National Accounts |
Brief Introduction |
Statistics on national accounts
include mainly four components, namely, gross domestic product, input-output
table, flow of fund table and balance of payment. |
I. Gross Domestic Product |
The data on GDP and its industrial composition are calculated by the Department of National Economic Accounting, National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) with various approaches in the light of the features of various sectors and the data sources. The value added in some sectors is calculated with the production approach. The value added in other sectors is calculated with the income approach. Finally, the GDP is the result of the sum of the value added of various sectors. This is the standard data of GDP. The GDP calculated with the expenditure approach equals to the sum of final consumption, total capital formation and the net export of goods and services. However, the GDP data obtained with expenditure approach is not equal to the standard data of GDP calculated with the method mentioned above. The difference between the two figures is called statistical discrepancy. to avoid confusion in use the concerned indicators, the following names of the indicators are stipulated by the Department of National Economic Accounting, NBS: (1) the GDP calculated with the production approach and the income approach is simply called GDP; (2) the index of GDP calculated with the production approach and the income approach is simply called the index of GDP; (3) the GDP calculated by expenditure approach is called GDP calculated with expenditure approach. The gross national product can be calculated as the sum of the standard data of GDP and the net factor income from abroad. |
The data on the national
accounts of the latest year published in this statistical yearbook are not
final and are subject to changes. When it happens to be a census year, the
data of GDP of the past years may also be revised. In 1995, the GDP figures
of the past years were adjusted in accordance with the result of the first tertiary
industry census. The data published in this yearbook are the adjusted data. The
regional data in the table are prepared according to the data of national
accounts provided by the statistical bureaus of the provinces, autonomous
regions and municipalities directly under the central government. The sum of
the regional data is not equal to the national total. |
II. Input-output Table |
The 1997 Input-output Table of China included in this chapter is compiled by the Department of National Accounts of the National Bureau of Statistics. Expressed in value terms at current prices, the 1997 Input-output Table of China still takes the metric form of product-by-product sectors as was in the 1992 Input-output table (please refer to the condensed table of 1717 sectors). Features and changes of the 1997 input-output table are summarized as follows. |
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2) In terms of indicators
selected for the table, nomenclature and concepts of indicators in the 1997
input-output Table of China were revised and standardized in the light of the
requirements of the national accounts system, in order to ensure the internal
consistency of the Chinese national accounts system. For instance,
“government consumption” is used to replace “social consumption”, and “final
consumption” is used to replace “aggregate consumption”. Names of industries
and sectors are kept consistent with corresponding nomenclature in the new
national accounts system of |
3) in terms of the size of the table, the size and classification of the 1997 Input-output Table is designed in line with the new industrial classification of China Industrial Classification and Codes of the National Economy, GB/T4754-94 , in order to meet the needs of China’s economic development and the macroeconomic analysis. It is, on the one hand, fully compatible with the current accounting and statistics coverage, and on the other hand, basically comparable with the main category classification of the 1992 Input-output Table. The 1997 Input-output Table has 124 industries or 5 industries more than the 1992 table. It is worth mentioning that the industries are designed in line with the principles of the industrial classification of the 1997 Input-output Table, rather than a simple change in the number of industries out from the 1992 Input-output Table. Among the 124 industries, there are 5 industries for agriculture, 8 industries for mining and quarrying, 72 industries for manufacturing, 1 industry for wastes and residuals, 3 industries for the production and supply of power, gas and water, 1 industries for construction, 10 industries for the material and non-material sectors of transportation, 1 industry for storage, 2 industries for post and telecommunications, 2 industries for trade and catering service, and 19 industries for other services. |
The 1997 Input-output Table of China is the fifth input-output table compiled by the National Bureau of Statistics, the four preceding ones being the input-output tables of 1987, 1990, 1992 and 1995. To facilitate readers in understanding the basic framework of the input-output table in order to make better use of it for the analysis of the performance of the national economy, a brief introduction of the input-output table is given in the following paragraphs. |
Reflecting the sources of the
input into, and the utilization of the output from production by various
industries of the national economy, the input-output table constitutes an
important part of the new national economic accounting system of |
Quadrant III is the horizontal extension of Quadrant I. It has the same column headings with Quadrant I and its row headings consists of primary input such as depreciation of fixed capital, compensation of labour, net taxes of production and operating surplus. This part of the input-output table illustrates the composition of value-added (i.e. the primary input) of various industries, representing the primary distribution of the gross national product). Quadrant I and Quadrant III together represent the source of input of industries in the production process and the value component of their products, i.e. the quantity of intermediate input and value-added. Inter-connected with each other, the 3 quadrants of the input-output table comprehensively and systematically reflect the relations (both the aggregate and the structure) between different industries from production to final use. |
III. Flow of Fund Table Published for the
second time, the flow of fund tables of China for the years 1992-1996 in this
chapter are results of revision and extension of the flow of fund tables for
years 1992-1995 as published in the 1998 edition of Statistical Yearbook
of China. They were compiled jointly by the National Accounts Department
of the National Bureau of Statistics and the Survey and Statistics Department
of the People's Bank of China. |
Similar to internationally accepted
format, the flow of fund table of |
The financial transaction part
of the table is compiled mainly using accounting data of banks and other financial
institutions, supplemented by special surveys and estimation. Data used
include accounting and business reports of financial institutions, statistics
on credits and loans, profits and losses statements, profits distribution
reports, statistics on the financial transactions with the rest of the world,
statistics on the issue and transfer of securities, balance of payment
statistics, statistics on the circulation of currencies, etc. |
IV. Balance of Payment Table the balance of
payment table in this chapter was compiled by the Balance of Payment
Department of the State Administration of Foreign Exchanges. Efforts on
establishing |