Valuation of the U.S. net international investment position.
Landefeld, J. Steven ; Lawson, Ann M.
Valuation of the U.S. Net International Investment Position
This article reviews the issues surrounding the valuation of the
U.S. net international investment position and presents revalued
estimates for direct investment, for U.S. gold reserves, and for the
international investment position. The article describes two alternative
methods for valuing direct investment in prices of the current period,
presents estimates of the direct investment totals for 1982-89 that are
prepared using these methods, and compares these estimates with
BEA's existing historical-cost estimates and with current-value
estimates from several earlier studies. (Estimates for 1990 and revised
estimates for 1987-89 will be presented in the regular article on the
international investment position next month.)
In the mid-to-late 1980's, concerns began to arise about the
mix of valuation methods used by BEA in deriving the net international
investment position. Although many of the assets in the U.S.
international investment position (such as portfolio investment and most
reserve assets) were being valued at current-period prices, other assets (such as direct investment and U.S. gold reserves) were being valued at
the historical costs at which they were purchased. In 1990, BEA
suspended publication of the net international investment position of
the United States and announced that it was undertaking a review of
alternative methods of valuing international investment to reflect
current-period prices.(1)
The BEA review focused on direct investment because the largest
differences between historical and current costs in the international
investment position were thought to have resulted from a significant
nmisstatement of the relative positions for U.S. direct investment
abroad (USDIA) and foreign direct investment in the United States
(FDIUS). Because most USDIA in the 1989 stock occurred in the
1960's and 1970's, it seemed likely that these assets would
require a significantly larger adjustment for the cumulative effects of
inflation than would those for FDIUS, most of which occurred in the late
1970's and 1980's.(2)
Revaluation of direct investment.--As a result of its review, BEA
has developed two measures--current-cost and market-value--to revalue
its estimates of the USDIA and FDIUS positions in prices of the current
period. The current-cost method revalues the U.S. and foreign
parents' share of their affiliates' investment in plant and
equipment using a perpetual inventory model to estimate the net stock of
direct investment capital at current costs, revalues direct investment
in land using general price indexes, and revalues direct investment in
inventories using estimates of their current replacement cost. The
market-value method revalues the owners' equity portion of the
direct investment position for USDIA and FDIUS using indexes of stock
market prices. Thus, the two methods can be viewed as revaluing,
respectively, the asset side of a balance sheet and the liabilities and
owners' equity side of a balance sheet (see the box
"Revaluation of Direct Investment in a Hypothetical Balance
Sheet"). The market value differs from the current-cost value in
that it is an estimate of firms' aggregate net worth, including not
only the current value of tangible assets, but also the market value of
intangible assets--such as patents, trademarks, management, and name
recognition. The market value may also reflect changes in the general
economic outlook or in the outlook for a particular industry--changes
that may not be related to the prices of tangible assets.
BEA's revaluation of direct investment assets from historical
cost to current
cost raises the value of the USDIA position at yearend 1989 by $162.4
billion, to $535.9 billion, and raises the FDIUS position by $56.7
billion, to $457.6 billion (chart 4 and table 1). Revaluation of
owners' equity from historical cost to market value raises the
value of the USDIA position at yearend 1989 by $431.1 billion, to $804.5
billion, and raises the FDIUS position by $142.9 billion, to $543.7
billion. On a historical-cost basis, the U.S. net direct investment
position at yearend 1989 was -$27.4 billion. Revaluation to current cost
raises the net position to $78.3 billion; revaluation to market value
raises the net position to $260.8 billion. The difference between the
current-cost and market-value estimates reflects significantly different
rates of change in recent years in stock prices and in replacement costs
of tangible assets.
Revaluation of U.S. gold reserves.--BEA has revalued U.S. gold
reserves from the 1973 par value of $42.22 per fine troy ounce previously used in the international investment position to the yearend
market price, as reported for gold on the London fixing. the revaluation
puts gold reserves on the same current-cost valuation basis as other
reserve assets and values gold reserves on the same basis as gold held
in private portfolios.
The following tabulation provides the historical values for U.S.
gold reserves based on the 1973 par value and the current values based
on market prices. Revaluing U.S. gold reserves to the yearend 1989
market price of $401.50 per fine troy ounce raises the 1989 value of
these reserves in the investment position by $94.1 billion, from $11.1
billion to $105.2 billion.
U.S. international investment position.--After the revaluations of
direct investment and U.S. gold reserves, the major components of the
international investment position may be viewed as valued at or near
current-period prices (table 2). The following list summarizes the
valuations used for the major investment position components:
* Direct investment has been
revalued to current-period prices using
both stock market prices for
equity investment and current-cost
values for tangible assets.
* Portfolio investments in foreign
and U.S. securities are valued at
current-period prices; for these
frequently traded assets held in
private and public portfolios, the
position estimates are based on
changes in stock market prices
and, in the case of bonds, on
changes in bond prices.
