DISTRIBUTION OF INCOME, CONSUMPTION, SAVING AEG MEETING WASHINGTON DC, 8-10 SEPTEMBER 2014 Presented by Jennifer Ribarsky (OECD)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 Progress report on Expert Groups on micro and macro household statistics WPNA meeting October 2011 Maryse FESSEAU (OECD – Statistic Directorate, National.
Advertisements

Changes in measurement of savings: Perspectives from a consumer (of NA data) Alain de Serres* OECD Florian Pelgrin * Bank of Canada * Personal views, not.
GDP by Income Approach and Accounts of Household Sector For Qatar Experience Prepared by : Aisha Al-Mansoori Statistical Researcher Population & Social.
Statistical Issues in Measuring Poverty from Non-Survey Sources NATIONAL ACCOUNTS UNSD/NA/MR1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National.
Information item: Two Expert Groups on households’ economic resources Working Party on National Accounts 2 December 2010 Maryse FESSEAU (OECD)
UNECE OECD EUROSTAT Group of Experts on National Accounts Expanded Accounts for the Household Sector Discussant comments Michael Connolly May 2014.
Intertemporal Approach to the Current Account Part 2.
Pension Analysis and the PER Richard P. Hinz, Adviser, HDNSP Anita M. Schwarz, Lead Economist, ECSHD April 2007.
Bayesian estimation in NTA frameworks Details of a data study in progress By Jan W. van Tongeren (ex-Head National Accounts, UNSD) and Arjan Bruil (statistical.
IT’S ABOUT HOUSEHOLDS Jennifer Ribarsky Head of Section Sectoral and National Accounts OECD Group of Experts on National Accounts Meeting Geneva, 7 -9.
E-frame conference, Paris, June 2012 Income inequalities Denis Leythienne and Liviana Mattonetti (Eurostat)
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, 2005 Advanced Macroeconomics Chapter 16 CONSUMPTION, INCOME AND WEALTH.
Money, Financial Crises, and Business Cycles Edward C. Prescott July 7, 2010.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 15 The Economics of Consumption Behavior.
Lecture 11: Consumption, Saving and Investment II L11200 Introduction to Macroeconomics 2009/10 Reading: Barro Ch.7 16 February 2010.
Household Real Wealth in OECD Countries Massimo Coletta and Riccardo De Bonis (Bank of Italy) OECD Working Party on Financial Statistics 29 November -
Chart 1 Household net fixed investment, net lending and saving. Percentage of disposable income ) Net fixed investment less net capital transfers.
Macroeconomics fifth edition N. Gregory Mankiw PowerPoint ® Slides by Ron Cronovich macro © 2002 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved Topic 13: Consumption.
Regional Coordinators Meeting September 28-30, 2009 Washington DC Defining the National Accounts Framework for the ICP.
African Centre for Statistics United Nations Economic Commission for Africa Handbook on Supply and Use Table: Compilation, Application, and Good Practices.
INSTITUTIONAL SECTOR ACCOUNTS Peter van de Ven Head of National Accounts OECD Short Course on National Accounts IARIW-conference, August 23 – 24, 2014.
This chapter presents:
SAMS AND MICRO-DATA: NEW AREAS OF RESEARCH Paul Schreyer OECD IIOA Towards New Horizons of Innovation, Environment and Trade Kitakyushu July 2013.
1 AEG New York, April 2012 Giving more prominence to households AEG New York, April 2012.
DISTRIBUTIONAL INFORMATION ON HOUSEHOLD ECONOMIC RESOURCES: PROGRESS TO DATE Paul Schreyer OECD Deputy Director of Statistics Side Event at the 44 th Session.
Non-life insurance services 1 UN STATISTICS DIVISION Economic Statistics Branch National Accounts Section UNSD/ECA National accounts workshop November.
5 CHAPTER Measuring GDP and Economic Growth.
Agenda item 13 Expert Group on Disparities in National Accounts Meeting of the Advisory Expert Group (AEG) on National Accounts Luxembourg, May 2013.
Constant Price Estimates Expert Group Meeting on National Accounts Cairo May 12-14, 2009 Presentation points.
© 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved.
1 Lessons from the OECD workshop : Accounting for Implicit Pension Liabilities François Lequiller OECD.
3rd ICP 2011 Technical Advisory Group Meeting at the OECD, Paris 10, 11 June 2010.
THE Wealth of Older Americans and the Sub- prime Debacle Barry Bosworth Rosanna Smart.
Copyright 2010, The World Bank Group. All Rights Reserved. 1 GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS INTRODUCTION TO GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS Part 2 This lecture.
Arjan Bruil & Jan W. van Tongeren Analysing wealth.
1 Some implications of the crises for indicators on non-financial corporations and households Paul Schreyer OECD Statistics Directorate.
The Average Propensity to Consume Out of Full Wealth: Testing a New Measure Laurie Pounder.
© The Treasury Better saved than sorry: Treasury’s position on NZ’s savings performance.
Estimating Households’ Non-financial Assets Presentation to the OECD Working Party on Financial Accounts Patrick O’Hagan System of national Accounts, Statistics.
Output of the U.S. Financial Sector: Measuring the services of banks andinsurance companies Brian C. Moyer Deputy Chief National Income and Wealth Division.
1 Workshop on National Accounts 6-9 July 2009, New Delhi, India Gulab Singh UN Statistics Division South Asian Countries Compliance with the UN-NAQ Questionnaire.
Introduction to the UK Economy. What are the key objectives of macroeconomic policy? Price Stability (CPI Inflation of 2%) Growth of Real GDP (National.
The vulnerability of indebted households during the crisis: evidence from the euro area The vulnerability of indebted households during the crisis: evidence.
4 November 2009CMEPSP - Jean-Etienne Chapron1 OECD Working Party On National Accounts Paris, 4 – 6 November 2009 Commission on the Measurement Of Economic.
1 Social statistics on economic resources: a user perspective Marco Mira d’Ercole Counsellor, OECD Statistics Directorate UNSD Expert meeting on the Scope.
THE VALUE ADDED OF ANALYSING HOUSEHOLDS? Peter van de Ven Head of National Accounts OECD The Accounts of Society Luxembourg, June 12 – 13, 2014.
Foreign Direct Investment Georg Andersson Balance of Payments and Financial Market Statistics unit Statistic Sweden.
WORK OF THE OECD EXPERT GROUP ON DISPARITIES IN NATIONAL ACCOUNTS Jorrit Zwijnenburg National Accounts Division OECD Advisory Expert Group on National.
Herman Smith UNSD 10 th Meeting of the Advisory Expert Group on National Accounts April 2016, Paris The accrual recording of property income in the.
EUROPEAN NEEDS FOR A FUTURE SNA/ESA
Statistics for policy use
Table on household retirement resources
State of play - Expert Group on disparities in national accounts
Introduction to the UK Economy
ICP 7-th Regional Coordinators Meeting World Bank, Washington D.C.
Distributive transactions
User needs and practices
Extensions to the core system
Distributive transactions
Proposals for the 2012 WPFS meeting and for the Biennium
Users’ needs and practices
User needs and practices
Presented by Jorrit Zwijnenburg (OECD)
Asset-based Reallocations
Meeting of the Advisory Expert Group (AEG) on National Accounts
Overview 2008 SNA (cont’d) Training Workshop on System of National Accounts for ECO Member Countries October 2012, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran.
Rebasing and Linking of National Accounts
What’s going on within the household sector?
Users’ needs and practices
Part 2 Topics Measuring Domestic Output and National Income
Presentation transcript:

