GLOSSARY OF STATISTICAL TERMS
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
Organisation de Coopération et de Développement Economiques
2007
INTRODUCTION
1.
Background
Over the last two decades, international organisations such as the OECD, International Monetary Fund
(IMF), International Labour Organisation (ILO), United Nations Statistical Division (UNSD) and the
Statistical Office of the European Communities (Eurostat), in collaboration with national statistical
agencies, have developed a comprehensive set of international statistical guidelines and recommendations
covering almost all statistical domains1. This work continues as new areas of statistical need arise (ecommerce, biotechnology, etc) and old standards require revision. The primary aims of these statistical
standards are promotion of best practice and use of common concepts in the statistics compiled by
national agencies and international organisations alike. Both are prerequisites for the compilation of
statistics that can be readily used in international comparisons.
A cornerstone of these international standards is the set of definitions of data elements and concepts
developed to facilitate the compilation of internationally comparable statistics. Unfortunately, because of
the diversity of the institutional, economic and cultural climate within different countries, these definitions
are often the result of comprises and by necessity are fairly broad in many instances. To a large extent
they can be viewed as “target” definitions requiring elaboration and adaptation to national circumstance.
A factor complicating international comparisons of national statistical practice has been the use by different
countries and international organisations of different terminologies for the same concepts. In few cases,
such differences can also be found within the same country or organisation. The use of inconsistent labels
frequently leads to misinterpretation of available data, as well as to other problems for data quality. Finally,
the inconsistent application of terminology can also cause problems in data collection by international
organisations and in their preparation of metadata text explaining national practices followed to compile
statistics. Finally, such inconstancies severely limit the use of much existing metadata in comparing
national data.
Given the role of international organisations in promoting the use of “standard” concepts and definitions
and in increasing their visibility by making them readily accessible, in 2001 the OECD decided to develop
the Glossary of Statistical Terms. This Glossary, available on Internet since January 2002 at
http://stats.oecd.org/glossary is also available in PDF that can be downloaded to your system. A limited
number are also available on CD-ROM. While the update of the content of the Internet version is an ongoing activity, the PDF and CD-ROM versions are a snapshot of the Internet database version as of
December 2007 and currently contains around 7,000 definitions.
The first six pages of the OECD Glossary are provided in this document to illustrate its format.
2.
Aims of OECD Glossary
The main aims of the OECD Glossary of Statistical Terms are to provide a:
highly visible and readily accessible source of definitional information for use by OECD author areas in
the development of questionnaires and other data collection instruments, and for inclusion in published
output. The Glossary is intended to facilitate the collection of consistent data by the various OECD
Directorates and Committees. The Glossary is also intended to lend greater transparency to OECD
data requirements from national agencies that provide information to the Organisation. Obviously, such
uses would also be of interest to people working in national agencies;
set of target definitions based on existing international statistical standards that will ultimately be linked
to actual data located on OECD databases. In other words, the Glossary will also be an integral part of
the new OECD Statistical Information System.
catalyst for the development of consistent international statistical standards by international
organisations working in co-operation with national agencies. The Glossary highlights areas of existing
1
A comprehensive list of these guidelines is located on the United Nations Statistical Division (UNSD) website,
Methodological Publications in Statistics (http://esa.un.org/unsd/progwork). Another site listing almost all of the current
international statistical classifications is provided on a Eurostat site - http://europa.eu.int/comm/eurostat/ramon.
3
inconsistencies between existing standards and may help prevent similar occurrences events in the
future.
3.
Description of OECD Glossary of Statistical Terms
The OECD Glossary of Statistical Terms contains a comprehensive set of definitions of the main data
items collected by the Organisation. The Glossary also contains definitions of key terminology and
concepts and commonly used acronyms. The definitions in the OECD Glossary are primarily drawn from
existing international statistical guidelines and recommendations referred to above. In the main, the
definitions are quoted word for word from these sources and a detailed reference is provided to enable the
user to refer to the complete source document to obtain further information/context where needed. The
source information provided relates to the source from where the definition was extracted for inclusion in
the OECD Glossary. This source document may not in fact have been the original source of the definition.
It should be emphasised that national data collected by the OECD are based on national definitions. These
may for a number of reasons depart from definitions contained in international statistical guidelines and
recommendations. Information on national definitions, concepts, etc, for specific data collected from
Member countries are normally presented in relevant OECD publications.
The main elements of the OECD Glossary are:
unique title for the definition;
text outlining the actual definition;
text outlining the context for the definition, i.e. background information about the definition, appropriate
use, etc;
detailed source information. In most instances the source cited is self evident but in a small number of
cases the acronyms listed below at the end this Introduction have been used, the most common one
being “SNA” for the 1993 System of National accounts;
internal cross-links to related definitions, etc., contained elsewhere in the Glossary;
URL link to the source of the definition where this is currently located on the internet.
The internet version of the Glossary also includes powerful text search and interrogation facilities.
The title for each definition included in the Glossary is unique. In a relatively small number of instances
several definitions may exist for the one term. This occurs, for example, when definitions have been
prepared in the context of the System of National Accounts (SNA 93), other definitions developed by
United Nation agencies and by other international organisations such as the OECD and Eurostat to meet
their particular requirements. For example, Eurostat and European Commission definitions have been
prepared for the European context, and though these definitions are in the main consistent with those
developed by United Nations agencies they are often more detailed/specific and are frequently imbedded
in various European Commission Regulations.
Where more than one definition exists, a unique title has been provided through the inclusion of acronyms
to identify the source of each definition in the title (SNA, Eurostat, ISIC, UN, ESA, ILO, etc.). A complete
list of the acronyms used in Glossary definition titles is provided below at the end of this Introduction.
4.
Links to other relevant glossaries on the Internet
A number of other international organisations and many national statistical agencies have compiled
glossaries that provide definitions of key concepts and statistical domain specific variables, etc. However,
in the main these glossaries have been domain (or issue) specific and as a result there are many instances
of different and inconsistent definitions being disseminated in multiple glossaries containing same concepts
within the one organisation and country.
To help overcome this problem, a number of international organisations have developed extensive
glossary databases containing definitions of key concepts and variables covering a wide range of statistical
concepts, etc. The OECD Glossary of Statistical Terms is one example of such a glossary database,
though others have been developed by Eurostat, the United Nations Statistical Division and the
International Statistical Institute. Links to some of these glossaries are provided below.
4
Eurostat’s concepts and definitions
database (CODED)
http://forum.europa.eu.int/irc/dsis/coded/info/data/
coded/en.htm
United Nations Statistical Division’s data
dictionary of official definitions
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/cdb/cdb_list_dicts.asp
The process of compiling these extensive glossary databases has entailed the confrontation of inconsistent
definitions covering the same concept that previously resided in different glossaries with narrower
coverage. In effect, the extensive glossary databases developed by the OECD, Eurostat and UNSD
facilitate the preparation of sub-glossaries covering more specific statistical domains with consistent
definitional content. In the OECD context, the OECD Glossary of Statistical Terms can be used to derive a
number of sub-glossaries the content of which will often overlap.
For example, the OECD Glossary also includes definitions and concepts currently being developed for
inclusion in the Metadata Common Vocabulary (MCV) being developed as part of the Statistical Data and
Metadata Exchange (SDMX) project. This project is a consortium of seven international organisations
(Bank for International Settlements, European Central Bank, Eurostat, IMF, OECD, UNSD and the World
Bank) working together to develop more efficient processes for the exchange of data and metadata, both
between themselves and from national agencies to international organisations. More detailed information
about the SDMX project is available on the project website at www.sdmx.org.
Examples of other specific sub-glossaries that can be derived from the OECD Glossary database are the
“SNA Glossary” and the “Data and Metadata Reporting and Presentation Glossary”.
5. Comments and future changes to the Glossary
The OECD Glossary is still evolving with regards to both definitional content and facilities for its use.
Comments and suggestions are welcome (either through use of the "Contact Us" facility on the internet
version or by email to catherine.MARTIN@oecd.org).
Comment is particularly sought from users on the definitions currently included in the Glossary, for
example:
there may be more appropriate definitions that should be incorporated in preference to those already
listed;
definitions for other topics, concepts should also be included; or
reference/source and context information may not be sufficiently detailed.
6. How you can access the OECD Glossary of Statistical Terms
The OECD Glossary has been available free of charge on the Internet as a read-only database since
January 2002 at http://stats.oecd.org/glossary.
Since the end of 2004 the Glossary is also available on the Internet in PDF and WORD that can be
downloaded to your system at the above address.
A limited number are also available on CD-ROM.
While the update of the content of the Internet database version is an on-going activity, the PDF, WORD,
CD-ROM and limited print versions are snapshots of the Internet database version as of December 2007.
OECD,
Paris
December 2007
5
Acronyms used in Glossary definition titles and source information
BIS
Bank for International Settlements
BPM
The Balance of Payments Manual, Fifth Edition, (BPM5) IMF, Washington D.C. 1993
CPC
Central Product Classification (CPC), Version 1.0, United Nations, New York, 1997
DAC
Development Assistance Committee
ECB
European Central Bank
ECMT
European Conference of Ministers of Transport
ESA
European Standard Accounts, 1995 (ESA), Eurostat, Luxembourg
Eurostat
Statistical Office of the European Union
IEA
International Energy Agency
ILO
International Labour Organisation
IMF
International Monetary Fund
ISI
International Statistical Institute
ISO
International Standards Organisation
ISIC Rev.2
International Standard Industrial Classification of All Economic Activities, Revision 2,
United Nations, New York
ISIC
Rev. 3
International Standard Industrial Classification of All Economic Activities, Revision 3,
United Nations, New York, 1990
NACE
Nomenclature generale des activites economiques dans les Communautes
Europeennes, Revision 1, Eurostat, Luxembourg, 1996
National
Definitions derived from national sources such as national statistical institutes, central
banks, etc
OECD
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
Other
Definitions derived from other published sources such as the Oxford University Press,
International Statistical Institute, etc.
SNA
System of National Accounts, 1993 (SNA 93), European Commission, IMF, OECD,
United Nations, World Bank
UN
Recommendations and guidelines embodied in the various international statistical
standards disseminated by the United Nations, New York
6
7
OECD Glossary of Statistical Terms
A posteriori audit
See Ex post control.
but in ―other changes in non-financial asset n.e.c.‖
in the ―Other changes in assets account‖.
See also: Ex poste control
Abnormal obsolescence is a synonym for
―unforeseen obsolescence‖
A priori audit
See Ex ante control
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
See also: Ex ante control
A programme
language (APL)
A high level programming language for scientific
and business applications in which the fundamental
objects are scalars, vectors, and matrices.
See also: Unforeseen obsolescence – OECD,
Unforeseen obsolescence – SNA
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
See also: Accumulated benefit obligation
ABO
See Accumulated benefit obligation
Absence from work
due to illness
Absence from work due to illness refers to the
number of work days lost per year per currently
employed person
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Abatement
Réduction
See Pollution abatement
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
See also: Pollution abatement
Abatement cost
Abatement costs refer to expenditures which
reduce the direct pressures on natural assets (for
example from air emissions or waste disposal).
Absolute difference
Différence absolue
The difference, taken without regard to sign,
between the values of two variables; and in
particular of two random variables.
Context: The calculation of imputed abatement
costs does not require the definition of absolute
environmental quality levels or standards but of
reductions in levels (for residual flows in
particular). Ideally, imputed abatement costs
should always be calculated as the sum of direct
and indirect cost effects of additional prevention
measures.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Absolute error
Erreur absolue
The absolute error of an observation x is the
absolute deviation of x from its ―true‖ value.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 9.37
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Absolute frequency
Fréquence absolue
The absolute frequency of a variate, as distinct
from the relative frequency, namely the ratio of
the frequency to the total frequency of all variate
values.
Abnormal
Obsolescence anormal
obsolescence
Abnormal obsolescence is the loss in value of an
asset due to a fall in demand for that type of asset
that could not have been foreseen when the asset
was acquired.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Context: Abnormal obsolescence may occur
because of a new invention or discovery which
destroys the market for the asset or because a
shift in relative prices makes it uneconomic to
continue using the asset.
Abuse of dominant
It is not included in consumption of fixed capital
8
position
The term abuse of dominant position refers to
anticompetitive business practices in which a
dominant firm may engage in order to maintain or
increase its position in the market.
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 46
Acceptance region
Région d'acceptation
The set of acceptable values defined by the edits
for each record. For categorical data the
acceptance region can be represented as a set of
lattice points in N-Space. For numerical data it is a
set of convex regions in N-Space (N-dimensions of
real numbers). Also called a feasible region.
Context: These business practices by the firm, not
without controversy, may be considered as
"abusive or improper exploitation" of monopolistic
control of a market aimed at restricting
competition.
The term abuse of dominant position has been
explicitly incorporated in competition legislation of
various countries such as Canada, EEC and
Germany. In the United States, the counterpart
provisions would be those dealing with monopoly
and attempts to monopolize or monopolization of a
market. Which of the different types of business
practices are considered as being abusive will vary
on a case by case basis and across countries.
Some business practices may be treated differently
in different jurisdictions as well. However, the
business practices which have been contested in
the following: charging unreasonable or excess
prices, price discrimination, predatory pricing, price
squeezing by integrated firms, refusal to deal/sell,
tied selling or product bundling and pre-emption of
facilities.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Acceptance rule
Acceptance rule
Logical or arithmetic condition applied to a data
item or data group that must be met if the data
are to be considered correct.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Acceptance region
See also: Anticompetitive practices
Accessibility (as a
statistical data quality
dimension)
The ease and the conditions with which statistical
information can be obtained.
Academic staff
Academic Staff (International Standard
Classification of Education (ISCED) 5-6) includes
personnel whose primary assignment is
instruction, research, or public service. This
includes staff personnel who hold an academic
rank with titles such as professor, associate
professor, assistant professor, instructor, lecturer,
or the equivalent of any of these academic ranks.
The category includes personnel with other titles,
(e.g. dean, director, associate dean, assistant
dean, chair or head of department), if their
principal activity is instruction or research. It does
not include student teachers or teacher aides
Context: Accessibility refers to the availability of
statistical information to the user (International
Monetary Fund, "Data Quality Assessment
Framework - DQAF - Glossary").
Accessibility includes the ease with which the
existence of information can be ascertained, as
well as the suitability of the form or medium
through which the information can be accessed.
The cost of the information may also be an aspect
of accessibility for some users. (Statistics Canada,
"Statistics Canada Quality Guidelines", 4th edition)
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 45
In SDMX, "Accessibility of Documentation" refers
to the availability of documentation of various
aspects of the data (sources and methods
documents) and the content of such
documentation.
Academic support for
students
Academic Support (International Standard
Classification of Education (ISCED) 5-6) includes
all personnel whose primary responsibility is to
support the academic program of students. It
includes all pedagogical support staff, as well as
other professional support staff employed in
tertiary education institutions.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) – BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD – Metadata Common Vocabulary
See also: Clarity, Integrity, Quality – Eurostat,
Quality – IMF, Simultaneous release
9
may be:
Accessibility (in EDemocracy)
Is concerned with the means by which all groups
can have access to the electronic engagement,
including the visually disadvantaged.
- internal, to a higher level of management, in
which managers are assessed on a regular basis on
the way in which they have carried out the tasks
set out in their job description, with pay increases
and/or promotion prospects frequently dependent
on the outcome of such assessments (performance
appraisal);
Source: OECD, 2003, Promise and Problems of EDemocracy: Challenges of online citizen
engagement, OECD, Paris, Annex 1: Commonly
used E-Engagement Terms
- external, to parliament, the public or central
agencies such as the supreme audit institution
(SAI), for their own performance (and, in the case
of senior officials, for the performance of the
organisation which they manage).
Account
An account is a tool which records, for a given
aspect of economic life, (a) the uses and resources
or (b) the changes in assets and the changes in
liabilities and/or (c) the stock of assets and
liabilities existing at a certain time; the
transactions accounts include a balancing item
which is used to equate the two sides of the
accounts (e.g. resources and uses) and which is a
meaningful measure of economic performance in
itself
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Source: SNA 2.85 and 2.87
Accounting basis
Defined by the International Federation of
Accountants (IFAC) as ―the body of accounting
principles that determine when the effects of
transactions or events should be recognized for
financial reporting purposes. It relates to the
timing of the measurements made, regardless of
the nature of the measurement.‖
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Accountability
Responsabilité
(environmental)
Accountability is the responsibility for the
deterioration of the natural environment, implying
the allocation of environmental costs to the
economic activities that cause such deterioration.
Context: There are many variations of the
accounting basis. IFAC identifies two basic
reference points (cash and accrual) and two
variations (modified cash and modified accrual).
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
See also: Polluter-pays-principle, User-pays
principle
See also: Accounting conventions, Special Data
Dissemination Standard (SDDS)
Accountability (in
management theory)
A key concept in modern management theory and
practice. It means that managers are held
responsible for carrying out a defined set of duties
or tasks, and for conforming with rules and
standards applicable to their posts.
Accounting controls
Those procedures and documentation concerned
with safeguarding of assets, the conduct and
recording of financial transactions and the
reliability of financial records. They are frequently
based on standards issued by the Ministry of
Finance or the supreme audit institution (SAI) to
ensure comparability of accounting practices
across all ministries and conformity with national
and/or international conventions.
Context: The person or body to which the manager
must report and answer for his or her actions are
made explicit and he or she may be rewarded for
good performance or suffer the consequences of
inadequate performance. A manager of an
organisational unit may also be held accountable
for the actions of subordinate staff.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Governments introducing reforms in public
management have generally tried to delegate
greater flexibility and autonomy to managers as a
means of improving efficiency and effectiveness of
their operations. Since this gives the manager
greater power to make decisions, the reforms have
included much greater emphasis on accountability
as a means of balancing and checking his exercise
of that power. In relation to work carried out by
government ministries and agencies, accountability
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
See also: Control/controls
Accounting
conventions
10
Term capturing the practical aspects and
conventions used when compiling data from
diverse sources under a common methodological
framework.
Principles as promulgated by the Financial
Accounting Standards Board in the United States of
America).
Source: Code of Good Practices on Transparency in
Monetary and Financial Policies, Part 1—
Introduction, Approved by the IMF Executive Board
on July 24, 2000.
Context: In SDMX, "Accounting Conventions" (also
referred to as accounting "basis") refers to
descriptions of the types of prices used to value
flows and stocks, or other units of measurements
used for recording the phenomena being observed;
the time of recording of the flows and stocks or the
time of recording of other phenomena that are
measured, including the reference period
employed; and the grossing/netting procedures
that are used.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/mae/mft/sup/part
1.htm#appendix_III
Accounting system
The set of accounting procedures, internal
mechanisms of control, books of account, and plan
and chart of accounts that are used for
administering, recording, and reporting on financial
transactions.
Accounting conventions may refer to whether the
data are recorded on a cash/accrual or mixed
accounting basis, the time of their recording and
the reference period (fiscal or calendar year)
employed. The description could also include how
consistent the practices used are with
internationally accepted standards - such as the
Balance of Payments 5th Manual or SNA93 - or
good practices.
Context: Systems should embody double entry
bookkeeping, record all stages of the payments
and receipts process needed to recognize
accounting transactions, integrate asset and
liability accounts with operating accounts, and
maintain records in a form that can be audited.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
See also: Recording of transactions, Reference
period, Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX), Time of recording - SDMX, Valuation
Accounting treatment
of remedial costs
Remedial costs (restoration of land or site) are
treated as land improvement. They are included in
the fixed capital formation.
Accounting edit
See Balance edit
See also: Balance edit
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 6.83
Accounting rate
In telecoms, the charge made by one country‘s
telephone network operator for calls originating in
another country.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Accounting treatment
of terminal costs
The decommissioning costs should be recorded as
capital formation when they are actually incurred
but the deduction of these costs from income via
consumption of fixed capital will have been made
progressively over the life of the asset just as the
―replacement costs‖ are.
Accounting standards
Accounting standards are methodologies and
disclosure requirements for the preparation and
presentation of financial statements.
Context: Accounting standards are usually
developed within the institutional and professional
framework of a country, and promulgated by
regulatory or professional accountancy bodies.
Standards can also be backed by ethical standards
issued by an accountancy body that provide for
professional sanctions against members in the
event of non-compliance. Accounting standards
may also be developed in harmony with, or as an
adaptation of, an internationally recognized set of
benchmark standards such as International
Accounting Standards (as promulgated by the
International Accounting Standards Committee), or
the U.S. GAAP (General Accepted Accounting
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 6.67
Accrual accounting
11
Comptabilité sur la
base des droits et
obligations
Accrual accounting records flows at the time
economic value is created, transformed,
exchanged, transferred or extinguished; this
means that flows which imply a change of
ownership are entered when ownership passes,
services are recorded when provided, output is
entered at the time products are created and
intermediate consumption is recorded when
materials and supplies are being used
A part of the accounting records which records
liabilities.
Context: For example, if an organisation pays ECU
100 000 annually in arrears at 30 June for services
received, by 31 December it has therefore received
50 per cent of those services for no payment and
should make an accrual for a liability of ECU 50
000 at 31 December.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Context: Recognition in financial accounts of the
implications of transactions (or decisions giving
rise to transactions) when they occur irrespective
of when cash is paid or received. (The OECD
Economic Outlook: Sources and Methods. Available
at http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods).
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Source: SNA 3.94
Accrued benefits
Prestations
constituées
The amount of accumulated pension benefits of a
pension plan member on the basis of years of
service.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Cash accounting, Due-for-payment
recording, Modified accrual accounting
Accrual factor
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Coefficient
d'accumulation
See Accrual rate
Accrued interest
Accrued interest is interest which has accumulated
but which is not legally due before a specified
payment date
See also: Accrual rate
Accrual of interest
costs
Continuous recording of interest costs, so matching
the cost of capital with the provision of capital.
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Accrued rights
See Accrued benefits
Droits constitués
See also: Accrued benefits
Accrual rate
Taux d'accumulation
The rate at which pension benefits builds up as
member service is completed in a defined benefit
plan.
Accumulated assets
Actifs accumulés
The total value of assets accumulated in a pension
fund.
Context: Identical term, "Accrual factor"
Context: Identical term, "Accumulated
contributions"
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Defined benefit pension plans - OECD
Accumulated benefit
obligation (ABO)
Obligations au titre
des prestations
constituées
The actuarial present value of benefits, vested and
non-vested, attributed to the pension formula to
employee service rendered to a particular date,
based on current salaries.
Accrual reporting
Reporting based on accrual accounting systems.
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
See also: Accrual accounting
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Accruals account
12
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
atno=12-539-X&CHROPG=1)
See also: Projected benefit obligation (PBO)
Accuracy is the second quality component in the
Eurostat Definition.
Accumulated
contributions
See Accumulated assets
Cotisations
accumulées
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003.
See also: Accumulated assets
See also: Error, statistical, Precision, Quality –
Eurostat, Quality – IMF, Reliability, Statistical Data
and Metadata Exchange (SDMX), Statistical error
Accumulation
Accumulation
Accumulation is the acquisition of fixed assets,
stocks of non-durable goods, land, mineral
deposits and other non-reproducible tangible
assets, financial assets, patents, copyrights and
other tangible assets during a period of account
less the incurrence of liabilities. This is gross
accumulation. Net accumulation is gross
accumulation during a period reduced by the
consumption of fixed capital
ACI
Airports Council International
Acid precipitation
Précipitation acide
Acid precipitation is any form of precipitation (rain,
snow, hail or fog) whose acidity has been
increased through the intake of acid pollutants
from the air.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
See also: Acid rain
Accumulation
Comptes
accounts
d‟accumulation
Accumulation accounts are flow accounts that
record the acquisition and disposal of financial and
non-financial assets and liabilities by institutional
units through transactions or as a result of other
events
Acid rain
See Acid precipitation
Pluie acide
See also: Acid precipitation
Acidifying potential
(AP)
The aggregate measure of the acidifying potential
of some substances, calculated through the
conversion factor of sulphur oxides and nitrogen
and ammonia into acidification equivalents (H+
ion).
Source: SNA 1.9 [2.93, 10.1]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.28
Accuracy
Closeness of computations or estimates to the
exact or true values that the statistics were
intended to measure.
Context: In SDMX, "Accuracy" refers to the
provision of either measures of accuracy or
precision (numerical results of the
methods/processes for assessing the accuracy or
precision of data) or qualitative assessment
indicators. It may also be described in terms of the
major sources of error that potentially cause
inaccuracy. It includes providing the results of the
assessment of source data for coverage, sampling
error, response error and non-sampling error.
ACP
African, Caribbean and Pacific countries. Group of
71 countries with preferential trading relation with
the EU under the former Lomé Treaty now called
the Cotonou Agreement.
The accuracy of statistical information is the
degree to which the information correctly describes
the phenomena it was designed to measure. It is
usually characterized in terms of error in statistical
estimates and is traditionally decomposed into bias
(systematic error) and variance (random error)
components. It may also be described in terms of
the major sources of error that potentially cause
inaccuracy (e.g., coverage, sampling, non
response, response). (Statistics Canada, "Statistics
Canada Quality Guidelines", 4th edition, October
2003, page 6-7, available at
http://www.statcan.ca:8096/bsolc/english/bsolc?c
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Acquis
communautaire
The body of Community legislation by which all EU
Member States are bound. Countries joining the EU
13
must have implemented the existing acquis
communautaire by the time of accession.
de
The times at which goods and services are
acquired are when the change of ownership occurs
or the delivery of the services is completed
Source: European Central Bank, 2003, Annual
Report: 2003, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Source: SNA 9.34
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Acquisition
(ownership)
Acquisition refers to obtaining ownership and
control by one firm, in whole or in part, of another
firm or business entity.
Acquisitions
Acquisitions
Goods (including assets) and services are acquired
by institutional units when they become the new
owners of the goods or when the delivery of
services to them is completed
Context: As distinct from a merger, an acquisition
does not necessarily entail amalgamation or
consolidation of the firms. An acquisition, even
when there is complete change in control, may
lead the firms involved to continue to operate as
separate entities. Nevertheless, joint control
implies joint profit maximization and is a potential
source of concern to antitrust authorities.
Source: SNA 9.32
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Acquisitions approach
(to CPI)
An approach to CPIs in which consumption is
identified with the consumption goods and services
acquired by a household in some period (as
distinct from those wholly or partially used up for
purposes of consumption). Depending on the
intended scope of the CPI, acquisitions may include
not only goods and services purchased, but also
those acquired by own-account production or as
social transfers in kind from government or nonprofit institutions.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Merger, Takeover
Acquisition of
technology and
knowledge
Acquisition of technology and knowledge involves
the purchase of external knowledge and
technology without active co operation with the
source. This external knowledge can be embodied
in machinery or equipment that incorporates this
knowledge. It can also include the hiring of
employees who possess the new knowledge, or the
use of contract research and consulting services.
Disembodied technology or knowledge also
includes other know-how, patents, licences,
trademarks and software.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Acronym
Word formed from the initial letter or letters of
each of the successive of major parts of a
composite term. Examples: Soweto (South West
Townships); radar; UNGEGN.
Source: OECD, 2005, ―The Measurement of
Scientific and Technological Activities: Guidelines
for Collecting and Interpreting Innovation Data:
Oslo Manual, Third Edition‖ prepared by the
Working Party of National Experts on Scientific and
Technology Indicators, OECD, Paris, para. 269
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Acquisition price
Prix d'acquisition
The acquisition price is the price that was actually
paid for an asset when it was first acquired by a
resident user. It is a synonym for ―historic price"
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Active bribery
See Active corruption
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
See also: Active corruption
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
Active corruption
Active corruption or ―active bribery‖ is defined as
paying or promising to pay a bribe.
See also: Historic prices
Acquisition, time of
Source: OECD, 2007, Bribery in Public
Acquisition, moment
14
Procurement: Methods, Actors and CounterMeasures, OECD, Paris
mode transport
actif) / (mode passif)
Transport of goods using two modes of transport in
combination, where one (passive) transport means
is carried on another (active) transport means
which provides traction and consumes energy
(rail/road transport, sea/road transport, sea/rail
transport...).
Active field
A data item (field) for which some values of this
data item create a conflict in combination with
values of other data items.
Context: Piggy-back transport is the synonym for
rail/road transport.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Active mode / Road
Transport
accompanied
accompagné mode
transport
actif / route
Transport of a complete goods road motor vehicle,
accompanied by the driver, by another mode of
transport (for example by sea or rail).
Active labour market
programmes
Active labour market programmes includes all
social expenditure (other than education) which is
aimed at the improvement of the beneficiaries‘
prospect of finding gainful employment or to
otherwise increase their earnings capacity. This
category includes spending on public employment
services and administration, labour market
training, special programmes for youth when in
transition from school to work, labour market
programmes to provide or promote employment
for unemployed and other persons (excluding
young and disabled persons) and special
programmes for the disabled
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Active mode / Road
Transport non
unaccompanied
accompagné mode
transport
actif / route
Transport of goods road motor vehicles or trailers,
not accompanied by the driver, by another mode
of transport (for example by sea or rail).
Source: An Interpretative Guide to the OECD
Social Expenditure Database (SOCX), OECD, page
15
See also: Passive or income maintenance
programmes (labour market programmes)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Active member
Membre adhérent
actif
A pension plan member who is making
contributions (and/or on behalf of whom
contributions are being made) and is accumulating
assets.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Activity
Activité
An activity is a process, i.e. the combination of
actions that result in a certain set of products.
See also: Pension plan member
Context: An activity as defined in ISIC Rev. 3 may
consist of one simple process, e.g. weaving, but
may also cover a whole range of subprocesses,
each of which are mentioned in different categories
of the (ISIC) classification. For example, the
manufacturing of a car is considered one activity
even though its integrated production process
includes sub-activities such as casting, forging,
welding, assembling, painting, etc (ISIC Rev. 3
para 30).
Active
metainformation
system
An active metainformation system is physically
integrated with the information system containing
the data that the metadata in the metainformation
system informs about
Source: Guidelines for the Modelling of Statistical
Data and Metadata, UNECE and UNSC, Conference
of European Statisticians Methodological Material,
1995 – page 1
In practice the majority of units carry on activities
of a mixed character. One can distinguish between
three types of economic activity:
- Principal activity: The principal activity is
identified by the topdown method as the activity
which contributes most to the total value added of
the entity under consideration. The principal
See also: Passive metainformation system
Active mode / Passive Transport (mode
15
activity so identified does not necessarily account
for 50% or more of the entity's total value added.
- Secondary activity: A secondary activity is any
other activity of the entity that produces goods or
services.
- Ancillary activity: Principal and secondary
activities are generally carried out with the support
of a number of "ancillary activities", such as
accounting, transportation, storage, purchasing,
sales promotion, repair and maintenance etc. Thus
ancillary activities are those that exist solely to
support the main productive activities of an entity
by providing non-durable goods or services for the
use of that entity.
- (NACE Rev. 1, Statistical Classification of
Economic Activities in the European Community,
Introduction, Eurostat, May 1996, P. 14-15,
Council Regulation (EEC), No. 696/93, Section IV
B1 and B4 of 15.03.1993 on the statistical units for
the observation and analysis of the production
system in the Community and Eurostat
consume collectively. Also referred to as ―collective
consumption expenditure‖.
Source: Statistical Office of the United Nations,
"International Standard Industrial Classification of
all Economic Activities, Third Revision", Statistical
Papers Series M No. 4, Rev. 3, United Nations,
New York, 1990, para. 29
Source: SNA 9.97 and 9.3
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Actual final
consumption of
general government
Consommation finale
effective des
administrations
publiques
Actual final consumption of general government is
measured by the value of the collective (as
opposed to individual) consumption services
provided to the community, or large sections of the
community, by general government; it is derived
from their final consumption expenditure by
subtracting the value of social transfers in kind
payable
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Ancillary activity – Eurostat, Ancillary
activity – ISIC Rev. 3, Ancillary activity – SNA,
Principal activity – Eurostat, Principal activity –
ISIC Rev. 3, Principal activity – SNA, Secondary
activity – ISIC Rev. 3, Secondary activity – SNA
Actual final
Consommation finale
consumption of
effective des ménages
households
Actual final consumption of households is the value
of the consumption goods and services acquired by
households, whether by purchase in general, or by
transfer from government units or NPISHs, and
used by them for the satisfaction of their needs
and wants; it is derived from their final
consumption expenditure by adding the value of
social transfers in kind receivable
Activity classification
The main purpose of an activity classification is to
classify productive economic activities. The main
aim is to provide a set of activity categories that
can be utilised when dissecting statistics according
to such activities.
Source: SNA 9.11 and 9.3 [9.72, 9.96]
Context: ISIC is the United Nations International
Standard Industrial Classification of All Economic
Activities. The third revision of ISIC is used in the
1993 System of National Accounts (SNA)
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: ISIC Rev. 3, para. 16
Actual final
Consommation finale
consumption of noneffective des ISBLSM
profit institutions
serving households
There is no actual final consumption of non-profit
institutions serving households (NPISHs) because,
in practice, most of their services are individual in
nature and so, for simplicity, all services provided
by NPISHs are treated by convention as individual
(as social transfers in kind)
See also: Activity – ISIC Rev. 3, ISIC
Activity restriction free expectancy
Functional limitation-free life expectancy is the
average number of years an individual is expected
to live free of functional limitation if current
patterns of mortality and disability continue to
apply. Functional limitations mean restrictions in
abilities, for instance, to bend forward and pick up
something, or the ability to walk
Source: SNA 9.44 [9.94, 9.95]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Actual individual
Consommation
consumption
individuelle effective
Actual individual consumption is measured by the
total value of household final consumption
expenditure, non-profit institutions serving
households (NPISHs) final consumption
expenditure and government expenditure on
Actual collective
consumption
The final consumption expenditure of general
government on collective services. A measure of
the services that general government provides to
the community as a whole and which households
16
individual consumption goods and services
Actuarial liability
Passif actuariel
The amount calculated based on actuarial
assumptions that represents the present value of
the pension benefits accrued in a pension plan.
Context: The total value of the individual
consumption expenditures by households, NPISHs
and general government. A measure of the
individual goods and services that households
actually consume as opposed to what they actually
purchase.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
See also: Actuarial valuation
Actuarial reduction
Réduction actuarielle
The amount of benefit decrease the pension plan
member receives calculated based on actuarial
assumptions in case of early retirement.
Source: SNA [9.94]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Actual social
Cotisations sociales
contributions
effectives
Actual social contributions consist of employers‘
actual social contributions, employees‘ actual social
contributions, and social contributions by selfemployed and non-employed persons
See also: Actuarial assumptions, Early retirement
Actuarial report
Rapport d'actuaire
The report prepared by the actuary following the
actuarial valuation that describes the financial
position of the pension fund.
Source: SNA 8.67 - 8.70
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Imputed social contributions
See also: Actuarial valuation
Actuarial assumptions Hypothèses
actuarielles
The various estimates (including assumptions
related to changes in longevity, wage, inflation,
returns on assets, etc.) that the actuary makes in
formulating the actuarial valuation.
Actuarial surplus
Excédent actuariel
In a situation when the actuarial liability is less
than the actuarial value of a pension fund‘s assets,
the measure of this value.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Actuarial valuation, Actuary
See also: Actuarial deficiency, Actuarial valuation,
Overfunding
Context: Identical term, "Surplus"
Actuarial deficiency
Déficit actuariel
In a situation when the actuarial value of a pension
fund‘s assets is less than the actuarial liability, the
measure of this value.
Actuarial valuation
Évaluation actuarielle
A valuation carried out by an actuary on a regular
basis, in particular, to test future funding or
current solvency of the value of the pension fund‘s
assets with its liabilities.
Context: Identical term, "Deficiency"
Context: Identical term, "Valuation"
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Actuarial surplus, Actuarial valuation
See also: Actuarial deficiency, Actuarial surplus
Actuarial increase
Majoration actuarielle
The amount of benefit increase the pension fund
member receives calculated based on actuarial
assumptions in case of deferred retirement.
Actuary
Actuaire
The person or entity whose responsibility, as a
minimum, is to evaluate present and future
pension liabilities in order to determine the
financial solvency of the pension plan, following
recognised actuarial and accounting methods.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
See also: Actuarial assumptions, Deferred
retirement
17
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Indicators for 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2007,
Data sources, definitions and methods
Acute care
Acute care is one in which the principal intent is
one or more of the following:
Acute health
conditions
Acute health conditions are characterised by
sudden onset and are of finite duration. In
addition, they tend to severely restrict the
subject‘s usual daily activities
* to manage labour (obstetrics)
* to cure illness or to provide definitive treatment
of injury
* to perform surgery
* to relieve symptoms of illness or injury
(excluding palliative care)
* to reduce severity of an illness or injury
* to protect against exacerbation and/or
complication of an illness and/or injury which could
threaten life or normal function
* to perform diagnostic or therapeutic procedures
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 14.44
See also: Chronic health conditions
Ad hoc survey
An ad hoc survey is a survey without any plan for
repetition.
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Source: United Nations, 1964, Recommendations
for the Preparation of Sample Survey Reports
(Provisional Issue), Statistical Papers Series C, No.
1, Rev 2, Department of Economic and Social
Affairs, Statistical Office of the United Nations, New
York, p. 3
Acute care beds
Acute care beds are beds accommodating patients
where the principal clinical intent is to do one or
more of the following:
Ad valorem tariff
An ad valorem tariff is a charge levied on imports,
defined in terms of a fixed percentage of value
- manage labour (obstetric)
- cure illness or provide definitive treatment of
injury
- perform surgery
- relieve symptoms of illness or injury (excluding
palliative care)
- reduce severity of illness or injury
- protect against exacerbation and/or complication
of an illness and/or injury which could threaten life
or normal functions
- perform diagnostic or therapeutic procedures.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
See also: Specific-rate tariff
Adaptation
Adaptation
Adaptation refers to changes in an organism‘s
structure or habits that help it adjust to its
surroundings
Context: Acute care beds have alternatively been
defined as beds accommodating patients in a
hospital or hospital department whose average
length of stay is 30 days or less until the 1980s
and 18 days or less after.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 45
Adapted products
Produits adaptés
Adapted products are products that are less
polluting, at the time of their consumption and/or
scrapping, than equivalent traditional products. In
most cases, such products are more costly, and
their production and consumption are usually
encouraged by fiscal and other incentives.
Acute care hospital
staff ratio
The number of staff employed in hospitals, where
the primary focus of activity is on acute care,
divided by the number of available beds.
Context: Products which are cleaner (and therefore
more environmentally friendly) when used or
disposed of. These products are sometimes also
called (environmentally) cleaner products. Only the
extra-cost is accounted for in the environmental
protection expenditure.
Context: A proxy variable is the number of fulltime salaried doctors, nurses and administrators
(including contracted-out staff) divided by the
number of available beds.
United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
Caution should be exercised in making cross
country comparisons as some countries calculate
using Full Time Equivalent staff while others use
headcounts.
Source: OECD Health Data 2007: Statistics and
18
para. 5.83
Additives
Additives are non-hydrocarbon substances added
to or blended with a product to modify its
properties, for example, to improve its combustion
characteristics.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: Alcohols and ethers (MTBE, methyl
tertiary-butyl ether) and chemical alloys such as
tetraethyl lead are included here. Ethanol is not
included here, but under Gas/liquids from biomass.
ADB
See Analytical Data Base or Asian Development
Bank
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
See also: Analytical Data Base, Asian Development
Bank (ADB)
Add-factor
An add-factor is the adjustment made to equationbased projection over the forecasting period. For
example, if an equation has under-predicted a
variable in recent periods, then an "add factor"
may be added to the equation if it is judged that
the equation will under-predict over the forecast
period as well. In short, add factors are equationresiduals applied over the forecast period
Additivity - CPI
Additivité - IPC
At current prices, the value of an aggregate is
identical to the sum of the values of its
components.
Context: Additivity requires this identity to be
preserved for the extrapolated values of the
aggregate and its components when their current
values in some period are extrapolated using a set
of interrelated quantity indices; or, alternatively,
when the current values of an aggregate and its
components in some period are deflated using a
set of interrelated price indices.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Additional bonuses to
base salary (of
teachers)
Additional bonuses to base salary refer to
additional payments that teachers may acquire in
addition to the amount received on the basis of
educational qualification and experience (salary
scale). These bonuses may be awarded for
teaching in remote areas, for participating in
school improvement projects or special activities or
for excellence in teaching performance.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
See also: Additivity - PPI, Additivity - SNA
Additivity - PPI
Additivité - IPP
At current prices, the value of an aggregate is
equal to the sum of its components. At constant
prices, additivity requires this identity to be
preserved for the extrapolated values of the
aggregate and its components, when their values
in some reference period are extrapolated to some
other period using a set of interdependent volume
index numbers, or, alternatively, when the values
of an aggregate and its components in some period
are deflated using a set of interdependent price
index numbers based on some other period.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: Teacher‘s salaries
Additions to stock
levels
Positive changes in the stock of a non produced
environmental asset, in physical or monetary units.
The entry of the SEEA asset accounts that records
the value of changes in stock level of mineral and
energy resources due to new discoveries or
reappraisals of the quantity and quality of
previously known stocks; natural growth of noncultivated biological resources.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.93
See also: Additivity - CPI, Additivity - SNA
Additivity - SNA
Additivité - SCN
Additivity is a property pertaining to a set of
interdependent index numbers related by definition
or by accounting constraints under which an
aggregate is defined as the sum of its components;
additivity requires this identity to be preserved
when the values of both an aggregate and its
19
components in some reference period are
extrapolated over time using a set of volume index
numbers.
See also: Compilation practices, Revision policy,
Seasonal adjustment, Special Data Dissemination
Standard (SDDS)
Source: SNA para. 16.55
Adjustment for the
Ajustement pour la
change in the net
variation des droits
equity of households
nets des ménages sur
in pension fund
les fonds de pension
reserves
The adjustment for the change in the net equity of
households in pension fund reserves is equal to the
total value of the actual social contributions
payable into private funded pension schemes plus
the total value of contribution supplements payable
out of the property income attributed to insurance
policy holders (i.e., holders of pension rights)
minus the value of the associated service charges
minus the total value of the pensions paid out as
social insurance benefits by private funded pension
schemes; this adjustment is designed to ensure
that the balance of pension contributions over
pension receipts (i.e., of ―transfers‖ payable over
―transfers‖ receivable) does not enter into
household saving
See also: Additivity - CPI, Additivity - PPI
Address
A number or similar designation that is assigned to
a housing unit, business or any other structure.
Addresses mainly serve postal delivery, but are
also important for administrative purposes, for
example in civil registration systems and in census
taking.
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Adjustable Long-term
Putable Security
The currency conditions are similar to a foreign
interest payment security (FIPS); however, the
bonds have a floating interest rate and a put
option.
Source: SNA 9.16 [10.30]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Adjustment methods
See Adjustment
See also: Adjustment
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Administered item
Administered item is a registry item for which
administrative information is recorded in an
administration record.
Adjusted disposable
Revenu disponible
income
ajusté
Adjusted disposable income is derived from the
disposable income of an institutional unit or sector
by adding the value of the social transfers in kind
receivable by that unit or sector and by subtracting
the value of the social transfers in kind payable by
that unit or sector
Context: Administered item classification is the
relationship where an Administered Item is
classified based on a specified Classification
Scheme.
Administered item context is the relationship that
provides a Context for an Administered Item.
Source: SNA 8.24 [8.26]
Administered item identifier is an identifier for an
administered item. (ISO/IEC 11179-3 "Information
technology-Metadata registries (MDR)-Part 3:
Registry metamodel and basic attributes",
February 2003)
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Adjustment
The set of procedures employed to improve
coverage / classification / timing / valuation of the
data or to conform to an accounting/recording
basis or address data quality differences in
compiling specific data sets.
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
See also: Administration record, Metadata registry,
Registry item
Context: Items covered may include changes in
positions during the reference period associated
with transactions, exchange rate changes, price
changes, seasonal adjustment and other
adjustments.
Administered price
Prix administré
(schemes)
An administered price is a price fixed by policy
makers in order to determine, directly or indirectly,
domestic market or producer prices.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Context: All administered price schemes set a
minimum guaranteed support price or a target
20
price for a commodity, which is maintained by
associated policy measures, such as quantitative
restrictions on production and imports; taxes,
levies and tariffs on imports; export subsidies; and
public stockholding.
Administrative
controls
Refer to non-financial procedures and records of
ministries which ensure compliance with rules
governing activities such as:
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
- the appointment, promotion and disciplining of
personnel;
- public procurement;
- equal opportunities for minority groups;
- the handling of correspondence;
- travel and entertainment, etc.
Administered prices
(set by firms)
Administered prices are prices set by firms that do
not vary in response to short-run fluctuations in
demand and supply conditions.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Context: This price rigidity has been viewed by
some economists as arising from the exercise of
market power. Various research studies have been
conducted attempting to link administered prices
to concentration and inflation. What emerges from
the findings is that there are differences across
industries (and across countries) in the degree of
price flexibility which simple models of market
clearing cannot fully explain. However, researchers
have been confronted with serious measurement
difficulties, notably the fact that official price
indices often do not reflect price discounts. "The
Theory and the Facts of How Markets Clear", D. W.
Carlton in R. Schmalensee and R. Willig (eds.), The
Handbook of Industrial Organization, North
Holland, Amsterdam, 1989
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
See also: Control/controls
Administrative data
Administrative data is the set of units and data
derived from an administrative source.
Source: OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, "Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook", Annex 2, Glossary, Paris, 2002
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Administrative data
collection
Administrative data collection is the set of activities
involved in the collection, processing, storage and
dissemination of statistical data from one or more
administrative sources.
See also: Administrative data collection,
Administrative source
Administration (of a
Administration
pension fund)
The operation and oversight of a pension fund.
The equivalent of a survey but with the source of
data being administrative records rather than
direct contact with respondents.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Context: In this context, the administrative source
is the register of units and data associated with an
administrative regulation (or group of regulations),
viewed as a source of statistical data.
Administration record
Administration record is a collection of
administrative information for an administered
item.
Source: OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, "Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook", Annex 2, Glossary, Paris, 2002
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
Administrative
The term administrative relates to attributes that
describe management and control aspects of a
data element
See also: Administrative data, Administrative
source, Data source, types of
Administrative
regions
Administrative regions are the territorial units
which a country is divided in. There is normally an
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
21
administration with some government functions
and powers connected to administrative regions.
The jurisdiction of an administrative area normally
covers the total area inside its borders. In some
countries parts of the sea are also included in
administrative regions.
Adoption
Adoption is the legal and voluntary taking and
treating of the child of other parents as one‘s own
in so far as provided by the laws of the country. By
means of a judicial process, whether related or not
to the adopter, the adopted child acquires the
rights and status of a legitimate child
Source: Eurostat, 1999, Regions - Nomenclature of
territorial units for statistics - NUTS, Eurostat,
Luxembourg
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods,Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Administrative
regulations
Administrative regulations are paperwork and
administrative formalities - so-called "red tape"through which governments collect information
and intervene in individual economic decisions.
ADP
See Automated data processing
See also: Automated data processing (ADP)
Context: They can have substantial impacts on
private sector performance. Reform aims at
eliminating those no longer needed, streamlining
and simplifying those that are needed, and
improving the transparency of application.
ADSL
Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line
See DSL
Source: Regulatory Reform: A Synthesis, OECD,
Paris, 1997, page 11
See also: Digital Subscriber Line (DSL)
Advanced
manufacturing
technology
Advanced manufacturing technology is defined as
computer-controlled or micro-electronics-based
equipment used in the design, manufacture or
handling of a product.
Administrative source
Administrative source is the organisational unit
responsible for implementing an administrative
regulation (or group of regulations), for which the
corresponding register of units and the
transactions are viewed as a source of statistical
data.
Context: Typical applications include computeraided design (CAD), computer- aided engineering
(CAE), flexible machining centres, robots,
automated guided vehicles, and automated storage
and retrieval systems. These may be linked by
communications systems (factory local area
networks) into integrated flexible manufacturing
systems (FMS) and ultimately into an overall
automated factory or computer-integrated
manufacturing system (CIM).
Source: OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, "Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook", Second Draft, Annex 2, Glossary,
Paris, 2002
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
See also: Administrative data, Administrative data
collection, Data provider, Data source, types of
Source: OECD Frascati Manual, Fifth edition, 1993,
Annex 2, para. 35, page 117
Administrative status
Administrative status is a designation of the status
in the administrative process of a registration
authority for handling registration requests.
Hyperlink: http://www1.oecd.org/dsti/sti/statana/prod/eas_fras.htm
Source: ISO/IEC FCD FCD 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registers-Part 1:
Framework", May 2003
Advanced release
calendar
See Release calendar
See also: Release calendar
Administrative unit
A geographic area that serves administrative and
governmental functions. They are usually defined
and established by legal action.
Advanced Research
Programmes de
Qualifications (ISCED recherche de haut
6)
niveau (CITE 6)
Advanced Research Qualifications refer to tertiary
programmes that lead directly to the award of an
advanced research qualification, e.g., Ph.D. The
theoretical duration of these programmes is three
years full-time in most countries (for a cumulative
total of at least seven years full-time at the tertiary
level), although the actual enrolment time is
typically longer. The programmes are devoted to
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
22
advanced study and original research.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: International Council for the Exploration
of the Sea (ICES)
See also: International Standard Classification of
Education (ISCED).
AEA
Association of European Airlines
Advanced treatment
Technique de
technology (waste
traitement de pointe
water)
(pour les eaux usées)
Advanced treatment technology (waste water)
refers to processes capable of reducing specific
constituents in waste water not normally achieved
by other treatment options. It covers all unit
operations that are not considered to be
mechanical or biological, for example, chemical
coagulation, flocculation and precipitation, breakpoint chlorination, stripping, mixed-media
filtration, micro-screening, selective ion exchange,
activated carbon absorption, reverse osmosis,
ultrafiltration and electroflotation. Advanced
treatment processes may be used in conjunction
with mechanical and biological treatment
operations.
Affiliate under control
abroad
An affiliate under control abroad is an enterprise
controlled directly or indirectly by a parent
company which is controlled by residents of the
investor country.
Source: OECD, 2005, Measuring Globalisation:
OECD Handbook on Economic Globalisation
Indicators, OECD, Paris - Glossary
Affiliate under foreign
control
In a compiling country, an affiliate under foreign
control is an enterprise controlled by another
enterprise located abroad which is its parent
company.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: OECD, 2005, Measuring Globalisation:
OECD Handbook on Economic Globalisation
Indicators, OECD, Paris - Glossary
See also: Biological treatment technology,
Mechanical treatment technology
Advertising
Advertising helps manufacturers differentiate their
products and provides information about products
to consumers. As information, advertising provides
many benefits to consumers. Price advertising, for
example, lowers market prices. Advertising that
tells consumers about the existence of new
products facilitates entry. On the other hand, by
contributing to product differentiation, advertising
may create market power by raising barriers to
entry. Much empirical work has been carried out
about the competitive effects of advertising, with
no definitive results.
Affiliated enterprises
Enterprises related through direct investment
ownership structures, such as branches,
subsidiaries, associates, and joint ventures.
Affiliated enterprises include those in a direct
ownership relationship but also those that are
related through a third enterprise and/or a chain of
direct investment relationships.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Aforestation
Boisement
Aforestation is the artificial establishment of
forests by planting or seeding in an area of nonforest land
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Advisory Committee
Comité consultatif sur
on Fishery
la gestion des pêches
Management (ACFM)
(ACFM)
The Advisory Committee on Fishery Management
(ACFM) operates in the International Council for
the Exploration of the Sea (ICES) framework and
provides the advice and information on fisheries,
living resources and their exploitation and the
interaction between fisheries and the ecosystem as
requested by North Atlantic Fisheries Commission
(NEAFC), International Baltic Sea Fishery
Commission (IBSFC), NASCO, European
Commission and Member Countries of ICES
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
AFTA
See ASEAN Free Trade Area
See also: AFTA, ASEAN Free Trade Area
Age
Âge
Age is the interval of time between the day, month
and year of birth and the day and year of
23
occurrence of the event expressed in the largest
completed unit of solar time such as years for
adults and children and months, weeks, days,
hours or minutes of life, as appropriate, for infants
under one year of age (Gregorian calendar)
Age-efficiency profile Profil âge-efficacité
The age-efficiency profile of an asset describes the
change (usually the decline) in the efficiency of an
asset as it ages. Efficiency in this context refers to
the asset's ability to produce a quantity of capital
services for a given amount of inputs
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Context: The age-efficiency profile shows the loss
in productive capacity of a capital good over its life
time, or the rate at which the physical contribution
of a particular asset declines over time, as an
effect of wear and tear. (OECD Productivity
Manual: A Guide to the Measurement of Industry Level and Aggregate Productivity Growth, OECD,
Paris, March 2001, Annex 1 – Glossary. Available
at
http://www.oecd.org/subject/growth/prodmanual.pdf).
Age at last birthday
Âge au dernier
anniversaire
Age expressed as the number of birthday
anniversaries passed on the date of reference. As
it is the same as the number of completed years
lived by a person, it is also referred to as "age in
completed years".
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Source: Eurostat Glossary on Demographic
Statistics, 2000 Edition
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
Age of road vehicle
Âge du véhicle routier
Length of time after the first registration of the
road vehicle, irrespective of the registering
country.
Agenda 2000
Agenda 2000
Agenda 2000 is a Common Agricultural Policy
(CAP) reform package proposed by the European
Commission in 1998. After a number of
modifications, the European Union Heads of State
agreed to a package of reforms in March 1999.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Beginning in 2000, the package reduces
price supports and increases direct payments for
cereals and beef, while lowering oilseed direct
payments (by harmonising them with cereals) and
raising the milk quota. Dairy support price
reductions and the introduction of new dairy direct
payments are delayed until 2005, along with a
second round of milk quota increase. The package
is sometimes referred to as the ―Berlin Agreement‖
to distinguish the agreement from the initial
European Commission proposals.
Age reached during
Âge atteint au cours
the year
de l'année
The number of complete years lived at the end of
the year in question.
Context: For example, on 14 July 1997, a person
born on 22 August 1971 will be 26 during the year
(on 22 August 1997, i.e. before 1 January 1998).
This is the case for all of the 1971 generation. The
age reached during the year is also equal to the
year in question minus the year of birth (19971971=26).
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
See also: Berlin Agreement, Common Agricultural
Policy (CAP)
Source: Eurostat Glossary on Demographic
Statistics, 2000 Edition
Agenda 21
Action 21
Agenda 21 is the plan of action to achieve
sustainable development that was adopted by the
world leaders at the United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development held in Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil, in June 1992
See also: Age at last birthday
Age-dependency
ratios
Age-dependency ratios are a measure of the age
structure of the population. They relate the
number of individuals that are likely to be
―dependent‖ on the support of others for their daily
living – youths and the elderly – to the number of
those individuals who are capable of providing
such support.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www.unep.org/Documents/Default.asp?Doc
umentID=52
Source: OECD, 2007, Society at a Glance: OECD
Social Indicators, 2006 edition, OECD, Paris
Age-price profile
24
Profil âge-prix
The age-price profile shows the loss in value of a
capital good as it ages, or the pattern of relative
prices for different vintages of the same
(homogenous) capital good
Aggregate basis
Data collected on this basis show the total
transactions made by respondents during specified
reporting periods, such as information obtained
through enterprise surveys.
Context: The age-price profile of an asset
describes the change (usually the decline) in the
price of an asset as it ages. (Measuring Capital:
OECD Manual, Annex 1 Glossary of Technical
Terms Used in the Manual, OECD, 2001. Available
at
http://www.oecd.org/std/capital.pdf).
Source: OECD & IMF, 2004, Glossary of Foreign
Direct Investment Terms and Definitions, Paris and
Washington DC
Aggregate
concentration
See Concentration
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry- Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
See also: Concentration
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
Aggregate
Mesure globale du
measurement of
soutien
support (AMS)
Aggregate measurement of support (AMS) is the
indicator on which the domestic support discipline
for the Uruguay Round Agreement on Agriculture is
based. It is determined by calculating a market
price support estimate for each commodity
receiving such support, plus non-exempt direct
payments or any other subsidy not exempted from
reduction commitments, less specific agricultural
levies or fees paid by producers.
Aggregate (data)
Data obtained by aggregation, as distinct from unit
record data.
Context: In the context of PPPs an aggregate is
also a set of transactions relating to a specified
flow of goods and services in a given period, such
as the total purchases made by resident
households on consumer goods and services or the
total expenditure by government on collective
services or the total value of gross fixed capital
formation.
Context: It differs from the Producer Support
Estimate (PSE) in many respects. The most
important difference is that price gaps in the AMS
calculation are estimated by reference to domestic
administered prices and not to actual producer
prices, and that external reference prices are fixed
at the average levels of the 1986-1988 base
period. In addition, many budgetary transfers
included in PSEs are excluded from the AMS.
The term ―aggregate‖ is also used to mean the
value of the specified set of transactions.
(Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations)
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary.
See also: Producer Support Estimate (PSE)
Aggregates of basic
headings
Any aggregation of groups of basic headings, such
as bread and cereals, up to GDP.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
Also known as summary or analytical categories.
Aggregate (set of
transactions)
A set of transactions relating to a defined flow of
goods and services, such as the total output
produced by resident establishments in a given
period, or the total purchases of intermediate
inputs made by resident establishments in a given
period. The term ―aggregate‖ also is used to mean
the value of the specified set of transactions.
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Aggregates of the
Agrégats du SCN
System of National
Accounts
The aggregates of the System of National Accounts
(SNA) - for example, value added, income,
consumption and saving - are composite values
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
25
which measure the result of the activity of the
entire economy considered from a particular point
of view; some aggregates may be obtained directly
as totals of particular transactions (e.g. final
consumption, gross fixed capital formation and
social contributions) while others may result from
summing up balancing items for the institutional
sectors (e.g. value added, balance of primary
incomes, disposable income and saving)
to that at which detailed observations are taken.
Context: With standard hierarchical classifications,
statistics for related categories can be grouped or
collated (aggregated) to provide a broader picture,
or categories can be split (disaggregated) when
finer details are required and made possible by the
codes given to primary observations.
("United Nations Glossary of Classification Terms";
prepared by the Expert Group on International
Economic and Social Classifications)
Source: SNA 2.169 and 2.170
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Aggregation denotes the compounding of primary
data into an aggregate, usually for the purpose of
expressing them in a summary form. For example,
national income and price index numbers are
aggregative, in contrast to the income of an
individual or the price of a single commodity (The
International Statistical Institute, ―The Oxford
Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by Yadolah
Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003).
Aggregation
Agrégation
Aggregation is the combination of related
categories, usually within a common branch of a
hierarchy, to provide information at a broader level
to that at which detailed observations are taken.
Context: With standard hierarchical classifications,
statistics for related categories can be grouped or
collated (aggregated) to provide a broader picture,
or categories can be split (disaggregated) when
finer details are required and made possible by the
codes given to primary observations.
In the context of PPPs aggregation refers to the
procedure of computing PPPs above the basic
heading level. The process of weighting, summing
and averaging basic heading PPPs to obtain PPPs
for each level of aggregation up to and including
GDP.
("United Nations Glossary of Classification Terms";
prepared by the Expert Group on International
Economic and Social Classifications)
(Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations)
Aggregation denotes the compounding of primary
data into an aggregate, usually for the purpose of
expressing them in a summary form. For example,
national income and price index numbers are
aggregative, in contrast to the income of an
individual or the price of a single commodity (The
International Statistical Institute, ―The Oxford
Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by Yadolah
Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003).
Source: "United Nations Glossary of Classification
Terms"; prepared by the Expert Group on
International Economic and Social Classifications;
unpublished on paper.
Hyperlink:
unstats.un.org/unsd/class/family/glossary_short.ht
m
In the context of PPPs aggregation refers to the
procedure of computing PPPs above the basic
heading level. The process of weighting, summing
and averaging basic heading PPPs to obtain PPPs
for each level of aggregation up to and including
GDP.
See also: Compilation practices, Disaggregation,
Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS)
Aggregation in
physical accounts
A mean to improve the interpretability of physical
flows accounts grouping materials with a common
characteristic, or contributing to a specific
environmental issue through a weighting system,
e.g. the carbon dioxide equivalent, the ozone
depleting potential, acidifying potential etc.
(Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations)
Source: "United Nations Glossary of Classification
Terms"; prepared by the Expert Group on
International Economic and Social Classifications;
unpublished on paper.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.26
Hyperlink:
unstats.un.org/unsd/class/family/glossary_short.ht
m
See also: Compilation practices, Disaggregation,
Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS)
Aggregation
Agrégation
Aggregation is the combination of related
categories, usually within a common branch of a
hierarchy, to provide information at a broader level
Aggregation of data
into regions
The OECD Secretariat aggregates time series into
regional aggregates using individual country 1995
26
weights in GDP or expenditure items based on
1995 purchasing power parities (PPPs)
harmful of competition or proscribed by
competition laws. In several countries, competition
legislation provides exemptions for certain
cooperative arrangements between firms which
may facilitate efficiency and dynamic change in the
marketplace. For example, agreements between
firms may be permitted to develop uniform product
standards in order to promote economies of scale,
increased use of the product and diffusion of
technology. Similarly, firms may be allowed to
engage in cooperative research and development
(R&D), exchange statistics or form joint ventures
to share risks and pool capital in large industrial
projects. These exemptions, however, are
generally granted with the proviso that the
agreement or arrangement does not form the basis
for price fixing or other practices restrictive of
competition.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Agreed minute
Paris Club document detailing the terms for a debt
rescheduling between creditors and the debtor. It
specifies the coverage of debt-service payments
(types of debt treated), the cutoff date, the
consolidation period, the proportion of payments to
be rescheduled, the provisions regarding the down
payment (if any), and the repayment schedules for
rescheduled and deferred debt.
Creditor governments commit to incorporate these
terms in the bilateral agreements negotiated with
the debtor government that implements the
Agreed Minute. Paris Club creditors will agree to
reschedule only with countries that have an IMF
upper credit tranche arrangement (Stand-By
Arrangement or Extended Fund Facility (EFF)), a
Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility (PRGF)
arrangement, or a Rights Accumulation Program.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Agreement on the
Conservation of Small
Cetaceans of the
Baltic and North Seas
(ASCOBANS)
The objective of the Agreement on the
Conservation of Small Cetaceans of the Baltic and
North Seas (ASCOBANS) is to secure close cooperation between parties in order to achieve and
maintain a favourable conservation status for small
cetaceans. Each party to the agreement, within the
limits of its jurisdiction and in accordance with its
international obligations, is required to abide by a
range of conservation, research and management
measures
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Agreement (to lessen
or restrict
competition)
Agreement refers to an explicit or implicit
arrangement between firms normally in
competition with each other to their mutual
benefit. Agreements to restrict competition may
cover such matters as prices, production, markets
and customers.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Context: These types of agreements are often
equated with the formation of cartels or collusion
and in most jurisdictions are treated as violations
of competition legislation because of their effect of
increasing prices, restricting output and other
adverse economic consequences.
Agricultural activities Activités agricoles
The United Nations Food and Agricultural
Organisation (FAO) defines agricultural activities as
those listed in classes:
Agreements may be arrived at in an extensive
formal manner, and their terms and conditions are
explicitly written down by the parties involved; or
they may be implicit, and their boundaries are
nevertheless understood and observed by
convention among the different members. An
explicit agreement may not necessarily be an
"overt" agreement, that is one which can be openly
observed by those not party to the agreement.
Indeed, most agreements which give rise to
anticompetitive practices tend to be covert
arrangements that are not easily detected by
competition authorities.
- 111 (Agricultural and livestock production); and
- 112 (Agricultural services),
of the International Standard Industrial
Classification of all Economic Activities (ISIC),
Revision 2.
Context: In this narrow sectoral definition of
agricultural activities ―Hunting, trapping and game
propagation‖, ―Fishing‖ and ―Forestry and logging‖
are excluded.
Source: Economic Accounts for Agriculture:
Not all agreements between firms are necessarily
27
Presentation and Methodological Approach, OECD,
1999, page 5
household) or when the household head, reference
person or main income earner is economically
active in agriculture
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?CI=
3&Lg=1
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 13.15
Agricultural final
output
Final agricultural output measures the value of
agricultural products which, free of intra-branch
consumption, is produced during the accounting
period and, before processing, is available for
export and/or consumption.
Agricultural land
Terres agricoles
Agricultural land is land including arable land, land
under permanent crops and land under permanent
meadows and pastures
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: The measure of output refers to final
output. In comparison to harvested output this
narrower concept excludes:
Agricultural land and
surface water (SEEA)
Agricultural land and associated surface water is
equivalent to the 1993 SNA category ―land under
cultivation‖ (AN.2112) except for the qualification
on recreational land (see recreational land) and the
exclusion of plantations. The SEEA goes beyond
the 1993 SNA in identifying specific sub-categories
of agricultural land: cultivated land, pasture land
and other agricultural land.
- intra-branch consumption, whether by the
producing farm or by a farm other than the
producing farm, and, concerning crop products;
- losses between harvest and utilisation/storage
Source: Economic Accounts for Agriculture:
Presentation and Methodological Approach, OECD,
1999, page 6
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.64 EA. 22
Agricultural holding
(for census purposes)
An agricultural holding (for agricultural census
purposes) is a techno-economic unit of agricultural
production comprising all livestock kept and all
land used wholly or partly for agricultural purposes
and operated under the management of one
person or more , without regard to title, legal
form, size or location.
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 13.9
Agricultural Market
Access Database
See AMAD
See also: AMAD
Agricultural holding
(for economic
accounts)
An agricultural holding is the economic unit under
a single management engaged in agricultural
production activities. The unit may also be
engaged in non-agricultural activities so that this
concept should not be interpreted too strictly; the
aim is rather to value the final production of all
agricultural products. Also, establishments or
specialised units which provide agricultural services
on a fee or contract basis should, in general, be
included
Agricultural output,
final
See Final output, agricultural
See also: Final output, agricultural
Agricultural pollution Pollution agricole
Agricultural pollution comprises liquid and solid
wastes from all types of farming activities,
including run-off from pesticide and fertilizer use,
and from feedlots; erosion and dust from
ploughing; animal manure and carcasses; and crop
residues and debris
Source: Economic Accounts for Agriculture:
Presentation and Methodological Approach, OECD,
1999, page 5
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Agricultural waste
Agricultural
household
A household is considered to be an agricultural
household when at least one member of the
household is operating a holding (farming
Agricultural tractor
Tracteur agricole
Motor vehicle designed exclusively or primarily for
agricultural purposes whether or not permitted to
use roads opened to public traffic.
28
environment, a change in the environment, or a
driving force behind such a change, that can be
attributed wholly or in part to an agricultural
activity or activities
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Agricultural trailer
Remorque agricole
Trailer designed exclusively or primarily for
agricultural purposes and to be hauled by
agricultural tractor, whether or not permitted to
use roads opened to public traffic.
Agri-monetary system
Until the introduction of the single currency on 1
January 1999, intervention support prices and
payments under the Common Agricultural Policy
(CAP) were set in ECUs and then converted into
each country's currency using special conversion
rates called "green rates". These rates were
usually different from those established under the
European Monetary System (EMS) and from those
of the EU member states which are not members
of the EMS.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation, OECD, 2002, Glossary
of Agricultural Policy Terms
Agricultural waste
Déchets agricoles
Agricultural waste is waste produced as a result of
various agricultural operations. It includes manure
and other wastes from farms, poultry houses and
slaughterhouses; harvest waste; fertilizer run- off
from fields; pesticides that enter into water, air or
soils; and salt and silt drained from fields.
Agro-chemical
Agro-chemicals are commercially produced, usually
synthetic, chemical compounds used in farming —
such as a fertiliser, pesticide or soil conditioner
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
See also: Agricultural pollution
Agricultural water use
Agricultural water use includes water abstracted
from surface and groundwater, and return flows
(withdrawals) from irrigation for some countries,
but excludes precipitation directly onto agricultural
land
Agro-ecology
Agroécologie
Agro-ecology is the study of the relation of
agricultural crops and environment
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture:
Methods and Results, Executive Summary, OECD,
2000, page 48
Agro-ecosystem
An agro-ecosystem is an ecosystem under
agricultural management, connected to other
ecosystems
Agriculture support,
Total support
estimates
The annual monetary value of all gross transfers
from taxpayers and consumers arising from policy
measures that support agriculture, net of the
associated budgetary receipts, regardless of their
objectives and impacts on farm production and
income, or consumption of farm products.
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Agro-forestry
Agroforestage
Agro-forestry is the collective term used for landuse systems and technologies in which woody
perennials (trees, shrubs, palms, bamboo‘s and so
forth) are deliberately used on the same land
management unit as agricultural crops and/or
animals, in some form of either spatial
arrangement or temporal sequence
Source: OECD, 2001, Agricultural Policies in
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development-Countries, Monitoring and
Evaluation. Paris, annual.
