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Gross Fixed Capital Formation

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Millions of Dollars. Business & Public Administrations. Two ... Material costs (e.g. ties, sand, stone, steel, etc.) Labour costs (SEPH) Detailed Approaches ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Gross Fixed Capital Formation


1
Gross Fixed Capital Formation

  • Concepts
  • Total value of acquisitions, less disposals, of
    fixed assets during the accounting period, plus
    certain additions to the value of non-produced
    assets owing to the productive activity of
    institutional units.
  • Fixed assets are tangible or intangible assets
    which are produced as outputs from production
    processes and which are themselves used
    repeatedly or continuously in other production
    processes for more than one year.

2
Tangible Fixed Assets
  • Acquisitions, less disposals, of new and existing
    tangible fixed assets, sub-divided by type of
    asset into
  • Dwellings
  • Other buildings and structures
  • Machinery and equipment
  • Cultivated assets trees and livestock - that
    are used repeatedly or continuously to obtain
    products such as fruit, rubber, milk, etc.

3
Intangible Fixed Assets
  • Aquisitions, less disposals of new or existing
    intangible fixed assets, sub-divided by type of
    asset into
  • Mineral exploration
  • Software
  • Entertainment, literary or artistic originals
  • Other intangible fixed assets.

4
Others
  • Major improvements to non-produced tangible
    assets, including land.
  • Costs of transfers of ownership of produced and
    non-produced assets.

5
Gross Fixed Capital FormationBusiness and
Government
  • Three main categories
  • Residential Construction
  • Non-Residential Construction
  • Machinery and Equipment

6
Business Residential Construction
7
New Residential Construction
  • Singles, doubles, rows and apartments
    (Work-put-in-place)
  • housing starts Central Mortgage and Housing
    Corporation ( CMHC )
  • average value of building permits Building
    Permits Survey
  • work put in place coefficients

8
Other New Construction
  • Cottages, mobile homes and conversions
  • Building Permits Survey
  • Supplementary costs
  • Goods and services Tax
  • Provincial Sales Tax
  • Land developer fees
  • Other supplementary costs
  • Data published on a monthly basis by Investment
    and Capital Stock Division ( ICSD)

9
Alterations and Improvements
  • Included are all works that improve the quality
    of the dwelling and extend its service life
  • e.g. - replacement of carpets
  • - replacement of roof
  • - installation of fixed electrical home
    appliances
  • Repair work is recorded in personal consumer
    expenditures under services.

10
Alterations and Improvements(Annual Estimates)
  • National and provincial annual estimates
  • Renovation expenditures undertaken by
  • Owner occupants
  • Landlords
  • Cottage owners
  • Renters
  • Survey of Household Spending SHS
  • Homeowners Repairs and Renovations Survey - HRRS

11
FAMEX /SHS Family Expenditure Survey or Survey
of Household Spending HRRS Homeowners Repair
and Renovations Survey (discontinued in
2002) IEAD SNA estimate
12
Alterations and Improvements (Quarterly Sources)
  • Building permits for renovations (source ICSD )
  • Sales of building materials such as
  • building supplies,
  • metal products,
  • lumber and millwork.
  • ( source Wholesale Trade Survey )
  • And information for home furniture stores, home
    centres and hardware stores and other building
    material and garden equipment dealers. (source
    Retail Trade Survey )

13
Ownership Transfer Costs
  • Annual sources of data
  • Real Estate Agents and Brokers Survey
  • Multiple Listing Service MLS
  • Survey of Household Spending SHS
  • Quarterly source
  • Multiple Listing Service MLS
  • the number of units sold and
  • the average sale price.

