Reference metadata describe statistical concepts and methodologies used for the collection and generation of data. They provide information on data quality and, since they are strongly content-oriented, assist users in interpreting the data. Reference metadata, unlike structural metadata, can be decoupled from the data.
Eurostat, the statistical office of the European Union
1.2. Contact organisation unit
Eurostat, C1, National accounts methodology. Indicators
1.3. Contact name
Restricted from publication
1.4. Contact person function
Restricted from publication
1.5. Contact mail address
Office address: Joseph Bech building 5, Rue Alphonse Weicker 2721 Luxembourg
Functional mail box:ESTAT-MIP@ec.europa.eu
1.6. Contact email address
Restricted from publication
1.7. Contact phone number
Restricted from publication
1.8. Contact fax number
Restricted from publication
2.1. Metadata last certified
3 February 2025
2.2. Metadata last posted
3 February 2025
2.3. Metadata last update
3 February 2025
3.1. Data description
Both Employment and Employees data source from the National accounts domain.
National accounts are a coherent and consistent set of macroeconomic indicators, which provide an overall picture of the economic situation and are widely used for economic analysis and forecasting, policy design and policy making. Eurostat publishes annual and quarterly national accounts data. Annual national accounts are compiled in accordance with the European System of Accounts - ESA 2010 as defined in Annex B of the Council Regulation (EU) No 549/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 21 May 2013. Even though consistency checks are a major aspect of data validation, temporary (usually limited) inconsistencies between datasets may occur, mainly due to vintage effects.
The methodological framework followed in the compilation of National accounts statistics is defined in the European system of national and regional accounts (ESA2010), as defined in Regulation (EU) No 549/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 21 May 2013.
3.3. Coverage - sector
Annual and quarterly national accounts refer to the whole economy, but breakdowns by sectors are provided accordingly by the annual or quarterly sector accounts.
3.4. Statistical concepts and definitions
Employment covers all persons engaged in some productive activity (within the production boundary of national accounts). Employed persons are either employees (working by agreement for another resident unit and receiving remuneration) or self-employed (owners of unincorporated enterprises). Persons in employment are those who, during the reference week, did any work for pay or profit, or were not working, but had a job from which they were temporarily absent. Anyone who receives a wage for on-the-job training that involves a production of goods or services is also considered as being in employment. Self-employed and family workers are also included. Employment is measured in number of persons without distinction according to full-time or part-time work.
Input data are obtained through official transmissions of national accounts' country data in the ESA2010 transmission programme. The ESA2010 distinguishes two employment concepts depending on geographical coverage: resident persons in employment (i.e. national scope of employment) and employment in resident production units irrespective of the place of residence of the employed person (i.e. domestic scope). MIP indicators represent total employment, according to the domestic concept.
3.5. Statistical unit
National accounts aim to capture economic activity within the domestic territory. They combine data from a host of base statistics, and thus have no common sampling reference frame. The elementary building blocks of ESA 2010 statistics are statistical units and their groupings. ESA 2010 defines two types of units, institutional units and local kind-of-activity units (ESA 2010, § 1.54).
3.6. Statistical population
National accounts combine data from many source statistics. The concept of statistical population is not applicable in a national accounts context.
3.7. Reference area
Data are presented for each EU Member State.
3.8. Coverage - Time
The data published under the MIP domain are quarterly and annual time series. The lengths of series vary according to country, for details on time coverage see the information notes: tipsna60, tipsna61 and tipsna62.
3.9. Base period
Not applicable.
Data are expressed in thousand persons and % change over previous period.
The reference period is the calendar year.
6.1. Institutional Mandate - legal acts and other agreements
The European System of Accounts (ESA 2010) transmission programme is covered in Annex B of the Council Regulation (EU) No 549/2013 Commission Decision 98/715 of 30 November 1998 and Commission Decision 2002/990 of 17 December 2002 on measurement of price and volumes in national accounts.
