U.S. multinational companies: operations in 1987.
Whichard, Obie G.
U.S. multinational companies' assets and sales increased in
1987, but their employment was virtually unchanged. This pattern partly
reflected the fact that assets and sales, which are monetary measures of
multinational company (MNC) operations, were boosted by inflation and
dollar depreciation, whereas employment was not. Also, for assets,
growth by U.S. parent companies was concentrated in the finance and
insurance industries, in which assets per employee are very high.
For monetary measures, growth rates were higher for foreign
affiliates than for U.S. parents, reflecting the impact of dollar
depreciation on the value of affiliate assets, sales, and other items.
For employment, the pattern was the reverse: Employment increased
slightly for U.S. parents but decreased slightly for affiliates.
For both U.S. parents and their majority-owned foreign
affiliates, sales of services grew faster than sales of goods. For the
affiliates, local sales (that is, sales to customers located in the
country of the affiliate) accounted for most of the growth in sales of
both goods and services.
This article discusses these and other highlights of U.S. MNC
operations in 1987. The discussion focuses on selected measures of MNC
operations-assets, sales, U.S. merchandise trade, and employment. A
number of other measures were also collected in the annual BEA survey
upon which the estimates are based. Some of them are shown in the
accompanying tables; others are available in separate publications and
on diskettes (see box). All of the estimates cover nonbank U.S. parent
companies and their nonbank foreign affiliates.
Classification changes.-For individual industries, year-to-year
movements in the measures of operations, particularly for U.S. parents,
were affected by industry reclassifications. Each year, classifications
of some parents and affiliates change because their mix of activities
changes. In 1987, two large, diversified U.S. parents that had been
classified in petroleum wholesale trade were reclassified, one into
transportation and one into transportation equipment manufacturing. A
few additional changes in industry classification of U.S. parents
occurred because the 1987 benchmark survey of foreign direct investment
in the United States provided new information, by industry, on the
activities of companies that are both U.S. affiliates of foreign
companies and U.S. parents of foreign affiliates.
Changes in classification in 1987 also resulted from revisions BEA
made to its industry coding system for international surveys to align
the codes with the revised 1987 Standard Industrial Classification.
Although the changes did not affect most published levels of industry
detail, they substantially affected manufacturing of instruments and
related products and radio, television, and communication equipment
manufacturing. Companies engaged in manufacturing search, detection,
navigation, and guidance systems were reclassified from radio,
television, and communication equipment (part of electric and electronic
equipment) into instruments and related products (part of "other
manufacturing"). Several large U.S. companies were affected by
this change; thus, measures of U.S. parent activity in 1987 decreased
in the former industry and increased in the latter.
Assets
Total worldwide assets of U.S. MNC's increased 12 percent in
1987, to $5,282 billion (table 1). Assets of U.S. parent companies
increased 10 percent, to $4,184 billion, and assets of their foreign
affiliates increased 18 percent, to $1,098 billion.
Nearly 60 percent of the increase in assets of U.S. parents was
accounted for by parents in finance (except banking), insurance, and
real estate (FIRE); most of the remainder-35 percent-was accounted for
by parents in manufacturing. For parents in FIRE, the increase was
largely in finance (except banking). It reflected increases in the
value of brokerage firms' purchases of securities with advance
agreement to resell them and in transactions involving mergers,
acquisitions, and other corporate reorganizations. Both types of
activities tended to be financed primarily through borrowed funds;
increases in owners' equity financed only 6 percent of the increase
in assets.
In manufacturing, the largest increases in assets of U.S. parents
were in transportation equipment, chemicals, and instruments and related
products. In transportation equipment, the increase partly reflected
increases in assets of domestic finance subsidiaries of U.S. auto
manufacturers. (Such subsidiaries, which are established to extend
credit to car buyers, are consolidated or aggregated in the reports of
auto manufacturers.) In chemicals, the increase reflected merger and
acquisition activity, as well as expansion of existing operations. In
instruments, the increase largely reflected the aforementioned reclassifications of parents to this industry from radio, television,
and communication equipment manufacturing.
