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History of National Accounts SNA/ESA

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Presentation on theme: "History of National Accounts SNA/ESA"— Presentation transcript:

1 History of National Accounts SNA/ESA
CONTRACTOR IS ACTING UNDER A FRAMEWORK CONTRACT CONCLUDED WITH THE COMMISSION

2 Overview Theoretical background of the System of National Accounts
System of National Accounts – Historical development 2008 SNA/ESA 2010

3 Theoretical background of national accounts
The concepts, the design and the structure of national accounts are based on economic theory and principles. Basic concepts such as production, consumption and capital formation are rooted in economic theory. The concepts of national accounts show the pressure of (changing) policy needs and as well as the influence of different economic theories.

4 Theoretical background of national accounts
Original motivation - systematic measurement of employment and accurate measures of aggregate economic activity. Relevant in the Great Depression and for Keynesian macroeconomic stabilisation policy Wartime economic planning.

5 Theoretical background of national accounts - milestones
The period of the Great Depression and high unemployment Kusznets: National Income 1929 – 1932 (1934); emphasis on the production side, shares of types of income Keynes: General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936); emphasis on final demand Clark: National Income and Outlay (1937)

6 Theoretical background of national accounts - milestones
Development of econometrics Macroeconomic model building and planning Jan Tinbergen, Ragnar Frisch; Tinbergen developed the first national comprehensive macroeconomic model in 1936 Inter-industry modeling Leontief: Structure of American Economy, (1941)

7 Theoretical background of national accounts - milestones
World War II Keynes: How to Pay for the War (1940) UK Treasury: Analysis of the Sources of War Finance and an Estimate of the National Income and Expenditure in 1938 and 1940 (1941) League of Nations Study (1947) Richard Stone chairman, formulation of a set of accounts

8 Theoretical background of national accounts - Postwar period
OEEC and UN System of National Accounts (1951) Framework for planning Europe’s economic recovery; basis for allocating the Marshall Plan aid UN System of National Accounts (1968) More interest in structural analysis Integration of make and use tables as the basis for input-output analysis; distinction production sphere (industries, commodities) - accounts for institutional sectors

9 Theoretical background of national accounts - milestones
Seventies Is growth obsolete (Tobin, Nordhaus 1973) Extended accounts (Kendrick 1979) The Feasibility of Welfare-Oriented Measures to Supplement the National Accounts and Balances (United Nations 1977) Externalities Integrated Environmental and Economic Accounting (United Nations, European Commission, IMF, OECD, World Bank, 2003)

10 Theoretical background of national accounts - milestones
System of Social and Demographic Statistics Demographic Accounting and Model-Building (Stone, 1971) Towards a System of Social and Demographic Statistics (United Nations, 1975) Social Accounting Matrices (SAMs) SAM's were originally developed at the “Cambridge Growth Project” in the UK (Stone and Brown, 1962). SAMs were extensively used by the World Bank for assessing development policies; SAMs form the backbone of Computable general equilibrium (CGE) Models

11 2008 SNA/ESA 2010 The European system ESA 2010 is based on the concepts of the 2008 SNA, which provides guidelines on national accounting for all countries throughout the world. The differences between the SNA 2008 and the ESA 2010 can be attributed to the specific role that results of national accounts play in the EU. The main difference is 2008 SNA has the character of a recommendation ESA 2010 is part of a Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council.

12 2008 SNA/ESA 2010 - differences Presentation:
ESA 2010 has separate chapters on transactions in products, distributive transactions and financial transactions. 2008 SNA chapters are arranged by account, e.g. chapters on the production account, the primary distribution of income account, the capital account and the rest of the world account ESA 2010 describes a concept by providing a definition and a listing of what is included and what is excluded. 2008 SNA describes concepts in general terms and explains the rationale behind the conventions adopted.

13 2008 SNA/ESA differences ESA 2010 is sometimes more specific than 2008 SNA: 2008 SNA does not contain specific criteria on the distinction between market output, output for own final use. and non-market output. ESA 2010 has detailed guidance to ensure a uniform approach. (2) ESA 2010 does not itemise household production of goods, such as the weaving of cloth and the making of furniture, which are not significant in Member States. (3) ESA 2010 makes reference to institutional arrangements in the EU, such as the Intrastat system for recording intra-EU flows of goods and the contributions by the Member States to the EU.

14 2008 SNA/ESA differences b) The ESA 2010 directly meets the needs of the EU: (4) The ESA 2010 contains EU-specific classifications, e.g. Classification of products by activity (CPA) for products and NACE Rev. 2 for industries (both are harmonised with the corresponding UN classifications). (5) The ESA 2010 classifies external transactions into those between residents of the EU and those with residents from outside the EU. (6) The ESA 2010 contains a rearrangement of the 2008 SNA subsectors for the financial corporations sector, to meet the needs of the European Monetary Union.

15 Thank you for your attention
CONTRACTOR IS ACTING UNDER A FRAMEWORK CONTRACT CONCLUDED WITH THE COMMISSION


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