* Short-term loans and other short-term
liabilities to banks and non-banks
are recorded at historical
cost because the face, or claim,
value recorded on a firm's books
is normally roughly equal to the
current-period value.
* Official reserve assets are valued
at current-period private market
prices; U.S. gold reserves have
been revalued to current-period
private market prices.
* Long-term loans and other long-term
liabilities are valued at
historical cost. For loans held to
maturity, the maximum claim a
lender can collect is the book value
of the principal on the loan, so
loans and other long-term
liabilities generally need not be revalued
to reflect inflation.
In recent years, the Third World
debt problem and the U.S.
savings and loan problem have
indicated that there may be sizable
differences, reflecting increased risk
of default, between market
values and book values.
Unfortunately, the available estimates
of market value--from secondary
markets, appraisals, or indirect
methods--are of limited value.
BEA's revaluation of the U.S. direct investment position and
the U.S. reserve gold position from historical cost to current cost
reduces the deficit in the U.S. net international investment position at
yearend 1989 by $199.8 billion, to -$464.0 billion. The revaluation to
market value reduces the deficit by $382.3 billion, to -$281.4 billion
(table 3).
It should be noted that unrecorded capital inflows could have a
significant impact on BEA's position estimates. During the
1980's, there was a large and persistent statistical discrepancy between the current and the capital accounts in the U.S. balance of
payments. The cumulative statistical discrepancy, which amounted to $178
billion, indicated either an overstatement of the current-account
deficit or an understatement of net capital inflows into the United
States. To the extent that this statistical discrepancy was due to
unrecorded capital inflows, particularly of portfolio capital, the
foreign investment position in the United States is understated. The
Economic Statistics Initiative in the Administration's fiscal 1992
budget calls for improving the estimates of U.S. capital flows. Under
this initiative, the measures of international flows of portfolio
capital would be strengthened to take into account new channels of
financing and new types of financial instruments, and the measures of
direct investment would be strengthened by including estimates for small
reporters and nonreporters.(3)
Position estimates and measures of wealth.--The current-cost
estimates presented in this article put the U.S. international
investment position estimates on a basis comparable with BEA's
current-cost estimates of total U.S. fixed reproducible tangible wealth
and with the Federal Reserve Board's estimates of U.S. domestic net
worth--that is, the sum of tangible assets located in the United States,
including plant and equipment, inventories, and land.(4) With consistent
current-cost estimates of the value of foreign assets in the United
States and of U.S. assets here and abroad, it is possible to evaluate
changes in the size of national net worth, the distribution of net worth
between foreign and domestic saving and investment, and changes in the
rate of return to such investments over time.
At yearend 1989, domestic net worth in the United States was
$16,017.2 billion.(5) After BEA's revaluations, the current-cost
value of domestic assets owned by foreigners was $1,579.3 billion, and
the current-cost value of U.S. assets abroad was $1,025.1 billion, and
the value of U.S. monetary gold and of special drawing rights was $115.1
billion. Subtracting the current-cost value of domestic assets owned by
foreigners from domestic net worth and adding the current-cost value of
U.S. assets abroad and the value of U.S. monetary gold and of special
drawing rights produces a national net worth of $15,578.1 billion at
yearend 1989.
Valuation of Direct Investment
The question of undervaluation of the U.S. direct investment
position abroad relative to the foreign direct investment position in
the United States was first explored in a series of papers beginning in
the late 1980's; the most comprehensive were by Ulan and Dewald,
Eisner and Pieper, and Lederer.(6) These authors used a variety of
techniques to estimate the current-cost value of direct investment:
Revaluation of the cumulative direct investment flows by using a
replacement cost index for capital goods or by using various stock
market indexes; capitalization of the annual earnings flows from FDIUS
and USDIA by a common discount rate to derive an implicit current value
of the positions; and use of the ratio of current-cost value to
historical-cost value for the U.S. stock of property, plant, and
equipment (PP&E) and inventories to estimate the current replacement
cost value of tangible assets related to USDIA and FDIUS. In producing
the current-value estimates of the direct investment position, BEA has
built upon and refined the methods used in these exploratory studies.
The remainder of this section describes BEA's methodology and
estimates and then compares them with these studies.
BEA's current-cost estimates
Method.--The current-cost method revalues tangible assets using a
petual inventory model for plant and equipment, general price indexes
for land, and special adjustment factors for inventories. The model used
for revaluing the direct investors' shares of investment in plant
and equipment by affiliates is the same one used to derive BEA's
estimates of total U.S. fixed reproducible capital. The parent's
share of equity in FDIUS and USDIA affiliates has averaged about 80
percent in recent years.
