GNP: an overview of source data and estimating methods.
Carson, Carol S.
GNP: An Overview of Source Data and Estimating Methods
GNP is the most widely used measure of the Nation's
production. It is used to track the cyclical ups and downs of the
economy and to monitor economic growth. In conjunction with measures of
labor and capital input, it provides indicators of the Nation's
productivity. Thus, GNP is a primary focus in the analysis of the
current economic situation, in macroeconomic forecasting, and in policy
formulation.
The usefulness of GNP stems in part from its being the keystone of
a set of measures that provide answers to two questions: First, what is
the output of the economy--its size, its composition, and its use?
Second, what is the economic process or mechanism by which output is
produced and distributed? These measures are in the framework of a set
of accounts--the national income and product accounts
(NIPA's)--that show production, distribution, consumption, and
saving. The summary NIPA system is shown on pages 16 and 17 of this
issue of the SURVEY.
The first account in the summary system, the national income and
product account, shows GNP measured in two ways (table 1). On the right
side, GNP is measured as the sum of goods and services sold to final
users. On the left side, GNP is measured as the sum of income payments
and other costs. The right side, which corresponds to table 1.1. of the
set of NIPA tables, shows personal consumption expenditures for goods
and services and the other "product' components. The left
side shows the compensation of employees and the other
"income' components; most of these entries appear as
components of national income in NIPA table 1.14; the remainder appear
in table 1.9, which shows the relation among major NIPA income and
product aggregates.
As explained in "An Introduction to National Economic
Accounting,' the national income and product account is what is
referred to as a "production account.'[17]1 Specifically, it
is the production account for the Nation. Although most of the
Nation's production takes place in the business sector, production
also takes place in the other three sectors of the economy--households,
government, and foreign. Thus, this account can be viewed as the
consolidation of the production accounts for all economic transactors,
based either on actual production accounts or those that can be assumed
to exist. The national income and product account also serves as the
appropriation account for the business sector; that is, it records the
business sector's current income, current outlays, and saving. The
other accounts in the summary system are appropriation accounts for the
three other sectors and a consolidated saving-investment account for the
domestic sectors.
1. Bracketed numbers refer to items in the second part of this
article.
The first part of this article summarizes the source data and
estimating methods used to prepare the current- and constant-dollar
estimates of GNP. This overview of GNP complements the more detailed
information that is becoming available in BEA's series of papers
describing the conceptual framework of the NIPA's and the
methodology used in preparing the estimates. The second part provides a
directory of the information about GNP that has appeared in recent years
in the SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS and other BEA publications. GNP and
the other entries in the national income and product account are defined
next.
Measures of production.--As indicated, the total on both sides of
the national income and product account is GNP. Gross national product,
to use the words that underlie the familiar acronym, is defined as the
market value of the goods and services produced by labor and property
supplied by residents of the United States. The product side of the
account shows that GNP is the sum of purchases of goods and services by
persons and government, gross private domestic investment (including the
change in business inventories), and net exports (exports less imports).
This sum is the market value of final sales and business inventory
change. To avoid double counting, the summing does not include business
purchases of goods and services on current account--for example,
business purchases of paper to make books; their value is reflected in
the value of final sales and business inventory change. The investment
component of GNP is measured before deduction of charges for consumption
of fixed capital.
The income side shows charges against GNP (line 25), the costs
incurred and the profits earned in the production of GNP. This sum
equals GNP, except for the statistical discrepancy. The factor
charges--compensation of employees, proprietors' income, rental
income of persons, corporate profits, and net interest--represent the
incomes of the factors of production (labor and property). These factor
incomes are measured before deduction of taxes on those incomes and
after deduction of depreciation and other allowances for capital
consumed in production. The total of these incomes is a measure of
production called national income. Three nonfactor charges--business
transfer payments, indirect business taxes, and the current surplus of
government enterprises--are added to national income and
one--subsidies--is subtracted to yield charges against net national
product, yet another measure of production. Charges for the consumption
of fixed capital are added to charges against net national product to
yield charges against GNP.
The four measures of production that have been mentioned so far
differ from each other because of distinctions that are made between
measures at factor cost and at market value (that is, including
nonfactor charges as well as factor costs) and between measures that are
gross and net of capital consumption. GNP and charges against GNP are
gross market value measures. National income (line 19), the income that
originates in the production of the goods and services attributable to
labor and property supplied by residents of the United States, is a net
factor cost measure (line 19). Charges against net national product
(line 23), the income that originates in, plus the nonfactor charges
incurred in, the production of the goods and services attributable to
labor and property supplied by residents of the United States, is a net
market value measure.
One further basic distinction can be made in defining the measures
of production. This distinction is between national measures and
domestic measures. As indicated by its name, the national income and
product account presents measures on a national basis. National
measures relate to the ownership of the factors of production; they
refer to production attributable to labor and property supplied by
residents of a country. Domestic measures relate to the physical
location of the factors of production; they refer to production
attributable to all labor and property located in a country. The
national measures differ from the domestic measures by the net
inflow--that is, inflow less outflow--of labor and property incomes from
abroad.
The choice of a measure of production from this array depends on
the use to which it will be put. For example, national income is often
used in studies dealing with the allocation of factors of production to
various uses. A market price measure, such as GNP, is usually preferred
for studies of economic behavior and welfare, because market price is
the basis for choice among alternative products. Gross domestic
product, rather than GNP, is the most widely used measure of production
in other countries, and thus it is often used in international
comparisons.
Components.--The income and product components of GNP are defined
in the box on pp. 104-5. They are in the order of the line numbers in
the national income and product account, starting on the income side and
proceeding to the product side. These components are often defined by
reference to the purchaser of the goods and services or to the payor or
recipient of the income. "Business,' in the main, refers to
corporate and noncorporate private entities organized for profit.
Mutual financial institutions, private noninsured pension funds,
cooperatives, nonprofit organizations that primarily serve business,
Federal Reserve banks, and federally sponsored credit agencies are also
included as part of business. Government enterprises (such as the
Commodity Credit Corporation and Stateowned liquor stores) are treated
in some respects like private business and in other respects like other
government agencies. "Persons' refers to individuals,
nonprofit institutions serving individuals, private noninsured welfare
funds, and private trust funds. ("Households and institutions'
excludes the two kinds of funds.) "Government' refers to all
Federal, State, and local government agencies. "Foreigners'
refers to foreign residents who are transactors with U.S. residents;
"rest of the world' is used with the same meaning.
Part I. Source Data and Estimating Methods
This part summarizes the source data and estimating methods used to
prepare GNP. Such a summary encourages appropriate use of the estimates
by making the content of the income and product components more concrete
than did the definitions. For example, the definition of fixed
investment refers to capital goods "purchased;' the summary
methodology clarifies that the estimate for structures is of the value
put in place in a time period, which would differ from the full purchase
price if the construction is underway in several time periods. Such a
summary also makes explicit that the component estimates rely in varying
degrees on proxies and judgment--a reminder that, although the estimates
are useful analytical tools, they cannot be precision instruments.