Agri-environmental
indicator
An agri-environmental indicator is a summary
measure, combining raw data, used to describe the
state of the environment, a risk to the
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
29
Agronomy
Agronomie
Agronomy is the science of soil management and
crop production
Source: UNAIDS, Joint Programme on HIV/AIDS
with Unicef, UNDP, UNFPA, UNDCP, UNESCO,
WHO, World Bank. Report on the global HIV/AIDS
epidemic. Geneva, biennial. AIDS epidemic update.
Geneva, annual
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Air pollutants
Polluants
atmosphériques
Air pollutants are substances in air that could, at
high enough concentrations, harm human beings,
animals, vegetation or material. Air pollutants may
thus include forms of matter of almost any natural
or artificial composition capable of being airborne.
They may consist of solid particles, liquid droplets
or gases, or combinations of these forms
Aid
The words "aid" and "assistance" refer to flows
which qualify as Official Development Assistance
(ODA) or Official Aid (OA).
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
See also: Air pollution, Hazardous air pollutants
Aid activities
Aid activities include projects and programmes,
cash transfers, deliveries of goods, training
courses, research projects, debt relief operations
and contributions to non-governmental
organizations.
Air pollution
Pollution
atmosphérique
Air pollution is the presence of contaminant or
pollutant substances in the air that do not disperse
properly and that interfere with human health or
welfare, or produce other harmful environmental
effects
Source: OECD, 2004, Development Co-operation
Directorate (DAC), Glossary - CRS aid activity
database, OECD, Paris
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_14718511_1_1_1_1,00.html
See also: Air pollutants
Air pollution control
Lutte contre la
pollution
atmosphérique
Air pollution control refer to steps taken to
maintain a standard of purity of air for good public
health; for protection of plant and animal life, and
property; for visibility; and for safe ground and air
transportation
Aid in kind
Flows of goods and services with no payment in
money or debt instruments in exchange. In some
cases, ―commodity aid‖ goods (such as grain) are
subsequently sold and the receipts are used in the
budget or, more commonly through a special fund,
for public expenditure.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
See also: Protection of ambient air
Air pollution index
Indice de pollution
(API)
atmosphérique
An air pollution index (API) is a quantitative
measure that describes ambient air quality. The
index is obtained by combining figures for various
air pollutants into a single measurement
AIDS / HIV
prevalence rate
The AIDS / HIV prevalence rate in selected
populations refers to the percentage of people
tested in each group who were found to be
infected with HIV.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: UNAIDS, Joint Programme on HIV/AIDS
with Unicef, UNDP, UNFPA, UNDCP, UNESCO,
WHO, World Bank. Report on the global HIV/AIDS
epidemic. Geneva, biennial. AIDS epidemic update.
Geneva, annual
Air pollution sources
Sources de pollution
atmosphérique
Air pollution sources are activities that result in air
pollution including agricultural activities,
combustion processes, dust producing processes,
manufacturing activities, nuclear- energy related
activities, spray painting, printing, dry-cleaning
AIDS orphans
Children who have lost one or both natural parents
to AIDS.
30
and so on
The application of this concept is one of the two
main approaches to measuring earnings. The
concept is explained in the International
Accounting Standard No.8, ―Unusual and Prior
Period Items and Changes in Accounting Policy‖.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
When earnings are measured on the basis of this
concept, income is considered to be the amount
remaining after all items (including write-offs and
capital gains and losses, and excluding dividends
and any other transactions between the enterprise
and its shareholders or investors) causing any
increase or decrease in the shareholders‘ or
investors‘ interests during the accounting period,
are allowed for.
Air quality criteria
Critères de la qualité
de l‟air
Air quality criteria refer to levels of, and length of
exposure to, pollution resulting in adverse effects
on human health and well-being
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: OECD & IMF, 2004, Glossary of Foreign
Direct Investment Terms and Definitions, Paris and
Washington DC
Air quality standards
Normes de qualité de
l‟air
Air quality standards refer to levels of air
pollutants prescribed by regulations that may not
be exceeded during a specified time in a defined
area
See also: Current operating performance concept
(COPC)
Allocation of
emissions to final
demand
An analytical way, using input-output techniques,
to describe emissions according to the origin
(production, consumption and imports) and final
demand categories (final consumption, capital
formation and exports).
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Air time charges
Charges to users of wireless networks based on a
flat rate or on the actual time used. In cellular/PCS
networks, charges are typically on a timed basis.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 4.133
Source: Cellular Mobile Pricing Structures and
Trends, Working Party on Telecommunication and
Information Services Policies – November 1999,
page 9, Select Glossary of Mobile Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/54/42/2538118.pdf
Allocation of primary
income account - ESA
Compte d‟affectation
du revenu primaire Ŕ
SEC
The purpose of the allocation of other primary
income account is to return from the concept of
entrepreneurial income to the concept of primary
income. It therefore contains the elements of
primary income not included in the entrepreneurial
income account:
Airtime
Actual time spent using a wireless phone.
Source: Cellular Mobile Pricing Structures and
Trends, Working Party on Telecommunication and
Information Services Policies – November 1999,
page 9, Select Glossary of Mobile Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/54/42/2538118.pdf
a) in the case of corporations, distributed dividends
and reinvested earnings on direct foreign
investment (on the uses side);
ALGOL
(Algorithmic language) A landmark programming
language used for solving mathematical problems.
Developed in 1958.
b) in the case of households:
(1) property income payable, excluding rents and
interest payable in connection with the
entrepreneurial activity (on the uses side);
(2) compensation of employees (on the resources
side);
(3) property income receivable, excluding that
receivable in connection with the activity of the
enterprise (on the resources side);
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
c) in the case of general government:
(1) property income payable, excluding that
payable in connection with the market activities
(on the uses side);
All-inclusive concept
31
(2) taxes on production and imports less subsidies
(on the resources side);
(3) property income receivable, excluding that
receivable in connection with the market activities
(on the resources side)
AMAD
AMAD
The Agricultural Market Access Database (AMAD) is
a co-operative effort between Agriculture and Agrifood Canada, EU Commission-Agriculture DirectorGeneral, FAO, OECD, The World Bank, UNCTAD
and the United States Department of Agriculture,
Economic Research Service. Data in the database
is obtained from countries‘ schedules and
notifications submitted to the WTO
Source: ESA, Par. 8.29 [II.1.2.2]
See also: Allocation of primary income account –
SNA
Source: AMAD
Allocation of primary Compte d‟affectation
income account Ŕ SNA du revenu primaire Ŕ
SCN
The allocation of primary income account focuses
on resident institutional units or sectors in their
capacity as recipients of primary incomes rather
than as producers whose activities generate
primary incomes; it lists two kinds of income under
―resources‖:
Amalgamation
See Merger
See also: Merger
Ambiguity rule
Synonym of (p,q) rule.
(a) primary incomes already recorded in the
generation of income account that are receivable
by resident institutional units, and
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
(b) property incomes receivable from the
ownership of financial or tangible non-produced
assets (mainly land or sub-soil assets)
See also: p,q rule
Source: SNA 7.12 and 7.13
Amenity functions of
the natural capital
These service functions which are not survival
functions but improve the quality of life, for
example, by providing a pleasing landscape for
leisure pursuits.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Allocation of primary income account ESA
Allocative efficiency
See Pareto efficiency
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 1.23
See also: Pareto efficiency
ALMP
See Active labour market programme
See also: Active labour market programmes (ELS)
Alphanumeric
Representation, e.g. in a computer, that employs
not only numerals but also letters. In a wider
sense, also employing punctuation marks and
mathematical and other symbols.
American depository
receipt (ADR)
An ADR is a negotiable certificate that represents
ownership of the securities of a non-U.S. resident
company. Although the securities underlying ADRs
can be debt or money market instruments, the
large majority are equities. An ADR allows a nonU.S. resident company to introduce its equity into
the U.S. market in a form more readily acceptable
to U.S. investors, such as in U.S. dollars, without
needing to disclose all the information normally
required by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. A U.S. depository bank will purchase the
underlying foreign security and then issue receipts
in dollars for those securities to the U.S. investor.
The receipts are registered. The investor can
exchange the ADRs for the underlying security at
any time.
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
ALPS
See Adjustable long-term putable security
See also: Adjustable Long-term Putable Security
Alternative costs
See Opportunity costs
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
32
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Amplitude
Amplitude
In relation to a time series, the amplitude of a
fluctuation is the value of the ordinate at its peak
or trough taken from some mean value or trend
line. Sometimes the difference between values at
peak and trough is referred to as an ―amplitude‖.
American National
Standards Institute
(ANSI)
Established 1918. An organization that serves as a
clearinghouse for nationally coordinated voluntary
standards for fields ranging from information
technology to building construction.
Context: The distance from peak-to-trough in the
business cycle. In general, the larger the
amplitude is, the more volatile the business cycle
will be.
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
OECD, June 2004, Glossary, OECD Economic
Outlook, Paris, France.
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
American Standard
Code for Information
Interchange (ASCII)
A code used in computers and communications
systems in which each character, number, or
special character is defined in eight bits.
Amplitude
adjustment, CLI
Amplitude adjustment occurs when the OECD
composite leading indicator (CLI) is adjusted to
ensure that its cyclical amplitude on average
agrees with that of detrended reference series
Context: Each character is assigned a one byte
code, that is, a value between 0 and 255
(Handbook on Geographic Information Systems
and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No. 79, United Nations Department of Economic
and Social Affairs, Statistics Division, New York,
2000, Annex VI - Glossary).
Source: OECD Leading Indicator Website,
Glossary, 2001
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_34
349_1965941_1_1_1_1,00.html
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Amplitude ratio
Rapport d'amplitude
Some time series exhibit seasonal movements
which are regular in phase but vary in amplitude
from year to year. The actual amplitude in any
year, expressed as a proportion of the average
amplitude taken over a long period is called the
amplitude ratio. It affords a measure of departure
from normal seasonal variation.
Amortisation
Repayments of principal on a loan. Does not
include interest payments.
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
Amortisation schedule
The schedule for the repayment of principal and
payment of interest on an ongoing basis. For
loans, the schedule is normally included in an
annex to the contract or can be estimated from the
contract.
AMS
See Aggregate Measure of Support
See also: Aggregate measurement of support
(AMS)
Analysis
See Data analysis
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
See also: Data analysis
Hyperlink:
Analysis of correction
rule specifications
33
Analyse
Analysis of correction rule specifications entails
verifying consistency of correction rule
specifications, mainly in an extensive set of check
and correction rules.
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Analytical categories
The main aggregates, the expenditure categories,
the expenditure groups and expenditure classes for
which the results of a comparison are published.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Analytical Data Base
The Analytical Database (ADB) is the database
maintained by the OECD Secretariat and
underlying the projections presented in the OECD
Economic Outlook
Analysis of edit rule
specifications
Analysis of edit rule specifications is an activity by
which the consistency of a set of check rules is
ascertained, implied (derived) check rules are
created, and an economical form (reduction) of
specifications of the originally large number of edit
(check) rules is determined.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Analytical framework
An analytical framework describes the conceptual
system of definitions and classifications of the
related data.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Context: In the context of SDDS "analytical
framework" consists of the following components:
Analysis of variance
(ANOVA)
A statistical procedure for analyzing experimental
data.
1. International / Supranational guidelines:
identifies the standardized system of definitions
and classifications applied for analytical purposes
with regard to the conceptual framework and
organization of the related transactions data. (e.g.,
national accounts: System of National Accounts,
U.N. 1993; government operations: A Manual on
Government Finance Statistics, IMF, 2001; balance
of payments: Balance of Payments Manual, IMF,
1993).
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Analysis server
A form of remote data laboratory designed to run
analysis on data stored on a safe server. The user
sees the results of their analysis but not the data.
2. Specificities of national practice: describes how
concepts, definitions, and classifications for the
national data aggregates disseminated deviate
from those contained in relevant international or
regional standards and/or guidelines.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) – BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD – Metadata Common Vocabulary
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
See also: Special Data Dissemination Standard
(SDDS)
Analytic survey
Enquète
analytiquement
A (sample) survey where the primary purpose of
the design is the comparison between sectors or
subgroups of the population sampled.
Analytical unit Eurostat
Analytical units represent real or artificially
constructed units, for which statistics are compiled.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
Context: Analytical units are created by
statisticians, often by splitting or combining
observation units with the help of estimation and
imputation in order to compile more detailed and
34
Context: It should be noted that under the above
definition the following are not to be regarded as
ancillary activities:
more homogeneous statistics than is possible using
data on observation units. (ISIC Rev. 3, para. 63)
Analytical units can correspond, for example, to
enterprises, local units, kind-of-activity units
(KAU), local kind-of-activity units (local KAU) as
well as to units of homogeneous production (UHP)
and local units of homogeneous production (local
UHP).
- production of goods or work carried out which
forms part of fixed capital formation: in particular,
construction work for own account. This is in line
with the method used in NACE Rev. 1, where units
carrying out construction work for own account are
classified under the building industry if data are
available;
- production, a significant part of which is sold
commercially, even if much is used as consumption
in connection with the principal activity or
secondary activities;
- the production of goods which subsequently
become an integral part of the output of the
principal or secondary activity - e.g. production of
boxes, containers, etc. by a department of an
enterprise for use in packing its products;
- the production of energy (integrated power
station or integrated coking plant), even where this
is consumed in its entirety in the principal or
secondary activity of the parent unit;
- the purchase of goods for resale in (an) unaltered
state;
- research and development.
Source: Eurostat, CODED database
See also: Analytical unit – SNA, Classification,
Unit, statistical – ISIC
Analytical unit Ŕ SNA Unité d‟analyse Ŕ SCN
For more refined analysis of the production
process, use is made of an analytical unit of
production: this unit, which is not always
observable, is the unit of homogeneous production,
defined as covering no secondary activities.
Source: SNA 2.48
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Analytical Unit - Eurostat, Observation
unit, Statistical units – ISIC
These activities are not very widespread and do
not produce services which are used in current
production
ANBERD
The OECD‘s Analytical Business Enterprise
Research and Development (R&D) database
Source: Council Regulation (EEC), No. 696/93,
Section IV B1 and B4 of 15.03.1993 on the
statistical units for the observation and analysis of
the production system in the Community
Ancestry-based
Migrants ayant des
settlers
liens ancestraux
Ancestry based settlers are foreigners admitted by
a country other than their own because of their
historical, ethnic or other ties with that country,
who, by virtue of those ties, are immediately
granted the right of long-term residence in that
country or who, having the right to citizenship in
that country, become citizens within a short period
after admission
See also: Ancillary activity – ISIC Rev. 3, Ancillary
activity – SNA, NACE
Ancillary activity Ŕ
Activité auxiliaire Ŕ
ISIC Rev. 3
CITI Rév. 3
An ancillary activities are those that exist to
support the main productive activities of an entity
by providing non-durable goods or services entirely
or primarily for the use of that entity. Ancillary
activities are usually small scale compared to the
principal activity they support. The output is
always intended for immediate consumption within
the same entity and therefore it is not usually
recorded separately
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Context: According to ISIC Rev. 3 (para. 36)
ancillary activities can include activities such as:
- bookkeeping;
- transportation;
- storage;
- purchasing;
- sales promotions;
- cleaning;
- repair and maintenance;
- security.
Ancillary activity Ŕ
Activité auxiliaire Ŕ
Eurostat
Eurostat
According to the Regulation on statistical units an
activity must be regarded as ancillary if it satisfies
all the following conditions:
- it serves only the unit referred to: in other words,
goods or services produced must not be sold on
the market;
- a comparable activity on a similar scale is
performed in similar production units;
- it produces services or, in exceptional cases,
non-durable goods which do not from part of the
unit's end product (e.g. small implements or
scaffolding);
- it contributes to the current costs of the unit
itself, i.e. does not generate gross fixed capital
formation.
According to ISIC Rev. 3 (para. 39) the following
activities are not to be considered ancillary:
- Producing goods or doing work that are part of
fixed capital formation. The type of units most
affected are those doing construction work on the
account of their parent unit.
35
- Activities, the output of which, although used as
intermediate consumption by the principal or
secondary activity, is for the greater part sold on
the open market.
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
3: Guidelines for the reporting of different types of
data
- Producing goods which become a physical part of
the output of the principal or secondary activity,
e.g. production of boxes, etc, as packaging for its
own products.
Annual fellings
The average annual standing volume of all trees,
living or dead, measured over bark (with no
minimum diameter) that are felled during the
reference period, including the volume of trees or
parts of trees that are not removed from forested
land, other wooded land and other felling sites.
Includes silvicultural and pre-commercial thinnings
and cleanings left in the forest, and natural losses
that are not recovered.
- Research and development. These activities are
not universal and they do not provide services that
are consumed in the course of current production.
Source: ISIC Rev. 3, paras. 36, 37
See also: Analytical unit – SNA, Ancillary activity –
Eurostat
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.179
Ancillary activity Ŕ
Activité auxiliaire Ŕ
SNA
SCN
An ancillary activity is a supporting activity
undertaken within an enterprise in order to create
the conditions within which the principal or
secondary activities can be carried out; ancillary
activities generally produce services that are
commonly found as inputs into almost any kind of
productive activity and the value of an individual
ancillary activity‘s output is likely to be small
compared with the other activities of the enterprise
(e.g. cleaning and maintenance of buildings)
Annual growth rates
Annual growth rates are annual rates of change
expressed over the previous year.
Source: SNA 5.9 and 5.10 [15.16]
Context: For some phenomena, annual growth
rates may be further differentiated by the nature
or pattern of the incremental difference between
each successive period and whether or not the
absolute values of these increments over a given
period are themselves constant or changing. The
most commonly used patterns of growth are:
arithmetic, geometric and exponential.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Ancillary activity – Eurostat, Ancillary
activity – ISIC Rev. 3
Ancillary corporation Société auxiliaire
An ancillary corporation is a subsidiary corporation,
wholly owned by a parent corporation, whose
productive activities are ancillary in nature: that is,
they are strictly confined to providing services to
the parent corporation, or other ancillary
corporations owned by the same parent
corporation
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
3: Guidelines for the reporting of different types of
data
Annual pensions
estimate
See Benefit statement
Source: SNA 4.40
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Estimation annuelle des droits
See also: Benefit statement
See also: Ancillary activity – SNA
Annual removals
The average annual volume of those fellings that
are removed from forested land, other wooded
land and other felling sites during the reference
period. Includes removals during the reference
period of trees felled during an earlier period and
removal of trees killed or damaged by natural
causes (natural losses); for example, by fire,
storms, insects and diseases.
Andean Community
Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
Annual changes
Annual changes refer to annual changes in levels
expressed over the previous year.
36
different time periods (e.g. years and quarters).
However, because the impact of any irregular is
magnified, use of this form of growth rate
presentation is not recommended, especially as the
key headline series.
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.179
Annual report (of a
Rapport annuel
pension fund)
A report prepared each year by the pension fund,
which informs of its operation, and other
information whereby the trustees of the pension
funds inform all interested parties.
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
3: Guidelines for the reporting of different types of
data
See also: Annualised growth rate (annualised rate
of change), Linear approximation of the annualised
growth rate
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Annuitant
Titulaire d'une rente
The person who is covered by an annuity and who
will normally receive the benefits of the annuity.
Annualised data
See Annualised growth rates (annualised rate of
change)
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Annualised growth rate (annualised rate
of change)
See also: Annuity
Annualised growth
rate (annualised rate
of change)
Annualised growth rates (Annualised rate of
change) show the value that would be registered if
the quarter-on-previous quarter or month-onprevious month rate of change were maintained for
a full year.
Annuity
Rente
A form of financial contract mostly sold by life
insurance companies that guarantees a fixed or
variable payment of income benefit (monthly,
quarterly, half-yearly, or yearly) for the life of a
person(s) (the annuitant) or for a specified period
of time.
Context: Annualised growth rates attempt to
facilitate comparison of data for different time
periods (e.g. years and quarters). However,
because the impact of any irregular is magnified,
use of this form of growth rate presentation is not
recommended, especially as the key headline
series.
It is different to a life insurance contract which
provides income to the beneficiary after the death
of the insured. An annuity may be bought through
instalments or as a single lump sum. Benefits may
start immediately or at a pre-defined time in the
future or at a specific age.
Context: Identical term, "Pension annuity"
In addition to the compounded form of the
Annualised growth rate presented here, the term
―Annualised growth rate‖ is sometimes used to
describe the quarterly or monthly growth rate
multiplied by four or twelve.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Annuity rate
Multiplying the quarterly or monthly growth rate by
four or twelve is more appropriately referred to as
―Linear approximation of the annualised growth
rate‖.
Annuity rate
Taux de rente
The present value of a series of payments of unit
value per period payable to an individual that is
calculated based on factors such as the mortality
of the annuitant and the possible investment
returns.
Some agencies use the expression ―1-month rate
of change, annualised‖, etc, for such rates.
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
3: Guidelines for the reporting of different types of
data
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Unisex annuity rate, Unistatus annuity
rate
See also: Annualised semi-annual growth rate,
Linear approximation of the annualised growth rate
Annualised semiannual growth rate
Annualised semi-annual growth rates show the
value that would be registered if the rate of change
measured with reference to two quarters or six
months behind were maintained for a full year.
Annulment of a
marriage
The annulment of a marriage is the invalidation or
voiding of a legal marriage by a competent
authority, according to the laws of the country,
thus conferring on the parties the status of never
having been married to each other
Context: Annualised semi-annual growth rates
attempt to facilitate comparison of data for
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
37
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
construed as being anticompetitive and, if that, as
violating competition law, will vary by jurisdiction
and on a case by case basis. Certain practices may
be viewed as per se illegal while others may be
subject to rule of reason. Resale price
maintenance, for example, is viewed in most
jurisdictions as being per se illegal whereas
exclusive dealing may be subject to rule of reason.
The standards for determining whether or not a
business practice is illegal may also differ. In the
United States, price fixing agreements are per se
illegal whereas in Canada the agreement must
cover a substantial part of the market. With these
caveats in mind, competition laws in a large
number of countries examine and generally seek to
prevent a wide range of business practices which
restrict competition. These practices are broadly
classified into two groups: horizontal and vertical
restraints on competition. The first group includes
specific practices such as cartels, collusion,
conspiracy, mergers, predatory pricing, price
discrimination and price fixing agreements. The
second group includes practices such as exclusive
dealing, geographic market restrictions, refusal to
deal/sell, resale price maintenance and tied selling.
Anonymised data
Data containing only anonymised records.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Anonymised record
A record from which direct identifiers have been
removed.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Generally speaking, horizontal restraints on
competition primarily entail other competitors in
the market whereas vertical restraints entail
supplier-distributor relationships. However, it
should be noted that the distinction between
horizontal and vertical restraints on competition is
not always clear cut and practices of one type may
impact on the other. For example, firms may adopt
strategic behaviour to foreclose competition. They
may attempt to do so by pre-empting facilities
through acquisition of important sources of raw
material supply or distribution channels, enter into
long term contracts to purchase available inputs or
capacity and engage in exclusive dealing and other
practices. These practices may raise barriers to
entry and entrench the market position of existing
firms and/or facilitate anticompetitive
arrangements.
ANOVA
See Analysis of variance
See also: Analysis of variance (ANOVA)
ANSI
See American National Standards Institute
See also: American National Standards Institute
(ANSI)
Antarctic ozone hole
Trou dans la couche
d‟ozone au-dessus de
l‟Antarctique
See Ozone hole
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
See also: Ozone hole
Anticompetitive
Practiques
practices
anticoncurrentielles
Anticompetitive practices refer to a wide range of
business practices in which a firm or group of firms
may engage in order to restrict inter-firm
competition to maintain or increase their relative
market position and profits without necessarily
providing goods and services at a lower cost or of
higher quality.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Abuse of dominant position
Anti-dumping duty
Droit antidumping
An anti-dumping duty is a duty levied on imported
commodities. Article VI of the General Agreement
on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) permits special antidumping duties that are equal to the difference
between the import price and the normal value of
the product in the exporting country (the ―dumping
margin‖)
Context: The essence of competition entails
attempts by firm(s) to gain advantage over rivals.
However, the boundary of acceptable business
practices may be crossed if firms contrive to
artificially limit competition by not building so
much on their advantages but on exploiting their
market position to the disadvantage or detriment
of competitors, customers and suppliers such that
higher prices, reduced output, less consumer
choice, loss of economic efficiency and
misallocation of resources (or combinations
thereof) are likely to result.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
See also: Anti-dumping measures, GATT
Which types of business practices are likely to be
38
Anti-dumping
Mesures antidumping
measures
Anti-dumping measures can be adopted after an
investigation of the importing country, when
dumping and material injury resulting therefrom
has occurred.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Anti-dumping measures may take the form of antidumping duties or of price undertakings. Antidumping duties are generally enterprise-specific
duties levied on certain goods to offset the
dumping margin. Anti-dumping price undertakings
may be offered to exporters to avoid the
imposition of anti-dumping duties
APEC
APEC is the Forum for Economic Co-operation of 21
countries, formed in 1989, to promote free trade
and investment flows, economic growth and
stability in the Asia Pacific region
Context: Dumping takes place when a product is
exported at less than its normal value, i.e. the
comparable price, in the ordinary course of trade,
for the like product when consumed in the
exporting country.
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2000-2005,
OECD, 2000 edition, Annex II, Glossary of Terms
APL
See A Programme Language
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
See also: A programme language (APL)
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
APO
See Asian Productivity Organisation (APO)
See also: Anti-dumping duty, Dumping (of
products overseas)
See also: Asian Productivity Organisation (APO)
Anti-monopoly policy
See Antitrust
Apparent labour
productivity
Apparent labour productivity is defined as value
added per person employed
See also: Antitrust
Antiques and other art Antiquités et autres
objects
objets d‟art
Antiques and other art objects are non-financial,
tangible, produced assets that are not used
primarily for production or consumption, that are
expected to appreciate or at least not to decline in
real value, that do not deteriorate over time under
normal conditions and that are acquired and held
primarily as stores of value; they comprise
paintings, sculptures, etc, which are recognised as
works of art and antiques
Source: Statistics in focus: Industry, trade and
services; Theme 4 – 7/2001 - Distributive trades
statistics, Eurostat, Methodological Notes, page 7
Applicant country
See Accession countries
Applied research
Applied research is original investigation
undertaken in order to acquire new knowledge. It
is, however, directed primarily towards a specific
practical aim or objective
Source: AN.132 – Annex to chapter XIII
Antitrust
Antitrust refers to a field of economic policy and
laws dealing with monopoly and monopolistic
practices. Antitrust law or antitrust policy are
terms primarily used in the United States, while in
many other countries the terms competition law or
policy are used. Some countries have utilized the
phrases Fair Trading or Antimonopoly law.
Source: OECD Frascati Manual, Sixth edition,
2002, para. 64, page 30
Hyperlink: http://www1.oecd.org/dsti/sti/statana/prod/eas_fras.htm
See also: Basic research, Oriented basic research,
Pure basic research
Context: The intellectual basis for antitrust
economics or policy is the sub-field of industrial
organization economics which addresses issues
arising from the behaviour of firms operating under
different market structure conditions and the effect
this has on economic performance. Most antitrust
or competition laws have provisions dealing with
structure such as mergers, monopoly, dominant
market position and concentration, as well as
behaviour, such as collusion, price fixing, and
predatory pricing.
Apprentices
Apprentices are all employees who do not
participate fully in the production process of the
unit because they are working under an
apprentice's contract or because the fact that they
are undertaking vocational training impinges
significantly on their productivity.
Source: Eurostat, 1998, Definitions of SBS
Regulation variables (16 13 2), Eurostat,
39
Luxembourg
Refers to an authority under a law given by the
legislature to the executive to spend public funds
for a specified purpose.
Apprenticeship
support and related
forms of general
youth training
Apprenticeship support and related forms of
general youth training covers many forms of
training and work practice in enterprises for young
people. Access is not restricted to persons with
employment problems
Context: Annual appropriations are made through
annual budget laws. Supplementary
budgets/appropriations are sometimes granted
subsequent to the annual law if the annual
appropriation is insufficient to meet the purpose.
―Standing appropriation‖ is sometimes used for
authority extending beyond a single budget year
under separate legislation (such as social security
legislation). In some countries, such as the United
States, the term ―authorization‖ is used to denote
a general law setting up a program and permitting
appropriation but not giving any specific authority
to spend. In most countries, agencies and
departments require specific executive
authorization (―apportionment, allotment, or
warrant‖) to actually incur an obligation against
appropriation.
Source: Definitions of the Standardised categories
and Sub-categories of Labour Market Programmes,
OECD, 2001
Appropriate
Technologie adéquate
technology
See Environmentally sound technologies
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
See also: Environmentally sound technologies
Appropriation
accounts
Appropriation accounts contain detailed sources of
income and expenditures, saving and net lending
for key economic sectors such as general
government, businesses and households
Approximate
disclosure
Approximate disclosure happens if a user is able to
determine an estimate of a respondent value that
is close to the real value. If the estimator is exactly
the real value the disclosure is exact.
Context: Have a wide variety of uses in practice,
but may refer to funds separately identified by an
organisation for specific purposes. For example, a
government may establish an appropriation
account to monitor and record payments to private
consultants (Effects of European Union Accession,
Part 1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD
SIGMA Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List
of Useful Terms. Available at
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163)
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Aquaculture
Aquaculture/Aquiculture
Aquaculture is the farming of aquatic organisms
including fish, molluscs, crustaceans and aquatic
plants. Farming implies some sort of intervention
in the rearing process to enhance production, such
as regular stocking, feeding, protection from
predators and so forth. It also implies individual or
corporate ownership of the stock being cultivated
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Appropriation method
A method for estimating the resource rent using
the observed receipts of the owner of the
resource; may be applied for any resource:
subsoil, land, forests, fish, water, etc.
Arbitrage
Profiting from a difference in price when the same
security, currency or commodity is traded on two
or more markets.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.174
Context: Buying (or borrowing) in one market and
selling (or lending) in the same or another market
to profit from market inefficiencies or price
differences. (IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics:
Guide for Compilers and Users – Appendix III,
Glossary, IMF, Washington DC. Available from
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm)
Appropriations
Source: A glossary of terms used in payments and
40
settlement systems, July 2001, Committee on
Payment and Settlement Systems, Bank for
International Settlements
Context: µ-Argus is a specialized software tool for
the protection of microdata.
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/cpss00b.pdf
The two main techniques used for this are global
recoding and local suppression. In the case of
global recoding several categories of a variable are
collapsed into a single one. The effect of local
suppression is that one or more values in an
unsafe combination are suppressed, i.e. replaced
by a missing value.
ARCH / stochastic
volatility models
ARCH/stochastic volatility models are time series
models that allow for time-varying variances.
Both global recoding and local suppression lead to
a loss of information, because either less detailed
information is provided or some information is not
given at all. t-Argus is a specialized software tool
for the protection of tabular data. t-Argus is used
to produce safe tables. t-Argus uses the same two
main techniques as µ-Argus: global recoding and
local suppression. For t-Argus the latter consists of
suppression of cells in a table (whose data will be
averaged) may be fixed or random. The average
associated with a particular group may be assigned
to all members of a group, or to the "middle"
member (as in a moving average). It may be
performed on more than one variable with different
groupings for each variable.
Source: OECD Economic Outlook Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/28/54/1890650.ht
m
Area payments
Area payments are budgetary payments made to
individual producers on the basis of area (acres or
hectares) of eligible land.
Context: Under some programmes, payments are
made per hectare of land planted to a specific crop
in order to supplement producer returns earned
through market price. When used as part of a
supply control measure, acreage payments are
made per hectare of land fallowed or withdrawn
from agricultural use, or for non-production of
specific commodities. In some cases, an upper
limit is set on the number of hectares or the
percentage of total farm area eligible for acreage
payments. In the EU, area payments are made to
individual producers per hectare of eligible land
planted to cereals, oilseeds and protein crops as
compensation for decreases in administered prices.
The number of hectares eligible is the base area.
These payments are conditional on the
implementation of a land set-aside programme,
referred to as mandatory set- aside
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Arithmetic edit
See Formal edit
See also: Formal edit
Arithmetic growth
Arithmetic growth refers to the situation where a
population increases by a constant number of
persons (or other objects) in each period being
analysed.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Context: Arithmetic growth rates may take the
form of annual growth rates, quarter-on-previous
quarter growth rates or month-on-previous month
growth rates.
Area sampling
Échantillonnage par
zones
A method of sampling when no complete frame of
reference is available. The total area under
investigation is divided into small sub-areas which
are sampled at random or by some restricted
random process. Each of the chosen sub-areas is
then fully inspected and enumerated, and may
form a frame for further sampling if desired.
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
3: Guidelines for the reporting of different types of
data
Arm‟s length principle
This valuation principle is commonly applied to
commercial and financial transactions between
related companies. It says that transactions should
be valued as if they had been carried out between
unrelated parties, each acting in his own best
interest.
Context: The term may also be used (but is not
recommended) as meaning the sampling of a
domain to determine area, e.g. under a crop.
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003
Source: OECD, 2006, Annual Report on the OECD
Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises:
Conducting Business in Weak Governance Zones,
OECD, Paris
Argus
Two software packages for Statistical Disclosure
Control are called Argus.
41
Arrears are amounts of principal and/or interest
due but not paid as of the reporting date
Armed forces
Forces armées
Members of the armed forces are those personnel
who are currently serving in the armed forces
including auxiliary services, whether on a voluntary
or compulsory basis, and who are not free to
accept civilian employment.
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Context: Included are members of the army, navy,
air forces and other military services, as well as
conscripts enrolled for military training or other
service for a specified period, depending on
national requirements. Excluded are persons in
civilian employment of government establishments
concerned with defence issues; police (other than
military police); customs inspectors and members
of border or other armed civilian services; persons
who have been temporarily withdrawn from civilian
life for a short period of military training or
retraining, according to national requirements, and
members of military reserves not currently on
active service.
Arrival of a sea going Arrivée d'un navire
vessel
Any laden or unladen seagoing vessel which
entered a port in the territory of the country.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: International Standard Classification of
Occupations (ISCO-88), ILO, Geneva, 1990, page
265
Articulated vehicle
Ensemble articulé
Road tractor coupled to a semi-trailer.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Arrangements on
guidelines for
officially supported
export credits
The Arrangement (sometimes known as the
Consensus) is a gentleman‘s agreement governing
the provision of officially supported export credits
with a credit period of two years or more. It is
negotiated by an international body called the
Participants to the Arrangement on Guidelines for
Officially Supported Export Credits, which meets in
Paris under the auspices, and with the
administrative support, of the Secretariat of the
OECD. The Participants are Australia, Canada, the
European Union (including all the Member States),
Japan, Korea, New Zealand, Norway, Switzerland,
and the United States. Additionally, there are three
Observers: the Czech Republic, Hungary, and
Poland.
Artificial intelligence
(AI)
An advanced computer programming language
aimed at enabling computers to emulate the
human mode of reasoning.
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Artificial wet land
Lagons de marais
lagoons
artificiels
Artificial wet land lagoons are an environment
management technique consisting of man made
ponds and swamps which use natural processes to
purify polluted water
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001- 2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Array
Ordination
In the most general sense, an explicit display of a
set of observations. More usually, the term
denotes some special arrangement of the
observations, e.g. in order of magnitude.
ASCII
See American Standard Code for Information
Interchange
See also: Amercian Standard Code for Information
Interchange (ASCII)
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
ASEAN
See Association of South-East Asian Nations
See also: Association of South East Asian Nations
(ASEAN)
Arrears
42
established by Convention in 1961 by several
governments in Asia to hasten their economic
development. It is non-political, non-profit-making
and non-discriminatory.
ASEAN Free Trade
Area
The ASEAN Free Trade Area is a multilateral
agreement on trade, including agricultural trade,
between Association of South-east Asian Nations
(ASEAN)Member countries, phasing out tariffs and
revising other trade rules between the nine
countries over the 15-year period of
implementation of the Common Effective
Preferential Tariff (CEPT) Scheme. The agreement
was signed in January 1992
Context: APO aims to increase productivity and,
consequently, accelerate economic development in
the Asian and Pacific region by mutual cooperation. Membership is open to all Asian and
Pacific governments that are members of the
Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the
Pacific (ESCAP) of the United Nations.
Governments outside the Asian and Pacific region
may become Associate Members.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002 – Appendix F.
Glossary of Organisations
See also: ASEAN
Asia-5 countries
Asia-5 countries are the principal Asian economies
affected by financial market turmoil since 1997.
These include Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia, the
Philippines and Thailand
Hyperlink: http://www.apo-tokyo.com
Asia-Pacific Economic
Co-operation
See APEC
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
See also: APEC
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Asia-Pacific Fishery
Commission (APFIC)
Commission AsiePacifique des pêches
(CAPP)
The Asia-Pacific Fishery Commission (APFIC) is an
inter-governmental technical multilateral fishery
body, established in 1948 under the auspices of
the United Nations Food and Agricultural
Organisation (FAO), aimed at promoting the full
and proper utilisation of living aquatic resources by
the development and management of fishing and
aquaculture operations and by the development of
related processing and marketing activities. Its
area of competence is the Indo-Pacific region,
including inland waters
Asian Development
Bank (ADB)
The Asian Development Bank (ADB), a multilateral
development finance institution, was founded in
1966 by 31 member governments to promote the
social and economic progress of the Asian and
Pacific region. Over the past 31 years, the Bank‘s
membership has grown to 57, of which 41 are from
the region and 16 from outside the region.
Context: The Bank‘s principal functions are:
(a) to extend loans and equity investments for the
economic and social development of its developing
member countries (DMCs);
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
(b) to provide technical assistance for the
preparation and execution of development projects
and programmes, and for advisory services;
Asphalt
See Bitumen
See also: Bitumen
(c) to promote and facilitate investment of public
and private capital for development purposes; and
Asset / liability
principle
The Financial Account of the balance of payments
records an economy‘s transactions in external
financial assets and liabilities. The transactions are
classified by:
(d) to respond to requests for assistance in coordinating development policies and plans of its
DMCs.
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002 – Appendix F.
Glossary of Organisations
(1) functional type of investment (direct
investment, portfolio investment, other
investment, and reserve assets);
Hyperlink: http://www.adb.org
(2) assets and liabilities or, in the case of direct
investment, direction of investment;
Asian Productivity
Organisation (APO)
The Asian Productivity Organisation (APO) is an
intergovernmental regional organisation
(3) type of instrument; and, in some cases,
(4) domestic sector and
43
(5) original contractual maturity.
Assets are entities functioning as stores of value
and over which ownership rights are enforced by
institutional units, individually or collectively, and
from which economic benefits may be derived by
their owners by holding them, or using them, over
a period of time (the economic benefits consist of
primary incomes derived from the use of the asset
and the value, including possible holding
gains/loses, that could be realised by disposing of
the asset or terminating it).
This distinction between external assets and
liabilities is of primary importance for the
functional types of investment other than direct
investment.
Transactions should be recorded on a straight
asset/liability basis. Even when a net basis is used
for recording the Financial Account of the balance
of payments, transactions in financial assets
should be shown separately from transactions in
financial liabilities.
Context: Assets are entities that must be owned by
some unit, or units, and from which economic
benefits are derived by their owner(s) by holding
or using them over a period of time. (Measuring
Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1 Glossary of
Technical Terms Used in the Manual, OECD, 2001).
Source: OECD & IMF, 2004, Glossary of Foreign
Direct Investment Terms and Definitions, Paris and
Washington DC
Source: SNA 10.2 and 13.12 [1.26]
Asset allocation
Allocation d'actifs
The spread of fund investments among different
investment forms.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Assets (of a pension
Actifs
fund)
See Pension assets, Liabilities
See also: Liabilities (of a pension fund), Pension
assets
Asset management
Gestation des actifs
(of a pension fund)
The act of investing the pension fund‘s assets
following its investment strategy.
Associated financing
The combination of Official Development
Assistance, whether grants or Loans, with any
other funding to form finance packages. Associated
Financing packages are subject to the same criteria
of concessionality, developmental relevance and
recipient country eligibility as Tied Aid Credits.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Asset manager (of a pension fund)
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
Asset manager (of a
Gérant
pension fund)
The individual(s) or entity(ies) endowed with the
responsibility to physically invest the pension fund
assets. Asset managers may also set out the
investment strategy for a pension fund.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Association of South
East Asian Nations
(ASEAN)
Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN)
established in 1967 by Indonesia, Malaysia, the
Philippines, Singapore and Thailand to promote the
economic, social and cultural development of the
region through co-operative programmes, to
safeguard the political and economic stability of
the region, and to serve as a forum for the
resolution if inter-regional differences. Brunei
Darussalam (1984), Vietnam (1995), Laos (1997)
and Myanmar (1997) have since joined the
Association
See also: Asset management (of a pension fund)
Asset-backed security
A security collateralized by loans, leases,
unsecured receivables, or instalment contracts on
personal property, automobiles, or credit cards.
The cash flows generated by the underlying
obligations are used to pay principal and interest
to the asset-backed security holders.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2000-2005,
OECD, 2000 edition, Annex II, Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Assets
Asterisk product
A representative product so called because, when
reporting prices, countries participating in Eurostat
Actifs
44
and OECD comparisons assign asterisks (*) to
identify which of the products they have priced are
representative.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Atmospheric
Absorption
absorption
atmosphérique
Atmospheric absorption is absorption by the
earth‘s atmosphere of most of the X-rays and
ultraviolet and infrared radiation emitted by the
sun, except visible light. It prevents the earth‘s
surface from becoming too hot
See also: Representativity indicators
Asylum-seekers
Demandeurs d'asile
Asylum seekers are persons who file an application
for asylum in a country other than their own. They
remain in the status of asylum-seeker until their
application is considered and adjudicated
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Atomic energy
Atomic Energy:
See also: Foreigners admitted for humanitarian
reasons (other than asylum proper or temporary
protection), Foreigners granted temporary
protected status, Foreigners seeking asylum,
Refugees, Repatriating asylum- seekers
Energie atomique
1. internal energy of an atom absorbed by the
atom when it was formed;
2. energy derived from the nuclear transformation
(fission or fusion) of atoms
Asymmetric oligopoly
See Oligopoly
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Oligopoly
ASYNC
See Asynchronous Communication
Attachment level
A property of attributes in Gesmes/TS.
See also: Asynchronous Communication (ASYNC)
Context: For each attribute specified in a key
family, it is defined whether this attribute takes:
Asynchronous
Communication
(ASYNC)
The transmission of a single character at a time.
The common method of transmission between
portable timesharing terminals and mainframes,
between dumb terminals and minicomputers, and
between microcomputers.
- an independent value for each observation in the
data set
- an independent value for each time series in the
data set
- an independent value for each sibling group in
the data set
- a single value for the entire data set.
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Source: "GESMES/TS User Guide", Release 3.00,
February, 2003; unpublished on paper
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.sdmx.org/Data/GesmesTS_rel3.pdf
See also: Attribute, GESMES TS
Atlantic beef market
Marché Atlantique du
boeuf
The Atlantic beef market is the world beef market
excluding the Pacific Rim beef trade
Attendant at birth
An attendant at birth is the person who assisted
the mother in giving birth, whether a physician, a
midwife, a nurse, other paramedical personnel, a
lay person etc
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
ATM
See Automated teller machine
See also: Automated teller machine (ATM)
Atmosphere
Atmosphère
The atmosphere is the mass of air surrounding the
earth, composed largely of oxygen and nitrogen
Attribute
45
A characteristic of an object or entity.
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Context: An entity is any concrete or abstract thing
of interest, including associations among things.
See also: Attribute
Attribution
Attribution is the association or disassociation of a
particular attribute with a particular population
unit.
A composite attribute is an attribute whose
datatype is non-atomic.
An attribute instance is a specific instance of an
attribute.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
An attribute value is the value associated with an
attribute instance (ISO/IEC International Standard
11179-3 "Information technology - Metadata
registries (MDR)-Part 3: Registry metamodel and
basic attributes", February 2003).
Within SDMX, a data or metadata attribute is a
statistical concept providing qualitative information
about a specific statistical object such as a data
set, observation, data provider, or dataflow.
Audit (financial,
accounting)
May be carried out to satisfy the requirements of
management (internal audit), or by the supreme
audit institution (SAI), or any other independent
auditor, to meet statutory obligations (external
audit). A particular task of internal audit is to
monitor management control systems and report
to senior management on weaknesses and
recommend improvements.
Concepts such as units, magnitude, currency of
denomination, titles and methodological comments
can be used as attributes in the context of an
agreed data exchange. A conditional attribute is
permitted to take empty values. A mandatory
attribute is an attribute which must take a value,
otherwise the corresponding observation, which it
refers to, is not considered as meaningful enough,
e.g. with regard to the "status" of an observation
or the units in which a whole time series is
expressed. Within the SDMX information model,
attribute value is the value of an attribute, such as
the instance of a coded or uncoded attribute in the
context of a data structure.
Context: The scope of audits varies widely and
includes:
- financial audits, covering the examination and
reporting on financial statements, and the
examination of the accounting systems upon which
those statements are based;
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
- compliance or regularity audits, which examine
legal and administrative compliance, the probity
and propriety of administration, financial systems
and systems of management control; and
See also: Attribute value, Basic attributes, Entity,
GESMES TS, Key family, Object, Statistical concept
- performance audit/value for money audits, which
assess the management and operational
performance (economy, efficiency and
effectiveness) of public programmes, particular
ministries and agencies in using financial, staffing
and other resources in meeting their objectives.
Attribute disclosure
Attribute disclosure is attribution independent of
identification. This form of disclosure is of primary
concern to NSIs involved in tabular data release
and arises from the presence of empty cells either
in a released table or linkable set of tables after
any subtraction has taken place. Minimally, the
presence of a single zero within a table means that
an intruder may infer from mere knowledge that a
population unit is represented in the table and that
the intruder does not possess the combination of
attributes within the cell containing the zero.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
See also: Control/controls
Audit (statistical)
The process of applying more extensive methods
of measurement to a subsample during the
scheduled conduct of a survey in order to
determine the effect of nonsampling errors.
Attribute value
The value of an attribute, such as the instance of a
coded or uncoded attribute in a Key Family
structure.
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
46
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Audit evidence
The evidence gathered by the auditor as part of
the audit procedures.
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Audit trail
An audit trail is a method of keeping track of
changes to values in a field and the reason and
source for each change. Audit trails are generally
begun after the initial interview is completed.
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Audit objectives
Define intended audit accomplishments.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Auditability
Understood to mean that it is possible to establish
whether a system is functioning properly and,
thereafter, that it has worked properly.
Audit report
Refers to the report of the auditor made once the
audit work has been carried out. For example, an
auditor‘s report on an organisation‘s financial
statements will set out the results of the auditor‘s
work in connection with the financial statements.
Context: One aspect of auditability is to provide
sufficient knowledge about the system and its
structure, functions, controls, etc by means of
appropriate documentation. Another important
aspect of auditability is to make visible all
integrity-related modifications to the system and
its data. Logging data should make it possible to
answer the questions ―who?‖, ―what?‖ and
―when?‖.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Source: A glossary of terms used in payments and
settlement systems, July 2001, Committee on
Payment and Settlement Systems, Bank for
International Settlements
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/cpss00b.pdf
Audit risk
Refers to the risk that the procedures carried out
by the auditor will not detect matters which, if
known, would require the auditor‘s report to be
altered.
Auditor (of a pension Auditeur
fund)
A qualified individual or entity endowed with the
task of conducting audit.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Auditor's certificate
Refers to the report of the auditor made once the
audit work has been carried out. For example, an
auditor‘s report attached to an organisation‘s
financial statements may be referred to as the
auditor‘s certificate on those financial statements.
Audit sampling
Refers to where the procedures carried out by an
auditor are on a sample of an underlying
population, relevant to the audit work, rather than
the whole of that population.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
47
Useful Terms
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Autocorrelation
Autocorrélation
The internal correlation between members of
series of observations ordered in time or space.
Augmented balance
The overall balance plus any losses incurred by the
central bank, and any issuance of government debt
to recapitalize public financial institutions not
recorded in the overall balance.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Context: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal
Transparency, IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Automated data
adjustments
Automated data adjustments occur as a result of
computer actions.
Authentication
A process for verifying the correctness of a piece of
data.
Context: A desirable option in any system allowing
computer actions is to allow for the overriding of
those actions at some level. Batch data adjustment
results in a file of corrected (edited/imputed)
records with accompanying messages to report on
the computer actions taken to make the
adjustments.
Source: Memory of the World: Safeguarding the
Documentary Heritage - A guide to Standards,
Recommended Practices and Reference Literature
Related to the Preservation of Documents of All
Kinds, International Advisory Committee for the
UNESCO Memory of the World Programme SubCommittee on Technology for the General
Information Programme and UNISIST United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization - Part 9 - Glossary
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
http://www.unesco.org/webworld/mdm/administ/
en/guide/guide011.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Authorisation
(financial)
Implies that the authorising authority has verified
and validated that the activity or transaction
conforms with established policies and procedures.
Automated data
processing (ADP)
The data processing operations performed by a
system of electronic or electrical machines so
interconnected and interacting as to reduce to a
minimum the need for human assistance or
intervention.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
See also: Data processing (DP), Electronic data
processing (EDP)
Autocorrection
Autocorrection is data correction performed by the
computer without human intervention. It makes
particular use of redundancy. Exclusion
(elimination) of incorrect records or substitution of
a record or its part by data from other records or
the correction base. Auto-correction is generally
done according to rules that assure the final
(corrected) record fails no edits.
Automated data
review
Automated data review may occur in a batch or
interactive fashion. It is important to note that
data entered in a heads-down fashion may later be
corrected in either a batch or an interactive data
review process.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
48
Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations
Secretariat
New York, 7-10 August 2001, Glossary
Automated
imputations
Automated imputations generally fall into one of
six categories:
-
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/docs/sym
posium_06.htm#_Toc8547016
Deterministic imputation
Model based imputation
Deck imputation
Mixed imputation
Expert Systems
Neural networks
Automobile air
Pollution de l‟air par
pollution
les automobiles
Automobile air pollution are emissions from cars
and other vehicular traffic consisting chiefly of
carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides, unburned
gasoline, carbon dioxide and lead
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Automobiles
See Motor cars
Automated teller
machine (ATM)
An electromechanical device that permits
authorised users, typically using machine-readable
plastic cards, to withdraw cash from their accounts
and/or access other services, such as balance
enquiries, transfer of funds or acceptance of
deposits. ATMs may be operated either online with
real-time access to an authorisation database or
offline.
See also: Motor cars
Autonomous pension Fonds de pension
funds
autonomes
Autonomous pension funds are separate funds
(i.e., separate institutional units) established for
purposes of providing incomes on retirement for
specific groups of employees which are organised,
and directed, by private or public employers or
jointly by the employers and their employees.
These funds engage in financial transactions on
their own account on financial markets and make
investments by acquiring financial and nonfinancial assets. They do not include social security
schemes organised for large sections of the
community which are imposed, controlled or
financed by general government
Source: A glossary of terms used in payments and
settlement systems, July 2001, Committee on
Payment and Settlement Systems, Bank for
International Settlements
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/cpss00b.pdf
Context: In occupational plans, a pension fund that
is legally separated from the plan sponsor taking
the form of either a special purpose legal entity or
a separate account managed by financial
institutions on behalf of the plan/fund members.
Plan/fund members have a legal or beneficial right
or some other contractual claim against the assets
held in the fund. (OECD Working Party on Private
Pensions, Pensions Glossary, December 2002)
Automatic coding
The conversion, by unassisted computer, of verbal
texts into applicable codes.
Source: Adapting new technologies to census
operations, Arij Dekker, Symposium on Global
Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing
Censuses: Mid-Decade Assessment and Future
Prospects, Statistics Division, Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations
Secretariat New York, 7-10 August 2001, Glossary
Source: SNA 6.141
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/docs/sym
posium_06.htm#_Toc8547016
See also: Non-autonomous pension funds - SNA
Autoproducer
undertakings (of
electricity / heat
generation)
Autoproducer undertakings generate electricity
and/or heat, wholly or partly for their own use as
an activity which supports their primary activity.
Automatic teller
machine (ATM)
transaction
A transaction through an Automated Teller
Machine, or money dispenser.
Source: Adapting new technologies to census
operations, Arij Dekker, Symposium on Global
Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing
Censuses: Mid-Decade Assessment and Future
Prospects, Statistics Division, Department of
Source: Electricity information 2001, International
Energy Agency, Paris – Part II
49
Autoregression
Autorégression
The generation of a series of observations whereby
the value of each observation is partly dependent
upon the values of those which have immediately
preceded it, i.e. each observation stands in a
regression relationship with one or more of the
immediately preceding terms. A scheme of
autoregression may be regarded as a stochastic
process of a conditional kind.
sources, definitions and methods
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 207
See also: In-patient care beds, total
Average annual hours
worked
Average annual hours worked is a measure of the
total number of ―hours actually worked‖ during a
year per employed person.
Average costs
See Costs
Autoregressive model Modèle autorégressive
An econometric model based upon the
autoregressive process but also containing lagged
versions of some or all of the endogenous variates
appearing in the model specification.
See also: Costs
Average earnings
Régime des gains
scheme
moyens
A scheme where the pension benefits earned for a
year depend on how much the member‘s earnings
were for the given year.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Context: Identical term, "Career average scheme"
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Autoregressive
Transformation
transformation
autorégressive
If there is autocorrelation in the error term of an
autoregressive process it is sometimes possible to
transform the original variates to new variates
such that the autoregressive scheme in the
transformed variates has an uncorrelated error
term. This process is known as an autoregressive
transformation.
Average hourly /
weekly / monthly
earnings
The concept of average earnings is based on the
Resolution of the 12th Conference of Labour
Statisticians which states that statistics of average
earnings and hours of work should cover all
important categories of wage earners and salaried
employees in all major economic activities of the
country.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
In situations where the quarterly or monthly
surveys exclude infrequently paid components the
Resolution recommends that the programme of
earnings statistics should include the compilation
of average earnings statistics including these
components once a year.
Available bed
An available bed is a bed which is immediately
available to be used by an admitted patient or
resident if required. A bed is immediately available
for use if it is located in a suitable place for care
and where nursing and auxiliary staff are available,
either immediately or within a reasonable period.
Finally, the Resolution recommends that the time
unit in which the average earnings are expressed
(e.g. hour, day, week, month) should depend
primarily on how meaningful the figures would be
in the country concerned and the feasibility of
collecting the required data. Furthermore, to
enable international comparisons statistics of
average earnings and hours of work should be
presented on a per week basis.
Context: Inclusions: both occupied and unoccupied
beds are included. For nursing homes, the number
of approved beds includes beds approved for
respite care.
Exclusions: surgical tables, recovery trolleys,
delivery beds, cots for normal neonates,
emergency stretchers/ beds not normally
authorised or funded and beds designated for
same-day non-admitted patient care are excluded.
Beds in wards which were closed for any reason
(except weekend closures for beds / wards staffed
and available on weekdays only) are also excluded.
Source: Resolution of the 12th Conference of
Labour Statisticians, October 1973, paras. 22-33
Average hourly
compensation cost
Average hourly compensation cost is a wage
measure intended to represent employers‘
expenditure on the benefits granted to their
employees as compensation for an hour of labour.
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
50
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Context: These benefits accrue to employees,
either directly - in the form of total gross earnings
– or indirectly - in terms of employers‘
contributions to compulsory, contractual and
private social security schemes, pension plans,
casualty or life insurance schemes and benefit
plans in respect of their employees. This latter
group of benefits is commonly known as ―nonwage benefits‖. Its equivalent, employers‘
expenditure, is termed ―non-wage labour costs‖.
Average test for
volumes
A test that requires the per capita volume index for
an aggregate to lie between the smallest and the
largest of its component per capita volume indices.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 601
See also: Compensation cost, Non-wage labour
cost
Average value
A familiar but elusive concept. Generally, an
―average‖ value purports to represent or to
summarise the relevant features of a set of values;
and in this sense the term would include the
median and the mode. In a more limited sense an
average compounds all the values of the set, e.g.
in the case of the arithmetic or geometric means.
In ordinary usage ―the average‖ is often
understood to refer to the arithmetic mean.
Average length of line
operated throughout
the year (for rail
transport)
The length of (railway) line used for traffic
throughout the reported year (including lines
operated jointly with other railway enterprises)
plus the average length of lines opened or closed
during the year (weighted by the number of days
they have been operated).
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Context: The total length of line operated is the
length operated for passenger or goods transport,
or both. When a line is operated simultaneously by
several enterprises it will be counted only once.
See also: Unit value, Unit value
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Average wage or
salary rates
Wage or salary rates are the rates paid for nominal
time of work, comprising basic wages and salaries,
cost-of-living allowances and other guaranteed and
regularly paid allowances.
Context: The following should be excluded:
Average length of stay
by in-patient and
acute care
Average length of stay is computed by dividing the
number of days stayed (from the date of admission
in an in-patient institution) by the number of
discharges (including deaths) during the year.
- overtime payments;
- bonuses and gratuities;
- family allowances;
- other social security payments made by the
employer directly to employees and ex gratia
payments in kind supplementary to normal wage
and salary rates.
Context: Some countries may include deaths and
discharges (separations) as well as same day
separations. Caution should be exercised when
making international comparisons due to the
possibility that countries may provide data for
different types of institutions.
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 527
See also: Wage rates
Source: OECD Health Data 2007: Statistics and
Indicators for 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2007,
Data sources, definitions and methods Paris, 2001,
data sources, definitions and methods
Avian virus
Avian influenza is an infectious disease of birds
caused by type A strains of the influenza virus. The
disease, which was first identified in Italy more
than 100 years ago, occurs worldwide. The
quarantining of infected farms and destruction of
infected or potentially exposed flocks are standard
control measures.
Average test for PPPs
A test that requires the PPP for an aggregate to lie
between the smallest and the largest of its
component PPPs.
Source: OECD, 2004, OECD Agricultural Outlook:
2004-2013, OECD, Paris, Glossary
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
51
Aviation gasoline
Aviation gasoline is motor spirit prepared
especially for aviation piston engines, with an
octane number suited to the engine, a freezing
point of –60 degrees C, and a distillation range
usually within the limits of 30 degrees C and 180
degrees C.
An important feature of the axiomatic approach is
that prices and quantities are considered as
separate variables and no account is taken of
possible links between them.
Also known as the ―test approach‖.
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Avoidance
The fact to prevent the degradation before it
happens.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 9.35
Bad loans
Bad loans are defined as loans which are in arrears
exceeding a certain time limit and/or for which the
value of collateral has been eroded or disappeared
for economic reasons
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Avoidance costs
Côuts de protection
Avoidance costs are actual or imputed costs for
preventing environmental deterioration by
alternative production and consumption processes,
or by the reduction of or abstention from economic
activities
Balance (in business
tendency surveys)
The term balance is used in business tendency
surveys in the case of three-choice questions
where data are presented in the form of a percent
balance. ―Normal‖ and ―same‖ answers are ignored
and the balance is obtained by taking the
difference between the weighted percentages of
respondents giving favourable and unfavourable
answers
Context: Expenditure in order to reduce emissions
and more generally pressure on the environment.
These costs fall into two categories: structural
adjustment costs and abatement costs.
See structural adjustment costs and abatement
costs.
Source: Main Economic Indicators, OECD, Paris,
monthly
United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 9.35
Balance edit
A balance edit is an edit which checks that a total
equals the sum of its parts. Also called an
accounting edit.
Example: Closing inventory = Opening Inventory +
Purchases - Sales
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
See also: Abatement cost, Structural adjustment
costs
Axiomatic approach
The approach to index number theory that
determines the choice of index number formula on
the basis of its mathematical properties.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
A list of ―tests‖ is drawn up that require an index
to possess certain properties and the choice of
index made on the basis of the number of tests
satisfied. Not all tests may be considered equally
important and the failure to satisfy certain key
tests may be considered sufficient grounds for
rejecting an index.
Balance of exports
and imports
The f.o.b. value of exports of goods and services
less the f.o.b. value of imports of goods and
52
services. When no distinction between goods and
services is required, it may be defined as the f.o.b.
value of exports of goods and services less the
c.i.f. value of imports of goods and services.
See also: Balance of payments – Eurostat
Balance of payments
Balance des
Ŕ Eurostat
paiements - Eurostat
The balance of payments is a record of a country's
international transactions with the rest of the
world. This is equivalent to the transactions
between residents of a country and non-residents.
The balance of payments is divided up into the
current account and investment and other capital
transactions.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Balance of Payment
Manual, Fifth Edition
5ème édition de
Manuel de la balance
des paiements
The Balance of Payment Manual, Fifth Edition is the
manual describing the methodology for measuring
the economic transactions of an economy with the
rest of the world. The International Monetary Fund
(IMF) is the custodian of the Manual
These transactions, which are recorded by a
double- entry system of book-keeping, involve
goods, services, transfers, loans granted or
received, market securities, foreign exchange etc.
International trade in services is shown in the
current account balance of payments statistics and
forms part of what is known as "invisibles". The
current account balance constitutes the sole source
of comparable data on international cross-border
statistics on services
Source: United Nations Glossary of Classification
Terms. Prepared by the Expert Group on
International Economic and Social Classifications
Hyperlink:
http://www.un.org/Depts/unsd/class/glossary_sho
rt.htm
Source: Balance of Payments, Quarterly Statistics,
Eurostat, page. 8
See also: Balance of payments – BPM
Balance of payments
Balance des
Ŕ BPM
paiements - MBP
The balance of payments is a statistical statement
that systematically summarises, for a specific time
period, the economic transactions of an economy
with the rest of the world.
Balance of payments,
capital account
The major components of the capital account are:
- capital transfers, and
- acquisition/disposal of non-produced, nonfinancial assets.
Context: Transactions for the most part between
residents and non-residents, consist of those
involving:
Capital transfers consist of those involving
transfers of ownership of fixed assets; transfers of
funds linked to, or conditional upon, acquisition or
disposal of fixed assets; or cancellation, without
any counterparts being received in return, of
liabilities by creditors. This item does not cover
land in a specific economic territory.
- goods, services and income;
- those involving financial claims on, and liabilities
to, the rest of the world; and
- those (such as gifts) classified as transfers which
involve offsetting entries to balance, in an
accounting sense, one-sided transactions.
Capital transfers include two components: (i)
general government, subdivided into debt
forgiveness and other, and (ii) other, subdivided
into migrants' transfers, debt forgiveness, and
other transfers
The standard components of the balance of
payments are comprised of two main groups of
accounts:
- the current account pertains to goods and
services, income, and current transfers; and
- the capital and financial account pertains to (i)
capital transfers and acquisition or disposal of nonproduced, non-financial assets and (ii) financial
assets and liabilities.
Source: BPM, para. 175
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
See also: Balance of payments, capital and
financial accounts
A transaction itself is defined as an economic flow
that reflects the creation, transformation,
exchange, transfer, or extinction of economic value
and involves changes in ownership of goods and/or
financial assets, the provision of services, or the
provision of labour and capital.
Balance of payments,
capital and financial
accounts
The capital and financial account has two major
components:
Source: BPM, paras, 13, 149
- the capital account, and
- the financial account.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
These are in accordance with the same accounts in
53
the System of National Accounts (SNA). Assets
represent claims on residents and liabilities
represent indebtedness to nonresidents.
account are:
-direct investment;
-portfolio investment;
- other investment;
-reserve assets.
Capital transfers consist of those involving
transfers of ownership of fixed assets; transfers of
funds linked to, or conditional upon, acquisition of
disposal of fixed assets; or cancellation, without
any counterparts being received in return, of
liabilities by creditors. This item does not cover
land in a specific economic territory.
The financial account records an economy‘s
transaction in external financial assets and
liabilities. The major classifications in the financial
account are:
In the financial account, all components are
classified according to type of investment or by
functional breakdown (direct investment, portfolio
investment, other investment, reserve assets).
- Functional type of investment (direct investment,
portfolio investment, other investment, and
reserve assets);
- Assets (residents‘ financial claims on non
resident) and liabilities non resident financial
claims on resident);
- Instrument of investment (e.g. equity, debt);
- Sector of the domestic transactor (general
government, monetary authorities, banks and
other sectors)
Most entries in the capital and financial account
should be made on a net basis; that is, each
component should be shown only as a credit or
debit
Source: BPM, paras. 150, 172
Source: BPM paras. 176-180
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
See also: Balance of payments, capital account
See also: Balance of payments, capital and
financial accounts - BPM
Balance of payments,
current account
The current account includes all the transactions
(other than those in financial items) that involve
economic values and occur between resident and
non- residents entities. Also covered are offsets to
current economic values provided or acquired
without a quid pro quo.
Balance of payments, Balance de paiements,
goods
biens
Goods usually comprise the largest category of
transactions that for the most part, involve
changes of ownership between resident and nonresidents. Goods comprise:
Specifically, the major classifications are:
-
- goods and services;
- income;
- current transfers
Source: BPM para. 152
general merchandise;
goods for processing;
repairs on goods;
goods procured in ports by carriers;
non-monetary gold.
In accordance with general balance of payments
principles, change of ownership is the principle
determining the coverage and time of recording of
international transaction in goods. Certain
exceptions are applied to the principle. Exports and
imports of goods are recorded at market values at
points of uniform valuation, that is, the custom
frontiers of exporting economies
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Balance of payments,
current account
discrepancy
The balance of payments current account
discrepancy is a discrepancy arising from uneven
global recording of exports and imports
Source: BPM, paras. 153, 195
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
See also: Balance of payments, current account
Balance of payments, Balance de paiements,
income
revenus
Income covers two types of transaction between
residents and non-residents:
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Balance of payments,
financial account
The financial account is one of the two major
components under the financial and capital
account. The major components of the financial
(i) those involving compensation of employees,
which is paid to non-resident workers (e.g.,
border, seasonal and other shot-term workers),
and
54
(ii) those involving investment income receipts and
payments on external financial assets and
liabilities. Included in the latter are receipts and
payments on direct investments, portfolio
investment, other investment, and receipts on
reserve assets.
understatement of the recorded components
Source: BPM, paras. 146-147
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Income derived from the use of tangible assets is
excluded from income and classified, as
appropriate, under leasing or rentals, under other
business services , or under transaction. Financial
leasing arrangements are considered evidence that
a change of ownership is intended and part of the
lease payments is construed as income of financial
assets
Balance of payments, Balance de paiements,
reserve assets
avoirs de réserve
Reserve assets consist of those external assets
that are readily available to and controlled by
monetary authorities for direct financing of
payments imbalances, for indirectly regulating the
magnitude of such imbalances through intervention
in exchange markets to affect the currency
exchange rate and/or for other purposes.
Source: BPM para. 267
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
The category of reserve assets in the IMF's Balance
of Payments Manual, Fifth Edition (BPM5)
comprises:
See also: Balance of payments, current account
- monetary gold;
- special drawing rights (SDRs);
- reserve position in the Fund;
- foreign exchange assets (consisting of currency
and deposits and securities); and
- other claims
Balance of payments,
investment income
Investment income (property income in the
System of National Accounts (SNA)) covers income
derived from a resident entity's ownership of
foreign assets.
Source: BPM para. 424
The most common types of investment income are
income on equity (dividends) and income on debt
(interest).
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Dividends, including stock dividends, are the
distribution of earning allocated to shares and
other forms of participation in the equity of
incorporated private enterprises, cooperatives, and
public corporations. Dividends represents income
that is payable without a binding agreement
between the creditor and the debtor.
See also: Balance of payments, financial account
Balance of payments, Balance de paiements,
services
services
Services is the second major category of the
current account. Services covers traditional items,
such as travel and transportation and items, such
as communications, financial and computer
services, royalties and license fees, and many
types of other business services, that are
becoming increasingly important in international
transactions.
The components of investment income are
classified as direct investment income, portfolio
investment, and other investment income.
Source: BPM para. 274
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Context: Specifically, balance of payments,
services comprise:
-
See also: Balance of payments, income
Balance of payments, Balance des
net errors and
paiements Ŕ erreurs
omissions
et omissions nettes
When all actual balance of payments entries are
totalled, the resulting balance will almost inevitably
show a net credit or a net debit. That balance is
the result of errors and omissions in compilation of
statements. Some of the errors and omissions may
be related to recommendations for practical
approximation to principles.
transportation;
travel;
communication;
construction services;
insurance;
financial services;
computer and information services;
royalties and license fees;
other business services;
personal, cultural and recreational services;
government services n.i.e.
Both the production of, and international trade in,
services differ from production and trade related to
goods. International trade in goods is conducted
separately from production. For example goods
may be produced in one economy and
subsequently delivered to residents, who may or
may not be known when production occurs, of
In balance of payments, the standard practice is to
show separately an item for net errors and
omissions. Labeled by some compilers as a
balancing item or statistical discrepancy, that item
is intended as an offset to the overstatement or
55
another economy. In contrast the production of a
service is linked to an arrangement made, between
a particular producer in one economy and a
particular consumer or group of consumers in
another, prior to the time this production occurs.
See also: Balance sheet – SNA
Balance sheet Ŕ SNA
Thus, international trade in services is closely
linked with international production of services, as
the production process itself involves a resident
and non-resident. Nonetheless, the boundary
between goods and services is sometimes blurred;
items classified as goods may include some service
element, and vice versa.
