Title: The Final Consumption Expenditure of Households in Korea
1The Final Consumption Expenditure of Households
in Korea
- Sangkyo HAN
- National Accounts Coordination Team
- Economic Statistics Department
2Contents
- Introduction
- GDP by Expenditure Approach
- Estimation Method of the Final Consumption
Expenditure of Household - Household Income Expenditure Survey Evaluation
3I. Introduction
- Korean System of National Accounts
- Introduction of 1993 SNA in 2004 at the time of
the 9th rebasing from 1995 to 2000 - Additional implementation to 1993 SNA at the time
of the 10th rebasing from 2000 to 2005 - E.g. introduction of chain-linking method,
recognition of valuables as a separate item of
gross capital formation - 2008 SNA intended to be introduced in 2014 at the
time of the 11th rebasing from 2005 to 2010
4I. Introduction
- Three aspects from which Korean National Accounts
statistics are measured - Production, Expenditure, Distribution
- Broadly known as production approach, expenditure
approach and income approach - The final GDP aggregates are determined as GDP by
production activities.
5I. Introduction
- GDP by production
- Data sources survey data from the Statistics
Korea, the BOKs self survey data and
administrative data from government agencies such
as the National Tax Services (NTS) - GDP by expenditure
- Data sources survey data from the Statistics
Korea, corporate financial statement,
administrative data, customs clearance statistics
and BOP statistics, etc - GDP by income(compiled annually for nominal
value) - Data sources GDP estimates by production and
expenditure, data from government and social
security agencies, administrative data from the
NTS, business analysis data and employment
statistics
6Flow Chart on the Compilation of National
Accounts Statistics
7II. GDP by Expenditure Approach
- Conventional Estimating Process by Commodity Flow
Method (CFM) - Calculate domestic gross output in production
side - Derive total final demand by adding imports and
deducting intermediate consumption and exports - Calculate each expenditure item by multiplying
the total final demand by the weight of each item
stemmed from I/O table in base year
8II. GDP by Expenditure Approach
The conventional estimating process by CFM
Total supply (Gross domestic output Imports) Intermediate consumption Exports Total domestic demand Final consumption expenditure
Total supply (Gross domestic output Imports) Intermediate consumption Exports Total domestic demand Final consumption expenditure
Total supply (Gross domestic output Imports) ? Intermediate consumption ? Exports Total domestic demand Final consumption expenditure
Total supply (Gross domestic output Imports) ? Intermediate consumption ? Exports Total domestic demand Final consumption expenditure
Total supply (Gross domestic output Imports) ? Intermediate consumption ? Exports Total domestic demand Fixed investment
Total supply (Gross domestic output Imports) ? Intermediate consumption ? Exports Total domestic demand Fixed investment
Total supply (Gross domestic output Imports) Intermediate consumption Exports Total domestic demand Fixed investment
Total supply (Gross domestic output Imports) Intermediate consumption Exports Total domestic demand Inventories
Total supply (Gross domestic output Imports) Intermediate consumption Exports Total domestic demand Inventories
Total supply (Gross domestic output Imports) Intermediate consumption Exports Total domestic demand Inventories
(weight on total domestic demand)
9II. GDP by Expenditure Approach
- Problems revealed in CFM approach
- Lack of independence in the estimates for some
expenditure components of GDP - Introduction of new statistical techniques
employing both the supply-side and the
demand-side statistics - Identifying economic trends more accurately by
coping with changing statistical environments and
by incorporating much more statistical data - Enhancing accuracy, reliability of statistics,
and transparency - Ensuring objectivity of the estimation process
recommended by IMF
10III. Estimation Method of the Final Consumption
Expenditure of Household
- Calculate base year and annual(final) figures
based on consumer expenditure data - Calculate annual(preliminary) figures by sum of
quarterly (preliminary) figures - Calculate quarterly (preliminary) figures by
extrapolating alternative indicators with the
year-on-year rates of change from the same period
of the previous year - Nominal figures by item and the total are
estimated then real figures are calculated using
a deflation method (deflatormainly CPI)
11Major Source Data Related to Household Final
Consumption Expenditure
Title Organiza- tion Cycle Date of release Survey method Major information
Census of Service Industry Statistics Korea Every 5 year Mar of the two years after reference date Face-to-face interview (investigator's entry) Sales by sub-classes, the sales ratio to consumers, etc. for the service industry(excluding transportation sector)
Wholesale and Retail Survey ? Annual Dec of the following year ? Sales by industry of the wholesale and retail sectors for non-base year
Service Industry Survey ? ? ? ? Sales of service industry for non-base year
Transport Survey ? ? Aug of the following year ? Sales of the transportation industry
Household Income and Expenditure Survey ? Monthly Quarterly (10th day of the second following month) Housekeeping book (respondent's entry) Volume, structure and trend of income expenditure of households
Retail Sales Statistics ? ? Monthly (following month-end) Face-to-face interview (investigator's entry) Trend of retail sales in terms of business type and group of goods
Service Industry Activity Index ? ? ? ? Value and volume indexes on sales-basis for the service industry
Shipment for domestic market ? ? ? ? Producers' sales activities and trend of shipment of the mining and manufacturing industry by item.
