment, a deficit may merely reflect the
transfer of resources into the country to finance the shortfall of
saving (or the excess of spending over production).
The proposals discussed in this article should be regarded as
experimental rather than definitive, inasmuch as none of them is
completely free of conceptual difficulties. The same can be said of the
accompanying estimates shown in tables 1-4: Not all of the date that
would be needed to construct ideal estimates are now available, and for
the purposes of this article, it was not possible to make some
adjustments that probably would be desirable in a formal, ongoing
series. Because the regular production of high-quality estimates of
international transactions on an alterative basis would require
substantial resources and the resolution of several significant data and
conceptual problems, BEA has no current plans to produce such estimates
on an ongoing basis. Rather, it is hoped that this article will
stimulate discussion of the issues involved and illustrate what can be
accomplished with currently available information.
[TABULAR DATA OMITTED]
Standard balance of payments accounts
Traditionally, balance of payments accounts have included the
cross-border trade of direct investment enterprises with their country
of ownership and with other foreign countries. They have not, however,
recorded the sales or purchases by these enterprises, or
"affiliates," in their country of location, although these
sales and purchases do affect the balance of payments in the sense that
they are among the determinants of direct investment income and may
affect cross-border exports and imports indirectly.(5) The exclusion of
local sales by affiliates follows from the purpose of the accounts - to
record transactions between residents and nonresidents, with a view to
providing information needed to measure the level and geographic
location of production and to gauge pressures on foreign-currency
markets - and from the usual procedure of regarding an affiliate as a
resident of its country of location, not of its country of ownership.
Thus, a foreign investor's receipt of income from an affiliate -
consisting of reinvested earnings plus interest and dividends - is
considered an international transaction, to be recorded by the investor
country as a receipt of factor income from abroad and by the host
country as a payment of factor income to foreigners; an affiliate's
gross sales in its country of location, in contrast, are regarded as
transactions occurring wholly within a single country and, thus, are not
to be recorded in the balance of payments of either the investor country
or the host country.
With respect to measures of aggregate economic activity, none of
the activity of an affiliate is recorded in the gross domestic product
(GDP) of the investor country, inasmuch as that aggregate measures only
production occurring within the country and excludes any production
attributable to enterprises located abroad, even if domestically owned.
However, the direct investor's share of the an affiliate's
profits (after deduction of foreign income taxes) is included in the
gross national product (GNP) of the investor country, inasmuch as that
aggregate measures all production attributable to domestically supplied
factors of production, irrespective of the location of production. By
the same reasoning, an affiliate's production is included in the
GDP of its host country, but the direct investor's share of its
profits is excluded from the host country's GNP. Goods and services
produced for export are uniformly included in both the GDP and GNP of
the exporting country, irrespective of the destination of the exports,
the exporting firm's country of ownership, and the affiliation, if
any, between exporter and importer; similarly, imported goods and GNP of
the importing country.(6)
National Academy of Sciences proposal
As indicated earlier, the NAS study panel proposed an
ownership-based measure of net U.S. sales to foreigners.(7) This
innovative proposal views international transactions from the
perspective of the worldwide operations of multinational companies and
provide comparable measures of international business activities of
U.S.- and foreign-owned firms, whether conducted through cross-border
trade or through local sales by affiliates. Because the proposal focuses
on the global sales of multinational companies, it is helpful in
assessing U.S.-owned businesses' shares of foreign markets. In many
respects, its view of trade is more reflective of the view held by
companies and official trade representatives in developing international
trade policy and assessing U.S. trade performance than one covering
cross-border trade alone. The NAS proposal also has been instrumental in
stressing the need to develop additional information on ownership
relationships and on the methods used by multinational companies to
service international markets.
In presenting its proposal, the NAS panel defined the terms
"foreigners" to include U.S. affiliates of foreign companies
and to exclude foreign affiliates of U.S. companies. This definition
follows from the NAS measure's ownership-based perspective: U.S.
affiliates are regarded as foreigners because, although resident in the
United States, they are foreign owned, and foreign affiliates are not
regarded as foreigners because, although resident abroad, they are U.S.
owned.
