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January 2003


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IED INFORMATION GUIDE: JANUARY 2003


The Industry Economics Division (IED) of the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) prepares and publishes a variety of economic statistics on industries. Specifically, it prepares the input-output accounts, the gross domestic product by industry accounts, and two satellite accounts--one for transportation and one for travel and tourism. As outlined below, the data are published in the Survey of Current Business (Survey) or other publications. Most of the data are also available on diskette (3 1/2" high density). NOTE that most IED data products previously available on diskettes are now also available as downloadable compressed files by clicking on the title of a diskette, or its BEA product ID number, in this Guide.

CONTENTS
  1. Input-Output Accounts for the U.S. Economy
    1. Overview and Uses
    2. Availability of Data
      1. Free Downloadable Data
      2. Purchased Data
    3. Availability of Survey Articles and Other Documents
      1. Online Articles
      2. Online Documents

  2. Gross Domestic Product by Industry Accounts
    1. Overview and Uses
    2. Availability of Data
      1. Free Downloadable Data
      2. Summary Data Tables
    3. Availability of Survey Articles

  3. U.S. Transportation Satellite Accounts
    1. Overview and Uses
    2. Availability of Data
    3. Availability of Survey Articles

  4. U.S. Travel and Tourism Satellite Accounts
    1. Overview and Uses
    2. Availability of Survey Articles

Telephone and E-mail Contacts for IED Data Users

How to Order


I. Input-Output Accounts for the U.S. Economy

A. Overview and uses

Overview

The input-output (I-O) accounts show how industries interact; specifically, they show how industries provide input to, and use output from, each other to produce gross domestic product. These accounts provide detailed information on the flows of the goods and services that make up the production processes of industries.

The Industry Economics Division (IED) prepares both benchmark and annual I-O accounts. The benchmark accounts are based on detailed data from the economic censuses conducted every 5 years by the Bureau of the Census. They are published at the summary level and at the detailed level. The annual accounts are prepared for selected years between the benchmarks. These accounts are based on less comprehensive data than the data from the censuses, and they are published at the summary level.

The I-O accounts are presented in five tables: A make table, a use table, a direct requirements table, and three total requirements tables. The make table shows the commodities that are produced by each industry. The use table shows the inputs to industry production and the commodities that are consumed by final users. The three requirements tables are derived from the make and the use tables. The direct requirements table shows the amount of a commodity that is required by an industry to produce a dollar of the industry's output. The three total requirements tables show the production that is required, directly and indirectly, from each industry and each commodity to deliver a dollar of a commodity to final users.

In addition, supplementary tables present more detailed information. For example, one table provides a bridge between the categories of producers' durable equipment in the national income and product accounts (NIPA's) and the commodities in gross private fixed investment in the I-O accounts. Another table, the capital flows table, shows the detailed types of new equipment and structures used by industries.

Uses of the accounts

The I-O accounts can be used to study industry production or as a framework for preparing other economic statistics. The accounts are an important tool for analysis because they show the production functions of individual industries and the interactions among producers and between producers and final users in the economy. Specifically, these accounts can be used

  • To estimate the direct and indirect effects of changes in final uses on industries and commodities; for example, to estimate the effects of a strike or a natural disaster on the economy, or, supplemented with additional information, to estimate the effects of an increase in U.S. exports on employment
  • To provide detail that is essential in determining weights for price indexes, such as the producer price index compiled by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and quantity indexes, such as the quantity index for gross domestic product by industry compiled by IED
  • To provide the basis for benchmarking the NIPA's every 5 years
  • To provide a framework and data for the preparation of other economic statistics, such as the transportation satellite accounts and the travel and tourism satellite accounts, both of which are prepared by IED

B. Availability of data

1. Free downloadable data

The I-O data products previously available on diskettes are now also available in downloadable compressed (self-extracting ZIP format) ASCII files. Click on the title of a diskette, or its BEA product ID number, listed below. (Opening Zipped Files Instructions)

