Title: Accounting for Obsolescence:
1Accounting for Obsolescence
- An Evaluation of Current NIPA Practice
- The measurement of capital is one of the
nastiest jobs that economists have set to
statisticians. J.R. Hicks (1969)
Arnold J . Katz The 2008 World Congress on
National Accounts and Economic Performance
Measures for Nations Arlington, VA. May 13-17,
2008
2Organization of Presentation
- Introduction How depreciation and unexpected
obsolescence differ. - BEAs methodology for capital stocks and
depreciation how it handles quality change and
expected obsolescence . - Key points of the underlying economic theory.
- Causes of unexpected obsolescence.
- An evaluation of possible accounting treatments
for it.
3Depreciation vs. Obsolescence
- BEA defines depreciation as the decline in the
value of the stock of assets due to wear and
tear, obsolescence, accidental damage, and aging. - Declines in value due to unexpected obsolescence
are generally sharper. - They may result from factors that do not affect
depreciation. - Differences between the two concepts will become
clearer over the course of this presentation.
4BEAs Perpetual Inventory Method-I
- With the method, net stocks and depreciation are
weighted averages of past investment. - Investment in current prices is converted to
investment in constant prices using a
constant-quality price index. - Constant-price stocks are the product of past
constant-price investment and the relevant value
from each durables age-price profile. - Asset lives are service lives, not physical
lives.
5Age-price Profiles
- BEAs age-price profiles are theoretical ratios
that are pre-determined.
6Perpetual Inventory Method- II
- Depreciation is estimated using the prices used
to value the stock. - Current-price estimates are obtained by
reflation.
7Constant-price Properties
- Over an assets lifetime, depreciation charges
sum to initial purchase price. - Change in net stock gross investment less
depreciation. - These imply that net investment is zero in a
steady state where gross investment has been
constant.
8Treatment of Quality Change
- An increase in the quality of new investment
increases the quantity and reduces the price of
new investment. - It has no effect on the constant-price stock of
older vintages and, therefore, increases the
entire stock. - It reduces the current-price value of older
vintages and, therefore, the entire stock. - Similar results hold for measured depreciation.
9Theory I - Maintaining Capital Intact
- Pigou said that it was the quantity of capital
that must be maintained intact the property
that net investment is zero in a steady state is
consistent with this. - Hayek said physical lives were irrelevant and
that expected obsolescence was part of
depreciation - BEAs use of service rather than
physical lives is consistent with this.
10Theory II Jorgensons Capital Accounting
Framework
- Cornerstone is the fundamental equation of
capital theory the price of an asset is the
discounted present value of the net income to be
derived from owning it. - Depreciation is measured as the difference in
price of two assets that differ solely in their
age. - The decline in an assets market value can be
decomposed into depreciation and capital gain
components.
11Fig. 1- Decomposing Declines in Market Value
12Fig. 1- Decomposing Declines in Market Value
13Fig. 1- Decomposing Declines in Market Value
14Fig. 1- Decomposing Declines in Market Value
15Using One or Two Age-Price Profiles
- In BEAs estimates and in Jorgensons work, the
two prices used to estimate depreciation come
from identical age-price profiles. As a result,
they share the property that constant-price
estimates of depreciation sum up over the
lifetime of an asset to the assets purchase
price. - In many empirical studies, the two prices are not
forced to come from identical age-price profiles. - Frank Wykoff has recently labeled as
"obsolescence" the difference between two
estimates of depreciation, where one's prices
come solely from identical age-price profiles and
where the second's come from two different
age-price profiles.
16Definition of Unexpected Obsolescence
- Proposed Definition - Unexpected obsolescence is
a sharp decline in the value of an asset due to
factors other than physical damage,
deterioration, aging, and the passage of time.
17Causes of Unexpected Obsolescence
- Unavailability of required inputs.
- Increase in relative price of required inputs.
- Increase of relative cost of making repairs.
- Prolonged increase in interest rates.
- Tax credits for new investment.
- Regardless of the cause, expected obsolescence is
embodied in our estimates of depreciation. Its
effects can not be separated from other causes of
depreciation. -
18Treatments for Unexpected Obsolescence
- Replace ex ante depreciation patterns with ex
post ones. - Treat differences between the actual and expected
value of used assets as an other change in the
value of assets. - Same as above, but use normal values for expected
ones. - Write off only losses due to large-scale
obsolescence as an other change in the volume of
assets. - In deciding on a treatment, we need to reduce the
amount of subjectivity in it and avoid biasing
the measure of net investment.