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Capital stocks by sector and detailed asset type (nama_10_nfa_bs)

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Reference Metadata in Euro SDMX Metadata Structure (ESMS)

Compiling agency: Eurostat, the statistical office of the European Union

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This metadata is associated with table nama_10_nfa_bs containing data on balance sheets for non-financial assets. Balance sheets show the stocks of assets, liabilities held by the total economy or broken down by institutional sector, as well as their balancing item (net worth) at the beginning and the end of an accounting period.

 

Balance sheets are compiled and disseminated in line with the definitions and guidelines of the European System of Accounts (ESA 2010) implemented by the European Statistical System. The ESA 2010 is aligned with the System of National Accounts 2008 (SNA 2008) published by the United Nations.

 

According with SNA 2008 and ESA 2010, an asset is a store of value representing a benefit or series of benefits accruing to the economic owner by holding or using the entity over a period of time. It is a means of carrying forward value from one accounting period to another (SNA 2008, §3.30; ESA 2010, §7.15). A liability is the obligation (agreed upon a contract) which requires debtors to provide a payment or a series of payments to creditors.

 

A balance sheet relates to the value of assets and liabilities at a particular moment of time. Balance sheets are compiled at the beginning and end of an accounting period; the opening balance sheet at the beginning of the period is the same as the closing balance sheet recorded at the end of the preceding period. A basic accounting identity links the value of the stock of a specific type of an asset as shown in the opening balance sheet and the closing balance sheet as follows:

The value of the stock of a specific type of asset in the opening balance sheet

plus

the total value of that asset acquired in transactions that take place during the accounting period (transactions)

minus

the total value of that asset disposed of in transactions that take place during the accounting period (transactions)

minus

consumption of fixed capital (if applicable)

plus

other positive changes in volume affecting that asset (other changes in the volume of assets)

minus

other negative changes in volume affecting that asset (other changes in the volume of assets)

plus

the value of nominal holding gains accruing during the period resulting from changes in the price of that asset (revaluations)

minus

the value of nominal holding losses accruing during the period resulting from changes in the price of that asset (revaluations)

equals

the value of the stock of that asset in the closing balance sheet

 

Most fixed assets can be recorded in balance sheets at current purchasers’ prices reduced for the accumulated consumption of fixed capital; this is known as the written-down replacement cost. The sum of the reduced values of all fixed assets still in use is described as the net capital stock.

 

Stocks and flows are closely related. Stocks result from the accumulation of prior transactions and other flows, and they are changed by transactions and other flows in the period (SNA 2008, § 2.4). The changes in the balance sheet recapitulate the content of the accumulation accounts and the balancing item (difference between assets and liabilities) is the net worth (SNA 2008, § 2.122).

 

The country data is compiled by national statistical offices (NSO) and transmitted to Eurostat in respect of the deadlines established by the ESA 2010 transmission programme. As from September 2024, an amended version of ESA 2010 and associated transmission programme applies. The data is produced and disseminated for the total economy but may also include breakdowns of the total economy (by institutional sectors, NACE economic activities, asset groups, etc.).

 

After validation, Eurostat publishes all country data that it receives in its online database, in the section "Economy and finance" and organised into the following collections:

  • Data on gross fixed capital formation (GFCF) and consumption of fixed capital (CFC):
    • Gross fixed capital formation by AN_F6 asset type (nama_10_an6):

This table includes annual and quarterly data transmitted under table T1 of theESA 2010 transmission programme,

  • Cross-classification of gross fixed capital formation by industry and by asset (flows) (nama_10_nfa_fl):

This table includes annual data transmitted under table T22 of the ESA 2010 transmission programme,

  • Gross capital formation by industry (up to NACE A*64) (nama_10_a64_p5):

This table includes annual data transmitted under table T3 of the ESA 2010 transmission programme,

  • Data on stocks of fixed assets:
    • Cross-classification of fixed assets by industry and by asset (stocks) (nama_10_nfa_st):

This table includes annual data transmitted under table T20 of the ESA 2010 transmission programme,

This table includes annual data transmitted under table T26 of the ESA 2010 transmission programme,

  • Data on consumption of fixed capital can be found here:
    • National account aggregates by industry (up to NACE A*64) (nama_10_a64):

This table includes annual data transmitted under table T3 of the ESA 2010 transmission programme,

 

The current metadata focuses on balance sheets as disseminated in table nama_10_nfa_bs.