14
Deflation
  • New residential construction
  • New House Price Index NHPI excluding land
    (Prices Division)
  • Single family dwellings
  • Semi-detached dwellings
  • Row houses
  • Apartment Building Construction Price Index
  • Apartments

15
Deflation
  • Alterations and Improvements
  • Renovations Price Index (estimated in IEAD)
  • Cost of Labour ( 60 ) ( Survey of Employment,
    Payrolls and Hours)
  • Cost of Materials ( 40 ) ( Materials by type
    such as lumber, pipes, etc. )
  • Transfer Costs
  • Indexed average selling price of existing homes
    sold from Multiple Listing Services (MLS)

16
Non-Residential Construction
  • New non-residential construction (work put in
    place)
  • Additions and major renovations
  • Conversions and alterations that extend the life
    of an existing asset
  • Transfer costs
  • Capitalized costs (architectural, legal and
    engineering fees and interest)

17
Total Non-residential Construction
18
Business Public Administrations
  • Two categories
  • Building construction
  • e.g. hotels, office buildings, railway stations,
    schools and shopping centres
  • Engineering construction
  • e.g. bridges, roads, highways, waterworks,
    sewage systems, airports, transmission lines, oil
    well drilling, mine development, railway tracks,
    etc.

19
Sources of Data
  • Annual sources of data
  • Input/Output tables
  • Capital Expenditure Survey (CES), Actual,
    Preliminary and Intentions Estimates
  • Quarterly projectors and related indicators
  • Quarterly sources of data
  • There is no quarterly survey.
  • Related indicators are used to measure
    non-residential construction for the current year.

20
Global Approach
  • Total Construction Activity is obtained by
    combining data on
  • Material costs (shipments - exports imports ?
    inventories)
  • Labour costs (employment, hours and average
    earnings)
  • Overhead costs and profits
  • Total value of construction activity
  • - Estimates of residential construction (New
    Construction, AI)
  • Value added in oil and gas drilling
  • Value of spending on non-residential
    construction

21
Non Residential Construction
  • Resulting estimates are compared with annual
    estimates from the Capital Expenditure Survey and
    the survey by asset type
  • Quarterly estimates are benchmarked during the
    annual revision cycle
  • Annual estimates reflect the most recent data
    from Input-Output tables

22
Detailed approaches
  • I. Buildings
  • Institutional, industrial and commercial
    non-residential construction (ICSD) based on
    monthly building permit values and monthly work
    put in place (WPIP) coefficients
  • The monthly Building Permits Survey of Canadian
    municipalities collects data on the value of
    construction intentions for buildings in the
    non-residential sector and the number of
    dwellings authorized and value of construction
    projects in the residential sector.
  • The WPIP coefficients measure, by quarter of
    start, by province and by type of building, the
    volume of work normally executed in each
    construction period.

23
Detailed Approaches
  • II. Engineering
  • Highways
  • Material costs based on asphalt sales in cubic
    metres Industry Product Price Index (IPPI) for
    asphalt
  • Labour costs (SEPH)
  • Railways
  • Material costs (e.g. ties, sand, stone, steel,
    etc.)
  • Labour costs (SEPH)

24
Detailed Approaches
  • Other engineering
  • Material costs
  • iron and steel pipes, other metal building
    products, wires and cables, concrete products,
    prefabricated metal structures, glass products,
    etc.
  • Labour costs based on estimates of
  • Hours
  • Average weekly earnings
  • Number of employees.
  • Information based on Labour Force Survey ( LFS )
    and Survey of Employment, Payrolls and Hours (
    SEPH )

25
Non Residential Construction
  • Other information used
  • Construction estimates reported in the Quarterly
    Survey of Financial Statistics for Enterprises
    (large companies in mining, telecommunications,
    railwaysetc.)
  • Capital spending by provincial electric utilities
    Public Institutions Division
  • Cubic metres drilled in the oil and gas industry
    Industry Accounts Division Monthly GDP
  • Department of Natural Resources (general
    exploration expenditures )

26
DeflationBuildings
  • Non-Residential Building Construction Price
    Indexes (commercial, industrial and
    institutional) Prices Division
  • The Non-residential Building Construction Price
    Index (NRBCPI) is a quarterly series measuring
    the changes in contractors' selling prices of
    non-residential building construction (i.e.
    commercial, industrial and institutional)