Source data are the facts and figures BEA uses to prepare the
estimates, and estimating methods are the steps BEA takes to conform the
source data to the concepts and definitions of the NIPA's and to
fill in gaps in data coverage. Taken together, source data and
estimating methods are often referred to as "methodology.'
The summary in this article highlights features of the methodology that
serve the purposes just mentioned; they throw light on the content of
the components and provide indications of reliability.
The methodology described--first for current-dollar estimates and
then for constant-dollar estimates--is that in use as of the July 1987
annual revision. Methodology is not fixed once and for all. First,
source data emerge and disappear, and BEA adapts the estimating methods
accordingly. Second, often independently of circumstances that lead to
these adaptations, BEA improves the estimating methods. In recent
years, a number of improvements were associated with the expanding use
of computers; most obvious perhaps is the ability to handle a finer
level of estimating detail in the allotted timeframe. Finally, the
economy changes, and BEA updates the methodology to ensure that the
estimates continue to provide a reliable picture of the transactions and
transactors in the economy. One notable instance of methodological
change--the improvements in the constant-dollar estimates and associated
price measures over the last decade--is evident from the directory of
information about the estimates, in the second part of the article. In
this instance, the impetus was the inflation that began in the early
1970's, and the improvements involved developing new source data,
refining other source data, and adapting the estimating methods to
include more sophisticated treatments and to handle more detail.
Current-dollar estimates
Preview of source data and the estimating cycle.--With few
exceptions, the data used in preparing the estimates are collected for
purposes other than the preparation of the income and product estimates.
Data collected by Federal Government agencies provide the backbone of
the estimates, although they are supplemented by data from trade
associations, businesses, organizations, and other private sources. The
government data come from a number of agencies, mainly Commerce
Department's Census Bureau, Treasury Department's Internal
Revenue Service, Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics,
Office of Management and Budget, and Agriculture Department. Some
government-collected data, referred to as "administrative'
data, are byproducts of government functions such as welfare and social
security programs, tax collection, defense, and regulation.
Nonadministrative data, sometimes referred to as "general
purpose' or "statistical' data, include the periodic
economic and population censuses and a wide range of sample surveys,
such as those that collect data on manufacturing activity, corporate
profits, and the labor force status of households. Of the relatively
few items for which BEA itself collects data used to estimate the
NIPA's, most refer to international transactions. These include
investment by foreigners in the United States and by U.S. residents in
foreign countries.
The article in this issue about the annual NIPA revision highlights
an important characterstic of the estimates: The source data on which
they depend improve in quantity and quality as the estimates progress
through the estimating cycle. A cycle usually takes 5 years and runs
from three estimates of the current quarter to three (usually) annual
revisions and, finally, to a comprehensive revision (often referred to
as a "benchmark' revision). For the preliminary estimate of
GNP for the current quarter, which is released about 3 weeks after the
end of that quarter, source data provide less than full coverage and
usually are subject to revision. The data available for this estimate
are series collected monthly. One important series, retail sales, is
released early in the month following collection, and the preliminary
GNP estimate is timed to incorporate it. Thus, the preliminary estimate
incorporates 3 months of data for that series. The preliminary estimate
also incorporates 3 months of data for auto and truck sales and for
employment, hours, and earnings. For several other important monthly
series, 2 months of data are available.
In the 2 months immediately following the preliminary estimate, BEA
prepares two revised estimates of GNP for the current quarter. These
estimates, referred to as the "first revision' and
"second revision,' each incorporate both revised and
previously unavailable monthly data. As well, they incorporate three
major sets of quarterly data. One set is the data on domestic corporate
profits. Except for the fourth quarter, a preliminary corporate profits
estimate is released with the first revision of GNP and a revised
estimate with the second revision of GNP; for the fourth quarter, the
corporate profits schedule lags 1 month. The second set is the data on
foreign transactions from the BEA balance of payments accounts. With
the exception of merchandise trade data, most of the source data
underlying these accounts, including the BEA surveys of direct
investment, are quarterly. Data from the balance of payments are
incorporated in the second revision. The third set is the data on
assets from the flow of funds accounts prepared by the Federal Reserve
Board, also incorporated in the second revision.
Most quarterly and monthly source data are based on samples. The
sample-based data include the monthly Census Bureau reports on shipments
or sales and inventories of manufacturing, wholesale trade, and retail
trade (the sales series mentioned earlier); the corporate profits data
for manufacturing, mining, and trade in the Quarterly Financial Report
prepared by the Census Bureau; the monthly data on employment, hours,
and earnings compiled from reports of nonfarm establishments by the
Bureau of Labor Statisties and the monthly data on employment collected
from households by the Census Bureau in the current population survey,
both published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics in Employment and
Earnings; and the monthly data reported by the Census Bureau in Value of
New Construction Put in Place.
Several sets of source data are not samples and provide complete or
nearly complete coverage. One monthly set of data, that reported by the
Census Bureau in Highlights of U.S. Export and Import Trade, is from
documentation intended to cover nearly all goods as they enter or leave
the country. (The monthly trade data and the monthly construction data
that are used for current quarterly estimates are not replaced by annual
data based on a more inclusive collection system and are used for annual
estimates as well.) Two other sets that provide complete coverage are
the Federal receipts and expenditures in the Treasury Department report
referred to as the Monthly Treasury Statement and the unit sales of
autos and trucks from a trade source.
Ordinarily, the GNP estimates for the most recent calendar year and
usually the 2 preceding years are revised each year in July. These
annual revisions are timed to incorporate annual source data, although
they also incorporate quarterly data released too late to be used in the
current quarterly estimates. In addition, the seasonal adjustments
applied to the source data are updated. (See the box on page 115 for
more about seasonal adjustment.)
Annual data are usually based on samples. The schedule of one of
the sample-based sets of annual data--data related to business income
from tabulations of tax returns --is the major reason for the third
annual revision. This data is compiled by the Internal Revenue Service
and published in its Statistics of Income series. Data on sole
proprietors and partnerships become available for the second annual
revision, and data on corporations become available for the third.
The sample-based data also include the annual counterparts of the
data on shipments or sales and inventories mentioned earlier (reported
by the Census Bureau in the Annual Survey of Manufactures, the Annual
Retail Trade Report, and the Annual Wholesale Trade Report); receipts of
service establishments reported by the Census Bureau in the Service
Annual Survey; data on agriculture--production, inventories, costs, and
more--collected in several surveys by the Department of Agriculture;
receipts and expenditures of State and local governments reported by the
Census Bureau in Governmental Finances; and data collected by the Census
Bureau in the biennial housing survey.
The annual revisions also incorporate data compiled by the Bureau
of Labor Statistics on wages and salaries of employees covered by State
unemployment insurance. These data, published in Employment and Wages,
have provided nearly complete coverage of private nonfarm and of State
and local government employees in recent years. (Data from this source
and from the Internal Revenue Service tabulations mentioned above are
not replaced by data based on a more inclusive collection system and are
used for comprehensive revisions as well as for annual revisions.)