The perpetual inventory model first revalues each year's plant
and equipment investment from historical cost to constant cost using
U.S. capital goods price indexes for FDIUS and a weighted average of
country-by-industry price indexes for USDIA. The constant-cost gross
capital stock of plant and equipment for a given year is then obtained
by cumulating past investment in plant and equipment and deducting the
cumulated value of plant and equipment investment that has been
discarded, using estimated average service lives and retirement
patterns. The constant-cost net capital stock of plant and equipment is
obtained in a similar manner, using a depreciation formula to write off
the value of the assets over their service lives. The constant-cost net
capital stock is then revalued to current cost using the appropriate
capital goods price indexes.
The current-cost values for the net capital stock of plant and
equipment derived by this method are added to current-cost estimates of
the parents' share of their affiliates' land and inventories.
Land is revalued using U.S. and foreign gross national (domestic)
product price indexes. Inventories are revalued using ratios of
current-cost to historical-cost values for U.S. inventory stocks. The
sum of the revalued plant and equipment, land, and inventories produces
a current-cost replacement value for all tangible assets.
One of the major advantages of the perpetual inventory model is
that it explicitly takes into account current-cost depreciation, as well
as the timing pattern of investments and differences in prices across
industries and countries. Nevertheless, uncertainties about the
appropriate choice of service lives and pattern of depreciation can have
a large impact on the resulting estimates of capital stocks of plant and
equipment. The sensitivity of the estimates to changes in underlying
assumptions, as well as a more detailed discussion of the methodology,
is presented in the "Technical Notes."
Estimates.--Although revaluation to current costs significantly
changes the relative levels of the USDIA and FDIUS positions, the trend
in the current-cost estimates is similar to that in the historical-cost
estimates--both show a smaller increase in the USDIA position than in
the FDIUS position during the 1980's. From 1982 to 1989, the USDIA
position in current costs grew $161.9 billion, from $374.0 billion to
$535.9 billion. Over the same period, the FDIUS position in current
costs grew $284.3 billion, from $173.2 billion to $457.6 billion. As a
result, the net direct investment position dropped from $200.8 billion
in 1982 to $78.3 billion in 1989.
The sources of change in the year-to-year USDIA and FDIUS positions
in current costs are presented in table 4. In the table, changes
attributable to capital inflows and outflows are distinguished from
changes attributable to valuation adjustments for price changes,
exchange rate changes, and "other changes."
The price change adjustment reflects changes in capital goods
prices (either from movements in the price of, or from shifts in the mix
of, capital goods) that cause changes in the average age and price of
the stock. This price change adjustment is generally negative when
PP&E prices are declining--as they were in the United States in
1982-84--or when current-period PP&E investments are large enough,
relative to earlier period investments, to lower the average age of the
PP&E stock. The price change adjustment is generally positive under
the opposite circumstances.
The exchange rate adjustment reflects the effect of translating the
current-cost estimate into U.S. dollars using the yearend exchange rate
times its percent change from a year earlier. The exchange rate
adjustment to the USDIA position moves inversely to changes in the value
of the U.S. dollar relative to other major currencies: The rise in the
dollar in 1982-84 and in 1988-89 reduced the value of USDIA in foreign
currencies, and the decline in the dollar in 1985-87 raised the value of
USDIA in foreign currencies.
The "other changes" adjustment is a statistical entry
that includes revisions due to changes in coverage, statistical
discrepancies, the effect of the interaction between exchange rates and
price changes, and other statistical adjustments to the value of assets.
The change in the current-cost USDIA position was $36.4 billion in
1989, compared with $14.3 billion in 1988. Capital outflows contributed
$31.7 billion to the 1989 change in position. Valuation adjustments for
price changes and for "other changes" increased the position
by $8.7 billion, and adjustments for exchange rate changes lowered it by
$4.0 billion.
The change in the current-cost FDIUS position was $73.6 billion in
1989, compared with $61.3 billion in 1988. Capital inflows contributed
$72.2 billion to the 1989 change in position. Valuation adjustments for
price changes increased the position by $2.2 billion, and adjustments
for "other changes" decreased it by $0.8 billion. (Because
U.S. affiliates of foreign parents generally maintain their financial
accounts in U.S. dollars, the adjustment for changes in exchange rates
is negligible.)
BEA's market-value estimates
Method.--The market-value method for estimating the value of the
direct investment positions in current-period prices revalues the
historical-cost value of equity in foreign affiliates of U.S. parents
using weighted average foreign stock prices. The method revalues equity
in U.S. affiliates of foreign parents using a broad-based U.S. stock
price index. BEA's estimates revalue only the owners' equity
portion of the position; as noted earlier, the liabilities portion is
assumed to be approximately valued at current-period prices.
The market-value method is similar to that used by BEA to value
portfolio investment in that both use stock price indexes to revalue
equity interests in companies. The major difference is that portfolio
investments are composed of frequently traded securities, whereas U.S.
and foreign affiliates are often wholly owned subsidiaries, and their
stock may not be publicly traded. The key assumption is that revaluation
of direct investment using general stock price indexes produces on
average a reasonable estimate of the aggregate value of affiliates in a
country. See the "Technical Notes" for a more detailed
discussion of the methodology.
