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Are Manufacturing statistics still relevant?
Often cited phrases:
“Manufacturing activities
are declining”
“The share of manufacturing activities is declining and
services dominate the economic production”
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Are Manufacturing statistics still relevant?
Manufacturing activities are growing
worldwide
While services play an increasing role today, manufacturing as
the source of all physical goods remains an essential key component of all economic statistics
Many service industries support manufacturing or are based on goods produced by the manufacturing sector
Manufacturing statistics are a key input into the national accounts, but have also important applications in their own right
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Are Manufacturing statistics still relevant?
Manufacturing sector plays leading
role for growth in most developing countries, while the
services sector does in developed countries, supported by strong technology-based manufacturing sector
Industrial development is particularly important for economic prosperity because of its technological and high value adding nature and employment effect
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Are Manufacturing statistics still relevant?
Not all manufacturing industries
have high growth potential, therefore research and policy makers
seek potential sources of growth, with notions of comparative advantage, competitiveness, productivity and structural change as such at the sub-sectoral level becoming relevant
Demand for internationally comparable data on detailed (structural) manufacturing statistics is increasing more than ever for industrial-growth empirics
Statistics need to reflect effects of globalization of production, such as outsourcing, global supply chains
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Available statistics for manufacturing
Data collection at the international
level:
General industrial statistics (number of establishments, employment, female employment,
wages and salaries, output*, value added*, gross fixed capital formation)
(annual, 3 and 4-digit ISIC)
Index numbers of industrial production
(quarterly, 2-digit ISIC; monthly, 1-digit ISIC)
Commodity production statistics
(annual, 600 products; monthly, 15 products)
Indicators are based on “traditional” data collection by country
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New Challenges
Manufacturing technologies and methods of production have
changed
Manufacturing production has taken on a global character,
with production owners, production organizers, production contractors and clients located in different parts of the world (outsourcing, merchanting)
Specialization in support activities has changed the scope of activities of traditional manufacturing units
Some of these changes impact on time series for manufacturing statistics, while others are not visible in traditional indicators
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New Challenges
Coherence of business statistics is needed
‘internal coherence’
: between annual and short-term business statistics; between data
coming from different sources (direct surveys, administrative sources, directly from business accounting systems etc.);
‘external coherence’ : business statistics vis-à-vis other economic statistics: national accounts, statistics on prices and wages, external trade and BOP statistics
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We need a consistent approach to:
Scope of manufacturing
activities and products
Detail of statistics required
Selection of units
problems
for continuity of historical time series
Measurement issues
industry vs. product based measurement
measurement of volatile industries
productivity measures
valuation of output
Different forms of outsourcing
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Consistent approach (cont.)
Existing international guidelines:
International Recommendations for Industrial
Statistics (IRIS)
Last revision: 2008
International Standard Classification of All Economic
Activities (ISIC)
Last revision: 2008
Central product classification (CPC)
Last revision: 2008
Manual on index numbers of industrial production
Last revision: 1950 (currently under revision)
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Scope of manufacturing activities
Manufacturing covers the production of
physical goods
Includes industrial services (repair, installation)
Does not include support
services (accounting, computer services)
Boundary issues e.g. between manufacturing and trade need to be consistently resolved
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Scope (cont.)
Data collection should also cover SME (small
and medium enterprises) for selected industries
Some industries are dominated
by large companies, but there are exceptions based on country and industry (e.g. food manufacturing)
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Detail of statistics required
New version of ISIC Rev.4
defines more accurately the scope of manufacturing and reflects
new industries (electronic products, pharmaceuticals, etc.)
Compliance with the new international standard should be a priority
For comprehensive study of manufacturing, all categories at 4-digit level of ISIC should be considered
2-digit level may be appropriate for some short term indicators, such as quarterly indices
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Selection of units
In cases of production of multiple
types of goods and in cases of outsourcing, the
choice of unit strongly impacts comparability of statistics
Choice of enterprise vs. establishment reflects balancing of data availability against homogeneity of outputs
If output across establishments within an enterprise is not homogeneous, the establishment may be the better unit for manufacturing statistics, but less data may be available
Using the establishment as unit, also produces more accurate regional data
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Selection of units (cont.)
Changing concepts will disrupt historical
time series
Nonetheless, the new concepts provide a clearer description
of actual production
SNA and IRIS provide guidance, but national interpretation and implementation differs
Clearer guidelines at regional level are necessary to avoid ambiguity
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Measurement issues
1. Industry vs. product based measurement
2. Measurement
of volatile industries
3. Productivity measures
4. Valuation of output
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1. Industry vs. product based measurement
Output of manufacturing
activities can be described on an establishments basis (gross
output, value added etc.) = historical “general industrial statistics”
Diversification of outputs and secondary production is not visible in this form
Product data on outputs (commodity production statistics) has to complement the general industrial statistics
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Industry vs. product data (cont.)
