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System of National Accounts

System of National Accounts. Clementina Ivan-Ungureanu Training: Essential SNA: Building the basics Addis Ababa, 12-16 February 2012. Content of the training. SNA What is SNA Towards the 2008 SNA Basic concepts Fundamentals Main aggregates 3. Building the SNA NSDS

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System of National Accounts

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  1. System of National Accounts Clementina Ivan-Ungureanu Training: Essential SNA: Building the basics Addis Ababa, 12-16 February 2012

  2. Content of the training • SNA • What is SNA • Towards the 2008 SNA • Basic concepts • Fundamentals • Main aggregates 3. Building the SNA • NSDS • SNA implementation strategy

  3. Content of the training 4. Infrastructure for NA • Business register • Classifications • Statistical data sources • Administrative sources 5. Transition from administrative data to national accounts concepts 6. NOE: concept, content, estimation practices 7. Informal sector: concept, content, estimation practices

  4. WHAT IS SNA

  5. Content of the presentation • What is SNA • Need for SNA • The 2008 SNA

  6. Definition SNA is the internationally agreed standard set of recommendations on how to compile measures of economic activity in accordance with established accounting conventions based on economic principles.

  7. Definition • The recommendations are expressed in terms of a set of concepts, definitions, classifications and accounting rules that comprise the internationally agreed standard for measuring such items as gross domestic product (GDP), the most frequently quoted indicator of economic performance. • The accounting framework of the SNA allows economic data to be compiled and presented in a format that is designed for purposes of economic analysis, decision taking and policymaking

  8. Characteristics They are: • Internationally compatible • Harmonized with those in other social and economic statistics • Well-established and fixed for a long period • Focused on describing the economic process in monetary and readily observable terms • Flexible and multi-purpose

  9. The economic circuit

  10. SNA –Main uses • Measure the structure and the evolution of the economy • Establish a country’s economic and social policy: they are used by policy makers to analyse the current situation, identify the major problems and find a common solution for development • Is the framework used for economic forecasting. • International comparisons

  11. SNA –Main uses ( cont) • The SNA is the central statistical framework that must be used as the coordinating framework for all other statistics so as to obtain consistent definitions, and hence data.

  12. NA for decision-making 1. Target of public policy: • Supply of money should grow in line with the nominal growth of GDP corrected for changes in the velocity of circulation (monetary policy target in order to avoid excessive inflation) • Government expenditure on education as %of GDP • Expenditure on R&D as %of GDP • Government expenditure < 60% of domestic product • Contribution to military expenditure, • The burden of taxes and social security contributions as a % of national income

  13. NA for decision-making(cont) 2. Tax or aid measure for nations and regions. • The contributions to the international organisations like UN, OECD and IMF and to supra-national economic and political unions, like the EU. • Regions with a relatively low gross domestic product per region per capita receive funds

  14. NA for decision-making (cont) 3. Automatic adjustment for price changes. • Government expenditures adjusted with the price-change in GDP • Multi-annual contracts by local authorities and non-profit institutions are adjusted with the price change in net material consumption • The budget by local authorities and non-profit institutions can be determined by using for the various types of expenditure and for some sales and tariffs indices from the national accounts.

  15. Main users • Administrative users • Economic policymakers • Economic modelers • Masse media , public • Other users (financial markets etc) • International organizations

  16. Promoting NA • NA and statistics are commonly not well marketed ( monopolistic product) • NA is like a good and should be promoted • Marketing efforts: • stress the main purposes of NA • make the NA an attractive statistics • Point to the value added of NA to efficient and democratic-decision-making.

  17. Education The general knowledge of data users and compilers should be raised • Providing guidance to users: presentation of the concepts, methods, clear tables with data • Courses for various groups of data users and at various levels. • More prominent place in the research Investments in education will reduce misinterpretation, will increase interaction between data compilers and data users . In the long run, this will also improve the national accounts as a description and tool for analysis and policy

  18. TOWARD THE 2008 SNA

  19. Evolution The roles and uses of the national accounts have developed over time and have been stimulated by major events, like the economic crisis in the thirties, the Second World War and European unification.

  20. Historical questions • Production and/or distribution matters? • Does government produce? • Are services relevant? • What production and income arises from financial activities? • How to show changes over time? How to compare over nations? • Can national accounts say something about wellbeing (environment, natural resources, sustainability…)?