Comprehensive revisions are carried out about every 5 years. The
comprehensive revisions--which also incorporate definitional and
classificational changes--are timed to incorporate the quinquennial economic censuses; the year of the economic censuses is referred to as
the "benchmark year.' The source data available for the
comprehensive revisions provide the most complete coverage. Examples are
the decennial census of population, the decennial census of housing (and
its supplementary survey of residential finance), the quinquennial
census of governments, and the quinquennial economic censuses, all
collected by the Census Bureau. The economic censuses, currently
conducted in years ending in "2' and "7,' provide
extensive data on manufactures, wholesale trade, retail trade, service
industries, construction industries, agriculture, transportation, and
mineral industries. (An alternative view of the use of source data is
that these censuses are the major sources used to prepare BEA's
input-output tables and that the input-output tables, in turn, are the
single most important source for the comprehensive revisions of the
NIPA's. The input-output tables provide the level for the
product--that is, expenditures--components of GNP in the benchmark
year.)
The data from these decennial and quinquennial censuses as well as
data (such as from the tabulations of business tax returns and the
unemployment insurance system) that are not replaced--that is, are
considered final--determine the levels of the component estimates. Other
source data are used to interpolate and extrapolate; as will be
explained more fully in the next section, these source data provide the
basis for the annual and quarterly changes in the level. Annual data
are usually used to interpolate between and extrapolate from the final
levels. Quarterly data are used to interpolate between and extrapolate
from annual levels.
Notes to the sources and methods table.--Table 2 identifies the
principal source data--those previewed as well as many others--and
estimating methods used to prepare the current-dollar annual and
quarterly estimates of GNP components. The components are as shown in
table 1, starting on the income side and proceeding to the product side.
The subcomponents in table 2, with their 1986 dollar values, are grouped
according to the methodology used to prepare them.
The column in table 2 for annual estimates covers the several
annual estimates in the estimating cycle; major differences in
methodology as the estimates move through the annual revisions to a
comprehensive revision are few enough to condense into a table. For
example, for most goods in personal consumption expenditures (the first
item on the product side), the table indicates one methodology for
benchmark years and another for all other years.
The column for the quarterly estimates is a condensation in several
respects. First, it refers to the preliminary estimates for the current
quarter. That one estimate, rather than all of the current quarterly
estimates, is described because more attention focuses on the
"first look' at the quarter. Second, even for the preliminary
estimate, the column does not detail how many months of data are
available nor whether the data are subject to revision by the source
agency. Thus, the benefit of condensation is at the cost of not
detailing the tradeoff between the timeliness of the preliminary
estimate and the improved quantity and quality of source data available
in the 2 following months.2
2. The methodology for personal consumption expenditures
illustrates the sequential introduction of source data in the current
estimates. For the preliminary estimates, the key data available are:
3 months of retail sales (of which 2 months are subject to revision by
the source agency); 3 months of unit sales of new motor vehicles, 1
month of information with which to allocate the unit sales among
consumers and other purchasers, and 2 or 3 months of average list prices
(which are subject to modification as more detailed information on
models of cars sold, and thus actual retail prices, becomes available);
and 1 or 2 months of data for services amounting to three-fifths of
total services. The estimates for most of the remainder of personal
consumption expenditures are extrapolations based either on related
indicator series or on judgmental trends. For the first revision,
revised retail sales for 2 months become available. For the second
revision, information on sales of used cars and more data on several
services--hospitals, electricity, natural gas, telephones, airline
transportation, foreign travel, and insurance other than life
insurance-- become available.
The "Business Situation' in the SURVEY provides a
footnote at the time of the preliminary estimates of GNP (January,
April, July, and October) listing major source data, including the
number of months for which they are available, for that GNP estimate.
Notes to a table in the "Business Situation' in the 2
following months list source data, including revisions to earlier data,
that subsequently became available and were incorporated in that
estimate.
The information in the column for the quarterly estimates is
generic; it fits any preliminary estimate for the current quarter. For
users who want to track the actual data and resulting estimates, BEA
prepares "Key Source Data and Projections for National Income and
Product Estimates.' This table, provided at the time of the
preliminary estimates, shows the monthly figure for key source data that
are available (and indicates whether the data are subject to revision by
the source agency) and BEA's projected figures for data that are
not available [40]. BEA is reformatting this table and plans to make it
more accessible by putting it on the Commerce Department's Economic
Bulletin Board.
Table 2 lists source data referring to a variety of different
economic measures--wages and salaries, premiums, expenses, interest
rates, mortgage debt, tax collections, unit sales, housing stock,
employment, and average price, to name a few. For most components, the
source data are "value data;' that is, they embody both the
quantity and price dimensions that are required for current-dollar
estimates. In these cases, the methodology indicated in table 2 is the
adjustment of the value data to derive estimates consistent with NIPA
definitions and coverage. The descriptions of the adjustments to derive
domestic corporate profits and change in business inventories are
examples. Three other methods are described more fully in the next
section.
When value data are not used in preparing an estimate, the table
indicates the combination of data with separate quantity and price
dimensions that is used to derive the required value estimate (as well
as indicating any major adjustments needed to derive estimates
consistent with NIPA definitions and coverage). On the product side, a
"physical quantity times price' method is used for several
components. For example, the estimate for new autos is prepared as unit
sales times average list price. Both the income and product sides refer
to an "employment times hours times average hourly earnings'
method and to several forms of a "stock of assets/liabilities times
an interest rate' method.
As mentioned earlier, some of the source data shown in table 2 for
the annual estimate are used to interpolate and extrapolate the levels
established by source data that are viewed as final, and all of the
source data shown for the preliminary quarterly estimates are used to
extrapolate the level of the preceding quarter. In addition to using
indicator series, as is the case when source data are listed in the
table, extrapolation and interpolation may use trends, as is the case
when "judgmental trend' is listed in the table.
Extrapolation is a method of extending estimates from one period
forward (or backward) in time to other periods. In simple terms,
extrapolation applies a percent change-- either the percent change in
the indicator series or the percent change in the trend--to the level of
the preceding period. Interpolation is a method of filling in estimates
between two periods. Interpolation applies a more complex mathematical
formula--there are several in use--to preserve the pattern of the
indicator series consistent with the level of the source data viewed as
final. (An explanation of interpolation and extrapolation, using simple
numerical examples, in the context of BEA's regional estimates is
in [21], pp. T-34 and T-35.)
Illustrative methods.--Table 2 refers to three methods-- commodity
flow, retail control, and perpetual inventory-- used for specific
components. These methods are described briefly in the following
paragraphs to illustrate the work of conforming source data to the
concepts and definitions of the NIPA's and filling in gaps in data
coverage.
The commodity-flow method was originally developed in the
1930's as a way to obtain the value of consumers' purchases of
goods (that is, commodities) or of producers' purchases of durable
equipment. A generalization of that method is now applied for these
components within the input-output framework that is used to establish
GNP in benchmark years. The steps and information used in benchmark
years for producers' durable equipment except autos and scrap are
summarized in the tabulation.