Estimates.--On the market-value basis, unlike on either the
historical-cost or the current-cost basis, the USDIA position increased
more than the FDIUS position from 1982 to 1989. Although both U.S. and
foreign stock market indexes rose to record levels in the 1980's,
stock market prices increased more rapidly abroad than in the United
States. From 1982 to 1989, the USDIA position at market value grew
$576.2 billion, from $228.3 billion to $804.5 billion. Over the same
period, the FDIUS position at market value grew $410.7 billion, from
$133.0 billion to $543.7 billion. As a result, the net direct investment
position increased from $95.3 billion in 1982 to $260.8 billion in 1989.
From 1982 to 1984, the market-value estimates of the USDIA position
were lower than the current-cost estimates. As foreign stock market
indexes jumped in 1985, the market-value estimate moved slightly higher
than the current-cost estimate. By yearend 1989, the market value of
USDIA was $804.5 billion, $268.6 billion higher than the current-cost
estimate.
Detailed information on the sources of change in the year-to-year
USDIA and FDIUS positions on a market-value basis is not yet available.
It is clear, however, that changes attributable to stock prices and
capital flows predominated over changes attributable to exchange rates
and other factors.
Comparison of BEA's estimates with those of earlier studies
Table 5 presents the alternative valuations of the positions for
USDIA and for FDIUS that have been made by BEA and by authors of earlier
studies. The methodologies used and results obtained are compared in
this section.
Current-cost method.--In addition to using different source data,
the BEA current-cost estimates differ from the current-cost estimates
from various earlier studies for two methodological reasons.
First, BEA's current-cost measures differ from those of Ulan
and Dewald and of Eisner and Pieper because BEA applies the
tangible-asset price indexes only to the tangible assets. Both sets of
authors applied price indexes for capital goods to the entire direct
investment flow. As Lederer pointed out, broad application of the
tangible-asset price indexes to all flows is incorrect because these
flows are used by affiliates to finance a wide range of investments,
ranging from plant and equipment to financial assets, a significant
share of which are assets--such as cash and trade receivables--that do
not need to be revalued. Among assets other than tangible assets, only
equity stock in other corporations and intagible assets such as goodwill
might arguably be revalued.
Second, BEA's current-cost estimates, unlike Lederer's
estimates, are based on the perpetual inventory model, which explicitly
takes into account the timing and composition of investment in plant and
equipment and of prices both here and abroad. Lederer's estimates
were based on the single ratio of current cost to historical cost for
the total U.S. capital stock of plant and equipment and other tangible
assets. This approach implicitly assumes that the timing of investment
flows, the distribution of assets, and the rate of inflation are the
same for U.S. domestic investment, USDIA, and FDIUS; however,
three-fourths of FDIUS included in the yearend 1989 FDIUS position
occurred in the 1980's and thus requires a smaller revaluation than
the USDIA position, a large share of which occurred in the 1960's
and 1970's.
Market-value method.--BEA's market-value estimates differ from
those of Ulan and Dewald because the BEA method excludes the portion of
the movements in stock prices that are attributable to the retention of
earnings. In this way, BEA avoids the double-counting of retained
earnings in the Ulan and Dewald estimates that resulted from their
applying an unadjusted stock price index to direct investment capital
flows that included reinvested earnings. Furthermore, BEA's
market-value estimates differ from those of Ulan and Dewald and of
Eisner and Pieper because BEA's adjusted stock price indexes are
applied only to the owners' equity portion of the direct investment
capital flows; in contrast, both sets of authors applied their price
indexes to the entire flow of direct investment capital.
Capitalization of earnings.--BEA has not produced an estimate based
on the capitalization of direct investment earnings because of the large
uncertainties involved in choosing an appropriate rate of discount.
Given the existence of exchange rate risks, expropriation risks, less
than perfect capital mobility, and persistent differences in interest
rates across countries, it seems unreasonable to assume that a single
discount rate could be appropriate for discounting investment flows from
USDIA and FDIUS; further, small differences in discount rates produce
large differences in the capitalized value of earnings. In addition,
choosing a discount rate predetermines the rate of return one can derive
from the capital stock, and thus yields no independent information.
Valuation of Gold and Debt
U.S. gold reserves
In order to more accurately reflect the current value of all assets
in the international investment position and to provide consistent
current-cost treatment of U.S. gold reserves with other reserve assets
and private gold, BEA has revalued gold reserves from the 1973 par value
of $42.22 per fine troy ounce to yearend market prices, as reported for
gold on the London fixing.
Using the yearend 1989 market price of gold of $401.50 per fine
troy ounce raises the 1989 value of U.S. reserve holdings of gold by
$94.1 billion, from $11.1 billion to $105.2 billion. Revaluation to
market value significantly raises the value of gold reserves throughout
the 1982-89 period. The physical U.S. gold stock changed little
throughout 1982-89, so virtually all of the changes in the year-to-year
position of gold at current cost reflect changes in the price of gold.