Benchmark Tables

Title
BEA product ID number
1997 Benchmark Standard Make and Use Tables at the detailed level NDN-0306 (825kb)
1997 Benchmark Supplementary Make, Use and Direct Requirements Tables at the detailed level NDN-0307 (1.16Mb)
1997 Benchmark Summary Tables NDN-0305 (1.4Mb)
1997 Benchmark Commodity-by-Commodity Total Requirements after redefinitions at the detailed level NDN-0309 (1.24Mb)
1997 Benchmark Industry-by-Commodity Total Requirements after redefinitions at the detailed level NDN-0308 (1.38Mb)
1997 Benchmark Industry-by-Industry Total Requirements after redefinition at the detailed level NDN-0310 (1.42Mb)
1997 Benchmark Bridge tables to Personal Consumption Expenditures and Private Fixed Investment in Equipment and Software NDN-0311 (118kb)
1992 Benchmark I-O Table Six-Digit Transactions NDN-0178 (1.68Mb)
1992 Benchmark I-O Alternative Table Six-Digit Transactions NDN-0179 (1.09Mb)
1992 Benchmark I-O Table Two-Digit All NDN-0180 (411kb)
1992 Benchmark I-O Six-Digit Industry-by-Commodity Total Requirements NDN-0183 (1.34Mb)
1992 Benchmark I-O Commodity-by-Commodity Total Requirements NDN-0184 (1.28Mb)
1992 Benchmark I-O Composition of NIPA Final Demand NDN-0185 (217kb)
1992 Benchmark I-O PCE and PDE by NIPA Category NDN-0186 (140kb)
1992 Investment by Using Industries NDN-0224 (52kb)
1987 Benchmark I-O Table Six-Digit Transactions NDN-0016 (1.96Mb)
1987 Benchmark I-O Six-Digit Industry-by-Commodity Total Requirements NDN-0017 (1.29Mb)
1987 Benchmark I-O Six-Digit Commodity-by-Commodity Total Requirements NDN-0018 (1.29Mb)
1987 Benchmark I-O Table Two-Digit All Make and Use NDN-0019 (358kb)
1987 Benchmark I-O Composition of NIPA Final Demand NDN-0020 (201kb)
1987 Benchmark I-O PCE and PDE by NIPA Category NDN-0021(66kb)
1987 Annual I-O Study NDN-0027 (213kb)
1982 Benchmark I-O Six-Digit Transactions NDN-0025 (1.12Mb)
1982 Benchmark I-O Six-Digit Commodity-by-Commodity Total Requirements NDN-0026 (1.44Mb)
1982 Benchmark Detailed Workfile Transactions and Notes NDN-0028 (1.54Mb)
1982 Benchmark I-O Two-Digit All NDN-0125 (223kb)
1982 Benchmark I-O Six-Digit Commodity-by-Commodity Total Requirements NDN-0127 (62kb)
1982 Investment by Using Industries /*/ NDN-0277 (61.6kb)
/*/ The estimates provided in these files are not official; they are considered somewhat less reliable than other estimates, but they are made available for research purposes.

Annual Tables

Title
BEA product ID number
1999 Annual I-O Table Two-Digit NDN-0313 (890kb)
1998 Annual I-O Table Two-Digit NDN-0291 (934kb)
1997 Annual I-O Table Two-Digit NDN-0271 (452kb)
1996 Annual I-O Table Two-Digit NDN-0247 (689kb)

2. Purchased data

The following publications are available from the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office (click here for ordering information):

Title
Stock number
Price
Benchmark Input-Output Accounts of the United States, 1992 003-010-00275-1 $31.00
Benchmark Input-Output Accounts of the United States, 1987 003-010-00251-4 $36.00

Note that the methodology and appendixes of the first publication mentioned above are also available online.

C. Availability of Survey articles and other documents

For detailed information and analysis, see the following articles that were published either in the Survey of Current Business (Survey), the monthly journal of BEA, or in separate documents:

1. Online articles

    More recent article

    Other articles

2. Online document

The methodology and appendixes (in one document) of the publication mentioned above in I.B.2, Benchmark Input-Output Accounts of the United States, 1992


II. Gross Domestic Product by Industry Accounts

A. Overview and uses

Overview

The Industry Economics Division (IED) prepares estimates of gross domestic product (GDP) by industry. GDP by industry is a measure of the contribution of each private industry and of government to the Nation's gross domestic product. It is defined as an industry's gross output less its purchases of intermediate inputs. (Gross output consists of sales or receipts and other operating income, commodity taxes, and inventory change; intermediate inputs consist of the goods and services that are purchased for use in production from other industries or imported.)

IED prepares estimates of GDP by industry for 62 private industries and 4 government classifications (Federal general government and government enterprises and State and local general government and government enterprises). These estimates indicate the industry shares of current-dollar GDP, the composition of current-dollar GDP by industry, and the relative performance of industries in terms of quantity indexes and real growth rates. In addition, IED prepares estimates of the contributions to the growth in real GDP by industry groups because measures based on chained dollars are not additive and because the associated contributions to the growth in real GDP can be misleading for years far from the reference year.

IED also prepares estimates of current-dollar GDP by industry by detailed income component, estimates of current-dollar and real gross output and intermediate inputs for selected industries, and price measures for GDP by industry, gross output, and intermediate inputs.