The net sales measure can be derived as the sum of three items: Net
U.S. cross-border sales to foreigners by domestically owned companies,
net sales to foreigners by foreign affiliates of U.S. companies, and net
U.S. sales to U.S. affiliates of foreign companies.
Net U.S. cross-border sales to foreigners by domestically owned
U.S. companies is computed in three steps. First, U.S. exports to
foreign affiliates of U.S. companies and exports by U.S. affiliates of
foreign companies are subtracted from total U.S. exports of goods and
services to obtain an estimate of cross-border exports by domestically
owned U.S. companies to foreigners.(8) Second, imports from foreign
affiliates of U.S. companies and imports by U.S. affiliates of foreign
companies are subtracted from total U.S. imports to obtain an estimate
of cross-border imports by domestically owned U.S. companies from
foreigners. Third, the import measure is subtracted from the export
measure to produce net cross-border sales to foreigners by domestically
owned U.S. companies.
Net sales to foreigners by foreign affiliates of U.S. companies is
computed in two steps. First, sales by foreign affiliates to the United
States and to other foreign affiliates of U.S. companies are subtracted
from their total sales.(9) Second, local (non-U.S.) purchases of goods
and non-factor services by foreign affiliates of U.S. companies are
subtracted from the result of step one to obtain net sales to foreigners
by foreign affiliates of U.S. companies.
Net U.S. sales to (or if negative, as is the case, purchases from)
U.S. affiliates of foreign companies is computed in two steps. First,
sales by U.S. affiliates of foreign companies to other U.S. affiliates
and to other countries are subtracted from their total sales.(10) This
total is then subtracted from U.S. affiliates' purchases of goods
and non-factor services in the United States to obtain net U.S. sales to
U.S. affiliates of foreign companies.
These computations are detailed in table 2 and are summarized and
compared with balance of payments statistics in table 1. Using the
standard balance of payments framework, the United States recorded a $28
billion deficit in trade on goods and services in 1991. Using the NAS
net sales measure, in contrast, the United States had a positive sales
balance of $164 billion, as positive balances on cross-border
transactions and on transactions by foreign affiliates of U.S. companies
were only partly offset by a negative balance on transactions by U.S.
affiliates of foreign companies.(11)
Conceptual issues. - As noted earlier, the NAS proposal is helpful
in assessing U.S.-owned businesses' shares of foreign markets. In
the late 1980's and early 1990's, Robert E. Lipsey and the
late Irving B. Kravis, using BEA data on multinational-company
operations, conducted a series of studies showing that although the U.S.
share of cross-border merchandise trade around the globe had declined,
U.S. multinational companies' share - whether through companies
located in the United States or located abroad - had changed little.(12)
Like the Lipsey and Kravis approach, the NAS proposal focuses on the
global sales of multinational companies; however, by considering local
as well as cross-border sales by affiliates, it does so in a more
comprehensive way.
Although the net sales measure is useful for assessing
companies' sales performance in global markets and can provide
insights into the important linkages between international trade and
investment activities and the domestic economy, it may give misleading
signals if used to gauge the effect of changes in foreign
affiliates' sales on domestic income and employment. It is too
gross a measure for most country-level macroeconomic analyses because it
does not align a country's
(1.) National Research Council, Panel on Foreign Trade Statistics,
Behind the Numbers: U.S. Trade in the World Economy, ed. Anne Y. Kester
(Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 1992). See especially chapter 1
("Supplementing the Balance of Payments Framework") and
Appendix A ("Sales and Purchases of Goods and Services Between
Americans and Foreigners"). (2.) DeAnne Julius, Global Companies
and Public Policy: The Growing Challenge of Foreign Direct Investment
(New York, NY: Council on Foreign Relations Press, 1990). (3.) For the
last 4 years, BEA has provided detailed information on both cross-border
services transactions and on sales of services through affiliates in the
September Survey of Current Business. The two types of information have
not, however, been integrated into a formal framework along the lines
discussed here. (4.) An earlier proposal for compiling balance of
payments transactions on an ownership basis should also be acknowledged:
Evelyn Parrish Lederer, Walter Lederer, and Robert L. Sammons,
International Services Transactions of the United States: Proposals for
Improvement in Data Collection, a report prepared for the Departments of
State and Commerce and the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative
(Washington, DC, 1982). This proposal was narrower in purpose than the
two that are discussed here, however, in that it was designed to account
for international business only in specific types of services rather
than to provide a comprehensive framework. (5.) The description given
here is consistent with current methodology for compiling the U.S.