Compte de patrimoine
- SCN
A balance sheet is a statement, drawn up at a
particular point in time, of the values of assets
owned by an institutional unit or sector and of the
financial claims (i.e. liabilities) incurred by this unit
or sector; for the economy as a whole, the balance
sheet shows what is often referred to as ―national
wealth‖ - the sum of non-financial assets and net
claims on the rest of the world
Source: BPM paras. 158-168, 185,186
Source: SNA 13.1 and 13.2 [1.11, 2.93, 10.1]
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Balance sheet – Eurostat
See also: Balance of payments, current account
Balance sheet account
The balance sheet account is an account showing
the assets, liabilities and net worth of an
institutional unit, or class of such units, as of a
given date
Balance of primary
Solde des revenus
incomes
primaires
The balance of primary incomes is the total value
of the primary incomes receivable by an
institutional unit or sector less the total of the
primary incomes payable; at the level of the total
economy it is described as ―national income"
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Source: SNA 7.14
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Balances on nostro
and vostro accounts
A vostro (your) account is another bank‘s account
with a reporting bank, while a nostro (our) account
is a reporting bank‘s account with another bank.
Balance sheet Ŕ
Compte de patrimoine
Eurostat
Ŕ Eurostat
A balance sheet is a statement, drawn up at a
particular point in time, of the values of assets
owned and of liabilities outstanding. The balancing
item is called net worth. In national accounts a
balance sheet is drawn up for sectors, the total
economy and the rest of the world. For a sector
the balance sheet shows the value of all assets produced, non-produced and financial - and
liabilities and the sector‘s net worth. For the total
economy the balance sheet provides as balancing
item what is often referred to as national wealth:
the sum of non-financial assets and net financial
assets with respect to the rest of the world.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Balances, survey
Balances (also called net balances) are used to
summarise answers to multiple-choice questions in
business tendency and consumer opinion surveys.
―No-change‖ answers (such as ―normal‖ or ―same‖)
are ignored and the balance is obtained by taking
the difference between the weighted percentages
of respondents giving favourable and unfavourable
answers.
The balance sheet for the rest of the world, called
the external assets and liabilities account, consists
entirely of financial assets and liabilities. In
national accounts a balance sheet relates to the
value of assets and liabilities at a particular
moment of time. Balance sheets are compiled at
the beginning of the accounting period (the same
as the end of the preceding period) and at its end.
Context: Survey balances can be positive or
negative
Context: Provisions for the layout of the balance
sheet for certain types of companies within the EU
is given in Articles 9 and 10 of the Fourth Council
Directive.
Source: OECD, 2003, Business Tendency Surveys:
A Handbook, OECD, Paris, Glossary
Source: ESA [7.01-7.02 and 7.07] and Fourth
Council Directive (EEC), No. 78/660, of 25.07.1978
based on Article 54 (3) of the Treaty on the annual
accounts of certain types of companies
Balancing item
56
Solde comptable
An account is "closed" by introducing a balancing
item defined residually as the difference between
the two sides of the account; a balancing item
typically encapsulates the net result of the
activities covered by the account in question and is
therefore an economic construct of considerable
interest and analytical significance - for example,
value added, disposable income, saving, net
lending and net worth
Source: United Kingdom, Office for National
Statistics (ONS) website, site statistics
Hyperlink:
http://www.statistics.gov.uk/sitestatistics/interpret
ing.asp
Bank deposits
Bank deposits are claims on banks that are either
transferable or are ―other deposits.‖ Transferable
deposits consist of deposits that are exchangeable
on demand at par without restriction, or penalty,
and directly usable for making payments by check,
giro order, direct debit/credit, or other payment
facility.
Source: SNA 1.3 [3.64]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Ballast
Heavy material carried by a ship for ensuring
proper stability, so as to avoid capsizing and to
secure effective propulsion.
Context: ―Other deposits‖ comprise all claims
represented by evidence of deposit—for example,
savings and fixed-term deposits; sight deposits
that permit immediate cash withdrawals but not
direct third-party transfers; and shares that are
legally (or practically) redeemable on demand or
on short notice in savings and loan associations,
credit unions, building societies, etc.
Source: International Merchandise Trade,
Australia, Concepts, Sources and Methods,
Glossary, Australian Bureau of Statistics
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/0/6B7D
040A646F264ECA256A5B001BD777?Open&Highlig
ht=0,warehouse
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Baltic Free Trade
Agreement
The Baltic Free Trade Agreement (BFTA) is a
trilateral agreement on trade between Estonia,
Latvia and Lithuania signed in 1994. In June 1996,
the BFTA was extended to include agricultural
trade, with effect from 1 January 1997. The
agreement permits the removal of tariffs on all
agricultural and food products of Baltic origin
Bank for International
Settlements (BIS)
The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) was
established in 1930 by intergovernmental
convention. The BIS promotes co-operation among
central banks. In this capacity it carries out four
main functions:
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
- it holds and manages deposits from A large
number of central banks throughout the world;
Baltic Marine
Commission pour la
Environment
protection de
Protection
l‟environnement
Commission
marin dans la Baltique
(HELCOM)
(HELCOM)
The Baltic Marine Environment Protection
Commission (HELCOM) is the governing body of
the Convention on the Protection of the Marine
Environment of the Baltic Sea Area (first signed in
1974, and revised in 1992), also known as the
Helsinki Commission. Decisions taken by HELCOM
— which require unanimous approval — are
regarded as recommendations and are intended to
be incorporated into the national legislation of the
contracting parties
- it serves as a forum for international monetary
co-operation;
- it acts as an agent or trustee in the execution of
various international financial agreements; and
- it carries out research and issues publications on
monetary and economic subjects
Source: External Debt Statistics: Guide for
Compilers and Users (Draft), IMF, Washington DC,
March 2000, Appendix III, Glossary of Terms
Bank rate
See Interest, discount rate
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
See also: Interest, discount rate
Banker's acceptances
(B/A)
A negotiable order to pay a specified amount of
money on a future date, drawn on and guaranteed
by a bank. These drafts are usually drawn for
Bandwidth
Largeur de bande
Measure (in kilobytes of data transferred) of the
traffic on a site.
57
international trade finance purposes as an order to
pay an exporter a stated sum on a specific future
date for goods received. The act of a bank
stamping the word ―accepted‖ on the draft creates
a banker‘s acceptance.
See Deposit money banks
See also: Deposit money banks
Banns of marriage
(notice of forthcoming
marriage)
Banns of marriage (notice of forthcoming
marriage) are admonitions or proclamations of
intended marriage between the parties whose
names, in full, and addresses are provided in
public places for a legally specified period of time
Context: The acceptance represents an
unconditional claim on the part of the owner and
an unconditional liability on behalf of the accepting
bank; the bank has a claim on the drawer, who is
obliged to pay the bank the face value on or before
the maturity date. By writing the word ―accepted‖
on the face of the draft the bank carries primary
obligation, guaranteeing payment to the owner of
the acceptance.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Banker‘s acceptances can be discounted in the
secondary market, the discount reflecting the time
to maturity and credit quality of the guaranteeing
bank. Since the banker‘s acceptance carries a
banker‘s obligation to pay (in effect ―two-name
paper‖) and is negotiable, it becomes an attractive
asset. Banker‘s acceptances are always sold at a
discount and have maturities of up to 270 days.
Bar chart
Diagramme à bâtons
The graphical representation of frequencies or
magnitudes by rectangles drawn with lengths
proportional to the frequencies or magnitudes
concerned.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Context: There are numerous variations which can
be incorporated into this simple concept. For
example, component parts of a total can be shown
by sub-dividing the length of the bar. Two or three
kinds of information can be compared by groups of
bars each one of which is shaded or coloured to aid
identification. Figures involving increases and
decreases can be shown by using bars drawn in
opposite directions, above and below a zero line.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Banks - BIS
Banks are generally defined as institutions whose
business is to receive deposits and/or close
substitutes for deposits and grant credits or invest
in securities on their own account. Within the
scope of the Bank for International Settlement
(BIS) banking statistics official monetary
authorities including the BIS and the European
Central Bank (ECB) are also regarded as banks.
Can refer to banks‘ head offices or affiliates
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Barnardisation
A method of disclosure control for tables of counts
that involves randomly adding or subtracting 1
from some cells in the table.
Source: Guide to the International Banking
Statistics, Bank for International Settlements,
Basel, Switzerland, 2000, Part III – Glossary of
Terms
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/meth07.pdf
See also: Banks - IMF
Banks - IMF
Banques - FMI
Banks comprise all units that engage in financial
intermediation as their principal activity and have
liabilities in the form of deposits or financial
instruments (such as short-term certificates of
deposit) that are close substitutes for deposits
Barriers to entry
Barriers to entry are factors which prevent or deter
the entry of new firms into an industry even when
incumbent firms are earning excess profits.
Source: External Debt Statistics: Guide for
Compilers and Users (Draft), IMF, Washington DC,
March 2000, Appendix III, Glossary of Terms
Context: There are two broad classes of barriers:
structural (or innocent) and strategic. These two
classes are also often referred to as economic and
behavioural barriers to entry. Structural barriers to
entry arise from basic industry characteristics such
as technology, costs and demand. There is some
debate over what factors constitute relevant
structural barriers. The widest definition, suggests
that barriers to entry arise from product
See also: Banks - BIS
Banks, deposit money
58
differentiation, absolute cost advantages of
incumbents, and economies of scale. Product
differentiation creates advantages for incumbents
because entrants must overcome the accumulated
brand loyalty of existing products. Absolute cost
advantages imply that the entrant will enter with
higher unit costs at every rate of output, perhaps
because of inferior technology. Scale economies
restrict the number of firms which can operate at
minimum costs in a market of given size.
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
A narrower definition of structural barriers
suggests that barriers to entry arise only when an
entrant must incur costs which incumbents do not
bear. This definition excludes scale economies as a
barrier.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Base population
The base population refers to the number of people
in a given area (e.g. a nation, province, city, etc)
to which a specific vital rate applies, that is, the
denominator of the crude birth rate or death rate;
that population determined by a census
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Base weight
Pondération de base
The weights of a weighting system for an index
number computed according to the information
relating to the base period instead, for example, of
the current period.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003
Barter transactions
Opérations de troc
Barter transactions involve two parties, with one
party providing a good, service or asset other than
cash to the other in return for a good, service or
asset other than cash
See also: Weights
Base weighted index
See Laspeyres price index
Source: SNA 3.37
See also: Laspeyres price index
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Base-country
invariance
The index-number property that involves the
symmetrical treatment of all countries, with the
result that the relative index-number standings of
the countries are not affected by the choice of the
reference (numeraire) country.
Base
Base
A number or magnitude used as a standard of
reference. It may occur as a denominator in a ratio
or percentage calculation. It may also be the
magnitude of a particular time series from which a
start is to be made in the calculation of a new
relative series – an index number – which will
show the observations as they accrue in the future
in relation to that of the base period.
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Base area (in
agriculture)
National base areas are defined on the basis of the
average of areas planted to cereals, oilseeds and
protein crops between 1989 and 1991. The sum of
individual areas claimed for payments — areas
under set-aside and areas planted in cereals,
oilseeds and protein crops — cannot exceed the
national base area. If exceeded, there is a
reduction in area payments and a penalty land setaside which increases the level of mandatory setaside during the following year
Basel Capital Accord
Adopted by the Basel Committee on Banking
Supervision in 1988, and amended in 1996, the
Basel Capital Accord is an internationally agreed
set of supervisory regulations governing the capital
adequacy of international banks—capital is
measured in relation to the perceived credit and
market risk of the assets owned by the banks.
Context: The objectives behind the Accord are to
strengthen the soundness and stability of the
international banking system and to diminish
sources of competitive inequality among
international banks. At the time of writing a new
Accord is being developed.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
59
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Basic attribute
Basic attribute is an attribute of a metadata item
commonly needed in its specification.
Basel Committee on
Banking Supervision
(BCBS)
Established by the Central Bank Governors of the
Group of Ten (G-10) countries at the end of 1974,
the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision
(BCBS) formulates broad supervisory standards
and guidelines. It also recommends statements of
best practice in the expectation that individual
authorities will take steps to implement them
through detailed arrangements—statutory or
otherwise—which are best suited to their own
national systems.
Context: Categories of basic attributes:
- Identifying are attributes that are applicable for
the identification of a data element.
- Definitional are attributes that describe the
semantic aspects of a data element. These
attributes may be derived by inheritance from
characteristics of data element concepts, objects or
entities.
- Relational are attributes that describe
associations among data elements and/or
associations between data elements and
classification schemes, data element concepts,
objects, entities.
- Representational are attributes that describe
representational aspects of a data element.
- Administrative are attributes that describe
management and control aspects of a data
element.
Context: It encourages convergence toward
common approaches and common standards
without attempting detailed harmonization of
member countries' supervisory techniques. One of
its major objectives is to close gaps in international
supervisory coverage in pursuit of the two
following basic principles:
(1) no foreign banking establishment should
escape supervision; and
A basic attribute that is applicable to all types of
metadata item is a common attribute. (ISO/IEC
11179-3 "Information technology-Metadata
registries (MDR)-Part 3: Registry metamodel and
basic attributes", February 2003)
(2) supervision should be adequate.
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
See also: G10 countries
Baseline (in market
projections)
Scénario de
base/scénario de
référence
The baseline is the set of market projections used
as a benchmark for the analysis of the impact of
different economic and policy scenarios
See also: Attribute
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001- 2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Basic data collection
programme
The basic (statistical) data collection programme is
the data collection infrastructure and survey
procedures that are in place within a national
statistical system to collect, process and
disseminate basic statistical data.
Basic data
Refer Basic statistical data
See also: Basic statistical data
Baseline (of a graph) Ligne de base
The horizontal line on a graph corresponding to
some convenient basic measurement of the
variable represented on the ordinate scale. The
base is often taken to be zero.
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
Basic dwelling
Logement de base
A basic dwelling is a housing unit that has some
but not all of the essential features of a
conventional dwelling. It is a permanent structure
or a part of a permanent structure, hence it may
be a room or a suite of rooms in a permanent
building but it is without some of the conventional
dwelling facilities such as a kitchen, fixed bath or
BASIC
(Beginner All-Purpose Symbolic Instruction Code)
A programming language used in minor data
processing tasks. Usually resident on small
computers.
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
60
shower, piped water or toilet
and plus any subsidy receivable, on that unit as a
consequence of its production or sale; it excludes
any transport charges invoiced separately by the
producer
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.336
Context: The amount received by the producer
from the purchaser for a unit of good or service
produced as output. It includes subsidies on
products and other taxes on production. It
excludes taxes on products, other subsidies on
production, suppliers‘ retail and wholesale margins,
and separately invoiced transport and insurance
charges. Basic prices are the prices most relevant
for decision making by suppliers.
Basic heading
The lowest level of aggregation of items in the GDP
breakdown for which parities are calculated.
Context: In theory, a basic heading is defined as a
group of similar well-defined goods or services. In
practice, it is defined by the lowest level of final
expenditure for which explicit expenditure weights
can be estimated. Thus, an actual basic heading
can cover a broader range of products than is
theoretically desirable.
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Monetary Fund, Washington
DC
Basic headings are the building blocks of a
comparison. It is at the level of the basic heading
that expenditures are defined, products selected,
prices collected, prices edited and PPPs first
calculated and averaged.
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: SNA 6.205, 15.28 [3.82]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Basic pension
See Basic state pension
See also: Basic price – ESA, Basic price – OECD
Basic research
Basic research is experimental or theoretical work
undertaken primarily to acquire new knowledge of
the underlying foundations of phenomena and
observable facts, without any particular application
or use in view
Pension de base
See also: Basic state pension
Basic price Ŕ ESA
Prix de base - SEC
The basic price is the price receivable by the
producers from the purchaser for a unit of a good
or service produced as output minus any tax
payable on that unit as a consequence of its
production or sale (i.e. taxes on products), plus
any subsidy receivable on that unit as a
consequence of its production or sale (i.e.
subsidies on products). It excludes any transport
charges invoiced separately by the producer. It
includes any transport margins charged by the
producer on the same invoice, even when they are
included as a separate item on the invoice
Source: OECD Frascati Manual, Sixth edition,
2002, para. 64, page 30
Hyperlink: http://www1.oecd.org/dsti/sti/statana/prod/eas_fras.htm
See also: Applied research, Oriented basic
research, Pure basic research
Basic state pension
Pension d'état de base
A non-earning related pension paid by the State to
individuals with a minimum number of service
years.
Source: ESA 3.48
Context: Identical term, "Basic pension"
See also: Basic price – OECD, Basic price – SNA
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Basic price Ŕ OECD
Prix de base - OCDE
The basic price provides a reference point for the
triggering of intervention measures. It is set in the
same way as the target price in the sheep, goat,
pig and sugar beet sectors. It is adjusted on a
seasonal basis in the sheep and goat sector
Basic statistical data
Basic statistical data are data collected on a
regular basis (by survey from respondents, or from
administrative sources) by survey statisticians in
the national statistical system to be edited,
imputed, aggregated and/or used in the
compilation and production of official statistics.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
See also: Basic price – ESA, Basic price – SNA
Context: In the context of the SDDS, this concept
should include whether data are compiled from
administrative records (e.g., monetary and
government data), surveys, censuses, or any
combination of these. It should also briefly
Basic price Ŕ SNA
Prix de base - SCN
The basic price is the amount receivable by the
producer from the purchaser for a unit of a good or
service produced as output minus any tax payable,
61
describe the means of data collection. In cases
where sampling techniques are used, the sampling
procedures should be briefly described.
The term commonly used for the list of goods and
services, together with their relative values of
output or input, for which a sample of prices is
collected for the purpose of compiling the PPI.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) – BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD – Metadata Common Vocabulary
Context: A specified set of quantities of goods and
services. In a CPI context, the set may comprise
the actual quantities of consumption goods or
services acquired or used by households in some
period, or may be made up of hypothetical
quantities.
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
See also: Data source, types of, Primary source (of
statistical data), Special Data Dissemination
Standard (SDDS)
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Basing point pricing
Basing point pricing (also known as delivered
pricing) refers to a system in which a buyer must
pay a price for a product inclusive of freight costs
that does not depend on the location of the seller.
Also referred to a as a "product list" and "ïtem
list".
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Context: The freight costs may be calculated from
a specific location or "basing point" from standard
published freight rate schedules. Under this
system, customers located near or far from the
basing point pay the same price. Thus nearby
customers are discriminated against or are charged
"phantom" freight that they would not incur if they
had a choice of paying separately for the product
and for the freight charges. Conversely, the freight
costs of distant customers are absorbed by the
sellers. This practice has been extensively used in
industries such as steel and cement and has been
viewed as a method to facilitate collusion among
firms.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Batch data review
Batch data review is a review of many
questionnaires in one batch occurs after data
entry. It generally results in a file of error
messages. This file may be printed for use in
preparing corrections.
In competition, prices are expected to reflect costs.
Economists therefore expect FOB (free on board)
plus actual freight costs to emerge in competition.
However, firms even in competition may adopt a
system of delivered pricing because it is simple
and saves administrative costs. This is particularly
the case when firms establish price zones within
which transportation distances and costs do not
vary very much. Moreover FOB pricing plus actual
freight costs may be a better means of collusion
because it facilitates allocation of customers
geographically. In addition the practice may be
adopted in order to deter locational entry by
otherwise competing firms.
Context: The data records may be split into two
files. One file contains the "good" records and one
containing data records with errors. The other file
can be corrected using an interactive process.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Batch processing
Method by which items are coded and collected
into groups and then processed sequentially in a
computer, usually at a later time.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Basis point
One one-hundredth of a percent, or 0.01%
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
See also: Interactive processing
Baud rate
The transmission speed of a communications
channel. The BAUD rate is used to represent bits
Basket
62
per second.
Benchmark (in
Point de référence
context of quality
improvement)
In the quality improvement lexicon, a benchmark
is a best in class achievement. This achievement
then becomes the reference point or recognized
standard of excellence against which similar
processes are measured.
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Source: United States Bureau of Census, "Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms",
unpublished on paper
BCD
See Binary coded decimal
See also: Binary coded decimal (BCD)
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Bearer depository
receipts (BDR)
A form of depository receipt issued in bearer rather
than registered form.
Benchmark portfolio
In relation to investments, a reference portfolio or
index constructed on the basis of the objectives for
the liquidity and risk of, as well as the return on,
the investments. The benchmark portfolio serves
as a basis for comparison of the performance of
the actual portfolio.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Bed-days
A bed-day is a day during which a person is
confined to a bed and in which the patient stays
overnight in a hospital. Day cases (patients
admitted for a medical procedure or surgery in the
morning and released before the evening) should
be excluded
Benchmarking
Benchmarking refers to the case where there are
two sources of data for the same target variable,
with different frequencies, and is concerned with
correcting inconsistencies between the different
estimates, e.g. quarterly and annual estimates of
value-added from different sources.
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Context: Benchmarking is generally done
retrospectively as annual benchmark data are
available some time after quarterly data.
Benchmarking does have a forward-looking
element however, in that the relationship between
benchmark and indicator data (benchmark:
indicator ratio) is extrapolated forward to improve
quarterly estimates for the most recent periods for
which benchmark data are not yet available.
Beef cattle feedlot
Enclos à bestiaux
A beef cattle feedlot is an enclosure where cattle
are kept. Feedlots are a potential hazard to the
environment as they cause water pollution, and
degradation of the lands and plants receiving
polluted water
Source: Maitland-Smith, F, "Use of Benchmark
Data to Align or Derive Quarterly/Monthly
Estimates", paper presented at the June 2002
meeting of the OECD Short-term Economic
Statistics Expert Group, Paris.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink: www.oecd.org/std/meeting-papers
Benchmark
A standard, or point of reference, against which
things can be compared, assessed, measured or
judged.
See also: Interpolation
Beneficiary
Bénéficiaire
An individual who is entitled to a benefit (including
the plan member and dependants).
Context: Benchmarking is the process of
comparing performance against that of others in
an effort to identify areas of improvement.
Context: Identical term, "Pension plan beneficiary"
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: OECD, 2006, DAC Guidelines and
Reference Series Applying Strategic Environmental
Assessment: Good Practice Guidance for
Development Co-operation, OECD, Paris
Benefit (pension)
Prestation
Payment made to a pension fund member (or
dependants) after retirement.
See also: Benchmarking
63
Context: Identical terms, "Pension benefit",
"Retirement benefit"
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.37
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Benefit incidence
analysis
A method of computing the distribution of public
expenditure across different demographic groups,
such as women and men. The procedure involves
allocating per unit public subsidies (for example,
expenditure per student for the education sector)
according to individual utilization rates of public
services.
BERDR
R&D Expenditure in the Business Enterprise Sector
in a given year at the regional level.
Source: Eurostat, "The regional dimension of R&D
and innovations statistics - Regional manual",
Office for Official Publications of the European
Communities, Luxembourg, 1996 , p. 38
Source: Alexander, P., Baden, S., 2000, Glossary
on macroeconomics from a gender perspective,
Institute of Development Studies, University of
Sussex
Berlin Agreement
Accord de Berlin
The Berlin Agreement is the Common Agricultural
Policy (CAP) reform package to which European
Union heads of state agreed in March 1999.
Beginning in 2000, the package reduces price
supports and increases direct payments for cereals
and beef, while lowering oilseed direct payments
(by harmonising them with cereal payments) and
raising the milk quota. Dairy support price
reductions and the introduction of new dairy direct
payments are delayed until 2005, along with a
second round of milk quota increase. Like the
initial proposal by the European Commission which
was not accepted, the agreement is often referred
to as Agenda 2000
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/52/56/31594934.p
df
Benefit statement
Relevé des droits
A statement of the pension benefits an individual
has earned (in a defined benefit plan) or a
prediction of what the final pension might be (in a
defined contribution plan).
Context: Identical term, "Annual pension estimate"
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
See also: Agenda 2000
Berne Convention
Treaty, administered by the World Intellectual
Property Organization (WIPO), for the protection of
the rights of authors in their literary and artistic
works.
Benefit transfer
A practice used to estimate economic values for
ecosystem services by transferring information
available from studies already completed in one
location or context to another. This can be done as
a unit value transfer or a function transfer.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 9.107
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Berne Union
The International Union of Credit and Investment
Insurers. This Union is an informal association of
export credit insurance agencies, founded in 1934.
The two main objectives of the Berne Union are
the promotion of the international acceptance of
sound principles in export credit insurance and
investment insurance, and the exchange of
information relating thereto.
Bequest benefit
Bequest benefits are derived from the continued
existence of elements of the environment because
they may one day provide benefits for those yet to
be born.
The almost 50 members meet twice a year to
exchange information and seek to establish
common standards, for instance on the appropriate
down payment and repayment periods for various
kinds of exports. Informal credit ratings of the
Context: An example of these types of benefits is
that derived from maintaining a rain forest to
protect future sources of genetic material for drugs
or hybrid agricultural crops.
64
borrowing countries are maintained. They also
consult with each other on a continuing basis, and
cooperate closely. All members participate as
insurers and not as representatives of their
governments.
See Baltic Free Trade Agreement.
See also: Baltic Free Trade Agreement
Bias
Biais
An effect which deprives a statistical result of
representativeness by systematically distorting it,
as distinct from a random error which may distort
on any one occasion but balances out on the
average.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Context: In the context of PPPs a bias is a
systematic error in a PPP or volume index. Bias can
arise for a number of reasons including failure to
respect either representativity or comparability or
consistency, the price collection and measurement
procedures followed, and the calculation and
aggregation formula employed.
Bertrand (Nash)
Equilibrium
In a Bertrand model of oligopoly, firms
independently choose prices (not quantities) in
order to maximize profits. This is accomplished by
assuming that rivals' prices are taken as given.
The resulting equilibrium is a Nash equilibrium in
prices, referred to as a Bertrand (Nash)
equilibrium.
Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
The bias of an estimator is the difference between
its mathematical expectation and the true value it
estimates. In the case it is zero, the estimator is
said to be unbiased.
Context: When the industry is symmetric, i.e.,
comprising firms of equal size and identical costs,
and the costs are constant and the product
homogenous, the Bertrand equilibrium is such that
each firm sets price equal to marginal cost, and
the outcome is Pareto efficient. This result holds
regardless of the number of firms and stands in
contrast to the Cournot equilibrium where the
deviation from Pareto efficiency increases as the
number of firms decreases. However, when
products are differentiated even the Bertrand
model results in prices which exceed marginal cost,
and the difference increases as products become
more differentiated.
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003
Biased sample
Échantillon avec
erreur systématique
A sample obtained by a biased sampling process,
that is to say, a process which incorporates a
systematic component of error, as distinct from
random error which balances out on the average.
Non-random sampling is often, though not
inevitably, subject to bias, particularly when
entrusted to subjective judgement on the part of
human being.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Cournot (Nash) Equilibrium
Best available
technology
The term best available technology is taken to
mean the latest stage of development (state of the
art) of processes, of facilities or of methods of
operation which indicate the practical suitability of
a particular measure for limiting discharges.
See also: Non-random sample
Bibliometrics
Bibliometrics is the generic term for data about
publications.
Context: Originally, work was limited to collecting
data on numbers of scientific articles and
publications, classified by authors and/or by
institutions, fields of science, country, etc., in
order to construct simple ―productivity‖ indicators
for academic research. Subsequently, more
sophisticated and multidimensional techniques
based on citations in articles (and more recently
also in patents) were developed. The resulting
citation indexes and co-citation analyses are used
both to obtain-more sensitive measures of
research quality and to trace the development of
fields of science and of networks.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 9.42
BFTA
65
Bibliometric analysis use data on numbers and
authors of scientific publications and on articles
and the citations therein (and in patents) to
measure the ―output‖ of individuals/research
teams, institutions, and countries, to identify
national and international networks, and to map
the development of new (multi-disciplinary) fields
of science and technology
Bilateral comparisons
See Binary comparison
See also: Binary comparison
Bilateral deadline
In the context of Paris Club reschedulings, the date
by which all bilateral agreements must be
concluded. It is set in the Agreed Minute and is
typically about six months later, but can be
extended upon request.
Source: OECD Frascati Manual, Sixth edition,
2002, Annex 7, paras. 20-22, page 203
Hyperlink: http://www1.oecd.org/dsti/sti/statana/prod/eas_fras.htm
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Bicycle
A road vehicle which has two or more wheels and
is propelled solely by the muscular energy of the
persons on that vehicle, in particular by means of a
pedal system, lever or handle (e.g. bicycles,
tricycles, quadricycles and invalid carriages).
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Bilateral debt
Loans extended by a bilateral creditor.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Bid rigging
Bid rigging is a particular form of collusive pricefixing behaviour by which firms coordinate their
bids on procurement or project contracts.
Bilateral exchange
Exchange of data and/or metadata between a
sending organisation and a receiving organisation
where all aspects of the exchange process are
agreed between counterparties, including the
mechanism for exchange of data and metadata,
the formats, the frequency or schedule, and the
mode used for communications regarding the
exchange.
Context: There are two common forms of bid
rigging. In the first, firms agree to submit common
bids, thus eliminating price competition. In the
second, firms agree on which firm will be the
lowest bidder and rotate in such a way that each
firm wins an agreed upon number or value of
contracts. Since most (but not all) contracts open
to bidding involve governments, it is they who are
most often the target of bid rigging. Bid rigging is
one of the most widely prosecuted forms of
collusion.
Context: Apart from bilateral exchange, the SDMX
initiative identifies two other basic forms of
exchange of statistics and metadata between
organisations, i.e. multilateral exchange and datasharing exchange.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Gateway exchange
Bilateral monopoly /
oligopoly
A bilateral monopoly/oligopoly is a situation where
there is a single (or few) buyer(s) and seller(s) of
a given product in a market. The level of
concentration in the sale of purchase of the
product results in a mutual inter-dependence
between the seller(s) and buyer(s).
Bid-ask spread
Bid-ask spread is the difference between the price
buyers are willing to pay for an asset (bid) and the
price sellers are asking for it.
Source: OECD Economic Outlook Glossary
Context: Under certain circumstances the buyer(s)
can exercise countervailing power to constrain the
market power of a single or few large sellers in the
market and result in greater output and lower
prices than would prevail under monopoly or
oligopoly. This would particularly be the case
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/28/54/1890650.ht
m
66
purchasers‘ price for the standard construction
project described.
when: the "upstream" supply of the product is
elastic, i.e. fairly responsive to price changes and
not subject to production bottlenecks; the buyers
can substantially influence downwards the prices of
monopolistic sellers because of the size of their
purchases; and the buyers themselves are faced
with price competition in the "downstream"
markets (see vertical integration for discussion of
terms upstream-downstream).
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Bills
Bons
Bills are short-term securities that give the holder
(creditor) the unconditional right to receive a
stated fixed sum on a specified date
Such a situation is particularly likely in the case of
purchase of an intermediate product. However, if
the supply of the product upstream is restricted
and there is no effective competition downstream,
the bilateral monopoly/oligopoly may result in joint
profit maximization between sellers-buyers to the
detriment of consumers.
Source: SNA 7.97[11.74]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Bills-of-quantity
approach
The method used to build up the costs of
construction projects from the individual modules
of activity involved.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
See also: Vertical integration
Bilateral rescheduling
agreements
Rescheduling agreements reached bilaterally
between the debtor and creditor countries. These
are legally the equivalent of new loan agreements.
After a Paris Club rescheduling, such agreements
are required to put into effect the debt
restructuring set forth in the multinational Agreed
Minute.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Binary coded decimal
(BCD)
A numerical representation in which decimal digits
are represented by binary numerals.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Bill and keep
A pricing scheme for the two-way interconnection
of two networks under which the reciprocal call
termination charge is zero - that is, each network
agrees to terminate calls from the other network at
no charge.
Binary comparison
A price or quantity comparison between two
countries that draws upon data only for those two
countries. Also known as bilateral comparisons.
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Bill of quantities
The product specification that details the
operations required to build a standard
construction project. It covers the costs of inputs
(labour, materials and plant), subcontracting,
preliminaries and overheads. It also covers
contractor‘s profit or loss, architect‘s and
engineer‘s fees and non-deductible taxes. A bill of
quantities is structured to provide a weighted price
for each component specified which, when
summed across components, provide the
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Binary digit (BIT)
A numeral in the binary scale of notation. This digit
is represented by a 0 or 1.
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
67
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
See also: Biodegradable
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Biodiversity
Biodiversité
Biodiversity refers to the range of genetic
differences, species differences and ecosystem
differences in a given area
Binary PPP
A PPP between two countries calculated using only
the prices and weights for those two countries.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
See also: Biological diversity
Biodiversity
Convention sur la
Convention
diversité biologique
See United Nations Conference on Environment
and Development
Biobank
A collection of biological material and the
associated data and information stored in an
organised system, for a population or a large
subset of a population.
See also: United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development
Biodiversity indices
Indices de diversité
biologique
Biodiversity indices are measures of species
diversity expressed as ratios between numbers of
species and ―importance values‖ (numbers,
biomass, productivity and so on) of individuals.
The term may also refer to genetic diversity and
diversity of habitats or communities
Context: Also referred to as Human genetic
research database(s) (HGRD) or ―population
database‖.
Source: OECD, 2006, Creation and Governance of
Human Genetic Research Databases, OECD. Paris
Bioclimatology
Bioclimatologie
Bioclimatology is the scientific study of the
relationship between organisms and climate
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Bioecology
Bioécologie
Bioecology is the branch of biology that studies the
relationship among different living organisms and
their environment
Biocycle
Biocycle
A biocycle is the cycle through which energy and
essential substances are transferred among
species and between the biotic and abiotic
segments of the environment
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Biofuel
See Biomass fuel
See also: Biomas fuel
Biodegradable
Biodégradation
Is matter capable of decomposing rapidly under
natural conditions
Biogas
See Gas/liquids from biomass
See also: Gas/liquids from biomass
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Bioinformatics
Construction of databases on genomes, protein
sequences; modelling complex biological
processes, including systems biology.
See also: Biodegradation
Biodegradation
Biodégradation
Biodegradation is the process by which organic
substances are decomposed by micro-organisms
(mainly aerobic bacteria) into simpler substances
such as carbon dioxide, water and ammonia.
Context: The use of computers in solving
information problems in the life sciences; mainly, it
involves the creation of extensive electronic
databases on genomes, protein sequences, etc.
Secondarily, it involves techniques such as the
three-dimensional modelling of biomolecules.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: OECD, 2005, A Framework for
Biotechnology Statistics, OECD, Paris, Annex 1:
Glossary of Terms Used in the List-Based Definition
68
of beetles on the cottony—cushion scale; and the
control of Japanese beetles by Bacillus popilliae
Biological
Accumulation
accumulation
biologique
Biological accumulation is the accumulation of
elements and compounds of harmful substances in
the tissues of living organisms
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Biological resources
Timber resources, crop and plant resources,
aquatic resources , and animal resources other
than aquatic that bring use benefits today or that
may do so in the future. Each category of
biological resource in the SEEA asset classification
is subdivided into cultivated and non cultivated
sub-categories.
Biological benchmark Référence biologique
A biological benchmark is a population level or
fitness of plant or animal species used as a
benchmark for measuring pollution in natural
systems (habitats)
See cultivated biological resources and noncultivated biological resources.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.53, EA 14
See also: Biological indicator
Biological diversity
Biodiversité
Biological diversity refers to the global variety of
species and ecosystems and the ecological
processes of which they are part, covering three
components: genetic, species and ecosystem
diversity
See also: Cultivated biological resources (SEEA),
Non-cultivated biological resources
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Biological sample
A biological specimen including, for example,
blood, tissue, urine, etc. taken from a participant.
See also: Biodiversity
Source: OECD, 2006, Creation and Governance of
Human Genetic Research Databases, OECD. Paris
Biological family
A biological family refers to parents and their own
children
Biological treatment
Technique d‟epuration
technology
biologique
Biological treatment technology refers to wastewater treatment employing aerobic and anaerobic
micro-organisms that results in decanted effluents
and separate sludge containing microbial mass
together with pollutants.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Biological indicator
Indicateur biologique
Biological indicator refer to organisms, species or
community whose characteristics show the
presence of specific environmental conditions.
Other terms used are indicator organism, indicator
plant and indicator species
Biological treatment processes are also used in
combination or in conjunction with mechanical and
advanced unit operations.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Advanced treatment technology (waste
water), Mechanical treatment technology
Biological waste
Biological waste is waste containing mostly natural
organic materials (remains of plants, animal
excrement, biological sludge from waste-water
treatment plants and so forth)
See also: Biological benchmark, Environmental
indicator
Biological pest control Destruction
biologique des
parasites
Biological pest control refers to the use of
predatory or parasitic organisms instead of highly
polluting chemicals to reduce the number of
harmful animals or plants, as in, for example, the
destruction of the citrophilus mealy bug by
parasitic species of the chalcid wasp; the predation
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Waste
69
Biomass
Biomasse
Biomass is the quantity of living material of plant
or animal origin, present at a given time within a
given area
Source: Adapting new technologies to census
operations, Arij Dekker, Symposium on Global
Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing
Censuses: Mid-Decade Assessment and Future
Prospects, Statistics Division, Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations
Secretariat New York, 7-10 August 2001, Glossary
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/docs/sym
posium_06.htm#_Toc8547016
See also: Solid biomass
Biomass fuel
Liquid, solid, or gaseous fuel produced by
conversion of biomass. Examples include
bioethanol from sugar cane or corn, charcoal or
woodchips, and biogas from anaerobic
decomposition of wastes.
Biotechnology active
firm (enterprise)
Is defined as a firm engaged in key biotechnology
activities such as the application of at least one
biotechnology technique to produce goods or
services and/or the performance of biotechnology
R&D.
Context: Biomass fuel is any material derived from
plants or animals which is deliberately burnt by
humans. Wood is the most common example, but
the use of animal dung and crop residues is also
widespread. China, South Africa and some other
countries also use coal extensively for domestic
needs.
Source: OECD, 2005, A Framework for
Biotechnology Statistics, OECD, Paris, Chapter 2:
Basic Concepts and Definitions
Bruce, Nigel, Rogelio Perez-Padilla and Rachel
Albalak (2000). Indoor air pollution in developing
countries: a major environmental and public health
challenge. Bulletin of the World Health
Organization, 78 (9), 1078-1092. Geneva, 2000.
(p. 78)
Biotechnology
employment
Is defined as the employment involved in the
generation of biotechnology products.
Context: For ease of collection, it is suggested that
employment be measured in terms of staff
numbers rather than hours worked. However,
where countries prefer, they can collect this
information in terms of full-time equivalents,
consistent with an R&D survey approach (as
outlined in the OECD Frascati Manual).
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2002-2007,
OECD, Paris, 2002 – Annex II. Glossary of Terms
Biomedical research
Biomedical research comprises:
Source: OECD, 2005, A Framework for
Biotechnology Statistics, OECD, Paris, Chapter 2:
Basic Concepts and Definitions
- the study of specific diseases and conditions
(mental or physical), including detection, cause,
prophylaxis, treatment and rehabilitation of
persons;
See also: Biotechnology product
- the design of methods, drugs and devices used to
diagnose, support and maintain the individual
during and after treatment for specific diseases or
conditions;
Biotechnology
expenses
Is defined as an expense incurred in the
generation of biotechnology revenue. It is thus
generally a subset of the total expenses incurred
by biotechnology firms.
- the scientific investigation required to understand
the underlying life processes which affect disease
and human well-being, including such areas as
cellular and molecular bases of diseases, genetics,
immunology.
Source: OECD, 2005, A Framework for
Biotechnology Statistics, OECD, Paris, Chapter 2:
Basic Concepts and Definitions
A full list of such activities includes clinical trials
and laboratory investigations, the study of
exposure to environmental agents and various
behavioural hazards
Biotechnology process
Is defined as a production or other (e.g.
environmental) process using one or more
biotechnology techniques or products.
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Source: OECD, 2005, A Framework for
Biotechnology Statistics, OECD, Paris, Chapter 2:
Basic Concepts and Definitions
Biometric
identification
Identification of individuals through one or more of
their physical characteristics.
Biotechnology product
70
Is defined as a good or service, the development
of which requires the use of one or more
biotechnology techniques per list-based and single
definitions. It includes knowledge products
(technical know-how) generated from
biotechnology R&D.
Biotechnology, single
definition
Biotechnology is defined as the application of
science and technology to living organisms as well
as parts, products and models thereof, to alter
living or non-living materials for the production of
knowledge, goods and services
Source: OECD, 2005, A Framework for
Biotechnology Statistics, OECD, Paris, Chapter 2:
Basic Concepts and Definitions
Source: Second OECD Ad Hoc Meeting on
Biotechnology Statistics, OECD, May 2001
Biotechnology
research and
experimental
development (R&D)
Is defined as R&D into biotechnology techniques,
biotechnology products or biotechnology
processes, in accordance with both biotechnology
definitions above and the OECD Frascati Manual for
the measurement of R&D.
Birth (or parity) order
Birth (or parity) order refers to the numerical order
of the live birth or foetal death, recorded in
relation to all previous issue of the mother,
irrespective of whether the issue is a live birth or
foetal death or whether pregnancies were nuptial
or extranuptial
Source: OECD, 2005, A Framework for
Biotechnology Statistics, OECD, Paris, Chapter 2:
Basic Concepts and Definitions
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods,Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Biotechnology sales /
revenue
Is defined as the revenue generated from the sale
(or transfer) of biotechnology products (including
knowledge products). It is thus generally a subset
of the total revenue earned by biotechnology firms.
Birth rate
Taux de natalité
The crude birth rate of an area is the number of
births actually occurring in that area is a given
time period, divided by the population of the area
as estimated at the middle of the particular time
period. The rate is usually expressed in terms of
―per 1 000 of population‖.
Source: OECD, 2005, A Framework for
Biotechnology Statistics, OECD, Paris, Chapter 2:
Basic Concepts and Definitions
Context: The crude birth rate is capable of
considerable refinement according to the various
specific viewpoints adopted in the analysis of vital
statistics. For example, it may be adjusted to allow
for changes in the proportion of the female
population in the child-bearing age groups.
Biotechnology, list
based definition
A list based definition of biotechnology comprises
the following five categories:
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
- DNA (the coding): genomics, pharmaco-genetics,
gene probes, DNA
sequencing/synthesis/amplification, genetic
engineering.
- Proteins and molecules (the functional blocks):
protein/peptide sequencing/synthesis, lipid/protein
engineering, proteomics, hormones and growth
factors, cell receptors/signalling/pheromones.
BIS
See Bank for International Settlements
See also: Bank for International Settlements (BIS)
- Cell and tissue culture and engineering:
cell/tissue culture, tissue engineering,
hybridisation, cellular fusion, vaccine/immune
stimulants, embryo manipulation.
BIT
See Binary digit
See also: Binary digit (BIT)
- Process biotechnology‘s: Bioreactors,
fermentation, bioprocessing, bioleaching,
biopulping, bio-bleaching, bioremediation, and
biofiltration.
Bits per second (BPS)
A measure of transfer speed in digital
communication networks.
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
- Sub-cellular organisms: gene therapy, viral
vectors
Source: Second OECD Ad Hoc Meeting on
Biotechnology Statistics, OECD, May 2001
71
known as converter gas, LD gas or BOS gas.
Bitumen
Solid, semi-solid or viscous hydrocarbon with a
colloidal structure, being brown to black in colour,
obtained as a residue in the distillation of crude oil,
vacuum distillation of oil residues from
atmospheric distillation.
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Blended payments
See Graduated payments
Context: Bitumen is often referred to as asphalt
and is primarily used for surfacing of roads and for
roofing material. This category includes fluidised
and cut back bitumen.
See also: Graduated payments
BLEU
Belgo-Luxembourg Economic Union
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Blood relatives
Blood relatives are persons related through
common descent from the same progenitor or
ancestor
BKB
BKB are composition fuels manufactured from
lignite/brown coal, produced by briquetting under
high pressure.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Black-Scholes formula
Black-Scholes formula (developed by Fischer Black
and Myron Scholes) prices the value of a European
option on a financial asset, given its price, the
exercise price, the time to maturity, the risk-free
interest rate and the asset‘s expected standard
deviation/volatility.
Blue collar workers
See Production workers
See also: Production workers
Bluetooth
Bluetooth is a short-range radio technology that
allows devices within ten metres of each other to
communicate wirelessly.
Source: OECD, OECD Economic Outlook Glossary,
OECD, Paris
Source: OECD, 2002, OECD Information
Technology Outlook, OECD, Paris, p. 230.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
733_1968510_1_1_1_1,00.html
Blurring
Blurring replaces a reported value by an average.
There are many possible ways to implement
blurring. Groups of records for averaging may be
formed by matching on other variables or by
sorting on the variable of interest.
Blair House
Accord de Blair House
Agreement
The Blair House Agreement is an agreement on
agriculture between the United States and the
European Community in 1992 dealing mainly with
limits on oilseed subsidies in the European Union
which paved the way for the Uruguay Round
Agreement
Context: The number of records in a group (whose
data will be averaged) may be fixed or random.
The average associated with a particular group
may be assigned to all members of a group, or to
the "middle" member (as in a moving average). It
may be performed on more than one variable with
different groupings for each variable.
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
See also: Uruguay Round Agreement on
Agriculture (URAA)
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Blast furnace gas
Blast furnace gas is produced during the
combustion of coke in blast furnaces in the iron
and steel industry. It is recovered and used as a
fuel partly within the plant and partly in other steel
industry processes or in power stations equipped
to burn it.
BMI
Body Mass Index
Context: Also included here is oxygen steel furnace
gas which is obtained as a by-product of the
production of steel in an oxygen furnace and is
recovered on leaving the furnace. The gas is also
Bond market
72
The market in which longer-term debt securities
are issued and traded.
Bonds and notes
Bonds and notes are debt instruments that usually
give the holder the unconditional right to fixed
money income or contractually determined variable
money income. With the exception of perpetual
bonds, bonds and notes also provide the holder
with an unconditional right to a fixed sum as
repayment of principal on a specified date or dates
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Bond with call option
The issuer has the right to redeem the bond at a
specified earlier date than the one originally fixed
as the final maturity.
Source: External Debt Statistics: Guide for
Compilers and Users (Draft), IMF, Washington DC,
March 2000, Appendix III, Glossary of Terms
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Bonuses
It refers to all payments to employees which were
not paid regularly at each pay period, including
bonuses paid at fixed periods, but not paid
regularly at each pay period and bonuses linked to
individual or collective performance. These
bonuses are not included in the hourly and
monthly earnings. In some tables presenting
monthly earnings, an estimation of the monthly
value of the bonuses is included separately.
Bonuses are included in annual earnings.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Bond with put option
The investor has the right to require redemption of
the principal at a specified date earlier than the
one originally fixed as the final maturity.
Source: Eurostat, 1999, "Statistics on the structure
and distribution of earnings: Methods and
definitions", Data 1995, 1998 Edition, Office for
Official Publications of the European Communities,
Luxembourg
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Bonuses linked to
individual or collective
performance
These bonuses are not paid regularly at each pay
period and are linked to individual or collective
performance. The amount of such bonuses is not
laid down in advance and is determined according
to production objectives, quality, productivity,
value added, turnover or the profits of the
enterprise.
Bonds and debentures Obligations garanties
ou non garanties
Bonds and debentures are long-term securities
that give the holders the unconditional right to one
or both of:
(a) a fixed or contractually determined variable
money income in the form of coupon payments,
i.e. payment of interest is not dependent on
earnings of the debtors;
Source: Eurostat, 1996, Community statistics on
the level and structure of labour costs 1996 - List,
definition and breakdown of the variables, p.5,
Eurostat, Luxembourg
(b) a stated fixed sum as a repayment of principal
on a specified date or dates when the security is
redeemed
Book price
See List price
Source: SNA 7.100 and 11.74 [12.109]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: List price
Book reserved
pension plans
Sums entered in the balance sheet of the plan
sponsor as reserves or provisions for occupational
pension plan benefits. Some assets may be held in
separate accounts for the purpose of financing
benefits, but are not legally or contractually
pension plan assets.
Bonds and money
market instruments
Include bonds, debentures, commercial paper,
promissory notes, certificates of deposit, and other
tradable non-equity securities (with the exception
of financial derivatives).
Source: OECD & IMF, 2004, Glossary of Foreign
Direct Investment Terms and Definitions, Paris and
Washington DC
Context: Most OECD countries do not allow this
method of financing. Those that do usually require
these plans to be insured against bankruptcy of
the plan sponsor through an insolvency guaranty
arrangement.
73
See Top and bottom coding.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Top and bottom coding
Bouncing
The fluctuation or oscillation of prices up and down
in a persistent pattern.
See also: Funded pension plan, Unfunded pension
plan
Book reserves or
provisions
Book reserves or provisions are sums entered in
the balance sheet as reserves or provisions for
supplementary pension benefits.
Context: A situation in which the set of prices for
the second period is simply a reordering of the set
of prices for the first period, the price relatives this
being obtained by matching each price in the first
period with another price from the same set of
prices.
Source: Eurostat, 1996, Community statistics on
the level and structure of labour costs 1996 - List,
definition and breakdown of the variables, p.7,
Eurostat, Luxembourg
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Book value
Valeur comptable
Book value is the value at which an equity or other
capital asset or liability is recorded in the balance
sheet of an entity. Book value can reflect one of
the following valuation methods:
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
• Historical cost
• Replacement cost
• An interim adjusted price, which is not the
current market price
• Fair market value
• Current market price
Bounds
The range of possible values of a cell in a table of
frequency counts where the cell value has been
perturbed or suppressed. Where only margins of
tables are released it is possible to infer bounds for
the unreleased joint distribution. One method for
inferring the bounds across a table is known as the
Shuttle algorithm.
Source: OECD & IMF, 2004, Glossary of Foreign
Direct Investment Terms and Definitions, Paris and
Washington DC
See also: List price, Valuation of stocks
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Border price
See Reference (border) price
See also: Reference (border) price
Border protection
Any measure which acts to restrain imports at
point of entry.
See also: Shuttle algorithm
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Bovine somatotropin
(BST)
Bovine somatotropin (BST) is a naturally occurring
hormone that stimulates milk production
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Border workers
Travailleurs
frontaliers
Border workers are persons commuting between
their country of usual residence (which is usually
their country of citizenship as well) and their place
of employment abroad
Bovine Spongiform
Encéphalopathie
Encephalopathy (BSE) spongiforme bovine
(ESB)
Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE) is a fatal
disease of the central nervous system of cattle,
first identified in the United Kingdom in 1986.
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Context: On 20 March 1996, the UK Spongiform
Encephalopathy Advisory Committee (SEAC)
announced the discovery of a new variant of
Creutzfeldt-Jacob Disease (CJD), a fatal disease of
the central nervous system in humans, which
might be linked to consumption of beef affected by
exposure to BSE.
Bottom coding
74
options on oil revenues (Coordinated Portfolio
Investment Survey Guide, Second Edition,
International Monetary Fund, 2002, Washington
DC. Appendix VI: Definition and Description of
Instruments. Available at:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf ).
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Box
Category of domestic support.
— Green box: supports considered not to distort
trade and therefore permitted with no limits.
Source: Joint BIS-IMF-OECD-World Bank statistics
on external debt, metadata
— Blue box: permitted supports linked to
production, but subject to production limits and
therefore minimally trade-distorting.
Hyperlink:
http://www1.oecd.org/dac/debt/htm/metadata.ht
m#Line%20A
— Amber box: supports considered to distort trade
and therefore subject to reduction commitments.
Brady Plan
See Brady bonds
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
See also: Brady bonds
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Brand and model
specification
See Product specification
See also: Product specification
BPM5
See Balance of Payments Manual, Fifth Edition
Brand competition
(inter and intra)
Firms marketing differentiated products frequently
develop and compete on the basis of brands or
labels. Coca Cola vs. Pepsi-Cola, Levi vs. GWG
jeans, Kellogg‘s Corn Flakes vs. Nabisco‘s Bran
Flakes are a few examples of inter-brand
competition. Each of these brands may be
preferred by different buyers willing to pay a
higher price or make more frequent purchases of
one branded product over another.
See also: Balance of Payment Manual, Fifth Edition
BPS
See Bits per second
See also: Bits per second (BPS)
Brackish water
Brackish water means water where the salinity is
appreciable but not at a constant high level. The
salinity may be subject to considerable variation
due to the influx of fresh or sea waters.
Intra-brand competition is competition among
retailers or distributors of the same brand. Intrabrand competition may be on price or non-price
terms. As an example, a pair of Levi jeans may be
sold at a lower price in a discount or specialty store
as compared to a department store but without the
amenities in services that a department store
provides. The amenities in services constitute
intra-brand non-price competition. Some
manufacturers seek to maintain uniform retail
prices for their products and prevent intra-brand
price competition through business practices such
as resale price maintenance (RPM), in order to
stimulate intra-brand non-price competition if it
will increase sales of their product.
Source: European Union, Council Regulation (EC)
No 788/96 of 22 April 1996 on the submission by
Member States of statistics on aquaculture
production
Brady bonds
Brady bonds comprise commercial bank debt
restructured under the Brady Plan. The Brady Plan
was introduced in early 1989 and offers a
comprehensive debt restructuring package for
commercial bank debt. Under the plan commercial
lenders/creditors can chose from a menu of
instruments including buybacks, discount
exchanges for debt stock reduction, and par
exchanges at reduced interest rates for debt
service reduction
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Context: Eurobonds issued by the government of a
developing country refinancing its debt to foreign
commercial banks under a Brady-type agreement.
The agreement is characterized by introduction of
an IMF plan and the opportunity for the creditor to
exchange its debt against a set of instruments
aimed at satisfying both counterparts of the deal.
The main features of Brady bonds are
collateralization, debt reduction, debt-equity
conversion, underwriting against new money, and
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Bridge country
A country that provides the link or bridge between
two separate comparisons involving different
groups of countries. The bridge country
75
participates in both comparisons and by doing so
enables the countries in one comparison to be
compared with the countries in the other
comparison and vice versa.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
See also: Monetary aggregates – IMF, Narrow
money
Broadacre
Broadacre is a term used, mainly in Australia, to
describe farms or industries engaged in the
production of grains, oilseeds and other crops
(especially wheat, barley, peas, sorghum, maize,
hemp, safflower, and sunflower), or the grazing of
livestock for meat or wool, on a large scale (i.e.,
using extensive parcels of land)
Bridging (bridge) loan
A bridging loan is a short-term advance pending
receipts of funds by the borrower from the same or
another source
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Broad Economic
Categories (BEC)
A three-digit classification, which groups
commodities according their main end use,
introduced by the United Nations in 1970, suitable
for the general economic analysis of international
merchandise trade data.
Brokers and agents
Brokers and agents are individuals or firms that
arrange, execute, or otherwise facilitate client
transactions in financial assets.
Context: Included are brokers and agents handling
the purchase and sale of securities or other
financial contracts for clients, and financial
advisory services that provide specialized services
to brokers and their customers.
Source: International Merchandise Trade,
Australia, Concepts, Sources and Methods,
Glossary, Australian Bureau of Statistics
Because many brokerage firms also trade in
financial securities or financial derivatives on the
firm‘s own account, it can be difficult to distinguish
brokers and agents from underwriters and dealers
classified as financial intermediaries.
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/0/6B7D
040A646F264ECA256A5B001BD777?Open&Highlig
ht=0,warehouse
By convention, this grouping should include only
brokers and agents that clearly specialize in
brokerage and related activities rather than the
intermediation activities that are generally
accomplished by underwriters and dealers
classified as insurance corporations
Broad Economic Policy
Guidelines (BEPGs)
The Treaty obliges the Member States to regard
their economic policies as a matter of common
concern and to coordinate them within the EU
Council. The BEPGs constitute the main instrument
of this coordination.
Source: Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual,
IMF, Washington, 2000, para. 101
Context: They contain recommendations to policymakers on macroeconomic and structural policies
and provide a yardstick for ex post assessment in
the context of multilateral surveillance within the
EU Council. The EU Council, acting on a
recommendation from the European Commission,
formulates a draft of the BEPGs and reports its
findings to the European Council. The EU Council
then adopts a recommendation on the BEPGs
based on the European Council‘s conclusions.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/mfs/manual/i
ndex.htm
Brown coal
Brown coal is calculated as the sum of bituminous
coal and lignite.
Source: European Central Bank, 2003, Annual
Report: 2003, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Source: Electricity information 2001, International
Energy Agency, Paris – Part II
Broad money
Monnaie au sens large
Broad money supply, in addition to currency in
circulation plus sight deposits held by domestic
non-banks, also include time deposits as well as
savings deposits at short-notice held by domestic
non-banks
Browser
A program used to locate and view Web pages.
These include Netscape, Mosaic, Microsoft Internet
Explorer, and others.
Source: United Kingdom, Office for National
Statistics (ONS) website, site statistics
76
than half of the overall useful floor area is used for
residential purposes, the building is classified
under non-residential buildings in accordance with
its purpose-oriented design;
Hyperlink:
http://www.statistics.gov.uk/sitestatistics/interpret
ing.asp
Non-residential buildings are constructions which
are mainly used or intended for non-residential
purposes. If at least half of the overall useful floor
area is used for residential purposes, the building
is classified as a residential building
BSE
See Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy
See also: Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy
(BSE)
Source: Classification of Types of Constructions,
Eurostat
BST
See Bovine somatotropin (BST)
See also: Building - UN, Non-residential buildings –
ESA, Non-residential buildings – UN, Residential
building
See also: Bovine somatotropin (BST)
Budget calendar
A calendar indicating the key dates in the process
of preparing and approving the budget. These
would include the date the budget circular is
issued, time period for discussing estimates with
the ministries and departments, the date the
executive budget is submitted to the legislature,
legislative review including dates for budget
hearings, and the date the budget appropriations
bill should be passed by the legislature. There may
be other important steps in the process, which
varies by country.
Building - UN
Bâtiment - NU
A building is any independent free-standing
structure comprising one or more rooms or other
spaces, covered by a roof, enclosed with external
walls or dividing walls which extend from the
foundations to the roof, and intended for
residential, agricultural, industrial, commercial,
cultural, etc., purposes.
A building may be either a residential building or a
non-residential building
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 1.335
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
See also: Building – Eurostat, Non-residential
buildings – ESA, Non-residential buildings – UN,
Residential building
Budget
documentation
Includes the annual budget presentation, the
budget-supporting documents, including but not
limited to background to policy proposals and
discussion of fiscal risks, within-year budget
reports for monitoring budget execution, and the
final accounts.
Building codes
Codes du bâtiment
Building codes are building regulations concerning
materials, structural design, construction practices,
safety, building services (lighting, ventilation,
electricity, heating/air conditioning, escalators,
plumbing, water supply, drainage and so forth)
and specifications for appropriate administrative
and technical control
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Budgeting
Refers to the process whereby an organisation will
plan for its future financial activities.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Building volume or
area method
(construction price
indices)
For this method in the compilation of construction
price indices the cubic metre is used as a common
denominator to compare the costs of a recent
construction to costs in a base period. An index of
the value per cubic metre is calculated and
adjusted for differences in volume, quality, period,
and region. These adjustments enable a price
index to be prepared. However, the use of this
method requires the construction activity included
to be homogenous. The index is valid only for each
reference building, etc. as it was originally built.
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Building Ŕ Eurostat
Bâtiment - Eurostat
Buildings are roofed constructions which can be
used separately, have been built for permanent
purposes, can be entered by persons and are
suitable or intended for protecting persons,
animals or objects.
Context: This method is no longer used by any
OECD Member country in its pure form, however
building volume is used in some countries (by the
Residential buildings are constructions at least half
of which is used for residential purposes. If less
77
decreases. Conversely, the bear bond has a higher
redemption value if the stock market weakens and
a lower value if stock prices rise.
Netherlands for example) as one of the building
characteristics in the regression analysis used in
the compilation of the hedonic construction price
indices described below.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
A variant of this method used in the compilation of
an output price index for dwellings in Spain uses
the average price per square metre as one of the
variables collected in determining the average
prices of monitored dwellings.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Source: Sources and Methods: Construction Price
Indices, OECD, Eurostat, 1997, page 21
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/document/4/0,2340,en_2649
_34247_2367940_1_1_1_1,00.html
Bullet bond
An issue with no call and no prepayments until
maturity.
See also: Construction price indices, Subsequent
breakdown methods (construction price indices)
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Built-in agenda
Agreed under the Uruguay Round were a range of
selective negotiations, in the areas of trade in
agriculture, trade in services and aspects of
intellectual property that would continue regardless
of whether there was a subsequent round of global
trade talks
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Bullet repayment
The repayment of principal in a single payment at
the maturity of the debt.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
See also: Uruguay Round
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Bulk / oil carrier
Pétrolier-vraquier
Bulk carrier arranged for the carriage of either bulk
dry cargoes or liquid cargoes in the same cargo
spaces but not simultaneously.
Bulletin boards
Simply an electronic message centre relevant to
specific interest groups. Users can review
messages left by others and leave their own
message.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: OECD, 2003, Promise and Problems of EDemocracy: Challenges of online citizen
engagement, OECD, Paris, Annex 1: Commonly
used E-Engagement Terms
Bulk carrier
Vraquier
Ship designed with a single deck and holds for the
bulk carriage of loose dry cargo of a homogenous
nature.
Bundling (of
products)
Bundling is also referred to as package tie-in and
tends to occur when one product is sold in
proportion to another as a requirement for the
sale.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: It is related to the concept of tied selling.
For example, a computer manufacturer may
require customers to purchase along with the
computer all or a specified amount of ancillary
products such as floppy disks and printing paper.
Alternatively, the sale may be made as a complete
package such as an automobile equipped with all
options including automatic transmission, cassetteradio and air conditioning.
Bull and bear bond
Fixed-interest bond whose value at maturity is
dependent on the performance of a stock market
index. The issue is divided into two parts: a bull
bond and a bear bond.
The bull bond‘s redemption value rises if the
market index increases and declines if the index
78
Bundling of products may be a source of
economies or efficiencies for the manufacturer,
part of which may be reflected in a lower
composite price for the buyer than if all the
different products were supplied or bought
separately. However, bundling may also make it
difficult for firms to enter different product
segments of the market.
"duration"). If interest rates rise, the investor will
choose to receive coupons in the normal way
Source: Financial Terminology Database, Bank of
England
See also: Duration of a fixed income instrument
Burial permit
A burial permit is an official statement authorising
the removal of the dead body (corpse) to the
cemetery
The competition implications of bundling, including
that of tied selling generally, are complex and need
to be evaluated on a case by case basis adopting a
rule of reason approach.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Bus
Passenger road motor vehicle designed to seat
more than nine persons (including the driver).
See also: Bundling (of telecommunications
services), Tied selling
Context: Statistics also include mini-buses
designed to seat more than 9 persons (including
the driver).
Bundling (of
telecommunications
services)
Grouping various telecommunications services -wireline and/or wireless -- as a package to
increase the appeal to potential customers and
reduce advertising, marketing and other expenses
associated with delivering multiple services. For
example, a bundled package could include long
distance, cellular, Internet and paging services.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Business cycles OECD
Business cycles are recurrent sequences of
alternating phases of expansion and contraction in
the level of a time series
Source: Cellular Mobile Pricing Structures and
Trends, Working Party on Telecommunication and
Information Services Policies – November 1999,
page 9, Select Glossary of Mobile Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/54/42/2538118.pdf
Context: A cycle in economic activity is the time
span separating two turning points of the same
nature (two peaks or two troughs). (OECD Leading
Indicator Website, Glossary, 2001)
See also: Bundling (of products)
Bunkers
This term includes all dutiable petroleum products
loaded aboard a vessel for consumption by that
vessel.
Source: OECD Leading Indicator Website,
Glossary, 2001
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_34
349_1965941_1_1_1_1,00.html
Source: International Merchandise Trade,
Australia, Concepts, Sources and Methods,
Glossary, Australian Bureau of Statistics
See also: Business cycles - Other, Growth cycles
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/0/6B7D
040A646F264ECA256A5B001BD777?Open&Highlig
ht=0,warehouse
Business cycles Cycle conjoncturel
Other
Business cycles are a type of fluctuation found in
aggregate economic activity of nations that
organise their work mainly in business enterprises.
Bunny bonds
Bunny bonds are sometimes called a multiplier, a
fixed rate bond issue which gives the holder the
option to receive payments either in cash or as
more bonds fungible with the original issue. The
investor will exercise the reinvestment option if
interest rates fall; hence reinvestment risk is
eliminated, and the "duration" of the bond is
lengthened (see group description for definition of
Context: A cycle consists of expansions occurring
at about the same time in many economic
activities, followed by similarly general recessions,
contractions and revivals which merge into the
expansion phase of the next cycle. This sequence
of changes is recurrent but not periodic.
In duration business cycles vary from one year to
ten or twelve years. They are not divisible into
79
shorter cycles of similar character with amplitudes
approximating their own.
Buyer (buyer‟s) credit
Buyer credit refers to a loan obtained by the
overseas purchaser of goods or services, with the
supplier being paid in cash; also known as financial
credit
Source: Statistical Indicators of Cyclical Revivals,
A.F. Burns, W.C. Mitchell NBER, New York, 1938
See also: Business cycles, OECD CLI
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Business enterprise
An enterprise is a term in the commercial world
used to describe a project or venture undertaken
for gain. It is often used with the word "business"
as in "business enterprise". Usually, by extension,
it refers to the business entity carrying out the
enterprise and is thus synonymous with
"undertaking", "company" or "firm".
Buyer concentration
See Concentration
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
See also: Concentration
Buyer's credit
A financial arrangement in which a bank or
financial institution, or an export credit agency in
the exporting country, extends a loan directly to a
foreign buyer or to a bank in the importing country
to pay for the purchase of goods and services from
the exporting country. Also known as financial
credit. This term does not refer to credit extended
directly from the buyer to the seller (for example,
through advance payment for goods and services).
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Holding company
Business register, FDI
A business register is a register of enterprises or
establishments involved in foreign direct
investment (FDI), which is maintained by countries
to assist in the compilation of their direct
investment data
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms, OECD, 2001 – unpublished
Business sector
output
Business sector output is total economic output of
the economy less the activities of the general
government sector, that is, general government
consumption and gross capital formation
Buying-in price
Buying-in price is the percentage of the
intervention price at which purchases into
intervention are actually accepted
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Buyout
A buyout refers to a situation where the existing
owners of a firm are "bought out" by another
group, usually management and/or workers of that
firm. A buyout may be for the whole firm or a
division or a plant as the case applies.
Busy hour
The 60 minute period during which a
telecommunications network experiences its peak
traffic.
Context: The financing of the buyout can be
structured in various ways such as bank loans or
through the issuance of bonds. In a leveraged
buyout for example, a fairly large proportion of
debt in relation to the asset value of the firm is
incurred. Because buyouts lead to replacing
publicly traded equity with debt (in the form of
bonds backed by assets and other guarantees) the
firms are often viewed as "going private" since its
shares may no longer be listed on the stock
exchange. Buyouts are viewed as an integral part
of the market for corporate control and the redeployment of assets from lower to higher valued
uses.
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Buy-back program
Programme de rechat
A buy-back program is a program, usually
government sponsored, for buying vessels or
licenses from fishers and removing the vessels
from the fishery
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
80
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
C
A high-level computer programming language.
Buy-out schemes
Buy-out schemes are supply control measures, in
which participation is usually voluntary, under
which producers receive compensatory payments
for reducing output or productive capacity by a
specified amount for a given period
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Cabotage (maritime
context) / national
sea transport
Sea transport between two ports (a port of
loading/embarkment and a port of unloading/
disembarkment) located in the same country
irrespective of the country in which the seagoing
vessel is registered.
See also: Supply control
By-catch
Prises accessoires
Fish or other fauna (e.g. birds or marine
mammals) that are caught during fishing, but
which are not sold or kept for personal use. In
commercial fishing these include both fish
discarded for economic reasons (economic
discards) and because regulations require it
(regulatory discards). Fish released alive under
catch-and-release fishery management programs
are not normally considered as bycatch
Context: Cabotage (maritime context) can be
performed by a seagoing vessel registered in the
reporting country or in another country. One port
transport is included.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Bypass
Arrangements or facilities whereby a customer can
access long-distance, international, or other
services without using the local operating
company's switched network, thus avoiding
payment of access charges. More generally, any
means whereby customers avoid usage of a
monopoly service or facility.
CAD-CAM
See Computer assisted design/Computer assisted
manufacturing
See also: Computer Assisted Design/Computer
Assisted Manufacturing (CAD-CAM)
Source: Telecommunications services: Glossary of
terms – World Trade Organisation
CAESAR
World Conference on Agricultural and
Environmental Statistical Applications
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/tratop_e/serv_e/t
elecom_e/tel12_e.htm
CAI
See Computer assisted interviewing
Byte
The common unit of computer storage from
personal computers to mainframes. A byte holds
the equivalent of a single character, such as a
letter, a dollar sign, or decimal point.