The commodity-flow method is also used for producers' durable
equipment in nonbenchmark years, but it is implemented in an abbreviated
form. It uses less commodity detail--starting with shipments for about
300 commodity classes from the Census Bureau annual survey of
manufactures --and assumes the same distribution in steps 3-6 as in the
last benchmark. (See [9] for a description of the method as applied to
computers.) An even more abbreviated commodity-flow method is used for
current quarterly estimates.
The strength of the commodity-flow method is that it draws on the
very detailed commodity classification and comprehensive coverage of the
census of manufactures for benchmark years. To go from domestic
manufacturer's shipments to business purchases, it relies on data
drawn from several other comprehensive, but not necessarily consistent,
sets of source data. As applied in its abbreviated form, when the data
for steps 3-6 are not available, the method relies on the assumption
that the relationships do not change rapidly. The assumption that, for
each type of equipment, the share of the total going to intermediate
purchases, persons, and governments is stable between benchmark years is
an important limitation.
The retail-control method, which is used to estimate over one-third
of the value of personal consumption expenditures, is more direct than
the commodity-flow method. The method provides, first, the indicator
series used in extrapolating and interpolating the total of most goods
and, second, provides the "control' total to which
type-of-good components in this group are made to sum. Specifically, it
is used to prepare estimates for all goods except motor vehicles,
gasoline and oil, food furnished employees, expenditures abroad by U.S.
residents, and personal remittances in kind to foreigners, each of which
is shown separately in table 2 (and the very small amounts of food
produced and consumed on farms and standard clothing issued to military
personnel, which are not shown separately). The steps and information
used for each current month's estimate are explained in the
tabulation. For current quarters, the monthly estimates are summed to
quarterly estimates. The same steps are used with comparable information
for annual estimates except in benchmark years.
The retail-control method makes it possible to use retail sales,
available only by kind of business except at 5-year intervals, to
provide type-of-good detail. Further, its feasibility on a monthly
basis is the foundation for the monthly estimates of personal
consumption expenditures. These monthly estimates, in combination with
monthly estimates of personal income, provide timely information for the
analysis of the economic activities of one of the major sectors in the
economy. The basic limitation of the method as an extrapolator is that
it cannot take into account changes in the relative importance of
business purchases at retail stores, services sold at retail stores, or
personal purchases outside of retail stores. In addition, use of the
method to provide the control to which components sum relies on the
general assumption that the types of goods purchased in the various
kinds of retail stores do not change rapidly.
The perpetual-inventory method is used to derive estimates of fixed
capital stock. The stock estimates, in turn, form the basis for the
estimates of capital consumption allowances with capital consumption
adjustment (often referred to as "economic' depreciation) and
for the estimates of the capital consumption adjustment shown with
proprietors' income, rental income of persons, and corporate
profits. The perpetual-inventory method is based on cumulating past
investment flows and deducting the value of discarded assets; it is an
alternative to direct measurement of the capital stock, which is seldom
statistically feasible on a comprehensive basis. The steps and
information used in preparing BEA's estimates of the capital stock
are summarized in the tabulation.
One of the main advantages of obtaining the stock estimates in this
way is that, for the most part, comprehensive, detailed, and relatively
reliable estimates of investment flows--with which the method
starts--are available within the NIPA's. By using these flows, the
resulting stock and depreciation estimates are consistent conceptually
and statistically with the NIPA's. In addition, the
perpetual-inventory method provides alternative valuations of the
capital stock--at historical cost (that is, when an asset is valued at
the price at which it was purchased new), at constant cost (that is,
when an asset is valued at the price that would have been paid for it
had it been purchased in the base period), and at current cost (that is,
when an asset is valued at the price that would have been paid for it
had it been purchased in the period to which the stock estimates refer).
One of the disadvantages of this method is that it relies on information
on the service lives of various kinds of assets; accurate and up-to-date
information of this kind is difficult to obtain.
Observations.--Although the main purpose of the sources and methods
table is to provide a convenient reference, the overview it provides
serves as the basis for several broad observations about methodology.
First, on the product side, separate methodologies are often shown
for benchmark and other years. On the income side, the distinction
between benchmark and other years seldom appears. For many income-side
components, the same methodology is used each year. However, for several
--notably corporate profits and net interest--the final source data do
not become available for several years so that interim methologies must
be used until the final one can be substituted.
Second, product-side estimates are largely based on
non-administrative data. Census Bureau censuses and surveys dominate;
for the annual estimates, they account for about two-thirds of the
product-side total. Income-side estimates are largely based on
administrative data. Tabulations from the unemployment insurance
program and from business income tax returns dominate; for the annual
estimates, they account for about two-thirds of the income-side total.
Third, the product-side estimates provide detail by type of good or
service. Identifying each sector's purchases is fundamental to the
structure of the national income and product account, and that
requirement dictates the use of source data--notably manufacturers'
shipments as used in the commodity-flow method--that also provides
detail for many components. (Also, as indicated in the next section,
detail is crucial to the preparation of constant-dollar estimates.) The
income-side estimates provide detail by industry, by legal form of
organization (for example, corporate and noncorporate business), or
both.
Finally, the estimates of personal consumption expenditures provide
an interesting contrast between the methods of deriving totals and
component detail. When the retail-control method is used, the total of
expenditures for goods prepared in that way is estimated with more
certainty than is the component detail, which is derived by allocating
the total using percentages determined at 5-year intervals. In
contrast, the total of expenditures on services is pieced together from
component detail. The estimating procedure is simpler in that the
consumer of a service often purchases it directly from the producer and
many types of services--haircuts, for example--are purchased only by
persons. However, any uncertainty about the source data that provide
the detail carries through to the total of expenditures for services.
Constant-dollar estimates and associated price indexes
The principle underlying constant-dollar estimates is simple: Value
each component at its price in a base period. (See the box on page 115
for more about the base period.) This approach, rather than the
approach of adding the various physical quantities (the approach perhaps
suggested by the term "real' that is often used in referring
to constant-dollar estimates), is taken because "you can't add
apples and oranges.' Constant-dollar values provide the means of
aggregation.
This principle is implemented for the product-side components of
GNP by one of three methods, depending on the availability of source
data. The method used for by far the largest part of GNP is deflation.
In fact, deflation is so widely used that the term is often used to
describe the preparation of all constant-dollar estimates. In
deflation, constant-dollar estimates are obtained by dividing the most
detailed current-dollar components by appropriate price indexes with the
base period--at present, the year 1982--equal to 100.
The other methods, quantity extrapolation and direct base-year
valuation, are similar in that they both use quantity data. For
quantity extrapolation, constant-dollar estimates are obtained by
extrapolating the current-dollar estimates from the base year to the
current period by quantity data. For direct valuation, constant-dollar
estimates are obtained by multiplying base-year prices by quantity data
for the current period.
In preparing constant-dollar estimates, detail is crucial because
the greater the detail the more closely the results approximate the
ideal of pricing each good or service purchased in the current period
with its base-year price. A number of the improvements in methodology
for the constant-dollar estimates have focused on carrying out the
calculations at a more detailed level. For example, until the
mid-1970's, expenditures on food consumed at home had been deflated by the index for food at home from the Consumer Price Index, in which
food prices are weighted by the composition of expenditures in a base
period. The improvement was to disaggregate these expenditures and
deflate 16 separate categories with the appropriate component of the
index. Thus, if there are shifts in expenditures between the base year
and the current year--for example, from meats to vegetables--the more
detailed deflation captures the shifts and provides a more accurate
measure of changes in constant-dollar expenditures on food. At present,
roughly 600 categories of goods and services are deflated separately for
the quarterly and regular annual estimates.
