Sector accounts; current transactions by sectors 1969- q4 2013
Sectors | Periods | Resources Taxes on production and imports Taxes on products Value added tax (VAT) (mln euro) | Balancing items Gross domestic product / value added (mln euro) | Balancing items Net domestic product / value added (mln euro) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Total economy | 2013* | 42,111 | 602,658 | 512,867 |
Non-financial corporations | 2013* | - | 341,509 | 294,044 |
Financial corporations | 2013* | - | 44,895 | 40,254 |
Monetary financial institutions | 2013* | - | 23,760 | 22,011 |
Other financial institutions | 2013* | - | 12,357 | 10,273 |
Insurance corporations and pension funds | 2013* | - | 8,778 | 7,970 |
General government (consolidated) | 2013* | 42,111 | 74,617 | 57,484 |
Central government (consolidated) | 2013* | 42,111 | 26,545 | 20,726 |
Local government (consolidated) | 2013* | - | 46,442 | 35,197 |
Social security funds (consolidated) | 2013* | - | 1,630 | 1,561 |
General government | 2013* | 42,111 | 74,617 | 57,484 |
Central government | 2013* | 42,111 | 26,545 | 20,726 |
Local government | 2013* | - | 46,442 | 35,197 |
Social security funds | 2013* | - | 1,630 | 1,561 |
Households including NPISH | 2013* | - | 78,674 | 58,122 |
Households | 2013* | - | 75,850 | 55,521 |
NPI serving households | 2013* | - | 2,824 | 2,601 |
Rest of the world | 2013* | 311 | . | . |
Source: CBS. |
Dataset is not available.
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.
- Taxes on production and imports
- Taxes on production and imports are all taxes to the government and the EU paid by producers except for the current taxes on income and wealth.
All taxes paid by consumers are regarded as current taxes on income and wealth. So, depending on the taxpayer, the same tax is recorded as a tax on production or a tax on income and wealth. For example real estate taxes on dwellings, paid by tenants, are seen as taxes on income and wealth, while real estate taxes paid by owners of dwellings (including owner-occupiers) are seen as taxes on production.
Import duties to the EU are recorded as taxes on imports. The import duties paid by non-residents to the EU (via the government) are not recorded in the national accounts.
Taxes on production and imports are recorded according to the destination criterion. So, taxes collected by the central government on behalf of the local government or the EU are not recorded as receipts of the central government.- Taxes on products
- Taxes on products are related to the value or the volume of products. They are levied on domestically produced or transacted products and on imported products.
Taxes on products are classified into taxes on domestic products, taxes on imports and VAT.- Value added tax (VAT)
- Value added tax (VAT) is a tax on goods and services collected in stages by producers, which is ultimately charged in full to the final purchasers. Producers are obliged to hand over only the difference between the VAT on their sales and the VAT on their purchases.
- Balancing items
- Main macroeconomic balancing items by sectors
- Gross domestic product / value added
- Value added (basic prices) per sector is equal to the difference between the production (basic prices) and intermediate consumption (purchasers' prices). Gross domestic product (GDP) is equal to the value added at basic prices of all sectors together plus some transactions which cannot be attributed to sectors. The undistributed transaction consists of taxes less subsidies on products. GDP is also equal to the value of the income generated in the Netherlands.
- Net domestic product / value added
- Net domestic product / value added remains after deducting consumption of fixed capital from gross domestic product / value added.