A major factor contributing to the 18-percent increase in assets
of affiliates was the decline in the value of the U.S. dollar against
major foreign currencies. From December 1986 to December 1987, the U.S.
dollar depreciated 17 percent on a trade-weightedaverage basis against
the currencies of 10 industrial countries and 9 percent against the
currencies of 22 OECD countries. As a result of this dollar
depreciation, the dollar value of affiliate assets denominated in
foreign currencies rose. (Because U.S. parent assets include the value
of their investment in foreign affiliates, the increase in affiliate
assets also raised the value of parent assets, although by a much
smaller percentage.) To some extent, the geographic pattern of increases
in affiliate assets followed the pattem of changes in exchange rates.
The increases were largest in developed countries, particularly in
Europe and Japan.
The assets of affiliates in developed countries increased 23
percent, to $832 billion; this increase accounted for over 90 percent of
the total increase in affiliate assets. Four countries-the United
Kingdom, Japan, Canada, and Germany-accounted for almost twothirds of
the increase in assets in developed countries. In all four countries,
the largest increases were in manufacturing and FIRE. In each country,
there was either a sharply appreciating home currency (Germany) or
aboveaverage economic growth (Canada), or there was both (the United
Kingdom and Japan).
The assets of affiliates in developing countries increased 5
percent, to $253 billion. The increases exceeded $1 billion in three
countries-South Korea, Bermuda, and Brazil.
U.S. merchandise trade
U.S. merchandise exports and imports associated with U.S.
MNC's increased in 1987, after having declined in 1986 (table 2).
Exports-the sum of goods shipped to affiliates by all U.S. persons and
goods shipped to unaffiliated foreigners by U.S. parants-increased 7
percent, to $184 billion. Imports-the sum of goods shipped by
affiliates to all U.S. persons and goods shipped by unaffiliated
foreigners to U.S. parents-increased 13 percent, to $167 billion.
Exports associated with MNC's accounted for 72 percent of
total U.S. merchandise exports in 1987. Exports shipped to affiliates
accounted for nearly 60 percent of the increase in MNC-associated
exports. Parents in manufacturing more than accounted for the increase;
a decline in exports by parents in wholesaling of nondurable goods was
partly offsetting.
Imports associated with MNC's accounted for 41 percent of
total U.S. imports in 1987. 4 Imports shipped by affiliates and
imports shipped by unaffiliated foreigners to U.S. parents each
accounted for 50 percent of the total increase in MNC-associated
imports. MNC's with U.S. parents in manufacturing accounted for a
little over onehalf of the increase; those with parents in petroleum and
wholesale trade accounted for most of the remainder.
Employment
Employment by U.S. MNC's was virtually unchanged in 1987, at
24.1 million. Employment by U.S. parents increased slightly, to 17.9
million (tables 3-5), while employment by foreign affiliates declined
slightly, to 6.2 million (tables 6-8).
Employment by parents in FIRE, services, and "other
industries" increased. These increases were partly offset by
decreases in employment by parents in petroleum, manufacturing, and
wholesale trade.
By country, the largest increase in affiliate employment was in
Brazil. It partly reflected a new joint venture between a U.S.
automaker and a German automaker that provided for the Brazilian
operations of both automakers to be conducted through a single firm; the
increase in employment resulted from a shift to that firm of employees
previously carried on the payroll of the German automaker. A sizable increase in affiliate employment also occurred in South Korea.
The largest dechnes in employment were in the United Kingdom and
South Africa. In the United Kingdom, the decline reflected selloffs of
a minority interest in a telecommunications equipment manufacturing
affiliate and a chain of grocery stores. The latter was sold to reduce
debt incurred in connection with a leveraged buyout of the MNC's
worldwide operations. In South Africa, the decline reflected the sale
of several affihates, in some cases to trusts created on behalf of the
affiliates' employees. The sales may have been in response to
South Africa's controversial social policies and to a new provision
in the U.S. tax code that denies credits for taxes paid in South
Africa. Among other countries, the largest dechnes in affiliate
employment were in France and Saudi Arabia.