Table 3 summarizes the methodology for the preparation of
constant-dollar estimates of GNP and its product-side components,
showing which of the three methods is used and indicating the source
data with which it is implemented.3 The subcomponents are as shown in
table 2, except where more detail is needed to highlight differences in
methodology for constant-dollar estimates. For example, more detail is
provided for Federal purchases because distinctly different source data
are used for the deflation of national defense and nondefense purchases.
For this table, the distinction between annual and quarterly methodology
is far less important than it was for the current-dollar methodology,
and major differences between the annual and quarterly source data are
noted within the individual entries.
3. With few exceptions, BEA does not prepare constant-dollar
estimates of income measures because price indexes cannot be associated
with them, as they can with product measures. Two exceptions are
disposable personal income and the profits measures presented in
BEA's Business Conditions Digest. In both cases, the series are
adjusted for price change by reference to prices of the goods and
services on which the income is spent. BEA prepares constant-dollar net
national product and national income by preparing constant-dolalr
estimates of capital consumption allowances with capital consumption
adjustment and of the nonfactor charges and then subtracting them from
constant-dollar GNP.
Table 3 shows that components of the Consumer Price Index and the
Producer Price Index, prepared monthly by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics, are used to deflate many components, which together account
for well over three-fourths of GNP. Other indexes used in deflation are
mainly for services (indexes of earnings and expense), structures
(various cost indexes and a Census Bureau index for new houses),
merchandise exports and imports (Bureau of Labor Statistics and Census
Bureau indexes), and national defense (primarily BEA indexes). Quantity
extrapolation is used for a few service subcomponents in personal
consumption expenditures, mining shafts and wells, imputed interest and
financial service charges, and compensation of employees in government
purchases. Direct valuation of quantities is used for used autos and
inventories of agricultural commodities held by farmers and the Federal
Government.
The implicit price deflator and price indexes
The preparation of current- and constant-dollar estimates yields a
byproducts--the implicit price deflator. It is derived as a
current-dollar measure divided by a constant-dollar measure, multiplied
by 100. Technically, the implicit price deflator for GNP or a component
of GNP is an average of the indexes of prices of all the goods and
services that make up GNP or the component, weighted by the
constant-dollar composition of GNP or the component in the current
period. Thus, changes in the implicit price deflator reflect not only
changes in prices but also any shift in the composition of GNP or the
component.
A fixed-weighted price index also is an average of the indexes of
prices of all the goods and services that make up GNP or the component.
In contrast to the implicit price deflator, the index is weighted by the
composition of GNP or the component at a fixed point selected as the
base period. Such indexes measure the changes in the price of a fixed
market basket; thus, they measure only price change. Chain price
indexes, from one period to the next, also do not reflect shifts in the
composition. In the 1970's, it became especially useful to
distinguish quarter-to-quarter shifts in the composition of GNP from
price changes because at times each was large. Since then, BEA has
increasingly featured the GNP fixed-weighted and chain price indexes as
appropriate measures of price change.
Part II. A Directory to Information about GNP
In recent years, a number of BEA publications have provided
information about GNP and its income and product components. The
following is an annotated list of those publications, numbered with the
most recent publication first and going back to the mid-1970's.
Among the items listed are the methodology papers mentioned earlier and
articles describing the comprehensive and annual revisions. The
methodology papers explain the conceptual framework of the NIPA's
and the source data and estimating methods used to prepare the
estimates. One of the papers provides an introduction to national
economic accounting; it is listed as item 17. Two others, on foreign
transactions and corporate profits, have been published; they are listed
as items 3 and 15, respectively. During the period covered by the list,
comprehensive revisions were released in 1985, 1980, and 1976; the
articles describing them are listed as items 13, 34, and 47. Annual
revisions were released in most years (except before or after
comprehensive revisions); the articles describing them are listed as
items 1, 7, 19, 24, 29, 37, 41, 43, 45, and 53. A number of the other
publications in the list, although more general or less directly
related, contain useful information about GNP and its components. These
include publications about reliability of the estimates (items 10 and
54), capital stock (items 2 and 14), regional income estimates (item
21), and the underground economy (items 18 and 20).
Table 4 is designed to serve as a directory to the information in
these publications. For GNP and several other measures of production
and for each income and product component, the first two columns
indicate the publications that have included descriptions of methodology
and the second two columns indicate publications that have discussed
changes in definition and classification and changes in methodology.
The publications about the methodology for constant-dollar estimates or
about price measurement are marked with an asterisk. The items
indicated for the production measures tend to be overviews; those for
components, more specific.
1. "The U.S. National Income and Product Accounts: Revised
Estimates, 1984-86, and First and Second Quarters 1987.' July 1987
SURVEY. Presents a regular annual revision. Describes methodological
changes affecting personal consumption expenditures (different source
data for quarterly estimates of gasoline, first-time estimates of video
cassette rentals, and, for current-dollar estimates, an adjustment for
quality change in used car purchases); producers' durable equipment
(more detailed treatment of exports and imports in the abbreviated
commodity-flow method and, for current-dollar estimates, an adjustment
for quality change in used car transactions); net exports (added
coverage of commissions on securities transactions and of medical
services); and deflation procedures. The changes in deflation
procedures affected personal consumption expenditures (a different price
index for new trucks); residential investment (a modification of the
price index for new houses); and personal consumption expenditures,
producers' durable equipment, net exports, and government purchases
(inclusion of prices for personal computers).
2. Fixed Reproducible Tangible Wealth in the United States,
1925-85. 1987 (GPO Stock No. 003-010-00177-1, price $18.00). Includes
a detailed description of the investment flows used to implement the
perpetual-inventory method of preparing the capital stock estimates and
of the derivation of the associated estimates of depreciation. Also
describes the recently developed estimates of fixed private capital by
industry.
3. Foreign Transactions in the National Income and Product
Accounts. BEA Methodology Paper No. 3, 1987 (GPO Stock No.
003-010-00178-0, price $2.75). Describes the concepts, sources, and
methods of the NIPA foreign transactions components, including the net
exports component of GNP. In particular, describes the conceptual and
statistical relationship between the NIPA foreign transactions and the
balance of payments accounts. See also item 5.
4. "Gross Product by Industry, 1986.' April 1987
SURVEY. Includes a summary of sources and methods for the estimates of
GNP by industry, for which the current-dollar estimates are prepared as
distributions by industry of the income-side components of the national
income and product account.
5. "Foreign Transactions in the National Income and Product
Accounts: An Overview.' November 1986 SURVEY. Presents the
conceptual basis and framework of foreign transactions in the
NIPA's, describes the presentation of the estimates, and summarizes
the sources and methods used to prepare them. See also item 3.
