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

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Page 1: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

Why is GDP revised?

Andrew WaltonAssistant Deputy DirectorNational Accounts Coordination Division

2 October 2013

Page 2: 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?

Page 3: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

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

Page 4: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

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)

Page 5: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

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

Page 6: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

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

Page 7: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

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

Page 8: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

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

Page 9: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

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

Page 10: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013
Page 11: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013
Page 12: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013
Page 13: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013
Page 14: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013
Page 15: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013
Page 16: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013
Page 17: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013
Page 18: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013
Page 19: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013
Page 20: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013
Page 21: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

The Recession: Q1 2008 to Q3 2009

Page 22: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

The Recession: Q1 2008 to Q3 2009

Page 23: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

Revisions to Growth

• Preliminary to QNA growth• Last 26 periods• Average -0.01 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• Q4 2009 revised by 0.3 p.p• Q1 2009 revised by -0.5 p.p (Blue Book)

• No benefit in delaying preliminary estimate from 25 days to 13 weeks

Page 24: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

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 2007• -0.2 p.p for period 2008 to 2010

• Absolute average revisions higher• 0.4 p.p for period 1998 to 2007• 0.5 p.p for period 2008 to 2010

• Impact of methodological changes• Continue to monitor closely

Page 25: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

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

Page 26: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013
Page 27: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

Nominal Revisions at 2nd estimate

Page 28: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

CVM revisions on the same basis

Page 29: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

CVM revisions at 1st balanced BB

Page 30: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

Nominal GDP at 1st balanced BB

Page 31: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

CVM GDP revisions across vintages

Page 32: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

Nominal GDP revs across vintages

Page 33: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

Total updates - CVM

Page 34: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

Total updates – Nominal GDP

Page 35: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

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

Page 36: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

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

Page 37: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

References

Revisions policy

http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/guide-method/method-quality/specific/economy/revisions/economic-statistics/national-accounts-revisions-policy.pdf

Detail of Supply and Use tables structure

http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/guide-method/method-quality/specific/economy/input-output/input-output-supply-and-use-tables-structure-overview.pdf

Revisions triangles

http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/publications/re-reference-tables.html?edition=tcm%3A77-240821

Improvements to the measurement of Insurance Services

http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/guide-method/method-quality/specific/economy/national-accounts/methodology-and-articles/2011-present/blue-book-2012-insurance-services/index.html

Various National Accounts articles, including "National Accounts: A short guide"

http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/guide-method/method-quality/specific/economy/national-accounts/methodology-and-articles/2011-present/index.html

Why is GDP revised article from June 2013

http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/guide-method/method-quality/specific/economy/national-accounts/articles/2011-present/why-is-gdp-revised-/updated-analysis--why-is-gdp-revised-.pdf

Page 38: Why is GDP revised? Andrew Walton Assistant Deputy Director National Accounts Coordination Division 2 October 2013

Questions

Email: [email protected]