From 1982 to 1989, the current-cost value of U.S. gold reserves declined
from $120.7 billion to $105.2 billion.
Long-term loans and other long-term debt
The valuation of debt, particularly that of heavily indebted nations, is a major issue for the 1990's, both here and abroad. In
the past, valuation at historical cost seemed reasonable for debt that
was unlikely to be sold in secondary markets--for example, government or
bank debt. Bad debts, when deemed uncollectible, were written off by
banks or forgiven by governments, and these writeoffs were reflected in
the position estimates. Although a large dollar volume of debt to Third
World nations was written off or forgiven during the 1980's, much
debt that may yet have to be written off or forgiven is still being
recorded at book value. In recent years, the rescheduling, selling,
repurchasing, and swapping of such debt has led to development of a
secondary market for the debt of these nations.
While there is some default risk attached to the debt of a
substantial number of countries, market attention has focused on the
debt of heavily indebted countries. For these countries, the secondary
market value of their long-term bank debt has been estimated at about
one-third of the book value of that debt.(7) Ulan and Dewald, using
these secondary market values, estimated that discounting bank loans to
less developed countries would reduce the value of claims reported by
U.S. banks by $40-50 billion in 1989. Such estimates are speculative
because secondary markets are extremely thin; any large purchase can
substantially change the secondary market price. Indeed, when Brazil bought back a portion of its own debt in March 1988, the secondary
market price of Brazilian debt doubled. In addition, these secondary
market discounts cannot simply be applied to bank debt to produce
market-value estimates, because the value of bank claims varies
substantially according to the extent to which loans have been
collateralized and/or subordinated. Moreover, many of these loans have
been written down substantially from face value, and the true market
value of current bank claims may be only half of the amount implied by
such estimates.
Although revaluation of debt was not attempted in the work reported
in this article, BEA intends to examine the question further. The issue
will face BEA--for both domestic and international debt--in the more
general context of moving to an integrated set of national and
international income and wealth accounts.(8)
Technical Notes
This section provides additional detail on the two
methods--current-cost and market-value--used by BEA to revalue the USDIA
and FDIUS positions. The discussion covers the assumptions underlying
each method, including tests of the sensitivity of the estimates to
several of these assumptions.
Current-cost method
Under this method, U.S. and foreign parents' shares of
affiliates' tangible assets--inventory stocks and PP&E--are
revalued to current costs. Inventory stocks are revalued using ratios of
current-cost to historical-cost inventory stocks for nonfarm corporate
business from the U.S. national income and product accounts
(NIPA's); these adjustments convert inventories from historical
costs to current replacement costs. For FDIUS, land is revalued using
the implicit price deflator for gross national product; for USDIA, land
is revalued using country-specific implicit price deflators for gross
national (for domestic) product. Plant and equipment is revalued using a
perpetual inventory model.
Perpetual inventory model.--The current-cost method uses a
perpetual inventory model to estimate the gross and net stocks of plant
and equipment for foreign affiliates of U.S. parents and for U.S.
affiliates of foreign parents, by industry and geographic area.(9) The
model starts with plant and equipment investments in current and
constant dollars and obtains the gross plant and equipment capital stock
for a given year by cumulating past plant and equipment investments and
deducting the cumulated value of plant and equipment that has been
discarded or retired, using estimated average service lives and
retirement patterns. Net plant and equipment capital stocks are derived
by deducting depreciation for plant and equipment from the gross stock.
The depreciation estimates are based on the straight-line formula used
in the NIPA's, in which annual depreciation for a fixed asset is
equal to its gross value divided by its service life.
The constant-cost estimates measure the net plant and equipment
stocks in the prices of a base year, according to the following
equation: [K.sub.n]=[summation]([I.sub.t]-[D.sub.t])
([P.sub.b]/[P.sub.t]).
In this formula, [K.sub.n] is the constant-cost net stock of plant
and equipment in year n, expressed in the prices of base year b;
[I.sub.t] is plant and equipment expenditures, net of discards of
retired plant and equipment, in year t; [D.sub.t] is the estimated
annual depreciation in year n on the plant and equipment purchased in
year t; [P.sub.b] is the price that would have been paid in the base
year for the mix of plant and equipment purchased in year t; and
[P.sub.t] is the price of the plant and equipment in period t. The net
plant and equipment stock in a country or region is the summation of net
plant and equipment stocks across all industries in the country or
region.
Current-cost plant and equipment estimates are derived by
multiplying constant-cost plant and equipment estimates by
current-period price indexes. Thus, current-cost estimates measure the
plant and equipment stocks in prices that would have been paid if the
stocks had been purchased in the period to which the plant and equipment
estimates refer.