6. The National Income and Product Accounts of the United States,
1929-82: Statistical Tables, 1986 (GPO Stock No. 003-010-00174-7,
price $23.00). Includes a full set of definitions of NIPA aggregates
and components, a brief discussion of constant-dollar estimates and
price indexes, and descriptions of the classification of production by
sector, legal form of organization, and industry.
7. "The U.S. National Income and Product Accounts: Revised
Estimates, 1983-85 and First Quarter 1986.' July 1986 SURVEY.
Presents a regular annual revision. Describes methodological changes
affecting State and local indirect business tax and nontax accruals (to
include fines levied under Federal oil price regulations and paid to
States as a nontax); corporate profits (adjustments for profits reported
on the completed-contract method of accounting, for reversions of
defined benefit pension plans, for employer contributions to tax-credit
stock ownership plans, and for the amount of fines paid); farm
proprietors' income and farm corporate profits (incorporating a
defaulters' gain); and deflation procedures. The changes in
deflation procedures affected personal consumption expenditures (for
airline transportation, a BEA discount-adjusted price index; for
computers, a BEA price index that incorporates detailed information on
changes in prices and characteristics of computers) and producers'
durable equipment (eliminating the lagging of price indexes previously
needed to put them on a delivery basis). In describing revisions,
presents summary methodologies for services in personal consumption
expenditures and for net interest and personal interest income.
8. "Federal Farm Programs for 1986-90.' April 1986
SURVEY. Includes a statement of the NIPA treatment of the transactions
of the Commodity Credit Corporation.
9. "Improved Deflation of Purchases of Computers.' March
1986 SURVEY. Presents the quality-adjusted deflators constructed by BEA
for computers included in producers' durable equipment, exports and
imports, and government purchases, primarily from price indexes
developed by IBM Corporation. Discusses the selection of the index most
appropriate for deflation of computers in GNP, the construction of the
new deflators, and their use in the estimates presented in the
comprehensive revision released in 1985. See also "The Economic
Interpretation of Hedonic Methods' and "Quality-Adjusted Price
Indexes for Computer Processors and Selected Peripheral Equipment'
in the January 1986 SURVEY and "Corrections to the Estimates of
Purchases of Computers' in the March 1986 SURVEY.
10. The Use of National Income and Product Accounts for Public
Policy: Our Successes and Failures. BEA Staff Paper No. 43, 1986 (GPO
Stock No. 003-010-00144-5; price $3.75). Reviews the
"accuracy' of NIPA estimates, using the size of the revisions
to GNP as an indicator, and users' recommendations over the last 30
years for new and improved series, schedules of release, changes in
concept and structure, etc.
11. "Revised Estimates of the National Income and Product
Accounts of the United States, 1929-85: An Introduction.' December
1985 SURVEY. Presents a comprehensive revision; see item 13. Includes
notes on the effect of shifting the base period and on the revision of
producers' durable equipment. Presents a table indicating new NIPA
tables and items.
12. "A Note on Merchandise Trade Data.' October 1985
SURVEY. Describes the changes in the Census Bureau monthly data on
merchandise trade that are used as source data for the NIPA quarterly
estimates. (Further changes were made in 1987; they were noted in the
announcement of the consequent rescheduling of BEA's release of
several estimates in the February 1987 SURVEY.)
13. "An Advance Overview of the Comprehensive Revision of the
National Income and Product Accounts.' October 1985 SURVEY.
Describes definitional and classificational changes: Two relate to
classification of certain business expenditures--replacement railroad track and major replacements to residential structures--as investment,
three relate to Federal Government employee benefit programs, three
relate to foreign transactions (one of which is described in item 11),
and two relate to government assistance programs. Describes three
methodological changes affecting a number of components--improved
adjustments for misreporting on tax returns ("underground economy
adjustments'--see item 20), improved estimates of capital
consumption allowances (based on new work on capital stock estimates),
and exclusion of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and U.S. territories.
Also describes a change affecting rental income of persons (improved
accounting for expenses of homeownership); a shift from 1972 to 1982 in
the base year for the calculation of constant-dollar estimates and price
indexes; changes in deflation procedures; and a number of other
methodological changes. The changes in deflation procedures affected
the several components that include for computers (a BEA price index
that incorporates detailed information on changes in prices and
characteristics of computers--see item 9), non-residential buildings,
residential additions and alterations (see item 24), Commodity Credit
Corporation purchases, national defense purchases, and net exports.
14. "Fixed Private Capital in the United States: Revised
Estimates, 1925-81, and Estimates by Industry, 1947-81.' July 1985
SURVEY. Includes a description of the investment flows used to
implement the perpetual-inventory method of preparing the capital stock
estimates and of the derivation of the associated estimates of
depreciation. (See item 2 for an updated, fuller description.)
15. Corporate Profits: Profits Before Tax, Profits Tax Liabilities, and Dividends. BEA Methodology Paper No. 2, 1985 (GPO
Stock No. 003-010-00143-7, price $2.50) Describes the concepts,
sources, and methods of the corporate profits components of the
NIPA's.
16. "A Note on the Implicit Price Deflator.' May 1985
SURVEY. Describes the implicit price deflator for GNP and contrasts it
with the GNP fixed-weighted and chain price indexes. (A more technical
explanation appears in "Alternative Measures of Price Change for
GNP' in the March 1969 SURVEY.)
17. Introduction to National Economic Accounting. BEA Methodology
Paper No. 1, 1985 (GPO Stock No. 003-010-00158-5, price $1.00).
Reprint of an article that appeared in the March 1985 SURVEY. Places
the U.S. NIPA's within the larger framework of national economic
accounting. Shows the step-by-step derivation of a general national
economic accounting system from the conventional accounting statements
used by business and government and inferred for other transactors.
Also shows how the income and product accounts, the capital finance
accounts, and input-output accounts--the major branches of national
economic accounting in the United States today--are derived from this
general system. Includes a list of suggestions for further reading.
18. "The Underground Economy: An Introduction.' May
and July 1984 SURVEY. In May, discusses the coverage of the term
"underground economy,' a synopsis of measurement methods and
results, and a survey of implications. In July, discusses illegal
activities in the context of the NIPA's, three sets of NIPA
estimates sometimes misunderstood as being measures of the underground
economy (including the adjustments for misreporting described in item
20), and the effect on NIPA estimates of possible misreporting in source
data due to the underground economy. An appendix in July shows the
types of source data used to estimate the income and product components
of GNP for a benchmark year. Includes a bibliography.
19. "The U.S. National Income and Product Accounts: Revised
Estimates, 1981-83, and First and Second Quarters 1984.' July 1984
SURVEY. Presents a regualr annual revision. Describes methodological
changes affecting service components of net exports (different data
sources for foreign travel and the separation of remitted and reinvested
earnings of unincorporated affiliates of U.S. residents and of foreign
residents), quarterly patterns of farm inventories and cash receipts for
crops, quarterly pattern of rental income of persons, and deflation of
the space rent portions of personal consumption expenditures and housing
output (a price index prepared by BEA). In describing the revisions,
presents a summary methodology for net interest and personal interest
income.
