Sector accounts; current transactions by sectors 1969- q4 2013
| Sectors | Periods | Resources Property income Interest Interest; definition National Accounts (mln euro) | Uses Property income Interest Interest; definition National Accounts (mln euro) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total economy | 2013* | 99,560 | 110,920 |
| Non-financial corporations | 2013* | 12,630 | 14,818 |
| Financial corporations | 2013* | 75,353 | 74,188 |
| Monetary financial institutions | 2013* | 23,211 | 35,552 |
| Other financial institutions | 2013* | 34,077 | 38,164 |
| Insurance corporations and pension funds | 2013* | 18,065 | 472 |
| General government (consolidated) | 2013* | 2,553 | 10,417 |
| Central government (consolidated) | 2013* | 1,366 | 9,124 |
| Local government (consolidated) | 2013* | 1,311 | 1,418 |
| Social security funds (consolidated) | 2013* | 47 | 46 |
| General government | 2013* | 2,753 | 10,617 |
| Central government | 2013* | 1,395 | 9,153 |
| Local government | 2013* | 1,311 | 1,418 |
| Social security funds | 2013* | 47 | 46 |
| Households including NPISH | 2013* | 8,824 | 11,297 |
| Households | 2013* | 8,537 | 11,282 |
| NPI serving households | 2013* | 287 | 15 |
| Rest of the world | 2013* | 58,102 | 46,742 |
| Source: CBS. | |||
Table explanation
This table provides an overview of the non-financial transactions of the institutional sectors of the Dutch economy, distinguishing between uses and resources. Non-financial transactions consist of current transactions and transactions from the capital account. Furthermore, this table provides the main balancing items of the (sub)sectors.
Non-financial transactions are estimated for the main institutional sectors of the economy and the rest of the world. The main institutional sectors of the economy are non-financial corporations, financial corporations, general government, households and non-profit institutions serving households. A breakdown into subsectors is provided for financial corporations and general government sectors.
Data available from:
Years from 1969 to 2013
Quarters from first quarter 2005 to fourth quarter 2013.
Status of the figures:
The figures concerning 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014 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.
This table is replaced by table Sector accounts; current transactions by sectors. See paragraph 3.
Description topics
- Resources
- Revenue of institutional sectors.
- Property income
- Property income is the income receivable by the owner of a financial asset or a tangible non-produced asset in return for providing funds to, or putting the tangible non-produced asset at the deposal of, another institutional unit.
Property income consists of: interest, distributed income of corporations (dividends and withdrawals from income of quasi-corporations), reinvested earnings on direct foreign investments, property income attributed to insurance policy holders and rents on land and subsoil assets.- Interest
- Interest is imputed to the period for which the underlying claim or debt exists. The actual interest payments or receipts are corrected for imputed bank services. Therefore there is a shift from actual interest payments and receipts to the production or the consumption of bank services. For producers of imputed bank services this means a decrease of the received interest and an increase of the paid interest with respect to the actual interest flows. For the consumers of imputed bank services this means an increase of received interest and a decrease of paid interest, compared with the actual interest flows.
- Interest; definition National Accounts
- Interest is imputed to the period for which the underlying claim or debt exists. The actual interest payments or receipts are corrected for imputed bank services. Therefore there is a shift from actual interest payments and receipts to the production or the consumption of bank services. For producers of imputed bank services this means a decrease of the received interest and an increase of the paid interest with respect to the actual interest flows. For the consumers of imputed bank services this means an increase of received interest and a decrease of paid interest, compared with the actual interest flows.
- Uses
- Expenditure by institutional sectors.
- Property income
- Property income is the income receivable by the owner of a financial asset or a tangible non-produced asset in return for providing funds to, or putting the tangible non-produced asset at the deposal of, another institutional unit.
Property income consists of: interest, distributed income of corporations (dividends and withdrawals from income of quasi-corporations), reinvested earnings on direct foreign investments, property income attributed to insurance policy holders and rents on land and subsoil assets.- Interest
- Interest is imputed to the period for which the underlying claim or debt exists. The actual interest payments or receipts are corrected for imputed bank services. Therefore there is a shift from actual interest payments and receipts to the production or the consumption of bank services. For producers of imputed bank services this means a decrease of the received interest and an increase of the paid interest with respect to the actual interest flows. For the consumers of imputed bank services this means an increase of received interest and a decrease of paid interest, compared with the actual interest flows.
- Interest; definition National Accounts
- Interest is imputed to the period for which the underlying claim or debt exists. The actual interest payments or receipts are corrected for imputed bank services. Therefore there is a shift from actual interest payments and receipts to the production or the consumption of bank services. For producers of imputed bank services this means a decrease of the received interest and an increase of the paid interest with respect to the actual interest flows. For the consumers of imputed bank services this means an increase of received interest and a decrease of paid interest, compared with the actual interest flows.