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TFHPSA Working Group 2

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TFHPSA Working Group 2 Capital injections / Superdividends / Reinvested earnings Philippe de Rougemont (Eurostat-C.3) drawing on presentations by T. Dobbs and B ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: TFHPSA Working Group 2


1
TFHPSAWorking Group 2
  • Capital injections / Superdividends /
    Reinvested earnings
  • Philippe de Rougemont (Eurostat-C.3)
  • drawing on presentations by T. Dobbs and B.
    Robinson, and by A. Harrison

2
Part I
  • Presentation of the issue

3
In this discussion
  • Superdividends refers to payments returning
    multi-year (operating) earnings to owners.
  • Capital injections refers to payments covering
    multi-year (operating) losses
  • Including against issuance of shares.

4
Guidance
  • GFSM 2001 Government Finance Statistics Manual
    2001 IMF
  • Manual on Government Deficit and Debt (MDD)
    interprets ESA 1995

5
Table 1
6
Table 1 continued
7
Table 2 Criteria
8
Table 2 Criteria continued
9
Table 3 Criteria end
10
Table 3
11
Table 4 - continued
12
Support I
  • TFHPSA Questionnaire 17 responses 13 nationals
    (10 countries) 4 international
  • Question on support of the approach of the
    paper Support 8, partly support 4, do not
    support 4
  • Question on support to GSFM /MDD
  • capital injection superdividend
  • No 1 2
  • Yes but not enough 6 7
  • Yes to be in SNA 9 7
  • Reinvested earnings defaults volatility of 1st
    estimate, source data issues, consistency

13
Support II
  • TFHPSA in Washington (and Paris)
  • Support reinvested earnings USA, AUS, IMF GFD,
    Eurostat
  • Accounting? IPSASB
  • Oppose reinvested earnings CAN, UNSD, ECB, FR,
    DE
  • Japan?

14
Part II
  • To summarize

15
3 Options
  • 1 SNA unaltered
  • 2 SNA amended for superdividends and interpreted
    for capital injection
  • 3 Reinvested earnings

16
SNA unaltered
  • Advantages
  • No changes to concepts or practice
  • Disadvantages
  • Inconsistent with GFSM and MDD
  • Capacity to game
  • Asymmetry between superdividends and capital
    transfers (income)
  • Lack of worldwide comparability of net
    lending/net borrowing

17
Support
  • First choice small support
  • Second choice small support

18
SNA amended for superdividends and interpreted
for capital injections
19
Advantages
  • Symmetry between superdividends and capital
    injections (income)
  • Consistent with GFSM and MDD
  • Improves on SNA 1993, against gaming
  • Currently implemented by some compilers

20
Disadvantages
  • Not net worth neutral
  • Asymmetry between superdividends and capital
    injections (net lending/net borrowing)
  • Time of recording of the capital transfer not
    appropriate
  • Still leaves noticeable wriggle room for
    manipulation of S.13 data (injections)
  • Involve compilation difficulties
  • To be applied to which transactions?

21
Support
  • First choice - about half
  • Second choice - most of the other half

22
Reinvested earnings
23
Advantages
  • Net worth neutral
  • Symmetry between superdividends and capital
    injections (income and net lending/net borrowing)
  • Reduces gaming
  • Comes closer to accounting (IPSAS/GAAP)

24
Disadvantages
  • Requires changes to SNA (and supporting manuals)
  • Allocates saving to government
  • Imputation
  • Consistency issue if not applied to all sectors
  • Consistency with market valuation (?)
  • Measurement issues

25
Support
  • First choice - about half
  • Second choice - small

26
Part III
  • Reinvested earnings how does it work and what
    proposed threshold?

27
How does it work?
  • Example
  • Government owns a corporation that makes 15 of
    operating profits during the accounting period,
    and distributes 5 in dividends
  • The corporations assets/liabilities generate,
    during that period, 3 of holding gains/losses (to
    be excluded from operating profits)
  • The equity stakes in the company starts at 100.
    It closes at 113100153-5