Cairns Group
Group of agricultural exporting nations lobbying for
agricultural trade liberalization. It was formed in
1986 in Cairns, Australia just before the beginning
of the Uruguay Round. Current membership:
Argentina, Australia, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Chile,
Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Indonesia,
Malaysia, New Zealand, Paraguay, Philippines,
South Africa, Thailand and Uruguay.
Context: A kilobyte consists of approximately one
thousand bytes, a megabyte of one million bytes,
and a gigabyte of one billion bytes (Handbook on
Geographic Information Systems and Digital
Mapping, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 79,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Affairs, Statistics Division, New York, 2000, Annex
VI - Glossary).
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
81
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
A loan contract which is automatically renewed
every day unless the lender or the borrower
indicates that it wishes the funds to be returned
within a short period of time.
Calculated interval
The interval containing possible values for a
suppressed cell in a table, given the table structure
and the values published.
Source: A glossary of terms used in payments and
settlement systems, July 2001, Committee on
Payment and Settlement Systems, Bank for
International Settlements
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/cpss00b.pdf
Callable preferred
stock
Callable preferred stock can be repurchased by its
issuer at a specified price.
Calendar adjustment
Calendar adjustment refers to the correction for
calendar variations. Such calendar adjustments
include working day adjustments or the incidence
of moving holidays (such as Easter and Chinese
New Year).
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Context: The terms ―calendar adjustment‖ and
―working day adjustment‖ (also known as ―trading
day adjustment‖) are often used interchangeably.
However, the main difference between the two
terms is that working day adjustment is merely
one type of calendar adjustment.
Call-back
Rappel
The inability of an investigator to make contact
with a particular designated sample unit at the first
attempt raises certain problems of bias due to nonresponse. One method of dealing with this is for
the investigator to ―call-back‖ on one or more
occasions in order to establish contact.
Another type of calendar adjustment is a ―shopping
day‖ adjustment for consumer expenditure or retail
trade series. Each variable has its own specific
calendar adjustment.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
The length of month effect is assigned to the
seasonal component because it happens year after
year in the same period with the exception of leap
year effects.
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
4: Guidelines for the reporting of different forms of
data
Calling opportunities
The sum total of possible connections (and
therefore calls) on telecommunications networks
(fixed and wireless).
Calendar effects
component of a time
series
The calendar effects component is that part of the
seasonal component which represents calendar
variations in a time series, such as trading days /
working days, moving holidays and other calendar
effects (such as leap year).
Source: Cellular Mobile Pricing Structures and
Trends, Working Party on Telecommunication and
Information Services Policies – November 1999,
page 9, Select Glossary of Mobile Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/54/42/2538118.pdf
The effects of the normal length of a month are
assigned to the seasonal component.
Calling Party Pays
(CPP)
The convention under which the party originating a
call pays the entire end-to-end cost of the
communication. In particular, in the mobile sector,
this implies that the calling party pays the ―airtime
charge‖ for termination on the mobile handset.
Context: The calendar component is often slightly
moving and may disturb the stability of the
seasonal component.
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
4: Guidelines for the reporting of different forms of
data
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Call money
See also: Receiving Party Pays (RPP)
82
or contracting agencies) - often through the
provision of technical assistance, short/long-term
training, and specialist inputs (e.g., computer
systems). The process may involve the
development of human, material and financial
resources.
Camps
Camps
Camps are sets of premises originally intended for
the temporary accommodation of persons with
common activities or interests. Included in this
category are military camps, refugee camps and
camps established for the housing of workers in
mining, agriculture, public works or other types of
enterprises
Source: Employment-Intensive Investment
Programme (EIIP), International Labour
Organisation
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.362
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/employment/rec
on/eiip/index.htm
Canberra Group
See City groups
Capacity development
The process by which individuals, groups and
organisations, institutions and countries develop,
enhance and organise their systems, resources and
knowledge; all reflected in their abilities,
individually and collectively, to perform functions,
solve problems and achieve objectives.
See also: City groups
Candidate countries
There are currently (at March 2007) three
candidate countries for entry to the European
Union: Croatia, Turkey and the former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia.
Source: OECD, 2006, DAC Guidelines and
Reference Series Applying Strategic Environmental
Assessment: Good Practice Guidance for
Development Co-operation, OECD, Paris
Source: European Commission Enlargement
website
Hyperlink:
http://ec.europa.eu/enlargement/countries/index_
en.htm
Capacity of an inland Capacité d'un bateau
waterways transport
de transport de
(IWT) passenger
voyageurs par voies
vessel
navigables intérieures
Maximum permissible number of passengers that a
vessel may carry in accordance with its
documents.
See also: European Union
Canvasser method
The canvasser method is the method by which
information for each individual in a population
census or sample survey, collected and entered on
the questionnaire by an enumerator designated to
perform this operation in a specified area
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
CAPI
See Computer assisted personal interviewing
CAP
See Common Agricultural Policy
See also: Computer Assisted Personal Interviewing
(CAPI)
See also: Common Agricultural Policy (CAP)
Capital account Ŕ ESA
Compte de capital SEC
The capital account records acquisitions less
disposals of non-financial assets by resident units
and measures the change in net worth due to
saving (final balancing item in the current
accounts) and capital transfers.
Capacity assessment
A structured and analytical process whereby the
various dimensions of capacity are assessed within
a broader context of systems, as well as evaluated
for specific entities and individuals within these
systems.
Context: The capital account makes it possible to
determine the extent to which acquisitions less
disposals of non- financial assets have been
financed out of saving and by capital transfers. It
shows a net lending corresponding to the amount
available to a unit or sector for financing, directly
of indirectly, other units or sectors, or a net
borrowing corresponding to the amount which a
unit or sector is obliged to borrow from other units
or sectors
Source: OECD, 2006, DAC Guidelines and
Reference Series Applying Strategic Environmental
Assessment: Good Practice Guidance for
Development Co-operation, OECD, Paris
Capacity building
Means by which skills, experience, technical and
management capacity are developed within an
organizational structure (contractors, consultants
83
Source: ESA, par.8.46-8.47 [III.1]
wealth; that is, stocks of produced, human, social
and natural capital.
See also: Capital account – SNA
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 1.21
Capital account Ŕ SNA Compte de capital SCN
The capital account records all transactions in nonfinancial assets
Source: SNA 10.20 and 1.9
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Capital account –ESA
Capital consumption
Consommation de
capital
See Consumption of fixed capital - SNA
Capital adequacy ratio
The capital adequacy ratio is the central feature of
the Basel Capital Accord. It is an analytical
construct in which regulatory capital is the
numerator and risk-weighted assets is the
denominator. The minimum ratio of regulatory
capital to risk-weighted assets is set at 8 percent
(the core regulatory capital element should be at
least 4 percent). These ratios are considered the
minimum necessary to achieve the objective of
securing over time soundly-based and consistent
capital ratios for all international banks.
See also: Consumption of fixed capital - SNA
Capital expenditure
Dépenses en capital
Capital expenditure measures the value of
purchases of fixed assets, i.e. those assets that are
used repeatedly in production processes for more
than a year. The value is at full cost price. Sales of
fixed assets are not deducted
Source: Measuring the ICT Sector: Information
Society, OECD, 2000, Data Item Definitions, Data
Sources and Methodologies, page 151
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Capital expenditure
Dépenses en capital
(on education)
Capital expenditure represents the value of
educational capital acquired or created during the
year in question, that is, the amount of capital
formation, regardless of whether the capital outlay
was financed from current revenue or by
borrowing.
Capital adequacy
rules
Capital adequacy rules relate to the minimum
amount of capital (equity) that institutions must
hold relative to their assets set by financial market
regulators. These rules are designed to ensure that
capital is sufficient to absorb likely losses. It was
agreed at the Bank for International Settlements in
1988 that the minimum ratio of capital to riskadjusted assets for international banks should be 8
per cent
Capital expenditure includes outlays on
construction, renovation, and major repair of
buildings and expenditure for new or replacement
equipment. Although capital investment requires a
large initial expenditure, the plant and facilities
have a lifetime that extends over many years.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Capital expenditure
for environmental
protection
Capital expenditure for environmental protection
corresponds to gross capital formation by
producers of environmental protection services and
other capital formation in specific products.
Capital and reserves
Capital and reserves is the difference between total
assets and total liabilities in the balance sheet. It
represents the equity interest of the owners in an
entity and is the amount available to absorb
unidentified losses.
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.98
Capital approach to
sustainable
development
Sustainable development is development that
ensures non-declining per capita national wealth
by replacing or conserving the sources of that
84
equity, assuming that this payment has an
automatic effect on the government's assets (of
the same amount);
Capital flight
Fuite des capitaux
Capital flight may be defined as transfer of assets
denominated in a national currency into assets
denominated in a foreign currency, either at home
or abroad, in ways that are not part of normal
transactions. (Abalkin and Walley (1999) – ref.
Handbook Chapter 10)
- a non-financial transaction: the payment would
be a capital transfer, assuming that this is an
unrequited payment, having no automatic effect on
the government equity (of the same amount).
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary
The principle is the following:
- when the government, acting for public policy
purposes , provides funds to a corporation without
receiving financial assets and without expecting
property income, the capital injection is to be
recorded as a capital transfer;
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
- when the government, acting as a shareholder,
provides funds receiving financial assets and
expecting dividends in return, the capital injection
is to be recorded as a financial transaction in
shares and other equity.
Capital formation
Formation de capital
See Gross capital formation and Gross fixed capital
formation
See also: Gross capital formation, Gross fixed
capital formation – SNA
Source: Eurostat, 2002, "ESA 95 manual on
government deficit and debt, 2002 Edition", Office
for Official Publications of the European
Communities, Luxembourg, Chapter II.3
Capital gains (or loss)
See Holding gains
See also: Holding gains
Capital levies
Impôts en capital
Capital levies consist of taxes on the values of the
assets or net worth owned by institutional units
levied at irregular, and very infrequent, intervals of
time
Capital growth bond
Issue price of par (100 percent) with redemption
at a multiple of that amount.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Source: SNA 10.136
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Capital repairs
Capital repairs including restoration and
conversions includes, in principle, all construction
work performed for others and intended to extend
the normal economic life or to increase the
productivity of existing structures
Capital injections
Analysts in the media commonly refer to "capital
injections" made by the government in a public
corporation, when some financial support is
provided. The notion of "capital injection" as such
is not defined in the SNA93 and in the ESA95. In
the media, it may cover any payment from
government to a public corporation having the
characteristics of either a capital transfer or a
financial transaction in national accounts.
Source: International Recommendations for
Construction Statistics, Statistical Papers, Series
M, No. 47, Rev. 1, United Nations, New York,
1997, para. 73
See also: Current repairs and maintenance,
Repairs and maintenance
Context: For example, it includes transactions that
could be described in public accounts as
investment grants, capital grants, commutation
grants, loans, equity injections, acquisition of
share capital or public dividend capital. Such
injections are more often made in cash, but can
also be made in kind. The latter case is subject of
a specific CODED-definition ("Capital injections in
kind").
Capital service price
Prix des services tirés
du capital
See User cost of capital
See also: User cost of capital
Capital services
Services tirés du
capital
Capital services refer to the flow of productive
services provided by an asset that is employed in
production. Capital services reflect a (physical)
quantity, not to be confused with the value, or
price concept of capital. Capital services are the
appropriate measure of capital input in production
analysis
Should the payment from the government
(commonly referred to as "capital injection") be
recorded in the national accounts as:
- a financial transaction: it could be, in the most
common example, an increase of the government
85
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Context: Capital services are the productive inputs,
per period, that flow to production from a capital
asset. The value of capital services is the quantity
of services provided by the asset multiplied by the
price of those services. (Measuring Capital: OECD
Manual, Annex 1 Glossary of Technical Terms Used
in the Manual, OECD, 2001. Available at
http://www.oecd.org/std/capital.pdf)
Capital transaction
account
The capital transaction account is the standard
account relating to the transactions of the nation
with the rest of the world in respect of financial
assets and liabilities and other sources of the
finance of gross accumulation
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Capital services
method
A means of estimating the value of an asset from
the volume of capital services rendered by this
asset.
Capital transfer in
Transfert en capital en
cash
espèces
A capital transfer in cash consists of the transfer of
cash that the first party has raised by disposing of
an asset or assets (other than inventories), or that
the second party is expected, or required, to use
for the acquisition of an asset, or assets (other
than inventories); the second party, the recipient,
is often obliged to use the cash to acquire an
asset, or assets, as a condition on which the
transfer is made
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.161 & box 7.2
Source: SNA 10.132 [8.31]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Capital stock
Aliénation
disposals
Disposals of assets occur when assets leave the
capital stock of a producer, either to be scrapped
or to be used in production by another producer
See also: Capital transfer in kind, Capital transfers
Capital transfer in
Transfert en capital en
kind
nature
A capital transfer in kind consists of the transfer of
ownership of an asset (other than inventories and
cash) or the cancellation of a liability by a creditor,
without any counterpart being received in return
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Source: SNA 10.132 [8.31]
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Capital stock, gross
See Gross capital stock
Stock brut de capital
See also: Capital transfer in cash, Capital transfers
Capital transfers
Transferts en capital
Capital transfers are transactions, either in cash or
in kind, in which the ownership of an asset (other
than cash and inventories) is transferred from one
institutional unit to another, or in which cash is
transferred to enable the recipient to acquire
another asset, or in which the funds realised by
the disposal of another asset are transferred
See also: Gross capital stock - SNA
Capital stock, net
See Net capital stock
Stock net de capital
See also: Net capital stock
Capital taxes
Impôts sur le capital
Capital taxes consist of capital levies (i.e. those
taxes levied at irregular and very infrequent
intervals on the values of the assets or net worth
owned by institutional units) and taxes on capital
transfers (i.e. taxes on the values of assets
transferred between institutional units as a result
of legacies, gifts inter vivos (i.e. during the donor‘s
life time) or other transfers)
Source: SNA 10.29 [3.22, 8.3]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Capital transfer in cash, Capital transfer
in kind
Capital transfers,
Source: SNA 10.136
86
Autres transferts en
other
capital
Other capital transfers consist of all capital
transfers except capital taxes and investment
grants; they include, among others, cancellation of
debt by mutual agreement between the creditor
and debtor
factor productivity
multifactorielle (PMF)
(MFP)
capital-travail
Capital-labour multi-factor productivity (MFP) is a
productivity measure that relates value-added to
primary (capital and labour) inputs
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Source: SNA 10.139
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
Capitalisation of
Capitalisation des
interest
intérêts
Capitalisation of interest is the conversion of
scheduled (due or in arrears) or late interest
payments into debt. It often occurs as part of a
rescheduling agreement
See also: Multi-factor productivity (MFP), Total
factor productivity
Capped floating-rate
note
Floating-rate note (FRN) with a maximum interest
rate.
Source: Development Assistance Committee (DCA)
International Development Statistics – Handbook
for Reporting Debt Reorganisation on the DAC
Questionnaire
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Hyperlink:
http://interdev.oecd.org/dac/pdf/debtreng.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Capitalised interest
Capitalized interest is the conversion of accrued
interest costs or future interest payments, by a
contractual arrangement with the creditor, into a
new debt instrument or the principal amount.
Capture fisheries
The sum (or range) of all activities to harvest a
given fish resource. It may refer to the location
(e.g. Morocco, Georges Bank), the target resource
(e.g. hake), the technology used (e.g. trawl or
beach seine), the social characteristics (e.g.
artisanal, industrial), the purpose (e.g.,
commercial, subsistence, or recreational) as well
as the season (e.g. winter).
Context: The most common form of capitalization
is the reinvestment of interest costs into the
principal amount, either because of an explicit
agreement regarding the specific debt instrument
or as part of a rescheduling agreement. Frequently
as part of a rescheduling agreement, some
percentage of interest due during the consolidation
period (see below) is converted, through an
agreement made with the creditor, into principal.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.273
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Car registration taxes
Taxes
d‟enregistrement des
véhicules
Car registration taxes are payments made
periodically by car owners to government for the
right to use the vehicle
Capitalised production
Capitalised production includes the own-account
production of all goods that are retained by their
producers as investment. The latter includes the
production of fixed tangible assets (buildings, etc.)
as well as intangible assets (development of
software, etc.). Capitalised production is unsold
production and is valued at production cost.
Source: SNA [7.70]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Commission Regulation (EC) No. 2700/98
of 17 December 1998 concerning the definitions of
characteristics for structural business statistics,
European Commission, Brussels, 1998
Capital-labour multi-
Caravan
Caravane
Road vehicle not intended for the carriage of
passengers and/or goods and designed to be
hauled by passenger car.
Productivité
87
Context: The term caravan, therefore, includes
road vehicles intended mainly for recreational
purposes.
Carbon sequestration (carbon sink) is a
biochemical process by which atmospheric carbon
is absorbed by living organisms, including trees,
soil micro-organisms, and crops, and involving the
storage of carbon in soils, with the potential to
reduce atmospheric carbon dioxide levels
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Carbon dioxide
Gaz carbonique
Carbon dioxide is one of the greenhouse gases
produced through the decomposition of organic
matter in soils under oxidising conditions, also
produced by the burning of fossil fuels
Carbon tax
Taxe sur les émissions
carbonées
A carbon tax is an instrument of environmental
cost internationalisation. It is an excise tax on the
producers of raw fossil fuels based on the relative
carbon content of those fuels
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Carbon dioxide
emissions
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is a colourless, odourless
and non-poisonous gas formed by combustion of
carbon and in the respiration of living organisms
and is considered a greenhouse gas. Emissions
means the release of greenhouse gases and/or
their precursors into the atmosphere over a
specified area and period of time.
Career average
scheme
See Average earnings scheme
See also: Average earnings scheme
Cargo carrying ship
Navire de charge
Merchant ship designed for the carriage of goods
and/or public transport of passengers.
Source: United Nations. United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change (A/AC.237/18 (Part
II)/Add.1 and Corr.1). Opened for signature at Rio
de Janeiro on 4 June 1992. (Section C)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Carbon dioxide
equivalent
Carbon dioxide equivalent is a measure used to
compare the emissions from various greenhouse
gases based upon their global warming potential.
For example, the global warming potential for
methane over 100 years is 21. This means that
emissions of one million metric tons of methane is
equivalent to emissions of 21 million metric tons of
carbon dioxide
Caricom
The Caribbean Community and Common Market
comprises 15 countries.
Carli price index
An elementary price index defined as the simple,
or unweighted, arithmetic average of the currentto base period price relatives.
Context: The conversion factor of greenhouse
gazes in term of warming potential relative to that
of carbon dioxide.
United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.27
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Carnet
An international customs document for the
temporary duty-free admission of goods under
certain international conventions.
Carbon sequestration
Source: International Merchandise Trade,
88
Australia, Concepts, Sources and Methods,
Glossary, Australian Bureau of Statistics
Carry over
When an exporting country utilizes the previous
year‘s unutilized quota.
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/0/6B7D
040A646F264ECA256A5B001BD777?Open&Highlig
ht=0,warehouse
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Carriageway
Chaussée
Part of the road intended for the movement of road
motor vehicles; the parts of the road which form a
shoulder for the lower or upper layers of the road
surface are not part of the roadway, nor are those
parts of the road intended for the circulation of
road vehicles which are not self-propelled or for
the parking of vehicles even if, in case of danger,
they may occasionally be used for the passage of
motor vehicles. The width of a carriageway is
measured perpendicularly to the axis of the road.
Carry trade
See Carry
See also: Carry
Carrying capacity (of Port en lourd
inland waterways
transport vessel)
Maximum permissible weight of goods, expressed
in tonnes, which a vessel may carry in accordance
with its documents.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Carry
Carry is defined as the difference between return
on securities held and financing costs, and "carry
trade" refers to institutions and businesses taking
advantage of this differential.
Carrying capacity of
Capacité de transport
an oil pipeline
d'un oléoduc
Maximum tonnage of products that the oil pipeline
may move during the given period.
A positive/negative carry occurs when the
financing cost is less/more than the yield on
securities that are being financed
Context: The carrying capacity of an pipeline is
generally measured in terms of "thousand barrels a
day". In converting barrels to tonnes, the
conversion factor for crude oil is: 1 tonne = 7.55
barrels (there is a slight variation according to the
type of crude).
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
For petroleum products conversion factor is: 1
tonne = 7.5 barrels.
Carry forward
Utilisation anticipée
The situation in which a missing price for a product
(or item) in the current period is imputed as being
equal to the last price observed for that product
(or item).
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: When an exporting country uses part of
the following year‘s quota during the current year.
(Doha World Trade Organisation Ministerial:
Glossary of Terms. Available at
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
)
Carrying capacity of
Capacité de transport
passenger vehicle
d'un véhicle à
(railway)
voyageurs
The number of seats and berths and the number of
authorized standing places available in a passenger
vehicle when performing the service for which it is
intended.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
89
of Labour Statisticians (October 1998), page 2
Carrying capacity of
Capacité de charge
wagon
d'un wagon
The carrying capacity of wagon is the maximum
authorized weight it can carry.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: Occupational injury
Cartel
A cartel is a formal agreement among firms in an
oligopolistic industry. Cartel members may agree
on such matters as prices, total industry output,
market shares, allocation of customers, allocation
of territories, bid-rigging, establishment of
common sales agencies, and the division of profits
or combination of these.
Source: SNA 3.92
Cash accounting
Comptabilité sur une
base de caisse
Cash accounting records only cash
payments/receipts and records them at the times
these payments/receipts occur
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Accrual accounting, Modified cash
accounting
Cash and carry
Cash and carry is a form of trade in which goods
are sold from a wholesale warehouse operated
either on a self-service basis, or on the basis of
samples (with the customer selecting from
specimen articles using a manual or computerised
ordering system but not serving himself) or a
combination of the two. Customers (retailers,
professional users, caterers, tradesmen,
institutional buyers, etc.) settle the invoice on the
spot and in cash, and carry the goods away
themselves.
Context: Cartel in this broad sense is synonymous
with "explicit" forms of collusion. Cartels are
formed for the mutual benefit of member firms.
The theory of "cooperative" oligopoly provides the
basis for analyzing the formation and the economic
effects of cartels. Generally speaking, cartels or
cartel behaviour attempts to emulate that of
monopoly by restricting industry output, raising or
fixing prices in order to earn higher profits.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source:
Eurostat, 1993, "Retailing in the European Single
Market", Office for Official Publications of the
European Communities, Luxembourg
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Cash rate
See Spot rate
See also: Agreement (to lessen or restrict
competition), Collusion
See also: Spot rate
Cartelisation
See Cartel, Collusion, Monopolisation
Cash reporting
Reporting based on cash accounting systems.
See also: Cartel, Collusion, Monopolisation
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Cascade taxes
See General obligations
See also: Cash accounting
See also: General obligations
Cash transfer
Transfert en espèces
A cash transfer consists of the payment of
currency or transferable deposit by one unit to
another without any counterpart
CASE
See Computer aided software engineering
See also: Computer Aided Software Engineering
(CASE)
Source: SNA 8.27
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Case of occupational
injury
A Case of occupational injury refers to the case of
one worker incurring an occupational injury as a
result of one occupational accident.
CASIC
See Computer assisted survey information
collection
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning statistics of occupational
injuries (resulting from occupational accidents),
adopted by the Sixteenth International Conference
See also: Computer assisted survey information
collection
90
Categorical data
Distribution
qualitative nominale
Data consisting of counts of observations falling in
different categories. The categories may be purely
descriptive, or may have a natural order.
Casual workers
Casual workers are workers who have an explicit
or implicit contract of employment which is not
expected to continue for more than a short period,
whose duration is to be determined by national
circumstances.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
These workers may be classified as being
employees or own-account workers according to
the specific circumstances of the employment
contract
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning International Classification
of Status in Employment Adopted by the 15th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians,
January 1993, para. 14(e)
Categorical
Distribution
distribution
qualitative nominale
A distribution is said to be categorical if the data
are sorted into categories according to some
qualitative description rather than by a numerical
variable.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
CAT scanners
See Computed tomography scanners
See also: Computed tomography scanners
Categories of goods
carried by rail
Types de
marchandises
transportées par
chemin de fer
The categories of goods carried by rail are those
defined by the NST/R nomenclature (Standard
Goods Nomenclature for Transport
Statistics/revised - EUROSTAT) or CSTE
nomenclature (Commodity Classification for
Transport Statistics in Europe - UN/ECE).
Catamaran
Catamaran
Ship consisting of two hulls connected with a deck.
Context: Catamarans are used mainly as
passenger ferries but some cargo-carrying
catamarans also exist.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Catastrophic losses
Destructions d‟actifs
dues à des
catastrophes
The volume changes recorded as catastrophic
losses in the ―other changes in the volume of
assets account‖ are unanticipated losses resulting
from large scale, discrete, and recognisable events
that may destroy assets within any of the
categories of assets
Categories of goods
carried by sea
Catégories de
marchandises
transportées par mer
The categories of goods carried by sea are those
defined by the NST/R (Standard Goods
Nomenclature for Transport Statistics/revised EUROSTAT) or CSTE (UN-ECE Commodity
Classification for Transport Statistics in Europe)
nomenclatures.
Source: SNA 12.35
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Catch per unit of
Capture par unité
fishing effort (CPUE)
d‟effort (CPUE)
Catch per unit of fishing effort (CPUE) is the total
catch divided by the total amount of effort used to
harvest the catch
Categories of
Catégories de voies
navigable inland
navigables intérieures
waterways
The categories of navigable inland waterways are
defined with reference to international
classification systems such as those drawn up by
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
91
the United Nations Economic Commission for
Europe or by the European Conference of Ministers
of Transport.
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Category scheme
The descriptive information for an arrangement or
division of categories into groups based on
characteristics, which the objects have in common.
Context: The category scheme is an artefact for
organising categories which themselves link to
dataflow definition or metadataflow definition
Category
Catégorie
Generic term for items at any level within a
classification, typically tabulation categories,
sections, subsections, divisions, subdivisions,
groups, subgroups, classes and subclasses.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
See also: Category, Characteristic
Context: A homogeneous class or group of a
population of objects or measurements. The
category may be styled after one of the finite
characteristics of the population or according to
the limits of measurement for which observations
are to be allocated to that category of frequency
group. For example, people may be categorised
according to Sex (Male or Female) or Age next
birthday (1-5 years; 6-10; 11-15; 16-20; and so
on).
CATI
See Computer assisted telephone interviewing
See also: Computer Assisted Telephone
Interviewing (CATI)
Causes of death
Causes of death refers to all diseases, morbid
conditions or injuries that either resulted in or
contributed to death, and the circumstances of the
accident or violence that produced any such
injuries. Symptoms or modes of dying, such as
heart failure or asthenia, are not considered to be
causes of death for statistical purposes
A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th edition,
prepared for the International Statistical Institute
by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the International
Statistical Institute by Longman Scientific and
Technical
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Classification categories are usually identified by
codes (alphabetical or numerical) which provide
both a unique identifier for each category and
denote their place within the hierarchy. They
contain elements which are subsets of the
classification to which they belong, such as
activities, products, types of occupations, types of
education, etc.
CBD
Convention on Biological Diversity
Source: United Nations Glossary of Classification
Terms; prepared by the Expert Group on
International Economic and Social Classifications,
unpublished on paper
CBNE
Classification of Branches of the National Economy
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/class/family/glossary_s
hort.htm
CBT
See Computer based training
See also: Category scheme
See also: Computer based training (CBT)
Category of road
Catégories de route
Classification of the road network according to:
CCCN
Customs Co-operation Council Nomenclature
a) administration responsible for its construction,
maintenance and/or operation;
CCIO
Classification of Commodities by Industrial Origin
b) according to design standards or,
c) according to the users allowed to have access
on the road.
CCNM
See Centre for Co-operation with Non-Members
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
See also: Centre for Co-operation with NonMembers
CCT
Common Customs Tariff
92
definition of risky cells, in frequency count tables
all cells containing small counts and in tables of
magnitudes all cells containing small counts or
presenting a case of dominance have to be primary
suppressed.
CDR
See Crude death rate
See also: Crude death rate
CD-ROM
See Compact disk - read only memory
To reach the desired protection for risky cells, it is
necessary to suppress additional non-risky cells,
which is called complementary (secondary)
suppression. The pattern of complementary
suppressed cells has to be carefully chosen to
provide the desired level of ambiguity for the risky
cells with the least amount of suppressed
information.
See also: Compact Disk - Read Only Memory (CDROM)
CEECs
See Central and Eastern European Countries
See also: Central and Eastern European Countries
(CEECs)
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
CEFTA
See Central European Free Trade Agreement
See also: Central European Free Trade Agreement
(CEFTA)
Cellular mobile
telephone subscribers
Users of portable telephones subscribing to an
automatic public mobile telephone service which
provides access to the Public Switched Telephone
Network (PSTN) using cellular technology.
CEIES
Comité consultatif
Européen de
l‟Information
Statistique dans les
domaines Economique
et Sociale
European Advisory Committee on Statistical
Information in the Economic and Social Spheres
Source: International Telecommunication Union,
Yearbook of Statistics, Telecommunication
Services. Geneva, annual. (item 271)
Cell / tissue / embryo
culture and
manipulation
Growth of cells, tissues or embryonic cells under
laboratory conditions.
Cellular service
A terrestrial radio-based service providing two-way
communications by dividing the serving area into a
regular pattern of sub-areas or cells, each with a
base station having a low-power transmitter and
receiver.
Source: OECD, 2005, A Framework for
Biotechnology Statistics, OECD, Paris, Annex 1:
Glossary of Terms Used in the List-Based Definition
Although cellular radio is primarily a means of
providing mobile telephone service, it is also used
to provide data services and private voice services,
and as an alternative to fixed wired telephone
service where this is scarce, such as in developing
countries.
Cell receptors
Structures (typically proteins) found in the plasma
membrane (surface) of cells that tightly bind
specific molecules (organic molecules, proteins,
viruses etc.). Some (relatively rare) receptors are
located inside the cell (e.g. free-floating receptor
for Retin-A). Both (membrane and internal) types
of receptors are a functional part of information
transmission (i.e. signalling) of the cell.
Source: Telecommunications services: Glossary of
terms – World Trade Organisation
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/tratop_e/serv_e/t
elecom_e/tel12_e.htm
Source: OECD, 2005, A Framework for
Biotechnology Statistics, OECD, Paris, Annex 1:
Glossary of Terms Used in the List-Based Definition
Cement
Ciment
Cement comprises: Cement, lime and plaster
(Central Product Classification Group 374). The
Group is broken down into the following Classes:
Cell suppression
In tabular data the cell suppression statistical
disclosure control (SDC) method consists of
primary and complementary (secondary)
suppression.
- plasters;
- quicklime, slaked lime and hydraulic lime;
- cement clinkers;
- Portland cement, aluminous cement, slag cement
and similar hydraulic cements, except in the form
of clinkers;
- calcinated or agglomerated dolomite
Context: Primary suppression can be characterised
as withholding the values of all risky cells from
publication, which means that their value is not
shown in the table but replaced by a symbol such
as ‗ב to indicate the suppression. According to the
Source: Central Product Classification (CPC),
93
Useful Terms
United Nations, 1998, Version 1.0. Series M, No.
77, Ver. 1.0
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
Central and Eastern
European Countries
(CEECs)
Central and Eastern European Countries (CEECs) is
an OECD term for the group of countries
comprising Albania, Bulgaria, Croatia, the Czech
Republic, Hungary, Poland, Romania, the Slovak
Republic, Slovenia, and the three Baltic States:
Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania
CEN
European Committee for Standardisation
Census
Recensement
A census is a survey conducted on the full set of
observation objects belonging to a given
population or universe
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Context: A census is the complete enumeration of
a population or groups at a point in time with
respect to well defined characteristics: for
example, population, production, traffic on
particular roads. In some connection the term is
associated with the data collected rather than the
extent of the collection so that the term sample
census has a distinct meaning.
Central bank
Banque centrale
A central bank is the public financial corporation
which is a monetary authority, that is, which issues
banknotes and sometimes coins and may hold all
or part of the international reserves of the country.
The central bank also has liabilities in the form of
demand or reserve deposits of other depository
corporations and often government deposits
The partial enumeration resulting from a failure to
cover the whole population, as distinct from a
designed sample enquiry, may be referred to as an
"incomplete census". (The International Statistical
Institute, ―The Oxford Dictionary of Statistical
Terms‖, edited by Yadolah Dodge, Oxford
University Press, 2003).
Source: SNA para. 4.86
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva 2000
Central Bering Sea
Central Béring Sea
Pollock Convention
Pollock Convention
(CBSPC)
(CBSPC)
The Central Bering Sea Pollock Convention
(CBSPC) was signed on 16 June 1994 by China,
Korea, Japan, Poland, Russia and the United
States. The Convention went into effect in
December 1995
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
Centile
See Percentiles
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
See also: Percentiles
Central agencies
Those organisations in the executive branch that
co-ordinate the activities of, and provide guidance
to the operating ministries and agencies. Practice
vary widely from country to country, but central
agencies are generally regarded as including:
Central counterparty
An entity that interposes itself between the
counterparties to trades, acting as the buyer to
every seller and the seller to every buyer.
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
- the Ministry of Finance;
- the Cabinet Office, or the ministry assisting the
Prime Minister or the Council of Ministers in the
development and co-ordination of policy;
- the ministry or agency responsible for developing
and co-ordinating policies in relation to human
resource management within the public sector;
- the Supreme Audit Institution; and
- the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in certain areas of
work such as policy on European integration.
Central European Free
Trade Agreement
(CEFTA)
The Central European Free Trade Agreement
(CEFTA) is an agreement originally signed by the
countries of the Visegrad group (the Czech
Republic, Hungary, Poland and the Slovak
Republic) on 21 December 1992 and effective since
July 1994. Slovenia (1996), Romania (1997) and
Bulgaria (1999) have since joined CEFTA.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
94
Moreover, Lithuania, Latvia, Croatia, Macedonia
and Ukraine have announced their intention to
join. The agreement provides for the gradual
establishment of a free trade area for industrial
goods and a gradual reduction of certain, but not
all, barriers to trade in agro-food products
The classification structure comprises:
-
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Sections – one digit code;
Divisions – two-digit code;
Groups – three-digit code;
Classes – four-digit code;
Subclasses – five-digit code
The current version (Version 1.0) was last revised
in 1997 and is expected to be updated by 2002
Context: Conversely, each activity of the ISIC is
defined in such a way that it normally produces
only one type of product as defined in the CPC
(where each type of product may have a number
of individual products coded under it). So far as is
practically possible, an attempt is made to
establish a one-to-one correspondence between
the two classifications, each category of the CPC
being accompanied by a reference to the ISIC class
in which the good or service is mainly produced.
However, such a one-to-one correspondence is not
always possible. In practice, therefore, the output
of an industry, no matter how narrowly defined,
will tend to include more than a single product.
Central government
Administration
centrale
The central government sub-sector consists of the
institutional units making up the central
government plus those NPIs (non-profit
institutions) that are controlled and mainly
financed by central government. The political
authority of central government extends over the
entire economy. Central government has therefore
the authority to impose taxes on all residents and
non-resident units engaged in economic activities
within the country
Source: SNA 4.117-118
The Classification of Products by Activity (CPA) is
the equivalent classification at European Union
level. (SNA 5.44)
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: State government
Source: Central Product Classification (CPC).
Version 1.0. United Nations, New York, 1998,
Series M, No. 77, Ver. 1.0
Central institutions
―Central‖ institutions are the organisations to
which partner institutions "report" statistics. The
central institutions use these statistics either to
compile aggregates and/or to assemble and make
them available uniformly (e.g., on-line or on a CDROM or through file transfers).
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
See also: CPA
Therefore, central institutions both receive data
from other institutions and also, usually,
"disseminate" data to individuals and/or
institutions for end-use.
Central projection
A central projection is a projection of the most
likely outcome, but not always one where risks are
considered evenly spread on the upside and the
downside
Context: Eurostat (the statistical office of the
European Communities), as a central institution,
collects data from national statistical institutes
(NSIs) and other sources. And it disseminates data
to NSIs, other partners, and to the public. Within a
country, an NSI or a national central bank (NCB)
plays, of course, a role of central institution,
because it collects data from other entities and
disseminates statistical information to end users.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Central securities
depository (CSD)
An entity that holds and administrates securities
and enables securities transactions to be processed
by book entry. Securities can be held in a physical
(but immobilised) or dematerialised form (i.e. so
that they exist only as electronic records). In
addition to the safekeeping and administration of
securities, a CSD may incorporate clearing and
settlement functions.
Source: GESMES/TS - The time series data
exchange message: User Guide, Release 3.00,
February 2003, European Central Bank.
Central product
Classification centrale
classification (CPC)
des produits (CPC)
The central product classification (CPC) is a
classification based on the physical characteristics
of goods or on the nature of the services rendered.
Each type of good or service distinguished in the
CPC is defined in such a way that it is normally
produced by only one activity as defined in ISIC.
The CPC covers products that are an output of
economic activities, including transportable goods,
non-transportable goods and services.
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Central tendency
95
Tendance centrale
The tendency of quantitative data to cluster around
some variate value. The position of the central
value is usually determined by one of the
measures of location such as the mean, median or
mode. The closeness with which values cluster
around the central value is measured by one of the
measures of dispersion such as the mean deviation
or standard deviation.
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Certificate for disposal
of the corpse
The certificate for disposal of the corpse is the
certificate of registry given to the informant, in the
prescribed form, on registration of a death; or a
coroner‘s order in respect of an unnatural death for
purposes of disposal of the corpse
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Centre for Cooperation with NonMembers
Centre for Co-operation with Non-Members is the
unit within the OECD responsible for the coordination of the Organisation‘s programme of
activities with non-Member countries
Certificates of deposit Certificat de dépôt
(CD)
A certificate issued by a bank acknowledging a
deposit in that bank for a specified period of time
at a specified rate of interest; CDs are essentially a
form of negotiable time deposit (evidenced by the
certificate).
Centre of economic
Centre of economic
interest
interest
An institutional unit has a centre of economic
interest within a country when there exists some
location – dwelling, place of production, or other
premises – within the economic territory of the
country on, or from, which the unit engages and
intends to continue engaging, either indefinitely or
over a finite but long period of time, in economic
activities and transactions on a significant scale.
The locations need not to be fixed so long as it
remains within the economic territory.
Context: CDs are widely issued in the domestic
and international markets, and are typically bearer
instruments, issued at face value with original
maturities of one to six months, although there
have been maturities of up to seven years.
Typically, interest costs are payable at maturity for
issues of one year or less, and semi-annually on
longer issues. The rate of interest on a given CD
depends on several factors: current market
conditions, the denomination of the certificate, and
the market standing of the bank offering it.
Context: Also SNA 14.12 [4.15]
Source: BPM para. 62
Typically, CDs are highly liquid instruments, which
allows banks access to a cheaper source of funds
than borrowing on the interbank market.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
CEPA 2000
The internationally agreed classification of
environmental protection activities. CEPA 2000 is a
generic, multi-purpose, functional classification for
environmental protection. It is used for classifying
activities but also products, actual outlays
(expenditure) and other transactions.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Certification authority
subscriber application
agreement
Used by a party providing certification services to
those who wish to use a digital signature to
facilitate on-line communication and transaction. A
certification authority verifies the identity of a
subscriber, issues a certificate linking the person to
a particular public key, and publishes the
certificate, which can be checked by those who
want to verify a digitally signed electronic
communication.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.35 and Annex 5
Cereals
Céréales
Cereals are defined as wheat, coarse grains and
rice
Source: Measuring Electronic Commerce, OECD
Working Party on the Information Economy, 1998,
Software Publishers Association (SPA), (1996),
page 29 - A typology of Internet and e-commerce
96
agreements. Adapted from The SPA Guide to
Contracts and the Legal Protection of Software,
September, Washington D.C.
An index number in which the value at any given
period is related to a base in the previous period,
as distinct from one which is related to a fixed
base.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/32/52/2094340.pdf
Context: The comparison of non-adjacent periods
is usually made by multiplying consecutive values
of the index numbers, which, as it were, form a
chain from one period to another.
Certified data element
A certified data element is a recorded data element
that has met the quality requirements specified in
International Standards Organisation (ISO) 11179
In practice chain index numbers are usually formed
from weighted average of link-relatives, namely
the values of magnitudes for a given period divided
by the corresponding values in the previous period.
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003
Certifier of cause of
death
A certifier of cause of death is a person authorised
by law (the physician who attended the deceased
in his/her last illness; or the coroner for deaths of
persons who were not attended during the last
illness by a physician, or for unnatural deaths due
to violence or accident) who issues a certificate, on
the prescribed form, stating to the best of his/her
knowledge and belief, the cause of death and other
facts related to the event for submission to the
local registrar
See also: Chain indices - SNA, Fixed base index,
Index number
Chain indices - SNA
Indices-chaîne
Chain indices are obtained by linking price (or
volume) indices for consecutive periods; the shortterm movements which are linked are calculated
using weighting patterns appropriate to the periods
concerned
Context: An index number series for a given
aggregate spanning a long sequence of periods
obtained by linking index numbers spanning
shorter sequences of periods, each with their own
weights. The linking may be made as frequently as
the weights change and the data permit, or at
specified intervals, such as every 5 or 10 periods.
In the limit, the weights may be changed each
period, each link in the chain consisting of an index
comparing each period with the previous period.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
CES
Conference of European Statisticians
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Monetary Fund, Washington
DC
CFCs
CFC
See Chloro-fluorocarbons
See also: Chloro-fluorocarbons (CFCs)
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Chain
Chaîne
A sequence of terms such that each term depends
in some defined way upon the previous term or
terms in the series; for example, the chain-relative
used in the calculation of index numbers upon the
chain-base method.
Source: SNA 16.41
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Chain index - ISI
Context: The term chain is also used in connection
with stochastic processes where the value at one
point is determined by values at previous points
apart from a random element; or more exactly, the
probability distribution at any point, conditional on
certain previous values, is otherwise independent
of past history.
Chain linking
Joining together two indices that overlap in one
period by rescaling one of them to make its value
equal to that of the other in the same period, thus
combining them into single time series. More
complex methods may be used to link together
indices that overlap by more than period.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Also known as ―chaining‖.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
See also: Chain linking
Chain index - ISI
Indice en chaîne - ISI
Hyperlink:
97
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Chain linking bias
See Drift
Change of name
An individual may petition to a court to have his or
her name changed in the civil registry for personal
reasons
See also: Drift
Chain price indexes
Price indexes where the values of the aggregate
index for two adjacent periods, calculated from the
detailed price indexes, are based on the
expenditure pattern from the first of the two
periods, and where these index values are linked
together in a chain to form the index.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Changes in
Variations des stocks
inventories (including (y compris les travaux
work-in-progress)
en cours)
Changes in inventories (including work-inprogress) consist of changes in:
Source: Chain Fisher Volume Index, Glossary Statistics Canada
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca/english/concepts/chainfishe
r/glossary.htm#index
(a) stocks of outputs that are still held by the units
that produced them prior to their being further
processed, sold, delivered to other units or used in
other ways; and
Chain relative
Rapport en chaîne
The term is synonymous with link relative
(b) stocks of products acquired from other units
that are intended to be used for intermediate
consumption or for resale without further
processing; they are measured by the value of the
entries into inventories less the value of
withdrawals and the value of any recurrent losses
of goods held in inventories.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Chain index - ISI, Link relative
Context: The acquisition, less disposals, of stocks
of raw materials, semi-finished goods and finished
goods that are held by producer units prior to their
being further processed or sold or otherwise used.
Inventories also cover all raw materials and goods
stored by government as strategic reserves. Semifinished goods include work-in-progress, that is,
goods and services that are only partially
completed and whose production process will be
continued by the same producer in a period
following the accounting period.
Chained index
weighting
Chained index weighting is an alternative way of
weighting together the subaggregates that form
GDP. The key difference to the fixed-weight
aggregation, used in most countries, is that the
prices are continuously updated and that
"substitution bias" is avoided and that measures
are independent of the choice of base year
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Work-in-progress is particularly important for
production processes with long gestation periods,
such as the construction of large-scale civil
engineering works, the manufacture of aeroplanes
and ships, and reforestation. Also covered by
work-in-progress is the natural growth prior to
harvest of agricultural crops and the natural
growth in livestock raised for slaughter.
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Chaining
See Chain linking
Enchaînement
Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
See also: Chain linking
Change in real
Variation de la valeur
national net worth
nette nationale réelle
The change in real national net worth is the sum of
changes in net worth of all resident institutional
sectors less the neutral holding gains/losses (that
is, in proportion to the general price level); it is
also equal to the sum of saving and capital
transfers, other changes in volume of assets and
real holding gains or losses
Source: SNA 10.7 and 10.28
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Changes in land cover
by categories of
changes
Source: SNA 2.186
98
A matrix that cross distributes the changes in land
cover according to categories of land cover and
categories of changes (economic and non
economic). Increase and decrease are generally
separately shown.
Context: Essential characteristic is a characteristic
which is indispensable to understanding a concept
[ISO 1087-1:2000, 3.2.6].
The physical and economic attributes of a product
that serve to identify it and enable it to be located
under some heading of a product classification.
The technical parameters and price determining
properties of a product listed in a product
specification.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.346
Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
Changes in net worth
Variations de la valeur
nette
Changes in net worth are equal to changes in
assets less changes in liabilities
See also: Concept, Object
Characteristicity
The property that requires transitive multilateral
comparisons between members of a group of
countries to retain the essential features of the
intransitive binary comparisons that existed
between them before transitivity. A transitive
multilateral comparison between a pair of countries
is influenced by the price and quantity data of all
other participating countries.
Source: SNA 2.148, 13.91 [2.93]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Changes in the rate of
extraction
One of the items of the decomposition of the
changes in the value of natural resources during
the accounting period. Changes in the extraction
rate modify the life length of the resource stock
and thus the net present value.
Context: Characteristicity requires that the impact
of these influences should be kept to a minimum
when they are introduced into the intransitive
binary comparison. In other words, the multilateral
PPP between two countries should deviate as little
as possible from their binary PPP.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.226 & Box 7.3
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Characters per inch
(CPI)
A measure of the character density on computer
tape.
Changes in the unit
resource rent
The item of the decomposition of the changes in
the value of natural resources that results from the
modifications of the economic conditions of
extraction (extracted product‘s price and costs of
extraction).
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.226 & Box 7.3
Chat room
A virtual space where a chat session takes place.
Technically, it is just the real-time communication
between two computer users, such that once a
chat has been initiated, either user can type in
information and the entered text appears on the
other user‘s screen.
Characteristic
Caractéristique
An abstraction of a property of an object or of a
set of objects. Characteristics are used for
describing concepts. [ISO 1087-1:2000, 3.2.4]
Source: OECD, 2003, Promise and Problems of EDemocracy: Challenges of online citizen
engagement, OECD, Paris, Annex 1: Commonly
used E-Engagement Terms
99
Check digit
See Error detecting characters
Children
Young human being, boy or girl; person who has
not reached age of discretion; son or daughter at
any age.
See also: Error detecting characters
Checking rule
A checking rule is a logical condition or a
restriction to the value of a data item or a data
group which must be met if the data is to be
considered correct. In various connections other
terms are used, e.g. edit rule.
Source: Oxford University Press. The Concise
Oxford Dictionary of Current English, Seventh
Edition. London, 1982.
Children ever born
Nombre d'enfants
(census definition)
Children ever born comprises information on the
number of children born alive (lifetime fertility) and
should include all children born alive (that is to
say, excluding foetal deaths) during the lifetime of
the woman concerned up to the census date.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Context: The number recorded should include all
live-born children, whether born in or out of
marriage, whether born in the present or prior
marriage, or in a de facto union, or whether living
or dead at the time of the census.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.126
Checking rule
specification
A checking rule specification is a set of checking
rules that should be applied in the given editing
task.
Chlorinated
Hydrocarbures chlorés
hydrocarbons
Chlorinated hydrocarbons is a class of persistent,
broad-spectrum insecticides that linger in the
environment and accumulate in the food chain.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Context: Among them are
dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT), aldrin,
dieldrin, heptachlor, chlordane, lindane, endrin,
mirex, hexachloride and toxaphene. Another
example is trichloroethylene which is used as an
industrial solvent.
Chemical treatment
(of hazardous waste)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Traitement chimique
(des déchets
dangereux)
Chemical treatment (of hazardous waste) refers to
the treatment methods that are used to effect the
complete breakdown of hazardous waste into nontoxic gases or, more frequently, to modify the
chemical properties of the waste, for example,
through reduction of water solubility or
neutralisation of acidity or alkalinity
Chloro-fluorocarbons Chlorofluorocarbones
(CFCs)
(CFC)
Chloro-fluorocarbons (CFCs) are inert, non-toxic
and easily liquefied chemicals used in refrigeration,
air-conditioning, packaging and insulation, or as
solvents and aerosol propellants.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: Because CFCs are not destroyed in the
lower atmosphere, they drift into the upper
atmosphere where their chlorine components
destroy ozone. They are also among the
greenhouse gases that may effect climate change.
Child allowance
A child allowance is a sum of money paid
periodically to a single parent of a child until
he/she will have attained a certain age
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Chronic health
conditions
Chronic health conditions are those where the
onset is usually insidious, with a gradual
100
See also: Transitivity (in international
comparisons)
progression of symptoms or with problems of a
more permanent nature resulting as sequels to a
series of acute conditions. Daily activities may or
may not be restricted during any given period
although there is usually a more general series of
limitations of activities
Circularity test
See Circularity
See also: Circularity
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 14.45
Circumvention
Measures taken by exporters to evade antidumping or countervailing duties.
See also: Acute health conditions
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Cif price
Prix c.a.f.
The c.i.f. price (i.e. cost, insurance and freight
price) is the price of a good delivered at the
frontier of the importing country, including any
insurance and freight charges incurred to that
point, or the price of a service delivered to a
resident, before the payment of any import duties
or other taxes on imports or trade and transport
margins within the country.
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
CIS
See Commonwealth of Independent States
Context: In the System of National Accounts (SNA)
1993 this concept is applied only to detailed
imports (see SNA 15.35 [14.40])
See also: Commonwealth of Independent States
CIT
Countries in transition
Source: International Merchandise Trade Statistics,
Concepts and Definitions, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Studies in Methods, Series M, No. 52,
Rev. 2, page 35, para. 7
Citizens deported
Nationaux expulsés
from abroad
par un autre pays
Citizens deported from abroad are citizens
returning to their own country as a result of
deportation procedures against them in another
country
See also: Fob price
Cipher text
The encrypted form of data.
Source: A glossary of terms used in payments and
settlement systems, July 2001, Committee on
Payment and Settlement Systems, Bank for
International Settlements
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/cpss00b.pdf
Citizens in transit
Nationaux en transit
Citizens in transit are persons who arrive in their
own country but do not enter it formally because
they are on their way to another destination
CIRCA
Communication and Information Resource Centre
Administrator
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Circularity
An index number property such that the algebraic
product of the price index comparing period j with
period i and the price index comparing period k
with period j is equal to the price index that
compares period k directly with period i.
Citizenship
Citizenship is the legal nationality of the persons
concerned (i.e. of live births, parents,
descendants, brides, grooms, divorcees)
The property is also known as ―transitivity‖. When
the axiomatic approach is used, a price index
number may be required to satisfy the ―circularity
test‖.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods,Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
City groups
In recent years, representatives from national
statistical agencies have started to meet informally
to address selected problems in statistical
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
101
methods. Some of these groups have become
formally known as ―city groups‖. The city groups
and their area of interest are:
systems
The civil registration and vital statistical systems
refer to government machinery set up in the
country, province, state or other territorial
subdivision of the country to do both the recording
of vital events for legal purposes and the
compilation of vital statistics from those records,
as provided in the laws and regulations of the
country
- Canberra Group – household income statistics;
- Delhi Group – informal sector statistics;
- London Group – environmental accounts;
- Ottawa Group – price statistics;
- Paris Group – labour and compensation;
- Rio Group – poverty statistics;
- Sienna Group – social statistics and social
monitoring;
- Voorburg Group – services statistics.
- Washington Group - disability statistics
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
In addition, a number of other groups exist. These
comprise:
Civil registration
system
The civil registration system refers to
governmental machinery set up in the country,
state, province or any other territorial subdivision
of the country for the purpose of legal recording of
vital events related to the civil status of the
population on a continuous basis, as provided by
the laws and regulations of the country, state,
province, etc
- Expert Group on capital stocks
- Round tables on business survey frames
Source: United Nations Statistical Division website
Hyperlink:
http://www.un.org/depts/unsd/citygrp/citygrp.htm
Civil engineering
Civil engineering includes all construction work not
classified under building construction, that is,
construction of railways, roads, bridges, highways,
airports, water and sewage, dams and irrigation,
etc
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Source: Bulletin of Housing and Building Statistics
for Europe and North America, UNECE, Geneva,
2000, Annex II, Definitions and General Terms,
page 84
Civil society
organisations
The multitude of associations around which society
voluntarily organizes itself and which represent a
wide range of interests and ties. These can include
community-based organisations, indigenous
peoples‘ organisations and non-government
organisations.
Civil register
A civil register is an official loose-leaf file or a
ledger book for each type of vital event where vital
events and changes in the civil status occurring to
the population in a well-defined area (e.g. a
county, district, municipality, parish and so on) are
legally registered, following established procedures
Source: OECD, 2006, DAC Guidelines and
Reference Series Applying Strategic Environmental
Assessment: Good Practice Guidance for
Development Co-operation, OECD, Paris
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Civilian labour force
Population active
civile
The civilian labour force corresponds to the Total
labour force excluding armed forces.
Civil registrar
A civil registrar is an official charged with the
responsibility for civil registration and for recording
and reporting information on vital events for
statistical purposes
Source: Labour Force Statistics: 1981-2001,
OECD, August 2002 - Definitions, page xi
See also: Armed forces, Total labour force – ILO
CJD
See Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
See also: Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD)
Claim
The entitlement of a creditor to repayment of a
Loan; by extension, the loan itself of the
outstanding amount thereof.
Civil registration and
vital statistical
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
102
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
Class - ISI
Classe
Apart from its usage in the customary colloquial
sense this word has some mild specialisation in the
theory of frequency distributions. The total number
of observations made upon a particular variate
may be grouped into classes according to
convenient divisions of the variate range in order
to make subsequent analysis less laborious or for
other reasons. A group so determined is called a
class.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html#1965442
Claim payments
Payments made to exporters or banks, after the
claims-waiting period, by an export credit agency
on insured or guaranteed loans when the original
borrower or borrowing-country guarantor fails to
pay. These are recorded by the agencies as
unrecovered claims until they are recovered from
the debtor or the debtor‘s guarantor.
Context: The variate values which determine the
upper and lower limits of a class are called class
boundaries; the interval between them is the class
interval; and the frequency falling into the class is
the class frequency.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Class - ISO
Class - ISO
A description of a set of objects that share the
same attributes, operations, methods,
relationships, and semantics [ISO/IEC 195011:2001, 2.5.2.9]
Claims waiting period
The period that exporters or banks must wait after
the due-date of payment before the export credit
agency will pay on the corresponding claim.
Context: An association is a semantic relationship
between two classes. An association is a type of
relationship. [Adapted from ISO/IEC 195011:2001, 2.5.2.3]
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
An association class is an association that is also a
class. It not only connects a set of classes, but also
defines a set of features that belong to the
relationship itself.
[Adapted from ISO/IEC 19501-1:2001, 2.5.2.4]
(ISO/IEC 11179-3 "Information technologyMetadata registries (MDR)-Part 3: Registry
metamodel and basic attributes", February 2003)
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Clarity
Clarity refers to the data's information
environment: whether data are accompanied with
appropriate metadata, illustrations such as graphs
and maps, whether information on their quality
also available (including limitation in use) and the
extent to which additional assistance is provided
by National Statistical Institutes.
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
See also: Attribute, Class - ISI, Object
Context: For example, are the data illustrated with
graphs, maps, etc? Is information on their quality
also available (possible limitation in use…)? Can
further assistance be expected from the provider?
Class attribute check
A class attribute check verifies whether the value
of the common attributes (class attributes) of a
logical unit or its components are identical.
The fourth quality component in the Eurostat
Definition of quality is "accessibility and clarity".
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
October 2003.
See also: Accessibility, Quality – Eurostat
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
CLASET
An EDI message for the exchange of classification
structures and definition, correspondence tables,
code lists and life cycle.
Class boundaries
103
See Class
of a "nomenclature" being narrower than that of a
"classification".
See also: Class
The structure of classification can be either
hierarchical or flat. Hierarchical classifications
range from the broadest level (e.g. division) to the
detailed level (e.g. class). Flat classifications (e.g.
sex classification) are not hierarchical.
Class frequency
See Class
See also: Class
Class interval
See Class
Intervalle de classe
The characteristics of a good classification are as
follows:
See also: Class
- the categories are exhaustive and mutually
exclusive (i.e. each member of a population can
only be allocated to one category without
duplication or omission);
Class size
Class size is the average number of students per
class, calculated by dividing the number of
students enrolled by the number of classes. In
order to ensure comparability between countries,
special needs programmes have been excluded.
- the classification is comparable to other related
(national or international) standard classifications;
- the categories are stable, i.e. they are not
changed too frequently, or without proper review,
justification and documentation;
Data include only regular programmes at these two
levels of education and also exclude teaching in
sub-groups outside the regular classroom setting.
- the categories are well described with a title in a
standard format and backed up by explanatory
notes, coding indexes, coders and correspondence
tables to related classifications (including earlier
versions of the same classification);
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Classes of
construction
Construction surveys and their resulting statistics
generally make a distinction between the following
classes of construction, new construction, on the
one hand, and repairs and maintenance, on the
other, the latter can be further broken down into
capital and non-capital repairs and maintenance
- the categories are well balanced within the limits
set by the principles for the classification (i.e. not
too many or too few categories). This is usually
established by applying significance criteria (e.g.
size limits on variables such as employment,
turnover, etc.);
- the categories reflect realities of the field (e.g.
the society or economy) to which they relate (e.g.
in an industry classification, the categories should
reflect the total picture of industrial activities of the
country); and
Source: International Recommendations for
Construction Statistics, Statistical Papers, Series
M, No. 47, Rev. 1, United Nations, New York,
1997, para. 73
- the classification is backed up by the availability
of instructions, manuals, coding indexes,
handbooks and training.
Classical swine fever
Peste porcine
classique
Classical swine fever is a highly contagious disease
that affects pigs and which normally results in the
slaughtering of affected herds
Examples of classification are NACE Rev. 1
(Statistical Classification Of Economic Activities),
NUTS (Nomenclature of Territorial Units for
statistics), and ISCO-88 (International Standard
Classification of Occupations). ISIC is the United
Nations International Standard Industrial
Classification of All Economic Activities.
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Classification
Classification
A set of discrete, exhaustive and mutually
exclusive observations, which can be assigned to
one or more variables to be measured in the
collation and/or presentation of data.
Source: "United Nations Glossary of Classification
Terms" prepared by the Expert Group on
International Economic and Social Classifications;
unpublished on paper.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/cr/family1.asp
Context: In SDMX, "Classification Systems" refer
to a description of the classification systems being
used and how they conform with internationally
accepted standards guidelines, or good practices.
It also refers to the description of deviations of
classification systems compared to accepted
statistical standards, guidelines, or good practices,
when relevant.
See also: Analytical Unit - Eurostat, Classification
scheme, Classifications, standard, Nomenclature,
Observation, Observation unit - ISIC Rev. 3,
Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange (SDMX),
Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange (SDMX),
Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange (SDMX),
Statistical units – ISIC, Taxonomy - ISO
The terms "classification" and "nomenclature" are
often used interchangeably, despite the definition
104
Classification changes
A new version of a classification differs in essential
ways from the previous version. Essential changes
are changes that alter the borders between
categories, i.e. a statistical unit may belong to
different categories in the new and the older
version. Border changes may be caused by
creating or deleting categories, or moving a part of
a category to another category.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Classification of
outlays of producers
by purpose (COPP)
Classification des
dépenses des
producteurs par
fonction (COPP)
The classification of outlays of producers by
purpose (COPP) is used to classify expenditures by
producers (intermediate consumption,
compensation of employees, etc) by purpose (e.g.
outlays on repair and maintenance or outlays on
sales promotion)
Context: Changes in classifications and structure
comprise changes in sector classification and
structure of institutional units and changes in
classification of assets and liabilities (Eurostat,
"European System of Accounts - ESA 1995", Office
for Official Publications of the European
Communities, Luxembourg, 1996, par.6.29).
Source: SNA 18.13
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Neuchâtel Group, "Neuchâtel Terminology:
Classification database object types and their
attributes - Version 2", September 2002
Classification of the
functions of
government (COFOG)
CFAP/COFOG
(Classification
fonctions des
administrations
publiques)
The classification of the functions of government
(COFOG) is a classification used to identify the
socio-economic objectives of current transactions,
capital outlays and acquisition of financial assets
by general government and its sub-sectors
See also: Classification
Classification of
Classification des
environment
activités de protection
protection activities
de l‟environnement
(CEPA)
(CAPE)
The Classification of environment protection
activities (CEPA) is the draft classification proposed
within the framework of the United Nations
methodology for integrated environmental and
economic accounting
Source: SNA 18.9
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Environmental protection
Classification of the
Classification des
purposes of non-profit fonctions des
institutions (COPNI)
institutions sans but
lucratif au service des
ménages (COPNI)
The classification of the purposes of non-profit
institutions (COPNI) is a classification used to
identify the socio-economic objectives of current
transactions, capital outlays and acquisition of
financial assets by non-profit institutions serving
households
Classification of
Classification des
individual
fonctions de la
consumption by
consommation
purpose (COICOP)
individuelle (COICOP)
The classification of individual consumption by
purpose (COICOP) is a classification used to
classify both individual consumption expenditure
and actual individual consumption.
Context: COICOP is one of the "functional"
classifications designed to classify certain
transactions of producers and of three institutional
sectors, namely household, general government
and non- profit institutions serving households.
They are described as "functional" classifications
because they identify the "functions" - in the sense
of "purposes" or "objectives" - for which these
groups of transactors engage in certain
transactions. The classifications concerned are:
Source: SNA 18.12
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Classification of
visitors
Visitors may be classified as either:
- Classification of individual consumption by
purpose (COICOP).
- Classification of the functions of government
(COFOG).
- Classification of the purposes of non-profit
institutions serving households (COPNI).
- Classification of outlays of producers by purpose
(COPP)
- international visitors, or
- domestic visitors
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, para 2.24
Source: SNA 18.1, 18.7
Classification scheme
105
A classification scheme is the descriptive
information for an arrangement or division of
objects into groups based on characteristics, which
the objects have in common.
International Economic and Social Classifications
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/class/family/glossary_s
hort.htm
Context: Attributes of Classification scheme:
See also: Classification, Observation unit - ISIC
Rev. 3, Statistical units – ISIC
"Classification scheme type name" is the name of
the type of Classification scheme.
Classifications used MetaStore
Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types this item
should list the name of all classifications actually
used in the compilation of the data.
"Classification scheme administration record" is the
Administration record for a Classification scheme.
"Classification scheme item" is an item of content
in a classification scheme. This may be a node in a
taxonomy or ontology, a term in a thesaurus, etc.
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
Attributes of Classification scheme item:
See also: Classification
Classification scheme item type name is the name
of the type of the Classification scheme item.
Classified component
A classified component is an administered
component of a data element that may be
classified in one or more classification schemes.
These components include the object class,
property, representation class, data element
concept, value domain, and data element
Classification scheme item value an instance of a
Classification scheme item.
Classification scheme item relationship is the
relationship among items within a Classification
scheme. Such relations serve to assist navigation
through a large number of Classification Scheme
Items.
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Classification scheme item relationship type
description is a description of the type of
relationship between a Classification scheme item
and one or more other Classification scheme items
in a Classification scheme.
(ISO/IEC 11179-3 "Information technology Metadata registries-Part 3: Registry metamodel
and basic attributes", February 2003)
Classroom teachers
Classroom teachers (International Standard
Classification for Education (ISCED) 0-4) includes
professional personnel education teachers; and
other teachers who work with students as a whole
class in a classroom, in small groups in a resource
room, or one-on-one inside or outside a regular
classroom. It includes chairpersons of departments
whose duties include some amount of student
instruction. The category does not include student
teachers, teachers‘ aides, or paraprofessionals
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 45
Classification scheme membership is the
relationship of a Classification scheme with its
items.
See also: Classification
Clean production
Manufacturing processes that minimise
environmental impacts (e.g. low use of energy and
raw materials, low emissions and waste) through
changes in production processes.
Classification scheme
item
A classification scheme item is the discrete
components of content in a classification scheme.
These may be the nodes of a taxonomy/ontology,
the terms of a thesaurus, etc
Source: OECD, 2007, Business and the
Environment: Policy Incentives and Corporate
Responses, OECD, Paris
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Clean technology
Technologie non
polluante
Clean technology is the installation or a part of an
installation that has been adapted in order to
generate less or no pollution. In clean as opposed
to end-of-pipe technology, the environmental
equipment is integrated into the production
process
Classification unit
The classification unit is the basic unit to be
classified in the classification (e.g. in an activity
classification this would be the establishment or
enterprise, in an occupational classification it will
be the job)
Source: United Nations Glossary of Classification
Terms. Prepared by the Expert Group on
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
106
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Climate Convention
Convention sur le
climat
See United Nations Conference on Environment
and Development
See also: End-of-pipe protection, Environmentally
sound technologies, Integrated investments
See also: United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development
Cleaner technologies
and products group
(of the environment
industry)
The cleaner technologies and products group
comprises goods and services which reduce or
eliminate negative environmental impacts, but
which are often supplied for other than
environmental purposes and for which statistical
assessment remains disputed, difficult or
expensive.
Climate protection
Protection du climat
See Protection of climate and ozone layer
See also: Ozone layer, Protection of climate and
the ozone layer
Closed ecological
Système écologique
system
clos
A closed ecological system is an ecosystem that
provides for the maintenance of life through
complete reutilization of available material, in
particular by means of cycles wherein exhaled
carbon dioxide, fuel and other waste matter are
converted, chemically or by photosynthesis, into
oxygen, water and food
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.90
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Client (for
Maitre d‟ouvrage
construction activity)
Is the natural or legal person for whom a structure
is constructed, or alternatively the person or
organisation that took the initiative of the
construction.
Closed network
Telecommunications network used for a specific
purpose, such as a payment system, and to which
access is restricted.
Source: A glossary of terms used in payments and
settlement systems, July 2001, Committee on
Payment and Settlement Systems, Bank for
International Settlements
Source: Sources and Methods: Construction Price
Indices, OECD, Eurostat, 1997, page 11
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/document/4/0,2340,en_2649
_34247_2367940_1_1_1_1,00.html
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/cpss00b.pdf
Closed pension funds
Fonds de pension
fermé
Funds that supports only pension plans that are
limited to certain employees (e.g. those of an
employer or group of employers).
Climate
Climat
Climate refers to the condition of the atmosphere
at a particular location (microclimate) or region
over a long period of time. It is the long-term
summation of atmospheric elements – such as
solar radiation, temperature, humidity,
precipitation type (frequency and amount),
atmospheric pressure and wind (speed and
direction) – and their variations
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Open pension fund
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Closed season
Période de fermeture
A closed season is a specified period during which
the category of fish or marine plants may not be
fished or harvested
Climate change
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Changement
climatique
Climate change is a term frequently used in
reference to global warming due to greenhouse
gas emissions from human activities
Closed-end fund
See Investment trust share
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Investment trust share
Closed-end
investment company
See also: Greenhouse effect
107
A closed-end investment company is a managed
investment company with an unlimited life that
does not stand ready to purchase its own shares
from its owner and rarely issues new shares
beyond its initial offering. (Source: Investments,
W.F. Sharpe/G.J. Alexander)
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Elementary unit
Clustering
Classement
(a) Clustering of events in space or time, as a
result of heterogeneity or interdependence.
Source: Institutional Investors Statistical
Yearbook, 2000 edition, Annex III, Glossary
(b) Clustering of objects in the space defined by
multivariate observations.
Cluster
Conglomérat
A group of contiguous elements of a statistical
population, e.g. a group of people living in a single
house, a consecutive run of observations in an
ordered series, or a set of adjacent plots in one
part of a field.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Cluster analysis
CMFB
Committee on Monetary, Financial and Balance Of
Payment Statistics
See also: Committee on Monetary, Financial and
Balance of Payments Statistics
Cluster analysis
Analyse des
conglomérats
A general approach to multivariate problems in
which the aim is to see whether the individuals fall
into groups or clusters. There are several methods
of procedure; most depend on setting up a metric
to define the ―closeness‖ of individuals.
Coach
Passenger railway vehicle other than a railcar or a
railcar trailer.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Coal
Coal is a family name for a variety of solid organic
fuels and refers to a whole range of combustible
sedimentary rock materials spanning a continuous
quality range. For convenience, this continuous
series is divided into four categories:
Cluster samples
Because of budgetary and timing considerations,
most household surveys are based on what are
termed cluster samples, that is, cases where the
ultimate sample units are chosen in groups of
various sizes within only selected parts of the
country
-
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 4.24
anthracite
bituminous coal
sub-bituminous coal
lignite.