Employment by majority-owned foreign affiliates
(MOFA's)-those in which U.S. parents hold more than a 50-percent
interest-declined 1 percent, to 4.7 million (tables 9-11). The pattem
of changes in MOFA employment by industry and by country was generally
similar to the pattem for all affiliates discussed earlier. The major
difference was in Latin America, where the previously mentioned joint
venture in Brazil caused total affiliate employment to rise (because of
the addition of the German automaker's employees), but caused
employment by MOFA's to decrease (because the U.S. automaker,
which previously held a majority interest in its Brazilian affiliate,
holds only a minority interest in the new joint venture).
In 1987, MOFA's accounted for 75 percent of total affiliate
employment. Among countries in which affiliate employment was sizable,
the MOFA shares were higher than average in Canada (93 percent), Germany
(84 percent), and the United Kingdom (83 percent). The MOFA shares were
lower than average in Japan (32 percent), South Korea (36 percent), and
India (24 percent). The countries with lowerthan-average shares
restricted, or had previously restricted, majority ownership by
foreigners. In addition, in some cases factors other than govemment
policy may have influenced the decision to acquire only a minority
interest. For example, interests in several large minority-owned
automotive affiliates may have been acquired more to transfer technology
and facilitate trade than to influence operations or management.
Sales
Worldwide sales by U.S. MNC's increased 7 percent, to $3,732
billion. Sales by U.S. parents increased 5 percent, to $2,680 bilhon.
Sales by foreign affiliates increased 13 percent, to $1,052 billion.
The increase in sales by U.S. parents was in nonpetroleum
industries; sales by parents in petroleum dechned 3 percent. Parents in
manufacturing accounted for over one-half of the total increase in
sales. The largest increases were in instruments, transportation
equipment, and chemicals.
The increase in sales by foreign affiliates was concentrated in
developed countries, which accounted for almost 90 percent of the total
increase. It was dispersed among several industries. The largest
increases were in Germany, the United Kingdom, Japan, and Canada.
Sales of services.-The remainder of this section focuses on the
composition of, and the growth in, sales of services by U.S. MNC's
in 1987.' As part of a larger BEA data-improvement effort for
services, BEA's benchmark and annual surveys of U.S. direct
investment abroad have provided a disaggregation of sales between goods
and services for years beginning with 1982.
Of total sales by U.S. parents in 1987, $1,915 bilhon, or 71
percent, were goods, and $764 bilhon, or 29 percent, were services
(table 12). Of total sales by MOFA's, $718 billion, or 88 percent,
were goods, and $95 billion, or 12 percent, were services.
For both parents and MOFA's, most sales of services were
local (that is, to customers in the country of the entity making the
sale), reflecting the need to deliver services through an entity located
near the customer. Of U.S. parent sales, 98 percent were to U.S.
persons. Of MOFA sales, nearly 76 percent were local, 13 percent were
to persons in other foreign countries, and 11 percent were to U.S.
persons.
Most sales of services by MNC's to foreign (non-U.S.) persons
were to unaffiliated persons. Even though total sales of services by
U.S. parents were several times larger than those by affihates,
affiliates' sales to unaffiliated foreigners were much larger than
those of the U.S. parents-$72 bilhon, compared with $10 billion. Sales
to unaffiliated foreigners accounted for twothirds of U.S.
parents' sales of services to foreigners and for 85 percent of
sales to foreigners by MOFA's.
Sales by U.S. parents to unaffiliated foreigners were
concentrated in a few industries in which cross-border transactions are
a common means of delivering services to foreign customers. Over
one-third of the sales were by parents in transportation, communication,
and public utilities. In that industry group, the sales largely
consisted of U.S. telecommunications carriers' receipts from
foreign carriers for their share of revenues from transmitting messages
originating abroad to U.S. destinations and of U.S. airlines'
ticket sales to foreigners.
The 5-percent increase in total sales of goods and services by
U.S. parents in 1987 represented a 4-percent increase in sales of goods
and an 8-percent increase in sales of services. The share of services
in total sales rose from 28 percent to 29 percent; it was 23 percent in
1982, when the series began.