8 January 2025

The following definitions of key concepts have been extracted from the SNA 2008, ESA 2010, the Eurostat glossary, and the OECD Glossary of Statistical Terms:

 

An economic asset is a store of value representing the benefits accruing to the economic owner by holding or using the entity over a period of time. It is a means of carrying forward value from one accounting period to another (ESA 2010, §7.15). Two main categories of assets in the balance sheets are distinguished in SNA 2008 and ESA 2010: non-financial assets (denoted as AN) and financial assets and liabilities (denoted as AF) (ESA 2010, §7.20). Non-financial assets are divided into produced non-financial assets (denoted as AN.1) and non-produced non-financial assets (denoted as AN.2) (ESA 2010, §7.21). Produced non-financial assets (AN.1) are outputs from production processes (ESA 2010,§7.20-7.22) and are further classified on the basis of their role in production: fixed assets (AN.11) which are used repeatedly or continuously in production for more than one year; inventories (AN.12) which are used up in production as intermediate consumption, sold or otherwise disposed of; and valuables (AN.13) which are not used primarily for production or consumption, but are instead acquired and held primarily as stores of value. Non-produced non-financial assets are split into three categories, natural resources, contracts leases and licences, and purchase and sale of goodwill and marketing assets (SNA2008, §A3.50).

 

Fixed assets consist of a subset of produced assets that are used repeatedly or continuously in production over periods of time of more than one year (SNA 2008, § 1.52). They include dwellings and other buildings and structures, machinery and equipment, land improvements, weapons systems (however not single-use items such as ammunition), cultivated biological and animal resources yielding repeat products, intellectual property rights (e.g. the results of research and development, computer software, literary and artistic originals) and mineral exploration. In national accounts, fixed assets (AN.11) are a distinct category from inventories (AN.12), valuables (AN.13) and non-produced non-financial assets (AN.2), split in natural resources (AN.21), contracts, leases and licences (AN.22) and purchases less sales of goodwill and marketing assets (AN.23). Natural resources include land (AN.211), mineral and energy reserves (AN.212) and non-cultivated biological resources and water resources (AN.213).

 

The SNA 2008 does not formally include a division between tangible and intangible assets in the classification. However, the categories of dwellings, other buildings and structures, machinery and equipment, weapons systems and cultivated biological resources can be taken to correspond to tangible assets and the other categories to intangible assets (SNA 2008, §10.67).

 

Fixed capital is the value of capital assets available for production purposes at a given point in time. All capital goods are included which are accounted for in gross fixed capital formation. This is measured by the value of acquisitions less disposals of new or existing fixed assets.

 

Gross capital stock is the value of all fixed assets still in use, at the actual or estimated current purchasers’ prices for new assets of the same type, irrespective of the age of the assets. In the gross stock, assets are treated as new until they are retired: it is assumed that they retain their full productive capacity until removed from the stock.

 

Net capital stock is equal to gross fixed capital stock reduced for the accumulated consumption of fixed capital. It is the sum of the written-down values of all the fixed assets still in use.

 

Consumption of fixed capital (CFC, ESA code P.51c) reflects the decline in the value of the fixed assets of enterprises, governments and owners of dwellings in the household sector. Fixed assets decline in value due to normal wear and tear, foreseeable ageing (obsolescence) and a normal rate of accidental damage. Unforeseen obsolescence, major catastrophes and the depletion of natural resources, however, are not included. Unlike "depreciation" in business accounting, CFC in national accounts is not a method for allocating the costs of past expenditures on fixed assets over subsequent accounting periods. Rather, it is the decline in the future benefits of the assets due to their use in the production process.

 

A balance sheet is a statement, drawn up for a particular point in time, of the values of assets economically owned and of liabilities owed by an institutional unit or group of units. The balance sheet completes the sequence of accounts, showing the ultimate effect of the entries in the production, distribution and use of income, and accumulation accounts on the stock of wealth of an economy.

 

A balance sheet is drawn up for resident institutional sectors and subsectors, the total national economy, and the rest of the world. The balancing item of a balance sheet is called net worth (B.90). Net worth can be negative if liabilities are greater than the value of assets.

According to the ESA 2010, in national accounts two types of units and two corresponding ways of subdividing the economy are used: (a) institutional unit; (b) local kind-of-activity unit (local KAU). The first type is used for describing income, expenditure and financial flows as well as balance sheets. The second type of units is used for the description of production processes, for input-output analysis and for regional analysis.

An institutional unit is an economic entity characterised by decision-making autonomy in the exercise of its principal function. A resident unit is regarded as constituting an institutional unit in the economic territory where it has its centre of predominant economic interest if it has decision-making autonomy and either keeps a complete set of accounts or is able to compile a complete set of accounts.

A local KAU groups all the parts of an institutional unit in its capacity as producer which are located in a single site or in closely located sites, and which contribute to the performance of an activity at the class level (four digits) of the NACE Rev. 2.

An institutional unit comprises one or more local KAUs; a local KAU belongs to one and only one institutional unit.

