Challenges of Globalization in the Measurement of National Accounts
Nadim Ahmad, Brent R. Moulton, J. David Richardson, and Peter van de Ven, editors
The substantial increase in the complexity of global supply chains and other production arrangements over the last three decades has challenged some traditional measures of national income account aggregates and raised the potential for distortions in conventional calculations of GDP and productivity.
Challenges of Globalization in the Measurement of National Accounts examines a variety of multinational business activities, including how multinational enterprises arrange their financing and assign ownership of intellectual property to avoid tax and regulatory burdens, and assesses their impact on economic measurement.
Several chapters consider how global supply chains complicate the interpretation of traditional trade statistics and how new measurement techniques, such as extended supply and use tables, can provide new information about global production arrangements.
Other chapters examine the role of intangible capital in global production, including the intangible output of factoryless goods producers and the problems of measuring R&D in a globalized world.
The studies in this volume also explore potential ways to enhance the quality of the national accounts by improving data collection and analysis and by updating the standards for measurement.