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Home > National Income and Product Accounts


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1 See also
National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA) use double entry accounting to report the monetary value and sources of output produced in a country and the distribution of incomes that production generates. Data are available at the national and industry level.

The example is from the United States but the concept is general, varying mainly in the ways different countries collect taxes. The most recent U.S. report (updated quarterly) is available in several forms, including interactive, from links on the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) NIPA ([1]) page.

The NIPA summarizes national income on the left (debit, revenue) side and national product on the right (credit, expense) side of a two-column accounting report. The bottom line on both sides of the report is labeled " Gross Domestic Product." Since the report summarizes a set of accounts generated according to accepted practices, GDP must have the same value on both sides; income and expenditure must balance. The left side is presented first for convenient screen display.

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1 Accounting for National Income: The Left Side of the Report

The income side of the National Income and Product Account report begins with the kinds of income people might have. Employee compensation includes the wages and salaries paid to anyone whose income is subject to income tax withholding. Since wages and salaries affect more individuals and families directly than the other sources of income, it has by far the largest value.

1.1 Table 1: The Revenue Uses of GDP

National Income and Product Accounts of the U.S.
[Billions of current US$]
Income Accounts 1   2003
Employee compensation 2   6,289.00
Proprietors' income with IVA and CCA 3   834.10
Rental income of persons with CCA   153.80
Corporate profits with IVA and CCA 4   1,021.10
Net interest and miscellaneous payments   543.00
Taxes on production and imports   798.10
Less: Subsidies   46.70
Business current transfer payments (net)   77.70
Current surplus of government enterprises   9.50
National Income (NI)   9,679.60
Statistical discrepancy   25.60
Net National Product (NNP)   9,705.20
Consumption of fixed capital   1,353.90
Gross National Product (GNP)   11,059.10
Plus: Income payments to the rest of the world   273.90
Less: Income receipts from the rest of the world   329.00
Gross domestic product (GDP) 5   11,004.00
    =========


Proprieters' income is the payments to those who own non-corporate businesses, including sole proprieters and partners. Inventory Value Adjustment (IVA) and Capital Consumption Adjustment (CCA) are corrections for changes in the value of proprieter's inventory (goods that may be sold within one year) and capital (goods like machines and buildings that are not expected to be sold within one year) under rules set by the U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS).

Rental income of persons excludes rent paid to corporate real estate companies. Real estate is capital rather than inventory by definition, so there is no IVA.

Corporate profits with IVA and CCA is like the entries for proprieters' income and rental income except that the organization is a corporation. Corporate profit is shown before taxes, which are part of Taxes on Production and imports, two lines down.

Net interest and miscellaneous pyments is interest paid minus interest received plus payments to individuals and corporations that are not elsewhere classified (NEC). Taxes on production and imports includes corporate income tax payments to the states and to the federal government. While the report includes the net value of interest payments and receipts, both the taxes paid and subsidies from the government are shown.

National Income (NI) is the sum of employees, proprieters, rental, coporate, interest, and government income less the subsidies government pays to any of those groups.

Net National Product (NNP) is National Income plus or minus the statistical discrepancy that accumulates when aggregating data from millions of individual reports. In this case, the statistical discrepancy is US$25.6 billion, or about 0.23% of Gross Domestic Product. A discrepency that small (less than three-tenths of one percent) is immaterial under accounting standards.

Gross National Product (GNP) is Net National Product plus an allowance for the consumption of fixed capital, mostly buildings and machines, usually called depreciation. Capital is used up in production but it does not vanish.

Finally, Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is Gross National Product plus payments from the rest of the world that are income to residents of the U.S. minus payments from the U.S. to the rest of the world that count as income where they are received.



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