1 / 10

Business Demography Indicators for the euro area

Business Demography Indicators for the euro area. Heinz Dieden European Central Bank – DG Statistics. OECD Structural Business Statistics Expert Meeting 10-11 May 2007, Paris. 1. Introduction. Why ECB interest in statistics on enterprise demography?

jlai
Download Presentation

Business Demography Indicators for the euro area

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Business Demography Indicatorsfor the euro area Heinz Dieden European Central Bank – DG Statistics OECD Structural Business Statistics Expert Meeting10-11 May 2007, Paris

  2. 1 Introduction Why ECB interest in statistics on enterprise demography? • Dynamics of economic branch (e.g. IT industries) • Employmenteffects • Climate ofentrepreneurship • Competitionamong economies • Short-term and structural analysis • NO euro area dataavailable for this purpose

  3. 2 Initiative of the WGGES Working Group on General Economic Statistics • ECB and all EU National Central Banks (NCBs) • Co-ordination with Eurostat 2005: work on5 business demography indicators • Eurostat definition as targets: • Enterprisebirthsof which:real births • Enterprise deathsof which:bankruptcies • Stockof enterprises • Breakdown forNACE A6 categories

  4. 3 Results from the stocktaking (1) Euro area country coverage rates 1) Includes stock data for Italy on bankruptcies, the country coverage excluding Italy is 78.5%.

  5. 4 Results from the stocktaking (1I) • Timeliness (for larger countries) • Quarterly data: 1-3 months • Annual data: 2-6 months • Sources • Administrative register or statistical business register maintained by the NSI • For IT and AT: chambers of commerce •  Therefore data meet national quality standards and are validated for publication

  6. 5 Results from the stocktaking (III) – Euro area

  7. Quarterly enterprise births (annual percentage changes) 6

  8. 7 Conclusions (I) Two datasets – two approaches Eurostat • Legal framework • Harmonised methodology and data • No euro area data yet; annual frequency; timeliness WGGES/ECB • Available national data (often non-harmonised) • Annual and quarterly data • Higher timeliness

  9. 8 Conclusions (II) Based on national, non-harmonised data: • First euro areaestimates for some indicators • Enterprise births:annual and quarterly • Bankruptcies:annual • Stock of enterprises:annual First euro area aggregatesare encouraging and are aunique dataset

  10. 9 Conclusions (III) • Eurostat data and WGGES datacomplement each otherin many aspects: • Timeliness • Frequency • Availability • Where available, harmonised Eurostat data is usedplus WGGES data • Euro area breakdowns according toNACE A6not yet possible

More Related