28
How does it work? (2)
29
100 Threshold is suggested
  • 100 is a lesser change in SNA
  • 100 controlled entities are un-restrictively
    controlled
  • transfer pricing notion of savings elusive.
    Slightly different concept from D.43 for S.2
    (influence and control)
  • 100 public controlled provide most scope for
    gaming in fiscal
  • 100 does not give rise to the question of the
    treatment of minority interest
  • 100 may allow a recording of losses as subsidy,
    instead of negative property income

30
Capturing quasi-fiscal operations
  • (1) Set a market/nonmarket rule to cover all loss
    making corporations
  • (2) Record as expenditure the granting of
    guarantees, before the call
  • (3) Accrue profits and losses in the account of
    the government

31
Part IV
  • TFHPSA to AEG
  • (1) Possible propositions of change
  • (2) What preference

32
option A GFSM2001 / MDD
  • Extend the quasicorporation treatment of
    superdividends to corporations
  • Clarify capital transfer recording implemented
    when to cover past losses, even when shares are
    issued
  • Clarify this also applies to quasicorporations
  • Clarify capital injections can also be carried by
    way of debt assumption
  • Change a reference in GFSM 2001 in case of public
    corporation
  • Change ESA for references to units that
    disappeared, at least when public corporations

33
Option A cont. GFSM2001 / MDD
  • To which equity links to apply the superdividend
    treatment?
  • To all equity? Portfolio/Direct
  • thresholds? 10, 50, 20, 10
  • To all sectors?

34
Option B Reinvested earnings
  • Extend the reinvested earnings treatment that
    exist for direct foreign investment only to 100
    public owned corporations (and quasi corporation)

35
TFHPSA preference
  • Slight preference for MDD/GFSM Option as
    those preferring reinvested earnings are more
    amenable to supporting this option than the
    reverse.

36
Some data
  • See Excel file

37
(No Transcript)
38
Distribution of dividend of 10
Change net worth Income before remeasurement Remeasurement Total income
1993 SNA 0 10 -10 0
New SNA 0 0 0 0
Equity Method 0 ? ? 0
Cost Method 10 ? ? 10

39
Earnings of profits (of 25)
Change net worth Income before remeasurement Remeasurement Total income
1993 SNA 25 0 25 25
New SNA 25 25 0 25
Equity Method 25 ? ? 25
Cost Method 0 0? 0? 0

40
The Government Finance issue
  • Capital injections should generally be expensed,
    even though they are always net worth neutral for
    the corporation in question and also for
    government
  • Prudence cover past or future losses of public
    corporations, which are not accrued as expenses
    in the books of government
  • Injections realized in a commercial context, with
    expectation of a reasonable return on investment,
    can be classified as transaction in equity
  • Distributed dividends recorded for a period
    should not exceed the income of the period
  • distributions of superdividends or lump sum
    payments should be classified as financial
    transactions (for the part in excess)
  • otherwise governments would be able to manipulate
    the timing of their revenues, irrespective of the
    time of the underlying event (the profit accrued)

41
The Government Finance issue II
  • In Europe the accounting treatment of GG
    Public corporations transactions the most
    contentious issue when EU Commission visits
    countries
  • Railways
  • Importance of issue largely depends on the
    definition of the market/non market (50 rule or
    100 rule)

42
Guidance
  • SNA 1993 - ESA 1995
  • Dividends / losses
  • Quasi-corporations
  • Reinvested earnings (RoW)
  • Eurostats Manual on Deficit and Debt (MDD)
  • Interpretation of ESA 1995, though not a legal
    act
  • 40 of the MDD (of 243 pages) is dedicated to
    Part II Relations between the government and
    public enterprises
  • GFSM 2001
  • Compilation guide