Product data allows:
Measuring of
diversification of outputs
Measuring of secondary activities
Linking product data to
trade data and consumption data
Measuring production patterns of volatile outputs, i.e. changing product groups over time within the same industry
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2. Measurement of volatile industries
Some industries have rapidly
changing production patterns, i.e. the output changes (based on
season etc.) while the process, technology and equipment used remains the same
In such cases the industry classification of the producer has to remain stable, making it not a perfect tool for measuring change
But: Detail in the product classification is able to provide the necessary information
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Measurement of volatile industries (cont.)
How should production indices
reflect this behaviour?
How should fast changes be reflected in
product basket?
How should fast quality changes be reflected in index numbers for volume and prices?
How to measure output of industries with work-in-progress over long periods (e.g. shipbuilding) for short-term indicators?
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3. Productivity measures
Outsourcing of labour force affects calculation
of productivity indicators (e.g. output/worker or output/hours worked)
Trends in
sector employment get distorted when labour force is outsourced
Data collection needs to be supplemented with new information that allows linking the outsourced labour to the contracting manufacturing unit
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4. Valuation of output
Output data in quantitative units
are stable, but monetary terms are used for most
analysis and aggregation, e.g. for National Accounts:
Choice of national accounting concept or industrial census concept of value added
Valuation of output: ‘Basic prices’ or ‘producer prices’
Difference between market prices and prices between related establishments; how does this affect the use of prices for deflation of outputs
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Valuation of output (cont.)
Choice of national accounting concept
vs. industrial census concept of value added
The difference is
significant for some industries using relatively more non-industrial services due to:
Industrial census excludes cost of and revenue from non-industrial services
National accounts value added properly includes cost of and revenue from non-industrial services
Valuation of output: ‘Basic prices’ vs. ‘producer prices’
Basic prices valuation does not include net taxes therefore reflects the actual cost of production. This avoids the effects of changes in taxes or subsidies on products on the value of output within a country or the effects of different tax regimes on output across countries.
Producer prices include net taxes.
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Outsourcing
Affects manufacturing to a large degree
Can take place
locally and on international level
Can take three forms:
outsourcing of
support functions (services), such as accounting, computer services
outsourcing of parts of the manufacturing process
outsourcing of labour force
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(1) Outsourcing of support functions (services)
Problem: Affects time
series, since over time units move out of manufacturing;
showing apparent decline in value added, employment
Examples: accounting, computer services
Selection of appropriate units is key issue
Often related to ancillary units
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(1) Outsourcing (cont.)
Concept and use of “ancillary units”
is inconsistent across countries and is changed in new
SNA context
Separate accounting of such units changes the scope of data in time series
Double coding of such units for purposes of time series continuity has to be considered
Clear guidance on selection of units for manufacturing statistics is needed
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(2) Outsourcing of parts of the manufacturing process
Problem:
Where is production recorded? How are involved units linked
in the statistics?
Common growing phenomenon, in particular at the international level
Who reports manufacturing production – the principal or the contractor?
Contractor carries out the actual production, but cannot report on value of the output (sales value)
Principal can report on sales value, costs etc., but has no manufacturing facility as such
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(2) Outsourcing (cont.)
Countries treat this in different ways,
harmonization is strongly needed
SNA guidelines exist, but are not
followed by all countries for reporting of manufacturing statistics
This form of outsourcing may involve foreign affiliates, in which case transnational corporations may be able to provide data (yet the problem of recording persists). However, in other cases unrelated companies are involved.
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(3) Outsourcing of labour force
Problem: Affects productivity statistics;
employment in manufacturing declines
Emergence of companies providing labour force
to others – “Human resource provision” (e.g. PEOs)
Manufacturing companies have no (or few) employees and therefore no compensation of employees
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(3) Outsourcing (cont.)
Labour force is provided by independent
company that charges a service fee for this provision
Productivity
statistics are affected by this
Industry employment trends are difficult to observe
Requires consistent approach to linking employees of human resources provision companies to production
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Summary
Production patterns in manufacturing have changed
Historical scope of
manufacturing production may now be spread over other industries
as well
Production takes no longer place in single locations but involves units across the globe
Typical manufacturing indicators (output , value added, employment) do not paint the full picture of today’s complex economy and its global character, even with consistent use guidelines
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Current state of data collection
Index numbers
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Current state of data collection
Industrial commodity statistics (of
588)