Context: Classification of different types of coal
into practical categories for use at an international
level is difficult for two reasons:
Cluster sampling
Échantillonnage par
conglomerats
When the basic sampling unit in the population is
to be found in groups or clusters, e.g. human
beings in households, the sampling is sometimes
carried out by selecting a sample of clusters and
observing all the members of each selected
cluster. This is known as cluster sampling.
- Divisions between coal categories vary between
classification systems, both national and
international, based on calorific value, volatile
matter content, fixed carbon content, caking and
coking properties, or some combination of two or
more of these criteria.
Context: If the elements are closely grouped they
are said to be compact. If they are almost
equivalent to a geographically compact group from
the point of view of investigational convenience
they are said to quasi-compact.
- Although the relative value of the coals within a
particular category depends on the degree of
dilution by moisture and ash and contamination by
sulphur, chlorine, phosphorous and certain trace
elements, these factors do not affect the divisions
between categories.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Coal quality can vary and it is not always possible
108
to ensure that available descriptive and analytical
information is truly representative of the body of
coal to which it refers.
COBOL
(Common Business Oriented Language) A high
level programming language used in business
applications.
The International Coal Classification of the
Economic Commission for Europe (UN/ECE)
recognises two broad categories of coal:
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
- hard coal
- brown coal
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
The International Energy Agency has adopted this
definition of hard coal and brown coal .
Source: Electricity information 2001, International
Energy Agency, Paris – Part II
Code
A language-independent set of letters, numbers or
symbols that represent a concept whose meaning
is described in a natural language.
Coal, oil and natural
gas reserves
Réserves de charbon,
de pétrole et de gaz
naturel
Coal, oil and natural gas reserves consist of proven
reserves of anthracite, bituminous and brown coal
deposits and of petroleum and natural gas
reserves and fields
Context: A code normally consists of one or more
alphabetic, numeric or alpha/numeric characters.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Source: AN. 2121– Annex to chapter XIII
See also: Code list, Coding
Code division multiple
access (CDMA)
A spread spectrum air interface technology used in
some digital cellular, personal communications
services and other wireless networks.
Coarse grains
Coarse grains generally refers to cereal grains
other than wheat and rice — in the OECD
countries, those used primarily for animal feed or
brewing.
Source: Cellular Mobile Pricing Structures and
Trends, Working Party on Telecommunication and
Information Services Policies – November 1999,
page 9, Select Glossary of Mobile Terms
Context: When used as a collective term in the
context of Producer Support Estimates (PSE) and
Consumer Support (CSE) estimates, the
composition will vary by country and may include
any or all of the following: barley, oats and
sorghum.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/54/42/2538118.pdf
Rye and triticale, the production of which is minor
in the OECD, are not included in PSE composites
relating to coarse grains, except in a few cases
where statistical difficulties prevent the separation
of data on rye from those for other coarse grains.
Code list
A code list is a predefined list from which some
statistical coded concepts take their values.
Context: Each code list has the following
properties: a) identifier (it provides a unique
identification within the set of code lists specified
by a structural definitions maintenance agency); b)
name (also unique); c) description (a description
of the purpose of the code list); and d) code value
length (either an exact or a maximum number of
characters and a type, i.e. numeric or
alphanumeric).
Maize (corn in the United States) is a coarse grain
but is reported separately from all other coarse
grains in the PSE/CSE tables.
In Mexico, most maize is produced for human
consumption rather than animal feed.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Source: European Central Bank (ECB), Bank for
International Settlement (BIS), Eurostat,
International Monetary Fund (IMF), Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD), "GESMES/TS User Guide", Release 3.00,
February, 2003; unpublished on paper.
Coarse grains crop
Campagne (céréales
year
secondaires)
Coarse grains crop year refers to the crop
marketing year beginning 1 April for Japan, 1 July
for the European Union and New Zealand, 1 August
for Canada and 1 October for Australia. The US
crop year begins 1 June for barley and oats and 1
September for maize and sorghum.
Hyperlink:
http://www.sdmx.org/Data/GesmesTS_rel3.pdf
See also: Definition, structural, GESMES TS
Code redundancy
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
109
Code redundancy occurs when a character or
group of characters in a code word can be partially
or completely deduced from the remaining
characters of the code word.
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Coded samples
Are those from identified sources, but the samples
do not include any identifying information, such as
patients‘ names or social security numbers.
Rather, they are accompanied with codes. In such
cases, although the repository (or its agent)
retains the ability to link the research findings
derived from a sample with the individual source
by using the code, the investigator or researcher
(or one reading a description of the research
findings) would not be able to do so.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Code space
A code space is a set of all combinations of
admissible values of a particular record of data.
Cartesian product of the code word lists of
individual data in a record.
Context: Sometimes also referred to as ―reversibly
anonymised‖, ―linkable‖ or ―identifiable‖ samples.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: OECD, 2006, Creation and Governance of
Human Genetic Research Databases, OECD. Paris
Codex
Refer Codex Alimentarius
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Codex Alimentarius
Codex Alimentarius
The Codex Alimentarius is an international code for
food developed and administered by the United
Nations‘ Codex Alimentarius Commission.
Sometimes simply referred to as ―the Codex‖
Code structure check
See Code structure validation
See also: Code structure validation
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Code structure
validation
Code structure validation is the process of verifying
whether the characters of the correct type (e.g.,
digits, letters) are at the correct positions of the
code word.
Codex Alimentarius
Commission
The Codex Alimentarius Commission is an
international body charged with developing the
standards, guidelines and recommendations that
comprise the Codex Alimentarius.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Context: Created in 1963 by two agencies of the
United Nations — the Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) and the World Health
Organization (WHO) — the Commission concerns
itself with all important aspects of food pertaining
to the protection of consumer health, as well as to
fair practices in the international food trade. The
Commission also encourages food- related
scientific debate and technological research.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
CODED
Eurostat's Concepts and Definitions Database
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Coded representation
The representation of an item or of a feature class
by an alphanumeric or graphic code; the result of
applying a code to any member of a coded set.
Example: 0226. main road
See also: Codex Alimentarius
Coding
Codage
Coding is the technical procedure for converting
verbal information into numbers or other symbols
which can be more easily counted and tabulated.
110
COFOG (classification
of the functions of
government)
Classification des
fonctions des
administrations
publiques
(CFAP/COFOG)
See Classification of the functions of government
Source: Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
October 2003
See also: Coding error
Coding error
The assignment of an incorrect code to a survey
response.
See also: COFOG (classification of the functions of
government)
COG
See Coke oven gas
Source: Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
October 2003
See also: Coke oven gas
Coherence
Cohérence
Coherence of statistics is their adequacy to be
reliably combined in different ways and for various
uses.
See also: Coding
Coefficient of
variation
The standard deviation of a random variable
divided by the mean.
Context: Coherence of data and information
reflects the degree to which the data and
information from a single statistical program, and
data brought together across data sets or
statistical programs, are logically connected and
complete. Fully coherent data are logically
consistent – internally, over time, and across
products and programs. Where applicable, the
concepts and target populations used or presented
are logically distinguishable from similar, but not
identical, concepts and target populations of other
statistical programs, or from commonly used
notions or terminology. (Statistics Canada Quality
Guidelines, 3rd edition, October 1998, page 5)
Context: Its dimensionless form makes it
convenient for summarization.
The United States Bureau of Census alternatively
refers to the coefficient of variation as the ratio of
the standard error to the value being estimated,
usually expressed in terms of a percentage. Also
known as the relative standard deviation. (United
States Bureau of Census, Glossary of Selected
Abbreviations and Acronyms - refer
http://eire.census.gov/cgi-bin/ssd/Glossary)
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003
Coherence is the sixth quality component in the
Eurostat definition.
Source: Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
October 2003
Coefficient table
Tableau de
coefficients
A coefficient (input-output) table records the
amount of each product (or the amount of output
by each industry) used as input per unit of output
of the various products/industries
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca:8096/bsolc/english/bsolc?c
atno=12-539-X&CHROPG=1)
See also: Comparability, Data confrontation,
Quality – Eurostat, Quality – IMF, Quality - ISO,
Quality - OECD, Statistical Data and Metadata
Exchange (SDMX)
Source: SNA 15.175
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Cohort
A cohort is a group of persons who experience a
certain event in a specified period of time. For
example, the birth cohort of 1985 would be the
people born in that year
Cofinancing
The joint or parallel financing of programs or
projects through loans or grants to developing
countries provided by commercial banks, export
credit agencies, other official institutions in
association with other agencies or banks, or the
World Bank and other multilateral financial
institutions.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Cohort life table
Table de mortalité de
cohorte
In contrast to current life table, a table based on a
cohort of people born in the same period. Thus, for
a cohort born in 1900, the death rates at 20 and
80 would be based on death rates observed about
1920 and 1980.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
111
aggregate) current information.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Cohort studies
Étude de cohorte
In medical statistics, studies in which a group of
individuals, selected according to occupation, age
or geographical area, is followed up over a period
of time.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Deck imputation, Hot deck
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
COLI
See Cost of Living Index
See also: Cost-of-living index
Collateral
Collateral refers to assets pledged as a guarantee
for the repayment of the short-term liquidity loans
which credit institutions receive from the central
banks, as well as assets sold to central banks by
credit institutions as part of repurchase operations.
COICOP (classification COICOP (Clasification
of individual
des fonctions de la
consumption by
consommation
purpose)
individuelle)
See Classification of individual consumption by
purpose
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
See also: Classification of individual consumption
by purpose (COICOP)
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
Coke oven coke
Is the solid product obtained from the
carbonisation of coal, principally coking coal, at
high temperature. It is low in moisture content and
volatile matter.
Collateralised debt
obligations (CDOs)
CDOs are bonds whose income payments and
principal repayments are dependent on a pool of
instruments. Typically, a CDO is backed by a
diversified pool of loan and bond instruments
either purchased in the secondary market or from
the balance sheet of a commercial bank.
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Coke oven gas
Coke oven gas is obtained as a by-product of the
manufacture of coke oven coke for the production
of iron and steel.
Context: The diversified nature of the instruments
differentiates a CDO from an asset-backed
security, which is backed by a homogeneous pool
of instruments, such as mortgages and credit card
loans. Because income and the repayment of
principal are dependent on the performance of the
underlying instruments, there is a probability of
early repayment. Issuers are often provided with
different tranches of the security, so that if there
are prepayments the first tier will be repaid first,
the second tier next, etc. The pricing of each
tranche reflects the probability of repayment.
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Coking coal
Coking coal refers to coal with a quality that allows
the production of a coke suitable to support a blast
furnace charge. Its gross calorific value is greater
than 23 865kJ/kg (5 700 kcal/kg) on an ash-free
but moist basis.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Cold deck
A cold deck is a correction base for which the
elements are given before correction starts and do
not change during correction. An example would
be using prior year's data. A modified cold-deck
may adjust cold-deck values according to (possibly
Collaterised mortgage
obligation (CMO)
CMOs are debt obligations of an entity established
by a financial institution or other sponsor.
112
Context: They are collateralized by whole
mortgage loans or by mortgage-backed passthrough securities guaranteed by the Government
National Mortgage Association (GNMA), the Federal
National Mortgage Association (FNMA), or the
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
(FHLMC). CMOs are sold in multimaturity classes
called tranches.
See also: Collective agreement, Collective
bargaining coverage
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Collective bargaining
coverage
Collective bargaining coverage is an indicator of
the extent to which the terms of workers‘
employment are influenced by collective
negotiation. It is the coverage rate, i.e. the
number of employees covered by the collective
agreement, divided by the total number of wage
and salary-earners.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, July 1994,
Chapter 5, Collective Bargaining: levels and
Coverage, page 171
See also: Collective bargaining
Collective agreement
The collective agreement should be defined, for the
purposes of statistics, as a written agreement
concluded between one or more employers or an
employers' organisation on the one hand, and one
or more workers' organisations of any kind on the
other, with a view to determining the conditions of
individual employment and, in certain cases, to the
regulation of other questions relative to
employment.
Collective
consumption
Goods and services that are consumed
simultaneously by a group of consumers or by the
community as a whole: for example, defence
services provided by the state.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Source: International Labour Organisation (ILO)
Resolution concerning statistics of collective
agreements, adopted by the Third International
Conference of Labour Statisticians (October 1926,
page 1
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Collective
consumption service
Service de
consommation
collectif
A collective consumption service is a service
provided by general government simultaneously to
all members of the community or to all members
of a particular section of the community, such as
all households living in a particular region
See also: Collective bargaining
Collective bargaining
Collective bargaining is a process of decisionmaking between parties representing employer
and employee interests which implies the
―negotiation and continuous application of an
agreed set of rules to govern the substantive and
procedural terms of the employment relationship
….‖ [Collective Bargaining in Industrialised Market
Economies: A Reappraisal, J.P. Windmuller et al,
ILO, Geneva, 1987]
Source: SNA 9.43
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Context: In most OECD countries, basic rules
pertaining to collective bargaining are laid down in
labour law, although there are important
differences in the extent to which governments
intervene in labour-management relations.
Collective households
See Collective living quarters
See also: Collective living quarters – UN
Collective living
Locaux d'habitation
quarters
collective
Collective living quarters include structurally
separate and independent places of abode
intended for habitation by large groups of
individuals or several households and occupied at
the time of the census [or survey]. Such quarters
usually have certain common facilities, such as
cooking and toilet installations, baths, lounge
rooms or dormitories, which are shared by the
occupants.
Bargaining takes place in many forms. For
example, it can occur between trade unions and
individual companies (single-employer bargaining),
or between union federations and employer
associations (multi-employer bargaining).
Moreover, these levels are not mutually necessarily
exclusive; different issues can be taken up at
different levels.
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, July 1994,
Chapter 5, Collective Bargaining: levels and
Coverage, page 168
Collective living quarters may be further classified
113
into hotels, rooming houses and other lodging
houses, institutions and camps
moon" to take turns and determine which amongst
them would submit the "low" bid to win the
contracts. In yet other types of cases, collusion
entailed market sharing agreements.
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1.
United Nations, New York, 1998, Series M, No. 67,
Rev. 1, para. 2.355
Collusion does not necessarily have to involve an
explicit agreement or communication between
firms. In oligopolistic industries, firms tend to be
interdependent in their pricing and output
decisions so that the actions of each firm impact
on and result in a counter response by the other
firm(s). In such circumstances, oligopolistic firms
may take their rivals‘ actions into account and
coordinate their actions as if they were a cartel
without an explicit or overt agreement. Such
coordinated behaviour is often referred to as tacit
collusion or conscious parallelism.
See also: Institutions
Collective services
Services provided by general government that
benefit the community as a whole.
Context: Such services include general public
services, defence, public order and safety,
economic affairs, environment protection, and
housing and community amenities. They also
include the overall policy-making, planning,
budgetary, co-ordinating responsibilities of
government ministries overseeing individual
services and government research and
development for individual services. These
activities cannot be identified with specific
individual households and are considered to benefit
households collectively.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Collusive bidding
(tendering)
See Bid rigging
See also: Bid rigging
Collusion
Collusion refers to combinations, conspiracies or
agreements among sellers to raise or fix prices and
to reduce output in order to increase profits.
Co-management
Cogestion
Co-management is a process of management in
which government shares power with resource
users, with each given specific rights and
responsibilities relating to information and
decision-making
Context: As distinct from the term cartel, collusion
does not necessarily require a formal agreement,
whether public or private, between members.
However, it should be noted that the economic
effects of collusion and a cartel are the same and
often the terms are used somewhat
interchangeably.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Combination
In the parlance of competition law and policy, the
term combination refers to firms organized
together to form a monopoly, cartel or agreement
to raise or fix prices and restrict output in order to
earn higher profits. This term has been
interchangeably used with conspiracy and collusion
as well.
Collusion between firms to raise or fix prices and
reduce output are viewed by most authorities as
the single most serious violation of competition
laws. Collusive arrangements are known to have
been arrived at and enforced in ways which are as
varied as the human imagination itself. Cases
drawn from across different countries reveal that
collusion may be reached through informal
gentlemen‘s agreements where mutual regard,
social convention and personal contacts and
connections provide sufficient basis for ensuring
adherence to agreed prices and related business
practices by members. While collusion is generally
easier when sellers are few and produce
homogenous products, price fixing conspiracies
have also arisen in the sale of complex products.
An example is the electrical equipment industry in
the United States which involved 29 different
companies selling diverse technical products such
as turbine generators, transformers, switch gears,
insulators, controls and condensers. Similarly,
through agreement on product specification details
and standards, American steel producers were able
to collude successfully for some time. In one bidrigging conspiracy firms used the "phases of the
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Collusion, Conspiracy
Combined heat and
power plants (CHP)
Are plants which are designed to produce both
heat and electricity simultaneously.
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
114
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Commercial
confidentiality
Commercial confidentiality refers to safeguarding
the privacy of sensitive information of individual
firms (such as market position, financial health, or
whether the firm is receiving financial support).
Commercial confidentiality can help to promote the
full and free disclosure of pertinent information to
official agencies by financial firms, and ensures the
fair and equal treatment of all firms.
Combined school and
work-based
programmes
In combined school and work-based programmes,
instruction is shared between school and the
workplace, although instruction may take place
primarily in the workplace. Programmes are
classified as combined school and work-based if
less than 75 per cent of the curriculum is
presented in the school environment or through
distance education. Programmes that are more
than 90 per cent work-based are excluded.
Source: Code of Good Practices on Transparency in
Monetary and Financial Policies, Part 1—
Introduction, Approved by the IMF Executive Board
on July 24, 2000.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/mae/mft/sup/part
1.htm#appendix_III
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: Programme orientation, School-based
programmes, Vocational programmes
Commercial credit
In the context of the Paris Club, loans originally
extended on terms that do not qualify as official
development assistance (ODA) credits. These are
typically export credits on market terms but also
include other non-ODA loans by governments.
Comitology
Within Eurostat, comitology is a framework upon
which the Community legislature generally relies
when it designs the administrative process to be
used in implementing legislation on statistics.
Source: Eurostat CODED
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Command-and-control Politique d‟injonction
policy
et de contrôle
Command—and—control policy refers to
environmental policy that relies on regulation
(permission, prohibition, standard setting and
enforcement) as opposed to financial incentives,
that is, economic instruments of cost
internalisation
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Commercial fishing
Commercial fishing refers to the harvesting of fish,
either in whole or in part, for sale, barter or trade
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Commensurability
The property that requires the results of a
comparison to be invariant to changes in units of
measurement for prices and quantities.
Commercial interest
reference rates
(CIRRs)
A set of currency-specific interest rates for major
OECD countries. CIRRs have been established for
13 currencies, the majority of which are based on
either the five-year government bond yields or on
three-, five- and seven-year bond yields, according
to the length of the repayment period. CIRRs are
adjusted monthly and are intended to reflect
commercial rates.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Commensurability test
See Invariance to changes in units of
measurement test
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
See also: Invariance to changes in the units of
measurement test
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Comments
Comments refer to remarks on the data element
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 1, Framework for the
specification and standardization of data elements,
1998
Commercial land
Land mainly used for commerce, trade and related
services, such as shopping centres, banks,
115
commercial garages, repair shops, commercial
storage facilities, related office buildings, etc. Also
included are private roads and other auxiliary
spaces located in the areas concerned. In terms of
ISIC/Rev.3, the activities included in this category
can be described by divisions 50-55, 65-74, 91 and
93.
Commercial risk
In the context of export credits, the risk of
nonpayment by a non-sovereign or private sector
buyer or borrower in his or her domestic currency
arising from default, insolvency, and/or a failure to
take up goods that have been shipped according to
the supply contract (contrasted with transfer risk
arising from an inability to convert domestic
currency into the currency in which the debt
service is payable, or with broader political risk).
Source: Joint OECD/Eurostat Questionnaire 2002
on the State of the Environment, section on Land
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Commercial Mobile
Radio Service (CMRS)
A US FCC designation for any carrier or licensee
whose wireless network is connected to the public
switched telephone network and/or is operated for
profit.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Commission of the
European
Communities
See European Commission
Commercial paper
Commercial paper is an unsecured promise to pay
a certain amount on a stated maturity date, issued
in bearer form. CP enables corporations to raise
short-term funds directly from end investors
through their own in-house CP sales team or via
arranged placing through bank dealers.
See also: European Commission
Commitment
A firm obligation, expressed in writing and backed
by the necessary funds, undertaken by an official
donor to provide specified assistance to a recipient
country or a multilateral organisation.
Context: Short-term in nature, with maturities
ranging from overnight to one year, CP is usually
sold at a discount. A coupon is paid in a few
markets. Typically, issue size ranges from
$100,000 up to about $1 billion. In bypassing
financial intermediaries in the short-term money
markets, CP can offer a cheaper form of financing
to corporations. But because of its unsecured
nature, the credit quality of the issuer is important
for the investor. Companies with a poor credit
rating can obtain a higher rating for the issue by
approaching their bank or insurance company for a
third-party guarantee, or perhaps issue CP under a
MOF (Multiple Option Facility), which provides a
backup line of credit should the issue be
unsuccessful.
Context: Bilateral commitments are recorded in
the full amount of expected transfer, irrespective
of the time required for the completion of
disbursements.
Commitments to multilateral organisations are
reported as the sum of (i) any disbursements in
the year reported on which have not previously
been notified as commitments and (ii) expected
disbursements in the following year.
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Commitment charge
(or Fee)
This is the charge made for holding available the
undisbursed balance of a loan commitment.
Typically, it is a fixed-rate charge (for example,
1.5 percent a year) calculated on the basis of the
undisbursed balance.
Commercial presence
Having an office, branch, or subsidiary in a foreign
country.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
116
Includes all goods and services produced by
industries, all imported goods and services except
direct purchases abroad by government and
households, and that part of the gross output of
producers of government services and a private
non- profit services to households which is sold on
the conditions, characteristic of sales of
commodities
Committee on
Monetary, Financial
and Balance of
Payments Statistics
The Committee on Monetary, Financial and Balance
of Payments Statistics (CMFB) was established by
Council Decision in 1991 to assist the European
Commission in drawing up and implementing work
programmes concerning monetary, financial and
balance of payments statistics, and to offer
opinions on these areas of statistics and on their
links with other areas of economic statistics, in
particular national accounts. (Indeed, the
government statistician members of the CMFB are
usually responsible for macroeconomic statistics in
their countries.)
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
See also: Products
Commodity linked
bonds
A bond whose redemption value is linked to the
price of a commodity. Typically, issuers whose
income stream is closely tied to commodity
earnings issue these bonds.
The context was the need to make statistical
preparations for Economic and Monetary Union
(EMU). The CMFB is an independent committee
with advisory functions; it has no legislative
powers. The original Council Decision has been
amended to reflect changes since 1991.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Context: The Members of the Committee are
senior statisticians from the National Statistical
Institutes and National Central Banks of the
countries of the European Economic Area (Austria,
Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Finland, France,
Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the
Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden,
Switzerland and the United Kingdom). The
European Commission (Eurostat) and the European
Central Bank are also Members of the Committee.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Commodity linked
derivatives
Derivatives whose value derives from the price of a
commodity.
Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Cyprus, Estonia,
Hungary, Malta, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland,
Romania, Slovak Republic, Slovenia and Turkey
have Observer status, as well as the Bank for
International Settlements (BIS), International
Monetary Fund (IMF) and the Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
Context: These include:
- Commodity future—traded on an organized
exchange, in which counterparties commit to buy
or sell a specified amount of a commodity at an
agreed contract price on a specified date;
Source: CMFB website
Hyperlink:
http://www.cmfb.org/organisation/purpose.htm
- Commodity option—gives the purchaser the right
but not the obligation to purchase (call) or sell
(put) a specified amount of a commodity at an
agreed contract price on or before a specified date;
and
Committee on Surplus
Disposal (CSD)
The Committee on Surplus Disposal is a
subcommittee of the Food and Agriculture
Organisation's (FAO's) Committee on Commodity
Problems that monitors food aid flows to ensure
that surplus disposal does not interfere with
normal production and trade patterns, in
compliance with the FAO Principles of Surplus
Disposal (1954)
- Commodity swap—a swap of two payment
streams, where one represents a currently
prevailing spot price and the other an agreed
contract price for a specified quantity and quality
of a specified commodity.
Net cash settlements are usually made.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Commodities
Commodities are goods and services normally
intended for sale on the market at a price that is
designed to cover their cost of production.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
117
catches (TACs)), except within predetermined
protected areas where the right to fish is restricted
or completely withdrawn, and within member
states‘ coastal fisheries. Currently, the CFP applies
only partially to the Mediterranean Sea.
Commodity reversal
test
A test that may be used under the axiomatic
approach which requires that, for a given set of
products, the price index should remain unchanged
when the ordering of the products is changed.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Common market
A common market is a customs union with
provisions to liberalise movement of regional
production facts (people and capital). The
Southern Cone Common Market (MERCOSUR) of
Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay is an
example of a common market.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Common Agricultural Politique agricole
Policy (CAP)
commune (PAC)
The Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) is the
European Union‘s agricultural policy. Its objectives
were set forth in Article 39 of the Treaty of Rome
(1957).
Source: Glossary of Insurance Policy Terms, OECD,
Centre for Co-operation with Non-Members, 1999
See also: Customs union, Economic union, Free
trade area, Regional trading arrangement
Common Market of
the South
(MERCOSUR)
The Common Market of the South (MERCOSUR) Mercado Común del Sur. A multilateral agreement
on trade, including agricultural trade, between
Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. The
agreement was signed in 1991 and came into
effect on 1 January 1995. Its main goal is to create
a customs union between the four countries by
2006
Source: OECD, 2004, OECD Agricultural Outlook:
2004-2013, OECD, Paris, Glossary
Common Agricultural
Policy (CAP) Reform
The EU Commission has published a
Communication on the Mid-Term Review on the
Common Agricultural Policy in July 2002, in
January 2003 the Commission adopted a formal
proposal. A formal decision on the "Cap reform - a
long-term perspective for sustainable agriculture
was taken by the EU farm ministers. The reform
includes far reaching amendments of current
policies, including further reductions in support
prices, partly offset by direct payments, and a
further decoupling of most direct payments from
current production.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Common Market
Organisation (CMO)
for sugar
The common organisation of the sugar market
(CMO) in the European Union was established in
1968 to ensure a fair income to community sugar
producers and self-supply of the Community
market. At present CMO is governed by Council
Regulation (EC) No. 1260/2001 (the basic
regulation) which are applicable until 30 June
2006.
Source: OECD, 2004, OECD Agricultural Outlook:
2004-2013, OECD, Paris, Glossary
Common cartel
See Control of enterprises, Holding company
See also: Control of enterprises, Holding company
Common Fisheries
Politique common de
Policy (CFP)
la pêche (PCP)
Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) is the European
Union‘s basic framework for managing the fisheries
in the waters of Member states. The CFP was
drawn up in 1970 in order to institutionalise cooperation between the EU member states over
fisheries management; formal principles were
established in 1983 based on Articles 38 and 39 of
the Treaty of Rome, and were later reinforced in
Article 3 of the (Maastricht) Treaty on European
Union.
Source: OECD, 2004, OECD Agricultural Outlook:
2004-2013, OECD, Paris, Glossary
Common property
Ressources
resources
(écologique)
(environmental)
communes
Common property resources (environmental) are
natural resources owned and managed collectively
by a community or society rather than by
individuals
Context: The CFP basic legislation [Regulation
(EEC) 101/76] was adopted in 1976, and has
constantly been adapted to meet changing needs,
now covering fish landing, marketing, storage and
transport. Generally, the principle of free access to
fishing grounds applies (based on total allowable
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
118
Commonwealth of
Independent States
Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) was
created in December 1991. In the adopted
Declaration the participants of the Commonwealth
declared their interaction on the basis of sovereign
equality.
"Community statistics" shall mean quantitative,
aggregated and representative information taken
from the collection and systematic processing of
data, produced by the national authorities and the
Community authority in the framework of
implementation of the Community statistical
programme.
At present the CIS unites: Azerbaijan, Armenia,
Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan,
Uzbekistan and Ukraine.
Source: European Union, Council Regulation (EC)
No 322/97 of 17 February 1997 on Community
statistics (Official Journal of the European Union No
L 52, 22.2.1997, p. 1 – 7)
Context: In September 1993 the Heads of the CIS
States signed an Agreement on the creation of
Economic Union to form common economic space
grounded on free movement of goods, services,
labour force, capital; to elaborate coordinated
monetary, tax, price, customs, external economic
policy; to bring together methods of regulating
economic activity and create favourable conditions
for the development of direct production relations.
Hyperlink: http://europa.eu.int/eurlex/lex/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=CELEX:3199
7R0322:EN:HTML
See also: European Union, Eurostat
Commuting accident
A Commuting accident is an accident occurring on
the habitual route, in either direction, between the
place of work or work-related training and:
In order to facilitate further integration the
Agreement on deepening of integration in
economic and humanitarian field of four countries
(Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia) and
Agreement on áreation of Commonwealth of
Sovereign Republics (Belarus and Russia) were
signed in 1995.
(i) the worker's principal or secondary residence;
(ii) the place where the worker usually takes his or
her meals; or
(iii) the place where he or she usually receives his
or her remuneration;
which results in death or personal injury.
In February 1999 by the decision of the Interstate
Council of four countries (Belarus, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Russia) the Republic of Tajikistan was
recognized as participant of the customs union
enjoying full rights.
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning statistics of occupational
injuries (resulting from occupational accidents),
adopted by the Sixteenth International Conference
of Labour Statisticians (October 1998), page 2
Interaction of countries in the framework of the
Commonwealth is realized through a number of
coordinating institutions including the Interstate
Statistical Committee..
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Bodies of Branch Cooperation: (Consulting Council
for Labour, Migration and Social Security of
Population, Transport Coordinating Conference,
Interstate Council for Aviation and Air Space Uses,
Interstate Ecological Council, Intergovernmental
Council for Agro-Industrial Complex, Council for
Electric Energy, Bureau for Coordinating Anti
Organized Crime Activities, Interstate Euro-Asian
Association of Coal and Metal, etc).
Compact Disk - Read
Only Memory (CDROM)
An optical disk that is created by a mastering
process and used for reading information and data
only
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Source: Website of the CIS Statistical Office
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Hyperlink: http://www.cisstat.com/eng/cis.htm
Community of species Communauté
d‟espèces
A community of species is an assemblage of
organisms characterised by a distinctive
combination of species occupying a common
environment and interfacing with one another
Compaction
Compactage
Compaction is the process whereby the density of
soils is increased by tillage, livestock pressure
and/or vehicular traffic. Such compaction gives rise
to lower soil permeability and poorer soil aeration
with resultant increases in erosion risk and lowered
plant productivity
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Community statistics
Company pension plan Plan de retraite
119
d'entreprise
See Occupational pension plan. Identical term,
"Employer's pension plan"
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
See also: Occupational pension plan
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Comparability
Comparability is the extent to which differences
between statistics from different geographical
areas, non-geographical domains, or over time,
can be attributed to differences between the true
values of the statistics.
See also: Coherence, Quality – Eurostat, Quality ISO, Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS),
Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange (SDMX)
Comparable treatment
An understanding in a debt-restructuring
agreement with the Paris Club creditors that the
debtor will secure at least equivalent debt relief
from other creditors.
Context: In SDMX, "Comparability" is closely
associated with "Coherence", which is the
adequacy of statistics to be reliably combined in
different ways and for various uses. The use of
standard concepts, classifications and target
populations promotes coherence, as does the use
of common methodology across surveys.
Coherence does not necessarily imply full
numerical consistency.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Under the SDDS, the comparability of statistics
within and across statistical frameworks - and the
ability to perform cross-checks and reconciliations
- requires the dissemination of components
underlying aggregate series, dissemination within
a statistical framework, and/or the dissemination
of related data that support and encourage users'
ability to check and verify the quality of data.
Comparable
Taux de chômage
unemployment rates
comparables
(CURs)
Comparable unemployment rates (CURs) are
unemployment rates compiled by Eurostat for
Member states of the European Union as far as
possible across countries according to International
Labour Organisation (ILO) definitions of
unemployment and labour force
The sources of distortion of comparability in
statistics, increasing or reducing it, are mainly
twofold:
- use of different concepts/definitions, or
Source: Quarterly Labour Force Statistics, OECD,
refer Technical Notes
- use of different measuring tools, compilation and
presentation practices.
See also: Standardised unemployment rates
Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange (SDMX) BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD and UNSD Metadata Common Vocabulary
Comparative mortality Chiffre comparatif de
figure
mortalité
The ratio of the standardised death rate to the
crude death rate in a standard population. It may
also be regarded as an index number in the
Laspeyres form.
In the context of PPPs comparability refers to the
requirement that countries price products that are
identical or, if not identical, equivalent.
Products are said to be comparable if they have
identical or equivalent physical and economic
characteristics – that is, if they have the same or
similar technical parameters and price determining
properties. In this context, equivalence or
similarity between products is defined as meeting
the same needs with equal efficiency so that
purchasers are indifferent between them and are
not prepared to pay more for one than for the
other.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Comparative mortality Taux comparatif de
index
mortalité
This is a variant of the comparative mortality
figure and is a weighted average death rate, where
the weights are the mean of the actual (current)
population and the standard population both
expressed in proportions on a common basis of
absolute size.
The pricing of comparable products ensures that
the differences in prices between countries for a
product reflect ―pure‖ price differences and are not
affected by differences in quality. If the
requirement is not respected, differences in quality
will be mistaken for price differences leading to an
underestimation or overestimation of price levels
and a corresponding overestimation and
underestimation of volume levels.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
120
In particular, the costs of recruitment, employee
training, and plant facilities and services, such as
cafeterias, medical clinics and welfare services, are
not included.
See also: Comparative mortality figure
Comparative price
levels
Comparative price levels are defined as the ratios
of purchasing power parities (PPPs) to exchange
rates.
Context: It is estimated that the labour costs not
included in hourly compensation costs account for
some 4 to 5 per cent of total labour costs for those
economies for which information is presented in
the ILO KILM. This measure is also closely related
to the ―compensation of employees‖ measure used
in the system of national accounts, which can be
considered a proxy to total labour costs.
Context: They provide a measure of the
differences in price levels between countries by
indicating for a given product group the number of
units of the common currency needed to buy the
same volume of the product group in each country.
For example, in 1999, a given volume of gross
domestic product (GDP) costs on average 106
dollars in the United Kingdom, 68 dollars in
Portugal and 143 dollars in Japan. In other words,
the general price level of Japan is higher than that
of the United Kingdom and of Portugal.
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 601
See also: Average hourly compensation cost,
Compensation of employees – SNA, Labour cost –
ILO
Source: Purchasing power parities – measurement
and uses, P. Schreyer, F. Koechlin, OECD Statistics
Brief, March 2002, No. 3, page 7
Compensation of
Rémunération des
employees
salariés
Compensation of employees is the total
remuneration, in cash or in kind, payable by an
enterprise to an employee in return for work done
by the latter during the accounting period.
Comparison period
See Current period
Compensation of employees has two main
components:
See also: Current period
Comparison resistant
A term first used to describe non-market services
which are difficult to compare across countries
because:
(a) Wages and salaries payable in cash or in kind;
(b) The value of the social contributions payable by
employers: these may be actual social
contributions payable by employers to Social
Security schemes or to private funded social
insurance schemes to secure social benefits for
their employees; or imputed social contributions by
employers providing unfunded social benefits.
- they have no economically-significant prices with
which to value outputs,
- their units of output cannot be otherwise defined
and measured,
Context: No compensation of employees is payable
in respect of unpaid work undertaken voluntarily,
including the work done by members of a
household within an unincorporated enterprise
owned by the same household. Compensation of
employees does not include any taxes payable by
the employer on the wage and salary bill -- for
example, a payroll tax. Such taxes are treated as
taxes on production.
- the institutional arrangements for their provision
and the conditions of payment differ from country
to country, and
- their quality varies between countries but the
differences cannot be identified and quantified.
Context: Increasingly, the term is being used to
describe capital goods and many market services
whose complexity, variation and country specificity
make it difficult for them to be priced comparably
across countries.
Source: SNA 7.21 [7.31]. See also ESA [9.29]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
See also: Compensation cost
Competing Local
Exchange Carrier
(CLEC)
A licensed local operator in the US and Canada
which is not the incumbent local operator, or ILEC.
Compensation cost
Compensation cost is a measure closely related to
labour cost, although it does not entirely
correspond to the ILO definition of total labour cost
contained in the 1966 ILO resolution concerning
statistics of labour cost, adopted by the 11th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians
(ICLS) in that it does not include all items of labour
costs.
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
121
Competition
Competition refers to a situation in a market in
which firms or sellers independently strive for the
patronage of buyers in order to achieve a
particular business objective, e.g., profits, sales
and/or market share.
Competitive services
A service is competitive if the market for the
provision of that service can sustain a high level of
competition - that is, many simultaneous
competing operators. Compare with noncompetitive services.
Context: Competition in this context is often
equated with rivalry. Competitive rivalry between
firms can occur when there are two firms or many
firms. This rivalry may take place in terms of price,
quality, service or combinations of these and other
factors which customers may value.
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
See also: Non-competitive
Competitiveness (in
Compétitivité
international trade)
Competitiveness is a measure of a country's
advantage or disadvantage in selling its products in
international markets.
Competition is viewed as an important process by
which firms are forced to become efficient and
offer greater choice of products and services at
lower prices. It gives rise to increased consumer
welfare and allocative efficiency. It includes the
concept of "dynamic efficiency" by which firms
engage in innovation and foster technological
change and progress.
Context: The OECD Secretariat calculates two
different measures of competitiveness based on
the differential between domestic and competitors‘
unit labour costs in manufacturing and consumer
prices both expressed in a common currency.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
See also: Contestability, Cut-throat competition,
Pareto efficiency, Perfect competition, Workable
competition
Compilation
See Statistical processing
Competition of
functions
The situation when the use of one (environmental)
function is at the expense of the same or another
function now, or is expected to be so in the future.
See also: Statistical processing
Compilation of vital
data
Compilation of vital data is a process of condensing
information by classifying and tabulating vital
statistical data into various categories or groups
with the object of producing vital statistics
according to a determined tabulation programme
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.31
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Competition prices
Competition prices are antitrust and related
policies (e.g., intellectual property regulations)
designed to foster or restrict competition and
which may have an impact on foreign trade and
investment
Compilation practices
See Statistical processing
See also: Statistical processing
Compiling agency
Agency that compiled the data being reported.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Context: The dimension is needed as two agencies
might be compiling the exact same data but using
different sources or concepts (the latter would be
partially captured by the dimensions). The provider
ID is not sufficient, as one provider could
disseminate the data compiled by different
compiling agencies.
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Competitive fringe
See Dominant firm
Source: Status Report on the BIS-IMF-OECD-World
Bank Joint External Debt Hub: Prepared by the
See also: Dominant firm
122
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
SDMX Pilot Project Team, May 2005
See also: Concept
Compiling errors
Errors introduced in operations on the original
observations such as editing, coding, punching,
tabulating and transcribing.
See also: Exact disclosure
Complete market
A financial market place is said to be complete
when a market exists with an equilibrium price for
every asset in every possible state of the world.
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Complementary
(telecommunications
services)
Two or more services are complementary when
both or all are required to obtain the final
combined or bundled service that the end-user
wants. For example, car bodies, car engines and
car tires are complementary - all must be
combined to obtain the final service that
consumers want (in this case car transportation
services).
Complete set of
conflict rules
A complete set of conflict rules is a set of explicitly
given conflict rules and all implied conflict rules.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Complementary
suppression
Synonym of secondary suppression.
Complete set of edits
A complete set of edits is the union of explicit edits
and implied edits sufficient for the generation of
feasible (acceptance) regions for imputation (that
is if the imputations are to satisfy the edits).
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
See also: Secondary suppression
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Complete coverage
A survey (or census) should be called complete if
virtually all of the units in the population under
study are covered.
See also: Explicit edit, Implied edit
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Completeness
Completeness is the extent to which all statistics
that are needed are available. It is usually
described as a measure of the amount of available
data from a statistical system compared to the
amount that was expected to be obtained.
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
See also: Census
Context: In the European context, completeness is
the availability of statistics to meet the
requirements of the European Statistical System.
Complete disclosure
Synonym of exact disclosure.
Completeness is the seventh quality component in
the Eurostat definition of data quality.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
Source: Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
October 2003
123
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.30 D
See also: Quality – Eurostat, Quality - ISO
Completeness
checking
Completeness checking may be carried out at
either the survey or questionnaire levels.
- Completeness checking at survey level ensures
that all survey data have been collected. A minimal
completeness check compares the sample count to
the questionnaire count to insure that all samples
are accounted for, even if no data were collected.
Component
A set of goods and services that constitutes a subset of the goods and services that make up some
defined aggregate.
- Completeness checking at questionnaire level
insures that routing instructions have been
followed. Questionnaires should be coded to
specify whether the respondent was inaccessible or
has refused, this information can be used in
verification procedures.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Component cost
method (construction
price indices)
This approach is used for the compilation of output
construction price indices. It regards construction
output as bundles of standardised homogeneous
components. These components correspond to the
supply of standard operations.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Completion point
In the context of export credits, the risk of
nonpayment by a non-sovereign or private sector
buyer or borrower in his or her domestic currency
arising from default, insolvency, and/or a failure to
take up in the context of the HIPC Initiative, when
the IMF and World Bank Executive Boards decide
that a country has met the conditions for
assistance under the Initiative.
Examples would be: the supply and laying of so
many square metres of roofing tiles; installation of
a hot water tank of a given capacity; construction
of so many square metres of brick wall etc.
Context: Price indices are compiled using the
prices of these homogenous components. A
representative construction (or number of
projects) is also chosen.
Context: The timing of the completion point
depends on the satisfactory implementation of key
structural policy reforms agreed at the decision
point, the maintenance of macroeconomic stability,
and the adoption and implementation of a poverty
reduction strategy developed through a broadbased participatory process.
However, the actual work entailed in its completion
is broken down into precisely defined standard
services or components.
A number of representative construction firms that
have recently performed any of these services are
surveyed to determine the price they have actually
agreed or invoiced for these services. A price index
is then created for each standard component.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
These indices are then aggregated for the buildings
initially defined as the benchmarks. The actual
buildings are used only to define a selection of
services and the corresponding weights.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Decision point
A variant of this approach involves the respecification of a number of the representative
projects on a cyclical basis.
Compliance criterion
Expenditure undertaken with the main objective of
protecting the environment but specifically in order
to comply with environmental protection
legislation, conventions and voluntary agreements.
This can be further sub-divided to show those
activities and transactions undertaken in order to
comply with legislation only.
The difference between an index based on input
factors and one based on standard components is
essentially one of degree, since components are
only factors at a more advanced stage of
production. However, the standard component cost
index also incorporates productivity gains and
changes in profit margins, as it reflects not only
124
the cost of the factors, but also the price of the
finished product paid by the customers of the
construction firm. It will therefore include more of
the price elements listed above that determine the
prices of finished construction work.
economic reason for a leading relationship with the
reference series;
- Cyclical behaviour: cycles should lead those of
the reference series, with no missing or extra
cycles. At the same time, the lead at turning points
should be homogeneous over the whole period;
Another advantage of this method is that the
prices obtained are for components which remain
comparable over time.
- Data quality: statistical coverage of the series
should be broad; series should be compiled on a
monthly rather than on a quarterly basis; series
should be timely and easily available; there should
be no break in time series; series should not be
revised frequently.
Fluctuations due to differential quality or execution
are eliminated. However, while components are
more homogeneous than completed buildings it is
unlikely that they will be completely identical for
different completed buildings.
If there is a permanent change in the way a
component is performed its definition is changed,
and the new price series is spliced to the old one
by means of chaining taking account of changes in
quality.
Selecting truly representative standard
components, and determining weighting
coefficients that accurately reflect construction
techniques and the way buildings, etc. are usually
constructed during the base year is the hardest
and most important part of compiling the index.
Source: OECD Leading Indicator Website,
Glossary, 2001
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_34
349_1965941_1_1_1_1,00.html
See also: Composite leading indicators (CLI)
Composite household Ménage complexe
A composite household is a household consisting of
any of the following:
However, every standard component does not
have to be priced separately. For example, if the
price change characteristics of brick laying and
paving are similar then prices of only one of
(similar) standard components need to be
incorporated in the construction price index.
- a single family nucleus plus other persons, some
of whom are related to the nucleus and some of
whom are not, for example, mother with child(ren)
and other relatives and non-relatives;
- a single family nucleus plus other persons, none
of whom are related to the nucleus, for example,
father with child(ren) and non-relatives;
An advantage of both the standard factor and
standard component cost methods is that they can
produce different indices merely by changing the
weighting of the indices for each component. For
example, indices could be compiled by type of
work, by trade, or as in the example of the
conventional construction price indices compiled in
Germany, by type of building.
- two or more family nuclei related to each other
plus other persons, some of whom are related to at
least one of the nuclei and some of whom are not
related to any of the nuclei, for example, two or
more couples with other relatives and nonrelatives only;
Source: Sources and Methods: Construction Price
Indices, OECD, Eurostat, 1997, page 19
- two or more family nuclei related to each other
plus other persons, none of whom are related to
any of the nuclei, for example, two or more
married couples one or more of which with
child(ren) and non-relatives;
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/document/4/0,2340,en_2649
_34247_2367940_1_1_1_1,00.html
See also: Construction price indices, Prior
breakdown methods (construction price indices)
- two or more family nuclei not related to each
other, with or without any other persons;
Component series,
Séries composantes,
Composite leading
ICA
indicator (CLI)
Component series are economic time series which
exhibit leading relationship with a reference series
at the turning points. Their seasonally adjusted or
raw form are combined into a composite leading
indicator (CLI).
- two or more persons related to each other but
none of whom constitute a family nucleus, plus
other unrelated persons;
- non-related persons only
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.82
Context: The component series are selected from a
wide range of economic sectors. The number of
series used for the compilation of the OECD CLIs
varies for each Member country, i.e. between five
and eleven series. Selection of the appropriate
series for each country are made according to the
following criteria:
Composite indicator
A composite indicator is formed when individual
indicators are compiles into a single index, on the
basis of an underlying model of the multi-
- Economic significance: there has to be an a priori
125
dimensional concept that is being measured.
quantitative forecasts
Context: A composite indicator measures multidimensional concepts (e.g. competitiveness, etrade or environmental quality) which cannot be
captured by a single indicator. Ideally, a composite
indicator should be based on a theoretical
framework / definition, which allows individual
indicators / variables to be selected, combined and
weighted in a manner which reflects the
dimensions or structure of the phenomena being
measured.
Context: CLI is constructed by aggregating
together component series selected according to
the criteria specified in component series.
However, It is important to emphasise that
component series are not selected according to a
strict quantitative criteria based on the crosscorrelation with the reference series.
Source: OECD, 2004, ―The OECD-JRC Handbook on
Practices for Developing Composite Indicators‖,
paper presented at the OECD Committee on
Statistics, 7-8 June 2004, OECD, Paris
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_34
349_1965941_1_1_1_1,00.html
Source: OECD Leading Indicator Website,
Glossary, 2001
See also: Composite indicator
See also: Composite leading indicators (CLI)
Composite leading
indicators (CLI)
weighting
Component series of the OECD composite leading
indicator (CLI) are equally weighted in the
aggregation process into a country CLI. On the
other hand, GDP-PPP weights are used to estimate
the CLIs for groups of countries, i.e. zone
Composite leading
indicator zones
In addition to those for individual countries, OECD
calculates CLI for the following groups of countries
or zones: OECD total, Major Seven countries,
OECD Europe, European Union, Euro area, Big four
European countries and NAFTA (North American
Free Trade Agreement).
Source: OECD Leading Indicator Website,
Glossary, 2001
Korea, New Zealand, Czech Republic, Hungary,
Iceland, Poland, and Slovak Republic are excluded
from zone calculations since no CLI is published for
these countries.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_34
349_1965941_1_1_1_1,00.html
Context: The reference series for a zone is the
weighted average of the individual countries
reference series, where the weights are derived
from GDP in industry and the GDP purchasing
power parity. Weights are updated every five years
and current weights are from the year 2000. The
amplitude-adjusted CLI for the zone is calculated
by weighting together the amplitude-adjusted CLIs
for individual countries, using the same weights as
for the reference series. The same method is used
to obtain the industrial production trend for the
zone. Then, the trend restoration is done as for
individual countries, by multiplying the amplitudeadjusted composite indicator by the trend of the
reference series.
Composite sampling
scheme
Plan
d'échantillonnage
composite
A scheme in which different parts of the sample
are drawn by different methods; for example, a
sample of a nations population might be taken
from some form of area sampling in rural districts
and by a random or systematic method in urban
districts.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: OECD Leading Indicator Website,
Glossary, 2005
Composition check
A composition check verifies whether the structure
of a logical unit (e.g. - household) is consistent
with the definition (e.g., at least one adult).
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/document/1/0,2340,en_2825
_293564_32694145_1_1_1_1,00.html#Z
See also: Main Economic Indicator main country
groupings
Example: A household must have at least one
adult
Composite leading
indicators (CLI)
Indicateurs
composites avancés
(ICA)
A composite leading indicator (CLI) is an aggregate
time series displaying a reasonably consistent
leading relationship with the reference series for
the macroeconomic cycle in a country.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Thus, CLI can be used to give an early indication of
turning points in the reference series but not for
Hyperlink:
126
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Compound
Distribution
distribution
composite
A distribution specified in terms of another
distribution dependent on a parameter that is itself
a random variable with a specific distribution.
See also: Compulsory core curriculum, Compulsory
curriculum, Intended instruction time, Noncompulsory curriculum
Compulsory reporting
requirements
Compulsory reporting requirements is a situation
where legislation creates a legal obligation (and
usually an appropriate penalty for non-compliance)
for reporters to provide the requested information
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Report on the Survey of Implementation
of Implementation of Methodological Standards for
Direct Investment – IMF, OECD, March 2000 –
Appendix II: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms
Comprehensive
private internal rate
of return
See Private internal rate of return
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/bopage/pdf/mar2000.
pdf
See also: Private internal rate of return
Compulsory core
curriculum
Compulsory core curriculum is the minimum
required time devoted to core subjects and study
areas within the compulsory curriculum.
Computation of lowest
level indices
Method used to combine the basic price
observations to obtain the first level index (ratio of
average prices, average of price relatives or
geometric mean; long-term relative from base
period vs. short-term relative; weighted or
unweighted arithmetic or geometric average).
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: Compulsory curriculum, Compulsory
flexible curriculum, Intended instruction time, Noncompulsory curriculum
Context: Under the SDDS, in the context of labour
market this would entail, e.g., weighted or
unweighted ratio of average labour service prices,
weighted or unweighted arithmetic or geometric
average of labour service price relatives, long-term
relative from base period versus short-term
relative.
Compulsory
curriculum
Compulsory curriculum refers to the amount and
allocation of instruction time that has to be
provided in every school and must be attended by
all students.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
See also: Compulsory core curriculum, Compulsory
flexible curriculum, Intended instruction time, Noncompulsory curriculum
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
See also: Compilation practices, Index number,
Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS)
Compulsory education Scolarité obligatoire
The legal age from which children are no longer
compelled to attend school (e.g., 15th birthday).
The ending age of compulsory schooling is thus
different from the ending age of an educational
programme.
Computed
tomography scanners
Computer tomography scanners (CT or CAT
scanner) is an x-ray machine which combines
many x-ray images with the aid of a computer to
generate cross-sectional views and, if needed,
three-dimensional images of the internal organs
and structures of the body.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: OECD Health Data 2007: Statistics and
Indicators for 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2007,
Data sources, definitions and methods
Compulsory flexible
curriculum
Compulsory flexible curriculum refers to the part of
the compulsory curriculum in which there is
flexibility or choice for schools or students. For
example, a school may choose to offer more
classes than the minimum in science and only the
minimum required number of classes in art within
the compulsory time frame.
Computer Aided
Software Engineering
(CASE)
127
The use of software packages that aid in
developing all phases of an information system
including analysis, design, and programming.
Interviewing (CAI)
Computer assisted interviewing uses the computer
during interviewing.
Source:
United States Bureau of Census, Glossary of
Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Context: Any contradictory data can be flagged by
edit routines and the resultant data can be
immediately adjusted by information from the
respondent.
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
An added benefit is that data capture (key entry)
occurs at interview time. CAI assists the interview
in the wording of questions and tailors succeeding
questions based on previous responses.
Computer and
information services
Services
d'informatique et
d'information
Computer and information services cover computer
data and news-related service transactions
between residents and non-residents. Included
are: data bases, such as development, storage,
and on-line time series, data processing, hardware
consultancy, software implementation,
maintenance and repair of computers and
peripheral equipment.
CAI has been mainly used in Computer Assisted
Telephone Interviews (CATI) or Computer Assisted
Personal Interviewing (CAPI).
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Glossary of Terms on
Statistical Data Editing", Conference of European
Statisticians Methodological Material, Geneva,
2000
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/editingglo
ssary.pdf
Source: International Monetary Fund (IMF),
"Balance of Payments Manual" (BOP), Washington
D.C., 1993, p.67
See also: Computer assisted survey information
collection
Computer assisted
coding
Coding activity whereby human coders decide and
computer systems provide assistance.
Computer Assisted
Personal Interviewing
(CAPI)
A method of data collection in which an interviewer
uses a computer to display questions and accept
responses during a face-to-face interview.
Source: Adapting new technologies to census
operations, Arij Dekker, Symposium on Global
Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing
Censuses: Mid-Decade Assessment and Future
Prospects, Statistics Division, Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations
Secretariat New York, 7-10 August 2001, Glossary
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/docs/sym
posium_06.htm#_Toc8547016
Computer Assisted
Self-Interviewing
(CASI)
The technique whereby respondents independently
complete electronic questionnaires, assisted only
by specially-designed computer programs.
Computer Assisted
Design / Computer
Assisted
Manufacturing (CADCAM)
The integration of computer aided design with
computer controlled manufacturing.
Source: Adapting new technologies to census
operations, Arij Dekker, Symposium on Global
Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing
Censuses: Mid-Decade Assessment and Future
Prospects, Statistics Division, Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations
Secretariat New York, 7-10 August 2001, Glossary
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/docs/sym
posium_06.htm#_Toc8547016
Computer Assisted
Instruction (CAI)
See Computer Based Training (CBT)
Computer Assisted
Survey Information
Collection
Computer assisted survey information collection
(CASIC) encompasses computer assisted data
collection and data capture.
See also: Computer based training (CBT)
Computer Assisted
128
CASIC may be more broadly defined to include the
use of computer assisted, automated, or advanced
computing methods for data editing and
imputation, data analysis and tabulation, data
dissemination, or other steps in the survey or
census process.
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Computer file
Organized, ordered and named collection of
computer records.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Computer menu
List of options available to an operator, usually
displayed in graphic or alphanumeric form on the
computer screen.
Computer Assisted
Telephone
Interviewing (CATI)
A method of data collection by telephone with
questions displayed on a computer and responses
entered directly into a computer. A component in
the modular data management network, CASIC.
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Computer program
A set of instructions directing the computer which
operations to perform.
Computer associate
professionals
Techniciens en
informatique et
communications
Computer associate professionals is subdivided into
three unit groups:
Context: Complementary term: data; these can be
operated upon by a program.
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
- Computer assistants (ISIC 3121)
- Computer equipment operators (ISIC 3122), and
- Industrial robot controllers (ISIC 3123) is
described as follows:
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Computer associate professionals provide
assistance to users of micro-computers and
standard software packages, control and operate
computers and peripheral equipment and carry out
limited programming tasks connected with the
installation and maintenance of computer
hardware and software.
See also: Data
Computer record
Computer-readable collection of related data
pertaining to a single topical item and treated as a
unit. Example: a single toponym and its related
data, such as coordinates, date of ratification and
origins.
Source: Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development (OECD) and Statistical Office of
the European Communities (Eurostat), "The
measurement of scientific and technological
activities; manual on the measurement of human
resources devoted to S&T; Canberra Manual",
OECD, Paris, 1995, p.99
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Computer Based
Training (CBT)
The use of computers in teaching. Another term for
Computer Assisted Instruction.
Computer software
Logiciels
Computer software is an asset consisting of
computer programs, program descriptions and
supporting materials for both systems and
applications software; included are purchased
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
129
software and software developed on own account,
if the expenditure is large
possible indicator of market power.
Computing standards
In computing, a set of rules or specifications
established by some authority that define, for
example, accuracy requirements, data exchange
formats, hardware or software systems.
- Buyer concentration which measures the extent
to which a large percentage of a given product is
purchased by relatively few buyers. At the
extreme, a single purchaser of all the production of
a good or service would give rise to a situation of
monopsony. Buyer concentration may result in
countervailing power that offsets the market power
that may otherwise arise from high levels of
market or seller concentration.
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: AN.1122) – Annex to chapter XIII
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Concealed
employment
Concealed employment is employment which,
while not illegal in itself, has not been declared to
one or more administrative authorities to whom it
should be made known, thereby leading to the
evasion of legal regulations, the evasion of taxes,
or the evasion of a reduction of social security
entitlements.
Concentration rule
Synonym of (n,k) rule.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, September
1986, Chapter III, Concealed Employment, page
66
See also: n,k rule
Concept
Concepts
A concept is a unit of knowledge created by a
unique combination of characteristics [ISO 10871:2000, 3.2.1]
Concealed production
Same as Underground production
See also: Underground production
Context: Concepts are abstract summaries,
general notions, knowledge, etc., of a whole set of
behaviours, attitudes or characteristics which are
seen as having something in common. Concepts
are used to assist in presenting/conveying precise
meaning, categorising, interpreting, structuring
and making sense of phenomena (such as
classifications) ("United Nations Glossary of
Classification Terms" prepared by the Expert Group
on International Economic and Social
Classifications, unpublished on paper, available at:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/class/family/glossary_s
hort.htm).
Concentration
Concentration refers to the extent to which a small
number of firms or enterprises account for a large
proportion of economic activity such as total sales,
assets or employment.
Context: There are at least four distinct concepts
embodied within the term concentration:
- Aggregate concentration which measures the
relative position of large enterprises in the
economy. This measure has interested economists,
sociologists and political scientists mainly in the
context of theories relating to actual (and
potential) economic- political power which big
business may be able to exercise because of their
economic importance in a country/industrial
sector/geographic region.
A semantic link among two or more concepts is a
concept relationship.
A description of the type of relationship among two
or more concepts is a concept relationship type
description. (ISO/IEC International Standard
11179-3 "Information technology-Metadata
registries (MDR)-Part 3: Registry metamodel and
basic attributes", February 2003).
- Industry or Market concentration (also often
referred to as seller concentration) which
measures the relative position of large enterprises
in the provision of specific goods or services such
as automobiles or mortgage loans. The rationale
underlying the measurement of industry or market
concentration is the industrial organization
economic theory which suggests that, other things
being equal, high levels of market concentration
are more conducive to firms engaging in
monopolistic practices which leads to misallocation
of resources and poor economic performance.
Market concentration in this context is used as one
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
See also: Characteristic, Compiling agency, Data
element concept, Definition, Definition, structural,
Dimension, ISO / IEC 11179, Key family, Metadata
130
structure definition, Ontology, Statistical concept,
Structural definition, Subject field
between a Conceptual domain and a Value domain.
(ISO/IEC International Standard 11179-3
"Information technology - Metadata registries-Part
3: Registry metamodel and basic attributes",
February 2003)
Concept scheme
The descriptive information for an arrangement or
division of concepts into groups based on
characteristics, which the objects have in common.
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179-3 Information technology - Metadata registries
(MDR) - Part 3: Registry metamodel and basic
attributes", February 2003
Context: Within SDMX, a concept scheme is a
maintained list of concepts that are used in key
family and metadata structure definitions. There
can be many such concept schemes. A core
representation of the concept can be specified
(e.g. a code list, or other representation such as
date).
See also: Data model, Unit of measure
Concerted action or
practice
See Cartel, Collusion
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
See also: Cartel, Collusion
Concessional loans
These are loans that are extended on terms
substantially more generous than market loans.
The concessionality is achieved either through
interest rates below those available on the market
or by grace periods, or a combination of these.
Concessional loans typically have long grace
periods.
See also: Characteristic, Object
Conceptual data
model
A data model that represents an abstract view of
the real world. A conceptual model represents the
human understanding of a system.
Context: A conceptual data model describes how
relevant information is structured in the natural
world. In other words, it is how the human mind is
accustomed to thinking of the information.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Information Technology - Data Management and
Interchange - Metadata Registries (MdR) - Part 3:
Registry Metamodel (MdR3) - ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 32
N 0643, 1 May 2001.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
Concessional
restructuring
Debt restructuring with a reduction in present
value of the debt service. In the context of the
Paris Club, concessional restructuring terms have
been granted to low-income countries since
October 1988 with a reduction in the present value
of eligible debt of up to one-third (Toronto terms);
since December 1991, with a present value
reduction of up to one-half(London terms or
―enhanced concessions‖ or ―enhanced Toronto‖
terms); and, since January 1995, with a present
value reduction of up to two thirds (Naples terms).
Conceptual domain
A set of valid value meanings.
Context: The value meanings in a conceptual
domain may either be enumerated or expressed
via a description.
Enumerated conceptual domain is a conceptual
domain that is specified by a list of all its value
meanings.
In the context of the HIPC Initiative, creditors
agreed in November 1996 to increase the present
value reduction to up to 80 percent(Lyon terms)
and then in June 1999 to 90 percent (Cologne
terms). Such restructuring can be in the form of
flow restructuring or stock-of-debt operations.
While the terms (grace period and maturity) are
standard, creditors can choose from a menu of
options to implement the debt relief.
Non-enumerated conceptual is a conceptual
domain that is not specified by a list of all valid
value meanings.
Non-enumerated conceptual domain description is
a description or specification of a rule, reference,
or range for a set of all Value Meanings for the
Conceptual domain.
Conceptual domain relationship is a relationship
among two or more Conceptual domains.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Conceptual domain relationship type description is
a description of the type of relationship among two
or more Conceptual domains.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Conceptual domain representation is a relationship
131
Concessionality level IMF
A net present value calculation, measured at the
time the loan is extended, that compares the
outstanding nominal value of a debt and the future
debt-service payments discounted at an interest
rate applicable to the currency of the transaction,
expressed as a percentage of the nominal value of
the debt.
Conditional edit
A conditional edit is an edit where the value of one
field determines the editing relationship between
other fields and possibly itself. For example,
suppose there are three fields A, B, and C. A
conditional edit would exist if the relationship
between fields B and C as expressed through the
edits depended on the value in A.
Example:
1) If A>0 then B>C
2) If A>B then C>B
Context: The concessionality level of bilateral debt
(or tied aid) is calculated in a similar manner, but
instead of using the nominal value of the debt, the
face value of the loan is used—that is, including
both the disbursed and undisbursed amounts, and
the difference is called the grant element.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Concessionality level - OECD, Grant
element, Net present value (NPV) of debt
Conditionally
renewable resources
See Renewable natural resources
Concessionality level OECD
The concessionality level is a measure of the
"softness" of a credit reflecting the benefit to the
borrower compared to a loan at market rate.
Technically, it is calculated as the difference
between the nominal value of a Tied Aid Credit and
the present value of the debt service as of the date
of disbursement, calculated at a discount rate
applicable to the currency of the transaction and
expressed as a percentage of the nominal value
See also: Renewable natural resources
Conditioning effect
The effect on responses resulting from the
previous collection of data from the same
respondents in recurring surveys.
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html#1965464
Conditioning of
Conditionnement des
radioactive wastes
déchets radioactifs
Conditioning of radioactive wastes refers to the
operation that transforms radioactive waste into a
safe condition for transport, storage and/or
disposal
See also: Concessionality level
Conditional cost of
living index
A conditional cost of living index measures the
change in the cost of maintaining a given utility
level, or standard of living, on the assumption that
all the factors, except the prices covered by the
index, that influence the consumer‘s utility or
welfare (e.g. the state of physical environment)
remain constant.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Confidence interval
A confidence interval is an interval which has a
known and controlled probability (generally 95% or
99%) to contain the true value.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Source: Assessment of the Quality in Statistics,
fifth meeting, Eurostat, Luxembourg, 2-3 May
2002, Item 4: Glossary
See also: Cost-of-living index
Confidential cells
132
Cellules
confidentielles
The cells of a table which are non-publishable due
to the risk of statistical disclosure are referred to
as confidential cells.
Source: Eurostat, "Manual on disclosure control
methods", Office for Official Publications of the
European Communities, Luxembourg, 1996, p. 8-9
Context: By definition there are three types of
confidential data where disclosure might happen
and therefore cells that are confidential:
Confidential data
Confidential data are data which are subject to
confidentiality clauses.
- Small counts. A tabular cell is confidential, if less
than m entities contribute to the total of that cell.
The value of m is called a threshold and is usually
determined by the statistical authority according to
the desired degree of confidentiality protection: m
is at least 3 but sometimes m= 5 is given. In the
case of a threshold of m=3, a cell is confidential if
the figure in the cell shows the data of only one
unit, or if the figure is the sum of two entities and
one respondent has the possibility of disclosing the
figure of the other respondent by subtraction of his
own figure from the sum. This is also known as the
threshold rule.
Context: The data collected by many national
statistical agencies are subject to national rules
regarding confidentiality.
The two main reasons for declaring data to be
primary confidential are: a) too few units in a cell;
b) dominance of one or two units in a cell. The
limits of what constitutes "too few" or "dominance"
vary between statistical domains.
In the European Union, confidential data is defined
in Article 13 of Council Regulation No 322/97, as:
1. Data used by the national authorities and the
Community authority for the production of
Community statistics shall be considered
confidential when they allow statistical units to be
identified, either directly or indirectly, thereby
disclosing individual information.
- Dominance or case of predominance. (a)
dominance rule, concentration rule, (n,k) rule: A
cell is regarded as confidential, if the n largest
units contribute more than k% to the cell total.
The n and k are given by the statistical authority
and differ quite a lot, e.g. you find that n=2 and
k=85, which means that a cell is defined as
confidential if the two largest units contribute more
than 85% to the cell total. (b) prior posterior
ambiguity rule, p/q rule: it is assumed that out of
publicly available information the contribution of
one individual to the cell total can be estimated to
within p per cent (p=error before publication);
after the publication of the statistic the value can
be estimated to within q percent (q=error after
publication). In the p/q rule the ratio p/q
represents the information gain through
publication and in the prior posterior ambiguity
rule the difference p-q. If the information gain is
unacceptable the cell is declared as confidential. P
and q are given by the statistical authority and
thus the definition of the acceptable level of
information gain.
To determine whether a statistical unit is
identifiable, account shall be taken of all the means
that might reasonably be used by a third party to
identify the said statistical unit.
2. By derogation from paragraph 1, data taken
from sources which are available to the public and
remain available to the public at the national
authorities according to national legislation, shall
not be considered confidential.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
See also: Confidentiality, data, Statistical
confidentiality
- Secondary confidentiality/derivation: Even if all
confidential cells containing small counts or cases
of predominance are protected by disclosure
control methods (=primary protection), disclosure
might be possible by recalculating confidential cells
as the difference between a total and the sum of
cells corresponding to that total. This recalculation
of primary protected cells is called derivation.
Derivation can occur (a) within one twodimensional table or higher-dimensional tables,
when margin totals are given in the lines, the
columns or in a set of lines or columns; (b)
between tables and subtables in the case of three
or more dimensions e.g. between geographic levels
or between aggregation levels (total economy,
sector); (c) between different tables on the same
aggregation or geographical level containing
different sorts of information.
Confidentiality
Data confidentiality is a property of data, usually
resulting from legislative measures, which
prevents it from unauthorized disclosure.
Context: In SDMX, "Confidentiality" refers to the
legislative measures or other formal provision
which prevent unauthorised disclosure of data that
identify a moral or physical person either directly
or indirectly. Also refers to the procedures in place
to prevent disclosure of confidential data, including
rules applying to staff, aggregation rules when
disseminating data, provision of unit records, etc.
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva, 2000
Note: Small counts and dominance are collectively
primary confidentiality.
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
133
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
aterminology.pdf
See also: Confidential data, Disclosure analysis,
Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange (SDMX)
Confidentiality edit
The confidentiality edit is a procedure developed
by the U.S. Census Bureau to provide protection in
data tables prepared from the 1990 Census.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Context: There are two different approaches: one
was used for the regular Census data; the other
was used for the long-form data, which were filled
by a sample of the population.
See also: Rejection rule
Congenital
abnormalities
Congenital abnormalities refer to the prevalence
rate of selected congenital anomalies per 10, 000
total births (includes live births and still births).
Selected congenital anomalies comprise: spina
bifida, limb reduction, Down‘s syndrome,
transportation of great vessels (non-corrected)
Both techniques apply statistical disclosure
limitation techniques to the microdata files before
they are used to prepare tables. The adjusted files
themselves are not released; they are used only to
prepare tables. For the regular Census microdata
file, the confidentiality edit involves "data
swapping" or "switching" of attributes between
matched records from different geographical units.