PP&E expenditures.--For USDIA and FDIUS, PP&E expenditures
are derived from BEA's direct investment surveys of foreign and
U.S. affiliates. For USDIA and FDIUS, it is assumed that the
parents' share of PP&E expenditures equals the affiliates'
PP&E expenditures multiplied by the parents' share of ownership
in the affiliates.
Gross PP&E stocks at historical-cost (book) value are also
available from BEA's direct investment surveys. Yearend changes in
the gross stock of PP&E (also weighted by the parents' share of
ownership) that are not explained by current PP&E expenditures or
discards are the result of acquisitions or divestitures of affiliates
and of benchmark revisions. Such changes are treated as transfers of
used PP&E to or from affiliates.
Annual PP&E investments--PP&E expenditures adjusted for
discards, acquisitions, divestitures, and benchmark revisions--are
distributed into the components of PP&E using detailed information
from BEA's benchmark surveys of FDIUS and USDIA. Additional
adjustments are made to include expensed petroleum and natural gas
exploration and development expenditures in PP&E investments and
stocks. Although companies may expense certain petroleum and natural gas
exploration and development expenditures for financial reporting, BEA
treats these investments as capitalized for the purpose of developing
current-cost estimates consistent with NIPA concepts.
For FDIUS, annual PP&E expenditures at historical cost by
industry of U.S. affiliate are available from the 1974, 1980, and 1987
benchmark surveys and from the 1977-79, 1981-86, and 1988 annual surveys
of FDIUS. Estimates are made for 27 industry groups of affiliates.
Because such estimates are not yet available for 1989, PP&E
expenditures are estimated by extrapolating the results by industry from
the Census Bureau's Plant and Equipment Expenditures Survey. Gross
PP&E stocks at historical cost by industry of affiliate are
available for 1974 and for 1980-88. Foreign parent ownership shares, by
industry, are available from the 1974, 1980, and 1987 benchmark surveys
and for large affiliates from the 1981-86and 1988 annual surveys.
For USDIA, annual PP&E expenditures at historical cost by
geographic area and industry of majority-owned foreign affiliates
(MOFA's) are available from the 1957, 1966, 1977, and 1982
benchmark surveys and from the 1958-65, 1967-76, 1978-81, and 1983-89
annual capital expenditures surveys of USDIA.(1) Gross PP&E stocks
for MOFA's are available from the 1966, 1977, and 1982 benchmark
surveys and the 1983-88 annual surveys. Parent ownership shares, by
geographic area and industry, are available from the 1966,1977, and 1982
benchmark surveys and from the 1983-89 annual surveys.
For the estimates of PP&E expenditures and stocks for USDIA to
be consistent with those for FDIUS, data on PP&E expenditures and
stocks are needed for both MOFA's and minority-owned foreign
affiliates (MINOFA's).(11) PP&E data for MINOFA's are not
as complete as those for MOFA's. As a result, the relationships
between net PP&E stocks for MOFA's and MINOFA's, by region
and industry, as reported in BEA's 1982 benchmark survey are used
to proportionally adjust the MOFA's PP&E expenditures and
stocks, by region and industry, to an estimated total for MOFA's
and MINOFA's combined.
For USDIA, the revaluation adjustments were based on weighted
averages of data from the following countries or groups of countries:
Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, all other
countries in Europe, and a residual for all other countries in the rest
of the world.(12)
Priceindexes.--For FDIUS, current-and constant-cost values for
plant and equipment are derived using the annual price indexes for U.S.
investments in plant and equipment, by industry, from BEA's capital
stock estimates. Current- and constant-cost estimates of investment in
land are derived using the implicit price deflator for U.S. gross
national product.
For USDIA in Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and the United
Kingdom, the current- and constant-cost values for plant and equipment
are derived using the appropriate country price index, available from
the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), for
nonresidential structures and for nonresidential equipment. Current-and
constant-cost estimates of investment in land are derived for each
country using its price deflator for gross national (or domestic)
product.
For USDIA in "other Europe," country price indexes,
available from the OECD, are used to develop weighted price indexes for
structures, equipment, and gross domestic product. For USDIA in the rest
of the world, U.S. price indexes are used because reliable weighted
indexes for the developing countries are not available; furthermore,
foreign affiliates in developing countries, particularly affiliates in
the petroleum industry, are believed to acquire much of their equipment
from the United States.
Average service lives.--The average service lives and retirement
patterns used for FDIUS plant and equipment are the same as those used
by BEA to derive the estimates of total U.S. private fixed reproducible
tangible wealth.
The service lives used for USDIA plant and equipment in Canada,
France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and the United Kingdom are those used in
the national economic accounts of those countries, as reported to the
OECD.(13) The service lives for nonpetroleum investments in other
developed countries are based on service lives used in selected small
European countries and on service lives in Canada, France, Germany,
Italy, Japan, and the United Kingdom. The service lives used for
nonpetroleum investments in less developed countries are based on those
for developed countries, but they have been lengthened because less
developed countries are assumed to have slower technological
obsolescence and lower labor costs (and maintenance costs) relative to
capital acquisition costs. The service lives used for petroleum
investments are judgmental estimates and are considerably longer than
those used by BEA for the domestic petroleum industry; the use of longer
service lives reflects the slower, more efficient rate at which oil is
extrated in foreign countries.