Uses of the accounts

The estimates of GDP by industry can be used to examine changes in the structure of the U.S. economy and the importance of an industry and its contribution to GDP. Specifically, the estimates can be used

  • To identify changes in labor and capital shares
  • To study production, capacity, and productivity across industries
  • To compare price changes across industries

B. Availability of data

1. Free downloadable data

The GDP by industry data products previously available on diskettes are now also available in downloadable compressed (self-extracting ZIP format) ASCII files. Click on the title of a diskette, or its BEA product ID number, listed below: (Opening Zipped Files Instructions)

Title
BEA product ID number
1947-2001 Gross Domestic Product by Industry And the Components of Gross Domestic Product
NDN-0302 (550kb)
1977-2001 Gross Output by Detailed Industry
NDN-0303 (198kb)
1977-2001 Shipments of Manufacturing Industries
NDN-0304 (353kb)

NOTE: A free download has now replaced the GDP by Industry and Gross State Product CD-ROM (RCN-0265). Click on Gross State Product.

2. Summary data tables (HTML format):

C. Availability of Survey articles

For detailed information and analysis, see the following online articles that were published in the Survey of Current Business (Survey), the monthly journal of BEA:

    More recent articles

    Other articles


III. U.S. Transportation Satellite Accounts

A. Overview and uses

Overview

The U.S. transportation satellite accounts (TSA's) show a detailed picture of transportation services and their role in the U.S. economy. These accounts were jointly developed by the Industry Economics Division (IED) and by the Bureau of Transportation Statistics in the U.S. Department of Transportation in order to more accurately measure the contribution of transportation activities to the U.S. economy.

These accounts present estimates of both transportation services that are hired and transportation services that a firm provides for its own use (own account). The estimates are presented in dollars rather than in the more usual physical units.

The TSA's consist of four tables--a make table, a use table, a direct requirements table, and a total requirements table. These tables are based on the input-output tables, but they have been expanded to include own-account transportation services as a commodity and as an industry. The make table shows the commodities that are produced by each industry. The use table shows the factors of that production--the commodities, or intermediate inputs, and the labor and capital, or value added--and the commodities that are consumed by final users. The direct requirements table shows the amount of a commodity that is required by an industry to produce a dollar of the industry's output. The total requirements table shows the production that is required, directly and indirectly, from each industry to deliver a dollar of a commodity to final users.

Uses of the accounts

The TSA's can be used to determine the size of the transportation activities in the U.S. economy and the contribution of transportation to gross output and gross domestic product. Specifically, the accounts can be used

  • To identify the industries that account for the most transportation activities
  • To estimate the proportion of services that are hired and that are provided by firms (own-account services)
  • To identify the industries that are the biggest users of transportation services
  • To estimate the share of transportation services in the production costs of these industries
  • To estimate the shares of government spending and business spending for transportation-related structures and equipment, such as highways and trucks

B. Availability of data

The TSA's data products previously available on diskettes are now also available in down-loadable compressed (self-extracting ZIP format) ASCII files. Click on the title of a diskette, or its BEA product ID number, listed below: (Opening Zipped Files Instructions)

Title
BEA product ID number
1996 Transportation Satellite Accounts NDN-0252 (284kb)
1992 Transportation Satellite Accounts Summary Two-Digit NDN-0193 (280kb)
1992 Transportation Satellite Accounts Input Structure Six-Digit NDN-0194 (1.95Mb)
1992 Transportation Satellite Accounts Industry-by-Commodity Six-Digit NDN-0195 (1.06Mb)

C. Availability of Survey articles

For detailed information and analysis, see the following online articles published in the Survey of Current Business (Survey), the monthly journal of BEA:


IV. U.S. Travel and Tourism Satellite Accounts

A. Overview and uses

Overview

The U.S. Travel and Tourism Satellite Accounts (TTSA's) show a detailed picture of the travel and tourism industries and their role in the U.S. economy. These accounts were developed by the Industry Economics Division (IED), with the support of the Tourism Industries Office of the International Trade Administration, in order to more accurately measure the contribution of travel and tourism to the economy.

These accounts present estimates of the expenditures by tourists, or visitors, for 20 types of commodities and estimates of the output of 20 travel and tourism industries. The accounts also present estimates of income generated by travel and tourism and estimates of employment in the travel and tourism industries.

The TTSA's are extensions of the U.S. input-output accounts. The methods used to prepare the TTSA's are consistent with the methods used to estimate U.S. gross domestic product (GDP), national income, and other national economic measures.

