A preview of the comprehensive revision of the national income and product accounts: definitional and classificational changes.
Parker, Robert P.
A Preview of the Comprehensive Revision of the National Income and
Product Accounts: Definitional and Classificational Changes
In November, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) will release the
results of a comprehensive - that is, benchmark - revision of the
national income and product accounts (NIPA's). This revision is the
ninth of its kind; the last such revision was released in December 1985.
Comprehensive revisions differ from annual NIPA revisions because
of the scope of the changes incorporated and because of the number of
years subject to revision. Comprehensive revisions incorporate three
kinds of changes: Definitional and classificational changes, statistical
changes, and new and redesigned tables.
Definitional and classificational changes update the accounts to
reflect the evolving U.S. economy; they are usually made in a
comprehensive revision so that the estimates can be revised back to
produce consistent time series. In the upcoming comprehensive revision,
the definitional and classificational changes will mainly represent
efforts to deal with the effects of the changing nature of government
programs, the increasing importance of international transactions, and
the nature of business incomes and expenses as they affect current
production.
Statistical changes update the estimates to reflect the
incorporation of newly available and revised data from regularly used
sources and new methodologies - that is, new source data and new
estimating procedures. In the upcoming revision, data will be
incorporated from sources such as the 1982 benchmark input-output
tables, the 1987 Economic Censuses, and several annual surveys for 1989
and 1990; several new methodologies will be introduced to cope with
difficult measurement problems and to reflect changes in the
availability and quality of source data. In addition, the base period
for the calculation of constant-dollar estimates and of the associated
price indexes will be shifted from 1982 to 1987, and the industry
distributions of GNP and its components will be shifted from the 1972 to
the 1987 Standard Industrial Classification.
New and redesigned tables update the presentation of the
NIPA's to reflect the definitional, classificational, and
statistical changes and to make the tables more informative. In the
upcoming revision, the most important changes will entail a focus on
gross domestic product (GDP), the appropriate measure of U.S. production
for many types of analysis, and the presentation of alternative
constant-dollar estimates and related price indexes.(1)
This article describes the definitional and classificational
changes. Subsequent articles will describe the statistical changes, the
new and redesigned tables, and other aspects of the revision.
The definitional and classificational changes to be incorporated in
this comprehensive revision can be grouped into the following four
types: Classification of government agencies, treatment of government
receipts, treatment of international transactions, and treatment of
business incomes and expenses. For each change, table 1 shows the
aggregates and components from the current NIPA five-account system that
will be affected and the initial year of revision. The following
paragraphs briefly describe each change, the reason for the change, and
the effects of the change on NIPA aggregates and components. Except as
noted, the changes that affect GNP will affect GDP in the same way.
[Tabular Data Omitted]
Classification of government agencies
Nine Federal Government agencies will be reclassified from their
current designations as government enterprises or as general government
agencies.(2) These changes resulted from a reexamination of government
agencies that sell goods or services to the public. The revisions
resulting from each of these changes will be carried back to the year
each agency was established.
Reclassification of six agencies as general government agencies. -
The Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC), the Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation (PBGC), the Federal Home Loan Bank Board Revolving Fund (FHLBBRF), the Credit Union Share Insurance Fund (CUSIF), and the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and the Federal Savings and
Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC) and their successors will be
reclassified from government enterprises to general government agencies.
For the PBGC, the changed treatment will also include the creation of a
social insurance fund to record employer contributions to the PBGC and
payouts of pensions by the PBGC.
For the deposit insurance agencies - the FSLIC, FDIC, and CUSIF -
and for the FHLBBRF, the change recognizes that the operating expenses of these agencies are now primarily asset transfers, a type of financial
transaction that is excluded from the NIPA's.(3) For the CCC, the
change recognizes that the CCC's revenues do not cover a
substantial proportion of its expenses. For the PBGC, the change
conforms its treatment to that of similar programs, such as
workers' compensation and unemployment insurance.