Alternative service lives and the depreciation formula.--BEA
examined a number of alternative assumptions about the appropriate
service lives and formulas to use for depreciation. Several of these
assumptions are discussed in the following paragraphs.
It is possible that the longer average service lives for used for
USDIA do not reflect actual differences in practice between the United
States and other countries. If the USDIA position at current costs were
recalculated using the shorter U.S. service lives (instead of the OECD
service lives) for U.S. affiliates abroad, the current-cost USDIA
position for 1989 would be $61 billion lower, as would the resulting net
direct investment position.
Various studies of depreciation in the United States suggest that
depreciation for equipment may be more rapid in the first years of the
service life than that calculated using the straight-line formula;
studies also suggest that, for structures, either the depreciation rates
are less or the service lives are longer than those used by BEA. BEA
tested the effects of such assumptions using a declining balance formula
with a depreciation rate of 1.8 times the first year's
straight-line rate for equipment and using a straight-line formula with
25 percent longer service lives for structures.(14) Combining these
alternatives for equipment and structures would raise the FDIUS position
by $1 billion in 1989 and the USDIA position by $23 billion; the
resulting net direct investment position for 1989 would be $21 billion
higher.
Market-value method
Under this method, owner's equity of foreign affiliates of
U.S. parents and of U.S. affiliates of foreign parents is revalued to
current costs. Owner's equity included in the USDIA and FDIUS
positions is the cumulative total of equity capital flows and reinvested
earnings. Owners' equity is revalued to current cost using the
market-equity model.
Market-equity model.--In the market-equity model, FDIUS is revalued
at the aggregate level, and USDIA is revalued by a weighted average
country/region estimate. The revaluation formula for parents'
equity in affiliates that maintain their financial records in U.S.
dollars is [Mathematical Expression Omitted], where [K.sub.t] is the
equity investment in affiliates in year t, valued at yearend stock
market prices; [Peoy.sub.t] is the yearend stock market price index and
[Pavg.sub.t] is the annual average stock market price index, in year t;
[I.sub.t] is the total equity capital flow in year t; and [RE.sub.t] is
the yearend ratio of retained earnings per share as reflected in the
stock price index for year t.
This formula revalues U.S. and foreign parents' equity in
affiliates using end-of-year stock price indexes, while adjusting for
changes in annual investment and correcting for the effect of retained
earnings on stock market prices during the year. The stock market data
are first converted into U.S. dollars, so exchange rate effects are
reflected in the market indexes.
An additional adjustment is needed for foreign affiliates of U.S.
parents that maintain their financial accounts in another national
currency and later translate these accounts into U.S. dollars.
Investments made during the year by these foreign affiliates must be
revalued from the average exchange rate during the year to the yearend
exchange rate.
Equity investment flows.--Data on equity capital flows are
generally available from BEA's quarterly and benchmark surveys from
1966 to 1989. For both USDIA and FDIUS, the necessary earnings,
dividends, equity capital flows, and equity positions are generally
available beginning in 1966 for incorporated U.S. affiliates of foreign
parents and incorporated foreign affiliates of U.S. parents.
For FDIUS, the 1966 market value of the foreign equity position in
incorporated U.S. affiliates is estimated by multiplying the position by
the ratio of market-to-book values in 1966 for the Standard and
Poor's Index for 400 Industrial Companies.(15) This method assumes
that the relationship between market and book values of incorporated
U.S. affiliates is similar to that of a typical large U.S. industrial
corporation in 1966.
For USDIA, comparable market-to-book-value ratios for 1966 are
unavailable for foreign stock markets. Therefore, the 1966 market value
of U.S. parents' equity in incorporated foreign affiliates is
estimated by calculating the dividends affiliates paid to U.S. parents,
assuming market yields in 1966, and then dividing the value of dividends
by the market yield for the year.
Time series data for unincorporated U.S. and foreign affiliates are
more limited than data for incorporated affiliates. For FDIUS,
distributed earnings, equity flows, and equity positions are available
for unincorporated U.S. affiliates of foreign parents from 1980 to 1989.
Because these data are not available for earlier years, the valuation of
unincorporated affiliates begins with data for 1980. A starting position
in current-cost values was created by multiplying the equity position in
unincorporated U.S. affiliates by the estimated market-to-book-value
ratio of incorporated U.S. affiliates in 1980. In 1989, equity capital
flows from foreign parents to unincorporated U.S. affiliates accounted
for 8 percent of total equity capital flows to the United States from
foreign parents.
For USDIA, complete data for unincorporated foreign affiliates are
available from 1982 to 1989. An initial position for 1982 was estimated
by using the market-to-book-value ratio for incorporated affiliates. In
1989, equity capital flows from U.S. parents to unincorporated foreign
affiliates accounted for 12 percent of total equity capital flows from
U.S. parents.