43
Part II
  • Superdividends / Capital injections

44
Dividends (1)
  • SNA - mixed message
  • it encompasses all distribution of profits by
    whatever name they are called SNA 7.114
  • the level of dividend is not unambiguously
    attributable to a particular earning period....
    SNA 3.99
  • income is often defined as the maximum amount
    that a household, or other unit, can consume
    without reducing its real net worth SNA 8.15
  • QC income that the owner of quasi-corporations
    withdraws from them is analogous to the income
    withdrawn from corporations by paying out
    dividends to their shareholder SNA 7.89
  • QC amounts recorded under D.422 have to be
    explicitly identifiable (SNA 7.116) and will
    depend largely on the size of the
    entrepreneurial income (SNA 7.117)
  • QC D.422 excludes withdrawal of funds realized
    by the sale or disposal of the quasi-corporations
    assets or of large amounts of accumulated of
    retained earnings or other reserves. SNA 7.118

45
Dividends (2)
  • MDD II.1.2.1
  • Dividends arise from the government ownership of
    the unit. They, apply to payments that are funded
    from the units income. Dividends do not apply to
    payments funded by asset sales, capital gains, or
    reserves accumulated over several years, even if
    they are called dividend.
  • GFSM 2001
  • Dividends are payments a corporation makes out
    of its current income, which is derived from its
    ongoing productive activities. A corporation may,
    however, smooth the dividends its pays from one
    period to the next so that in some periods it
    pays more in dividends than it earns from its
    productive activities. Such payments are still
    dividends. Distributions by corporations to
    shareholders of proceeds from privatization
    receipts and other sales of assets and large and
    exceptional one-off payments based on accumulated
    reserves or holding gains are withdrawals of
    equity rather than dividends. GFSM 5.87

46
Capital injections (1)
  • 1993 SNA
  • Transfers from government units to publicly or
    privately owned enterprises to cover large
    operating deficits accumulated over two or more
    years are recorded as other capital transfer
    (D.99). SNA 10.141
  • Regular transfers paid to public corporations
    which are intended to compensate for persistent
    lossesi.e. negative operating surpluses
    (B.2)which they incur on their productive
    activities as a result of charging prices which
    are lower than their average cost of production
    as a matter of deliberate government economic and
    social policy, are recorded under D.319 Other
    subsidies on products. SNA 7.78c

47
Capital injections (2)
  • MDD
  • A capital injection made to cover expected future
    losses, as well as repetitive losses, should be
    recorded as capital transfer (D.9), even if
    shares (or equivalent) are issued. II.3.1.2.3.
  • GFSM
  • GFSM 6.60 Subsidies also include transfers to
    public corporations and quasi-corporations to
    compensate for losses they incur on their
    productive activities as a result of charging
    prices that are lower than their average costs of
    production as a matter of deliberate government
    economic and social policy. If such losses have
    been accumulated over two or more years, the
    payments are classified as miscellaneous other
    capital expense (2822).

48
Specific issues
  • Central bank lumpsums
  • MDD
  • Debt assumption / cancellation
  • ESA 1995 inconsistencies 3 cases not expensed
  • Quasicorporations / Privatization / disappearing
    entity
  • GFSM 2001 Appendix II inconsistencies
  • Notion of effective claim
  • 5 cases

49
SNA ambiguous reading of some government
operations
  • Subsidies (D.3) to cover persistent losses
    incurred as a matter of deliberate government
    policy
  • Tax (D.2) profits of fiscal monopolies
  • Capital transfers (D.9) to cover post losses
  • Current 1993 SNA
  • reference in each case to transfers, to cover
    losses//of profits fiscal mono.//of QC income
  • not in line with the accrual principle

50
Part III
  • Assessment of the GFSM 2001 and MDD guidance

51
Assessment (1)
  • MDD and GFSM 2001 usefully clarify 1993 SNA
  • They extend the 1993 SNA quasicorporation
    treatment to other public corporations
  • It has problems
  • Implementation
  • Conceptual

52
Assessment (2)
  • Implementation
  • Asymmetry
  • superdividends not recognized as revenue but
    capital injections are expensed
  • Misrepresentation of income over the long run
    (superdividend)
  • Time of recording for capital injection is
    unsatisfactory
  • Cherry picking
  • Loopholes
  • guarantees.