6.2. Institutional Mandate - data sharing
Data received via the transmission programme are shared with other institutions in accordance with specific agreements, notably with the ECB and the OECD. A Protocol for co-operation between Eurostat and the OECD in the area of National Accounts signed in June 2013 specifies agreed data exchange and data validation arrangements. These data are published in Eurobase in the naid_10 collection.
7.1. Confidentiality - policy
Regulation 2015/759 of 29 April 2015, amending Regulation (EC) No 223/2009 on European statistics of 11 March 2009 [recital 24 and Article 20(4)], stipulates the need to establish common principles and guidelines ensuring the confidentiality of data used for the production of European statistics and the access to those data.
7.2. Confidentiality - data treatment
If Member States transmit data with a confidentiality flag or an embargo date, these data are not disseminated until the confidentiality flag is removed in a subsequent data transmission or the embargo is expired.
8.1. Release calendar
Data are released on the Eurostat Reference Database as soon as received from national authorities. Annual accounts that are also covered by quarterly accounts are usually updated on the occasion of new quarterly releases (which are released according to a pre-announced calendar published on Eurostat's website). Figures for a new year usually become available with the first release of quarterly accounts for the fourth quarter of the reference year.
In line with the Community legal framework and the European Statistics Code of Practice Eurostat disseminates European statistics on Eurostat's website (see § 10 'Accessibility and clarity') respecting professional independence and in an objective, professional and transparent manner in which all users are treated equitably. The detailed arrangements are governed by the Eurostat protocol on impartial access to Eurostat data for users.
Dissemination requirements for each dataset are defined in the ESA 2010 transmission programme. For annual main GDP aggregates: t+2 months and t+9 months. The quarterly variable on total employment (domestic scope) in persons is estimated around t+65 days.
European legislation and guidelines are explained in ESA 2010.
10.7. Quality management - documentation
Not available.
11.1. Quality assurance
Quality is assured by strict application of ESA 2010 concepts and by thorough validation of the data delivered by Member States.
11.2. Quality management - assessment
Eurostat conducts an annual compliance exercise for all Member States.
12.1. Relevance - User Needs
The indicators provide complementary information under the MIP framework.
12.2. Relevance - User Satisfaction
Not available.
12.3. Completeness
Annual national accounts data provide detailed breakdowns on production, consumption, investment and income.
13.1. Accuracy - overall
The indicators are associated with a high level of overall accuracy. Data transmitted by the Member States are checked in Eurostat for their consistency and plausibility. If any problem is found, Eurostat contacts the relevant Member State for checking the figures or confirming the changes.
Quality reports on national accounts, including revision analysis, are also published by some Member States.
13.2. Sampling error
Not applicable.
13.3. Non-sampling error
Not applicable.
14.1. Timeliness
Member States are required to transmit their data to Eurostat in compliance with the European System of Accounts ESA 2010 transmission programme, subject to derogations.
14.2. Punctuality
Eurostat releases its estimates of European aggregates in line with the pre-announced release schedule. Member states' data are revised according to national schedules, and revisions are applied to Eurostat’s online database as soon as they become available to Eurostat.
15.1. Comparability - geographical
The comparability is ensured by the application of common definitions (ESA 2010).
15.2. Comparability - over time
By using a common framework, the European System of Accounts ESA 2010, data can be comparable over time. Where series cannot be comparable over time, for example those expressed as a percentage of the total EU, then an explanatory note is presented with the series.
15.3. Coherence - cross domain
In certain cases, data from other domains of economic statistics, i.e. balance of payments statistics, business statistics, household budget statistics or external trade statistics can be used for cross-checking purposes. These economic statistics are also available in the relevant domains on Eurostat's website.
Most of national data have originally been published by the National Statistical Institutes (NSI).
Labour Force Survey (LFS) Activity rate indicators and National Accounts (NA) Employment indicators
LFS and NA are the two main sources of employment data, both with their own aims and measurement approaches, which may lead to different results.