international transactions accounts, with the new, fifth edition of the
International Monetary Fund's Balance of Payments Manual, and with
the 1993 revision of the international System of National Accounts. The
balance of payments items that would not be affected by the adoption of
one of the frameworks discussed in this article - capital flows, income
on portfolio investments, and unilateral transfers - are not described
here. (6.) Exports may embody imported goods and services, but in
computing GDP and GNP, an adjustment is made to subtract them from
exports or other gross product components (consumption, investment, and
government spending) in which they may be embodied, so that only the
portion of exports representing domestic production remains in the
total. (7.) In Behind the Numbers, this measure is termed "net
sales by Americans to foreigners." In this article, some measures
defined by other have been redesignated in order to reduce ambiguity and, insofar as possible, to permit the use of consistent nomenclature within the article and among it, other Survey articles, and other BEA
publications. (8.) Exports by the relatively small number of U.S.
affiliates of foreign companies that have foreign affiliates of their
own are subtracted twice in this computation, once as exports to foreign
affiliates and once as exports by U.S. affiliates. The NAS panel was
aware of the need for an adjustment to add back these exports, so that
they are, in effect, only subtracted once, but it lacked the data needed
to incorporate such an adjustment in its estimates. BEA has since
identified the duplication and, in updating the NAS estimates, adjusted
for it (table 2, line 4). A similar adjustment is reflected in the
derivation of the ownership-based import measure (line 9). (9.)
Available data for sales to other foreign affiliates cover only sales to
other affiliates of the same U.S. parent company. (10.) Data on U.S.
affiliates' sales to other U.S. affiliates are not available. (11.)
The attribution of balances to different groups of transactors may be
less precise than is suggested by this statement or by the organization
of table 2. For cases in which a cross-border sale is followed by a
resale by an affiliate, credit for the sale is, in effect, accorded to
the affiliate yet, in many, if not most, such cases, the affiliate is
merely an intermediary that facilitate sales by the cross-border
exporter. For a discussion of the role of U.S. affiliates in
facilitating the distribution of goods produced by their foreign parent
companies, see "Merchandise Trade of U.S. Affiliates of Foreign
Companies," Survey 73 (October 1993): 52-65. (12.) See the
following articles by Robert E. Lipsey and Irving B. Kravis: "The
Competitive Position of U.S. Manufacturing Firms," Banca Nazionale
del Lavoro Quarterly Review 153 (June 1985): 127-54; "The
Competitiveness and Comparative Advantage of U.S. Multinationals,
1957-84," Banca Nazionale del Lavoro Quarterly Review 161 (June
1987): 147-65; and "Sources of Competitiveness of the United States
and Its Multinational Firms," Review of Economics and Statistics 64
(May 1992): 193-201. See also Mangus Bloomstrom and Robert E. Lipsey,
"The Export Performance of U.S. and Swedish Multinationals,"
Review of Income and Wealth 35 (September 1989): 245-64. sales with the
use of only those factors of production that are either entirely located
in (as with GDP) or owned by (as with GNP) residents of the country.