These reclassifications will raise government purchases, and thus
GNP, by the amount of the agencies' operating expenses - that is,
by their payments for employee compensation, other services, and goods.
(Their purchases of equipment and structures, as well as their inventory
change, will continue to be treated in the NIPA's as government
purchases.)
Charges against GNP will also be raised by the amount of the
agencies' operating expenses: The current surplus of the agencies -
that is, operating revenue less operating expenses - will be excluded,
but their current operating revenue will be added back. For the PBGC,
this operating revenue will be added into employer contributions for
social insurance; for the other agencies, it will be added into indirect
business nontaxes. As a result of the change in the PBGC, pension
benefits paid to persons by the PBGC will be reclassified from business
transfer payments to Federal transfer payments. This reclassification
will not affect personal income, which includes both of these types of
transfer payments.
Reclassification of one agency as a foreign entity. - The Panama
Canal Commission (established in 1979 as a result of a treaty between
the United States and Panama) will be reclassified from a government
enterprise to a foreign entity. As such, only the Commission's
contributions to social insurance funds on behalf of its employees will
be included in the NIPA's. (The contributions to social insurance
funds will be recorded as transfer payments from foreigners to the
Federal Government.) GNP will be reduced by the amount of the
Commission's purchases of equipment and structures, and charges
against GNP will be reduced by the amount of the Commission's
compensation payments and its current surplus. The surplus or deficit of
the Federal Government will be affected by the removal of the current
surplus, net of contributions to social insurance funds, and the removal
of the purchases of equipment and structures.
Reclassification of two agencies as government enterprises. - The
National Flood Insurance Fund and the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation
Fund will be reclassified from general government agencies to government
enterprises.(4)
The change recognizes that both of these nondeposit insurance
agencies meet the NIPA criteria for government enterprises. These
reclassifications will reduce government purchases, and thus GNP, by the
agencies' current surplus. Currently, the operating expenses of
these agencies are classified as government purchases, and their current
operating revenues are classified as government sales. (In the
NIPA's, government sales are treated as a deduction from government
purchases.) Charges against GNP will also be reduced by the amount of
the agencies' current surplus.
Treatment of government receipts
Redefine government sales and personal nontaxes. - Back to 1929,
receipts for certain services provided by government - largely health
and hospital charges, tuition, and park and recreation charges - will be
redefined as government sales, which are treated as deductions from
government purchases; expenditures by persons for these services will be
added to personal consumption expenditures (PCE). Currently, the costs
of providing these services are included in government purchases, and
receipts for these services are treated as personal nontaxes.
The change in treatment will expand the definition of government
sales to cover all receipts by government for the types of goods and
services that are similar to those provided by the private sector. Thus,
it will eliminate the distinction currently made in the NIPA's
between government receipts for the types of goods or services that are
also provided by nonprofit institutions (currently classified as
nontaxes) and government receipts for the types of goods or services
that are also provided by for-profit institutions (currently classified
as sales). In addition, nontaxes will be limited to government receipts
for goods or services that are administrative or regulatory in nature.
This change will reduce government purchases - both State and local
and Federal nondefense - by the amount of the receipts from these
services. (Government purchases will continue to include the cost of
providing these services.) The change will increase PCE by the amount of
purchases of these services by persons. (Purchases of these services by
foreigners are already included in exports, and those by governments in
Federal, State, and local government purchases.) GNP will be reduced by
the amount of these purchases made by domestic business - mainly for
tuition payments by private employers to State universities for employee
training. Charges against GNP will not be affected, because the receipts
from business and foreigners are currently treated as personal nontaxes,
not as business nontaxes. (Business incomes are properly stated because
the payments are deducted as expenses.) All payments for these types of
services will be removed from personal nontaxes, thus increasing
disposable personal income (DPI) by that amount. PCE, a component of
personal outlays, will be increased only by the amount attributable to
purchases by persons. Personal saving will be raised by the difference
between the increase in DPI and the increase in PCE. The government
surplus or deficit will not be affected, because personal nontaxes and
government purchases each will be reduced by the same amount.