The LFS is a sample survey of individuals and households, whereas National Accounts is a conceptual framework (specified in the European System of Accounts - ESA2010) comprising definitions, classifications, variables and presentational arrangements. National Accounts are compiled by comparing and combining all the relevant data sources available in the country. This is a key feature of National Accounts: it allows taking the best from each source, increasing coherence and obtaining a more comprehensive result. For the variable employment, this means more robust estimates and improved consistency with other key national accounts variables like salaries and output. The National Accounts integration is however done at macro level, meaning that the results are produced for the whole economy plus industry breakdowns. Certain breakdowns like gender and age, which are available for the LFS are not available from National Accounts. Likewise, key concepts used in National Accounts, such as domestic employment (employment in resident production units), have no correspondence in the EU-LFS, which uses instead number of persons employed based on residency within the national border (national employment). There are also differences in coverage, where the EU-LFS employment covers the age groups 15 and older in private households only, while the national accounts employment covers all persons regardless of age or residence.
All in all, National Accounts is judged more suitable to measure employment levels, employment growth and industry breakdowns. LFS is more adequate to measure participation in the labour market (i.e. employment rates, activity rates, flows between employment and unemployment, etc.), demographic or social breakdowns (e.g. by age, gender or educational level) and it is more suitable for socio-demographic studies. A comparison between EU-LFS and national accounts data on employment growth shows that both sources are broadly comparable with relation to the direction of the employment growth.
15.4. Coherence - internal
In between Eurostat releases, Member States may revise their figures; Eurostat publishes the new Member States' accounts shortly after reception but does not recalculate the EU accounts until the next scheduled EU release. Geographical coherence may thus be lost for a brief period. In turn, a certain stability of annual aggregates is assured, and annual and quarterly EU aggregates will by default be coherent.
Not applicable.
17.1. Data revision - policy
All data disseminated consist of data already disseminated in Eurobase by the following domains:
The revision policy is therefore effectively the revision policy of those domains.
17.2. Data revision - practice
The revision practice effectively corresponds to the revision practice of the domains listed under sub‑concept 17.1 (data revision – policy).
18.1. Source data
Eurostat publishes national accounts data for the European Union, euro area and country data (for EU Member States, EFTA countries, candidate countries, the United States, Japan and some other countries on an ad hoc basis). Eurostat estimates the figures for EU and euro area (see section below '18.5. Data Compilation' for details); all other data are produced by the statistical offices of the respective countries.
Countries use many sources to compile their national accounts, among them administrative data from government, population censuses, business surveys and 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 need not always be strictly related to national accounts. In any case, there is no single survey source for national accounts.
18.2. Frequency of data collection
Member States should transmit national accounts data to Eurostat upon national publication and/or in line with the deadlines specified in the European System of Accounts (ESA 2012) transmission programme. Data are collected from national sources. As the breadth of the sources varies, so does the frequency of collection, from monthly to annually, and in the case of population censuses they are mostly collected every decade.
18.3. Data collection
Data in ESA 2010 are transmitted via SDMX, which introduced standardised codes.
National Accounts combine data from many source statistics. Techniques of data collection vary widely, depending on the compilation approach, the source statistics available, the particular account in the system of accounts, timeliness of data release and other factors.
18.4. Data validation
Source data undergo a sequence of checks within NSIs. Eurostat checks national data mainly for completeness (coverage of reference periods and variables) and consistency (accounting consistency, time-consistency between quarterly and annual accounts and consistency over time) and follows up with NSIs on any lack of quality in this respect.
The same checks are applied to data for European aggregates. Validation against data from other domains and validation of statistical tools used are done on an ad-hoc basis.
18.5. Data compilation
Where single Member States' figures are not available, Eurostat may use unpublished estimates to impute country data and hence calculate the European aggregates.