This result follows from the fact that in deriving net sales, purchases
of goods and services from foreigners are deducted from sales, but
payments to foreign capital and labor are not. By not excluding payments
to these foreign factors of production, a country's net sales to
foreigners may reflect substantial payments that do not accrue to its
own workers or investors.
Although some value added by an affiliate - specifically, its
parent's share in its profits - is attributable to factors of
production of the parent's country, most of it usually will be
attributable to labor and other factors of production obtained in the
affiliate's host country (or in some cases, in other countries). In
1991, for example, the U.S. content of the output of U.S. affiliates of
foreign companies (value added plus local purchases) was 84 percent, and
the foreign content of the output of foreign affiliates of U.S.
companies was 91 percent. In contrast to the NAS measures, the standard
measures of exports and imports of goods, services, and income to align
a country's sales with factor location or ownership, as do
supplemental measures, such as the one proposed by Julius, that treat
affiliates' locally obtained factor services as
"purchases" by the investor country.
Because it does not explicitly measure the effect on the domestic
economy of differences in the location of production, the net sales
measure cannot serve as an indicator of the effect on national income of
increases in multinational companies' sales. For instance, the
effect on the U.S. economy of additional sales of Opel automobiles in
Germany by General Motors' German subsidiary is already recorded in
the standard balance of payments accounts as investment income earned by
General Motors (GM) and as any additional exports by GM of parts and
components to the subsidiary. Payments made by GM's affiliate to
local suppliers and employees directly affect the German economy, not
the U.S. economy. Any impact on the U.S. economy would be indirect,
through the transmission of business cycles, and presumably much smaller
than the direct impact on the host economy. As another example, given
the high labor content in legal, engineering, and other professional
services, the U.S. economy is affected by whether Fluor decides to
"produce" engineering and design services for a construction
project in Stuttgart at its headquarters in Irvine, California, or
through its affiliate located in Germany
Another reason the net sales measure cannot serve as an indicator
of the effects of munltinational-company activity on the domestic
economy is that it does not take into account differences in ownership
shares. Because U.S. companies' direct ownership shares of foreign
affiliates may range from 10 to 100 percent, only a portion of the total
profits earned by foreign affiliates accrues to U.S. parent companies
and thus adds to U.S. national income. (13) An extra dollar of sales
through a foreign affiliate that is wholly owned clearly adds more to
U.S. national income (and to the U.S. direct investor's profits)
than an extra dollar of sales through an equally profitable affiliate
that is only 50-percent owned; the net sales method, however, gives
equal weight to increases in the sales of all foreign affiliates,
irrespective of the percentage of foreign ownership. (14)
Empirical issues. - Inclusion in an ownership-based framework of
sales by affiliates that are not majority owned may cause
double-counting in global totals and problems in identifying other
foreign affiliates. For example, consider the case of 10 companies from
10 different countries, participating equally in a joint venture. If
each investor country were to record 100 percent of the "net
sales" of the venture, the actual sales would be overstated by a
factor of 10. The NAS panel recognized this problem and considered two
possible methods of addressing it: (1) Prorating transactions by
ownership percentages, and (2) restricting transactions to be recorded
on an ownership basis to only those involving majority-owned affiliates.
(15) Perhaps the second method is the better choice, because it allows
the presentation of comparable measures (that is, sales) for both
cross-border transactions and transactions through foreign affiliates.
This method would be consonant with U.S. generally accepted accounting
principles, which stipulate that only majority-owned affiliates are to
be included in companies' consolidated financial statements. In
addition, from a practical standpoint, even though majority-owned
foreign affiliates are probably able to identify sales to other
majority-owned affiliates, they may find it difficult to identify sales
to minority-owned affiliates.
