Archive:Satellite accounts sharpen the focus
- Published in Sigma - The Bulletin of European Statistics, 2008/03
- By Annika östergren Pofantis, Eurostat
Satellite accounts have nothing to do with rocket science, orbiting Earth or keeping track of the number of astronauts in the world. They are statistical tools, which are used by national accountants to analyse certain events, which cannot be identified or analysed through normal national accounts.
Introduction
National accounts have very good standard tables, concepts and classifications, which are internationally recognised and harmonised. They are very useful for macroeconomic policy issues, like economic growth, inflation, public finance, balance of payments and employment. However, they can be insufficient when you want to highlight specific economic phenomena,’ said Frits Bos, private consultant in national accounting and economist at the Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis.
Satellite accounts exist for many different areas, among which are accounts on tourism, agriculture, health, transport, education, and research and development but perhaps the most well-known example are the environmental accounts (see also article on Environmental accounts).
‘A second way would be to check how much cake each family member received — the income approach. This becomes a bit more complicated than just measuring everything in the kitchen. You have to go to their rooms and see how big the pieces really were. If you are lucky, everybody will tell you precisely how much he or she received. In real life, however, there are always people who under-declare their income…
‘The third way is to try and measure how much they ate — the expenditure approach. In principle you ask each one how much they ate. However, maybe they do not remember exactly how much they ate. Maybe they saved some cake to eat later. Or maybe they traded cakes with the neighbour’s kids, who received a freshly baked apple pie, but prefer strawberry cake. Clearly measuring the level of expenditure is the trickiest option at a regional level.’
In national accounts the production, income and expenditure approaches are used and checked against each other. However, in regional accounts most EU countries use the production approach and to some extent the income approach to measure the total value of all goods and services produced in the regions. This is because all data are not always available at a regional level. One obvious example is how to measure imports from and exports to a region. Another is the flow of income between regions, as commuting can make a big difference to received and paid compensation of employees in a region.
In theory the regional accounts should add up to the national figures, which is the situation in Finland. However, for many countries this is not always the case. Therefore, the regional figures are grossed up or down to the national level. If the regional figures are 97 % of the national ones, all regional figures are adjusted with the same amount to match the national one at the end.
Regional GDP, employment,productivity
The output of regional accounts is first and foremost regional gross domestic product (GDP). However, the accounts include other types of data. In Finland the accounts also comprise detailed industry information on output, intermediate consumption, value added, gross fixed capital formation (investments net), hours worked and information on household incomes.
‘The most popular and known indicator is the regional GDP per inhabitant. Regional growth rates, employment and household income figures are also regularly requested topics,’said Mr Koutaniemi.
‘We also publish another indicator, which gives an easy approach to regional economic development. It is called the GEP-deviation indicator. It is calculated from [[gross value
added]] (GVA), employment and population by comparing regional growth percentages with those of the whole country and by adding up the differences in data for the whole country
and the regions,’ he continued.
At the European level, the regional GDP per inhabitant is the indicator which determines which regions are supported through grants from the EU budget. In principle those regions which have a GDP per head less than 75 % of the EU average receive funding.
Finland goes one step further
GDP is the sum of GVA and taxes (value added taxes and other taxes on products) less subsidies on products. In most Member States the national taxes and subsidies on products are distributed on the basis of the relative size of total regional GVA to all the regions. However, in Finland a new methodology was introduced in 2006, which means that taxes and subsidies are distributed based on regional expenditure.
‘We are able to use this method because we made an inputoutput study at a regional level for the year 2002. The study gives us the possibility to extrapolate taxes and subsidies on products at a regional level over the time series,’ said Mr Koutaniemi.
The result is that the regional GDP data users find differences on Eurostat’s and Statistics Finland’s homepages.
‘We believe the study, which took nearly four years to carry out, was worth it because of the increase in accuracy and quality of the regional accounts. Our users are happy and it is possible that another study will be carried out in the coming years.’
Regional details
Regional details in the accounts vary for different purposes. In Finland, data are published down to local administrative unit (LAU) 1 level of detail. This corresponded to 77 subregional units in 2006. In comparison the level of detail used by Eurostat are NUTS (nomenclature of units for territorial statistics) 3 and NUTS 2 level, which for Finland corresponds to 20 and 5 regions respectively.
Finnish users are quite satisfied with the local detail of the data, but many would like to have even more detail information. Although municipalities have been merged, users are still interested in the local situation.
‘We are lucky in Finland. Our source statistics are of a very high quality. Therefore, it is often possible for us to use the same level of detail as they do. There is no need to aggregate the data before we use it,’ explained Mr Koutaniemi.
‘In regional accounts there are normally certain trade-offs. You cannot provide as much information at a regional level as you can at a national one. What you win in regional detail, you lose in accuracy and types of data.’
Not only snapshots
At the moment, the European system of accounts (ESA) 1995 requires regional accounts data to be published only in current prices. However, many users would like to have regional GDP also in volume, which excludes the effect of inflation. In Finland, regional accounts data are released in both current and constant prices.
‘The advantage with data published in constant prices is that we not only get a snapshot of the economy, we can also see the GDP growth in different regions over the years,’ pointed out Mr Koutaniemi.
Timeliness
The regional accounts figures are transmitted with a delay of 24 months at a European level and published after 26 months. The delay is caused by the fact that regional accountants have to wait for other statistics which they use as sources and the final national accounts figures, before they can release their own final figures.
‘In most Member States the backbone of regional GVA compilation is the structural business survey, which has a delay of 18 months. This means that in June 2008 the countries report data for 2006,’ said Mr Krüger.
In Finland the first estimates of the regional accounts are published 15 to 16 months after the end of the year in question and the final figures one year later.
‘Users are never happy about delays, but the reason for them is that we depend on the input from structural business and municipality statistics, as well as the final national accounts figures,’ observed Mr Koutaniemi.