18.6. Adjustment
If Member States' accounts show discrepancies (explicit or implicit) between GDP and the sum of components, European annual accounts derived from summing these up would show a discrepancy equal to the sum of Member States' discrepancies. To avoid this, European annual accounts use some variables to adjust for any possible lack of additivity between the total and the sum of its components, i.e. these variables are effectively used as balancing items. This is only possible at current and at previous year's prices, because of the lack of additivity induced by the chain-linking technique.
NSIs may provide explicit balancing adjustments for their national accounts. These are recorded as "discrepancy items" in the appropriate tables.
Quarterly employment figures published in the MIP domain are non-seasonally adjusted.
Not applicable.
Both Employment and Employees data source from the National accounts domain.
National accounts are a coherent and consistent set of macroeconomic indicators, which provide an overall picture of the economic situation and are widely used for economic analysis and forecasting, policy design and policy making. Eurostat publishes annual and quarterly national accounts data. Annual national accounts are compiled in accordance with the European System of Accounts - ESA 2010 as defined in Annex B of the Council Regulation (EU) No 549/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 21 May 2013. Even though consistency checks are a major aspect of data validation, temporary (usually limited) inconsistencies between datasets may occur, mainly due to vintage effects.
Employment covers all persons engaged in some productive activity (within the production boundary of national accounts). Employed persons are either employees (working by agreement for another resident unit and receiving remuneration) or self-employed (owners of unincorporated enterprises). Persons in employment are those who, during the reference week, did any work for pay or profit, or were not working, but had a job from which they were temporarily absent. Anyone who receives a wage for on-the-job training that involves a production of goods or services is also considered as being in employment. Self-employed and family workers are also included. Employment is measured in number of persons without distinction according to full-time or part-time work.
Input data are obtained through official transmissions of national accounts' country data in the ESA2010 transmission programme. The ESA2010 distinguishes two employment concepts depending on geographical coverage: resident persons in employment (i.e. national scope of employment) and employment in resident production units irrespective of the place of residence of the employed person (i.e. domestic scope). MIP indicators represent total employment, according to the domestic concept.
National accounts aim to capture economic activity within the domestic territory. They combine data from a host of base statistics, and thus have no common sampling reference frame. The elementary building blocks of ESA 2010 statistics are statistical units and their groupings. ESA 2010 defines two types of units, institutional units and local kind-of-activity units (ESA 2010, § 1.54).
National accounts combine data from many source statistics. The concept of statistical population is not applicable in a national accounts context.
Data are presented for each EU Member State.
The reference period is the calendar year.
The indicators are associated with a high level of overall accuracy. Data transmitted by the Member States are checked in Eurostat for their consistency and plausibility. If any problem is found, Eurostat contacts the relevant Member State for checking the figures or confirming the changes.
Quality reports on national accounts, including revision analysis, are also published by some Member States.
Data are expressed in thousand persons and % change over previous period.
Where single Member States' figures are not available, Eurostat may use unpublished estimates to impute country data and hence calculate the European aggregates.
Eurostat publishes national accounts data for the European Union, euro area and country data (for EU Member States, EFTA countries, candidate countries, the United States, Japan and some other countries on an ad hoc basis). Eurostat estimates the figures for EU and euro area (see section below '18.5. Data Compilation' for details); all other data are produced by the statistical offices of the respective countries.
Countries use many sources to compile their national accounts, among them administrative data from government, population censuses, business surveys and 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 need not always be strictly related to national accounts. In any case, there is no single survey source for national accounts.
Dissemination requirements for each dataset are defined in the ESA 2010 transmission programme. For annual main GDP aggregates: t+2 months and t+9 months. The quarterly variable on total employment (domestic scope) in persons is estimated around t+65 days.
Member States are required to transmit their data to Eurostat in compliance with the European System of Accounts ESA 2010 transmission programme, subject to derogations.
The comparability is ensured by the application of common definitions (ESA 2010).
By using a common framework, the European System of Accounts ESA 2010, data can be comparable over time. Where series cannot be comparable over time, for example those expressed as a percentage of the total EU, then an explanatory note is presented with the series.