20. "Improved Adjustments for Misreporting of Tax Return
Information Used to Estimate the National Income and Product Accounts,
1977.' June 1984 SURVEY. Describes the use of tax return
information in the NIPA's and the methodology for preparing
improved adjustments for misreporting. The improved adjustments,
sometimes referred to as the "underground economy
adjustments,' were included in personal consumption expenditures,
gross private domestic investment, and several components of charges
against GNP. The estimates for 1977, subsequently extended forward and
backward to provide a time series, were included in the comprehensive
revision released in 1985.
21. State Personal Income: Estimates for 1929-82 and a Statement
of Sources and Methods. 1984 (GPO Stock No. 003-010-00125-9, price
$9.50). Provides a comprehensive statement of sources and methods used
for estimating State personal income, much of which is relevant to the
national estimates of income. (A major improvement has since been made
in the methodology for nonfarm proprietors' income; see the August
1986 SURVEY). Also presents two case studies of improvements over
time--one referring to the definition of other labor income and one
referring to the extension of coverage of unemployment insurance data in
estimating wage and salary disbursements.
22. "Special Note.--Profits of Financial Corporations.'
November 1983 SURVEY. Includes a summary of coverage, concepts, and
methodology.
23. "Implicit Price Deflators for Military
Construction.' November 1983 SURVEY. Presents some of the results
of the project described in item 38.
24. "The U.S. National Income and Product Accounts: 1980-82
and First Quarter 1983.' July 1983 SURVEY. Presents a regular
annual revision. Describes methodological changes affecting a services
component of net exports (a different data source for ocean freight and
port charges), net interest paid by the rest of the world (refinements
to the methodology of applying interest rates to the amounts outstanding
in asset categories), and deflation of residential investment (a
different price index for additions and alterations). In describing the
revisions, presents summary methodologies for rental income of persons
and rent of houses in personal consumption expenditures, for interest
and imputed financial services (see item 7 for an updated methodology),
and for proprietors' income.
25. "Net Exports of Goods and Services, 1980-82.' March
1983 SURVEY. Includes a summary methodology for exports and imports of
goods and services in current and constant dollars. (See item 3 for an
updated, fuller description.)
26. "Special Note.--National Defense Purchases.'
November 1982 SURVEY. Includes a summary methodology. (See item 38 for
a fuller description.)
27. "National Defense Purchases: Detailed Quarterly
Estimates, 1977-82.' November 1982 SURVEY. Introduces quarterly
estimates at a more detailed level than previously available, based on
the methodology summarized in item 26.
28. "Special Note.--Reinvested Earnings of Incorporated
Affiliates in the National Income and Product Accounts.' September
1982 SURVEY. Includes a summary methodology.
29 "The U.S. National Income and Product Accounts: Revised
Estimates, 1977-81 and First Quarter 1982.' July 1982 SURVEY.
Presents an annual revision (covering 5 years). Describes
methodological changes affecting quarterly estimates of gasoline
purchases in personal consumption expenditures (a different indicator of
volume), the space rent portion of personal consumption expenditures and
rental income of persons (introduction of the average contract rent for
tenant-occupied units to estimate the average rental value), net
interest paid by the rest of the world (introduction of several
different interest rates in the estimation of an appropriate interest
rate to apply to amounts outstanding in the categories of claims and
liabilities reported by U.S. banks), and compensation of State and local
government employees (different data on wages and salaries).
30. "Special Note.--The Commodity Credit Corporation in the
National Income and Product Accounts.' January 1982 SURVEY.
Includes a summary methodology.
31. "Constant-Dollar Manufacturing Inventories.'
November 1981 SURVEY. Describes the methodology for manufacturing
inventories introduced in the comprehensive revision released in 1980.
Introduces the constant-dollar estimates of manufacturing inventories by
stage of fabrication made possible by the improved methodology.
32. "Special Note.--Personal Interest Income.'
September 1981 SURVEY. Includes a summary methodology.
33. "International Transactions in Measures of the
Nation's Production.' May 1981 SURVEY. Introduces the
measures of command-basis GNP and terms of trade; discusses the scope
and deflation of international flows of factor income, focusing on the
addition of reinvested earnings of incorporated foreign affiliates to
the factor income flows and on the use of the deflator for net domestic
product (both introduced in the comprehensive revision released in
1980); and describes the methodology for deflating other components of
exports and imports (see item 3 for an updated, fuller description).
34. "The National Income and Product Accounts of the United
States: An Introduction to the Revised Estimates for 1929-80.'
December 1980 SURVEY. Presents a comprehensive revision. Describes
definitional and classificational changes, most importantly the change
that adds reinvested earnings of incorporated foreign affiliates of U.S.
direct investors and subtracts the reinvested earnings of incorporated
U.S. affiliates of foreign direct investors from the factor income
components of net exports. Also describes the elimination of capital
gains from earnings of unincorporated foreign affiliates, the
reclassification of earnings of unincorporated foreign affiliates to
dividends, and the reclassification of hotels and motels to
nonresidential structures. Introduces several new aggregates, including
gross domestic purchases. Describes methodological changes affecting
income components (a number of changes, affecting proprietors'
income, corporate profits, and net interest), producers' durable
equipment (use of the abbreviated commodity-flow method alone rather
than as part of an average), net exports (a new treatment of gold--see
item 37), and deflation procedures. The changes in deflation procedures
affected personal consumption expenditures (a new price index for
hospital expenditures), change in business inventories (see item 31),
net exports (including a conceptual change for factor services--see item
33), government purchases (more detail for national defense--see item
38--and for State and local), and the statistical discrepancy. Presents
a table indicating new NIPA tables and items.
35. "Federal Fiscal Programs.' February 1980 SURVEY.
Includes a discussion, built around reconciliation tables, of the
differences between unified budget concepts, as presented in the
"Budget of the United States,' and NIPA concepts of receipts,
expenditures (including purchases), and national defense purchases.
(The tables are updated annually.)
36. "Monthly Estimates of Personal Income, Taxes, and
Outlays.' November 1979 SEUVEY. Prepared when the introduction of
monthly estimates of four kinds of outlays-- personal taxes and nontax
payments, personal consumption expenditures (in current and constant
dollars), interest paid to consumers, and personal transfer payments to
foreigners--completed the monthly presentation of all components of the
personal income and outlay account. Describes the methodology for the
annual and monthly estimates (quarterly estimates are the sum of monthly
estimates) of personal income and its components; of personal tax and
nontax payments, personal outlays, and personal saving; and of the
constant-dollar estimates and related series.
37. "Revision of NIPA Estimates.' July 1979 SURVEY.
Presents a regular annual revision. Describes a change, mainly
affecting net exports, in the treatment of gold.
38. Price Changes of Defense Purchases of the United States. 1979
(NTIS Accession No. PB-80217359). Discusses the results of a major
project, started in the mid-1970's by BEA in cooperation with the
Department of Defense, to develop price indexes at a detailed level
using data provided by the Department of Defense.
39. "The Farm Sector.' November 1978 SURVEY. Includes
a methodology for farm income and also for farm output and product.