Recognize interest paid by persons to government. - Back to 1946,
interest payments on government loans to persons, largely loans for
education, will be attributed to them. This change will recognize the
existence of direct government loans to persons and will expand the
interest component of personal outlays, which is currently limited to
interest paid by persons to business, to include these payments. The
same amount will also be added to personal interest income, thus raising
total personal income.(5) Because personal income and personal outlays
will be increased by the same amount, personal saving will not be
affected. (Receipts of interest payments by persons are currently
recorded as government interest receipts.)
Recognize court-mandated escrow accounts. - Back to 1977, payments
into escrow accounts that are mandated by Federal courts in anticipation
of future settlements arising from proceedings related to alleged
violations of government regulations (such as oil price controls) will
be treated in the NIPA's as Federal Government receipts and
recorded as indirect business nontaxes. Withdrawals from these escrow
accounts that represent payments to business will be recorded as
reductions in these nontaxes; withdrawals that represent payments to
State and local governments will be recorded as increases in
grants-in-aid. Currently, business incomes are reduced by the amount of
payments into the escrow accounts and are increased by the amount of
payments from these accounts; no transactions are recorded in the NIPA
government accounts. The change in treatment, which will recognize the
existence of court-mandated escrow accounts as part of the government
accounts, will affect the government surplus or deficit, both when new
escrow accounts are established and when withdrawals are made.
Treatment of international transactions
Reclassify interest paid by the Federal Government to foreigners as
an import. - Back to 1929, the payment of interest by the Federal
Government to foreigners will be treated in the NIPA's as an import
of factor income. Currently, these payments are excluded from imports
and GNP as well as from net interest and charges against GNP, are
included in government expenditures in the calculation of the government
surplus, and are included in payments to foreigners in the calculation
of net foreign investment.
The reclassification will reverse one part of a decision, made in
the comprehensive revision released in January 1976, that removed these
interest payments from imports and from government purchases. Interest
paid to foreigners by government will be treated as a payment of factor
income; interest payments by government will continue to be excluded
from government purchases. This change also will eliminate a major
difference between net exports in the NIPA's and the balance on
goods, services, and income in BEA's balance of payments accounts.
The change will increase imports and thus reduce net exports and
GNP; charges against GNP and net interest will be reduced by the same
amount. Because the interest payments are classified as factor income,
GDP will not be affected. The government surplus and net foreign
investment also will not be affected. The revised estimates of net
interest from the rest of the world, which enter both net exports and
net interest, will be calculated as the difference between total
interest paid by foreigners and total interest received by foreigners.
Currently, only interest received from business is subtracted in the
calculation of rest-of-the-world net interest.
Record nonresident taxes as transfer payments. - Back to 1959, the
treatment of taxes paid by residents of one country to the government of
another country will be changed. Taxes paid by U.S. residents to foreign
governments will be recorded as business or as personal transfer
payments to foreigners, and taxes paid by foreigners to the U.S.
Government will be reclassified as foreign transfer payments to the U.S.
Government. Factor income receipts (exports) and payments (imports) will
be recorded gross of these taxes. Currently, taxes paid by U.S.
residents to foreign governments are not recognized, and taxes paid by
foreigners to the U.S. Government are recorded as personal taxes paid by
U.S. residents. Several components of both receipts and payments of
factor incomes are recorded net of nonresident taxes.
The change will increase both exports and imports for all years;
the effect on net exports, GNP, and charges against GNP will depend upon
the relative size of these increases. GDP will not be affected, because
it excludes net exports of factor income. Four components of charges
against GNP - compensation of employees, net interest, corporate
profits, and business transfer payments - will be affected by the
revision. Compensation of employees will be reduced because taxes will
be added only to compensation paid to non-U.S. residents (which is
subtracted in deriving total compensation). For net interest, taxes will
be added both to interest payments to non-U.S. residents and to interest
receipts by U.S. residents. Corporate profits will be affected in two
ways. First, it will be reduced by the taxes paid directly by domestic
corporations to foreign governments. Currently, these foreign taxes are
reported as part of the foreign tax credit and not as a deduction from
income. Second, the rest-of-the-world component of corporate profits,
which includes net dividends, will be affected because all dividends
will be recorded gross of taxes. Business transfer payments will be
increased by the amount of all taxes paid directly by domestic
corporations to foreign governments - that is, by the same amount that
corporate profits will be reduced by treating these taxes as expenses.