For small blocks, the Census Bureau increases the
sampling fraction.
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
After the microdata file has been treated in this
way, it can be used directly to prepare tables and
no further disclosure analysis is needed. For long
form data, sampling provides sufficient
confidentiality protection, except in small
geographic regions. To provide additional
protection in small geographic regions, one
household is randomly selected and a sample of its
data fields are blanked and replaced by imputed
values.
Conglomerate
A conglomerate is a firm or business enterprise
having different economic activities in different
unrelated industries. Conglomerate firms may
emerge through mergers and acquisitions and/or
investments across a diverse range of industries
for a variety of reasons such as minimization of
risk, increased access to financial and
management resources, and more efficient
allocation of resources.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Context:
Competition policy concerns have been raised,
although without universal agreement among
economists, that conglomerates facilitate
anticompetitive practices through crosssubsidization of less profitable activities aimed at
driving out competition and reciprocal
arrangements with other conglomerates in the
purchase and sale of inputs-outputs. There is
increasing evidence that conglomerates are not
necessarily more profitable and many
conglomerate firms have in recent times been
divesting different activities and focusing their
operations on fewer lines of business.
Configurational
sampling
See Grid sampling
See also: Grid sampling
Conflict of interest
Conflict of interest occurs when an individual or a
corporation (either private or governmental) is in a
position to exploit his or their own professional or
official capacity in some way for personal or
corporate benefit.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: OECD, 2007, Bribery in Public
Procurement: Methods, Actors and CounterMeasures, OECD, Paris
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Diversification, Merger
Conglomerate merger
A Conglomerate merger is a merger between firms
in unrelated business, e.g., between an automobile
manufacturer and a food processing firm.
Conflict rule
A conflict rule is a logical condition or a restriction
to the value of a data item or a data group which
must not be met if the data is to be considered
correct.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
134
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Arguments have been advanced that the burden of
proof must be higher than circumstantial evidence
of concerted or parallel behaviour and uniform
pricing and output policies. In other words,
conscious parallelism in and of itself should not
necessarily be construed as evidence of collusion.
The problem arises more from the nature of the
market or industry structure in which firms operate
than from their respective behaviour.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Horizontal merger, Merger, Vertical
merger
Conjoint analysis
approaches
The conjoint analysis approaches infer a value
from the hypothetical choices or trade-offs that
people make. People are asked to state preference
between one group of environmental services or
characteristics at a given price or cost to the
individual and another group of environmental
characteristics at a different price or cost.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 9.102
Consent
A process by which information concerning the
donation process is presented to the donor or the
donor‘s representative with an opportunity for
them to ask questions, after which approval is
documented.
Context: Also referred to as ―informed consent‖
Connected products
Products which are used directly and solely for
environmental protection (for example septic
tanks, filters, waste bags).
Source: OECD, 2006, Creation and Governance of
Human Genetic Research Databases, OECD. Paris
Conservation
Sauvegarde
Conservation is the management of human use of
organisms or ecosystems to ensure that such use
is sustainable
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.83
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Conservation Reserve
Program (CRP)
Programme de mise
en réserve des terres
fragiles (CRP)
The Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) is a
major provision of the United States‘ Food Security
Act of 1985 and extended under the Food,
Agriculture, Conservation and Trade Act of 1990,
and the Food, Agriculture, Improvement and
Reform Act of 1996 was designed to reduce
erosion on 40 to 45 million acres (16 to 18 million
hectares) of farm land.
Conscious parallelism
Under conditions of oligopoly, the pricing and
output actions of one firm have a significant impact
upon that of its rivals. Firms may after some
period of repeated actions become conscious or
aware of this fact and without an explicit
agreement coordinate their behaviour as if they
were engaged in collusive behaviour or a cartel to
fix prices and restrict output. The fear that
departure from such behaviour may lead to costly
price cutting, lower profits and market share
instability may further create incentives for firms
to maintain such an implicit arrangement amongst
themselves.
Context: Under the programme, producers who
sign contracts agree to convert erodible crop land
to approved conservation uses for ten years.
Participating producers receive annual rental
payments and cash or payment in kind to share up
to 50% of the cost of establishing permanent
vegetative cover.
Context: This form of conscious parallel behaviour
or tacit collusion generally has the same economic
effect as a combination, conspiracy or price fixing
agreement. However, whether or not conscious
parallel behaviour constitutes an illegal action
which is restrictive of competition is a subject of
controversy in both competition law and
economics. Price uniformity may be a normal
outcome of rational economic behaviour in markets
with few sellers and homogenous products.
The CRP is part of the Environmental Conservation
Acreage Reserve Program. The 1996 FAIR Act
authorised a 36.4 million acre (14.7 million
hectares) maximum under CRP, its 1995 level. This
has been extended to 39.2 million acres (15.8
million hectares) under the FSRI Act of 2002.
135
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2002-2007,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
See also: Quality – IMF, Serviceability
Consistency check
A consistency check detects whether the value of
two or more data items are not in contradiction.
Conservation tillage
Conservation tillage is a tillage system that creates
a suitable soil environment for growing a crop and
that conserves soil, water and energy resources
mainly through the reduction in the intensity of
tillage, and retention of plant residues
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Conventional tillage
Consignment (rail)
Envoi
Collection of goods transported under cover of the
same transport document in accordance with
regulations or tariffs in force where they exist.
Consistency edit
A consistency edit is a check for determinant
relationships, such as parts adding to a total or
harvested acres being less than or equal to planted
acres.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Consistency
Consistency refers to logical and numerical
coherence.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Context: An estimator is called consistent if it
converges in probability to its estimand as sample
increases (The International Statistical Institute,
"The Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms", edited
by Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003).
Consistency error
A consistency error refers to the occurrence of the
values of two or more data items which do not
satisfy some predefined relationship between those
data items.
Consistency over time, within datasets and across
datasets (often referred to as inter-sectoral
consistency) are major aspects of consistency. In
each, consistency in a looser sense carries the
notion of "at least reconcilable." For example, if
two series purporting to cover the same
phenomena differ, the differences in time of
recording, valuation, and coverage should be
identified so that the series can be reconciled.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Inconsistency over time refers to revisions that
lead to breaks in series stemming from, for
example, changes in concepts, definitions, and
methodology.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Inconsistency within datasets may exist, for
example, when two sides of an implied balancing
statement-assets and liabilities or inflows and
outflows - do not balance.
Consistency in
aggregation
An index is said to be consistent in aggregation
when the index for some aggregate has the same
value whether it is calculated directly in a single
operation, without distinguishing its components,
or it is calculated in two or more steps by first
calculating separate indices, or sub-indices, for its
components, or subcomponents, and then
aggregating them, the same formula being used at
each step.
Inconsistency across datasets may exist when, for
example, exports and imports in the national
accounts do not reconcile with exports and imports
within the balance or payments.
Within the IMF definition of quality, "consistency"
is one of the elements of "serviceability".
Source: International Monetary Fund, "Data
Quality Assessment Framework – DQAF –
Glossary", unpublished
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
136
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
sector
A balance sheet obtained by netting out inter-MFI
positions (e.g. inter-MFI loans and deposits) in the
aggregated MFI balance sheet. It provides
statistical information on the MFI sector‘s assets
and liabilities vis-à-vis residents of the euro area
not belonging to this sector (i.e. general
government and other euro area residents) and
vis-à-vis non-euro area residents. It is the main
statistical source for the calculation of monetary
aggregates, and it provides the basis for the
regular analysis of the counterparts of M3.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Consistent edits
A set of edits which do not contradict each other is
considered to be consistent. If edits are not
consistent, then no record can pass the edits.
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
See also: Monetary financial institutions (MFIs)
Consolidated debt
See Consolidated amount
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Consolidated amount
Consolidated
reporting
Reporting covering the claims and liabilities of all
offices worldwide of the same entity, but excluding
positions between offices of the same entity.
Offices include head offices, branch offices, and
subsidiaries. A consolidated balance sheet refers to
a balance sheet grouping of assets and liabilities of
a parent company and all its offices, after
elimination of all unrealized profits on intra-group
trading and of all intra-group balances.
Consistent estimator
An estimator is consistent if the probability that it
is in error by more than a given amount tends to
zero as the sample become larger.
Source: Assessment of the Quality in Statistics,
fifth meeting, Eurostat, Luxembourg, 2-3 May
2002, Item 4: Glossary
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Consolidated accounts
Those accounts which are drawn up to reflect the
affairs of a group of entities. For example, a
ministry or holding company with many different
operating agencies subsidiary companies may
prepare consolidated accounts reflecting the affairs
of the organisation as a whole, as well as accounts
for each operating agency/subsidiary.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Consolidation (in
Consolidation
national accounts)
Consolidation is a special kind of cancelling out of
flows and stocks; it involves the elimination of
those transactions or debtor/creditor relationships
which occur between two transactors belonging to
the same institutional sector or sub-sector.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Context: The elimination, both from uses and
resources, of transactions which occur between
units when the latter are grouped and to the
elimination of reciprocal financial assets and
liabilities.
Consolidated amount
The debt-service payments and arrears, or debt
stock, restructured under a Paris Club rescheduling
agreement.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Under the SDDS, in the context of fiscal sector
data an indication of the methods used to combine
data from separate central government accounts
and funds to derive statistics for transactions
between the entire central government and any
other sector, exclusive of transactions between
units within the same coverage of central
government, as defined in the Government Finance
Statistics Manual:
Consolidated balance
sheet of the MFI
1) whether all transactions between units of
general government have been eliminated in
consolidation is requested;
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
137
consolidation period is one year, but sometimes
debt payments over a two- or three-year period
have been consolidated, corresponding with a
multiyear arrangement with the IMF.
2) debt issues of one unit of central government
that are held by another unit are reported on a
consolidated or unconsolidated basis (e.g., central
government securities held by the social security
fund) are also specified.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: SNA 3.121 [11.52]
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Consolidation (of data), Grossing /
Netting
Consortium bank
A consortium bank refers to a joint venture in
which no single owner has a controlling interest
Consolidation (of
data)
The process that takes data from different
systems, entities (and possibly formats) and
combines that information to create a unified view.
Source: Guide to the International Banking
Statistics, Bank for International Settlements,
Basel, Switzerland, 2000, Part III – Glossary of
Terms
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/meth07.pdf
See also: Consolidation (in national accounts)
Conspiracy
A conspiracy is normally a covert or secret
arrangement between competing firms in order to
earn higher profits by entering into an agreement
to fix prices and restrict output.
Consolidation (of
firms)
Consolidation generally refers to combination or
amalgamation of two or more firms into one new
firm through the transfer of net assets. The new
firm may be specially organized to distinguish it
from a merger.
The terms combination, conspiracy, agreement and
collusion are often used interchangeably.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Agreement (to lessen or restrict
competition), Collusion, Combination
Consolidation (of
government debt)
Consolidation (of government debt) is a means of
presenting government accounts in which, where a
liability of a government-sector agency and
institution is held as an asset somewhere else in
the government sector.
Constable markets
See Contestability
See also: Contestability
Constant elasticity of
substitution index
A family of price indices that allows for substitution
between products. Within an elementary
aggregate, the Jevons index is a particular case of
a constant elasticity of substitution index. Another
case is the Lloyd-Moulton index.
Context: Debt data shown in the OECD's Economic
Outlook are consolidated to the largest possible
extent, given data limitations
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Consolidation period
In Paris Club restructuring agreements, the period
in which debt-service payments to be restructured
(the ―current maturities consolidated‖) have fallen
or will fall due. The beginning of the consolidation
period may precede, coincide with, or come after
the date of the Agreed Minute. The standard
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Constant prices
138
Flux en termes réels
Constant prices are obtained by directly factoring
changes over time in the values of flows or stocks
of goods and services into two components
reflecting changes in the prices of the goods and
services concerned and changes in their volumes
(i.e. changes in ―constant price terms‖); the term
―at constant prices‖ commonly refers to series
which use a fixed-base Laspeyres formula.
sum of frequencies in a set of classes shall be a
prescribed constant.
Context: The volume measure of GDP is frequently
referred to as "GDP at constant prices". When time
series are constructed by multiplying the values of
the base year by fixed base Laspeyres volume
indices, it is appropriate to describe the resulting
series as being at the constant prices of the base
year. However, when the values of the base year
are extrapolated by multiplying them by annual
chain volume indices it is no longer strictly correct
to describe them in this way. Nevertheless, the
series of values are expressed at the general price
level of the base year and it is convenient to
continue to describe them as being "at constant
prices" (SNA 16.2. 16.71).
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th edition,
prepared for the International Statistical Institute
by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the International
Statistical Institute by Longman Scientific and
Technical
Construction
Construction
In ISIC Rev. 3 the Tabulation Category (F) relating
to construction is made up of the following 5
groups:
- site preparation;
- building of complete constructions or parts
thereof; civil engineering;
- building installation;
- building completion;
- renting of construction or demolition equipment
with operator
A stock of assets is expressed at constant prices
when all members of the stock are valued at the
prices of a single base period. (Measuring Capital:
OECD Manual, Annex 1 Glossary of Technical
Terms Used in the Manual, OECD, 2001)
Context: The United Nations defines construction
as comprising ―economic activity directed to the
creation, renovation, repair or extension of fixed
assets in the form of buildings, land improvements
of an engineering nature, and other such
engineering constructions as roads, bridges, dams
and so forth.‖
A valuation expressed at the prices prevailing
during a fixed reference or base period (Chain
Fisher Volume Index, Glossary - Statistics Canada.
Available at
http://www.statcan.ca/english/concepts/chainfishe
r/glossary.htm#index).
Construction activity represents a significant share
of the economies of all OECD Member countries
both in terms of its contribution to GDP and total
employment. It is also an important market for
materials and products produced by other sectors
of the economy, e.g. manufacturing. A
characteristic feature of construction activity is its
volatility and sensitivity to movements in overall
business activity and the business cycle. For this
reason, construction statistics are key economic
indicators that are monitored closely by analysts in
both government and the private sector.
Source: SNA 16.2, 16.71
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Gross domestic product – constant prices
Constant prices test
See Identity test
See also: Identity test
However, the United Nations guidelines distinguish
between ―construction activity‖, which may be
carried out by any unit irrespective of its
predominant activity, and ―the construction
industry‖, which is confined to those units whose
predominant activity falls within Tabulation
Category F (Construction) of ISIC Rev. 3
Constant quantities
test
See Fixed basket test
See also: Fixed basket test
Constant returns to
scale
See Economies of scale
Source: ISIC Rev. 3 and NACE Rev. 1.
See also: Economies of scale
See also International Recommendations for
Construction Statistics, United Nations, 1977,
Series M, No. 47, Rev. 1, para. 15
Constraint
Contrainte
Specification of what may be contained in a data or
metadata set in terms of the content or, for data
only, in terms of the set of key combinations to
which specific attributes (defined by the data
structure) may be attached.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
See also: International Standard Industrial
Classification of All Economic Activities (ISIC),
NACE
Context: A constraint in a set of data is a limitation
imposed by external conditions, e.g. that a number
of variate values shall have zero mean, or that the
139
Construction
contractor
A firm which undertakes works as part of a
construction project by virtue of a contract with a
client.
completed
Work is completed when the building or other
structure is physically ready to be occupied or to
be put into use
Source: Sources and Methods: Construction Price
Indices, OECD, Eurostat, 1997, page 11
Source: Bulletin of Housing and Building Statistics
for Europe and North America, UNECE, Geneva,
2000, Annex II, Definitions and General Terms,
page 83
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/document/4/0,2340,en_2649
_34247_2367940_1_1_1_1,00.html
See also: Value of work put in place (construction)
Construction, other
Other construction comprises all construction
projects not predominantly involving the erection
of buildings
Construction
indicators
Construction indicators can be divided into two
groups. The first comprising permits issued, new
orders and work started (based on estimated
value, area or numbers upon completion) are
indicators of future activity.
Source: International Recommendations for
Construction Statistics, Statistical Papers, Series
M, No. 47, Rev. 1, United Nations, New York,
1997, para. 73
The second group, comprising work put in place,
work in progress and work completed are
indicators of work actually done within a given
period of time or at a particular point in time.
Consumer durables
Biens de
consommation
durables
Consumer durables are durable goods acquired by
households for final consumption (i.e. those that
are not used by households as stores of value or
by unincorporated enterprises owned by
households for purposes of production); they may
be used for purposes of consumption repeatedly or
continuously over a period of a year or more
Source: Main Economic Indicators - Comparative
Methodological Analysis: Industry, retail and
Construction Indicators, OECD, Paris, 2002, page
70
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/document/4/0,2340,en_2649
_34247_2367940_1_1_1_1,00.html
Source: AN.m - Annex to chapter XIII and 9.38
Construction price
indices
In broad terms, construction price indices provide
measures of changes in the prices of either the
inputs to, or outputs of, construction activity.
However, terminology used in the context of price
indices for construction activity varies between
countries.
Consumer goods
Biens de
consommation
Consumer goods are goods or service that are
used without further transformation in production
by households, non-profit institutions serving
households or government units for the direct
satisfaction of individual needs or wants or the
collective needs of members of the community
There is also considerable variation in the
inclusion/exclusion of items such as transport
costs, consumption taxes, fittings, etc.
Source: SNA, para. 9.41
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Two broad approaches are used by national
agencies to compile construction price indices.
These comprise:
Consumer Nominal
Assistance Coefficient (NACc)
The Consumer Nominal Assistance Co-efficient
(NACc) is an indicator of the nominal rate of
assistance to consumers measuring the ratio
between the value of consumption expenditure on
agricultural commodities domestically produced
including support to producers and that valued at
world market prices without support to consumers
- prior breakdown methods; and
- subsequent breakdown methods.
There are a number of variations within each of
these approaches
Source: Sources and Methods: Construction Price
Indices, OECD, Eurostat, 1997, Page 11
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/document/4/0,2340,en_2649
_34247_2367940_1_1_1_1,00.html
See also: Consumer Nominal Protection Coefficient
(NPCc), Producer Nominal Protection Co-efficient
(NPC)
Construction work
140
Consumer Nominal
Protection Coefficient
(NPCc)
An indicator of the nominal rate of protection for
consumers measuring the ratio between the
average price paid by consumers (at farm gate)
and the border price (measured at farm gate
level).
Consumer price index
(CPI) basket
A commonly used term for the goods and services
priced for the purpose of compiling the CPI.
Source: A Guide to the Consumer Price Index 13th Series, Glossary, Australian Bureau of
Statistics
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation, OECD, 2002 - Glossary
of Agricultural Policy Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/0/9171
F5CDC94489A9CA25697E0018FD59?Open&Highlig
ht=0,glossary
See also: Consumer Nominal Assistance Coefficient (NACc)
Consumer price index
Indice des prix à la
consommation
The consumer price index (CPI) measures changes
over time in the general level of prices of goods
and services that a reference population acquires,
uses or pays for consumption.
Consumer Support
Estimate (CSE)
The Consumer Support Estimate (CSE) is an
indicator of the annual monetary value of gross
transfers to (from) consumers of agricultural
commodities, measured at the farm gate (first
consumer) level, arising from policy measures
which support agriculture, regardless of their
nature, objectives or impact on consumption of
farm products.
A consumer price index is estimated as a series of
summary measures of the period-to-period
proportional change in the prices of a fixed set of
consumer goods and services of constant quantity
and characteristics, acquired, used or paid for by
the reference population. Each summary measure
is constructed as a weighted average of a large
number of elementary aggregate indices.
Context: The CSE includes explicit and implicit
transfers from consumers associated with: market
price support on domestically produced
consumption (transfers to producers from
consumers); transfers to the budget and/or
importers on the share of consumption that is
imported (other transfers from consumers). It is
net of any payment to consumers to compensate
them for their contribution to market price support
of a specific commodity (consumer subsidy from
taxpayers); and the producer contribution (as
consumers of domestically produced crops) to the
market price support on crops used in animal feed
(excess feed cost). When negative, transfers from
consumers measure the implicit tax on
consumption associated with policies to the
agricultural sector. Although consumption
expenditure is increased/reduced by the amount of
the implicit tax/subsidy, this indicator is not in
itself an estimate of the impacts on consumption
expenditure.
Each of the elementary aggregate indices is
estimated using a sample of prices for a defined
set of goods and services obtained in, or by
residents of, a specific region from a given set of
outlets or other sources of consumption goods and
services.
Context: The International Conference of Labour
Statisticians (ICLS) Resolutions laid down certain
international standards for methods for
computation of the CPI which contributed to the
international comparability of the CPI. The latest
(1987) recommendation on CPI was followed by a
manual on methods published in 1989. It is aimed
at a global audience and covers such important
aspects of CPI as its scope, definition of
elementary aggregates, the derivation of weights,
sampling, procedures for collecting price data,
substitution problems, etc.
The percentage CSE is the ratio of the CSE to the
total value of consumption expenditure on
commodities domestically produced, measured by
the value of total consumption (at farm gate
prices) minus budgetary support to consumers
(consumer subsidies). The nomenclature and
definitions of this indicator replaced the former
Consumer Subsidy Equivalent as from 1999
Since that time, significant developments have
been made in the practice of CPI construction. It
was in recognition of these developments that the
joint ECE/ILO Meeting on CPI, November 1997 in
its conclusions recommended the revision of the
ILO manual. The new manual was released in
2004.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning Consumer Price Indices
Adopted by the 14th International Conference of
Labour Statisticians, October-November 1987,
para. 2
See also: Producer Support Estimate (PSE)
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Consumer welfare
Consumer welfare refers to the individual benefits
derived from the consumption of goods and
services. In theory, individual welfare is defined by
an individual's own assessment of his/her
See also: Producer price index
141
satisfaction, given prices and income. Exact
measurement of consumer welfare therefore
requires information about individual preferences.
para. 9.99.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Context: In practice, applied welfare economics
uses the notion of consumer surplus to measure
consumer welfare. When measured over all
consumers, consumers' surplus is a measure of
aggregate consumer welfare. In anti-trust
applications, some argue that the goal is to
maximize consumers' surplus, while others argue
that producer benefits should also be counted.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Consumption
Consommation
Consumption is an activity in which institutional
units use up goods or services; consumption can
be either intermediate or final. It is the use of
goods and services for the satisfaction of individual
or collective human needs or wants.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Alternatively, a consumption of a good or service is
one that is used (without further transformation in
production) by households, non-profit institutions
serving households (NPISHs) or government units
for the direct satisfaction of individual needs or
wants or the collective needs of members of the
community
See also: Consumers' surplus, Deadweight welfare
loss
Consumers
Consumers are individual persons or groups of
persons living together as households.
Context: There are several types of consumption:
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
- intermediate consumption consists of the goods
and services used by enterprises as inputs into
their processes of production; it is excluded from
CPIs;
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
- collective consumption consists mainly of the
collective services provided by governments to the
community as a whole; it is excluded from CPIs;
Consumers' surplus
Consumers' surplus is a measure of consumer
welfare and is defined as the excess of social
valuation of product over the price actually paid. It
is measured by the area of a triangle below a
demand curve and above the observed price.
- final individual consumption consists of goods
and services that individual households may
acquire in order to satisfy their own needs and
wants.
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Context: Consumers' surplus is a widely used
measure of consumer welfare because it only
requires information on the demand curve (prices
and quantities). However, there is considerable
debate over the degree to which it corresponds to
more theoretically appealing measures of
consumer welfare. In general, consumers' surplus
is more useful the lower is the income elasticity of
demand.
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Source: SNA paras. 1.49, 9.39, 9.41
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Glossary of Industrial Organisation Economics and
Competition Law, compiled by R. S. Khemani and
D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the Directorate for
Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise Affairs, OECD, 1993
See also: Household final consumption expenditure
Consumption
expenditures of the
population (CEP)
The International Comparison Project (ICP)
concept of "consumption" that includes both
household expenditures and expenditures of
government on such categories as health and
education.
The difference between the price paid by an
individual for a particular good or service and the
maximum he would accept to pay.
United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
142
Glossary
para. 7.265
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Contact
A contact is an instance of a role of an individual or
an organization (or organization part or
organization person) to whom an information
item(s), a material object(s) and/or person(s) can
be sent to or from in a specified context.
Consumption good or Bien ou service de
service
consommation
A consumption good or service is one that is used
(without further transformation in production) by
households, NPISHs or government units for the
direct satisfaction of individual needs or wants or
the collective needs of members of the community
Context: In SDMX, "Contact" describes contact
points for the data or metadata, including how to
reach the contact points.
Source: SNA 9.41
Attributes of "contacts" (ISO 11179):
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
- Contact mail address: The mailing address of the
Contact.
- Contact name: The name of the Contact.
- Contact title: The name of the position held by
the Contact.
- Electronic mail address: An e-mail address for
correspondence with the Contact.
- Phone number: A telephone number for spoken
correspondence with the Contact.
- Fax number: A facsimile number for
correspondence with the Contact.
Consumption of fixed Consommation de
capital
capital fixe
Consumption of fixed capital represents the
reduction in the value of the fixed assets used in
production during the accounting period resulting
from physical deterioration, normal obsolescence
or normal accidental damage
Contact information is the information that enables
a Contact to be located or communicated with.
Source: SNA 10.27 [6.179, 10.118]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: ISO/IEC 11179-3 "Information
technology-Metadata registries (MDR)-Part 3:
Registry metamodel and basic attributes",
February 2003
Consumption of own
production
Goods or services that are consumed by the same
household that produces them. The housing
services consumed by owner-occupiers fall within
this category. If goods and services produced and
consumed within the same household are to be
included in CPIs, prices must be imputed for them.
Their inclusion or exclusion depends on the
intended scope of the CPI.
See also: ISO / IEC 11179, Statistical Data and
Metadata Exchange (SDMX), Stewardship (of
metadata), Submission
Contact person and
organisation MetaStore
Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types refers to
the contact person, title, unit, organisation, phone
number, fax, number, email, city, country, postal
code
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
See also: Contact
Contagion
Contagion are disturbances in financial markets in
one country or region triggering off a financial
crisis in other countries and regions
Consumption value
method (for standing
timber valuation)
A variant of the stumpage value method. Different
prices are used for different ages or diameter
classes. The consumption value method measures
the value of the stock as if it were all cut now.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
Container
Special box to carry freight, strengthened and
stackable and allowing horizontal or vertical
transfers.
143
Errors of observation or objective measurement, of
recording, of imputation, or of other processing
which results in associating a wrong value of the
characteristic with a specified unit.
Context: The technical definition of the container
is: "Article of transport equipment which is:
a) of a permanent character and accordingly
strong enough to be suitable for repeated use;
b) specially designed to facilitate the carriage of
goods, by one or more mode of transport, without
intermediate reloading;
c) fitted with devices permitting its ready handling,
particularly its transfer from one mode of transport
to another;
d) so designed as to be easy to fill and empty;
e) stackable; and,
f) having an internal volume of 1 m 3 or more."
Context: Coverage errors are excluded from this
definition.
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Swap bodies are excluded. Although without
internal volume, and therefore not satisfying
criterion (f) above, flats used in maritime transport
should be considered to be a special type of
container and therefore are included here.
Contestability
A contestable market is one in which the following
conditions are satisfied:
a) there are no barriers to entry or exit;
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
b) all firms, both incumbent and potential entrants,
have access to the same production technology;
c) there is perfect information on prices, available
to all consumers and firms;
d) entrants can enter and exit before incumbents
can adjust prices.
Container ship (fully
Porte-conteneur
cellular - fc)
cellulaire
Ship fitted throughout with fixed or portable cell
guides for the carriage of containers.
In contrast to perfect competition, a contestable
market may have any number of firms (including
only one or a few) and these firms need not be
price-takers. The analysis of contestable markets is
designed for cases in which the existence of scale
economies precludes a large number of
competitors.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Containment
Confinement
Containment is the retention of hazardous material
so as to ensure that it is effectively prevented from
dispersing into the environment, or released only
at an acceptable level. Containment may occur in
specially built containment spaces
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context
The context is the circumstances, purpose, and
perspective under which an object is defined or
used.
Contaminant
Contaminant
A contaminant is any physical, chemical, biological
or radiologic substance or matter that has an
adverse effect on air, water, land/soil or biota. The
term is frequently used synonymously with
pollutant
Context: A context description language is the
identifier of the language used in the context
description (ISO/IEC FCD 11179-3, "Registry
Metamodel, Final Committee Draft", 2001).
The administration record for a context is a context
administration record.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
The textual description of the context is a context
description.
See also: Pollutant
The identifier of the language used in the context
description is a context description language
identifier (ISO/IEC 11179-3 "Information
Content error
144
technology-Metadata registries (MDR)-Part 3:
Registry metamodel and basic attributes",
February 2003).
occurrence of some uncertain future event. They
are therefore not yet liabilities, and may never be
if the specific contingency does not materialize.
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
See also: Administered item
Contingent valuation
Estimation
contingente
Contingent valuation refers to the method of
valuation used in cost—benefit analysis and
environmental accounting. It is conditional
(contingent) on the construction of hypothetical
markets, reflected in expressions of the willingness
to pay for potential environmental benefits or for
the avoidance of their loss
Context description
language
A context description language is the identifier of
the language used in the context description.
Source: ISO/IEC FCD 11179-3, Registry
Metamodel, Final Committee Draft 2001
Context: Valuation method where hypothetical
situations are presented to a representative
sample of the relevant population in order to elicit
statements about how much they would be willing
to pay for specific environmental services.
Contingencies
These are contractual financial arrangements
whose principal characteristic is that one or more
conditions must be fulfilled before a financial
transaction takes place. Contingencies are not
recognized as financial assets (liabilities) on
balance sheet because they are not actual claims
(or obligations). However, these arrangements can
potentially affect financial soundness.
United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 9.92
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Contingency funds or
reserves
A separate fund or a budget provision set aside to
meet unforeseen and unavoidable requirements
that may arise during the budget year. Certain
types of contingency (such as meeting loan
guarantee obligations) may be specified as a
potential use for such funds.
See also: Valuation of natural assets
Continuing education Formation continue
and training
For the purpose of these indicators, continuing
education and training for adults is defined as all
kinds of general and job-related education and
training that is organised, financed or sponsored
by authorities, provided by employers or selffinanced.
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Contingent assets
Actifs éventuels ou
conditionnels
Contingent assets arise from contractual financial
arrangements between institutional units which do
not give rise to unconditional requirements either
to make payments or to provide other objects of
value; often the arrangements themselves do not
have transferable economic value so they are not
actual current financial assets and so they should
not be recorded in the System of National Accounts
(SNA); the principal characteristic of contingencies
is that one or more conditions must be fulfilled
before a financial transaction takes place
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Continuing students
Continuing students are students who were
included in the enrolment statistics at that level
the preceding reference year
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 38
Source: SNA 11.25
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Continuity
The property whereby the price index is a
continuous function of its price and quantity
vectors.
Contingent liabilities
Obligations that have been entered into, but the
timing and amount of which are contingent on the
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
145
Contract crops
(United States)
Contract crops are crops eligible for Production
Flexibility Contract Payments: wheat, maize,
sorghum, barley, oats, rice, and upland cotton
worker
A contributing family worker is a person who holds
a self employment job in a market-oriented
establishment operated by a related person living
in the same household, and who cannot be
regarded as a partner because of the degree of his
or her commitment to the operation of the
establishment, in terms of the working time or
other factors to be determined by national
circumstances, is not at a level comparable with
that of the head of the establishment
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.82
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
See also: Unpaid family members (working in an
establishment)
Contract escalation
See Indexation
Contribution (to a
Cotisation
pension plan)
A payment made to a pension plan by a plan
sponsor or a plan member.
See also: Indexation
Contract migrant
Travailleurs migrants
workers
sous contrat
Contract migrant workers are persons working in a
country other than their own under contractual
arrangements that set limits on the period of
employment and on the specific job held by the
migrant (that is to say, contract migrant workers
cannot change jobs without permission granted by
the authorities of the receiving state
Context: Identical term, "Pension contribution"
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Contribution base
The reference salary used to calculate the
contribution.
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Contract price
A general term referring to a written sales
instrument that specifies both the price and
shipment terms.
Contribution holiday
Suspension provisoire
des cotisations
A period when the contributions to a pension
scheme are put on hold, the most common reason
for this being a situation of overfunding.
Context: A contract may include arrangements for
a single shipment or multiple shipments. Usually it
covers a period of time in excess of one month.
Contracts are often unique in that all the pricedetermining characteristics in one contract are not
repeated exactly in any other contract.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Overfunding
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Contribution rate
Taux de cotisation
The amount (typically expressed as a percentage
of the contribution base) that is needed to be paid
into the pension fund.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Context: Identical term, "Funding rate"
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Contracting party
Partie contractante
A contracting party is a country that has signed, or
otherwise agrees to abide by the terms of, an
international agreement
See also: Contribution base
Contributory cause of
death
A contributory cause of death is a significant
condition that unfavourably influences the course
of the morbid process and thus contributes to the
fatal outcome, but which is not related to the
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Contributing family
Travailleurs familiaux
146
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
disease or condition directly causing death
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Control of a
Contrôle d‟une société
corporation
Control of a corporation occurs when a single
institutional unit owning more than a half of the
shares, or equity, of a corporation is able to control
its policy and operations by outvoting all other
shareholders, if necessary.
See also: Underlying cause of death
Contributory pension Régime de pension
scheme
contributif
A pension scheme where both the employer and
the members have to pay into the scheme.
Similarly, a small, organised group of shareholders
whose combined ownership of shares exceeds 50
per cent of the total is able to control the
corporation by acting in concert.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
In practice, when ownership of shares is widely
diffused among a large number of shareholders,
control may be secured by owning 20 per cent or
less of the total shares.
See also: Non-contributory pension scheme
Control (in statistics) Contrôle
There are two principal ways in which this term is
used in statistics.
Source: SNA 4.27 and 4.28
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Context: If a process produces a set of data under
what are essentially the same conditions and the
internal variations are found to be random, then
the process is said to be statistically under control.
The separate observations are, in fact equivalent
to random drawings from a population distributed
according to some fixed probability law.
Control of enterprises
Control over enterprises is generally viewed to be
exercised when an individual or group of investors
hold more than 50 per cent of the common voting
stock of the enterprise or firm.
The second usage concerns experimentation for
the testing of a new method, process or factor
against an accepted standard. That part of the test
which involves the standard of comparison is
known as the control.
However, "effective control" may be exercised
when the investor(s) holds a large block of voting
stock even when it is less than 50 per cent but the
remaining shares are widely held by many smaller
investors. Control of enterprises may also be
exercised through interlocking directorates and
inter-corporate ownership links between firms as in
the case of conglomerates.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Control / controls (in
management and
administration)
There are two meanings relevant to management
and administration:
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
- mechanisms and means for guidance, selfregulation, or restraint, intended to prevent
mishap, as in a pilot controlling an aircraft. Many
languages do not have words directly equivalent to
this meaning of ―control‖. In some countries, for
example the Netherlands, the English word is
borrowed and used to convey this meaning of
control; and
Controlled rounding
To solve the additivity problem, a procedure called
controlled rounding was developed.
Context: It is a form of random rounding, but it is
constrained to have the sum of the published
entries in each row and column equal to the
appropriate published marginal totals. Linear
programming methods are used to identify a
controlled rounding pattern for a table.
- to check, verify, audit or to keep a copy of the
accounts.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Hyperlink:
147
required to take the necessary measures to protect
the maritime area against the adverse effects of
human activities so as to safeguard human health
and to conserve marine ecosystems and, when
practicable, restore those areas that have been
damaged.
Controlled Tabular
Adjustment (CTA)
A method to protect tabular data based on the
selective adjustment of cell values. Sensitive cell
values are replaced by either of their closest safe
values and small adjustments are made to other
cells to restore the table additivity. Controlled
tabular adjustment has been developed as an
alternative to cell suppression.
Context: The Convention was opened for signature
on 22 September 1992 but has yet to enter into
force. It will enter into force when ratified by all
contracting parties of the 1974 Convention for the
Prevention of Marine Pollution from Land-based
Sources (the ―Paris Convention‖) and the 1972
Convention for the Prevention of Marine Pollution
by Dumping from Ships and Aircraft (the ―Oslo
Convention‖).
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Controlled vocabulary
A controlled vocabulary is an established list of
standardized terminology for use in indexing and
retrieval of information. An example of a controlled
vocabulary is subject headings used to describe
library resources.
Convention on
International Trade in
Endangered Species
of Wild Fauna and
Flora (CITES)
Convention sur le
commerce
international des
espèces sauvages de
faune et de flore
menacées d‟extinction
(CITES)
The Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora
(CITES) is an international treaty drawn up in 1973
to protect wildlife through controlling international
trade.
Context: A controlled vocabulary ensures that a
subject will be described using the same preferred
term each time it is indexed and this will make it
easier to find all information about a specific topic
during the search process.
Source: Government of Canada, Thesauri and
Controlled Vocabularies, Definitions, website
Context: CITES entered into force on 1 July 1975
and now has a membership of 136 countries.
Member countries act by banning commercial
international trade in an agreed list of endangered
species and by regulating and monitoring trade in
others that might become endangered.
Convention for the
Conservation of
Antarctic Marine
Living Resources
(CCAMLR)
Convention pour la
conservation de la
faune et de la flore
marines de
l‟Antarctique
(CCAMLR)
The Convention for the Conservation of Antarctic
Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) which entered
into force in 1982, has as its objective the
conservation of Antarctic marine living resources
(the term ―conservation‖ includes rational use).
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Conventional
Logements classiques
dwellings
A conventional dwelling is a room or suite of rooms
and its accessories in a permanent building or
structurally separated part thereof which, by the
way it has been built, rebuilt or converted, is
intended for habitation by one household and is
not, at the time of the census, used wholly for
other purposes.
Context: Signature and ratification is open to all
States and regional economic integration
organisations. The Convention applies to the
Antarctic marine living resources of the area south
of 60°S latitude and to the Antarctic marine living
resources of the area between that latitude and
the Antarctic Convergence that form part of the
Antarctic marine ecosystem.
It should have a separate access to a street (direct
or via a garden or grounds) or to a common space
within the building (staircase, passage, gallery and
so on).
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Examples of dwellings are houses, flats, and suites
of rooms and so forth.
Convention for the
Convention pour la
Protection of the
protection de
Marine Environment
l‟environment marin
of the North-East
dans l‟Atlantique
Atlantic (OSPAR)
Nord- Est (OSPAR)
The Convention for the Protection of the Marine
Environment of the North-East Atlantic (OSPAR)
requires contracting parties to take all possible
steps to prevent and eliminate pollution of the
marine environment. Also, contracting parties are
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.333
Conventional
rounding
148
A disclosure control method for tables of counts.
When using conventional rounding, each count is
rounded to the nearest multiple of a fixed base.
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Context: For example, using a base of 5, counts
ending in 1 or 2 are rounded down and replaced by
counts ending in 0 and counts ending in 3 or 4 are
rounded up and replaced by counts ending in 5.
Counts ending between 6 and 9 are treated
similarly. Counts with a last digit of 0 or 5 are kept
unchanged. When rounding to base 10, a count
ending in 5 may always be rounded up, or it may
be rounded up or down based on a rounding
convention.
Convertible issue
A bond or note that can be converted for newly
issued shares or bonds at predetermined prices
during specified periods of time.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Convertible preferred
stock
Convertible into a fixed amount of common stock
at the option of the owner.
Conventional tillage
Conventional tillage is a tillage system using
cultivation as the major means of seedbed
preparation and weed control.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Context: Typically includes a sequence of soil
tillage, such as ploughing and harrowing, to
produce a fine seedbed, and also the removal of
most of the plant residue from the previous crop.
In this context the terms cultivation and tillage are
synonymous, with emphasis on soil preparation.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Convertible rate
floating-rate notes
Issue that carries the option to convert either from
an initial floating-rate note into a fixed-rate bond
or from a fixed-rate bond into a floating-rate note.
This provides ways in which investors and
borrowers can speculate or hedge against the
future course of interest rates.
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
See also: Conservation tillage
Convertible bonds
A convertible bond is a fixed-rate bond that may,
at the option of the investor, be converted into the
equity of the borrower or its parent. The price at
which the bond is convertible into equity is set at
the time of issue and typically will be at a premium
to the market value of the equity at the time of
issue.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Context: The conversion option on the bond may
be exercised at one specified future date or within
a range of dates—―the window period.‖ The
conversion right cannot be separated from the
debt. The instrument allows the investor to
participate in the appreciation of the underlying
asset of the company while limiting risk. A
convertible bond will generally pay a coupon rate
higher than the dividend rate of the underlying
equity at the time of issue but lower than the rate
of a comparable bond without a conversion option.
For the investor, the value of the convertible bond
lies in the excess return of the bond yield over the
dividend yield of the underlying shares.
Convexity
A measure of the sensitivity of prices of fixed-rate
instruments (e.g., bonds) to interest rate changes.
Context: It is the second derivative of a bond‘s
price with respect to interest rates—duration is the
first derivative. The longer the maturity of an
instrument the greater the convexity; and for
instruments with the same duration, the more
dispersed the cash flows, the greater the
convexity. The higher the convexity, the greater
the price gain or price loss for a given change in
interest rates.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Used together with duration, convexity provides a
more accurate approximation of the gains and
losses on a fixed-rate instrument portfolio from a
Hyperlink:
149
given change in interest rates than using duration
alone.
See also: COPNI (classification of the purposes of
non- profit institutions)
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
COPP (classification of COPP (Clasification
outlays of producers
des dépenses des
by purpose)
producteurs par
fonction)
See Classification of outlays of producers by
purpose
Co-ordination of
samples
Increasing the sample overlap for some surveys
rather than drawing the samples independently is
known as positive coordination.
See also: COPP (classification of outlays of
producers by purpose)
Core commodity
A good or service that is widely available
throughout the world so that a substantial number
of countries in each region can provide prices for
these items.
A positive coordination is often searched in
repeated surveys over time (panels) in order to
obtain a better accuracy of statistics depending on
correlated variables from two surveys. Reducing
the overlap between samples for different surveys
is known as negative coordination.
Core commodities can serve as the basis for linking
the countries of the world to obtain transitive
parities at the basic heading level.
A negative coordination is used in order to share
more equally the response burden among
responding units when statistics from surveys are
not used together or are not correlated.
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
Source: Lessler, J.T. and Kalsbeek, W.D. (1992),
"Non Sampling Error in Survey", New York: John
Wiley or US department of Commerce (1978),
"Glossary of Non Sampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics",
Statistical Policy Working Paper 4, Office of Federal
Statistical Policy Standards, 1978
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Core country
An alternative or supplement to the core
commodity approach. Core countries agree to price
a common basket that allows linking of all areas of
the world at the basic heading level; or certain
pairs of core countries make binary comparisons
that allow there to be links at the basic heading
level between all groups of countries participating
in the comparison.
See also: Sample
Copenhagen criteria
Copenhagen criteria refers to the overall criteria
which applicant countries (to the European
Union(EU)) have to meet as a prerequisite for
becoming members of the European Union were
defined in general terms by the Copenhagen
European Council in June 1993.
Context: The Copenhagen criteria require (i) the
stability of institutions guaranteeing democracy,
the rule of law, human rights, and the respect for
and protection of minorities; (ii) the existence of a
functioning market economy as well as the
capacity to cope with competitive pressure and
market forces within the EU; and (iii) the ability to
take on the obligations of membership, including
adherence to the aims of political unification as
well as Economic and Monetary Union (EMU).
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Core services,
Educational
See Expenditure on educational core services
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
See also: Expenditure on educational core services
Coroner
A coroner is an officer of a county, district,
municipality, etc, holding inquest on bodies of
persons who may have died by violence or
accident (unnatural deaths)
COPNI (classification
of the purposes of
non- profit
institutions)
COPNI (Classification
des fonctions des
institutions sans but
lucratif au service des
ménages)
See Classification of the purposes of non-profit
institutions
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
150
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Correction base
A correction base is a set of correct data or records
from which date or records are retrieved for
imputation in the (probably) erroneous data or
records.
Corporate enterprises
Corporate enterprises are defined as corporations,
joint stock companies, co-operatives, limited
liability partnerships and other financial and nonfinancial enterprises which by virtue of legislation,
administrative regulations or registration, are
recognised as business entities independent of
their owners
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Correction rule
A correction rule is a rule for correcting certain
types of errors. Its general form is as follows: "If
errors are detected by the checks e1, ......, ek,
make a correction in this way‖.
Corporate governance
Procedures and processes according to which an
organisation is directed and controlled. The
corporate governance structure specifies the
distribution of rights and responsibilities among the
different participants in the organisation – such as
the board, managers, shareholders and other
stakeholders – and lays down the rules and
procedures for decision-making.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Corporate trustee
Société fiduciaire
A company that acts as a trustee.
Correlation
Corrélation
In its most general sense correlation denoted the
interdependence between quantitative or
qualitative data. In this sense it would include the
association of dichotomised attributes and the
contingency of multiply-classified attributes. The
concept is quite general and may be extended to
more than two variates.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Trustee
Corporation
Société
A corporation is a legal entity, created for the
purpose of producing goods or services for the
market, that may be a source of profit or other
financial gain to its owner(s); it is collectively
owned by shareholders who have the authority to
appoint directors responsible for its general
management
The word is most frequently used in a somewhat
narrower sense to denote the relationship between
measurable variates or ranks.
Context: In Italian usage the two senses are
distinguished by different words, ―connection‖ for
the wider sense and ―concordance‖ for the
narrower sense. Where no ambiguity arises it is
used in a still narrower sense to denote productmoment correlation.
Source: SNA 4.23 [4.18]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Correct value
The value obtained for a unit that is without error.
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Correlation coefficient Coefficient de
corrélation
A correlation coefficient is a measure of the degree
to which two variables tend to move together. The
coefficient has a value between plus and minus 1,
which indicates the strength and direction of
association
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
151
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Cost-based pricing
The general principle of charging for services in
relation to the cost of providing these services.
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: Telecommunications services: Glossary of
terms – World Trade Organisation
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/tratop_e/serv_e/t
elecom_e/tel12_e.htm
Corruption
There are many different definitions of the
concept. One is the, ―active or passive misuse of
the powers of Public officials (appointed or elected)
for private financial or other benefits‖.
Cost-benefit analysis
Cost/Benefit Analysis is a technique for deciding
whether to make a change. As its name suggests,
it compares the values of all benefits from the
action under consideration and the costs
associated with it.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Context: The cost-benefit ratio is determined by
dividing the projected benefits of the programme
by the projected costs. A programme having a high
benefit-cost ratio will take priority over others with
lower ratios.
Cost based pricing
techniques
Degradation pricing techniques based on the costs
of maintaining an adequate standard of
environmental functions. They comprise avoidance
costs and restoration (remedial) costs.
Glossary of Environment Statistics, Studies in
Methods, Series F, No. 67, United Nations, New
York, 1997.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 1.87
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 9.35
Cost-benefit ratio
See Cost-benefit analysis
Cost functions
Cost functions plot, for each type of measure, the
cost per unit of avoided pollutant against the
volume of avoided pollutants.
Cost-of-living bias
An alternative term used to describe ‗substitution
bias‘.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 9.38
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
See also: Substitution bias
Cost internalisation
Internalisation des
côuts
Cost internalisation is the incorporation of negative
external effects, notably environmental depletion
and degradation, into the budgets of households
and enterprises by means of economic
instruments, including fiscal measures and other
(dis) incentives
Cost-of-living index
An index that measures the change in the
minimum expenditures that would be incurred by a
utility maximising consumer, whose preferences or
tastes remain unchanged, in order to maintaining a
given level of utility (or standard of living or
welfare).
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: The cost-of-living-index (COLI) is not a
fixed basket index because consumers may be
expected to change the quantities they consume in
response to changes in relative prices (see
―substitution effect‖). The expenditures in the
152
second period cannot usually be observed. COLIs
cannot be directly calculated but may be
approximated by superlative indices. A conditional
cost of living index is one that assumes that all the
factors that may influence the consumer‘s utility or
welfare other than prices (such as the physical
environment) do not change.
enterprises)
The amount of available resources spent by the
railway enterprise in conjunction with an operation
or service, or with a series of operations and
services.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Monetary Fund, Washington
DC
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Costs (of inland
waterways transport
enterprises)
The amount of available resources spent by the
IWT enterprise in connection with an operation or
service, or with a series of operations and services.
In theory, the objective behind a cost-of-living
index is to measure price changes experienced by
consumers in maintaining a constant standard of
living. The idea is that consumers would normally
switch between products as the price relationship
of goods changes. (Your Guide to the Consumer
Price index, Prices Division, Statistics Canada,
Glossary of Terms. Available at
http://www.statcan.ca/english/freepub/62-557XIB/free.htm)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Costs (of oil pipeline
enterprises)
The amount of available resources spent by the oil
pipeline transport enterprise in conjunction with an
operation or service, or with a series of operations
and services.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
See also: Conditional cost of living index,
Substitution effect
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Costs
Coûts
Costs refer to the value in alternative uses of the
factors of production used by a firm (labour costs,
materials costs, capital costs). Costs may be fixed
or variable.
Costs (of road
transport enterprises)
The amount of available resources spent by the
road transport enterprise in conjunction with an
operation or service, or with a series of operations
and services.
Total costs refer to the sum of fixed and variable
costs. Average costs refer to total costs divided by
output. Marginal cost is the increment to total cost
that results from producing an additional unit of
output. Marginal cost is a function of variable costs
alone, since fixed costs do not vary with increases
in output.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Marginal cost has a particular importance
in economic theory. The profit maximizing firms
will always produce an output such that marginal
cost equals marginal revenue.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Costs (of sea
transport enterprises)
The amount of available resources spent by the
sea transport enterprise in connection with an
operation or service, or with a series of operations
and services.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
See also: Average costs, Fixed costs, Marginal
cost, Revenues, Total costs, Variable costs
Costs (for railway
153
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See Bilateral monopoly, Buyer concentration,
Monopsony
See also: Bilateral monopoly/oligopoly, Buyer
concentration, Monopsony
COT
coke-oven gas
Countries
Countries comprise both territorial entities that are
states, as understood by international law and
practice, and territorial entities that are not states
(such as Hong Kong) but for which statistical data
are maintained and provided internationally on a
separate and independent basis
See also: Coke oven gas
Counterfeit
Unauthorized representation of a registered
trademark carried on goods identical or similar to
goods for which the trademark is registered, with a
view to deceiving the purchaser into believing that
he/she is buying the original goods.
Source: Guide to the International Banking
Statistics, Bank for International Settlements,
Basel, Switzerland, 2000, Part III – Glossary of
Terms
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/meth07.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Country assistance
strategies / plans
A generic term for documents setting out the
planned programme of assistance provided by a
donor to a country, usually for a set period (often
3-4 years). They address how to achieve the UN
Millennium Development Goals.
Counterparty
The opposite party in a financial transaction (e.g.
any party transacting with a central bank).
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Context: Produced usually in consultation with
governments, business, civil society and others
within the country.
Countervailing duty
Droit compensateur
A countervailing duty is an additional levy imposed
on imported goods to offset subsidies provided to
producers or exporters by the government of the
exporting country.
Source: OECD, 2006, DAC Guidelines and
Reference Series Applying Strategic Environmental
Assessment: Good Practice Guidance for
Development Co-operation, OECD, Paris
Countervailing duties are permitted under Article
VI of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT)
See also: Millennium Development Goal indicators
Country classification,
Main economic
indicator
See Main Economic Indicator country groupings
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
See also: Main Economic Indicator main country
groupings
See also: Countervailing measures, GATT
Countervailing
Mesure compensatoire
measures
Countervailing measures are measures that can be
undertaken whenever an investigation, by the
investigating authority of the importing country,
has led to the determination that the imported
goods are benefiting from subsidies, and that they
result in an injury.
Country groupings,
Main economic
indicator
See Main Economic Indicators main country
groupings
See also: Main Economic Indicator main country
groupings
Countervailing measures may take the form of
countervailing duties or undertakings by the
exporting firms or by the authorities of the
subsidising country
Country identifier
A country identifier is an identifier further
specifying the geopolitical area associated with the
language.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Context: 1. Metamodel construct is: Attribute of
Language Identification.
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
2. Use the three digit numeric codes from ISO
3166-1, with extensions if required.
See also: Countervailing duty
Source: ISO/IEC 11179-3 "Information
technology-Metadata registries (MDR)-Part 3:
Countervailing power
154
Registry metamodel and basic attributes",
February 2003
Country-reversal test
This test is satisfied if, when country j is taken as
the base country, the price or quantity index for
countries j and k is the reciprocal of the index
when country k is the base country. For example,
Ij/k* Ik/i = 1. where I is a price or quantity index.
See also: Identifier
Country of usual
Pays de résidence
residence
habituelle
The country of usual residence is the country in
which a person lives, that is to say, the country in
which he or she has a place to live where he or she
normally spends the daily period of rest.
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
Temporary travel abroad for purposes of
recreation, holidays, visits to friends or relatives,
business, medical treatment or religious pilgrimage
does not change a person‘s country of usual
residence
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Courier services
Courier services focuses on express and door-todoor delivery. Couriers may use self-owned,
privately shared or public transportation to supply
these services. Included are express delivery
services, which might include, for example, ondemand pick-up or time-definite delivery.
Country-of-origin
labelling (CoOL)
Refers to the 2002 United States Farm Act which
requires that by September 30, 2004, United
States Department of Agriculture will implement a
mandatory regulation for country-of-origin
labelling.
Source: European Union, Regulation (EC) No
184/2005 of the European Parliament and of the
Council of 12 January 2005 on Community
statistics concerning balance of payments,
international trade in services and foreign direct
investment (Official Journal of the European Union
No L 35, 8.2.2005, p. 23 – 55)
Source: OECD, 2004, OECD Agricultural Outlook:
2004-2013, OECD, Paris, Glossary
Country-productdummy (CPD) method
The country-product-dummy method (CPD) is the
multilateral method used by the ICP to obtain
transitive PPPs at the basic heading level through
regression analysis.
Cournot (Nash)
Equilibrium
The Cournot model of oligopoly assumes that rival
firms produce a homogenous product, and each
attempts to maximize profits by choosing how
much to produce. All firms choose output
(quantity) simultaneously. The basic Cournot
assumption is that each firm chooses its quantity,
taking as given the quantity of its rivals. The
resulting equilibrium is a Nash equilibrium in
quantities, called a Cournot (Nash) equilibrium.
Context: It treats the calculation of PPPs as a
matter of statistical inference, an estimation
problem rather than an index number problem.
The underlying hypothesis is that, apart from
random disturbance, the PPPs for individual
products within a basic heading are all constant
between any given pair of countries.
Context: The Cournot model provides results which
are of some importance to industrial economics.
First of all, it can be shown that price will not in
most cases equal marginal costs (see costs) and
Pareto efficiency is not achieved. Moreover, the
degree to which each firm‘s price exceeds marginal
cost is directly proportional to the firm‘s market
share and inversely proportional to the market
elasticity of demand.
In other words, it is assumed that the pattern of
relative prices of the different products within a
given basic heading is the same in all countries. It
is also assumed that each country has its own
overall price level for the basic heading and it is
that which fixes the levels of absolute prices of the
products in the basic heading for the country.
If the oligopoly is symmetric, that is, all firms have
identical products and cost conditions, then the
degree to which price exceeds marginal cost is
inversely related to the number of firms.
By treating the prices observed in the countries for
the basic heading as random samples, the PPPs
between each pair of countries and the common
pattern of relative prices can be estimated using
classical least square methods. The method allows
sampling errors to be estimated for the PPPs.
Thus, as the number of firms increases, the
equilibrium approaches what it would be under
perfect competition. More generally, it can be
shown that for the industry the degree to which
price exceeds marginal cost is directly proportional
to the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index of
concentration. As concentration rises, industry
performance deviates more from the norm of
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
155
perfect competition.
Coverage (of data
Couverture
sources)
Coverage specifies the population from which
observations for a particular topic can be drawn.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Context: An understanding of coverage is required
to facilitate the comparison of data. Coverage
issues are often explained through the use of
tables showing linkages (e.g. part or full
correspondence) and can also be used to explain
the ratio of coverage. The rules and conventions of
coverage are largely determined by concept
definitions, scope rules, information requirements
and, in the case of statistical collections and
classifications, collection and counting units and
the collection methodology (United Nations
Glossary of Classification Terms).
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Bertrand (Nash) Equilibrium
Cournot model
See Cournot (Nash) equilibrium
See also: Cournot (Nash) Equilibrium
Cover
Provision of export credit guarantee or insurance
against risks of payment delays or non-payments
relating to export transactions. Cover is usually,
though not always, provided for both commercial
risk and political risk. In most cases, cover is not
provided for the full value of future debt-service
payments; the percentage of cover is typically
between 90 percent and 95 percent.
Coverage is a term used in sampling in two
senses:
(1) to denote the scope of the material collected
from the sample members (as distinct from the
extent of the survey, which refers to the number of
units included);
(2) to mean the extent or area covered by the
sampling as in expressions such as "50%
coverage", which means that one-half of the
population under discussion have been examined
(The International Statistical Institute, "The Oxford
Dictionary of Statistical Terms", edited by Yadolah
Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003).
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Under the SDDS and in SDMX, the term
"Coverage" encompasses the key features of the
scope of the data disseminated (e.g., geographic,
institutional, product, industry sector, occupation,
transaction, etc. as well as relevant exceptions and
exclusions), which a user must be aware of in
order to use and interpret the data appropriately.
See also: Quantitative (or cover) limits
Cover crop
A cover crop is a temporary vegetative cover that
is grown to provide protection for the soil and the
establishment of plants, particularly those which
are slow growing.
Source: "United Nations Glossary of Classification
Terms" prepared by the Expert Group on
International Economic and Social Classifications,
unpublished on paper
Some cover crops are introduced by undersowing
and in due course provide permanent vegetative
cover to stabilise the area concerned. The term can
include an intermediate crop that can be removed
by the use of selective herbicides
Hyperlink:
http://www.un.org/Depts/unsd/class/glossary_sho
rt.htm
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
See also: Coverage errors - UN, Coverage ratio,
Data, Scope, Special Data Dissemination Standard
(SDDS)
Coverage (in price
indices)
The set of goods and services of which the prices
are actually included in the index. For practical
reasons, coverage may have to be less than the
ideal scope of the index, that is, the set of goods
and services that the compilers of the index would
prefer to include if it were feasible.
Coverage errors
Coverage errors arise from failure to cover
adequately all components of the population being
studied. Incomplete sampling frames often result
in coverage errors
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Context: Coverage errors are due to divergences
between the target population and the frame.
Coverage errors include over-coverage, undercoverage and misclassification (Eurostat, Quality
Glossary).
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Coverage error is the error in an estimate that
results from failure to include specified units in the
conduct of a survey (undercoverage), and inclusion
156
a whole.
of some units erroneously either because of a
defective frame or because of inclusion of
unspecified units or inclusion of specified units
more than once in the actual survey
(overcoverage). (Statistical Policy Working Paper
15: Quality in Establishment Surveys, Office of
Management and Budget, Washington D.C., July
1988, page 44)
Source: United Nations Glossary of Classification
Terms. Prepared by the Expert Group on
International Economic and Social Classifications,
unpublished on paper.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/class/family/glossary_s
hort.htm
Source: Statistical Office of the United Nations,
"Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition", (para. 8.3), Studies in Methods, Series F,
No. 31, United Nations, New York, 1984
See also: Coverage, Homogeneity ratios,
Specialisation ratio
Covered wagon
Wagon couvert
Wagon characterized by its closed construction
(solid sides all the way up and roof) and by the
safety it provides for the goods conveyed in it
(possibility of padlocking and sealing).
See also: Coverage
Coverage
improvement
Statistical studies conducted to evaluate methods
to improve coverage for censuses and surveys.
Context: Wagons with opening roof as well as
insulated and refrigerated are included.
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Coverage of
rescheduling
agreements
The debt service or arrears rescheduled.
Comprehensive coverage implies the inclusion of
most or all eligible debt service and arrears.
CPA
Classifications of Products by Activity
Hyperlink:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/eurostat/ramon/cgi/Si
mWW
WFrame.SimResetBottomFrame?nID=CPA_1996&lI
d=&pId=&
test=&frameType=4&association=&property=DES
CRIPTION&language=EN
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Central product classification (CPC) – UN
CPC
CPC (Classification
centrale des produits)
See Central Product Classification (CPC)
Coverage problems
In geometrical probability, problems concerned
with the proportion of an area or length covered by
randomly placed, possibly overlapping objects.
There are important applications in immunology.
See also: Central product classification (CPC) – UN
CPI
See Characters per inch
Source:
A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th edition,
prepared for the International Statistical Institute
by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the International
Statistical Institute by Longman Scientific and
Technical
See also: Characters per inch (CPI)
CPI
See Consumer price index or Characters per inch
See also: Characters per inch (CPI), Consumer
price index
Coverage ratio
The coverage ratio measures the extent to which
observations designated as primary to a particular
category are undertaken by units primarily
involved with the observations related to that
category.
CPM
See Critical path method
See also: Critical path method (CPM)
CPP
See Calling party pays (CPP)
In industry statistics, the coverage ratio is the
output of goods and services characteristic of a
particular industry in proportion to the total output
of the same goods and services by the economy as
Creaming
157
Creaming is the selective cutting of the best (from
a commercial point of view) trees. It need not be
restricted to the best trees in a stand but may also
extend to the best stands in a larger area
Credit guarantee
Commitment by an export credit agency to
reimburse a lender if the borrower fails to repay a
loan. The lender pays a guarantee fee.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
See also: Selective cutting
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Creation date
The date the Administered item was created.
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179-3 Information technology - Metadata registries
(MDR) - Part 3: Registry metamodel and basic
attributes", February 2003
Credit institution
(i) An undertaking whose business is to receive
deposits or other repayable funds from the public
and to grant credit for its own account; or
See also: Date, Date of last change
(ii) an undertaking or any other legal person, other
than those under (i), which issues means of
payment in the form of electronic money.
Credit
Crédit
Credit is an amount for which there is a specific
obligation of repayment. Credits include loans,
trade credits, bonds, bills, etc., and other
agreements which give rise to specific obligations
to repay over a period of time usually, but not
always, with interest. Credit is extended to finance
consumption and investment expenditures, and
financial transactions
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Credit insurance
The main business of most export credit agencies
is insurance of finance provided by exporters or
banks (although some major agencies lend on their
own account). Insurance policies provide for the
export credit agency to reimburse the lender for
losses up to a certain percentage of the credit
covered and under certain conditions. Lenders or
exporters pay a premium to the export credit
agency. Insurance policies typically protect the
lender against political or transfer risks in the
borrowing country that prevent the remittance of
debt-service payments.
Source: External Debt Statistics: Guide for
Compilers and Users (Draft), IMF, Washington DC,
March 2000, Appendix III, Glossary of Terms
Credit card
A card indicating that the holder has been granted
a line of credit. It enables the holder to make
purchases and/or withdraw cash up to a
prearranged ceiling; the credit granted can be
settled in full by the end of a specified period or
can be settled in part, with the balance taken as
extended credit. Interest is charged on the amount
of any extended credit and the holder is sometimes
charged an annual fee.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: A glossary of terms used in payments and
settlement systems, July 2001, Committee on
Payment and Settlement Systems, Bank for
International Settlements
Credit linked note
A so-called structured security that combines a
credit derivative and a regular bond.
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/cpss00b.pdf
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Credit derivatives
Dérivés de crédit
Credit derivatives are financial derivatives whose
primary purpose is to trade credit risk; they are
designed for trading in loan and security default
risk and can take the form of both forward-type
and option-type contracts and, like other financial
derivatives, they are frequently drawn up under
standard master legal agreements, and involve
collateral and margining procedures
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Credit risk
The risk that one party to a financial contract will
fail to discharge an obligation and thus cause the
other party to incur a financial loss. Because of
deposit-takers‘ role as financial intermediaries,
monitoring the credit risk of their assets through
Source: SNA 11.42
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
158
FSIs, such as nonperforming loans to total loans, is
central to any assessment of financial soundness.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Crisis cartel
See Cartel
See also: Financial Soundness Indicators (FSIs)
Creditor
Prêteur
A creditor is an entity with a financial claim on
another entity
See also: Cartel
Critical capital
Natural capital that is essential for human survival
and is irreplaceable. Such critical capital should be
monitored separately in physical units.
Source: External Debt Statistics: Guide for
Compilers and Users (Draft), IMF, Washington DC,
March 2000, Appendix III, Glossary of Terms
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
11.74
Creditor country
The creditor country refers to the country in which
the lender is resident
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Critical load
Senil de charge
critique
Critical Load is the quantitative estimate of the
level of exposure of natural systems to pollutants
below which significant harmful effects on specified
sensitive elements of the environment do not occur
Creditor reporting
system
A statistical reporting system, maintained by the
OECD, to monitor the debt of developing countries.
Major creditor countries, primarily the 22 member
countries of the Development Assistance
Committee (DAC), together with the European
Commission, supply information. The data are
published in the OECD‘s annual External Debt
Statistics publication.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Critical path method
(CPM)
An activity network model. The CPM seeks to
determine the expected time of completion of the
total project and times of completion of the subprojects of which it is composed.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Creutzfeldt-Jakob
Disease (CJD)
Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD) is a rare but fatal
brain disease with unusually long incubation
periods (measured in years) and which usually
strikes people over 65. Its cause is currently
unknown.
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Context: Surveillance of CJD in the UK was
reinstituted in 1990 after the outbreak of bovine
spongiform encephalopathy (BSE or "mad cow
disease") in cattle, to see if there was a link
between the two.
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Crop residue
Crop residue is plant material remaining after
harvesting, including leaves, stalks, roots
Crop year
A crop year is a twelve-month period used for
collecting data on a particular crop — generally
corresponding to the natural planting and
marketing cycle for that crop. Usually, a crop year
begins in a month other than January
In 1996, the British government announced a
possible link, prompted by the discovery of several
atypical cases of CJD in Great Britain. In contrast
to the classic form of CJD, the new variant form
predominantly affects younger persons and has
atypical clinical features. This new variant of CJD
raises the possibility that they are causally linked
to BSE.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
159
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
the case with shoes and shoe laces.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Cross border residual
flows
Flows of residual that cross the national border;
they consist in discharge from production into a
different environment and the transmission of
residuals from one environmental sphere to
another by natural mechanisms.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Elasticity of demand (price)
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.92 & 3.93
Cross-border
operations
Cross-border operations are transactions between
residents of different countries
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Cross border shopping
Cross border shopping is the name given to the
activity wherein private individuals buy goods
abroad because of lower taxes and import them for
their own consumption, without declaring them in
full in order to avoid paying import duties
Cross-border
positions
Cross-border positions are asset and liability
positions vis-à-vis banks and non-banks located in
a country other than the country of residence of
the reporting bank. Also referred to as external
positions
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Cross price elasticity
of demand
Cross price elasticity of demand refers to the
percentage change in the quantity demanded of a
given product due to the percentage change in the
price of another "related" product. If all prices are
allowed to vary, the quantity demanded of product
X is dependent not only on its own price (see
elasticity of demand) but upon the prices of other
products as well.
Cross-correlation of
business cycles
A measure of how closely aligned the timing of
movements in activity are for two countries over
their business cycles. The cross-correlation statistic
for two economic time series can range from -1 to
1.
In general, the closer the cross-correlation is to
value of 1 the more in phase and synchronised the
business cycles will be. A value of -1 would
indicate that the two series move perfectly in a
counter-cyclical direction. A value near zero
indicates that there is no statistical relationship
between the series.
Context: The concept of cross price elasticity of
demand is used to classify whether or not products
are "substitutes" or "complements". It is also used
in market definition to group products that are
likely to compete with one another. If an increase
in the price of product Y results in an increase in
the quantity demanded of X (while the price of X is
held constant), then products X and Y are viewed
as being substitutes. For example, such may be
the case of electricity vs. natural gas used in home
heating or consumption of pork vs. beef.
Source: OECD Economic Outlook Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/28/54/1890650.ht
m
The cross price elasticity measure is a positive
number varying from zero (no substitutes) to any
positive number. Generally speaking, a number
exceeding two would indicate the relevant products
being "close" substitutes.
Cross-currency
Swaps croisés de
interest rate swaps
devises et de taux
See Swaps, Cross-currency interest rate
See also: Swaps – cross-currency interest rate
If the increase in price of Y results in a decrease in
the quantity demanded of product X (while the
price of X is held constant), then the products X
and Y are considered complements. Such may be
Cross-domain
concepts
160
the country of loading/embarkment or than the
country of unloading/disembarkment.
List of standard concepts covering structural and
reference metadata, which should be used
wherever possible to enhance possibilities of the
exchange of data and metadata between
organisations.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Within SDMX, cross-domain concepts are
envisaged to cover various aspects of the
statistical data, including data quality. When
exchanging statistics, institutions can select from a
standard set of content-oriented concepts.
Cross-trade sea
transport
Transport
international par mer
par un navire d'un
pays tiers
International sea transport performed by a
seagoing vessel registered in a third country.
