Regional accounts; key figures 1995-2011

Regional accounts; key figures 1995-2011

Regions Periods GDP (market prices) (mln euro) GDP per capita (euro) Value added (at basic prices) (mln euro) Compensation of employees (mln euro) Labour input of employed persons (1000 full-time equivalent jobs) Labour input of employees (1000 full-time equivalent jobs)
The Netherlands 2011* 599,047 35,886 536,618 306,215 6,753.0 5,909.8
North Netherlands (LD) 2011* 61,524 35,805 55,112 25,312 604.7 515.6
East Netherlands (LD) 2011* 106,486 30,102 95,389 58,090 1,355.6 1,176.5
West Netherlands (LD) 2011* 299,652 38,146 268,424 157,653 3,324.4 2,929.9
South Netherlands (LD) 2011* 125,594 35,064 112,505 64,715 1,462.7 1,282.2
Friesland (PV) 2011* 18,827 29,088 16,865 9,347 230.7 193.4
Flevoland (PV) 2011* 10,292 26,137 9,219 5,130 122.4 103.9
Gelderland (PV) 2011* 60,490 30,129 54,186 33,717 784.4 678.9
Noord-Holland (PV) 2011* 109,282 40,465 97,893 58,397 1,206.5 1,056.0
Zuid-Holland (PV) 2011* 125,187 35,360 112,141 65,627 1,410.8 1,250.4
Zeeland (PV) 2011* 13,088 34,309 11,724 5,688 137.2 115.4
Noord-Friesland (CR) 2011* 10,465 31,443 9,374 4,987 118.8 100.6
Zuidwest-Friesland (CR) 2011* 2,518 23,683 2,256 1,280 35.0 27.9
Zuidoost-Friesland (CR) 2011* 5,844 28,084 5,235 3,080 76.9 65.0
Zuidwest-Gelderland (CR) 2011* 7,143 30,316 6,399 3,681 91.1 74.5
Kop van Noord-Holland (CR) 2011* 9,239 24,867 8,276 5,051 129.5 105.3
Delft en Westland (CR) 2011* 8,212 37,799 7,356 4,418 98.0 86.7
Oost-Zuid-Holland (CR) 2011* 8,620 29,311 7,722 4,544 109.0 92.3
Zuidoost-Zuid-Holland (CR) 2011* 13,299 33,507 11,913 7,109 157.2 139.5
Overig Zeeland (CR) 2011* 8,702 31,634 7,795 3,906 97.7 81.7
Flevoland (CR) 2011* 10,292 26,137 9,219 5,130 122.4 103.9
Overig Zuidoost-Zuid-Holland (CP) 2011* 4,781 29,903 4,283 2,587 60.3 51.9
Flevoland-Midden (CP) 2011* 3,689 26,985 3,305 1,865 44.7 38.0
Source: CBS.
Explanation of symbols

Dataset is not available.


GDP, GDP per capita, value added, compensation of employees, labour input of employed persons, labour input of employees, by region, COROP region, province and groups of provinces.

Data available from: 1995-2011

Status of the figures:
The data from 1995 onwards are final. The figures for the last year are provisional. Because this table is discontinued, figures will not be updated anymore.

Changes as of February 13th:
None, this table is discontinued.

When will new figures be published?
Not applicated anymore.
This table is replaced by table Regional accounts; key figures region. See paragraph 3.

Description topics

GDP (market prices)
Gross domestic product (GDP), value added at market prices of
the total economy is calculated as follows:
total value added at basic prices of industries
plus: balance of taxes and subsidies on products
plus: difference imputed and paid VAT.
VAT, taxes on imports and subsidies on re-exports cannot be
attributed to individual industries. Therefore, GDP at market
prices cannot be broken down completely by industry.
Value added can be valued gross (including consumption of
fixed capital) or net (excluding consumption of fixed capital).
GDP per capita
Gross domestic product (GDP), value added at market prices of the
total economy, per capita.
Value added (at basic prices)
Value added at basic prices of total enterprises equals the difference
between the production (basic prices) and intermediate consumption
(purchasers' prices).
Compensation of employees
Compensation of employees is the total renumeration paid by employers
to their employees in return for work done.
Employees are all residents and non-residents working in a paid job.
Managing directors of limited companies are considered to be employees;
therefore their salaries are also included in the compensation of
employees. The same holds for people working in sheltered workshops.
Compensation of employees is distinguished between wages and salaries
and employers' social contributions.
Wages and salaries include income taxes and employees' social
contributions even if they are actually withheld by the employer and paid
directly to tax authorities, social security schemes and pension schemes.
Wages include payments that are periodically and directly paid to
employees. Besides they contain extra's (such as bonuses, overtime pay,
tips, commission), wages in kind (such as free housing, free food,
'company car', day nursery, lower interest rates on mortgages,
free travel (or at reduced prices) and holiday allowances. Furthermore,
certain refunds for costs made by the employee, such as travel expenses
to and from work, are included as well.
Employers' social contributions consist of payments to insurers made by
employers for the benefit of their employees. They can be classified in
employers' social security contributions, employers' private social
contributions (o.w. pension schemes) and the imputed social contributions.
In most cases the employers directly pay the employers' social
contributions to the insurers. However, to show that these contributions
are paid for the benefit of employees, these payments are recorded as two
transactions: a) employers pay employers' social contributions to their
employees, and b) employees pay the same contributions to social
insurance funds.
Labour input of employed persons
Labour input of employed persons is defined as the number of full-time
equivalent jobs. Part-time jobs are converted to full-time jobs.
For employees a full-time equivalent job is the annual contractual hours
considered full-time in that branch of industry.
For self-employed a full-time equivalent job is the quotient of the
usual weekly work hours of that job and the average weekly work hours
of self-employed with 37 or more normal weekly hours in the same branch
of industry.
Labour input of employees
Labour input of employees is defined as the number of full-time
equivalent jobs. Part-time jobs are converted to full-time jobs.
For employees a full-time equivalent job is the annual contractual hours
considered full-time in that branch of industry.