Personal income will be affected by the revisions to compensation
(wage and salary disbursements), net interest (personal interest
income), and corporate profits (personal dividend income). Personal
taxes will be reduced because taxes paid by non-U.S. residents to the
U.S. Government will be removed. Personal transfers to foreigners, a
part of personal outlays, will be increased to include taxes paid by
U.S. persons to foreign governments. The effect on personal saving will
depend on the relative size of these changes. The government surplus or
deficit will not be affected, because the taxes paid by non-U.S.
residents will be reclassified from personal taxes, which are recorded
as government receipts, to transfer payments by foreigners to the U.S.
Government, which are recorded as an offset to government expenditures.
Record exports and imports of services and interest between
affiliated foreigners on a gross basis. - Back to 1974, payments for
services provided and for interest paid by U.S. direct investors to
their foreign affiliates will be recorded as imports of services and of
factor income, respectively. Correspondingly, receipts for services
provided and for interest paid by U.S. affiliates to their foreign
direct investors will be recorded as exports of services and of factor
income. Currently, payments by U.S. direct investors to their foreign
affiliates are netted against receipts from these affiliates and are
recorded as exports. Receipts by U.S. affiliates from their foreign
direct investors are netted against payments by U.S. affiliates to these
investors and are recorded as imports. This change, which will provide a
more realistic portrayal of international transactions in services and
factor incomes, will not affect net exports or GNP, because exports and
imports will be raised by equal amounts. Similarly, the change will not
affect net interest or charges against GNP.
Treatment of business incomes and
expenses
Reclassify CCC commodity loans. - Back to 1933, defaults on CCC
commodity loans will be treated as Federal Government nondefense
purchases; disbursements and repayments of CCC commodity loans will be
treated as financial transactions and thus will be excluded from the
NIPA's. Currently, disbursements are treated as nondefense
purchases, and repayments as nondefense sales; defaults are not
recorded.
The change in treatment will recognize that the intent of the CCC
program is to provide short-term loans to aid the cash-flow position of
farmers and to support farm prices; the current treatment reflects the
fact that for many years these commodity loans were seldom repaid. The
treatment of the disbursements and repayments of these loans as
financial transactions will conform the treatment of CCC loans to that
of all similar loans in the NIPA's.
The effects of the changed treatment are largely those of timing:
Loan defaults will increase nondefense purchases and reduce the change
in farm inventories at the time of the default; as financial
transactions, loan disbursements and repayments will affect neither
nondefense purchases nor farm inventories. Thus, the change will affect
nondefense purchases, change in farm inventories, and the Federal
Government surplus or deficit only in periods when there are loan
defaults. GNP and charges against GNP will not be affected.
The reclassification also will result in one additional difference.
When a loan default is recorded, the increase in nondefense purchases
will reflect the value of commodities forfeited as measured by the loan
rate - that is, the amount received by the farmer when the disbursement was made. Currently, when commodities are put under loan or are
redeemed, they are valued in the NIPA's at the open market price at
that time: An adjustment for the difference between the market price and
the loan rate is added to non-defense purchases and to the current
enterprise surplus. The change will recognize the loan rate as the
actual market price so that no "valuation" adjustment will be
necessary.
Reclassify bad debt losses as financial transactions. - Back to
1929, losses resulting from bad debts will be reclassified as financial
transactions, and they will not be recognized as expenses in calculating
domestic business incomes. Currently, the NIPA treatment of bad debt
losses, except for those losses recorded in rest-of-the-world profits,
reduces the income of the lender by the amount of the actual loss in the
period that the loan is determined to be uncollectible, and it increases
the income of the defaulter by the same amount in that period.(6)
The change will treat losses from bad debts as asset transfers, a
type of financial transaction that is excluded from the NIPA's.