Another issue that ownership-based accounts must address concerns
the determination of country of ownership. Some affiliates are part of
an ownership chain extending across several countries; for such
indirectly held affiliates, duplication can occur if their sales are
attributed both to the country of ultimate beneficial owner and to the
countries of intervening parents in the chain. It could be argued to
that avoid such duplication, country of ownership should be based on
country of ultimate ownership rather than on country of foreign
parent.(16)
A final issue that may arise in connection with the ownership
approach concerns the difficulty of identifying all transactions between
affiliates that have the same country of ownership but different parent
companies. Because many U.S. companies have followed their client
companies overseas in order to service the clients' foreign
operations, a certain proportion of what are described as net sales to
foreigners by foreign affiliates of U.S. companies probably are, in
reality, sales to foreign affiliates of other U.S. companies,
Conceptually, these sales should be included in the deduction for sales
to other foreign affiliates that is made in computing net sales to
foreigners by foreign affiliates of U.S. firms. Similarly, sales between
U.S. affiliates of different foreign companies should be included in the
deduction from total sales by U.S. affiliates in computing net U.S.
sales to U.S. affiliates of foreign companies. In reality, such sales
usually cannot be identified or reported to BEA because in most cases,
reporters do not know the country of ownership of all the companies with
which they do business.
Julius proposal
Another ownership-based approach is suggested by the work of DeAnne
Julius (see footnote 2). Julius' method is similar to the NAS
approach in that it is based on ownership, but because it deducts all
payments to foreigners in deriving net sales, it - like the
residency-based approach presented next - avoids most of the conceptual
and empirical difficulties just described, at least insofar as the
computation of balance is concerned. (17)
Unlike the NAS proposal, the Julius proposal defines local
purchases by affiliates to include not only payments for goods and
nonfactor services purchased from outside vendors, but also payments for
labor and other factors of production employed within the firm. Under
this proposal, the foreign affiliate is treated not as a resident of the
host country, as in the standard accounts, but rather as a part of the
investor country's firm operating in the host country. The
affiliate's transactions with the host country are recorded on a
gross basis, reflecting the ownership boundary between the firm and the
rest of the host economy. As has been noted elsewhere, this netting of
all receipts from foreigners against all payments to foreigners results
in a trade balance equal, conceptually, to the balance on goods and
services plus the balance on direct investment income in the balance of
payments.(18)
The second respect in which the Julius approach differs from that
of the NAS panel is in the recording methodology. Whereas the NAS panel
used what is sometimes referred to as a "directional"
methodology, recording the net of sales and purchases separately for
both inward and outward direct investment, Julius suggests recording
transactions on what could be termed an "export/import" basis.
On this basis, foreign affiliates' local purchases of goods and
services are recorded as a component of sales by foreigners to the
United States rather than as a deduction from total sales by foreign
affiliates; similarly, U.S. affiliates' purchases in the United
States are recorded as a component of U.S. sales to foreigners rather
than as a deduction from total sales by U.S. affiliates. There are both
advantages and disadvantages with this approach: It produces larger
gross flows of sales and purchases than does the directional methodology
followed by the NAS panel and thus depicts more completely the total
magnitude of two-way transactions between U.S.-and for foreign-owned
entities; however, it makes it harder than under the directional
methodology to isolate and analyze the transactions of companies grouped
on the basis of ownership. From the standpoint o f the overall U.S.
trade (or sales) balance, it is immaterial which method of recording is
selected, for the choice of method alone has no effect balance.
The correspondence between Julius' net foreign sales balance
and the balance on goods and services plus the balance on direct
investment income in the standard balance of payments accounts suggests
that one way of viewing the Julius measure is as a more gross variant of
the standard accounts. Whereas the balance of payments accounts reflect
the net effect of subtracting the affiliate's purchases from its
sales - specifically, the parent's share in the affiliate's
net income - the estimates constructed by Julius show the purchases and
sales separately.
