Title: WORKING PARTY ON NATIONAL ACCOUNTS WPNA OCTOBER 2004
1WORKING PARTY ON NATIONAL ACCOUNTS (WPNA)OCTOBER
2004
- THE TREATMENT OF LAND IMPROVEMENTS
2THE TREATMENT OF LAND IMPROVEMENTSOutline
- The current SNA treatment of land improvements
and its rationale - Concerns with it
- Proposals for change
3THE TREATMENT OF LAND IMPROVEMENTS Current SNA
- Land improvements are GFCF
- On the balance sheet, land improvements are
included with land as non-produced assets - The decline in value of land improvements is
recorded as CFC - COTL is treated likewise until land is sold, then
written off
4THE TREATMENT OF LAND IMPROVEMENTS Current SNA
para 10.51
- Acquisitions that lead to major improvements in
the quantity, quality or productivity of land, or
prevent its deterioration, are treated as GFCF.
They consist of acquisitions related to the
following kinds of activities
5THE TREATMENT OF LAND IMPROVEMENTS Current SNA
para 10.51
- Reclamation of land dykes, sea walls, dams
- Clearance of forests, rocks, etc.
- Draining marshes, irrigation of deserts by dykes,
ditches, irrigation channels - Prevention of flooding or erosion by sea or
rivers breakwaters, sea walls, flood barriers
6THE TREATMENT OF LAND IMPROVEMENTS Current SNA
para 10.52
- Land improvements ..are not in themselves used
directly to produce other goods and services in a
way that most structures are. Their construction
is undertaken to obtain more or better land, and
it is the land, a non-produced asset, that is
needed for production. For example, a dam built
to produce electricity serves quite a different
purpose from a dam built to keep out the sea.
7THE TREATMENT OF LAND IMPROVEMENTS Current SNA
para 10.53
- Acquisitions of tunnels and other structures
associated with the mining of mineral deposits,
etc., are classified as GFCF and not as
improvements to land.
8THE TREATMENT OF LAND IMPROVEMENTS -CONCERNS
WITH THE CURRENT TREATMENT
- The current SNA treatment seems odd.
- Land improvements are recorded as GFCF but are
also recorded as non-produced assets on the
balance sheet - CFC is recorded in respect of a non-produced
asset.
9THE TREATMENT OF LAND IMPROVEMENTS -CONCERNS
WITH THE CURRENT TREATMENT
- Much of the value of rural land in long-settled
countries has been so greatly changed that it is
felt that land improvements account for the bulk
of the total composite value of land in many
cases. - Some countries are unable to obtain estimates of
the total value of land, and they can only
estimate land improvements.
10THE TREATMENT OF LAND IMPROVEMENTS -CONCERNS
WITH THE CURRENT TREATMENT
- It is difficult to draw a line between land
improvements and structures. Are dams to provide
water for animals and access roads to farms land
improvements? Is a wind-driven water pump for
irrigation a land improvement? The pipes that
carry the water from the pump? - Once a line is drawn, it is difficult to get
accurate estimates by survey.
11THE TREATMENT OF LAND IMPROVEMENTSOPTIONS
CONSIDERED BY CII
- Leave the SNA as it is
- Classify land as either produced or non-produced
according to how much land improvements
contributed to total value - Identify land improvements as produced assets and
unimproved land values as non-produced - Treat land improvements in the same way as
buildings and structures. This means adopting
option 3 where possible and option 2 where not.
12THE TREATMENT OF LAND IMPROVEMENTSOPTIONS
CONSIDERED BY CII
- The majority of Canberra II members favour option
4.
13THE TREATMENT OF LAND IMPROVEMENTSCANBERRA
II PROPOSALS
- GFCF of land improvements should be treated like
other GFCF and should result in a produced asset. - Land should be valued at its present unimproved
value. - Where land cannot be separated adopt
recommendations for land/structures para 13.57
for balance sheet and para 7.131 for
rentals/rent. - COTL be treated as COT on other types of
non-financial asset and be recorded as a fixed
asset. Allocate it to land improvements.