The list of common concepts and their definitions
reflects good practices and can be the basis for
mapping between internal systems when data and
metadata are exchanged or shared between and
among institutions.
Examples of cross-domain concepts are: data
source used, periodicity, population coverage and
seasonal adjustments.
Context: A third country is a country other than
the country of loading/embarkment or than the
country of unloading/ disembarkment.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: Data structure definition, Reference
metadata, Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX), Structural metadata
Cross-subsidization
The practice of using profits generated from one
product or service to support another provided by
the same operating entity.
Cross-training
Cross-training is defined as training workers for
jobs other than those they are currently doing.
Source: Telecommunications services: Glossary of
terms – World Trade Organisation
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, June 1999,
Chapter 4, New Enterprise Work Practices and their
Labour Market Implications, page 187
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/tratop_e/serv_e/t
elecom_e/tel12_e.htm
Crude birth rate
The crude birth rate is the number of live births
occurring among the population of a given
geographical area during a given year, per 1,000
mid-year total population of the given geographical
area during the same year
Cross-trade inland
waterways transport
Transport
internationale par
voies navigables
intérieures effectué
par des tiers
International inland waterways transport (IWT)
performed by an IWT vessel registered in a third
country.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Context: A third country is a country other than
the country of loading/embarkment or than the
country of loading/disembarkment.
Crude death rate
The crude death rate is the number of deaths
occurring among the population of a given
geographical area during a given year, per 1,000
mid-year total population of the given geographical
area during the same year
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Cross-trade road
transport
Transport routier
international effectué
par des tiers
International road transport performed by a road
motor vehicle registered in a third country.
Crude divorce rate
The crude divorce rate is the number of divorces
occurring among the population of a given
Context: A third country is a country other than
161
geographical area during a given year, per 1,000
mid-year total population of the given geographical
area during the same year
Source: Glossary For Transport Statistics, Eurostat,
ECMT, UN/ECE, Third edition
Hyperlink:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/eurostat/ramon/statma
nuals/files/KS-BI-03-002-__-N-EN.pdf
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Cryptography
The application of mathematical theory to develop
techniques and algorithms that can be applied to
data to ensure goals such as confidentiality, data
integrity and/or authentication.
Crude marriage rate
The crude marriage rate is the number of
marriages occurring among the population of a
given geographical area during a given year, per
1,000 mid-year total population of the given
geographical area during the same year
Source: A glossary of terms used in payments and
settlement systems, July 2001, Committee on
Payment and Settlement Systems, Bank for
International Settlements
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/cpss00b.pdf
CSD
See Committee on Surplus Disposal
Crude oil
See Petroleum, crude petroleum
See also: Committee on Surplus Disposal (CSD)
CSE
See Consumer Support Estimate
See also: Petroleum, crude petroleum
Crude petroleum
See Petroleum, crude petroleum
See also: Consumer Support Estimate (CSE)
CSTE
Commodity Classification for Statistics of Transport
in Europe
See also: Petroleum, crude petroleum
Cruise ship
Passenger ship intended to provide passengers
with a full tourist experience. All passengers have
cabins. Facilities for entertainment aboard are
included.
CSWD index
Carruthers, Sellwood, Ward, Dalén index. A
geometric average of the Carli and the harmonic
mean of price relatives index.
Context: Note: Ships operating normal ferry
services are excluded, even if some passengers
treat the service as a cruise. In addition, cargo
carrying vessels able to carry a very limited
number of passengers with their own cabins are
also excluded. Ships intended solely for day
excursions are also excluded.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: Glossary For Transport Statistics, Eurostat,
ECMT, UN/ECE, Third edition
Hyperlink:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/eurostat/ramon/statma
nuals/files/KS-BI-03-002-__-N-EN.pdf
CT scanners
See Computed tomography scanners
See also: Computed tomography scanners
Cruise ship
Passenger ship intended to provide passengers
with a full tourist experience. All passengers have
cabins. Facilities for entertainment aboard are
included.
Cultivated assets
Actifs cultivés
Cultivated assets are livestock for breeding
(including fish and poultry), dairy, draught, etc and
vineyards, orchards and other plantations of trees
yielding repeat products that are under the direct
control, responsibility and management of
institutional units
Context: Ships operating normal ferry services are
excluded, even if some passengers treat the
service as a cruise. In addition, cargo carrying
vessels able to carry a very limited number of
passengers with their own cabins are also
excluded. Ships intended solely for day excursions
are also excluded.
Source: AN.1114 – Annex to chapter XIII [10.83]
Cultivated biological
resources (SEEA)
162
Correspond to cultivated fixed assets and work in
progress on cultivated assets in the SNA.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Context: The SEEA clarifies the SNA definition:
cultivated fixed assets are ―livestock for breeding,
dairy, draught, etc. and vineyards, orchards and
other trees yielding repeat products whose natural
growth and/or regeneration is under the direct
control, responsibility and management of
institutional units‖.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Currency
Numéraire
Currency comprises those notes and coins in
circulation that are commonly used to make
payments
Work in progress on cultivated assets ―livestock
raised for products yielded only on slaughter, such
as fowl and fish raised commercially, trees and
other vegetation yielding once -only products on
destruction and immature cultivated assets
yielding repeat products‖.
Source: SNA 11.70 (AF.21) - Annex to chapter XIII
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.57
Currency and deposits Numéraire et dépôts Ŕ
Ŕ BPM
MBP
Currency and deposits are summed as one
component, although separate data may be
compiled by those countries desiring to do so for
analytic and other purposes. Currency consists of
notes and coin that are in circulation and
commonly use to make payments. Deposits
comprise both transferable and other deposits.
Cultivated land
Land used for the growing of crops on a cyclical
basis or a permanent basis. Also included is the
land that is normally cultivated but that has been
allowed to go temporarily fallow.
Transferable deposits consist of deposits that are
exchangeable on demand at par without restriction
pr penalty, freely transferable by check or giro
order, and otherwise commonly used to make
payments.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.65
Deposits may be denominated in domestic or
foreign currencies.
Other deposits include all claims reflecting
evidence of deposit other than transferable
deposits.
Typical examples are non-transferable saving
deposits; time deposits; and shares in savings and
loan association, credit unions, building societies,
etc
Cumulative data
Same as Year to date data
See also: Year to date data
Source: BPM paras. 420-421
Cumulative error
Erreur cumulative
An error which, in the course of the accumulation
of a set of observations, does not tend to zero. The
relative magnitude of the error does not then
decrease as the number of observations increases.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
See also: Currency and deposits - SNA
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Currency and deposits Numéraire et dépôts Ŕ
- SNA
SCN
Currency and deposits are financial assets that are
used to make payments or that may be included in
money, broadly defined, consisting of currency,
transferable deposits and other deposits
Cumulative preferred
stock
Cumulative preferred stock is entitled to receive at
a later date those dividends that accumulate
during profitless years (dividends in arrears).
During such years, common stock and regular
preferred stock are generally paid no dividends.
Source: AF.2 – Annex to chapter XIII
See also: Currency and deposits – BPM
Currency linked bonds
A bond in which the coupon and/or redemption
value are linked to the movement in an exchange
163
rate. Examples of these types of bonds were the
tesobonos issued by Mexican banks in 1994. These
bonds, issued and payable in pesos, had a
redemption value linked to the movement in the
U.S. dollar/ Mexican peso exchange rate. When the
Mexican peso depreciated, the redemption value
increased.
outstanding. As the U.S. dollar appreciates relative
to other currencies in the pool, the pool unit value
decreases.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Currency reporting
The unit of account in which amounts are reported
either to the compiling agency and/or to an
international agency compiling debt statistics.
Currency of
transaction
The medium of exchange in which an individual
transaction occurs. It may be currency, goods, or
services. The medium of exchange of one
transaction (for example, disbursement) does not
necessarily determine the medium of exchange of
another (for example, repayment).
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Currency swaps
Devises - swap de
See Swaps, cross-currency interest rate
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Swaps – cross-currency interest rate
Current account
Compte des
(balance of payments) transactions
courantes (balance
des paiements)
See Balance of payments, current account
Currency pool loans
Currency pool loans, provided by the World Bank
and regional development banks, are
multicurrency obligations committed in U.S. dollarequivalent terms whose currency composition is
the same (pooled) for all borrowers.
See also: Balance of payments, current account
Current accounts
Comptes des
opérations courantes
Current accounts record the production of goods
and services, the generation of incomes by
production, the subsequent distribution and
redistribution of incomes among institutional units,
and the use of incomes for purposes of
consumption or saving
Context: The World Bank guarantees that at least
90 percent of the U.S. dollar-equivalent value of
the currency pool is maintained in fixed currency
ratios of 1 U.S. dollar: 125 Japanese yen: 1 euro.
These ratios have been maintained since 1991,
and prior to the introduction of the euro, the
currency ratios were maintained in a fixed ratio of
1 U.S. dollar: 125 Japanese yen: 2 deutsche mark
equivalent (consisting of deutsche mark,
Netherlands guilders, and Swiss francs).
Source: SNA 1.5 [2.102]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
The currency amount disbursed is converted into a
U.S. dollar equivalent amount, using the applicable
exchange rate on the day of disbursements. The
U.S. dollar equivalent amount is then divided by
the pool unit value on the day of disbursement to
determine the pool units disbursed. The pool units
are what the borrower will have to repay. When
pool units are to be repaid, they are converted
back into the dollar equivalent amount using the
prevailing pool unit value. Thus, the pool unit value
may be thought of as an exchange rate used to
convert the units into their equivalent value in U.S.
dollars, and it changes daily in accordance with
movements of the exchange rates of the currencies
in the pool. The pool unit value is calculated by
dividing the U.S. dollar equivalent of the currencies
in the pool by the total number of pool units
Current activity status
Current activity status is the relationship of a
person to economic activity, based on a brief
reference period such as one week
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.231
Current cost
accounting
164
Comptabilité au coût
actuel
para. 5.97
Current cost accounting is a valuation method
whereby assets and goods used in production are
valued at their actual or estimated current market
prices at the time the production takes place (it is
sometimes described as ―replacement cost
accounting")
Current external
balance
Solde des opérations
courantes avec
l‟extérieur
The current external balance is the balancing item
in the external account of primary income and
current transfers
Context: A method of accounting for the use of
assets in which the cost of using the assets in
production is calculated at the current price of
those assets rather than using the historic cost
(that is the price at which the assets were
originally purchased).
Source: SNA Table 14.1 V.II [2.167]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Monetary Fund, Washington
DC
Current international
co-operation
Coopération
internationale
courante
Current international co-operation consists of
current transfers in cash or in kind between the
governments of different countries or between
governments and international organisations
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: SNA 1.60
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 8.92
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Current expenditure
(on education)
Current expenditure is expenditure on goods and
services consumed within the current year, which
needs to be made recurrently to sustain the
production of educational services. Minor
expenditure on items of equipment, below a
certain cost threshold, is also reported as current
spending.
Current maturities
In the context of restructuring agreements,
principal and interest payments falling due in the
consolidation period.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Current expenditure includes final consumption
expenditure, property income paid, subsidies and
other current transfers (e.g., social security, social
assistance, pensions and other welfare benefits).
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Current national
prices
Current national prices are level series of values
expressed in national currency and at current
prices
Current expenditure
for environmental
protection
Current expenditure by enterprises includes
internal operational spending on environmental
protection activities including, for example, wages
and salaries of people involved with the operation
of pollution control equipment and environmental
management, leasing payments for environmental
equipment, and materials such as air filters and
scrubbers. External expenditure such as waste
disposal by specialists contractors, waste water
treatment, regulatory charges to environmental
agencies and so on are also treated as current
expenditure whether made by enterprises,
government or households.
Source: Statistical Series for the Euro Area Conclusions and Recommendations of the OECD
ASTF Euro Subgroup, 15 May 2001
Current operating
performance concept
(COPC)
The application of the current operating
performance concept (COPC) is one of the two
main approaches to measuring earnings. The
concept is explained in the International
Accounting Standard No.8, ―Unusual and Prior
Period Items and Changes in Accounting Policy‖.
When earnings are measured on the basis of this
concept, such earnings consist of income from
normal enterprise operations before non-recurring
items (such as write-offs) and capital gains and
losses are accounted for
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
165
Source: Report on the Survey of Implementation
of Implementation of Methodological Standards for
Direct Investment – IMF, OECD, March 2000 –
Appendix II: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms
Source: SNA 1.62
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Current prices – Capital stock, Gross
domestic product – current prices
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/bopage/pdf/mar2000.
pdf
Current repairs and
maintenance
Current repairs and maintenance includes all
construction work performed for others and not
classified as capital repairs, restoration or
conversion, that is to say, such work as is
performed in order to prevent the normal
deterioration of existing structures or to maintain
them in a normal functional state
See also: All-inclusive concept
Current period (in
price index
calculation)
In principle, the ―current‖ period should refer to
the most recent period for which an index has
been computed or is being computed. However,
the term is widely used to refer to any period that
is compared with the price reference or index
reference period. It is also widely used simply to
mean the later of the two periods being compared.
The exact meaning varies according to the context.
Source: International Recommendations for
Construction Statistics, Statistical Papers, Series
M, No. 47, Rev. 1, United Nations, New York,
1997, para. 73
See also: Capital repairs, Repairs and maintenance
Context: The term is widely used to mean the
‗comparison period‘: that is, the period that is
compared with the ‗base period‘, usually the price
reference or index reference period. (Revision of
the ILO Manual on CPI, Draft Glossary, CPI
Technical Expert Group, December 2002
Current taxes on
Impôts courants sur
capital
le capital
Current taxes on capital consist of taxes that are
payable periodically, usually annually, on the
property or net wealth of institutional units,
excluding taxes on land or other assets owned or
rented by enterprises and used by them for
production
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: SNA 8.53 [OECD 4100, OECD 4200, OECD
4600]
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Current prices Ŕ OECD
A stock of assets is expressed at current prices
when all members of the stock are valued at the
prices of the year in question
Current taxes on
income, wealth, etc
Impôts courants sur
le revenu, le
patrimoine, etc.
Most current taxes on income, wealth, etc consist
of taxes on the incomes of households or profits of
corporations and taxes on wealth that are payable
regularly every tax period (as distinct from capital
taxes levied infrequently)
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Source: SNA 8.6
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Current prices - SNA
Current prices - SNA
prix courants - SCN
A fundamental principle underlying the
measurement of gross value added, and hence
GDP, is that output and intermediate consumption
must be valued at the prices current at the time
the production takes place.
Current taxes on land
and buildings
Impôts courants sur
la propriété foncière
et immobilière
Current taxes on land and buildings consist of
taxes payable periodically, in most cases annually,
on the use or ownership of land or buildings by
owners (including owner-occupiers of dwellings),
tenants or both, excluding taxes on land or
buildings rented or owned by enterprises and used
by them in production
This implies that goods withdrawn from inventories
by producers must be valued at the prices
prevailing at the times the goods are withdrawn
and consumption of fixed capital in the System is
calculated on the basis of the estimated
opportunity costs of using the assets at the time
they are used, as distinct from the prices at which
the assets were acquired
Source: SNA 8.53 [OECD 4100]
166
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
payments of
paiements
compensation
d‟indemnités
Payments of compensation consist of current
transfers paid by institutional units to other
institutional units in compensation for injury to
persons or damage to property caused by the
former excluding payments of non-life insurance
claims
Current taxes on net
Impôts courants sur
wealth
le patrimoine net
Current taxes on net wealth consist of taxes
payable periodically, in most cases annually, on
the value of land or fixed assets less any debt
incurred on those assets, excluding taxes on assets
owned by enterprises and used by them in
production
Source: SNA 8.98
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 8.53 [OECD 4200]
Current transfers Ŕ
Transferts courants Ŕ
SNA
SCN
Current transfers consist of all transfers that are
not transfers of capital; they directly affect the
level of disposable income and should influence the
consumption of goods or services
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Current taxes on
Impôts courants sur
other assets
les autres actifs
Current taxes on other assets include taxes
payable periodically, usually annually, on assets
such as jewellery or other external signs of wealth
Source: SNA 8.32 [3.22, 8.3, 10.133]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 8.53 [OECD 4600]
See also: Current transfers – BPM
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Current transfers
Transferts courants
between households
entre ménages
Current transfers between households consist of all
current transfers in cash or in kind made, or
received, by resident households to or from other
resident or non-resident households
Current transfers Ŕ
Transferts courants Ŕ
BPM
MBP
Current transfers consist of all transfers that are
not transfer of capital. Current Transfers are
classified into two main categories: -general
government -other sectors
Source: SNA 8.95
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: BPM para. 296
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Current transfers from Transferts courants
/ to abroad
de/vers l‟extérieur
Current transfers from/to abroad are current
transfers which take place between resident and
non-resident institutional units are referred to as
current transfers from/to abroad
See also: Current transfers – SNA
Current transfers Ŕ
Transferts courants,
fines and penalties
amendes et pénalités
Fines and penalties imposed on institutional units
by courts of law or quasi-judicial bodies are treated
as compulsory current transfers
Source: SNA 8.4
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 8.96
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Current transfers to
Transferts courants
non-profit institutions aux ISBLSM
serving households
(NPISHs)
Most current transfers to non-profit institutions
serving households (NPISHs) consist of cash
transfers received by NPISHs from other resident
or non-resident institutional units in the form of
membership dues, subscriptions, voluntary
donations, etc whether made on a regular or
occasional basis
Current transfers Ŕ
Transferts courants,
lotteries and gambling loteries et paris
Current transfers - lotteries and gambling consist
of the amounts paid out to the winners
Source: SNA 8.97
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Current transfers Ŕ
Source: SNA 8.94
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Transferts courants,
167
toward a customs union
Current transfers
Transferts courants
within general
entre administrations
government
publiques
Current transfers within general government
consist of current transfers between different
government units or different sub-sectors of
general government; they include current transfers
between different levels of government, such as
frequently occur between central and state or local
government units, and between government units
and social security funds
Source: Glossary of Insurance Policy Terms, OECD,
Centre for Co-operation with Non-Members, 1999
See also: Common market, Economic union, Free
trade area, Regional trading arrangement
Cut-off date
The date (established at the time of a country‘s
first Paris Club debt reorganization/restructuring)
before which loans must have been contracted in
order for their debt service to be eligible for
restructuring. New loans extended after the cutoff
date are protected from future restructuring
(subordination strategy). In exceptional cases,
arrears on post-cutoff-date debt can be deferred
over short periods of time in restructuring
agreements.
Source: SNA 8.90
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Current value
The actual value of some aggregate in the period
in question: the quantities in the period multiplied
by the prices of the same period.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
See also: Paasche price index
Cut-off sampling
A sampling procedure in which a predetermined
threshold is established with all units in the
universe at or above the threshold being included
in the sample and all units below the threshold
being excluded. The threshold is usually specified
in terms of the size of some known relevant
variable. In the case of establishments, size is
usually defined in terms of employment or output.
Currently active
Population
population
actuellement active
See Total labour force and Not currently active
population
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
See also: Total labour force – ILO
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Current weighted
index
See Paasche price index
CURs
See Comparable Unemployment Rates (CURs)
See also: Cut-off survey, Cut-off threshold
See also: Comparable unemployment rates (CURs)
Cut-off survey
A cut-off survey is a survey in which the sample
excludes all units that are less than a specified
size.
Custodian (of a
Conservateur des
pension fund)
actifs
The entity responsible, as a minimum, for holding
the pension fund assets and for ensuring their
safekeeping.
Source: OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, "Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook", Annex 2, Glossary, Paris, 2002
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
Customs union
Union douanières
A customs union is a free trade area that also
establishes a common tariff and other trade
policies with non-member countries.
See also: Cut-off sampling, Cut-off threshold
Cut-off threshold
A cut-off threshold is used, mainly for cost or
burden reasons, to exclude from the target
population (hence from the frame) units
contributing very little to the requested statistics,
small businesses for instance.
The Czech and Slovak Republics established a
customs union to preserve previous commercial
relationships between themselves and with third
parties. The Arab Common Market is moving
168
fluctuations in a time series which are longer than
a given threshold, e.g. 1½ years, but shorter than
those attributed to the trend.
Source: Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
October 2003
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
4: Guidelines for the reporting of different forms of
data
See also: Cut-off sampling, Cut-off survey
Cut-throat
competition
Cut-throat competition, also known as destructive
or ruinous competition, refers to situations when
competition results in prices that do not chronically
or for extended periods of time cover costs of
production, particularly fixed costs.
DAC
See Development Assistance Committee
See also: Development Assistance Committee
(DAC)
This may arise in secularly declining or "sick"
industries with high levels of excess capacity or
where frequent cyclical or random demand
downturns are experienced.
Dairy Export Incentive Programme
Program (DEIP)
d‟encouragement à
l‟exportation de
produits laitiers
The Dairy Export Incentive Program (DEIP) is a US
programme first authorised by the 1985 FSA Act
under which the Commodity Credit Corporation
subsidises exporters of US dairy products to help
them compete with other subsidising nations.
Context: The destructive competition argument is
often advanced to advocate government
intervention in the form of price regulation or
stabilization and structural rationalization.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Context: Eligible sales should be in addition to, and
not displace, commercial export sales. The 1996
FAIR Act extended the programme to 2002
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Damage adjustments
to assets valuation
An adjustment item to NDP which corresponds to
the reduction of value of assets that is not
accounted for in consumption of fixed capital.
Cyber money
E-money that is transferred via
telecommunications networks such as the internet.
Source: BIS Business papers, November 2001,
Glossary, J. Hawkins
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 10.142
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/bispap07l.pdf
Cycle (in time series) Cycle
In time series, any periodic variation may be
described as a cycle. Often, however, the term is
reserved for cycles generated by the
autoregressive structure of the series, as opposed
to seasonal variation, caused by outside influences.
A disturbance to the series may affect the phase of
the cycle in this sense, while a seasonal variation
has always the same phase.
Damage and benefit
based pricing
techniques
Degradation pricing techniques based on an
assessment of what the unit suffering from the
degradation of the environment would be willing to
pay to be free of the effects. They comprise
revealed preference methods and stated
preference methods.
Source:
A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th edition,
prepared for the International Statistical Institute
by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the International
Statistical Institute by Longman Scientific and
Technical
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 9.52
Cyclical component of
a time series
The cyclical component of a time series refers to
(regular or periodic) fluctuations around the trend,
excluding the irregular component, revealing a
succession of phases of expansion and contraction.
The cyclical component can be viewed as those
169
Damage cost
Dommages
Damage cost is the cost incurred by repercussions
(effects) of direct environmental impacts (for
example, from the emission of pollutants) such as
the degradation of land or human—made
structures and health effects. In environmental
accounting, it is part of the costs borne by
economic agents
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Data
Characteristics or information, usually numerical,
that are collected through observation.
See also: Environmental costs
Context: Data is the physical representation of
information in a manner suitable for
communication, interpretation, or processing by
human beings or by automatic means (Economic
Commission for Europe of the United Nations
(UNECE), "Terminology on Statistical Metadata",
Conference of European Statisticians Statistical
Standards and Studies, No. 53, Geneva, 2000).
Damage-adjusted
income
Net domestic income less the value of all damages
resulting from the impact of degradation.
The damage adjusted income equals dpNDP
(depletion - adjusted NDP) less pollution damage
to human health equals daNNI (damage-adjusted
national income).
Statistical data refers to data from a survey or
administrative source used to produce statistics.
(OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical Committee
of the Commonwealth of Independent States,
"Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook", Annex 2, Glossary, Paris, 2002,
available at
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf)
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 2.182 & 10.152
Source: The International Statistical Institute, "The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms", edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003
Damage-adjusted
saving
The difference between damage-adjusted income
and final consumption by households and the
government.
See also: Characteristic, Coverage, Metadata,
Periodicity, Special Data Dissemination Standard
(SDDS), Timeliness
Data analysis
Data analysis is the process of transforming raw
data into usable information, often presented in
the form of a published analytical article, in order
to add value to the statistical output
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 10.159
Source: Statistics Canada, "Statistics Canada
Quality Guidelines", 3rd edition, October 1998,
page 62
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca/english/freepub/12-539XIE/12-539-XIE.pdf
Dangerous goods (for Marchandises
sea transport)
dangereuses
The classifications of dangerous goods are those
defined by the United Nations Committee of
Experts on the Transport of Dangerous Goods and
subsidiary bodies (ST/SG/AC.10/1/Rev.5).
Data base
management system
(DBMS)
A complex set of software programs that controls
the organization, storage, and retrieval of data in a
database. It also controls the security and integrity
of the database.
There are nine classes of dangerous goods:
1. explosives;
2. gases;
3. flammable liquids;
4. flammable solids, substances liable to
spontaneous combustion, substances which, on
contact with water emit flammable gases;
5. oxidizing substances, organic peroxides;
6. poisonous (toxic) and infectious substances;
7. radioactive material;
8. corrosives; and,
9. miscellaneous dangerous substances.
Context: A collection of software required for using
a digital data base so as to enable independent
users to access this data base. (Glossary of Terms
for the Standardization of Geographical Names,
United Nations Group of Experts on Geographic
Names, United Nations, New York, 2002. Available
at
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf)
170
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Glossary of Terms on
Statistical Data Editing", Conference of European
Statisticians Methodological material, Geneva,
2000
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
See also: Compilation practices, Special Data
Dissemination Standard (SDDS)
Data capture
Data capture is the process by which collected data
are put in a machine-readable form.
Data collection
programme
Same as Basic data collection programme
Context: Elementary edit checks are often
performed in sub-modules of the software that
does data capture.
See also: Basic data collection programme
Data confrontation
Data confrontation is the process of comparing
data that has generally been derived from different
surveys or other sources, especially those of
different frequencies, in order to assess their
coherency, and the reasons for any differences
identified.
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Glossary of Terms on
Statistical Data Editing", Conference of European
Statisticians Methodological material, Geneva,
2000
Hyperlink: http://amrads.jrc.cec.eu.int/kbase/glossary/glossALL.htm
Data confrontation may also take place between
statistics produced in different countries. Such
processes may or may not attempt to quantify the
impact of any differences identified.
See also: Input device
Data checking
Data checking is an activity through which the
correctness conditions of the data are verified.
Context: Such data may not be coherent for a
number of reasons including the use of different
data item definitions, classifications, scope,
reference period, etc.
Context: It also includes the specification of the
type of the error or condition not met, and the
qualification of the data and its division into the
"error free" and "erroneous data".
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Data checking may be aimed at detecting errorfree data or at detecting erroneous data.
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Glossary of Terms on
Statistical Data Editing", Conference of European
Statisticians Methodological material, Geneva,
2000
See also: Coherence, Data reconciliation
Data consumer
An organisation using data as input for further
processing.
Hyperlink: http://amrads.jrc.cec.eu.int/kbase/glossary/glossALL.htm
Context: An Organisation can play a number of
Organisation roles. Three roles are identified at
present: DataProvider; DataConsumer;
MaintenanceAgency.
DataConsumer also embraces the activity of
metadata provision (SDMX-IM/UML, p.31)
See also: Data reconciliation, Data review
Data collection
Data collection is the process of gathering data.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Context: Data collection encompasses such
concepts as:
- the type(s) of interview used for data collection
(e.g. personal or by telephone, paper and pencil,
facsimile, computer-aided personal or telephone
interview (CAPI/CATI), or mailed questionnaires);
Data correction
Data correction is the activity of checking data
which was declared (is possibly) erroneous.
- the duration of the field work (specify the dates);
the period used for data collection;
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
- whether a permanent survey organisation exists
or personnel for each survey round are recruited,
etc.
Data may be observed, measured, or collected by
means of questioning, as in survey or census
response.
Hyperlink:
171
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
for obtaining these supplementary data.
Source: Statistics Canada, "Statistics Canada
Quality Guidelines", 3rd edition, October 1998,
page 59
Data cube
Multi-dimensional structure for storing statistical
information.
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca/english/freepub/12-539XIE/12-539-XIE.pdf
Source: Adapting new technologies to census
operations, Arij Dekker, Symposium on Global
Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing
Censuses: Mid-Decade Assessment and Future
Prospects, Statistics Division, Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations
Secretariat New York, 7-10 August 2001, Glossary
See also: Data dissemination standards, IMF,
Dissemination format, Dissemination media, Public
disclosure, Publication (of data), Statistical Data
and Metadata Exchange (SDMX)
Data dissemination
Dissemination is the release to users of information
obtained through a statistical activity.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/docs/sym
posium_06.htm#_Toc8547016
Context: Data dissemination consists of
distributing or transmitting statistical data to
users. Various release media are possible; for
example: electronic format including the internet,
CD-ROM, paper publications, files available to
authorised users or for public use; fax response to
a special request, public speeches, press releases.
Data dictionary
A data dictionary is a database used for data that
refers to the use and structure of other data; that
is, a database for the storage of metadata.
Context: A data catalogue that describes the
contents of a database. Information is listed about
each field in the attribute tables and about the
format, definitions and structures of the attribute
tables. A data dictionary is an essential component
of metadata information. (Handbook on
Geographic Information Systems and Digital
Mapping, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 79,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Affairs, Statistics Division, New York, 2000, Annex
VI - Glossary)
Dissemination formats. Under the SDDS, the
concept of dissemination formats is divided into
two categories: "hardcopy" and "electronic"
publications, which detail the reference documents
through which users may access the data
described in the metadata and, where relevant,
detailed components beyond the minimum
prescribed.
In SDMX, "Supplementary Data" refers to a
description of data not routinely disseminated that
are made available to users upon request. It may
include customized tabulations that can be
provided (perhaps for a fee) to meet specific
requests. Also include information on procedures
for obtaining these supplementary data.
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 1, Framework for the
specification and standardization of data elements,
1998
See also: Data element, Data element dictionary
Source: Statistics Canada, "Statistics Canada
Quality Guidelines", 3rd edition, October 1998,
page 59
Data dissemination
Dissemination is the release to users of information
obtained through a statistical activity.
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca/english/freepub/12-539XIE/12-539-XIE.pdf
Context: Data dissemination consists of
distributing or transmitting statistical data to
users. Various release media are possible; for
example: electronic format including the internet,
CD-ROM, paper publications, files available to
authorised users or for public use; fax response to
a special request, public speeches, press releases.
See also: Data dissemination standards, IMF,
Dissemination format, Dissemination media, Public
disclosure, Publication (of data), Statistical Data
and Metadata Exchange (SDMX)
Dissemination formats. Under the SDDS, the
concept of dissemination formats is divided into
two categories: "hardcopy" and "electronic"
publications, which detail the reference documents
through which users may access the data
described in the metadata and, where relevant,
detailed components beyond the minimum
prescribed.
Data dissemination
standards, IMF
Standards to guide members of the International
Monetary Fund in the dissemination to the public of
their economic and financial data.
Source: International Monetary Fund (IMF), "Guide
to the Data Dissemination Standards, Module 1:
The Special Data Dissemination Standard",
Washington, May 1996
In SDMX, "Supplementary Data" refers to a
description of data not routinely disseminated that
are made available to users upon request. It may
include customized tabulations that can be
provided (perhaps for a fee) to meet specific
requests. Also include information on procedures
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/mae/mft/sup/part
1.htm#appendix_III
172
ssary.pdf
See also: Data dissemination, Data Quality
Reference Site (DQRS), General Data
Dissemination System (GDDS), Quality – IMF,
Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS)
See also: Data editing, graphical, Macro-edit,
Micro-editing
Data element
A data element is a unit of data for which the
definition, identification, representation, and
permissible values are specified by means of a set
of attributes
Data divergence
The sum of all differences between two datasets
(data-data divergence) or between a single dataset
and reality (data-world divergence). Sources of
data divergence include: data ageing, response
errors, coding or data entry errors, differences in
coding and the effect of disclosure control.
Context: Data element administration record is the
Administration record for a Data element.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Data element precision is the degree of specificity
for a Data element.
Data element representation is the relationship
between a Data element and its Value domain.
Data element representation class is the class of
representation of a Data element. (ISO/IEC
International Standard 11179-3 "Information
technology - Metadata registries-Part 3: Registry
metamodel and basic attributes", February 2003)
Data editing
Data editing is the activity aimed at detecting and
correcting errors (logical inconsistencies) in data.
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
Context: Editing techniques refers to a range of
procedures and processes used for detecting and
handling errors in data. Examples of different
techniques include the different approaches to
editing such as micro-editing/ macro-editing,
input/output editing, or to the various tools
available for editing such as graphical editing,
interactive editing, etc.
See also: Data dictionary
Data element concept
A data element concept is a concept that can be
represented in the form of a data element,
described independently of any particular
representation
Edit types refer to the actual nature of edits
applied to data during input or output processing.
These include:
Context: Data element concept administration
record is the Administration record for a Data
element concept.
- validation edits - to check the validity of basic
identification of classificatory items in unit data;
- logical edits - ensure that two or more data items
do not have contradictory values;
Data element concept object class is the
designation of an Object class for a Data element
concept.
- consistency edits - check to ensure that precise
and correct arithmetic relationships exists between
two or more data items;
Object class qualifier is a qualifier of the Data
element concept object class.
- range edits - identify whether or not a data item
value falls inside a determined acceptable range;
Data element concept property is the designation
of a Property for a Data element concept.
- variance edits - involve looking for suspiciously
high variances at the output edit stage.
Data element concept conceptual domain
relationship is the relationship between a Data
element concept and its Conceptual domain.
Edit types may also refer to whether these edits
are fatal or query type, i.e. whether they detect
errors with certainty or point to suspicious data
items.
Data element concept expression is the
relationship between a Data element and a Data
element concept.
Data element concept relationship is the
relationship among two or more Data element
concepts.
(ISO/IEC International Standard 11179-3
"Information technology - Metadata registries-Part
3: Registry metamodel and basic attributes",
February 2003)
Micro-editing and macro-editing may be
distinguished in order to calculate rate of edits.
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Glossary of Terms on
Statistical Data Editing", Conference of European
Statisticians Methodological material, Geneva,
2000
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/editingglo
173
data is not altered during the transmission.
Data element
derivation
Relationship among a data element which is
derived, the rule controlling its derivation, and the
data element(s) from which it is derived.
Context: Data exchange context is the framework
in which two or more partners agree to: exchange
one or more identified sets of data and related
attributes (Exchanged time series, (ETS)); use one
or more key families to serve this requirement,
possibly, on some business and implementation
agreements.
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179-3 Information technology - Metadata registries
(MDR) - Part 3: Registry metamodel and basic
attributes", February 2003
Exchanged time series (ETS) is a collection of data
sets (European Central Bank (ECB), Bank for
International Settlement (BIS), Eurostat,
International Monetary Fund (IMF), Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD), "GESMES/TS User Guide", Release 3.00,
February, 2003; unpublished on paper, available at
http://www.sdmx.org/Data/GesmesTS_rel3.pdf)
Data element
dictionary
A data element dictionary is an information
resource that lists and defines all relevant data
elements
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 1, Framework for the
specification and standardization of data elements,
1998
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
See also: Data dictionary
See also: Electronic data interchange (EDI),
GESMES TS
Data element facet
A data element facet is any aspect of a data
element that is subject to classification. This
includes object class, property, representation, and
data element concept
Data exchange
context
The framework in which two or more partners
agree to exchange one or more identified sets of
data and related attributes (exchanged time series
(ETS)), use one or more key families to serve this
requirement, possibly, on some business and
implementation agreements.
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Data element name
A data element name is a single or multi-word
designation used as the primary means of
identification of data elements for humans
Source: European Central Bank (ECB), Bank for
International Settlement (BIS), Eurostat,
International Monetary Fund (IMF), Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD), "GESMES/TS User Guide", Release 3.00,
February, 2003; unpublished on paper
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Hyperlink:
http://www.sdmx.org/Data/GesmesTS_rel3.pdf
Data element registry
A data element registry is an information resource
kept by a registration authority that describes the
meaning and representational form of data
elements, including registration identifiers,
definitions, names, value domains, metadata and
administrative attributes, etc
See also: Attribute, Data exchange, Key family
Data field
Space for a specific data element in a computer
record. Example: the fields for the coordinates in a
place name computer record.
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
See also: Register - ISO
Data element value
A data element value is a value out of a set of
permissible values pertaining to a data element
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
See also: Data item
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Data flow definition
A structure which describes, categorises and
constrains the allowable content of a data set that
providers will supply for different reference
periods.
Data exchange
Data exchange is the process of sending and
receiving data in such a manner that the
information content or meaning assigned to the
Context: In SDMX, data sets are reported or
174
disseminated according to a data flow definition.
The data flow definition identifies the data
structure definition (key family) and may be
associated with one or more subject matter
domains; this facilitates the search for data
according to organised category schemes. A ―data
flow‖, in this context, is an abstract concept of the
data sets, i.e. a structure without any data.
Data interchange
See Data exchange
See also: Data exchange
Data intruder
A data user who attempts to disclose information
about a population unit through identification or
attribution.
A Data structure definition (Key Family) defines
the dimensions, attributes, measures, and
associated representation that comprise the valid
structure of data and related metadata contained
in a data set.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
The Dataflow Definition associates a Key Family
with one or more category. This gives a system the
ability to state which data sets are to be reported
for a given category, and which data sets can be
reported using the Key Family definition.
Data intrusion
detection
The detection of a data intruder through their
behaviour. This is most likely to occur through
analysis of a pattern of requests submitted to a
remote data laboratory. At present this is only a
theoretical possibility, but it is likely to become
more relevant as virtual safe settings become
more prevalent.
The Dataflow Definition may also have additional
metadata attached, defining qualitative information
and constraints on the use of the Key Family, in
terms of reporting periodicity or specifying the
subset of codes to be used in a dimension.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
See also: Attribute, Category, Code, Data set,
Definition, Dimension, Measure
Data format
Usually refers to a specific, possibly proprietary,
set of data structures within a software system.
Data Intrusion
Simulation (DIS)
A method of estimating the probability that a data
intruder who has matched an arbitrary population
unit against a sample unique in a target microdata
file has done so correctly.
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Data identifier
The unique identifier for an administered item
within a registration authority.
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
Data item
A data item is an occurrence of a data element.
See also: Administered item, Identifier
Data imputation
Data imputation is the substitution of estimated
values for missing or inconsistent data items
(fields). The substituted values are intended to
create a data record that does not fail edits.
Context: A data item is a specific sub-component
of a data record. For instance, in a population
census, specific data items might be last name,
first name, sex, and age (Economic Commission
for Europe of the United Nations (UNECE),
"Glossary of Terms on Statistical Data Editing",
Conference of European Statisticians
Methodological material, Geneva, 2000).
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179,
Part 1, Framework for the specification and
standardization of data elements, 1999
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Data dissemination standards, IMF,
Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS),
Variable
175
adjustments for time series) and availability of
textual analysis of current-period development
with the dissemination of the data.
Data model
A data model is a graphical and/or lexical
representation of data, specifying their properties,
structure and inter-relationships.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Context: The UN defines a data model as a user's
conceptual design of a data set that describes the
database entities and their relations to one another
(United Nations Department of Economic and
Social Affairs, "Handbook on Geographic
Information Systems and Digital Mapping", Studies
in Methods, Series F, No. 79, Annex VI - Glossary,
New York, 2000)
See also: Data, Data dissemination, Data set,
Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange (SDMX)
Data processing (DP)
The operation performed on data in order to derive
new information according to a given set of rules.
Context: The processing site refers to the
organisation, institute, agency, etc, responsible for
undertaking the collection, tabulation,
manipulation and preparation of data and
metadata output. The processing site may or may
not also refer to the physical location(s) at which
such activities are carried out.
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
See also: Metamodel
Data owners
Are the individuals who are held managerially and
financially accountable for a dataset and who have
legal ownership rights to a dataset even though
the dataset may have been
collected/collated/disseminated by another party.
A processing system embodies both manual and
automated systems used by agencies to despatch
questionnaires, collect, compile, manipulate,
analyse and disseminate data and metadata
output. Such systems therefore cover all stages of
the statistical processing cycle.
Source: National statistics, methods and quality
report, Office for National Statistics (ONS)
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva, 2000
Hyperlink:
http://www.statistics.gov.uk/methods_quality/data
_annex.asp
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
Data policy
A set of broad, high level principles which form the
guiding framework in which Data Management can
operate.
See also: Automated data processing (ADP),
Compilation practices, Electronic data processing
(EDP), Processing errors
Source: National statistics, methods and quality
report, Office for National Statistics (ONS)
Data protection
Data protection refers to the set of privacymotivated laws, policies and procedures that aim
to minimise intrusion into respondents‘ privacy
caused by the collection, storage and
dissemination of personal data.
Hyperlink:
http://www.statistics.gov.uk/methods_quality/data
_annex.asp
Data portability
The possibility of running and/or using the same
data on different computer systems.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Data provider
An organisation which produces data or metadata.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Data presentation
Description of the way the data are presented.
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
Context: In SDMX, "Data Presentation" includes
the description of the table contents, with their
data breakdowns. It should also include summary
information on units of measurement, time span
covered, adjustments to data (e.g., seasonal
See also: Administrative data, Administrative
source, Data, Data collection, administrative, Data
provider series key, Data source, Data source,
176
types of, Metadata, Primary source (of statistical
data), Revision policy, Secondary source (of
statistical data)
1001.pdf
See also: Data dissemination standards, Data
Quality Reference Site (DQRS), Quality – IMF
Data provider series
key
Identifier used by the data providers systems.
Data Quality
Reference Site
(DQRS)
The IMF Data Quality Reference Site (DQRS) was
created to develop an understanding of issues
surrounding data quality.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
The site includes contributions from both national
and international agencies and covers definitions of
data quality, provides examples of evaluations of
data quality and outlines the different tradeoffs
between the different dimensions of data quality.
See also: Identifier, Time series
Data quality
See Quality - Eurostat, Quality - OECD, Quality IMF, Quality - ISO, Quality - National
See also: Quality – Eurostat, Quality – IMF, Quality
- ISO, Quality - OECD
Context: The DQRS is an adjunct to the IMF‘s Data
Quality Assessment Framework (DQAF) which is
designed to foster communication between users
and compilers of statistics, and to provide a
structure and common language for data quality.
The three main areas where an assessment
methodology, such as that provided by the DQAF,
could be helpful are to guide:
Data Quality
Assessment
Framework (DQAF)
The IMF's DQAF was developed as an assessment
methodology that aims to provide structure and a
common language for the assessment of data
quality.
- countries‘ efforts to strengthen their statistical
systems by providing a self-assessment tool and to
identify areas for improvement in which donor
support might be sought;
The DQAF facilitates a comprehensive view of data
quality, one that recognizes interrelations,
including tradeoffs, among elements of quality and
allows emphases to vary across data categories
and uses/users.
- IMF staff in preparing reports assessing the
quality of data provided for country surveillance
and operations, and in designing programmes of
technical assistance;
It facilitates dialogue with national statistical
agencies and country authorities, as well as a more
homogenous approach to assessing data quality by
Fund staff.
- data users in gauging data quality for their own
purposes.
Context: Three main areas were envisioned in
which an assessment methodology, such as that
provided by the DQAF, could be helpful.
Source: IMF DQRS website
First, the DQAF could be useful to guide countries‘
efforts to strengthen their statistical systems by
providing a self-assessment tool and to identify
areas for improvement in which donor support
might be sought.
See also: Data dissemination standards, Quality –
IMF
Hyperlink: http://dsbb.imf.org/dqrsindex.htm
Data reconciliation
Frequently used as a synonym for Data
confrontation. In the more active sense, the term
implies the process of adjusting data derived from
two different sources to remove or at least reduce
the impact of differences identified in the process
of data confrontation.
Second, the DQAF could be useful in guiding IMF
staff in preparing Reports on the Observance of
Standards and Codes (ROSCs), in assessing the
quality of data provided for country surveillance
and operations, and in designing programs of
technical assistance.
Context: Editing and reconciliation may involve
fixing errors or adopting alternative sources and
methods that are aimed at improving the process
of reviewing or understanding data.
(International Monetary Fund (IMF)," Quarterly
National Accounts Manual", Washington D.C.,
2001, available
at:http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/qna/2000/
textbook)
Third, the DQAF could help guide data users—both
in the private and the public sectors—in gauging
data quality for their own purposes. In this sense,
it could serve as a useful complement to the
quality dimensions included in the SDDS and the
GDDS.
Source: The Fourth Review of the Fund's Data
Standards' Initiatives: Supplement on the Data
Quality Assessment Framework, IMF, Washington
DC, 10 July 2001
Under the SDDS, this may entail, according to the
data category under consideration, the
reconciliation of stocks and transactions data;
reconciliation of reported data with money and
banking statistics, custodian data; differences with
partner data or preshipment inspection data; the
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/dsbb/2001/07
177
treatment of differences between GDP compiled for
the production approach and GDP compiled from
the expenditure approach. It is a special kind of
editing done after initial compilation.
farm.
Hierarchical - This level involves checking items in
sub-questionnaires. Data relationships of this type
are known as "hierarchical data" and include
situations such as questions about an individual
within a household. In this example, the common
household information is on one questionnaire and
each individual's information is on a separate
questionnaire. Checks are made to ensure that the
sum of the individual's data for an item does not
exceed the total reported for the household.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
See also: Compilation practices, Data checking,
Data confrontation, Special Data Dissemination
Standard (SDDS)
b) across questionnaires / editing of logical units
Data redundancy
Data redundancy occurs when the value of data
items (fields) can be partially or completely
deduced from the values of other data items
(fields).
A logical level of checking and correction during
which the relationships among data in two or more
records are considered, namely in a group of
records that are logically coupled together. The
across questionnaire edits involve calculating valid
ranges for each item from the survey data
distributions or from historic data for use in outlier
detection.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Data analysis routines that are usually run at
summary time may easily be incorporated into
data review at this level. In this way, summary
level errors are detected early enough to be
corrected during the usual error correction
procedures. The "across questionnaire" checks
should identify the specific questionnaire that
contains the questionable data.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
"Across questionnaire" level edits are generally
grouped into two types: statistical edits and macro
edits.
Data review
Data review is an activity through which the
correctness conditions of the data are verified. It
also includes the specification of the type of the
error or condition not met, and the qualification of
the data and its division into the "error-free" and
"erroneous" data.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Data review consists of both error detection and
data analysis, and can be carried out in manual or
automated mode.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Context: Data review/error detection may occur at
many levels:
a) within a questionnaire
Data revisions
Data revisions are defined broadly as any change
in a value of a statistic released to the public by an
official national statistical agency.
Item level / editing of individual data - the lowest
logical level of checking and correction during
which the relationships among data items are not
considered. Validations at this level are generally
named "range checking".
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
6.1: Data revisions
Example: age must be between 0 and 120. In
more complex range checks, the range may vary
by strata or some other identifier. Example: if
strata = "large farm operation", then the number
of acres must be greater than 500.
Data security
The measures taken to prevent unauthorized
access or use of data.
Questionnaire level / editing of individual records a logical level of checking and correction during
which the relationships among data items in one
record/questionnaire are considered.
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva, 2000
Examples:
1) If married = 'Yes' then age must be greater
than 14.
2) Sum of field acres must equal total acres in
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
178
aterminology.pdf
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
See also: Confidentiality, data
See also: Bilateral exchange
Data set
Any organized collection of data.
Data source
A specific data set, metadata set, database or
metadata repository from where data or metadata
are available.
Context: Within SDMX, a data set can be
understood as a collection of similar data, sharing
a structure, which covers a fixed period of time.
Context: The source of data is often used as a
synonym for the term "data provider". However, in
the context of SDMX the latter term refers to the
organisation or individual from where statistics are
obtained.
A data set is any permanently stored collection of
information usually containing either case level
data, aggregation of case level data, or statistical
manipulations of either the case level or
aggregated survey data, for multiple survey
instances (United States Bureau of the Census,
Software and Standards Management Branch,
Systems Support Division, "Survey Design and
Statistical Methodology Metadata", Washington
D.C., August 1998, Section 3.3.7, page 14).
The term "data source" can also refer to the
characteristics and components of the raw
statistical data used for compiling statistical
aggregates.
Sources can be distinguished, according to the
modality of data collection, in:
The terms database and data set are often used
interchangeably.
a) administrative (for data coming from
administrative records);
A logical collection of values or database objects
relating to a single subject (United Nations
Department of Economic and Social Affairs,
"Handbook on Geographic Information Systems
and Digital Mapping", Studies in Methods, Series F,
No. 79, Annex VI - Glossary, New York, 2000).
b) survey (for data coming from surveys for a
specific sector or institutional unit).
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Glossary of Terms on
Statistical Data Editing", Conference of European
Statisticians Methodological material, Geneva,
2000
See also: Data provider
Data sources used MetaStore
Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types refers to
the original data source(s) used (administrative
data, household survey, enterprise/establishment
survey, etc).
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/editingglo
ssary.pdf
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
See also: GESMES TS, Sibling group
Data set identifier
See Data identifier
See also: Data source, types of
See also: Data identifier
Data sponsors
Are individuals or groups of individuals who
commission the collection, compilation or
production of datasets. Data Sponsors may, in
addition, be the Owners of such Datasets
especially if they provide the funding for such
collection on production efforts.
Data sharing
exchange
Exchange of data and/or metadata in a situation
involving the use of open, freely available data
formats and where process patterns are known
and standard.
Context: Apart from the data-sharing exchange,
the SDMX initiative identifies two other basic forms
of exchange of statistics and metadata between
organisations, i.e. bilateral exchange and
multilateral exchange.
Source: National statistics, methods and quality
report, Office for National Statistics (ONS)
Hyperlink:
http://www.statistics.gov.uk/methods_quality/data
_annex.asp
Any organization or individual can use any
counterparty's data and metadata (assuming they
are permitted access to it). This model requires no
bilateral agreement, but only requires that data
and metadata providers and consumers adhere to
the standards.
Data standardization
The process of reaching agreement on common
data definitions, formats, representation and
structures of all data layers and elements.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
179
a set of statistical concepts that may qualify the
statistical information at data set, sibling group,
time series or observation level. The statistical
concepts used in this way are called ―attributes‖.
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Each data structure definition has the following
properties:
Data status upon
release
The status of the data refers to whether the data
initially disseminated to the public are final data or
preliminary and therefore subject to revision.
a) identifier (providing a unique identification
within an exchanged time series);
b) name (also unique); and
Context: Under the SDDS the data identified as
meeting the standard may be preliminary and
subject to revision and designated as such. On the
other hand, estimates that are not based on data
collected for the given reference period would not
be considered preliminary and would not be in line
with the SDDS specifications.
c) description (a description of the purpose and
domain covered).
Source: European Central Bank (ECB), Bank for
International Settlement (BIS), Eurostat,
International Monetary Fund (IMF), Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD), "GESMES/TS User Guide", Release 3.00,
February, 2003; unpublished on paper
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Hyperlink:
http://www.sdmx.org/Data/GesmesTS_rel3.pdf
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
See also: Attribute, Cross-domain metadata
concepts, Definition, structural, Dimension
(dimensionality), GESMES TS, Key structure,
Statistical concept
See also: Revision policy, Special Data
Dissemination Standard (SDDS)
Data steward
A data steward is a person or organization
delegated the responsibility for managing a specific
set of data resources
Data swapping
A disclosure control method for microdata that
involves swapping the values of variables for
records that match on a representative key. In the
literature this technique is also sometimes referred
to as multidimensional transformation. It is a
transformation technique that guarantees (under
certain conditions) the maintenance of a set of
statistics, such as means, variances and univariate
distributions.
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Data structure
Implementation of a data model consisting of file
structures used to represent various features.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Data structure
definition
Set of structural metadata associated to a data
set, which include information about how concepts
are associated with the measures, dimensions, and
attributes of a data cube, along with information
about the representation of data and related
descriptive metadata.
Data type
Datatype is a set of distinct values, characterized
by properties of those values and by operations on
those values. [ISO/IEC 11404:1996, 4.11]
Context: The field characteristic of the columns in
an attribute table; for example, character, floating
point and integer (Handbook on Geographic
Information Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies
in Methods, Series F, No. 79, United Nations
Department of Economic and Social Affairs,
Statistics Division, New York, 2000, Annex VI Glossary).
Context: In order to exchange statistical
information, a central institution has to agree with
its partners about which statistical concepts are
necessary for identifying the series (and for use as
dimensions) and which statistical concepts are to
be used as attributes. These definitions form the
data structure definition (also called ―key family‖ in
Gesmes/TS).
Datatype annotation is the specifying information
to further define the Datatype.
Datatype description descriptive information to
further clarify the Datatype.
The coded statistical concepts assigned as
dimensions in a key structure are called the
dimensions of the key family. In addition to the
dimensions, each data structure definition assigns
Datatype name is a designation for the Datatype.
180
the list of acceptable values of this data item.
Datatype scheme reference is a reference
identifying the source of the Datatype
specification.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
ISO/IEC International Standard 11179-3 Information technology - Metadata registries
(MDR) - Part 3: Registry metamodel and basic
attributes", February 2003
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179-3 Information technology - Metadata registries
(MDR) - Part 3: Registry metamodel and basic
attributes", February 2003
Data value
A data value is an element of a value domain
Data type of data
element values
The data type of data element values refers to a
set of distinct values for representing the data
element value
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Data warehouse
The assembled data capital of enterprises or
institutions, stored and managed in a way that
favours access and analysis.
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Data utility
A summary term describing the value of a given
data release as an analytical resource. This
comprises the data‘s analytical completeness and
its analytical validity. Disclosure control methods
usually have an adverse effect on data utility.
Ideally, the goal of any disclosure control regime
should be to maximise data utility whilst
minimizing disclosure risk. In practice disclosure
control decisions are a trade-off between utility
and disclosure risk.
Source: Adapting new technologies to census
operations, Arij Dekker, Symposium on Global
Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing
Censuses:
Mid-Decade Assessment and Future Prospects,
Statistics Division, Department of Economic and
Social Affairs, United Nations Secretariat
New York, 7-10 August 2001, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/docs/sym
posium_06.htm#_Toc8547016
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Database
A logical collection of information that is
interrelated and that is managed and stored as a
unit, for example in the same computer file. The
terms database and data set are often used
interchangeably.
Data validation
Data validation is an activity aimed at verifying
whether the value of a data item comes from the
given (finite or infinite) set of acceptable values.
For instance, a geographic code (field), say for a
Canadian Province, may be checked against a table
of acceptable values for the field.
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Datatype
See Data type
See also: Data type
Date
A date is a time reference.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Data validation
according to a list
Data validation according to a list refers to the
process of verifying whether the data value is in
See also: Date of last change
Date last input
received from source -
181
MetaStore
Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types refers to
the date on which the data was last received from
the source, e.g. national agency or international
organisation.
a) last update of content;
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
In more general terms, this refers to the date on
which either the data or metadata were inserted or
modified in the database.
b) last certified without update;
c) last posted on web site.
Source: ISO/IEC 11179-3 "Information
technology-Metadata registries (MDR)-Part 3:
Registry metamodel and basic attributes",
February 2003
Date of birth
The date of birth is the hour (minute), day, month
and year of birth established in order that exact
age may be determined in completed years,
months, days, hours (minutes) of life as required
See also: Administered item, Creation date, Date,
Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange (SDMX),
Time of recording
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Date of occurrence of
a vital event
The date of occurrence of a vital event is the exact
day, month and year (Gregorian calendar), as well
as the hour and minute, if appropriate, when the
event occurred
Date of commitment
The date on which the commitment is made.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Day-to-day money
See Overnight money
See also: Overnight money
Date of last change
The date the administered item was last changed.
DB system
Context: In SDMX, "Date of Update" refers to the
date on which the metadata element was inserted
or modified in the database. It can be further
detailed in:
Régime à prestations
- définies
Defined benefit plans
a) last update of content;
DBMS
See Database management system
b) last certified without update;
See also: Data base management system (DBMS)
c) last posted on web site.
DC system
In more general terms, this refers to the date on
which either the data or metadata were inserted or
modified in the database.
Defined contribution plans
Régime à cotisations définies
DCMI
See Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (DCMI)
Source: ISO/IEC 11179-3 "Information
technology-Metadata registries (MDR)-Part 3:
Registry metamodel and basic attributes",
February 2003
See also: Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (DCMI)
DDT
DDT
DDT (dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane) an
insecticide highly toxic to biota, including humans.
This is a persistent biochemical which accumulates
in the food chain
See also: Administered item, Creation date, Date,
Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange (SDMX),
Time of recording
Date of last change
The date the administered item was last changed.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: In SDMX, "Date of Update" refers to the
date on which the metadata element was inserted
or modified in the database. It can be further
detailed in:
De facto population
182
should be based only on the deadweight welfare
loss (allocative efficiency), with judgments
regarding transfers of income left to the political
process. Still others argue that producers' surplus
should be considered because much of it is
dissipated in the quest for monopoly profits.
The de facto population is a concept under which
individuals (or vital events) are recorded (or are
attributed) to the geographical area where they
were present (or occurred) at a specified time
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
See also: De jure population, Population, total
De jure population
The de jure population is a concept under which
individuals (or vital events) are recorded (or are
attributed) to a geographical area on the basis of
the place of residence
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Rent seeking
Death
Death is the permanent disappearance of all
evidence of life at any time after live birth has
taken place (post natal cessation of vital functions
without capability of resuscitation). This definition
therefore excludes foetal death
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
See also: De facto population, Population, total
De minimis creditors
(or clause)
Minor creditors that are exempted from debt
restructuring to simplify implementation of the
Paris Club restructuring agreements. Their claims
are payable in full as they fall due. An exposure
limit defining a minor creditor is specified in each
Agreed Minute.
Death rate
Taux de mortalité
The number of deaths in a given period divided by
the population exposed to risk of death in that
period. For human populations the period is usually
one year and if the population is changing in size
over the year the divisor is taken as the population
at the mid-year. The death rate as so defined is
called ―crude‖.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
If some refinement is introduced by relating
mortality to the age and sex constitution (or other
factors) for comparative purposes the rate is said
to be standardised.
Dead unit
A dead unit is a unit that ceases existing during
the reference period. For enterprises this may be
because the business has closed down and for
persons because of death.
Source:
A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th edition,
prepared for the International Statistical Institute
by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the International
Statistical Institute by Longman Scientific and
Technical
Source: Assessment of the Quality in Statistics,
meeting organised by Eurostat on 4-5 April 2000,
Glossary on Quality in Statistics
Death, causes and
underlying causes
Those diseases, morbid conditions or injuries which
either resulted in or contributed to death and the
circumstances of the accident or violence which
produced any such injuries. The underlying cause
of death is (a) the disease or injury which initiated
the train of events leading directly to death, or (b)
the circumstances of the accident or violence which
produced the fatal injury.
Dead-weight welfare
loss
The deadweight welfare loss is a measure of the
dollar value of consumers' surplus lost (but not
transferred to producers) as a consequence of a
price increase.
Context: In anti-trust economics, there is some
debate over the appropriate welfare measure to be
applied. Some argue that lost consumer surplus
(i.e. including both deadweight loss and producers'
surplus) should be considered on the grounds that
a transfer from consumers to firms does not
improve social welfare. Others argue that this
represents a value judgment and all decisions
Source: UNSD, 2005, Millennium Indicators
Database, United Nations, New York
See also Underlying causes of death
UNSD, 2005, Millennium Indicators Database3,
United Nations, New York
183
Debt buyback
The repurchase by a debtor of its own debt,
usually at a substantial discount. The debtor‘s
obligations are reduced while the creditor receives
a once and for all payment. Although in apparent
contravention of standard commercial bank loan
agreements, some debtors have bought back their
own debt on the secondary market.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/mi/mi_goals.asp
See also: Underlying cause of death
Debt and debt service
reduction (DDSR)
operations
Debt-restructuring agreements are typically
undertaken for bank loan debt obligations and
involve the buyback and exchange of eligible debt
either for financial instruments that are valued at a
substantial discount (simple cash buyback) or for
new bonds featuring a present value reduction. In
some instances, the principal portion of new
financial instruments is fully collateralized with
zero-coupon bonds issued by the treasury of an
industrial country, while interest obligations are
also partially secured. DDSR operations are
characterized by a ―menu approach,‖ allowing
individual creditors to select from among several
DDSR options. Under the Brady plan of March
1989, some of these arrangements have been
supported by loans from official creditors.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Debt cancellation
Debt cancellation occurs when there is an
agreement between the debtor and the creditor
that an outstanding debt no longer needs to be
repaid
Source: Development Assistance Committee (DCA)
International Development Statistics – Handbook
for Reporting Debt Reorganisation on the DAC
Questionnaire
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://interdev.oecd.org/dac/pdf/debtreng.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Debt conversion
Debt conversion is the exchange of debt - typically
at a substantial discount - for equity, or
counterpart domestic currency funds to be used to
finance a particular project or policy. Debt for
equity, debt for nature and debt for development
swaps are all examples of debt conversion
Debt assumption
Debt assumption is a special form of debt
refinancing, involving three parties—the creditor,
the original debtor, and a new debtor who assumes
the debt obligation.
Source: Development Assistance Committee (DCA)
International Development Statistics – Handbook
for Reporting Debt Reorganisation on the DAC
Questionnaire
A debt assumption involves two simultaneous
transactions; the first transaction cancels the
original debtor‘s obligation, and the second
transaction creates a new debt contract between
the creditor and the new debtor, or assumer.
Hyperlink:
http://interdev.oecd.org/dac/pdf/debtreng.pdf
The first transaction is classified as a capital
transfer (as in the case of debt forgiveness), and
the second transaction involves the creditor‘s
acquisition of the new debt instrument issued by
the assumer. Any write-down of asset value by the
creditor is recorded in the revaluation account.
Debt default
Failure to meet a debt obligation payment, either
principal or interest. A payment that is overdue or
in arrears is technically ―in default,‖ since by virtue
of nonpayment the borrower has failed to abide by
the terms and conditions of the debt obligation. In
practice, the point at which a debt obligation is
considered ―in default‖ will vary.
Context: The assumption of a debt liability of one
entity by another entity, usually by mutual
agreement. (IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics:
Guide for Compilers and Users – Appendix III,
Glossary, IMF, Washington DC. Available at
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual,
IMF, Washington, 2000, para. 211
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/mfs/manual/i
ndex.htm
Debt defeasance
184
Défausse de la dette
Debt defeasance allows a debtor (whose debts are
in the form generally of securities other than
shares and loans) to remove certain liabilities from
the balance sheet by pairing irrevocably assets of
equal value to the liabilities
Debt refinancing
Debt refinancing refers to the conversion of the
original debt including arrears, into a new debt
instrument. In other words, overdue payments or
future debt-service obligations are ―paid off‖ using
a new debt obligation. In the Guide, as in BPM5, a
change in the terms of a debt instrument is to be
reported as the creation of a new debt instrument,
with the original debt extinguished.
Source: SNA 11.24
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Debt forgiveness Ŕ
Remise de dette - MBP
BPM
Debt forgiveness occurs when a government
creditor entity in one economy formally agrees via a contractual arrangement - with a debtor
entity in another to forgive (extinguish) all, or
part, of the obligation of the debtor entity to the
creditor, the amount forgiven is treated as a
capital transfer from the creditor to the debtor.
That is, the balance of payments reflects a
reduction of the liability offset by the transfer.
Similar treatment is applicable when a government
entity‘s debt is forgiven by agreement with a
creditor entity in another economy
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Debt relief
Allégement de la dette
Debt relief is any form of debt reorganisation which
relieves the overall burden of debt
Context: Debt relief results where there is a
reduction in the present value of these debtservice obligations and/or a deferral of the
payments due, thus providing smaller near-term
debt service obligations. This can be measured, in
most cases, by an increase in the duration of these
obligations; that is, payments become weighted
more toward the latter part of the debt
instrument‘s life.
Source: BPM para. 348
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
See also: Debt forgiveness – SNA
However, if debt reorganization results in changes
in present value and duration that are
countervailing in their impact on the debt burden,
then there is no debt relief, unless the net impact
is significant—such as could occur if there was a
deep reduction in present value (together with
small decrease in duration) or a sharp increase in
duration (together with a small increase in present
value). (IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC. Available from
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm)
Debt forgiveness Ŕ
Remise de dette - SCN
SNA
Debt forgiveness occurs when a debtor and
creditor become parties to a bilateral agreement
that a financial claim no longer exists
Source: SNA 11.23 [BPM 532]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Debt forgiveness – BPM
Debt instrument(s)
Existing debt instruments typically arise out of
contractual relationships under which an
institutional unit (the debtor) has an unconditional
liability to another institutional unit (the creditor)
to repay principal with or without interest, or to
pay interest without principal. These instruments
include debt securities, loans, trade credit, and
currency and deposits. Debt instruments may also
be created by the force of law—in particular,
obligations to pay taxes or to make other
compulsory payments—or through rights and
obligations that results in a debtor accepting an
obligation to make future payment(s) to a creditor.
Source: Development Assistance Committee (DCA)
International Development Statistics – Handbook
for Reporting Debt Reorganisation on the DAC
Questionnaire
Hyperlink:
http://interdev.oecd.org/dac/pdf/debtreng.pdf
Debt reorganisation / Restructuration de la
Restructuring
dette
Any action officially agreed between creditor and
debtor that alters the terms previously established
for repayment. This may include forgiveness
(extinction of the loan), or rescheduling which can
be implemented either by revising the repayment
schedule or extending a new refinancing loan.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
185
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Debt rescheduling
Debt rescheduling refers to the formal deferment
of debt-service payments and the application of
new and extended maturities to the deferred
amount. Rescheduling debt is one means of
providing a debtor with debt relief through a delay
and, in the case of concessional rescheduling, a
reduction in debt-service obligations.
See also: Eligible debt
Debt service ratio
The debt service ratio is the ratio of debt service
payments made by or due from a country to that
country‘s export earnings
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Context: The ratio of debt service (interest and
principal payments due) during a year, expressed
as a percentage of exports (typically of goods and
services) for that year. Forward-looking debtservice ratios require some forecast of export
earnings.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
This ratio is considered to be a key indicator of a
country‘s debt burden. (IMF, 2003, External Debt
Statistics: Guide for Compilers and Users –
Appendix III, Glossary, IMF, Washington DC.
Available from
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm)
Debt securities
Debt securities cover all tradable securities, except
those classified as equity securities. Debt securities
include bonds, debentures, notes, etc., money
market or negotiable debt instruments
Source: Report on the Survey of Implementation
of Implementation of Methodological Standards for
Direct Investment – IMF, OECD, March 2000 –
Appendix II: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms.
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/bopage/pdf/mar2000.
pdf
Debt service reduction
option
Option under concessional Paris Club debt
reschedulings where creditors effect the required
debt reduction in present value terms through a
reduction in the applicable interest rate.
Debt security
A promise on the part of the issuer (i.e. the
borrower) to make one or more payment(s) to the
holder (the lender) at a specified future date or
dates. Such securities usually carry a specific rate
of interest (the coupon) and/or are sold at a
discount to the amount that will be repaid at
maturity.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
See also: Concessional restructuring
Debt service
Refers to payments in respect of both principal and
interest. Actual debt service is the set of payments
actually made to satisfy a debt obligation,
including principal, interest, and any late payment
fees. Scheduled debt service is the set of
payments, including principal and interest, that is
required to be made through the life of the debt.
Debt sustainability
analysis
A study of a country‘s medium- to long-term debt
situation. A country‘s eligibility for support under
the HIPC Initiative is determined on the basis of
such an analysis, jointly undertaken by the staffs
of the IMF, the World Bank, and the country
concerned.
Context: Debt service is the sum of interest
payments and repayment of principal. (External
Debt: Definition, Statistical Coverage and
Methodology, A Report by an International Working
Group on External Debt Statistics of the World
Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD, OECD, Paris, 1988,
Glossary)
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
186
a specific, earmarked percentage of the receipts
from the exports of a particular commodity or
group of commodities to service the debt.
Debt swaps
Debt swaps refer to the exchange of debt, in the
form of a loan or, more typically, of securities
other than shares, for a new debt contract (i.e.,
debt-debt swap) or the exchange of debt for equity
shares (i.e., debt-equity swap).
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Debt swaps often call for writing down, or
discounting, the value of the original debt
instrument before the conversion to new debt or
equity. Any holding loss from writing down the
value of the original debt is recorded in the
revaluation account
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Debt-for-development
swap
Financing part of a development project through
the exchange of a foreign-currency-denominated
debt for local currency, typically at a substantial
discount. The process normally involves a foreign
nongovernmental organization (NGO) that
purchases the debt from the original creditor at a
substantial discount using its own foreign currency
resources, and then resells it to the debtor country
government for the local currency equivalent
(resulting in a further discount). The NGO in turn
spends the money on a development project,
previously agreed upon with the debtor country
government.
