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What’s Behind the Regional Personal Income Statistics. Robert L. Brown Calibrating the Nevada Economy: Data and Tools for Assessing Our State and Local Economies Reno, Nevada February 2, 2007. Overview. Personal income & its chief alternatives Revision schedule
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What’s Behind the Regional Personal Income Statistics Robert L. Brown Calibrating the Nevada Economy: Data and Tools for Assessing Our State and Local Economies Reno, Nevada February 2, 2007
Overview • Personal income & its chief alternatives • Revision schedule • Sources of personal income by component • Employment and why BLS & BEA job counts differ
Some differences between BEA, Census, & IRS • Definitional differences • Transfers, in cash, in kind • Capital gains • Pension benefits • FICA taxes • Misreporting • Production of the estimates • Revisions
Revisions • Regular revision schedule to incorporate data that are: • More complete • More detailed • More appropriate • Comprehensive revisions every 5 years • Definitional changes • Statistical changes • Presentational changes
Personal Income: income from all sources • Income from labor services • Compensation • Income from household enterprises • Proprietors’ income • Net rent • Income from ownership of capital • Dividends • Interest • Taxes and transfers
Derivation of Disposable Personal Income Wage and salary disbursements + Supplements to wages and salaries = Compensation + Proprietors’ income = Earnings (pow) — Contributions for govt. social insurance + Adjustment for residence = Earnings (por) + Dividends, interest, and rent + Personal current transfer receipts = Personal income — Personal current taxes = Disposable personal income
How We Produce the Estimates • Administrative record information • Advantage--provides detailed information at low cost • Disadvantage--does not precisely match what is being estimated • Adjustments made to compensate for differences in definition, coverage, and geographic detail • Some census data--quinquennial Agriculture and decennial Population and Housing • Very little from survey information
Sources of Data 60% 5% 23% 6% 6%
Wage & Salary Disbursements • 55% of personal income (2005) • Based primarily on edited ES 202 report (QCEW) • Excellent quality--Most workers are covered by UI • Data adjusted upward by ~6% for uncovered workers & under-reported wages & tips • Data are by place of work
Wage & Salary Disbursements • Includes: • Salaries of corporate officers • Bonuses and incentive pay • Pay in kind (meals, lodging, clothing) • Commissions & Tips • Stock options • Severance pay • Employee contributions to defined compensation plans
Supplements to Wages & Salaries • 13% of personal income • Employer contributions to: • Pension & private insurance funds (9%) • Govt. social insurance funds (4%)
Supplements as a % of Compensation, Nevada 2005 50 2005 data 40 30 20 10 0 Military Social Assistance Private Sector Avg Arts, entertainment & recreation Federal, civilian
Proprietors’ income • 9.2% of personal income (farm 0.4%, nonfarm 8.8%) • Accounting framework • Nonfarm: Based on tabulations of IRS tax returns—Schedule C & Form 1065 • Farm: Based on USDA data • Adjusted for misreported income
Contributions for Govt. Social Insurance • 8% of personal income • This is a deduction in the derivation of personal income • Mostly contributions for Social Security & Medicare • Contributions from Employers, Employees, & the Self-Employed
Major Social Insurance Programs • OASDI (Social Security) • Health Insurance (Medicare) • Unemployment Insurance • Workers’ Compensation • Supplementary Medical Insurance • Temporary Disability Insurance • Veterans’ Life Insurance • Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation • Railroad Employee Retirement Insurance
Adjustment for Residence • <0.5% of personal income nationally • Nevada: -0.6% • Clark, NV -1.1% • Washoe, NV -1.6% • Oregon: -2.0% • California: >-0.1% • San Francisco -30.0% • Utah: <0.1% • Inter-county commuters • Based on Census Journey to Work data & updated with IRS wages (por) • Border commuters • Based on BEA Balance of Payments data • Exceptions: • College students • Migratory workers
Adjustment for Residence • Place of work compensation and earnings • Shows location of production • Used as proxy for current production • Place of residence income • Indicator of economic well-being • Shows where income is available for tax planning and for spending analyses
Dividends, Interest, & Rent • 16% of personal income • Almost half of interest is received by pension funds and life insurance carriers on behalf of persons • About 20% of interest is an imputation for banking and other services • National estimate is distributed regionally on the basis of tabulations of income tax returns and Census housing statistics
Personal Current Transfer Receipts • 15% of personal income • Includes in-kind transfers such as Medicare & Medicaid • Excludes in-kind transfers such as housing and public schools • Based on primary data tabulated by state or county
Personal Current Taxes • 11% of personal income • Mostly income taxes • Property taxes deducted in derivation of rental income • Sales taxes are considered part of personal consumption expenditure
State & Local Personal Taxes as a % of 2005 Personal Income: US=2.7%
Personal Income • Comprehensive • Timely • Quarterly income by sector is available 3 months after end of period • Historical Comparability • County-based local areas
Caveats • Extreme per capita income • Unusual conditions such as bumper crop, drought, or hurricane • Special populations such as college students, prisoners • Major construction projects
Employment Data • Total employment: • Wage & salary jobs • Sole proprietorships • General partners • Job Count not Worker Count • Earnings and employment are consistent • Earnings per job
For Further Information Working papers available at http://www.bea.gov/bea/regional/articles.cfm?section=papers • Alternative Measures of Household Income: BEA Personal Income, CPS Money Income and Beyond by John W. Ruser, Adrienne T. Pilot, and Charles Nelson • Reliability of the State Personal Income Estimates by Robert L. Brown, Bruce T. Grimm, and Marian B. Sacks • Using Efficiency Tests to Reduce Revisions in Panel Data: The Case of Wage and Salary Estimates for U.S. States by Jeremy J. Nalewaik • State Pension Benefit Estimates Methodologies available at http://www.bea.gov/bea/regional/articles.cfm?section=methods
Questions/Comments Robert.Brown@bea.gov (202) 606-9246