40. "Key Source Data and Projections for National Income and
Product Estimates: Third Quarter 1978.' October 1978 SURVEY.
Presents tables showing monthly data sources for current-dollar GNP
components and for deflation at the time of the preliminary quarterly
estimates. (Although not currently published in the SURVEY, the tables
are available each quarter.)
41. "Revisions of NIPA Estimates.' July 1978 SURVEY.
Presents a regualr annual revision. Describes methodological changes
affecting auto repairs in personal consumption expenditures (a new
method based on mileage driven), Federal transfer payments
(reclassification of Federal payments to nonprofit institutions for
training the unemployed, previously treated as a purchase),
contributions for social insurance (a new data source for contributions
by State and local governments to pension plans for their employees),
and deflation procedures. The changes in deflation procedures affected
personal consumption expenditures (for brokerage charges and investment
counseling, a new BEA price series; for food, improved weights for the
composite price index and new information on imported food) and change
in business inventories (for farm inventories, improved weights).
42. "Reconciliation of Quarterly Changes in Measures of
Prices Paid by Consumers.' March 1978 SURVEY. Describes three
measures: The implicit price deflator for personal consumption
expenditures and the chain price index for personal consumption
expenditures, both prepared by BEA, and the Consumer Price Index,
prepared by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The reconciliation, which
was based on the Consumer Price Index available prior to January 1978,
has been discontinued.
43. "Revisions of the NIPA's.' July 1977 SURVEY.
Presents a regular annual revision. Describes methodological changes
affecting the deflation of fixed investment and government purchases
(introduction of a lagging procedure for one of the construction price
indexes and revisions in the lags applied to the price indexes for
equipment to put them on a delivery basis) and of net exports
(application of price indexes at a more detailed level).
44. "Reconciliation of BEA Compensation and BLS Earnings.' May 1977 SURVEY. Describes the two frequently used
series on hourly compensation; the reconciliation table continues to be
published each quarter in the SURVEY.
45. "Revisions of the NIPA's.' July 1976 SURVEY.
Presents a regular annual revision. Describes a methodological change
affecting the change in business inventories (use of a more detailed
procedure in preparing constant-dollar estimates).
46. "Manufacturing and Trade Inventories and Sales in
Constant-Dollars, 1959 to First Quarter 1976.' May 1976 SURVEY.
Includes a methodology for constant-dollar stocks of inventories. (Item
31 includes an updated methodology for manufacturing inventories.)
47. "The National Income and Product Accounts of the United
States: Revised Estimates, 1929-74.' January 1976 SURVEY, Part I.
Presents a comprehensive revision. Describes the definitional and
classificational changes, including those made to capital formation and
consumption (including the introduction of the capital consumption
adjustment --see item 49) and to government transactions (including
reclassification of interest paid by the Federal Government to
foreigners and introduction of imputed interest receipts and imputed
charges for services furnished without payment by financial
intermediaries). Describes the methodological changes affecting the
motor vehicles components (see item 48), change in business inventories
(mainly the introduction of information that permits a better separation
of book value inventories according to the accounting method underlying
them), producers' durable equipment (valuation of computers leased
by the manufacturers to others at cost and inclusion of nuclear reactor fuel elements and control rods), government purchases (a change in
procedures for converting information on local governments from a fiscal
year basis to a calendar year basis and inclusion of certain receipts as
negative State and local purchases), and deflation procedures. The
changes in deflation procedures affected personal consumption
expenditures (food and financial services), construction (see item 52),
producers' durable equipment (see item 50), and government
purchases (an approximation of specification pricing for employee
services and new detail on purchases from business). Also describes the
shift from 1958 to 1972 in the base year for the calculation of
constant-dollar estimates and price indexes and the methodology for
preparing constant-dollar estimates of nonfactor charges (indirect
business tax and nontax liability, subsidies less the current surplus,
and business transfer payments) that made possible the presentation of
several new constant-dollar aggregates, notably national income.
Presents exhibits indicating new NIPA tables and items.
48. "Vehicles: Recent Developments and Treatment in the GNP
Accounts,' November 1975 SURVEY. Summarizes the methodology
(including improvements introduced in the comprehensive revision
released in 1976) used to estimate the auto and truck components of the
expenditure components of GNP.
49. "New Estimates of Capital Consumption Allowances in the
Benchmark Revision of GNP.' October 1975 SURVEY. Describes the
concept and methodology for the adjustment, introduced in the
comprehensive revision released in 1976, that converts tax-return-based
measures of depreciation to measures that are based on consistent
accounting and valued at current replacement cost.
50. "Improved Deflation of Producers' Durable
Equipment.' July 1975 SURVEY. Describes the use of the Wholesale
Price Index (now Producer Price Indexes) and other price indexes,
featuring a timing adjustment to place the indexes on the delivery basis
needed for the NIPA's. (As of July 1986, the adjustment was no
longer needed for the Producer Price Indexes; see item 7.)
51. Quarterly GNP Estimates Revisited in a Double-Digit
Inflationary Economy. BEA Staff Paper No. 25, 1974 (NTIS Accession No.
COM 75-10042). Summarizes the sources and methods used to estimate
current-dollar quarterly GNP and quarterly national income and to
deflate quarterly GNP (tables 2 and 3 in this article are more up to
date). Describes the sources and methods used to estimate inventories
and the inventory valuation adjustment.
52. "Revised Deflators for New Construction, 1947-73.'
August 1974 SURVEY, Part I. Describes the price indexes from government
agencies and trade sources used to calculate the deflators for each type
of construction activity. (Several changes in methodology were made
later.)
53. "U.S. National Income and Product Accounts,
1970-73.' July 1974 SURVEY. Presents a regular annual revision.
Introduces two new tables: A reconciliation of national defense outlays
in the unified budget and NIPA national defense purchases (see item 35)
and a reconciliation of the Commodity Credit Corporation's outlays
in the unified budget and its NIPA expenditures (see items 30 and 8).
54. Reliability of the Quarterly National Income and Product
Accounts of the United States, 1947-71. BEA Staff Paper No. 23, 1974
(NTIS Accession No. COM-74-11538). Discusses possible sources of error
in the quarterly estimates and presents four ways of assessing
reliability, giving most weight to measures of revisions. An appendix
summarizes data sources used in preparing NIPA estimates (table 2 in
this article is more up to date).
Publications for which an NTIS accession number is given can be
ordered from the National Technical Information Service, 5285 Port Royal
Road, Springfield, VA 22161. Publications for which a GPO stock number
is given can be ordered from the Superintendent of Documents, U.S.
Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402. See "A
User's Guide to BEA Information' in the February 1987 SURVEY
for additional information about BEA's publications.
Table: 1.--National Income and Product Account, 1986
Table: 2.--Principal Source Data and Estimating Methods Used in
Preparing Current-Dollar Estimates of GNP
Table: Commodity-Flow Method
Table: Retail-Control Method
Table: Perpetual-Inventory Method
Table: 3.--Methodology Used in Preparing Constant-Dollar Estimates
of GNP
Table: 4.--Directory to Information about GNP