The units used in the national accounts data published by Eurostat are, in principle, the local KAU or the institutional unit as defined in ESA 2010. This is the case for both the country data received, and for the euro area and EU aggregates compiled by Eurostat. However, deviations might occur where the units used in the received country data are not fully compliant with the ESA 2010 guidelines. For information on statistical unit refer to nama10.

The national accounts population of a country consists of all resident statistical units (institutional units or local KAUs, see section 3.5). A unit is a resident unit of a country when it has a centre of predominant economic interest on the economic territory of that country, that is, when it engages for an extended period (one year or more) in economic activities on this territory.

Eurostat publishes data for EU Member States, Iceland, Switzerland, Norway and enlargement countries if data are available. EU Member States and EFTA countries have legal obligations to submit their data to Eurostat as defined in the ESA 2010 transmission programme of data.

Official Country groups:

  • European Union (EU)
  • Euro area (EA)
  • European Economic Area (EEA) (excluding Liechtenstein)

Individual country series:

  • EU Member States
  • Iceland
  • Norway
  • Switzerland
  • Albania
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Montenegro
  • North Macedonia
  • Serbia
  • Türkiye
  • Kosovo (under United Nations Security Council Resolution 1244/99)

The usual reference period for presenting national accounts data is the calendar year for annual data and the quarter for quarterly data.

Two basic kinds of information are recorded: flows and stocks. Flows refer to actions and effects of events that take place within a given period of time (year or quarter), while stocks refer to positions at a point of time (usually the beginning or end of a year or quarter).

Eurostat assesses the accuracy of national data by systematically applying validation checks to all national accounts data transmitted by countries. Accuracy of national accounts estimates is analysed in terms of revisions. For more information see Section 13 of na10 and nama10.

Data on balance sheets are available in current prices, million euro (CP_MEUR) and current prices, million units of national currency (CP_MNAC).

EU/EA aggregates are compiled by aggregating countries’ data transmitted to Eurostat. Countries’ data in current prices, net of consumption of fixed capital.

Countries’ data on balance sheets are compiled by NSIs. Data is compiled and disseminated for total economy and broken down by institutional sector. More information is available in countries metadata files.

Eurostat publishes national accounts data for the European Union, euro area and country data (for EU Member States, EFTA countries, candidate countries), as well as the United States, Japan and some other countries on an ad hoc basis. The data sources for estimating EU/EA aggregates are country data transmitted by NSIs to Eurostat.

Countries use many sources to compile their national accounts, among them administrative data from government, population censuses, business surveys, external trade and balance of payments statistics, or household surveys. No single survey can hence be referred to. Sources vary from country to country and may cover a large set of economic, social, financial and environmental items, which may not always be strictly related to national accounts. In any case, there is no single survey source for national accounts. In particular, different sources and methods are used for calculating stock of fixed assets.

For further information about sources and collection methods in National Statistical Institutes (NSIs), please refer to National Statistical Institutes and National Central Banks (see Eurostat's web site, and after having chosen the language to be used, select menu: About us - European Statistical System - ESS Partners; you can also find a List of National statistical institutes (NSI) and other national authorities here).

The transmission requirements for each dataset are defined in the ESA 2010 transmission programme:

  • Balance sheets data are due after T+24 months (nama_10_nfa_bs) are requested at t+24 months.

For information, associated data have the following transmission deadlines:

  • Annual data for gross fixed capital formation (tables (nama_10_an6, nama_10_nfa_fl, nama_10_a64_p5) are requested by t+2, t+9, t+21 or t+24 months, depending on the level of detail, where t is the end of the reference period,
  • Annual data for consumption of fixed capital (table nama_10_a64) are requested by t+9 or t+21 months, depending on the level of detail,
  • Cross-classification of fixed assets by industry and by asset (stocks) (nama_10_nfa_st) are requested at t+24 months,

Country data are published after successfully passing a set of validation checks. EU/EA data is calculated from country data and published shortly after country data has been disseminated.

Member States are required to transmit their data to Eurostat in compliance with the deadlines defined in the ESA 2010 transmission programme.

The comparability is ensured by the application of common definitions (ESA 2010). For compilation practices of data on gross fixed capital formation and fixed assets (stocks), Eurostat launched a questionnaire collecting information amongst compliers which is documented here: Non financial assets.

 

In 2020, Eurostat launched a Task Force on fixed assets and estimation of consumption of fixed capital under ESA 2010 to develop a set of recommendations aiming at further harmonising the parameters of the perpetual inventory model (PIM) widely used in compiling capital stocks and consumption of fixed capital data.

By using a common framework, the ESA 2010, data can be comparable over time. In the case of fundamental changes to methods or classifications, revisions of long time series are performed, usually going far back into the past. If the series contain some break suggesting that some structural change occurred in the series at a certain point in time, a flag “B” is inserted in the first period (year) when it occurs.