GDP, production and expenditures; output and income by sector 1988 - 2012

GDP, production and expenditures; output and income by sector 1988 - 2012

Economic sectors Periods Value added from the output Intermediate consumption (-) (mln euro) Value added from generation of income Consumption of fixed capital (mln euro)
Total economic sectors 2012* 657,855 89,044
Non-financial corporations 2012* 499,566 46,744
Financial corporations 2012* 35,360 4,128
General government 2012* 45,505 16,957
Households 2012* 73,994 20,982
NPI households 2012* 3,430 233
Source: CBS.
Explanation of symbols

Dataset is not available.


This table presents data about the macroeconomic production process.
For the economic sectors the output, intermediate consumption, value added and income components are given.

The subjects in this table are the same as the titles of the tables in the chapter output, intermediate consumption and generation of income in the printed edition of the National accounts. The industries are classifiedaccording to the Standard industrial classification 2008 (SBI 2008). The sectors are classified according to the European system of national and regional accounts (ESA 1995).

Data available from 1988 to 2012

Status of the figures:
The figures concerning 2011,2012 are (revised) provisional. Because this table is discontinued, figures will not be updated anymore.

Changes as of June 25th 2014:
None, this table is discontinued.

When will new figures be published?
Not applicable anymore.

Description topics

Value added from the output
Approach of gross value added at basic prices as the difference
between output (basic prices) and intermediate consumption (purchasers'
prices). Gross is including consumption of fixed capital.
Intermediate consumption (-)
Intermediate consumption includes all goods and services used up in the
production process in the accounting period, regardless the date of
purchase. This includes for example fuel, raw materials, semi
manufactured goods, communication services, cleansing services and audits
by accountants.
Value added from generation of income
Gross value added broken down by income components. Gross is including
consumption of fixed capital.
Consumption of fixed capital
Consumption of fixed capital represents the depreciation of the stock of
produced fixed assets, as a result of normal technical and economical
ageing and insurable accidental damage. Losses due to catastrophes and
unforeseen ageing are seen as a capital loss.