53
Assessment (3)
  • Not in line with core 1993 SNA/GFSM 2001
    principles
  • Dividends/injections are net worth neutral they
    do not meet the governments expense/revenue
    definition
  • Dividends/injections time of recording does not
    respect the accrual principle. The time of event
    is the time of the profit / of the loss
  • Income / revaluation delineation

54
Assessment (4) Principles own funds / net worth
neutrality
  • Superdividends partial liquidation (more cash
    less equity)
  • Dividend distribution gives rise to a fall on the
    market at time of distribution
  • Value of shares present value of future
    dividends
  • Capital injection less cash more equity
  • So what moves the own funds? the profit / the
    loss (at time they occur/are announced)

55
Assessment (5) Is it quantitatively important?
  • In the world massive cases of quasifiscal
    operations inequality of treatment
  • Algeria over the past 10 years, debt assumption
    of 10-15 of GDP every 3 years
  • Yemen losses are immediately covered by budget/
    most profits are immediately distributed
  • In Europe
  • On average, less severe cases (0.2-0.5 of GDP
    but in some countries up to 2 of GDP yearly)
    //. because of Eurostat MDD rules, most
    amounts are correctly recorded remains the
    issue of the time of recording
  • EU targets can be impacted (EDP)
  • Equality of treatment between countries

56
Part IV
  • Accruing of losses/profits - Reinvested earnings

57
1993 SNA treatment of property income on FDI -
D.43
  • DFI enterprise is subject to control or influence
    by a foreign direct investor the decision to
    retain some of its earnings within the enterprise
    must represent a conscious deliberate investment
    decision on the part of the foreign direct
    investor. SNA 7.121
  • DFI Direct foreign investment enterprises
    encompass corporations where a foreign investor
    owns a sufficient stake to have effective voice
    in its management. SNA 7.119

58
D.43
  • 1993 SNA recognizes income flow
  • D.43  reinvested earnings on FDI 
  • With a counterpart entry
  • F.5 Shares and other equity

59
Importance of D.43 a European experience
  • Governments contributions to Europe based on
    GNI/GNP (GNI Committee)
  • Relevant measure of relative national
    income/revenue
  • Reinvested earnings task force
  • Compilation of EU/Euro area sector accounts
  • Quarterly data task force
  • Work on asymmetries, notably D.43/D.42

60
Possible proposal for the new SNA
  • Extend the 1993 SNA treatment of reinvested
    earnings of FDI to earnings of public
    corporations / domestic direct investment links

61
Part V
  • Advantages
  • -
  • Arguments

62
Advantages GFS (1)Improvement in fiscal data
  • Boosts transparency (quasifiscal operations)
  • Lowers manipulability
  • Eliminates cherry picking and asymmetry
  • Eliminates loopholes
  • Captures the impact of fiscal policy on the
    economy correctly
  • Time of recording issue (when the economy is
    stimulated)

63
Advantages conceptual (2)
  • Solves the issue of superdividends and capital
    injections at a stroke they become financial
    transactions
  • Implements accrual reporting
  • Purifies the government expense/revenue
    definitions
  • Improves the income / revaluation delineation
  • Aligns with accounting practices (?)

64
Accounting practices reminder
  • Consolidated financial statements
  • Treatment of equity stakes in accounting
  • Controlled entities (above 50) consolidate
  • Associates (20 to 50) equity method
  • Below 20 at historical cost
  • Equity method
  • Equity reestimated on basis of shareholder equity
  • The profit of the investee is recognized,
    prorated, as profit of the investor
  • Therefore dividend is not a revenue..

65
IPSASB draft ED
  • How will the GGS IPSAS account for equity stakes
    of GGS?
  • In controlled entity
  • On a net equity basis equity method
  • Dividend is not a revenue the accruing profit is
  • Analogy limited as long as no Performance
    Reporting
  • In associates
  • What would be the treatment of capital
    injections?
  • Would GGS reclassify superdividends?