Market indexes.--For FDIUS, Standard and Poor's composite
stock market data are used to revalue foreign parents' equity in
U.S. affiliates. For USDIA, stock market data from Morgan Stanley
Capital International are used to revalue U.S. parents' equity in
foreign affiliates. OECD stock market data are used for years in which
the Morgan Stanley stock market data are incomplete or missing.
Investments in countries where country-specific stock market data are
not available are revalued using the Morgan Stanley World Index for
stocks.
The market-value method, like the current-cost method, is sensitive
to the assumptions used. For example, FDIUS equity was revalued using
the Standard and Poor's 500 stock market index because that index
has broader coverage than the Morgan Stanley index for the United
States; if the Morgan Stanley U.S. index were used, the 1989 FDIUS
position would be raised by $16 billion. [Table 1 to 5 Omitted] [Chart 4
Omitted] [Revaluation of Direct Investment in a Hypothetical Balance
Sheet Omitted]
(1)See "International Investment Position: Component Detail for
1989," Surveyof Current Business 70 (June 1990): 54-65. Before its
suspension in 1990, an annual estimate of the net international
investment position of the United States was published each year.
(2)Inflation drives a wedge between values expressed in historical
prices andthose in current prices. During the last 30 years, the
International Monetary Fund's world price index has risen more than
4 percent a year, amounting to more than a threefold increase over the
period. Such an inflation rate may hinder meaningful comparisons of
dollar values at different points in time. As a result, measures of
flows, which are in current prices, are often restated to constant
prices, and measures of stocks, which are valued in acquisition (or
historical) prices, are often restated to current (or to constant)
prices. Consistent comparisons of business income and assets over time
and of rates of return, capital productivity, and capital/labor ratios
require such valuations. (3)See "Improving the Quality of Economic
Statistics: The 1992 Economic Statistics Initiative" in the March
1991 Survey. (4)BEA has produced estimates of the gross and net stocks
of domestic fixed reproducible assets on consistent current- and
constant-cost bases since 1972. The Federal Reserve Board uses
BEA's current-cost estimates, along with an estimate of the market
value of land, to estimate total tangible assets located in the United
States, or domestic net worth, in its balance sheets for the U.S.
economy. (5)Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Balance
Sheets for the U.S. Economy, 1945-90, Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, Publication C (Washington, DC: March 1991). (6)Michael Ulan and William G. Dewald, "The U.S. Net International
InvestmentPosition: Misstated and Misunderstood," in James A. Dorn and William A. Niskanen, ed., Dollars, and Trade (Norwell, MA: Kluwer
Academic Publishers for the Cato Institute, 1989).
Robert Eisner and Paul J. Pieper, "The World's Greatest
Debtor Nation?," in The North American Review of Economics and
Finance, vol. 1, no. 1 (Greenwich, CT:JAI Press, 1990).
Walter Lederer, "The Valuation of U.S. Direct Investment
Abroad," Unpublished (Washington, DC: Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, May 8, 1990). (7)Salomon Brothers,
"Indicative Prices for Less Developed Country Bank Loans,"
January 4, 1990. (8)For a description of BEA's plans for moving to
an integrated set of national and international income and wealth
accounts, see "The United Nations System of National Accounts: An
Introduction," in the June 1990 Survey; and "Improving the
Quality of Economic Statistics: The 1992 Economic Statistics
Initiative," in the March 1991 Survey. (9)For detailed information
on the perpetual inventory model, see U.S. Department of Commerce,
Bureau of Economic Analysis, Fixed Reproducible Tangible Wealth in the
United States, 1925-85 Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office,
June 1987): vii-x. (10)MOFA's are foreign affiliates in which the
U.S. parent(s) ownership share is over 50 percent. (11)MINOFA's are
foreign affiliates in which the U.S. parent(s) ownership share is
between 10 percent and 50 percent. (12)PP&E is revalued according to
its location rather than to the location of the direct investment claim.
This treatment differs from the usual historical-cost treatment so as to
allow for the use of of price indexes and currency exchange rates of the
country in which the PP&Eis located. (13)Derek Blades, "Service
Lives Of Fixed Assets," OECD Working Paper No. 4 (Paris, France:
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, March 1983).
(14)These assumptions about depreciation of equipment and structures are
similar to the parameters suggested in a study by Hulten and Wykoff; see
C.R. Hulten and F.C. Wykoff, "The Measurement of Economic
Depreciation," in Depreciation, Inflation, and the Taxation of
Income from Capital (The Urban Institute Press, 1981): 94. (15)The
equity position of FDIUS in 1966 is not separately available. Therefore,
an estimated equity position is derived by multiplying the total 1966
direct investment position by the ratio of equity to total direct
investment in 1974, the first year equity is reported separately from
debt.