DISTRIBUTION OF INCOME, CONSUMPTION, SAVING AEG MEETING WASHINGTON DC, 8-10 SEPTEMBER 2014 Presented by Jennifer Ribarsky (OECD)

How to arrive at economic growth without people dropping out -> need for information on how income, consumption and wealth are distributed across households Main issues: – Existing distributional information from micro sources: Often focus on one dimension In most cases no consistent time series Not following international standards, especially related to wealth – National accounts data on households hardly provide any distributional information 2 Background

Early 2011: OECD-Eurostat Expert Group (EG DNA) Mandate: study feasibility to arrive at an internationally comparable methodology for generating distributional information consistent with national accounts Members: 25 countries, ECB, Luxembourg Income Studies Organisation of the work: – Phase 1 (2011): comparison between micro and macro data sources on households’ income, consumption and wealth => to better understand similarities and divergences between both data sources – Phase 2 (2012): allocation of national account totals to groups of households using a range of micro sources; derivation of disparity measures on income, consumption and saving, for a given year 3 Background

Sharing knowledge across countries and between micro and macro experts Better understanding of NA concepts and compilation procedures, household micro data collection, and differences between both of them Compilation of experimental disparity measures across households groups consistent with NA estimates: – for a range of OECD countries – based on common templates and methodology 4 Main results of first EG DNA

* Difference between adjusted disposable income and actual final consumption plus the change in net equity of households in pension funds. Savings* as a percentage of adjusted disposable income 5

6 Transactions and transfers between households of different quintiles difference of saving rates before and after transfers between households Q1Q2Q3Q4Q5 Australia-0.1%0.1%0.5%0.2%-0.2% France2.6%0.7%0.4%-0.4%-1.1% Korea0.5%0.7%-0.6%-0.7%0.4% Netherlands-1.6%0.8%0.5%0.2%-0.3% Unites States-2.2%0.0%0.2%0.1%0.0% Impact of transfers between households on saving rates positive values refer to higher saving rates after transfers were taken into account

Milton Friedman’s Permanent Income Hypothesis (PIH) – emphasizes the attempts of the individual to smooth its consumption over time, adjusting consumption and saving levels according to an expected long-term permanent income, and therefore evaluating income shocks by their persistence: smoothing out temporary fluctuations in income, and adjusting consumption levels to income shocks that are perceived to be long lasting. Modigliani and Brumberg’s Life Cycle Hypothesis (LCH) – states that individuals plan their consumption behaviour over their lifetime: in their early (student) years they may consume more than their income (for example on their education), then in their most productive (highest income earning years) they pay back the accumulated debt and save for their retirement, and finally they dis- save as pensioners (use up the accumulated assets). 7 Economic theories of consumption

8 Average age of head of household by equivalised disposable income quintile

Income related to the non-observed economy underestimated for the lower income quintiles? Inconsistent responses (case of France) Imperfect quintile allocation of households for consumption components Imputations related to owner occupied dwellings (primarily due to delineation of what is included in intermediate consumption (such as FISIM on mortgages and maintenance and repairs)) 9 Statistical issues

To produce information on income and consumption for a more recent year, via a streamlined questionnaire – To assess the robustness of the assumptions made – To assess the techniques developed to link micro and macro data To develop and evaluate methods and sources for extrapolating distributional dynamics from benchmark years using more timely available aggregate statistics 10 Goals of EG DNA (extended mandate)

Expert group met in April 2014 – To discuss its mandate and organise the work – Results from previous exercise discussed (with focus on negative saving rates and STiK) September 2014 OECD secretariat will issue a redesigned questionnaire template for the collection of data and metadata Next expert group meeting June 2015 Final report December Milestones of EG DNA (extended mandate)

To make readily available income, consumption and savings of households by income quintiles ; – Consistently with the corresponding national accounts totals – Ideally as part of the normal SNA/statistics production process This information is crucial to be able to add a distributional dimension to macroeconomic analysis 12 Long term vision

Thank you for your attention! 13