66
Argument (1) Source data
  • Difficulties of recording D.43 in balance of
    payment accuracy, reliability, timeliness issues
  • However
  • NSI have databases for sector accounts.
  • Governments need keeping data on their
    corporations
  • Treasury at the board of corporations (central
    government)
  • Transparency issue for public finance
  • MDD and GFSM 2001 also cumbersome
  • Flexibility in practice for local gov.s corpor.
  • Jeff Golland example for the UK
  • Problem of the minority stakes (private)

67
Argument (1bis) GFS issue Volatility and 1st
estimates issue
  • D.43 volatile?
  • In principle not it is not the accounting
    profit/loss it is more the operating surplus
    will hence mostly reflect the business cycle
  • Importance of quick/reliable estimates
  • Example in Europe EDP data due by 1st March
  • Profits can be 1st estimated based on business
    cycle
  • Profit of the year or year t-1?

68
Argument (2) Symmetry of treatment
  • AEG decided to keep D.43 for S.2
  • If extension to S.13, then to all economy.
  • But
  • SNA encompasses sector specific rules
  • FISIM assets recognition (durables)
  • Should we also extend the agreed ad-hoc rules of
    MDD/GFSM to all units (superdividends/equity
    injection)?
  • Question is the General Government sufficiently
    specific?
  • Any further extension is the prerogative of the
    AEG

69
Argument (2cont) Symmetry of treatment
  • Government change behavior on the basis of the
    way national accountant compile data
  • treatment of associates. in IAS
  • Government give away value (public corporation)
  • Quasi-fiscal operations
  • Reclassifying
  • Rerouting

70
Argument (4) Savings issue
  • Proposal will shift savings out of the corporate
    sector
  • But is this so important?
  • Some units have zero savings in SNA (pension
    funds, and also mutual funds under ESA)
  • profits is before distribution Savings
    capacity to  self finance  out of income can
    be measured by D.43 itself
  • Public corporations behave differently as private
    corporations (lack of savings do not restrain
    them)

71
Argument (5) Change in the definition of
income
  • The proposal restricts the extension to direct
    investment stakes of government
  • It is about control
  • Change to income definition would be to question
    the recording of dividend as such
  • In some respects the retreatment of
    superdividends as financial transactions changes
    also income (and possibly more)

72
The case for dividends as financial transactions
the Microsoft example
  • Used to distribute no dividends
  • Superdividends of 32 billion to be paid on
    December 4st (3 of monthly GDP)
  • US households income for December 2004? (bill
    Gates ownership)
  • US GNI for December 2004?
  • The target price of option plans of staff will be
    reviewed (Board Decision)
  • Is the fall in value on 4th December a volume
    change or a price change?

73
Argument (6)  An imputation 
  • Better to limit imputations in the SNA
  • Imputations are welcome when improving analytical
    relevance. Accrual recording imputations
  • Arguably, this more a delineation of flows (split
    of a change in value between a price component
    and a volume component) than an imputation
  • Signification of the artificial financial
    accounts entry?
  • Similar to interest accrued the reinvestment on
    the instrument shows a gain in size, in volume

74
Argument (7) Public Sector is enough
  • Public Sector GGS data have different purpose
  • SNA emphasis on GGS because of the nature market
    / non market of the output/resources
  • It does not prevent to account adequately for GGS

75
Argument (8) Creditors view
  •  Reinvested earnings imposes the creditors view
    on the debtor 
  • This is true for all property income on equity in
    SNA
  • equity seen as a liability, by convention
  • hence, dividend seen as a Use, by convention
  • The appropriate variable (for for-profit
    entities) is profit before distribution

76
Argument (9) Consistency with market valuation
  • Reinvested earnings is not consistent with
    market valuation
  • Reinvested earnings delineates between an income
    flow and a revaluation flow (whatever the
    valuation rule of the asset)
  • For a quasicorporation, revaluation those
    observable on the firms assets and on its other
    liabilities
  • For other shares (quoted), revaluation results
    from changes in the market conditions of the
    share itself

77
Argument (10) Ownership versus economic unit
  • Reinvested earnings departs from SNA with an
    emphasis on ownership versus economic units
  • But, justified in case of government
  • public sector / government delineation is based
    on the market/nonmarket criteria (fundamental
    economic behavior)
  • accountability requires reporting all public
    sector
  • reinvested earnings combines the two requirements