  21. Early estimates

  22. Early estimates

  23. Revolutionary decades (1930-1950) • In the period 1930-1950, national accounting was drastically transformed. It was a revolution in terms of the use of the national accounts

  24. Period 1930-1950 Uses: • PPP: international comparison of real income • Systematic analysis of long term growth • Input-output analysis • Econometric modelling of national economies • Macro-economics development • Public finance in a macro-economic framework • Monetary policy linked to national income instead of gold • Balance of payments in a macro-economic framework

  25. The era of the international guidelines (1950- ...)

  26. The era of the international guidelines (1950- ...)

  27. Update - The process • 2003-2004: Statistical Commission called for update • 44 issues for review • ISWGNA to coordinate and manage with the assistance of an AEG (5 meetings) • TFs and WGs, broad consultation • March 2007:SC adopted recommendations • 2008 UNSC Bureau approved Vol. 1 • 2009 UNSC Bureau approved Vol. 2

  28. Theme based recommendations 1.Globalisation 2. Financial instruments and institutions 3. Government and the public sector 4. New economy and non-financial assets 5. Informal sector 6. Environment

  29. Changes 1. Statistical units and issues of classification and sectoring 2. Production boundaries foroutput and intermediate consumption 3. Assets 4.Other changes

  30. The issues reviewed • Non-financial assets (22 issues) • Financial services (8) • Financial instruments (6) • Government and public sector (7) • The rest of the world (10) • Units (2) • Informal and illegal activities (2) • Other issues (1)

  31. Main recommendations with impact on GDP • Research and development is not an ancillary activity • Compilation of own account production by including return in capital • FISIM estimation refined • Extension of the assets boundary and government GFCF to include expenditure on weapons systems • The asset category “computer software” modified to include databases

  32. Example – military expenditures

  33. Treatment of GFCF The SNA/ESA draws a distinction between two types of durable goods used by the military: -those “that are used in much the same way as in any other type of production,” are treated as GFCF; - “destructive military weapons designed for combat” as rockets, missiles and their warheads and, by extension, warships, submarines, fighter aircraft and bombers, and tanks are considered destructive and are not treated as fixed assets, but IC of government

  34. Problematic issues This treatment is problematic for several reasons : • It fails to recognize that weapon systems provide a nation with economic benefits by protecting the liberty and property of its citizens • It fails to recognize the role of capital in the production of defence services. • It fails to recognize that existing military equipment have value and can be sold.

  35. Problematic issues • The distinction between destructive equipment and non-destructive equipment that can be used for peaceful purposes is difficult to make in practice. • The treatment of military equipment used by the military is inconsistent with the treatment of the same equipment (for example, armoured vehicles) used by internal police. • The treatment is inconsistent with the latest international public sector financial accounting standards.

  36. Main reasons to change a. The distinction between military equipment that can be used for civilian purposes and the equipment that cannot is difficult to make in practice and may lead to inconsistencies between countries

  37. Main reasons to change - cont b. The weapons have value in global resale markets; consequently, their exclusion from the asset boundary implies that the balance sheets understate the market value of the assets held by governments. c. Destructive military equipment provides a nation with real economic benefits by protecting its citizens and their property – provide a defensive service .

  38. Main reasons to change - cont d. Adoption of new standards of accounting The specialist military equipment is classified as property, plant, and equipment and require to be depreciated over their useful lives. International Federation of Accountants recommends that NA recognise that military equipment can provide economic benefits to the economy in the form of defence services, in more than one period

  39. Recommended changes of the 2008 SNA • Classification of the military weapon system as fixed assets based on the same criteria than the other assets • GFCF includes the military weapon system, including vehicles, other equipment (warships, submarines, military aircraft, tanks, missile carriers and launchers, etc ) used continuously in the production of defence services. Single-use items, such as ammunition, missiles, rockets, bombs, etc., delivered by weapons or weapons systems are treated as military inventories

  40. Recommended changes of the 2008 SNA The destruction of the weapon systems classified as fixed assets should be recorded in the “other changes in volume of assets account,” the same treatment as for other fixed assets that are destroyed in war. If the single-use items, which are classified as inventories, are expended, whether in combat or in training exercises, their use should be classified as intermediate consumption by general government, with an reduction in inventories.

  41. Treatment in national accounts - weapon system Weapon system- in the 93SNA/ESA95 Weapon systems are treated as intermediate consumption by general government.

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