Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
KLEMS and the NIPAs J. Steven Landefeld, Director World KLEMS Conference Harvard University August 20 th, 2010.
Advertisements

BEA’s KLEMS Statistics: Measuring Outputs and Intermediate Inputs
BEAs Industry Accounts: Improved Measures of Outputs, Inputs, and Value Added Erich H. Strassner World KLEMS Conference Harvard University.
Relationship and Consistency between BEAs Industry and National Economic Accounts Jiemin Guo OECD-NBS Workshop Beijing, China September 21-24, 2007.
Quarterly GDP compilation at NBS
1st Meeting of the Working Party on International Trade in Goods and Trade in Services Statistics - September 2008 Australia's experience (so far) in.
Australias Intergenerational Report Considering future liabilities of Government in a fiscal context 22 April 2013.
Arthur Berger Regional Products and Income Accounts, Beijing, China, March 2010 Canadas Provincial and Territorial Economic Accounts.
Regional Seminar on Developing a Programme for the Implementation of the 2008 SNA and Supporting Statistics January 30-February 1, 2013 Kingston, Jamaica.
Experimental Quarterly Supply & Use framework for Scotland Andrew Mortimer SNAP team.
The outlook for the economy – May 2011 Peter Andrews, Bank of England Construction Industry Council May 2011.
Scottish Input-Output Tables
INFO 4470/ILRLE 4470 National Income and Product Accounts: Business Cycles John M. Abowd and Lars Vilhuber February 23, 2011 Thanks to Brent Moulton, BEA.
United Nations Statistics Division/DESA
Why is GDP revised? Graeme Walker Head of National Accounts Royal Statistical Society: 30 May 2012.
Impact of changes in Blue Book and Pink Books 2013 Andrew Walton, Phillip Davies, Marilyn Thomas 27 June 2013.
GDP Gross Domestic Product James P. Norris – Economics Instructor, Osseo Area Schools, Minnesota.
ONS Economic Forum #ONSeconomy Website: involved/events/events/economic-forum/index.htmlhttp://
Annual Industry Accounts Overview George Smith & Nicole Mayerhauser Current Industry Analysis Division Bureau of Economic Analysis Industry Accounts Users’
Operations Management: Financial Dimensions
BEA Advisory Committee
1 Volume measures and Rebasing of National Accounts Training Workshop on System of National Accounts for ECO Member Countries October 2012, Tehran,
DataPost GDP Measuring the Economy Date last updated: February 19, 2015 Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Economic Education Group.
By Edwin St Catherine, Director of Statistics, SAINT LUCIA.
United Nations Statistics Division Revision policy and dissemination practices Training Workshop on the Compilation of Quarterly National Accounts for.
Revisions to BEA’s Estimates of GDP and GDI Dennis Fixler BEA Advisory Committee Meeting November 4 th, 2011.
PRIME MINISTRY REPUBLIC OF TURKEY TURKISH STATISTICAL INSTITUTE TurkStat NATIONAL ACCOUNTS IN TURKEY 1 TurkStat.
United Nations Statistics Division Scope and Role of Quarterly National Accounts Training Workshop on the Compilation of Quarterly National Accounts for.
What’s next Peter Patterson, Deputy Chief Economic Adviser Graeme Walker, Head of National Accounts ONS Economic Forum 10 July
U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis Presentation to the National Association for Business Economics December 17, 2003 Overview of the 2003 Comprehensive Revision.
OECD Short-Term Economic Statistics Working PartyJune Impact and timing of revisions for seasonally adjusted series relative to those for the.
OECD Short-Term Economic Statistics Working PartyJune Analysis of revisions for short-term economic statistics Richard McKenzie OECD OECD Short.
WORKING PARTY ON NATIONAL ACCOUNTS Paris, 3-5 October 2007 Revisions in Quarterly GDP of OECD Countries: An Update Document STD/CSTAT/WPNA(2007)15 Richard.
CATASTROPHIC NATURAL DISASTER AND NATIONAL ACCOUNTS: JAPAN’S EXPERIENCE Working Party on National Accounts, OECD, Paris October, 2011 Kosuke SUZUKI.
GDP measurement issues Graeme Walker Head of National Accounts Productivity Puzzle Seminar: 16 October 2012.
Georgian Quarterly National Accounts and time-series of Short Term Statistics indicators Levan Gogoberishvili Head of National Accounts Division, Geostat.
An Overview of BEA’s Other Data Programs Charles Ian Mead PNREAP Regional Workshop Reno, NV September 29, 2009.
National Accounts and Related Outputs Work Plan: 2013 – 2017 Andrew Walton.
GDP Timescales Flash Estimates Richard Morrison GDP Branch Short Term Economic Indicators.
Seminar on Developing Programmes for the Implementation of the 2008 SNA & SEEA Ghana’s Presentation By Bernice Serwah Ofosu-Baadu (Head, National Accounts.
Australian National Accounts State Accounts States of Australia.
THE SOUTH AFRICA I KNOW, THE HOME I UNDERSTAND Towards 2008 SNA: The South African experience EN/CSC2/2014/Pres/03.
Rapid Estimates of U.S. GDP: Timeliness, Estimating Methods & Accuracy Dave Wasshausen International Seminar on Timeliness, Methodology and.
Flash Estimates of Gross Domestic Product International Seminar on Early Warning and Business Cycle Indicators 15 December 2009.
African Centre for Statistics United Nations Economic Commission for Africa Handbook on Supply and Use Table: Compilation, Application, and Good Practices.
Jeffrey Timmermans Global Economic Journalism Week 2: Economies & Indicators - I.
Organization of Economic Statistics Statistics South Africa.
1 SESSION 4: Extrapolation, modelling, econometric and sampling techniques used in the preparation of rapid estimates Review of papers.
WORKING PARTY ON NATIONAL ACCOUNTS Paris, 3-5 October 2007 The situation of QUARTERLY NATIONAL ACCOUNTS data transmission to the OECD Document STD/CSTAT/WPNA(2007)6.
Recent work on revisions in the UK Robin Youll Director Short Term Output Indicators Division Office for National Statistics United Kingdom.
Scottish National Accounts Project (SNAP) Andrew Mortimer SNAP team.
Simon Compton Methodology Directorate Office for National Statistics
DataPost GDP Measuring the Economy Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Economic Education Group Date last updated: September 8, 2014.
Discussion: Timely estimates of economic indicators – Session C3 –
GDP Measuring the Economy
Why is GDP revised? Graeme Walker Head of National Accounts
GDP Measuring the Economy
GDP Measuring the Economy
Item 5а National Accounts of Ukraine: Current Status and Development Perspectives Irina N. Nikitina Director of Macroeconomic Statistics Workshop on the.
National Accounts Metadata
Quarterly National Accounts
TF meeting 7 October '15 Luxembourg
Quarterly National Accounts
South African National Accounts benchmarking experience
GDP Measuring the Economy
Managing Supply-Use Benchmarking
Quarterly National Accounts
Quarterly National Accounts
Using JDemetra+ at STATEC
GDP Measuring the Economy
Presentation transcript:

Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

Outline Revisions in general How GDP is compiled GDP revisions Some numbers Levels Growths Nominal GDP revisions Conclusions What’s next?

Revisions to economic series Revisions are a fact of life for most economic series Or else: The first estimate is delayed Later information is ignored even when it tells a different story Balance between accuracy and timeliness

How GDP is compiled (1) Three approaches Output, Expenditure and Income Perfect statistical world – all equal Many sources Monthly, Quarterly, Annual Various timings Monthly turnover (IoP around 6 weeks) Annual tax returns (15 months)

How GDP is compiled (2) Preliminary estimate (25 days) Accuracy and timeliness trade-off One of the fastest in the world Based exclusively on output, 44% data Second estimate (8 weeks) Growth based on output, 83% data Publish all 3 approaches Some provisional expenditure sources Limited direct income information Use of quarterly alignment adjustments

How GDP is compiled (3) Quarterly National Accounts 13 weeks Based on output, 92% data Similar to second estimate Expenditure components more firm Revisions to previous periods but not for SU balanced years When 4 quarters are published Seasonally adjusted annual constrained to equal unadjusted annual

How GDP is compiled (4) Balanced supply and use Framework for confronting differences Levels not growths 112 industries and products First balance after around 18 months BB13 balanced 2011 Not all benchmarks always received Second balance is usually “final” except for methodological changes

Why is GDP revised? Output source data revised Expenditure and income Revised seasonal factors Annual chain-linking changes weights Supply and use balancing New methods New international frameworks

Some numbers: Revisions to GDP levels Balancing supply and use fixes annual level not quarterly growth Use quarterly path from output anchored to SUT levels Generally small apart from methods changes

The Recession: Q to Q3 2009

Revisions to Growth Preliminary to QNA growth Last 26 periods Average p.p: not biased Absolute average 0.12 p.p 7 times unchanged;12 times by +/-0.1 p.p, 4 times by +/-0.2 p.p Q revised by 0.3 p.p Q revised by -0.5 p.p (Blue Book) No benefit in delaying preliminary estimate from 25 days to 13 weeks

QNA to Latest Evidence from the recession incomplete No evidence of bias yet Actual revisions now negative +0.2 p.p for period 1998 to p.p for period 2008 to 2010 Absolute average revisions higher 0.4 p.p for period 1998 to p.p for period 2008 to 2010 Impact of methodological changes Continue to monitor closely

Nominal GDP The poor relative in the media Possible MPC spotlight ONS setting up a review of methodology Revisions performance key Work in early stages

Nominal Revisions at 2 nd estimate

CVM revisions on the same basis

CVM revisions at 1 st balanced BB

Nominal GDP at 1 st balanced BB

CVM GDP revisions across vintages

Nominal GDP revs across vintages

Total updates - CVM

Total updates – Nominal GDP

Conclusions Revisions between Preliminary and QNA for real GDP continue to be small and unbiased Subsequent revisions have been higher since 2008 but still unbiased Partly explained by BB11 methods changes Impact of Supply and Use ONS monitoring methods through the recession and recovery Nominal quarterly GDP revisions being used as a guide to possible improvements

What’s next? BB 2014 – New National Accounts framework (ESA10) Also a range of Gross National Income (GNI) reservations to clear Analyse revisions by reason rather than over time Displaying uncertainty in estimates Splitting data revisions from methodological revisions Continue to monitor revisions

References Revisions policy accounts-revisions-policy.pdf Detail of Supply and Use tables structure use-tables-structure-overview.pdf Revisions triangles Improvements to the measurement of Insurance Services articles/2011-present/blue-book-2012-insurance-services/index.html Various National Accounts articles, including "National Accounts: A short guide" articles/2011-present/index.html Why is GDP revised article from June present/why-is-gdp-revised-/updated-analysis--why-is-gdp-revised-.pdf

Questions