78
Arguments (11) A GFSM 2001 footnote
  • Footnote 18 of chapter 5 of GFSM 2001
  • Origin
  • Treat income on direct investment same
  • Hesitation to depart too radically from 1993 SNA
  • GFSM experts position reinvested earnings
  • Enhances transparency
  • Reduces manipulability
  • So GFSM 2001 will happily be changed if deemed to
    be acceptable in Reviewed SNA

79
Summary it is about control
  • About control/influence
  • Rational of the 1993 SNA FDI treatment
  • Rational for equity method in accounting (see
    IPSAS 7)
  • GFS government takes not-for-profit actions and
    may act via corporations
  • Government is different from other sectors it
    gives away value

80
Summary Balance of arguments
  • Enormous boost in transparency
  • Some remaining counterarguments
  • Decision to restrict to GGS is reasonable
  • 100 ownership only is appealing But this is
    control that is the more fundamental criteria

81
Part VI
  • Positions

82
AEG
  • sympathy in principle
  • Practical implementation
  • Definition of income
  • Is it acceptable to adopt such treatment for
    government only?

83
European Task Force
  • Position of the EU Commission services (DGECFIN)
    supportive of D.43
  • Position of the Task Force Chair (Eurostat)
    openness to extend D.43 to equity stakes at least
    for 100

84
Accounting?
  • Three questions
  • Would GGS be accounted for on equity method?
  • If yes, what would be the split under performance
    reporting?
  • If no, how would be accounted superdividends?
    Capital injections?

85
TFHPSA
  • ..

86
Part VII
  • Pending issues

87
What definition of profit?
  • Definition of profit to accrue for D.43
  • 1993 SNA B.2D.4r-D.4pD.7r-D.7p-D.5p
  • Question of consumption of fixed capital
  • Adaptation to government?
  • Capital transfers/ Loans write offs (for public
    banks)
  • B.8n, B.10.1, B.9?

88
Question of threshold
  • No reinvested earnings
  • 100 ownership (straightforward)
  • 50 ownership (control established)
  • 20 ownership (associates in accounting)
  • 10 ownership (FDI 1993 SNA)
  • 0 ownership (all equity)

89
Various SNA review options

      Sector Sector Sector
  RoW General Corporations
Ownership   Government  
100          
50        
10      ??  
0.1          

    Current SNA
    Possible extension (1) Possible extension (1)
  Possible extension (2) Possible extension (2)
2/2/2004 2305
90
Other technical issues
  • Recording of losses (negative profits)
  • Expense or negative revenue of the investor?
  • Treatment of indirect profits
  • follow the BOP expertise?

91
Extension to other sectors / equity
  • To be decided by AEG (not GFS specific)
  • Extension to other sectors
  • ROW applied / households negligible / General
    Government suggested / remains
    financial-nonfinancial sectors delineation
  • Extension to other equities
  • Practice of share buybacks (USA)
  • Anomaly of the revaluation account
  • Notion of volume of instrument profit reinvested
    allows the enterprise to grow in size. Like wine
    ageing, it is not a price change but a volume
    change.

92
Part VIII
  • Recommendations
  • (tentative not mutually exclusive)

93
Recommendation 1
  • Change SNA to drop the reference to transfers
  • To cover losses....
  • Of profits of fiscal monopolies
  • For quasicorporations

94
Recommendation 2
  • Interpret SNA on the notion of income, to limit
    dividends to operating income of the period
  • Interpret SNA for expensing capital injections in
    all (most) cases
  • Clarify the treatment of debt operations in a
    consistent way towards expensing
  • Recognize weaknesses of this approach

95
Recommendation 3
  • Adopt reinvestment earnings to GG holdings in
    public corporations/direct investment
  • Recognize conceptual superiority
  • Control/influence of the shareholder
  • Accrual basis
  • Look at useful thresholds
  • Look at the definition of earnings
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