The changed treatment will have two effects. First, it will
increase the incomes of lenders. Second, it will reduce the incomes of
the defaulters by eliminating the adjustment (defaulters' gain) now
made to recognize a transfer of income from the lender to the defaulter.
The change will only affect GNP to the extent that the imputed financial
service charge of mutual financial institutions is affected by any
change in corporate profits, which are deducted in calculating the
imputation.(7) Charges against GNP also will be affected to the extent
that there is a change in the imputed financial charge; in addition,
charges against GNP will be affected because of inconsistencies in the
source data currently used to estimate the losses to the lenders and the
gains attributable to the defaulters. Personal income, and thus personal
saving, will be reduced to the extent that defaults are on personal
loans (business transfer payments) and on home mortgages (rental income
of persons) and to the extent that defaults by sole proprietorships and
partnerships exceed their loan losses.
The changed treatment will not affect the calculation of
rest-of-the-world profits (both exports and imports). These profits are
reduced by the amount of any bad debt expenses; however, because of a
lack of source data, these losses are not currently adjusted so that
they are deducted in the period a loan is determined to be
uncollectible, and no corresponding defaulters' gain is made.
Recognize capital gains distributions of regulated investment
companies as dividends. - Back to 1940, capital gains realized by
regulated investment companies and paid to investors in the form of
dividends will be classified as dividends; currently, they are not
included in the NIPA's.
The change will conform the treatment of these companies to the
principle that the source of the income underlying dividend payments -
that is, whether the income arises from current production or from
capital gains - is not a criterion when considering the treatment of
such payments.
The change will not affect corporate profits, but it will reduce
undistributed corporate profits (business saving) and increase dividends
paid to persons (personal saving) by the same amount; GNP will not be
affected. The change also will increase the imputed interest paid by the
regulated investment companies because property income received - that
is, interest, dividends, and rent - will increase by the amount of the
capital gains. The increase in imputed interest will increase GNP and
charges against GNP to the extent that it affects the imputed financial
service charge of persons, foreigners, and governments.
Remove capital gains from brokerage charges. - Back to 1929, the
capital gains element will be removed from the imputed financial service
charge of domestic security dealers, thus reducing corporate profits,
charges against GNP, and GNP.(8) These dealers do not charge explicit
commissions; instead, their income is the "spread," or the
difference, between the cost of acquiring a security and its sales
value. Currently, the imputed value of the dealer's commission,
except for those included in exports, contains a capital gain (or loss)
because it is measured as the difference between the cost of the
security on the date of acquisition and its value on the date of sale.
This change will measure the imputed value of these commissions as the
"spread" on the date the security is sold, thus eliminating
the capital gain. In the process of preparing the estimates of these
capital gains, it was found that the imputed value of services had
previously been made only for individual domestic purchasers and not for
other domestic purchasers, such as nonprofit institutions, private
noninsured pension plans, life insurance carriers, investment companies,
and State and local governments. The expansion of the imputation to
include these other purchasers will increase some components of PCE,
government purchases, and corporate profits.
Capitalize monetary interest paid by utility companies on
own-account construction projects. - Back to 1958, monetary interest
capitalized by utility companies on own-account construction projects
will be added to investment in nonresidential structures. Currently,
own-account investment in nonresidential structures by utility companies
excludes this interest, which is instead deducted as a current expense
in corporate profits. (The NIPA's will continue to omit the amount
of interest that utilities impute in compiling their estimate of capital
expenditures for new plant and equipment for financial accounting
purposes.)
The change will recognize monetary interest payments as a cost of
production and will conform the treatment of this type of interest to
that of interest capitalized on construction projects of other
businesses. It will reverse one part of a decision, made in the
comprehensive revision of 1965, to exclude both monetary and imputed
interest payments from investment in nonresidential structures.