Sales of services to U.S. persons increased much faster than
sales to foreign persons-8 percent compared with 1 percent. The
increase in sales to U.S. persons was concentrated in FIRE, which
accounted for over 60 percent of the total increase; some of the
increase probably was in the form of investment income. 7 There was
also a sizable increase in sales to U.S. persons by parents in
transportation, communication, and public utilities.
Total sales by MOFA's increased 13 percent, to $813 billion.
As in previous years, sales of services increased faster than sales of
goods-15 percent, to $95 billion, compared with 13 percent, to $718
billion. Thus, the share of total sales accounted for by services
increased-to 12 percent, compared with 11 percent in 1986, 10 percent in
1985, and 9 percent in each of the years 1982-84.
The increase in MOFA sales of services was largely in sales to
foreign persons, which increased 17 percent, to $85 billion. Sales to
other foreign affiliates (of the same U.S. parent) increased 11
percent, and sales to unaffiliated foreigners increased 18 percent.
Sales to U.S. persons increased 5 percent.
The increase in sales of services to foreign persons was spread
among affihates in a number of industries. MOFA's classified in
insurance, finance (except banking), wholesale trade, and office and
computing machinery manufacturing had the largest increases. A decline
in oil and gas field services was partly offsetting.
Data Availability
These estimates are from the 1987 annual survey of U.S. direct
investment abroad, which collected key items on the operations of a
sample of nonbank U.S. parent companies and their nonbank foreign
affiliates. (Banks were excluded from the survey.) The annual survey
focuses on the operations of U.S. parents and their foreign affiliates,
and it covers parents' and affiliates' transactions and
positions with all parties, not just with each other. In contrast, data
published by BEA on the U.S. direct investment position abroad and on
related capital and income flows cover only positions and transactions
between parents and affiliates.
For a more detailed description of the differences between the two
sets of data, see the methodology section in US. Direct Investment
Abroad: 1982 Benchmark Survey Data, which may be obtained from the
Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office,
Washington, DC 20402; price $18.00; stock number 003-010-00161-5.
The most recent data on the U.S. direct investment position
abroad and on the related capital and income flows may be found in
'The International Investment Position of the United States in
1988" and "U.S. International Transactions, First Quarter
1989,' respectively, in this issue of the SURVEY.
Additional detail from the annual surveys of U.S. direct
investment abroad-including estimates of foreign affiliate balance
sheets, income statements, and external financial position and of U.S.
parent and foreign affiliate sales and merchandise trade-is available in
the publications listed below. The publications for 1983-85 may be
obtained from Economic and Statistical Analysis/BEA, U.S. Department of
Commerce, Citizens and Southern National Bank, 222 Mitchell Street, P.O.
Box 100606, Atlanta, GA 30384. They cost $5.00 each. Estimates on
microcomputer diskette for all years 1983-87 may be ordered from the
same address at $20 for each year. The accession numbers for these
publications and diskettes are as follows:
Year Title of publication Accession number
Publications Diskette
U.S. Direct Investment Abroad: Operations of U.S. Parent
Companies and Their Foreign Affiliates:
1983 Revised 1983 Estimates BEA IID 86-103 BEA IID 86403
1984 Revised 1984 Estimates BEA IID 87-103 BEA IID 87-409
1985 Revised 1985 Estimates BEA IID 88-103 BEA HD 88-403
1986 Revised 1986 Estimates - BEA IID 89-403
1987 Preliminary 1987 Estimates - BEA IID 89-404
When ordering, please specify title, year, accession number, and
number of copies desired, and enclose a check or money order made
payable to 'Economic and Statistical Analysis/BEA." Allow 2 to
4 weeks for delivery.
The publications for 1986 and 1987 will be available from the
Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office (GPO),
Washington, DC 20402; Stock No. 003-010-00189-5 for the 1986
publication and Stock No. 003-010-00191-7 for the 1987 publication.
Prices may be obtained from GPO by calling (202) 783-3238.
BEA can prepare additional tabulations or perform regressions or
other statistical analyses of the data at cost, within the limits of
available resources and subject to legal requirements to avoid
disclosure of data of individual companies. Requests should be directed
to International Investment Division (BE-50), Data Retrieval and
Analysis Branch, Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. Department of
Commerce, Washington, DC 20230.