The results of applying the Julius method to data for 1991 are
shown in table 3. (19) The table shows that in 1991, total U.S. sales to
unaffiliated foreigners (with "foreigners" defined, as before,
from an ownership perspective) were (2,523 billion, compared with total
sales by foreigners to unaffiliated U.S. persons of $ 2.499 billion;
thus, the United States had a positive sales balance of $24 billion in
1991. While this balance equals the sum of the standard balances on
good, services, and direct investment income, it is produced by
estimates that provide a considerably more detailed picture of the gross
flows that produce the balance and of the channels of delivery that
companies use to service international markets.(20)
Alternative residency-based approach
As an alternative to producing ownership-based estimates, the
standard balance of payments accounts can be recast to provide more
information on ownership. In so doing, the varied needs of data users
can be met without giving up the linkage to economic activity in
specific economies and the integration with broader national accounts
that are among the virtues of standard balance of payments accounts.
Table 4 shows one such reconfiguration. It retains the standard measures
of cross-border trade in goods and services, and its key measure of
activity by affiliates is conceptually equivalent to the conventional
measure of direct investment income.(21) However, it separately records
a number of details that show the data from a new perspective and that
allow a more complete analysis of ownership relationships and of the
scope and importance of intrafirm trade than is allowed by the
conventional presentation.
In the estimates shown in table 4, as in the standard balance of
payments and in the NAS proposal, the results of affiliates'
activities in their countries of location are recorded on a
"directional" basis: Net receipts by U.S. companies resulting
from the operations of their foreign affiliates are recorded as a
component of U.S. sales (exports) to foreigners, and net receipts by
foreign companies resulting from the operations of their U.S. affiliates
are recorded as a component of U.S. purchases (imports) from foreigners.
Although equivalent to direct investment income, the "net
receipts" terminology used in the presentation to represent the
difference between affiliates' sales and purchases - each of which
is also shown in the table - is more suggestive of the underlying
operations that generate the income. In accordance with its residency
basis, the presentation retains the standard measures of cross-border
trade in goods and services; however, it separately identifies the
portions of the total that are accounted for by intrafirm, or
affiliated, trade. In addition, the account provides addenda that break
down the content of foreign affiliates' output into its U.S. and
foreign components and that show the extent to which the local content
of affiliates' output is attributable to the affiliates' value
added or to other local content, including returns to local investors.
This framework is consistent with the needs of traditional economic
accounting and analysis and maintains the strict correspondence between
output and the location or ownership of factors of production that exits
in the standard accounts. By retaining the residency concept, it
maintains consistency with internationally recognized standards for
measuring production and determining its location, and it keeps
attention focused on the effects of direct investment activities on the
U.S. economy. However, it encourages the user of the international
accounts to look beyond the information on cross-border trade alone and
to recognize that the overseas operations of foreign affiliates
constitute an integral part of the nation's economic interaction
with the rest of the world. Indeed, direct investment income differs
fundamentally from income on portfolio investments: It represents U.S.
companies' returns on sales to foreigners that - for reasons such
as efficiency, lower transport costs, or avoidance of trade barriers -
are made from foreign instead of U.S. locations, whereas portfolio
income merely represents returns to passive investments in foreign
stocks and bonds.
The residency-based framework suggested here adds many details
needed for such uses as supporting international trade negotiations and
economic policies toward multinational companies and assisting with the
analysis of these companies' global operations. The key summary
measure from this framework - termed "net exports," but
viewing exports in a sense broader than its usual meaning - combines the
standard balance on cross-border trade in goods and services with the
net receipts from sales by affiliates. In 1991, U.S. cross-border
exports of goods and services were smaller than U.S. imports - $581
billion and $609 billion, respectively (table 4, lines 2 and 15), for a
deficit on cross-border trade of $28 billion (line 28). However, net
U.S. receipts from sales by foreign affiliates of U.S. companies were
much larger than net foreign receipts from sales by U.S. affiliates of
foreign companies - $51 billion and - $1 billion, respectively (lines 7
and 20), for a surplus on net receipts of $52 billion (line 29).
Combining the cross-border trade with the net receipts related to sales
by affiliates yields exports (in the broad sense mentioned above) of
$632 billion (line 1), imports of $608 billion (line 14), and a net
export, or sales, surplus of $24 billion (line 27).