The TTSA's show

  • Total sales of travel industries, such as airlines, and of tourism industries, such as hotels
  • Expenditures for tourism as a share of GDP
  • Value added by tourism industries
  • Employment and employee compensation accounted for by the travel and tourism industries
  • Demand for tourism as measured by tourists' spending

Uses of the accounts

The TTSA's can be used to determine the size of tourism and the components of travel and tourism. Specifically, these accounts can be used

  • To determine the shares of the goods and services that were sold to visitors and the shares that were sold to local residents
  • To assess the effects of travel and tourism on the U.S. economy
  • To examine the relationships among the travel and tourism industries
  • To determine the expenditures of tourists
  • To compare travel and tourism industries to other manufacturing and services industries

B. Availability of Survey articles

For detailed information and analysis, see the following online articles that were published in the Survey of Current Business (Survey), the monthly journal of BEA:


TELEPHONE AND E-MAIL CONTACTS FOR DATA USERS - Industry Economics Division

Benchmark Input-Output Accounts:

Subject
Contact person
Telephone number
E-mail address
General Ted Morgan (202) 606-5584 benchmarkio@bea.gov
Manufacturing, mining, agriculture Belinda Bonds (202) 606-5584 benchmarkio@bea.gov
Consumer services Mahnaz Fahim-Nader (202) 606-5584 benchmarkio@bea.gov
Business services Kurt Bersani (202) 606-5584 benchmarkio@bea.gov
Final uses Belinda Bonds (202) 606-5584 benchmarkio@bea.gov
Capital Flows Bill McCarthy (202) 606-5584 benchmarkio@bea.gov


Annual Input-Output Accounts:

Subject
Contact person
Telephone number
E-mail address
General Mark Planting (202) 606-5584 annualio@bea.gov


Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by Industry Accounts:

Subject
Contact person
Telephone number
E-mail address
General Brian Moyer (202) 606-5307 gdpbyindustry@bea.gov
Current-dollar GDP by Industry: Levels, shares, and composition Felicia Candela or Sherlene Lum (202) 606-5307 gdpbyindustry@bea.gov
Real GDP by Industry: Chained-dollars, indexes, and contributions Robert McCahill or Brian Moyer (202) 606-5307 gdpbyindustry@bea.gov


U.S. Transportation Satellite Accounts:

Subject
Contact person
Telephone number
E-mail address
General Ann M. Lawson (202) 606-5584 industryaccts@bea.gov


U.S. Travel and Tourism Satellite Accounts:

Subject
Contact person
Telephone number
E-mail address
General Sumiye Okubo (202) 606-9612 industrysatellites@bea.gov


BEA Public Information Office: (202) 606-9900


How to Order

In general, all items described here can be obtained by following the instructions below. Please be sure to mail order forms and payment to the agency that sells the items that you wish to obtain. Also note that prices are subject to change.

A. Publications and diskettes

1. The data on industry accounts are published in the Survey of Current Business (Survey) or other publications. Most data are also available on diskette at a price of $20.00 per diskette. NOTE that most IED data products previously available on diskette are now also available as downloadable compressed files by clicking on the title of a diskette, or its BEA product ID number, in this Guide.

The Survey is the monthly journal of the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) and is available from the Superintendent of Documents (see below). Annual subscription: Domestic first-class mail $95.00; domestic second-class mail $50.00, foreign second-class mail $62.50. Single copy: domestic $22.00, foreign $27.50. International customers please add an additional 25 percent.

Note: Beginning with the January 1998 issue, the Survey is available free of charge in PDF on BEA's Web site.

To order IED publications or diskettes from BEA, customers within the United States please call 1-800-704-0415; customers outside the United States please call (202) 606-9666; or send the BEA ORDER FORM to:

BEA Order Desk, BE-53
Bureau of Economic Analysis
U.S. Department of Commerce
Washington, D.C. 20230

Please specify the title of the publication or diskette, its BEA product ID number, number of copies, and price; include a check or money order made payable to "Bureau of Economic Analysis, BE-53" or credit card (Visa or MasterCard only) information.

2. To order the Survey and other BEA publications from the Superintendent of Documents, go to bookstore.gpo.gov or mail the GPO ORDER FORM and payment to:

Superintendent of Documents
P.O. Box 371954
Pittsburgh, PA 15250-7954

Please specify the publication's title, stock number, number of copies, and price; include a check or money order made payable to "Superintendent of Documents." International customers, please add an additional 25 percent.

Orders may also be placed by telephone (202) 512-1800 (8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. EST, M-F) and by Fax (202) 512-2250 (24 hours a day).

B. News Releases

BEA's news releases are available on www.bea.gov within minutes of their release.


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