Non-financial corporations; non-fin. transactions by type of corporations

Non-financial corporations; non-fin. transactions by type of corporations

Non-financial corporations Periods Resources Property income Other investment income Investm. income attrib. to policy holder (million euros)
The non-financial corporations sector 2021 110
Dutch controlled non-fin. corporations 2021 69
Dutch Multinationals 2021 28
Other large corporations 2021 11
Small and medium sized enterprises 2021 30
Foreign controlled non-fin. corporations 2021 41
Source: CBS.
Explanation of symbols

Dataset is not available.

This table presents the non-financial transactions of the sector non-financial corporations and four subsectors, namely foreign controlled non-financial corporations, Dutch multinationals, other large corporations and independent small and medium sized enterprises. The transactions are divided into resources and uses. Furthermore, balancing items for the sectors are presented.

Data available from:
Annual data from 2015.

Status of the data:
The data from 2015 to 2021 are final estimates.

Changes as of June 23rd 2023:
Data of 2021 have been added to thiss table.

When are new data published?
Final annual data are released 18 months after the end of a reporting period. New data become available in June each year.

Description topics

Resources
Resources are transactions add to the economic value of 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.
Other investment income
Other investment income consists of:
- investment income attributable to insurance policy holders
- investment income payable on pension entitlements
- investment income attributable to collective investment fund shareholders
Investm. income attrib. to policy holder
In the national accounts pension and life insurance technical reserves are seen as a liability of insurance corporations to policy holders. Therefore, the investment revenues on these technical reserves are booked as payments from insurance corporations to households.
Subsequently, households pay back these revenues as imputed contributions to pension funds and life insurance corporations. In the financial accounts the latter transaction is recorded as a component of net equity in life insurance and pension funds technical reserves.