12III-i. Estimation Method in Reference year
- Final consumption expenditure of household
- Total expenditure in domestic market
- Direct purchases in domestic market
- by non-resident households
- Direct purchases abroad by resident households
13III-i. Estimation Method in Reference year
- Total expenditure in domestic market
- Total expenditure of goods
- Estimated based on sales by industry using ratios
of selling to household consumers in the Census
of Service Industry - Disaggregated for expenditures by item using
Household Income Expenditure Survey and other
sources - Total expenditures on services
- Based on the Census of Service Industry,
Household Income Expenditure Survey, and et
cetera
14III-i. Estimation Method in Reference year
- Direct purchases abroad by residents
- /Direct purchases in domestic market by
non-residents - Compiled based on the estimates of the external
transaction account - Estimate data by reclassifying Balance of
Payments statistics (e.g. travel services and
credit card usage)
15III-ii. Estimation Method in Current year
- Nominal value estimation method in current year
- Principally calculated in the same method as in
reference year - Estimated on different grounding sources
- E.g. Whole and Retail Trade Survey, The
Service Industry Survey, The Service Industry
Activity Index, et cetera (instead of The
Census of Services Industry)
16III-ii. Estimation Method in Current year
- Real value estimation in current year
- Estimated by dividing nominal value into related
deflators - Nominal value exists under the COICOP
classification system - Add up nominal and real values by COICOP code to
obtain the final consumption expenditure of
households by purpose and by type
17III-ii. Estimation Method in Current year
- Direct Purchases by residents and non-residents
- Compiled based on external transaction account
estimates - Deflators for Direct Purchases Abroad by
Residents Exchange-rate adjusted consumer price
index of major travel countries - Deflators for Direct Purchases in Domestic Market
by Non-residents Domestic consumer price index
18V. Household Income Expenditure Survey
- Differences between National Accounts Statistics
and Household Income Expenditure Survey - Coverage (by subjects or by items)
- Bias due to the limitation of sampling method
- Classification system
- Limited compatibility between National Account
and Household Income Expenditure Survey (HIES)
19?. Household Income Expenditure Survey
- Coverage by Subjects
- National Accounts Households NPISHs
- HIES Households only!
- In addition, HIES excludes certain households1)
- 1) Farm and Fishery HHs, Communal HHs and HHs
running restaurant and hotels in their own
houses - The Coverage Ratio is 90.5
20?. Household Income Expenditure Survey
- Bias inherent in Sampling Method (HIES)
- Non-response rate tends to be high in high-income
HHS. - On average, non-response rate was 18.9 in 2008
- Under-reporting could happen, especially in
- Income Self-employment income, property income
- Consumption Sin item (i.e. tobacco, alcoholic
beverages) - Sampling bias has been reported frequently in
many comparative studies carried out in many OECD
countries.
21?. Household Income Expenditure Survey
- Different Classification Systems
- Classification Systems are different
- Ex) Withdrawal from income of Quasi-corporations
- Property Income (National Accounts) vs.
- Income for
Self-Employment (HIES)
22?. Household Income Expenditure Survey
- USE of HIES in Compiling GDP statistics
- Total amount of income/expenditure/savings
Pointless - Absolute value by item level Limited
- Desirable to use detailed goods/service-level
information(mainly increase rate) of HIES
to estimate National Accounts
23?. Household Income Expenditure Survey
- USE of HIES Income Sector
- HIES mainly as a reference
- Only a few items are directly applicable
- Household Survey
- Current transfers between households (in current
transfer paid) - ?
- National Accounts
- Current transfers between households (in other
current transfers)
24?. Household Income Expenditure Survey
- USE of HIES Personal Consumption Sector
- HIES is More useful than Income Sector because
- Many items are comparable in concepts or in
classification system between HIES and Personal
Consumption - Subdivision of HIES items are most detailed
- Use of item-level absolute value (Benchmark year)
- Private tutoring fee, residence related services,
household services, and etc. (of course, after
parameterization)
25?. Household Income Expenditure Survey
- USE of HIES Personal Consumption Sector (contd)
- Use of weights information among items
- clothing and footwear related services,
furniture, furnishings and household equipment
and operation related services, and etc. - First, Estimate total amount based on the Census
of Service Industry and apply the HIES weights - Use of increase rate
- In most items
- Retail Control Method determine total amount
based on other statistics such as Whole and
Retail Trade Survey
26Thank you