The changed treatment will raise investment in nonresidential
structures, thus raising GNP. In charges against GNP, corporate profits
will be increased by the difference between the interest payments, which
will be capitalized rather than treated as a current expense, and the
depreciation on these payments, which will be added to capital
consumption.
Recognize capital consumption for abandoned nuclear power plants. -
Back to 1978, capital consumption will be increased to reflect the
abandonment of private nuclear power plants, either at the date of
abandonment or at the time the firm deducts the loss of the plant on its
Federal income tax return. (This date might not be when construction
activity stops, because, in many cases, construction is later restarted
or the plant (or a part of it) is converted to nonnuclear use.)
Currently, the historical costs of such abandonments are deducted as
business expenses for tax purposes. This change gives abandoned nuclear
power plants the same treatment as that currently used for capital goods that are destroyed accidentally.
The change will increase capital consumption allowances with
capital consumption adjustment (CCAdj) by the current cost of the actual
plant abandonments. Corporate profits before tax will not be affected,
but the CCAdj will be increased by the difference between the current
cost and the historical cost of the abandonments. Charges against GNP
will be increased by the historical cost of the abandonments.
Recognize personal-injury trusts as corporate businesses. -
Personal-injury trusts, created by businesses to handle future
settlements arising from court decisions, will be recognized as
nonprofit institutions serving business and included in the NIPA
corporate sector. BEA has identified the creation of these trusts
beginning in 1987.
This change will recognize the formation of the trusts and provide
the accounting mechanism to transfer the settlements to persons. When
such a trust is funded, corporate profits will not be affected, because
the funding reduces the profits of the corporation creating the trust
and increases the "profits" of the trust. When the trust makes
a payment to settle a claim, corporate profits will be reduced, and
business transfer payments to persons will be increased. Currently,
corporate profits are reduced at the time of funding.
The changed treatment will raise business transfer payments to
persons, thus raising personal income. GNP and charges against GNP will
not be affected.
(1.) GDP is the market value of goods and services produced within
the boundaries of the United States. See "Gross Domestic Product as
a Measure of U.S. Production" in the August 1991 Survey of Current
Business for a discussion of the differences between GNP and GDP.
(2.) Government enterprises are government agencies that cover a
substantial proportion of their operating expenses by selling goods and
services to the public and that maintain their own separate accounts.
For a discussion of government enterprises and their treatment in the
NIPA's, see U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic
Analysis, Government Transactions, Methodology Paper Series MP-5
(Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, November 1988): 6-8.
All other government agencies are general government agencies.
(3.) For additional information on the transactions of Federal
deposit insurance agencies, see "NIPA Treatment of the
|Bailout' of Thrift Institutions," Survey 69 (December 1989):
2-4.
(4.) The National Flood Insurance Fund, which was created in 1969,
provides flood insurance to property owners in communities that enact
and enforce appropriate flood plain management measures. The Federal
Crop Insurance Corporation, which was created in 1938, provides
insurance for agricultural producers to protect against losses caused by
natural hazards. Although this enterprise was created in 1938, separate
data on income and expenses are available only back to 1949, so the
revision will be carried back to 1949.
(5.) Personal interest income is derived as a residual - as the
difference between interest paid by business, persons, government, and
the rest of the world and interest received by business, government, and
the rest of the world. Therefore, because interest received by
government already includes interest paid by persons, the additional
amount will appear in interest received by persons.
(6.) For additional information on the treatment of bad debts, see
U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, Corporate
Profits: Profits Before Tax, Profits Tax Liability, and Dividends,
Methodology Paper Series MP-2 (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing
Office, May 1985): 19-20.
(7.) For additional information on imputed service charges, see
U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, Personal
Consumption Expenditures, Methodology Paper Series MP-6 (Washington, DC:
U.S. Government Printing Office, June 1990): 9-13.
(8.) As noted for the change related to bad debt losses, the
resulting revisions to corporate profits of mutual financial
institutions will also affect their imputed service charge.