International Transactions Accounts

Analysis of Revisions

In fulfillment of the requirements of U.S. Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Statistical Policy Directive No. 3: Compilation, Release, and Evaluation of Principal Federal Economic Indicators, the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) periodically reviews revisions to the International Transactions Accounts (ITAs). The statistics on revisions to the ITAs that BEA provided to OMB are made available to the public in this article.

Tables A and B below provide information on the size of revisions for key ITA statistics for the first quarter of 2019 through the fourth quarter of 2021. These are compared with revisions for statistics for 1999 through 2018.1

Mean revisions differ somewhat across periods, but they do not do so in any systematic way and are generally comparable in magnitudes. The most notable differences are that the mean revisions to exports of services and primary income payments were larger in the recent time period. The recent time period included the COVID–19 pandemic, which presented challenges for data collection and estimation.

Table A assesses revision magnitudes scaled using the account estimates, as has been done in previous ITA evaluations. Table B uses a different method (scaling by “trend quarter-to-quarter absolute changes”). This method allows for a meaningful assessment of revisions in the financial account and account balances, something not possible with scaling by account estimate; however, the values presented in table B cannot be directly compared with those in table A.2


  1. Revisions due to definitional and classification changes implemented with the 2014 comprehensive restructuring of the ITAs are removed. Other revisions due to updated source data and improved estimation methods during the 2014 annual update are maintained. For more information on the 2014 comprehensive restructuring, see Jeffrey R. Bogen, Mai-Chi Hoang, Kristy L. Howell, and Erin M. Whitaker, “Comprehensive Restructuring and Annual Revision of the U.S. International Transactions Accounts,” Survey of Current Business 94 (July 2014).
  2. Trend quarter-to-quarter scaling compares revisions to the typical absolute quarter-to-quarter change in the series rather than the series level. For more information, see page 9 of Ryan Howley, “An Analysis of the Reliability of BEA's International Transactions Accounts,” Survey 97 (February 2017).

 

The statistical analysis in this article was prepared by Ryan Howley.