27
DeflationEngineering
  • In the absence of output price indexes Input
    price indexes are constructed in IEAD
  • Material costs
  • IPPI for prefabricated metal building and
    structure, line pipe, other insulated wires and
    cables, concrete basic products, sand, stone,
    ready-mix concrete, etc.
  • Labour costs
  • Average weekly earnings (SEPH)
  • Overhead costs
  • Average weekly earnings indexes and consumer
    price indexes

28
Machinery and Equipment
  • Spending on durable and tangible goods that have
    a productive life of one year or more (whether
    owned or leased) including
  • purchase, construction and installation costs
  • feasibility studies, tooling, progress payments
  • exploration and development costs
  • net portion of used assets

29
Business Machinery and Equipment
30
Sources of Data(Annual)
  • Benchmark data are from the final demand matrix
    of the Input-Output tables (IOT).
  • Current estimates are based on the Capital
    Expenditures Survey Actual, Preliminary and
    Intentions of Investment and Capital Stock
    Division and
  • The sum of the quarterly estimates coming from a
    Supply Disposition approach.

31
Sources of Data(Quarterly)
  • Supply / Disposition model
  • GFME GO M X change in inventories, where
  • GO - gross output estimated using shipments
  • M - imports from International Trade Division
  • X - exports from International Trade
    Division
  • Done at a very detailed level (39 groups), such
    as for
  • Telecommunication equipment
  • Telephone and related equipment including
    facsimile
  • Broadcasting and radio communication equipment
  • Radar radio navigation equipment
  • ( Re. Supply/disposition models sent to the NBS
    on March 2007 )

32
Sources of Data(Quarterly)
  • Industrial machinery
  • Machine tools
  • Conveyors, elevators hoisting machinery
  • Packaging and bottling machinery
  • Construction mining machinery
  • Logging, pulp paper industry machinery
  • Power generation marine prop., non-electric
  • Electrical generators motors

33
Sources of Data(Quarterly)
  • Other transportation equipment
  • Aircraft
  • Commercial trailers semi-trailers
  • Truck bus bodies cargo containers
  • Locomotive, railway urban trans. rolling stock
  • Ships, boats parts, excl. pleasure
  • And other groups

34
Investment in Cars and Trucks
  • A more direct approach is used to estimate
    investment in cars and trucks
  • Total sales by type from Survey of New Motor
    Vehicle Sales
  • Government and business shares based on data from
    Motor Vehicles Manufacturers Association.

35
Software Investment
  • Own account software
  • Pre-packaged software
  • Custom-design software
  • Own-account software ( software developed by
    in-house employees to meet specific organization
    needs ) is based on the labour costs of computer
    programmers and system analysts and other costs
    (non-salary) of in-house software development.
  • Investment in pre-packaged and custom-design
    software is estimated residually (domestic
    production, plus imports, plus margins, less
    exports, less personal expenditure).

36
Deflation
  • Machinery and equipment price indexes (MEPIs) are
    used for all commodities except computers and
    software. The MEPI tracks price movements on a
    domestic and imported basis (producer price
    indexes published by the U.S. Bureau of Labor
    Statistics are used for the import component).
  • The Machinery and Equipment Price Index (MEPI)
    provides quarterly estimates of price changes for
    machinery and equipment purchases, relative to
    annual gross additions to capital by Canadian
    Industry of purchase.

37
Deflation
  • The deflator for computers is a weighted average
    of import and export computer price indexes.
  • Own-account software is deflated using a fixed
    weighted average of hourly earnings of
    programmers and systems analysts and an index of
    costs of non-labour inputs.
  • The Commercial Software Price Index from Prices
    Division is used to deflate pre-packaged
    software.
  • Custom-design software is deflated using a
    weighted average of the pre-packaged and
    own-account price indexes.

38
Total Investment on Plant and Equipment, 2005
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