Title: UK Experience with Revisions Analysis
1UK Experience with Revisions Analysis
- UK Office for National Statistics
- 7th October 2004
Emily.George_at_ons.gov.uk Fenella.Maitland-Smith_at_ons
.gov.uk
2Introduction
- GDP revisions analysis published since mid-80s
- Now major expansion of revisions analysis
- Multiple drivers and multiple aims
- Presentation will cover
- why were expanding
- aims
- programme of work
- some results
3Statistics Commission Report
- In 2003, ONS and other government departments
made important revisions to major UK economic
statistics. - Widely reported and criticised in British media
- Statistics Commission announced a review of
revisions to economic statistics
4Recent GDP revisions
- Larger than expected revisions to GDP published
in September 2003 - Revisions to historical GDP in the 2003 Blue Book
came from - introduction of annual chain-linking
- improvements to imports deflators
- rebased GFCF deflators
- revised imports to account for MTIC fraud
- The latest quarters growth (2003q2) also revised
significantly - up from 0.3 to 0.6
- revised construction data
5Recent GDP revisions
6Statistics Commission Report cont.
- The main conclusions of the Statistics Commission
were - For most economic statistics, revisions are the
norm. - The UK record on revisions to GDP is as good as
that in other countries, and in some respects it
is better - Some models used in preliminary estimates were
criticised. - Communication about the likelihood of revisions
needs to be improved, particularly to journalists - (Annex 2 of paper)
7Aims of Revisions Analysis at ONS
- Identify where any biases might exist
- Understand any patterns in revisions
- Use that information to improve our forecasting
and balancing processes - Make the information available to users to allow
them to use our datasets more effectively - Provide measures of data quality (reliability).
- And to.
- build confidence of users
- increase transparency
- help users understand that revisions are
inevitable
8What are we doing?
- tables of revisions in First Releases
- estimates of bias (mean revisions) in First
Releases - more detailed articles in Economic Trends
- sensitivity analyses - sample dependency, lags,
etc. - use of bias adjustments in compilation
- databases of historical revisions on website
- web-pages for revisions analysis, policies, etc.
- seminars with users
- more collaboration with Bank of England and
others - international comparisons
- collaboration with other NSOs
9First Releases - tables of revisions
10 First Releases - summary statistics (bias)
- Started February 2004
- 20 National Accounts First Releases
- Annex 3
11 First Releases - summary statistics (bias)
12Uses of summary statistics in First Releases
- Primarily aimed at users.
- But ONS may use in management tool Red Amber
Green - proportion of significant t tests across all
variables - RAG charts created from initial data set.
- future revisions classified as Green (within 2
sd of mean), Amber (2-3 sd of mean) Red (more
than 3sd from mean)
13Results to date (31/08/04)
- 14 (6 of 44) of t tests published most recently
showed a significant bias. - 2 of the values lay more then one standard
deviation from the mean. - none lay more than two standard deviations from
the mean. - so all would lie in the 'green' category.
14Articles in Economic Trends
15Articles in Economic Trends
- Displaying revisions graphically
- Examine revisions to GDP by stage of production
using - stacked bar charts
- t tests
- but different stages used in articles and First
Releases - Examine revisions to GDP by components
- production and expenditure
- t tests
- by component by stage of production
- charts of each component
- Starting work on sensitivity to
- sample
- economic cycle
16Articles in Economic Trends Graphs to show
patterns
GDP quarterly growth, 1993 to 2001Preliminary
and latest estimates,and difference (revision)
17Articles in Economic Trends Revisions by stage
Revisions to GDP quarterly growth, 1993 to 2001.
18Articles in Economic Trends Revisions by stage
19Articles in Economic Trends Revisions by
component
20Revisions WebPage
http//www.statistics.gov.uk/about_ns/economic_rev
isions.asp
21Revisions triangles (real-time databases)
22Revisions triangles (real-time databases)
Integrated spreadsheets on website containing...
- ..triangles of published estimates...
For all major GDP E and O components aim for
all First Release summary statistics to have
supporting triangles
23Issues for Discussion
- definition of bias
- treatment of revisions due to changes in scope
and definition - treatment of levels series
- length of series - sensitivity analyses
- use of bias estimates in compilation
- archiving
- comparison of different methods of analysing
revisions - international comparisons of
- reliability
- bias estimates