The $24 billion surplus is identical to that obtained under the
Julius approach, although the latter is derived as the net of much
larger gross flows, reflecting its use of an "export/import"
recording methodology rather than the "directional"
methodology used here. The surplus is much smaller than the $164 billion
produced by the measure suggested by the NAS panel. However, as
discussed earlier, that measure, being geared more to analyzing
production attributable to domestic- and foreign-based multinational
companies than to analyzing production attributable to U.S.- and
foreign-supplied factors of production, includes the returns to
foreign-supplied factors of production in net U.S. sales to foreigners
and includes the returns to U.S.-supplied factors of production in net
foreign sales to the United States. This definitional difference,
together with the fact that foreign affiliates of U.S. companies obtain
more factor services abroad than U.S. affiliates of foreign companies
obtain in the United States, accounts for the difference between the NAS
balance and the balance from the alternative residency-based framework.
Alternatively, the difference can be said to result from an excess of
value added abroad (less direct investment income, which is included in
both measures) by foreign affiliates of U.S. companies over value added
in the United States (similarly adjusted) by U.S. affiliates of foreign
companies.(22) (As noted in the addenda to table 4, value added by U.S.
affiliates of foreign firms in 1991 was $258 billion, while value added
by foreign affiliates of U.S. firms was $443 billion.)
The gross flows under the alternative residency-based measure are
smaller than both the estimates proposed by Julius and the NAS panel.
However, the reason for the larger NAS flows is the omission from
purchases of the payments to foreign capital and labor rather than, as
in the case of the Julius approach, the gross recording of foreign
affiliates' purchases in "imports" and U.S.
affiliates' purchases in "exports."
From 1981 to 1991, the U.S. surplus under the broadly defined net
export measure rose from $8 billion to $24 billion, whereas the deficit
on cross-border trade rose from $16 billion to $28 billion. Although in
terms of balances, the new measure presents a significantly different
picture from that presented by cross-border trade alone, in terms of
shares in world totals, the differences are less significant, because
income on direct investment is relatively small in comparison with
cross-border trade in goods and services, both globally and for the
United States. From 1981 to 1991, the U.S. share of world exports under
this measure rose from 14 percent to 15 percent, while the U.S. share of
world cross-border exports of goods and services rose from 12
percent.923) From 1981 to 1991, the U.S. share of world imports rose
from 13 percent to 14 percent both under the new measure and as measured
by cross-border trade alone.
In addition to its usefulness in analyzing the economic effects on
the United States of U.S. international sales and purchases of goods and
services, whether effected through cross-border transactions or through
sales by affiliates, the alternative framework can be used to derive
other information that may be useful for specific purposes. For example,
in addressing questions of market access, one might want to disregard
local purchases by affiliates (which seldom would be subject to any sort
of restriction) and ask what is the total of U.S. sales to unaffiliated
foreigners. From table 4, this measure could be derived as the sum of
cross-border exports to unaffiliated foreigners (line 3) and sales to
unaffiliated foreigners by foreign affiliates of U.S. companies (line 8
minus the sum of lines 13 and 18). Total U.S. purchases from foreigners
could be derived similarly. In addition, the framework could be built
upon by incorporating subtotals and groupings of particular interest or
new addenda lines; alternatively, auxiliary analytical tabulations could
be developed.
(13.) For example, in 1991, net income generated by foreign
affiliates of U.S. companies was $77 billion; only about two-thirds, or
$51 billion, of this total accrued to U.S. owners. (14.) Even if only
majority-owned affiliates are brought under the net sales approach
(which, as discussed in the next section, might be considered as a means
of avoiding duplication), this problem still exists because this
approach, unlike others discussed in this article, does not treat
returns to locally supplied capital as a purchase or cost of the
investor country. (15.) Although the accompanying tables cover all
nonbank affiliates rather than only those that are majority owned,
restricting their coverage to majority-owned affiliates would have had
only a limited effect, because most affiliates are majority owned. For
U.S. direct investment abroad, majority-owned affiliates accounted for
79 percent of the sales by all nonbank affiliates and for 93 percent of
the direct investment income receipts in 1989 (the only recent year for
which direct investment income can readily be disaggregated on the basis
of ownership percentages). For foreign direct investment in the United
States, income payments cannot readily be broken down by ownership
percentage, but the share of sales by U.S. affiliates in 1989 accounted
for by majority affiliates was, at 82 percent, about the same as the
comparable share for foreign affiliates. If only data for majority-owned
affiliates were recorded on an ownership basis, income from other
affiliates would still need to be recorded, but through standard
recording methods for direct investment income rather than through a
separate tabulation of sales an d expenses. (16.) The accompanying
tables the country of ownership to be the country of the first foreign
parent rather than that of the ultimate beneficial owner. However, the
effect of making an adjustment for cases in which U.S. parent companies
were, in turn, ultimately owned by foreigners likely would have been
small: In 1991, sales by such parents accounted for 11 percent of the
sales by all U.S. parents, and their foreign affiliates accounted for
only 4 percent of the sales by all foreign affiliates of U.S. companies.
If sales by affiliates of such foreign-owned U.S. parents were removed
from ownership-based measures of "U.S. sales," these
parents' direct investment income receipts would still need to be
recorded, but in the standard manner rather than through a separate
tabulation of sales and expenses. (17.) The major difficulty that the
Julius proposal shares with the NAS proposal is the empirical problem of
identifying the ultimate beneficial owner (UBO). BEA collects
information on ultimate beneficial ownership and could conceivably produce adjusted estimates on a UBO basis, but, as noted, the benefits
of such an adjustment likely would be small. (18.) Guy V.G. Stevens,
"The Net Foreign Sales Balance of DeAnne Julius," Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System, staff memorandum, July 25,
1990. (19.) It should be noted that in this table and in table 4,
labeled "costs and profits" accruing to U.S. for foreign
persons are computed residually, as sales less direct investment income
and less certain trade flows that can be identified as affiliates'
purchases. To the extent that some of the trade flows recorded in a
given period may represent capital goods or goods used in producing for
inventory, neither of which may enter into the affilliate's cost of
goods sold during that period, the trade-flow and "costs and
profits" items must be interpreted simply as flows of funds rather
than as an allocation of factor and nonfactor payments related to
current production. Over time, however, capital goods are depreciated and inventories sold, and in any event, capital goods and goods used in
producing for inventory probably account for a relatively small share of
total trade; thus, on average, the labeling of the items likely provides
a generally accurate representation of their nature. In any case, the
net sales measure as shown in table 3 is correctly measured,
irrespective of the fact that the true composition of some of the
expense items may a times deviate from the shown. (20.) The $24 billion
figure differs slightly from the derived from BEA'S quarterly
balance of payments accounts because the estimates presented in this
article exclude direct investment income from affiliates in banking
(which are not covered by BEA'S financial and operating data for
affiliates) and exclude the current-cost adjustment to income. (21.)
Minor variances from the figures published in the U.S. balance of
payments accounts exist for the reasons noted in footnote 20. (22.) Lois
Stekler, in comparing the NAS measure with the conventional trade
balance, has made a similar observation: The net sales balance ... is
approximately equal to the trade balance [on goods and services) plus
the value added by U.S. direct investment abroad minus the value added
by foreign direct investors in the United States. As long as the value
added by U.S. businesses abroad is higher than the value added by
foreign direct investors in the United States, the proposed measure will
be more favorable than the traditional measure of the trade deficit. See
Lois Stekler, review of Behind the Numbers, Journal of Economic
Literature 31 (September 1993): 1,461. (23.) The world totals used in
deriving these shares are from International Monetary Fund, Balance of
Payments Statistics Yearbook (Washington, DC: International Monetary
Fund, various issues).