Source: Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual,
IMF, Washington, 2000, para. 212
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/mfs/manual/i
ndex.htm
Debt workout
The process of working out a satisfactory method
whereby the debtor country can repay external
debt, including restructuring, adjustment, and the
provision of new money.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Debt-equity ratio
The debt-equity ratio is the total liabilities of a firm
divided by total shareholder equity
Debt-for-equity swap
A transaction in which debt of an economy is
exchanged, usually at a discount, for equity in an
enterprise in the same economy. Although variable
in form, such arrangements usually result in the
extinction of a fixed-rate liability (for example, a
debt security or loan) denominated in foreign
currency and the creation of an equity liability
(denominated in domestic currency) to a
nonresident. There may be clauses in the
agreement to prevent the repatriation of capital
before some specified future date.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Debt-for-charity swap
The purchase by a nonprofit organization such as a
non-governmental organization (NGO) of the
external debt of a country at a discount in the
secondary market, which the NGO then exchanges
for local currency to be used for philanthropic
purposes.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Debt-for-nature-swap Échange dette/nature
A debt—for—nature swap is an arrangement by
which an indebted developing country undertakes,
in exchange for cancellation of a portion of its
foreign debt, to establish local currency funds to be
used to finance a conservation programme
Debt-for-commodity
swap
The repayment in kind by a debtor country of all or
part of its external debt. Typically, the lender takes
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
187
Decay
Vieillissement
Decay is the loss in the physical efficiency of an
asset as it ages. Efficiency in this context refers to
the asset‘s ability to produce a quantity of capital
services for a given of labour or materials
Debtor / creditor
principle
There are two principles that may serve as the
basis for geographic allocation of direct investment
financial flows: the debtor/creditor principle and
the transactor principle.
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
According to the debtor/creditor principle,
transactions resulting from changes in financial
claims of the compiling economy are allocated to
the country or residence of the non-resident
debtor, and transactions resulting in changes in
financial liabilities are allocated to the country of
residence of the non- resident creditor, even if the
amounts are paid to or received from a different
country
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
Decile
Décile
One of the nine variate values which divide the
total frequency into ten parts.
Source: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms, OECD, 2001 – unpublished
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Transactor principle
Debtor country
A debtor country is the country in which the debtor
is resident
See also: Quantiles
Decision point
In the context of the HIPC Initiative, the point at
which a country‘s eligibility for assistance is
determined by the IMF and World Bank Executive
Boards on the basis of a debt-sustainability
analysis and three years of sound performance
under IMF- and World Bank-supported adjustment
programs. The international community enters into
a commitment at the decision point to deliver
assistance at the completion point, provided that
the debtor adheres to its policy commitments.
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Debtor reporting
system (DRS)
A statistical reporting system maintained by the
World Bank to monitor the debt of developing
countries. Information is supplied through reports
from debtor countries. The data supplied are the
basis for the annual World Bank report, Global
Development Finance (formerly World Debt
Tables).
Context: The debt-sustainability analysis is
essentially a medium-term balance of payments
projection that assesses the debt burden of the
country and its capacity to service those
obligations. If external debt ratios for that country
fall within or above applicable targets, it will be
considered for special assistance: the target is 150
percent for the ratio of the present value of debt to
exports, with exceptions to this target in the
special case of very open economies with a high
debt burden in relation to fiscal revenues.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Debt-reduction option
Option under concessional Paris Club debt
restructurings where creditors effect the required
debt reduction in present value terms through a
reduction of the principal of the consolidated
amount. A commercial interest rate and standard
repayment terms apply to the remaining amounts.
At the decision point, the Executive Boards of the
IMF and World Bank will formally decide on a
country‘s eligibility, and the international
community will commit to provide sufficient
assistance by the completion point for the country
to achieve debt sustainability calculated at the
decision point. The delivery of assistance
committed by the IMF and Bank will depend on
satisfactory assurances of action by other
creditors.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Concessional restructuring
See also: Completion point
188
Deck imputation
Deck imputation refers to imputation methods
where a donor questionnaire is used to supply the
missing value.
by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the International
Statistical Institute by Longman Scientific and
Technical
Context: Hot-deck imputation - a donor
questionnaire is found from the same survey as
the questionnaire with the missing item. The
"nearest neighbour" search technique is often used
to expedite the search for a donor record. In this
search technique, the deck of donor questionnaires
comes from the same survey and shows
similarities to the receiving record, where similarity
is based on other data on the questionnaire that
correlates to the data being donated.
Deconcentration
Deconcentration is the policy of breaking up and
divesting operations of large firms in order to
reduce the degree of concentration in an industry.
Context: This policy has been advocated from time
to time in different countries particularly in periods
of high levels of merger activity. Lower industry
concentration levels and increase in the number of
firms are viewed as being conducive to stimulating
competition.
For example: similar size and location of farm
might be used for donation of fuel prices.
There are however inherent risks in adopting this
policy as a general approach to resolving
competition problems that may be associated with
high industry concentration levels. A structural
deconcentration policy may result in significant
loss in economic efficiency. Large firms may be
large because of economies of scale, superior
technology and innovation which may not be
divisible without high costs. This is more likely to
be the case where firms have attained their
respective size in response to market conditions
and opportunities.
Cold-deck imputation - same as hot deck except
that the data is found in a previously conducted
similar.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
However, in several countries, particularly in
Eastern European economies, growth of industrial
concentration and large firm size have been
encouraged by deliberate government policy.
Deconcentration policies in such an environment
may be appropriate in order to promote market
oriented firm behaviour and efficiency.
See also: Automated imputations, Cold deck, Hot
deck
Declaration on the
Déclaration sur
Human Environment
l‟environnement
The Declaration on the Human Environment was
issued by the United Nations Conference on the
Human Environment, held in Stockholm, Sweden,
from 5 to 16 June 1972
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.unep.org/Documents/Default.asp?Doc
umentID=97
De-coupled payments Paiements découplés
De-coupled payments are budgetary payments
paid to eligible recipients which are not linked to
current production of specific commodities or
livestock numbers or the use of specific factors of
production
Decomposition
Décomposition
The act of splitting a time series into its constituent
parts by the use of statistical methods. A typical
time series is often regarded as composed of four
parts:
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
(a) a long-term movement or trend;
(b) oscillations of more or less regular period and
amplitude about this trend;
(c) a seasonal component;
(d) a random, or irregular, component.
Dedicated
biotechnology firm
Is defined as a biotechnology active firm whose
predominant activity involves the application of
biotechnology techniques to produce goods or
services and/or the performance of biotechnology
R&D.
Any particular series need not exhibit all of these
but those which are present are presumed to act in
an additive fashion, i.e. are superimposed; and the
process of determining them separately is one of
decomposition.
Source: OECD, 2005, A Framework for
Biotechnology Statistics, OECD, Paris, Chapter 2:
Basic Concepts and Definitions
Source:
A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th edition,
prepared for the International Statistical Institute
189
costs imposes losses and drives out competing
firms.
Deductible value
TVA déductible
added tax (VAT)
Deductible value added tax (VAT) is the VAT
payable on purchases of goods or services
intended for intermediate consumption, gross fixed
capital formation or for resale which a producer is
permitted to deduct from his own VAT liability to
the government in respect of VAT invoiced to his
customers
Context: Others argue that firms using "deep
pockets" to finance anticompetitive actions impose
a cost on themselves because those funds could be
more profitably employed elsewhere. Moreover, if
capital markets work reasonably well, target firms
should have no trouble obtaining financing to
sustain themselves through the anticompetitive
action.
Source: SNA 6.209
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Non-deductible VAT, Value added tax
(VAT) – SNA
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Deduction to stock
level
Deduction to stock level is a negative change in
the stock of a non produced environmental asset,
in physical or monetary units.
See also: Predatory pricing
Deep stratification
Stratification en
profondeur
A term which is sometimes used to denote
stratification by a substantial number of factors
with respect to the marginal distribution of the
factors only.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.93
Source:
A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th edition,
prepared for the International Statistical Institute
by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the International
Statistical Institute by Longman Scientific and
Technical
Deductive imputation
Deductive imputation is an imputation rule defined
by a logical reasoning, as opposed to a statistical
rule.
Deep-discount bonds
Obligations à prime
d‟émission élevée
Deep-discount bonds are bonds under which
periodic cash flows are made that cover some of
the interest liability during the life of the
instrument but the amount is substantially below
market interest.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
The difference between the discounted issue price
and the price at maturity is substantial and, in the
SNA, that difference is treated as interest and is
recorded as accruing over the life of the bond
rather than when due for payment
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Context: A bond with issue price significantly below
maturity price because of a lack of coupon or a
coupon below market rate (Coordinated Portfolio
Investment Survey Guide, Second Edition,
International Monetary Fund, 2002, Washington
DC. Appendix VI: Definition and Description of
Instruments. Available at:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf)
Deep ecology
Ecologisme radical
Deep ecology is a holistic approach to the
environment that stresses the intrinsic equality of
species, including human beings
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: SNA 11.77
Deep pockets
Deep pockets is an expression used to describe the
idea that extensive financial and other resources of
large firms or conglomerates can be used to sell
below cost for extended periods of time.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Default value
In computer processing, an option chosen by the
computer automatically in the absence of explicit
In this view, deep pockets are thought to give such
firms an unfair advantage over competitors
particularly if the practice of selling at prices below
190
instructions by the human operator.
A pension plan member that no longer contributes
to or accrues benefits from the plan but has not
yet begun to receive retirement benefits from that
plan.
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Context: Identical term, "Inactive member"
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Defeasement
Defeasance is a technique by which a debtor unit
removes liabilities from its balance sheet by pairing
them with financial assets, the income and value of
which are sufficient to ensure that all debt service
payments are met.
Deferred or partialpayment issues
Instruments that consist of debt obligations where
the investor pays only a portion of the issue price
on the initial payment date and the balance several
months later.
Context: Defeasance may be carried out by placing
the paired assets and liabilities in a separate
account within the institutional unit concerned or
by transferring them to another unit.
Context: The structure allows the borrower to
achieve a lower all-in cost compared with straight
issues by offering the investor a potential gain
from a decline in rates and/or protection against
depreciation of the currency between the time of
the initial payment and that of the final payment.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
The appeal of these securities is a function of the
interest rate and currency outlook at any given
time.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Defective sample
Échantillon
défectueux
A sample resulting from an inquiry which has been
incompletely carried out, e.g. because certain
assigned individuals have not been examined,
because records have been lost, or because (in
plant or animal experiments) certain members
have died.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Deferred payments
In the context of Paris Club debt reschedulings,
obligations that are not consolidated but postponed
non-concessionally, usually for a short time, as
specified in the Agreed Minute.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Defensive
Frais de défense de
environmental costs
l‟environnement
Defensive environmental costs refer to the actual
environmental protection costs incurred in
preventing or neutralising a decrease in
environmental quality, as well as the expenditures
necessary to compensate for or repair the negative
effects (damage) of environmental deterioration.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Deferred pension
Pension différée
A pension arrangement in which a portion of an
employee‘s income is paid out at a date after
which that income is actually earned.
Such costs include expenditures required to
mitigate environment—related health and other
welfare effects on human beings
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Deferred pensioner, Deferred retirement
See also: Damage cost, Environmental costs
Deferred member
Deferred pensioner
Bénéficiaire d'une
pension différée
An individual who draws the pension benefits later
than their normal retirement age.
Titulaire de droits
différés
191
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Occupational pension plans under which the plan
sponsor pays fixed contributions and has no legal
or constructive obligation to pay further
contributions to an ongoing plan in the event of
unfavourable plan experience.
See also: Deferred pension, Deferred retirement
Deferred retirement
Retraite différée
A situation when an individual decides to retire
later and draw the pension benefits later than their
normal retirement age.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Context: Identical terms, "Late retirement",
"Postponed retirement"
See also: Defined benefit (DB) occupational
pension plans, Hybrid DB plan, Mixed DB plans,
Money purchase pension plans, Traditional DB plan
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Definition
Définition
A definition is a statement of the precise meaning
of something.
See also: Deferred pension, Deferred pensioner,
Early retirement
Context: In classifications, this item refers to the
explanation of the concepts encompassed in
category description and often includes specific
examples of what is and is not included in
particular categories.
Deficiency
See Actuarial deficiency
Déficit
See also: Actuarial deficiency
According to ISO/IEC FCD FCD 11179-1
"Information technology - Metadata registers-Part
1: Framework", a definition is a "representation of
a concept by a descriptive statement which serves
to differentiate it from related concepts [ISO 10871:2000, 3.3.1]".
Deficiency payment
A deficiency payment is an output subsidy in which
the rate per unit of output of a commodity is the
difference between an administered price and the
market price
Definition (of Administered Item) is the definition
of an Administered item within a Context.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Definition source reference is a reference to the
source from which the Definition is taken.
Definition text is the text of the Definition.
Defined benefit (DB)
occupational pension
plans
Plan de retraite
professionnel à
prestations définies
(PD)
Occupational plans other than defined
contributions plans. DB plans generally can be
classified into one of three main types,
―traditional‖, ―mixed‖ and ―hybrid‖ plans.
Source: "United Nations Glossary of Classification
Terms" prepared by the Expert Group on
International Economic and Social Classifications;
unpublished on paper.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/class/family/glossary_s
hort.htm
See also: Defined contribution (DC) occupational
pension plans, Hybrid DB plan, Mixed DB plans,
Traditional DB plan
See also: Concept, ISO / IEC 11179
Definitional errors
Errors that occur in surveys whenever the
definitions of the characteristics for which data are
to be collected are not pertinent to the Purposes of
the survey, or are not clear to the respondents.
Defined benefit
pension plans
Régimes de pension à
prestations
prédéfinies
Defined benefit pension plans are those in which
the level of pension benefits promised to
participating employees is guaranteed; benefits are
related by some formula to participants‘ length of
service and salary and are not totally dependent
on either the participants‘ contributions or the
assets in the fund
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Source: SNA 13.78
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Defined contribution
(DC) occupational
pension plans
Deflation
Déflation
Deflation is defined as a sustained fall in the
general price level
Plans de retraite
professionnel à
cotisations définies
(CD)
Context: Another meaning of the term is the
192
division of the value of some aggregate by a price
index - described as a ―deflator‖ - in order to
revalue its quantities at the prices of the price
reference period or to revalue the aggregate at the
general price level of the price reference period.
Degradation costs are those costs reflecting the
qualitative deterioration of the natural environment
by economic activities.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Monetary Fund, Washington
DC
See also: Damage cost, Environmental costs
Degradation of land
and soil
The decline in the biological productivity or
usefulness of land and soil resources for their
current predominant intended use caused through
the use of the land by humans. The decline of the
capital value.
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.293
Deflator
See Deflation
See also: Deflation
Degradation
See Environmental degradation
Delayed (late
registration)
Delayed (late registration) refers to a vital event
registered beyond the prescribed period specified
in existing laws, rules or regulations once certain
requirements have been met
See also: Environmental degradation
Degradation Ŕ Cost
based estimates
Cost based estimates of degradation answer the
question ―How much it would cost to avoid the
degradation?‖. They group together maintenance
costing and ―greened economy modelling‖.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
2.176
Delhi Group
See City groups
See also: City groups
Delivered pricing
See Basing point pricing
Degradation Ŕ
Damage based
methods
Damage based methods for valuing degradation
answer the question: ―What is the value of
damages suffered due to the impacts of actual
degradation of the environment on health, etc?‖.
See also: Basing point pricing
Demand deposits
Dépôt à vue
Demand deposits comprise funds deposited at a
depository institution that are payable on demand
(immediately or within a very short period). The
most common forms of demand deposits are
checking accounts
They derive estimates from the impact of e.g.
actual residual generation.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 2.182
Degradation costs
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Democratic index
A form of CPI in which each household is given
equal weight in the calculation of the index,
irrespectively of the size of its expenditures.
Côut de la
dégradation
193
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
during a period of time. The period of time varies
according to national situation, but it is usually 19
out of 20 (or 9 out of 10) consecutive years.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.116
Demonetisation (of
Démonétiser de l‟or
gold)
If authorities release monetary gold from their
holdings for non-monetary purposes e.g. for sale
to private holders or users, they are deemed to
have demonetised gold
Dependant (to a
Personne à charge
pension scheme)
An individual who is financially dependent on a
(passive or active) member of a pension scheme.
Source: SNA 11.65
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Demonopolisation
See Anti-monopoly, Antitrust, Deconcentration
Dependants (in
Personnes à charge
migration statistics)
Dependants are immediate relatives of the
principal migrant who are normally admitted in the
same migration category as that person. Although
the definition of immediate relative varies from
country to country, the spouse and minor children
of a principal migrant usually qualify as
dependants
See also: Anti-monopoly policy, Antitrust,
Deconcentration
Dentists‟
consultations
Dentists' consultations refers to ambulatory
contacts with a dentist divided by the population.
Contacts in out-patient wards should be included.
The number of contacts includes:
- visits/ consultations of dentists at the dentist‘s
office
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
- dentist‘s visits made to a person in institutional
settings such as liaison visits or discharge planning
visits, made in a hospital or nursing home with the
intent of planning for the future delivery of service
at home.
Dependency ratio
Taux de dépendance
économique
Typically defined as the ratio of those of non-active
age to those of active age in a given population.
The number of dental contacts according to the
above definition is only a crude measure of the
volume of services provided, as services are added
regardless of their complexities.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
See also: System dependency ratio
Dependent population
ratio
The dependent population ratio is the ratio of the
population defined as dependent (the population
aged 0-19 and 65 and over) divided by the
population 20-64, multiplied by 100
Departure of a sea
Départ d'un navire
going vessel
Any laden or unladen seagoing vessel which left a
port in the territory of the country.
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Depletion (in natural
resource accounting)
Epuisement des
stocks (en
comptabilité des
ressources naturelles)
Depletion (in natural resource accounting) for
renewable resources, refers to the part of the
harvest, logging, catch and so forth above the
Dependable water
The portion of the surface water resource that can
be depended upon for annual water development
194
sustainable level of the resource stock; for non—
renewable resources, the quantity of resources
extracted
cultivated biological resources as a result of
harvesting, forest clearance, or other use
Source: SNA 12.29 and 12.30
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Depletion adjusted
operating surplus
The balancing item of the extended generation of
income account. It equals the net operating
surplus less extraction of non-produced biological
assets plus natural growth of non-produced
biological assets plus returns to non-produced
biological assets less extraction of subsoil
resources plus enhancement to the value of subsoil
resources plus returns to subsoil resources.
DepletionŔadjusted
national income
Depletion-adjusted national income equals
depletion-adjusted NDP plus any primary income
received from the rest of the world less any
primary income paid to the rest of the world.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 10.152
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 10.70 and box 10.5
DepletionŔadjusted
NDP (dpNDP)
The balance of the production account. It equals
NDP (net domestic product) less any damage
adjustments to asset valuation not included in
consumption of fixed capital less depletion of
natural resources.
Depletion adjusted
saving
The balancing item of the SNA use of income
account, after adjustments for the operating
surplus (transition from operating surplus to
depletion-adjusted operating surplus).
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 10.152
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 10.72
Deposit banks
Institution de dépôts
Deposit banks is a term covering deposit money
banks and other bank-like institutions accepting
deposits
Depletion costs
Côut de la
surexploitation
Depletion costs refer to the monetary value of the
quantitative depletion (beyond replenishment or
regeneration) of natural assets by economic
activities.
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Depletion of natural resources results from their
uses as raw materials in production or directly in
final (household) consumption
Deposit facility
A standing facility of the Eurosystem which
counterparties may use to make overnight
deposits, remunerated at a pre-specified interest
rate, at a national central bank (NCB).
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Depletion of natural
Épuisement d‟actifs
economic assets
naturels
The depletion of natural economic assets is the
reduction in the value of deposits of subsoil assets
as a result of their physical removal, the depletion
of water resources, and the depletion of natural
forests, fish stocks in the open seas and other non-
Deposit insurance
scheme
A formal scheme normally established by law that
is designed to limit the losses of depositors in the
195
event of bank failure(s). Typically, the scheme is
intended to support the confidence in the financial
system of small-scale depositors and thus reduce
the risk of systemic crises being caused by panic
withdrawals of deposits. The scheme can be
privately or government operated and funded.
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Economic instruments
Deposits
Dépôts
Deposits are sums placed with a financial
institution for credit to a customer‘s account
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Deposit money banks
Deposit money banks are resident depository
corporations and quasi-corporations which have
any liabilities in the form of deposits payable on
demand, transferable by cheque or otherwise
usable for making payments
Deposits Ŕ other
Autres dépôts
In the financial accounts, the item other deposits
includes all claims, other than transferable
deposits, on the central bank, other depository
institutions, government units and, in some cases,
other institutional units that are represented by
evidence of deposit
Source: SNA para. 4.93
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 11.72, (AF.29) - Annex to chapter
XIII
Deposit money
Institutions de dépôts
corporations
monétaires
Deposit money corporations consist of resident
depository corporations and quasi-corporations
which have any liabilities in the form of deposits
payable on demand, transferable by cheque or
otherwise usable for making payments
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Deposits in mutual
associations
Deposits in the form of shares or similar evidence
of deposit issued by mutual associations such as
savings and loans, building societies, credit unions,
and the like are classified as bank deposits.
Source: SNA 4.93
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Depository receipts
A depository receipt allows a nonresident entity to
introduce its equity or debt into another market in
a form more readily acceptable to the investors in
that market. A depository bank will purchase the
underlying foreign security and then issue receipts
in a currency more acceptable to the investor. The
investor can exchange the depository receipts for
the underlying security at any time.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Bank deposits
Depreciated
Optimised
Replacement Cost
(DORC)
An approach to allocating the capital costs of a
project under which the regulatory asset base is
periodically "re-valued" to be equal to the price of
building or buying a modern equivalent asset,
depreciated to reflect the shorter remaining life of
the existing assets.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: American depository receipt (ADR),
Bearer depository receipts (BDR)
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Deposit-refund
Système de consigne
system
A deposit-refund system is the surcharge on the
price of potentially polluting products. When
pollution is avoided by returning the products or
their residuals, a refund of the surcharge is
granted
Depreciation - OECD
Amortissement OCDE
Depreciation is the loss in value of an asset due to
ageing.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Context: This definition (which is common in the
196
productivity literature) is different from the
definition of depreciation, or consumption of fixed
capital (CFC) as defined by the 1993 System of
National Accounts.
(MDR) - Part 3: Registry metamodel and basic
attributes", February 2003
Depreciation in the SNA comprises both the loss in
value due to ageing and the effects of foreseen
obsolescence.
Derivation output
Relationship denoting the result of a Data element.
See also: Data element, Data element derivation
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179-3 Information technology - Metadata registries
(MDR) - Part 3: Registry metamodel and basic
attributes", February 2003
In the productivity literature, value changes due to
obsolescence are reflected in the capital gains/loss
term of the user cost formula.
See also: Data element, Data element derivation
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Derivation rule
Derivation rule is the logical, mathematical, and/or
other operations specifying derivation.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
Context: Derivation rule administration record is
the Administration record for a Derivation rule.
See also: Depreciation - SNA
Derivation rule application is the relationship
specifying the Derivation rule for a Data element
derivation.
Depreciation - SNA
Amortissement - SCN
Depreciation as usually calculated in business
accounts is a method of allocating the costs of past
expenditures on fixed assets over subsequent
accounting periods.
Derivation rule specification is the text of a
specification of Data element derivation.
Note that the depreciation methods favoured in
business accounting and those prescribed by tax
authorities almost invariably deviate from the
concept of consumption of fixed capital employed
in the SNA and so the term ―consumption of fixed
capital‖ is used in the SNA to distinguish it from
―depreciation‖ as typically measured in business
accounts
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179-3 Information technology - Metadata registries
(MDR) - Part 3: Registry metamodel and basic
attributes", February 2003
See also: Data element, Data element derivation
Derivative instrument
A derivative instrument is a financial instrument
whose value depends on some underlying financial
asset, commodity index or predefined variable.
Context: However, as it is defined in the SNA,
consumption of fixed capital is in fact identical with
depreciation as this term is widely used in the
economic literature. Therefore in some cases the
two terms can be used interchangeably, if it is
clear that one is referring to the concept
understood by economists and not depreciation as
measured by commercial accountants.
Context: Some of the main uses of derivative
instruments are to fix future prices in the present
(forwards and futures), to exchange cash flows or
modify asset characteristics (swaps) and to endow
the holder with the right but not the obligation to
engage in a transaction (options).
Source: SNA 1.62, 3.77 and 6.183
Source: Guide to the International Banking
Statistics, Bank for International Settlements,
Basel, Switzerland, 2000, Part III – Glossary of
Terms
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Depreciation - OECD
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/meth07.pdf
Deregulation
Deregulation is a subset of regulatory reform and
refers to complete or partial elimination of
regulation in a sector to improve economic
performance.
Derivative security
See Derivative instrument
See also: Derivative instrument
Source: Regulatory Reform: A Synthesis, OECD,
Paris, 1997, page 11
Derived data element
A derived data element is a data element derived
from other data elements using a mathematical,
logical, or other type of transformation, e.g.
arithmetic formula, composition, aggregation.
See also: Regulation, Regulatory reform
Derivation input
Relationship specifying the source Data element(s)
for a Data element derivation.
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179-3 Information technology - Metadata registries
197
53, Geneva, 2000
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
Destructive
competition
See Cut-throat competition
See also: Derived statistics
Derived statistical
activity
A derived statistical activity is one in which data
are estimated, modelled, or otherwise derived from
existing statistical data sources
See also: Cut-throat competition
Detection of errors in
data
See Data editing
Source: Statistics Canada Quality Guidelines, 3rd
edition, October 1998, page 7
See also: Data editing
Deterministic
checking rule
A deterministic checking rule is a checking rule
which determines whether data items are incorrect
with a probability of 1.
Derived statistics
A derived statistic is obtained by an arithmetical
observation from the primary observations. In this
sense, almost every statistic is "derived". The term
is mainly used to denote descriptive statistical
quantities obtained from data which are primary in
the sense of being mere summaries of
observations, e.g. population figures are primary
and so are geographical areas, but population-persquare-mile is a derived quantity.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Marriott, F.H.C for the ISI, "A Dictionary of
Statistical Terms", 5th edition, Longman Scientific
& Technical, New York , 1990
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Observation
Descriptive statistics
Statistique descriptive
A term used to denote statistical data of a
descriptive kind or the methods of handling such
data, as contrasted with theoretical statistics
which, though dealing with practical data, usually
involve some process of inference in probability for
their interpretation.
Deterministic edit
A deterministic edit is an edit, which if violated,
points to an error in the data with a probability of
one. Contrast with stochastic edit.
Example: Age 5 and Status = mother.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
The distinction is very useful in practice but not,
perhaps, entirely logical.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Stochastic edit
Deterministic
imputation
Deterministic imputation refers to the situation,
given specific values of other fields, when only one
value of a field will cause the record to satisfy all of
the edits.
Desertification
Désertification
Desertification is the process of land degradation in
arid, semi-arid and dry sub—humid areas resulting
from various factors, including climatic variations
(drought) and human activities (overexploitation of
drylands)
For instance, it might occur when the items that
are supposed to add to a total do not add to the
total. If only one item in the sum is imputed, then
its value is uniquely determined by the values of
the other items. This may be the first situation that
is considered in the automated editing and
imputation of survey data.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Designer bugs
Microdégradants
Designer bugs is a popular term for microbes
developed through biotechnology that can degrade
specific toxic chemicals at their source in toxic
waste dumps or in groundwater
Example: The missing sum at the bottom of a
column of numbers
198
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
See also: Human development, Sustainable
development
Development
Assistance Committee
(DAC)
The Development Assistance Committee (DAC) is
one of the key forums in which the major bilateral
donors work together to increase the effectiveness
of their common efforts to support sustainable
development.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Automated imputations
Deterministic
rounding
Synonym of conventional rounding.
The DAC concentrates on how international
development co-operation contributes to the
capacity of developing countries to participate in
the global economy and the capacity of people to
overcome poverty and participate fully in their
societies.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Context: The DAC Chairman presides over DAC
meetings, attended by Paris-based delegates of
Member countries and by officials from capitals.
See also: Conventional rounding
Developed natural
asset
One of the options for recording mineral
exploration and mineral deposits. The developed
natural asset is the composite asset the value of
which is given by the sum of mineral exploration
and mineral deposits.
The Committee holds an annual High Level Meeting
in which participants are ministers or heads of aid
agencies.
The work of the DAC is supported by the
Development Co-operation Directorate, (DCD), one
of some dozen directorates in the OECD. The DCD
is often referred to as the DAC Secretariat because
of this key function.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
SEEA Box 8.1 option 3
Members of the DAC are expected to have certain
common objectives concerning the conduct of their
aid programmes. To this end, guidelines have been
prepared for development practitioners in capitals
and in the field.
The DAC Members are Australia, Austria, Belgium,
Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany,
Greece, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, the
Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal,
Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom, the
United States and the Commission of the European
Communities.
Developed,
developing countries
There is no established convention for the
designation of ―developed‖ and ―developing‖
countries or areas in the United Nations system. In
common practice, Japan in Asia, Canada and the
United States in northern America, Australia and
New Zealand in Oceania and Europe are considered
―developed‖ regions or areas. In international
trade statistics, the Southern African Customs
Union is also treated as developed region and
Israel as a developed country; countries emerging
from the former Yugoslavia are treated as
developing countries; and countries of Eastern
Europe and the former USSR countries in Europe
are not included under either developed or
developing regions.
Source: Development Cooperation website
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/about/0,2337,en_2649_3372
1_1_1_1_1_1,00.html
Development Policy
Lending
A World Bank instrument focusing on issues such
as governance, public sector management and
reform of social sectors – such as health and
education.
Source: United Nations. Standard country or Area
Codes for Statistical Use. Series M, No. 49, Rev. 4
(United Nations publication, Sales No.
M.98.XVII.9). Available in part at
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/m49/m49regi
n.htm.
Source: OECD, 2006, DAC Guidelines and
Reference Series Applying Strategic Environmental
Assessment: Good Practice Guidance for
Development Co-operation, OECD, Paris
See also: Structural Adjustment Programmes
Development
Développement
See Human development or Sustainable
development
DGINS
199
Directeurs Généraux
des Instituts
Nationaux de
Statistique
Directors-General of the National Statistical
Institutes
a firm‘s products or functions to be considered an
innovation is that it is new (or significantly
improved) to the firm.
Source: OECD, 2005, ―The Measurement of
Scientific and Technological Activities: Guidelines
for Collecting and Interpreting Innovation Data:
Oslo Manual, Third Edition‖ prepared by the
Working Party of National Experts on Scientific and
Technology Indicators, OECD, Paris, para. 37
Dichotomy
Dichotomie
A division of the members of a population, or
sample, into two groups. The definition of the
groups may be in terms of a measurable variable
but is more often based on quantitative
characteristics or attributes.
Diffusion index
Indice de diffusion
A term proposed by Burns (1950) and Moore
(1950) to denote the proportion of a set of time
series in a given collection of series which are
increasing at a given point of time.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Dictionary,
geographical
List of geographical terms and/or names, usually
arranged in alphabetic order, providing definitions,
explanatory information or descriptive data for
each item.
Digital data vault
A space on the Internet where citizens can safely
store, and eventually provide access to, personal
data.
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Source: Adapting new technologies to census
operations, Arij Dekker, Symposium on Global
Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing
Censuses:
Mid-Decade Assessment and Future Prospects,
Statistics Division, Department of Economic and
Social Affairs, United Nations Secretariat
New York, 7-10 August 2001, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Diesel locomotive
Locomotive diesel
Locomotive, the main source of power of which is a
diesel engine, irrespective of the type of
transmission installed. However, diesel-electric
locomotives equipped to derive power from an
overhead wire or from a conductor rail are classed
as electric locomotives.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/docs/sym
posium_06.htm#_Toc8547016
Digital database
Comprehensive, sometimes exhaustive, collection
of computer files and/or computer records
pertaining to a specific subject. Example: the
collection of computer records for all hydrographic
features in a country.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Diffuse emission
Emission diffuse
Diffuse emission refers to pollution infiltrating the
atmosphere from a large non—point source, for
example, dust from a slag heap
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Digital divide
The term "digital divide" refers to the gap between
individuals, households, businesses and geographic
areas at different socio-economic levels with
regard to both their opportunities to access
information and communication technologies
(ICTs) and to their use of the Internet for a wide
variety of activities.
Diffusion (of
innovation)
Diffusion is the way in which innovations spread,
through market or non market channels, from their
very first implementation to different consumers,
countries, regions, sectors, markets and firms.
Without diffusion, an innovation has no economic
impact. The minimum requirement for a change in
The digital divide reflects various differences
200
among and within countries.
Digital Subscriber Line" under which the bandwidth
available in each direction is different. These
technologies are collectively known as xDSL.
Context: The ability of individuals and businesses
to take advantage of the Internet varies
significantly across the OECD area as well as
between OECD and non-member countries. Access
to basic telecommunications infrastructures is
fundamental to any consideration of the issue, as it
precedes and is more widely available than access
to and use of the Internet.
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Digital video disk
(DVD)
The more capacious successor of the CD-ROM.
Because of the current interest in these issues,
both among governments and the public, the
OECD has begun efforts to measure the digital
divide. In addition to communications
infrastructures, important indicators appear to be
computer availability – and potentially the
availability of alternative access through TVs or
mobile phones – and Internet access (these are
―readiness‖ indicators).
Source: Adapting new technologies to census
operations, Arij Dekker, Symposium on Global
Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing
Censuses:
Mid-Decade Assessment and Future Prospects,
Statistics Division, Department of Economic and
Social Affairs, United Nations Secretariat
New York, 7-10 August 2001, Glossary
The digital divide among households appears to
depend primarily on two variables, income and
education. Other variables, such as household size
and type, age, gender, racial and linguistic
backgrounds and location also play an important
role. The differences in PC and Internet access by
household income are very large and increasing,
but access in lower income groups is rising. Largely
through its effects on income, the higher the level
of education, the more likely individuals are to
have access to ICTs.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/docs/sym
posium_06.htm#_Toc8547016
Dilution
Dilution
Dilution refers to a method of disposing of
industrial waste or plant effluent by discharge into
a stream or other body of water
Other important indicators concern differences in
the profiles of countries, individuals and businesses
that use, and make the most use of, the
possibilities offered by the new information
technologies and the Internet.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Dilution ratio
A dilution ratio is the ratio of the volume of water
in a water body to the whole volume of incoming
waste. This factor affects the waste assimilation
capacity of the water body
Because harmonised cross-country data collection
does not exist for measuring some of the relevant
phenomena, figures [presented] are often not
comparable in terms of time and coverage.
However, because access to and development of
information, communication and e-commerce
resources are increasingly viewed as crucial for
economic and social development (for reasons of
efficiency and because of network effects), OECD
countries have begun to examine how best to
ensure access for citizens, businesses and regions
to these technologies and services.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Dimension
A statistical concept used, in combination with
other statistical concepts, to identify a statistical
series or single observations.
To do so efficiently and effectively, it is important
that governments have information on the nature
and extent of the digital divide and on the kinds of
measures that can help to overcome it.
Context: The equivalence between two units of
measure is determined by the existence of an
invertible transformation of one set of units to the
other. This means that two units of measure have
the same dimensionality if there is a function that
maps values in one unit of measure to values in
the other and the inverse of the function maps
values in the second units back to values in the
first.
Source: Understanding the Digital Divide, OECD,
200, page 5
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/38/57/1888451.pdf
Digital Subscriber Line
(DSL)
One of a range of technologies which allows high
bandwidth services to be carried over a traditional
copper twisted pair. The bandwidth achievable
usually depends on the length of the copper pair.
The most common form is ADSL or "Asymmetric
In the GESMES/TS context, "dimension" is a coded
statistical concept used (most probably together
with other coded statistical concepts) to identify a
time series, e.g. a statistical concept indicating a
certain economic activity or a geographical
reference area. (European Central Bank (ECB),
201
Bank for International Settlement (BIS), Eurostat,
International Monetary Fund (IMF), Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD), "GESMES/TS User Guide", Release 3.00,
February, 2003; unpublished on paper)
Diplomats and
Diplomates et
consular personnel
personnel consulaire
Diplomats and consular personnel are foreigners
working under diplomatic permits for foreign
embassies or consulates established in a receiving
country. Also, citizens travelling under diplomatic
passports in order to work in their country‘s
embassies or consulates abroad or in order to
return from a posting abroad
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Hyperlink:
http://www.sdmx.org/Data/GesmesTS_rel3.pdf
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
See also: Code list, GESMES TS, Key (time series
or sibling group), Key family, Key structure,
Statistical concept, Unit of measure
Direct use benefits
Direct use benefits include the use of
environmental assets as sources of materials,
energy or space for input into human activities.
Dimensionality
An expression of measurement without units.
Context: A quantity is a value with an associated
unit of measure. 32 Fahrenheit, 0 Celsius, $100
USD, and 10 reams (of paper) are quantities.
Equivalence between two units of measure is
determined by the existence of a quantity
preserving one-to-one correspondence between
values measured in one unit of measure and
values measured in the other unit of measure,
independent of context, and where characterizing
operations are the same.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.36
Equivalent units of measure in this sense have the
same dimensionality. The equivalence defined here
forms an equivalence relation on the set of all units
of measure. Each equivalence class corresponds to
a dimensionality.
Direct Budget Support
(DBS)
Development agencies increasingly provide
financial support to macro-level policies and to
government budgets to assist the recipient through
a programme of policy and institutional reform and
implementation that promote growth and achieve
sustainable reductions in poverty.
The units of measure "temperature in degrees
Fahrenheit" and "temperature in degrees Celsius"
have the same dimensionality, because for each
value measured in degrees Fahrenheit there is a
value measured in degrees Celsius with the same
quantity, and vice-versa. The same operations may
be performed on quantities in each unit of
measure. Quantity preserving one-to-one
correspondences are the well-known equations C =
(5/9)*(F - 32) and F = (9/5)*(C) + 32.
Direct Budget Support Agreements are the formal
DBS instruments negotiated between the
development agency and recipient government.
Context: The support may include a mix of general
budget support and policy and institutional actions
(including economy-wide reforms such as tax
reforms, privatisation, decentralisation and trade
liberalisation).
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
Source: OECD, 2006, DAC Guidelines and
Reference Series Applying Strategic Environmental
Assessment: Good Practice Guidance for
Development Co-operation, OECD, Paris
See also: Dimension, ISO / IEC 11179, Unit of
measure
Dioxin
Dioxine
Dioxin is a synthetic organic chemical of the
chlorinated hydrocarbon class.
Direct discharger
Pollueur direct
A direct discharger is a municipal or industrial
facility that emits pollutants through a defined
conveyance or system. It constitutes a point
source of pollution
It is one of the most toxic compounds known to
humans whose harmful effects, even in extremely
minute concentrations, include induction of cancer
and birth defects. It has become a widespread
pollutant because of the use of certain dioxin—
containing herbicides
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Direct expenditure on
educational
institutions
202
Dépenses directes au
titre des
établissements
d'enseignement
Direct expenditure on educational institutions are
purchases by a government agency of educational
resources to be used by educational institutions
(e.g., direct payments of teachers‘ salaries by a
central or regional education ministry, direct
payments by a municipality to building contractors
for the construction of school buildings, and
procurement of textbooks by a central or regional
authority for subsequent distribution to local
authorities or schools) and payments by a
government agency to educational institutions that
have the responsibility for purchasing educational
resources themselves (e.g., a government
appropriation or block grant to a university, which
the university then uses to pay staff salaries and to
buy other resources; government allocations of
funds to fiscally autonomous public schools;
government subsidies to private schools; and
government payments under contract to private
companies conducting educational research).
Second, methodological approaches differ in the
ways that cost-of-illness studies are conducted. In
the US and Australia inpatient expenditure by
disease is estimated by apportioning total inpatient
spending according to resource use for each
disease (using data on disease-related groups).
Direct expenditure by a government agency does
not include tuition payments received from
students (or their families) enrolled in public
schools under that agency‘s jurisdiction, even if the
tuition payments flow, in the first instance, to the
government agency rather than to the institution
in question.
Direct foreign
Entreprise
investment enterprise d‟investissements
directs (étrangers)
Direct foreign investment enterprises comprise
those entities that are identified as subsidiaries
(investor owns more than 50 per cent), associates
(investor owns 50 per cent or less) and branches
(wholly or jointly owned unincorporated
enterprises), either directly or indirectly owned by
the investor.
However, in The Netherlands and Germany,
inpatient expenditure is estimated using data on
average length of stay and the assumption that the
cost per day for all diseases is the same. Finally,
some types of medical expenditures are excluded
altogether from estimates. For example, Japan
does not include expenditures on over-the-counter
drugs in its estimates
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: Non-instructional educational institutions
Consequently, ‗direct foreign investment
enterprises‘ is a broader concept than ‗foreign
controlled corporations'
Direct expenditures
by disease
Direct expenditure by disease relates to the
economic burden incurred by the health system to
diagnose and treat health problems classified
according to the International Classification of
Diseases 9 (ICD-9).
Source: ESA [4.65]
See also: Foreign controlled corporations (nonfinancial and financial)
Direct identification
Identification of a statistical unit from its formal
identifiers.
Context: Results reflect the amount of
expenditures incurred during a period of time
equivalent to the prevalence of the disease over
the same period, typically one year. The incidence,
or on-set, of disease is not considered. Moreover,
the indirect economic burden associated with lost
productivity due to morbidity or premature
mortality is not considered. Data on direct
expenditure by disease can be further
disaggregated according to type of service
provided: inpatient, outpatient, and
pharmaceutical.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Direct investment
Investissements
direct
Direct investment is a category of international
investment made by a resident entity in one
economy (direct investor) with the objective of
establishing a lasting interest in an enterprise
resident in an economy other than that of the
investor (direct investment enterprise).
Typically, data on direct expenditures by disease
are derived from national cost-of-illness studies,
which identify and measure the costs of a
particular disease category. As estimation
standards tend to vary across countries,
considerable care must be applied in interpreting
cross-national results.
‖Lasting interest‖ implies the existence of a longterm relationship between the direct investor and
the enterprise and a significant degree of influence
by the direct investor on the management of the
direct investment enterprise.
First, the classification of symptoms sometimes
varies across countries. For example, in the UK,
outpatient and pharmaceutical expenditures
associated with Diseases of the Nervous System
(ICD-9 category VI) are included instead under
Mental Disorders (ICD-9 category V).
Direct investment involves both the initial
transaction between the two entities and all
203
subsequent capital transactions between them and
among affiliated enterprises, both incorporated and
unincorporated.
Direct investment
enterprise Ŕ foreign Ŕ
ESA
A direct foreign investment enterprise is an
incorporated or unincorporated enterprise in which
an investor resident in another economy owns 10
per cent or more of the ordinary shares or voting
power (for an incorporated enterprise) or the
equivalent (for an unincorporated enterprise).
Source: OECD & IMF, 2004, Glossary of Foreign
Direct Investment Terms and Definitions, Paris and
Washington DC
Direct investment
enterprise
A direct investment enterprise is an incorporated
enterprise in which a foreign investor owns 10
percent or more of the ordinary shares or voting
power for an incorporated enterprise or an
unincorporated enterprise in which a foreign
investor has equivalent ownership.
Direct foreign investment enterprises comprise
those entities that are identified as subsidiaries
(investor owns more than 50 per cent), associates
(investor owns 50 per cent or less) and branches
(wholly or jointly owned unincorporated
enterprises), either directly or indirectly owned by
the investor. Consequently, ‗direct foreign
investment enterprises‘ is a broader concept than
‗foreign controlled corporations‘
Context: Ownership of 10 percent of the ordinary
shares or voting stock is the guideline for
determining the existence of a direct investment
relationship. An ―effective voice in the
management‖, as evidenced by an ownership of at
least 10 percent, implies that the direct investor is
able to influence, or participate in, the
management of an enterprise; absolute control by
the foreign investor is not required.
Source: ESA [4.65]
See also: Direct investment enterprise – foreign –
SNA/BPM
Direct investment
enterprise Ŕ foreign Ŕ
SNA
A foreign direct investment enterprise is an
incorporated or unincorporated enterprise in which
a direct investor resident in another economy owns
10 per cent or more of the ordinary shares or
voting power (for an incorporated enterprise) or
the equivalent (for an unincorporated enterprise)
Direct investment enterprises are defined as those
entities that are either directly or indirectly owned
by the direct investor and comprise:
- subsidiaries (an enterprise in which a nonresident investor owns more than 50 percent);
- associates (an enterprise in which a non-resident
investor owns between 10 and 50 percent) and;
Source: SNA 14.152, BPM 362 [7.119]
- branches (unincorporated enterprises wholly or
jointly owned by a non-resident investor).
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
When the 10 percent ownership requirement for
establishing a direct investment link with an
enterprise is met, certain other enterprises that
are related to the first enterprise are also regarded
as direct investment enterprises. Hence the
definition of direct investment enterprise extends
to the branches and subsidiaries of subsidiaries of
the direct investor (so-called ―indirectly owned
direct investment enterprises‖).
See also: Direct investment enterprise – foreign –
ESA
Direct investment
financial flows
Are transactions between a direct investor in one
economy and a direct investment enterprise in
another economy, and among affiliated direct
investment enterprises that are in a direct
investment relationship, other than those that are
resident in the same economy.
The OECD Benchmark Definition of Foreign
Investment and the IMF Balance of Payments
Compilation Guide describe the scope of
enterprises, both directly and indirectly owned,
that should be included in the definition. The
OECD‘s specification of this group of enterprises is
referred to as the ―Fully Consolidated System"
Source: OECD, 2005, Measuring Globalisation:
OECD Handbook on Economic Globalisation
Indicators, OECD, Paris - Glossary
Direct investment
income
Direct investment income comprises income on
equity and income on debt
Source: Report on the Survey of Implementation
of Implementation of Methodological Standards for
Direct Investment – IMF, OECD, March 2000 –
Appendix II: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms.
Source: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms, OECD, 2001 – unpublished
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/bopage/pdf/mar2000.
pdf
Direct investment
position data
204
Are stock data showing an economy‘s direct
investment assets and liabilities at a given point in
time.
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.200
Source: OECD, 2005, Measuring Globalisation:
OECD Handbook on Economic Globalisation
Indicators, OECD, Paris - Glossary
Direct investment
relationship
A direct investment relationship is created when an
enterprise resident in one economy owns 10
percent or more of the ordinary shares or voting
power for an incorporated enterprise, or the
equivalent for an unincorporated enterprise, that is
resident in another economy. Direct investment
enterprises that are considered to be in a direct
investment relationship with a direct investor are
also considered to be in direct investment
relationships with each other
Direct material output
(DMO)
The sum of DPO and exports. This parameter
represents the total quantity of direct material
outputs leaving the economy after use either
towards the environment or towards the rest of the
world (in economy – wide material flow
accounting).
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.204
Source: Report on the Survey of Implementation
of Implementation of Methodological Standards for
Direct Investment – IMF, OECD, March 2000 –
Appendix II: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms.
See also: Domestic processed output (DPO)
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/bopage/pdf/mar2000.
pdf
Direct payments
Paiements directs
Direct payments are payments made directly by
governments to producers
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Direct investor
A direct investor is an individual, an incorporated
or unincorporated public or private enterprise, a
government, a group of related individuals, or a
group of related incorporated and/or
unincorporated enterprises that has a direct
investment enterprise (that is, a subsidiary,
associate or branch) operating in an economy
other than the economy or economies of residence
of the foreign direct investor or investors
Direct price
comparison
A price comparison between two or more countries
that is made by comparing the prices for a
representative sample of comparable products.
PPPs are generally derived from direct price
comparisons.
Source: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms, OECD, 2001 – unpublished
Context: Also referred to as the ―price approach‖.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Direct job creation
(public or non-profit)
Direct job creation (public or non-profit) is
temporary work and, in some cases, regular jobs
in the public sector or in non-profit organisations,
offered to unemployed persons
See also: Direct volume comparison
Direct probability
Probabilité directe
An expression which is supposed to be antithetical
to inverse probability, although neither expression
is very logical. It usually denotes probability when
used to proceed from the given probabilities of
prior events to the probabilities of contingent
events.
Source: Definitions of the Standardised categories
and Sub-categories of Labour Market Programmes,
OECD, 2001
Direct material input
(DMI)
An indicator that measures the input of materials
used in the economy, that is, all materials which
are of economic value and are used in production
and consumption activities; DMI equals domestic
(used) extraction plus imports (in economy – wide
material flow accounting).
For example, if it is given that the probability of
throwing each number with an ordinary six faced
die is one sixth, the probability of throwing a score
of 15 in three throws is directly ascertainable.
The relation is analogous to the deductive relations
of logic.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
205
terms and abbreviations
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Direct price comparison
Directional principle
Unlike other financial investments, direct
investment is not recorded in the balance of
payments on a strict asset/liability basis. Direct
investments are recorded on a directional basis
(that is, as resident direct investment abroad, or
non-resident direct investment in the reporting
economy).
See also: Inverse probability
Direct sampling
Sondage direct
A term used when the sample units are the actual
members of the population and not, for instance,
some kind of record relating to such numbers,
such as census form, ticket or registration card.
The term is related to the directness of the
observation of the units which enter into the
sample, not to the process by which they are
selected.
Capital invested by the direct investment
enterprise in its direct investor (reverse
investment) is regarded as an offset to capital
invested in the direct investment enterprise by a
direct investor and its related enterprises. That is,
such capital is regarded as disinvestment by the
direct investor rather than as an asset of the direct
investment enterprise, except when the equity
participation‘s are at least 10 percent in both
directions and two direct investment relationships
are therefore established.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Indirect sampling
Source: Report on the Survey of Implementation
of Implementation of Methodological Standards for
Direct Investment – IMF, OECD, March 2000 –
Appendix II: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms.
Direct source MetaStore
Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types refers to
the source from where the data was directly
collected.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/bopage/pdf/mar2000.
pdf
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
Disability
Incapacité
A disability reflects any limitation or lack of ability
that a person experiences in performing an activity
in the manner or within the range considered
normal for a person, in other words, a limitation in
learning, speaking, walking or some other activity
(individual dimension)
Direct taxes on
income
Direct taxes on income are levies by public
authorities at regular intervals, except social
contributions, on income from employment,
property, capital gains or any other source. Real
estate and land taxes are included if they are
merely an administrative procedure for the
assessment and collection of income tax
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.260
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
See also: Handicap, Impairment
Disability cash
benefits
Disability cash benefits comprise cash payments on
account of complete or partial inability to
participate gainfully in the labour market due to
disability. The disability may be congenital, or be
the result of an accident or illness during the
victim‘s lifetime.
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Direct volume
comparison
A volume comparison between two or more
countries that is made by comparing the volumes
(or quantities) of a representative sample of
comparable products.
Not included are disability benefits due to
prescribed industrial accidents or diseases. These
are grouped under occupational injury and disease.
The provision of goods and services in kind is
grouped under services for the elderly and disabled
people
Volume comparisons are not generally made
directly, but indirectly as shown under ―indirect
volume comparison‖.
Context: Also referred to as the ―quantity
approach‖.
Source: An Interpretative Guide to the OECD
Social Expenditure Database (SOCX), OECD, page
12
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
See also: Occupational injury
206
simultaneously.
Disability-free life
expectancy
Disability-free life expectancy is the average
number of years an individual is expected to live
free of disability if current patterns of mortality and
disability continue to apply.
Context: In practice, disbursements are recorded
at one of several stages: provision of goods and
services (where trade credit is involved); placing of
funds at the disposal of the recipient in an
earmarked fund or account; withdrawal of funds by
the recipient from an earmarked fund or account;
or payment by the lender of invoices on behalf of
the borrower.
This indicator has been developed in a number of
OECD countries since the 1970's, and available
estimates are reported here.
The term ―utilized‖ may apply when the credit
extended is in a form other than currency.
Disbursements should be recorded gross—the
actual amount disbursed.
Context:
According to the REVES committee on conceptual
harmonisation, the ICIDH disability-free life
expectancy might be differentiated into:
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
- functional limitation-free life expectancy, and
- activity restriction-free life expectancy.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Discards
Déclassement
Discards is a synonym for ―retirements‖ or ―
scrapping‖ . An asset is discarded, retired or
scrapped when it is withdrawn from the capital
stock at the end of its service life
Disaggregation
Disaggregation is the breakdown of observations,
usually within a common branch of a hierarchy, to
a more detailed level to that at which detailed
observations are taken.
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Context: With standard hierarchical classifications,
statistics for related categories can be grouped or
collated (aggregated) to provide a broader picture,
or categories can be split (disaggregated) when
finer details are required and made possible by the
codes given to primary observations ("United
Nations Glossary of Classification Terms"; prepared
by the Expert Group on International Economic and
Social Classifications).
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
See also: Retirements, Scrapping
Source: "United Nations Glossary of Classification
Terms"; prepared by the Expert Group on
International Economic and Social Classifications;
unpublished on paper
Discharge
Déversement
Discharge is the formal release of an in-patient
from an acute care institution after a period of
"hospitalization". It includes deaths in hospitals,
but excludes same-day separations and transfers
to other care units within the same institution.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/class/family/glossary_s
hort.htm
Source: OECD Health Data 2007: Statistics and
Indicators for 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2007,
Data sources, definitions and methods
See also: Aggregation,
Aggregation/disaggregation, Compilation practices,
Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS)
Discharge rates
Discharge rates are expressed as the number of
discharges per 100 000 population
Disbursed loans
The amount that has been disbursed from a loan
but has not yet been repaid or forgiven.
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Disclosive cells
Synonym of risky cells.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Disbursements
The transactions of providing financial resources.
The two counterparties must record the transaction
207
survey. If an intruder knows that a specific
individual has participated in the survey, and that
consequently his or her data are in the data set,
identification and disclosure can be accomplished
more easily.
See also: Risky cells
Disclosure
Disclosure relates to the inappropriate attribution
of information to a data subject, whether an
individual or an organisation. Disclosure has two
components: identification and attribution.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Disclosure by
spontaneous
recognition
This means the recognition of an individual within
the dataset. This may occur by accident or because
a data intruder is searching for a particular
individual. This is more likely to be successful if the
individual has a rare combination of characteristics
which is known to the intruder.
Disclosure analysis
Disclosure analysis is the process of protecting the
confidentiality of data. It involves limiting the
amount of detailed information disseminated
and/or masking data via noise addition, data
swapping, generation of simulated or synthetic
data, etc.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: United States Bureau of the Census,
Software and Standards Management Branch,
Systems Support Division, "Survey Design and
Statistical Methodology Metadata", Washington
D.C., August 1998, Section 3.3.17, page 28.
Hyperlink:
http://www.census.gov/srd/www/metadata/metad
a18.pdf
Disclosure control
methods
There are two main approaches to control the
disclosure of confidential data. The first is to
reduce the information content of the data
provided to the external user. For the release of
tabular data this type of technique is called
restriction based disclosure control method and for
the release of microdata the expression disclosure
control by data reduction is used.
See also: Confidentiality, data
Disclosure by fishing
This is an attack method where an intruder
identifies risky records within a target data set and
then attempts to find population units
corresponding to those records. It is the type of
disclosure that can be assessed through a special
unique analysis.
The second is to change the data before the
dissemination in such a way that the disclosure
risk for the confidential data is decreased, but the
information content is retained as much as
possible. These are called perturbation based
disclosure control methods.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Disclosure by
matching
Disclosure by the linking of records within an
identification dataset with those in an anonymised
dataset.
Disclosure control,
statistical
The complex of measures preventing unauthorized
access to sensitive statistical information.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Adapting new technologies to census
operations, Arij Dekker, Symposium on Global
Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing
Censuses: Mid-Decade Assessment and Future
Prospects, Statistics Division, Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations
Secretariat New York, 7-10 August 2001, Glossary
Disclosure by
response knowledge
This is disclosure resulting from the knowledge
that a person was participating in a particular
208
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/docs/sym
posium_06.htm#_Toc8547016
Disclosure scenarios
Depending on the intention of the intruder, his or
her type of a priori knowledge and the microdata
available, three different types of disclosure or
disclosure scenarios are possible for microdata:
disclosure by matching, disclosure by response
knowledge and disclosure by spontaneous
recognition.
Disclosure from
analytical outputs
The use of output to make attributions about
individual population units. This situation might
arise to users that can interrogate data but do not
have direct access to them such as in a remote
data laboratory. One particular concern is the
publication of residuals.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Discontinuers
(students)
Discontinuers are students who enrol in a level,
programme, or field of education for one or more
reference periods and interrupt their studies for
one or more reference periods before successfully
completing the programme.
Disclosure limitation
methods
Synonym of disclosure control methods.
Discontinuers are therefore students who follow a
reference period of enrolment with a reference
period when they are not enrolled
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 40
See also: Disclosure control methods
See also: Graduates
Disclosure problem
A disclosure problem occurs, if an unacceptable
narrow estimation of the confidential information of
a respondent is possible.
Discount
A deduction from the list or advertised price of a
good or a service that is available to specific
customers under specific conditions.
Source: Eurostat, 1996, "Manual on disclosure
control methods", Office for Official Publications of
the European Communities, Luxembourg, p. 7-8
Examples include cash discounts, prompt payment
discounts, volume discounts, trade discounts and
advertising discounts.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Disclosure regulations Informations à fournir
(for pension plans)
The rules the pension plan must follow when
providing information on the plan operation to its
members and the supervisory authority.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Discount rate
Taux d'actualisation
The discount rate is an interest rate used to
convert a future income stream to its present
value
Disclosure risk
A disclosure risk occurs if an unacceptably narrow
estimation of a respondent‘s confidential
information is possible or if exact disclosure is
possible with a high level of confidence.
Context: The discount rate is the interest charged
by a central bank on loans to domestic financial
institutions.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods. Available at
http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-and-methods
The annual percentage by which future income is
discounted to give an equivalent value in the
present period.
209
United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.189
unemployment. Discouraged workers are counted
as out of the labour force under international
guidelines since they are not looking for work.
(OECD Employment Outlook, July 1995, Chapter 2,
Supplementary measures of labour market slack:
an analysis of discouraged and involuntary parttime workers, page 45)
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 11.125
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
Discoveries
Gross additions to the level of subsoil reserves due
to the discovery of completely new reserves. In
SEEA, not only additions to the stock of proven
reserves but also additions to probable and
possible reserves are also to be recorded.
Discount rate interest
Interest is payment for the use of borrowed
money. The discount rate is the rate at which
central banks lend or discount eligible paper for
deposit money banks. Also known as the bank rate
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.104
Source: International Financial Statistics Yearbook,
IMF, Washington D.C, 2000, Introduction, page
xvii
Discount store
A discount store is a retailing establishment selling
a range of rapid-turnover, cut-price goods and with
virtually no floor-service at all.
Discrete variable
A variable that takes only a finite number of real
values. (e.g., 1, 3, 5 and 1,000).
Source: Eurostat, 1993, "Retailing in the European
Single Market", Office for Official Publications of
the European Communities, Luxembourg
Source: Statistics Canada, Educational Resources,
Glossary of Statistical Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca/english/edu/prototype/glos
sary/gloss.htm
Discounting (of
Actualisation des
natural assets)
ressources naturelles
Discounting (of natural assets) is a process of
determining the present value (net worth) of
assets by applying a discount rate to the expected
net benefits from future uses of those assets.
Discrimination
See Price discrimination
See also: Price discrimination
The discount rate reflects the social preferences for
current (as compared with future) uses.
Discriminatory
Analyse discriminante
analysis
Given a set of multivariate observations on
samples, known with certainty to come from two
or more populations, the problem is to set up some
rule which will allocate further individuals to the
correct population of origin with minimal
probability of misclassification. This problem and
sundry elaboration‘s of it give rise to discriminatory
analysis.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Discouraged workers
Discouraged workers constitute one group of
inactive work-seekers. These are persons who,
while willing and able to engage in a job, are not
seeking work or have ceased to seek work because
they believe there are no suitable available jobs.
Source: Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th edition,
prepared for the International Statistical Institute
by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the International
Statistical Institute by Longman Scientific and
Technical
Context: Alternatively, for the OECD,
discouragement is a concept used to describe
individuals who would like to work, but are not
seeking work because they feel no suitable job is
available. Discouraged workers by definition are
not in the labour force.
Discussion forum
An online discussion group where users, usually
with common interests, can exchange open
messages:
Discouraged workers is a subjective measure, in
contrast to the objectively-based measure of
210
• Issue-based fora, i.e. organised around policy
issues that have been formulated by policymakers, interest groups or "experts", and
presented as the heading of one or more
discussion "threads". Responses are sought in
order to gauge opinion or solicit ideas. Position
statements, links to topic-related websites and
other background information may also be
presented, although they are often lacking.
Dispersion index
Indice de dispersion
This is not, as the name might suggest, a measure
of the dispersion of a set of values expressed as an
index number. It is the name given to certain
statistics which are used to test the homogeneity
of a set of samples, i.e. it refers to the dispersion
of the samples.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
• Policy-based fora, i.e. organised around
themes/issues that relate directly to a draft policy
that is meant to address these, and where
discussion threads are intended to solicit responses
from those affected. Participants might be
encouraged to submit alternative ideas and
suggestions but the format implies that what is
being sought is an indication of how far the
participants agree (or not) with the proposals, and
why.
Displaced workers
Displaced workers are workers who permanently
lost a stable job in the last few years and who are
currently unemployed, out of the labour force or
re-employed.
Source: OECD, 2004, Promise and Problems of EDemocracy: Challenges of Online Citizen
Engagement, OECD, Paris, Annex 1: Commonly
used E-Engagement Terms
The analysis of displaced workers relies on flow
analysis concerned with what happens to these
workers after displacement from their job. Do they
find another job or not, and if so, under what
conditions? These studies are based on longitudinal
or retrospective follow-up surveys.
Diseconomies of scale
See Economies of scale
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, July 1990,
Chapter 2, Displacement and Job Loss, page 43
See also: Economies of scale
See also: Job losers
Disembodied technical
change
See Technical change, disembodied
Disposable income
Revenu disponible
Disposable income is derived from the balance of
primary incomes of an institutional unit or sector
by adding all current transfers, except social
transfers in kind, receivable by that unit or sector
and subtracting all current transfers, except social
transfers in kind, payable by that unit or sector; it
is the balancing item in the Secondary Distribution
of Income Account
See also: Technical change, disembodied
Dismissed or made
redundant
Dismissed or made redundant are employees
whose employment ended involuntary. It includes
those employees who were dismissed, made
redundant, or lost their job because their employer
either went out of business, or sold or closed down
the business.
Context: Disposable income is defined by the
Canberra Group as total income less current
transfers paid. Such transfers comprise:
employers‘ social insurance contributions;
employees‘ social insurance contributions; taxes on
income; regular taxes on wealth; regular interhousehold cash transfers; and regular cash
transfers to charities .
Source:
Eurostat, 1999, "Labour force survey: Methods and
definitions, 1998 Edition", Office for Official
Publications of the European Communities,
Luxembourg, p. 68
This measure of income is usually the preferred
measure for income distribution as it is more free
of the impact of the institutional arrangements in
relation to total income.
Dispersion
Dispersion
The degree of scatter shown by observations. It is
usually measured as an average deviation about
some central value (e.g. mean deviation, standard
deviation) or by an order statistic (e.g. quartile
deviation, range) but may also be a mean of
deviations of values among themselves (e.g. Gini‘s
mean difference and also standard deviation).
Disposable income is also a closer approximation
of receipts available for individual and household
consumption (Final Report and Recommendations
of Expert Group on Household Income Statistics,
The Canberra Group, 2001, pages 22 and 24).
Source: SNA 8.11
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Income – SNA
211
and seeds are all examples of products deliberately
transmitted to the environment and that thus need
to be included in the flows from the economy into
the environment.
Disposal of waste
Evacuation des
déchets
Disposal of waste refers to waste elimination
techniques comprising landfills, containment,
underground disposal, dumping at sea and all
other disposal methods
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.65
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Disposals (of assets) Cessions
Disposals of assets (inventories, fixed assets or
land or other non-produced assets) by institutional
units occur when one of those units sells or
transfers any of the assets to another institutional
unit; when the ownership of an existing fixed asset
is transferred from one resident producer to
another, the value of the asset sold, bartered or
transferred is recorded as negative gross fixed
capital formation by the former and as positive
gross fixed capital formation by the latter
Distillate fuel oil
See Gas/diesel oil
See also: Gas/diesel oil
Distortion
When prices and production are higher or lower
than levels that would usually exist in a
competitive market.
Source: SNA 10.40 [9.32]
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Dissemination format
Media by which statistical data and /or metadata
are disseminated to users.
Distributed income of Revenus distribués
corporations
des sociétés
The distributed income of corporations consists of
dividends plus withdrawals from income of quasicorporations
Context: In SDMX, "Dissemination Formats" refers
to the various means of dissemination used for
making the data available to the public. It would
include a description of the various formats
available, including where and how to get the
information (for instance paper, electronic
publications, on-line databases).
Source: SNA 7.112-7.118
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Under the SDDS, the concept of dissemination
formats is divided into two categories: "hardcopy"
and "electronic" publications, which detail the
reference documents through which users may
access the data described in the metadata and,
where relevant, detailed components beyond the
minimum prescribed.
Distribution and use
of income accounts ESA
Comptes de
distribution et
d‟utilisation du revenu
Ŕ SEC
Distribution and use of income are analysed in four
stages: primary distribution, secondary
distribution, redistribution in kind and use of
income.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
See also: Data dissemination, Statistical Data and
Metadata Exchange (SDMX)
-The first stage concerns the generation of income
resulting directly from the production process and
its distribution between the production factors
(labour, capital) and general government (via
taxes on production and imports, and subsidies). It
enables the operating surplus (or mixed income in
the case of households) and primary income to be
determined.
Dissemination media
See Data format
See also: Data dissemination, Dissemination
format
Dissipative residual
losses
The dispersion into the environment of materials
(residuals) due to the abrasion of car tyres and
brakes, as well as residuals corresponding to
‗deliberate disposal‘ of products such as fertilisers
and pesticides. Pesticides, fertilisers and compost,
thawing materials applied to roadways in winter,
-The second stage traces redistribution of income
via transfers other than social transfers in kind.
This yields the disposable income.
-The third stage describes redistribution via social
transfers in kind, yielding the adjusted disposable
income.
212
-The fourth stage describes how the income is
consumed and saved, yielding the saving
transactions
distribution et
d‟utilisation du revenu
Distributive transactions consist of transactions by
which the value added generated by production is
distributed to labour, capital and government and
of transactions involving the redistribution of
income and wealth (taxes on income and wealth
and other transfers)
Source: ESA para. 8.15
See also: Distribution and use of income accounts
– SNA
Distribution and use
of income accounts Ŕ
SNA
Comptes de
distribution et
d‟utilisation du revenu
Ŕ SCN
The distribution and use of income accounts
consist of a set of articulated accounts showing
how incomes are:
Source: SNA 2.31
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Distributor's mark
See Trade mark
(a) generated by production;
(b) along with property income, distributed to
institutional units with claims on the value added
created by production;
See also: Trade mark
Disturbing the data
This process involves changing the data in some
systematic fashion, with the result that the figures
are insufficiently precise to disclose information
about individual cases.
(c) redistributed among institutional units, mainly
by government units through social security
contributions and benefits and taxes; and
(d) eventually used by households, government
units or non-profit institutions serving households
(NPISHs) for purposes of final consumption or
saving.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: SNA 1.7 and Table 2.8
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Diversification
Diversification refers to the expansion of an
existing firm into another product line or market.
Diversification may be related or unrelated.
See also: Distribution and use of income accounts
- ESA
Distributive services
See Services, distributive
Context: Diversification may arise for a variety of
reasons: to take advantage of complementarities
in production and existing technology; to exploit
economies of scope; to reduce exposure to risk; to
stabilize earnings and overcome cyclical business
conditions; etc. There is mounting evidence that
related diversification may be more profitable than
unrelated diversification.
See also: ISIC, Services, distributive
Distributive trades
Distributive trades corresponds to the wholesale
and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles,
motorcycles and personal and household goods,
Tabulation Category (G) of ISIC Rev. 3.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
It includes the following Divisions:
— Sale, maintenance and repair of motor vehicles
and motorcycles; retail sale of automotive fuel.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
— Wholesale trade and commission trade, except
of motor vehicles and motorcycles.
See also: Related diversification, Unrelated
diversification
— Retail trade, except of motor vehicles and
motorcycles; repair of personal and household
goods.
Divestiture
Divestiture refers to firms selling part of their
current operations, divisions or subsidiaries.
Source: ISIC Rev. 3 and NACE Rev. 1
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
Context: Divestiture may take place as a result of
firms restructuring their business in order to
concentrate on certain products or markets. It may
also be imposed upon them by competition
authorities as a result of a merger or acquisition
which is likely to reduce competition substantially.
Divestiture under these latter circumstances is
See also: NACE
Distributive
Comptes de
213
aimed at maintaining existing competition in the
market. Divestiture may also form a part of a
policy to deconcentrate an industry.
Division of labour
Specialisation in work, which may be effected by
breaking an activity into component tasks, or by
assigning specific groups of persons to certain jobs
or outputs.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: Alexander, P., Baden, S., 2000, Glossary
on macroeconomics from a gender perspective,
Institute of Development Studies, University of
Sussex
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/52/56/31594934.p
df
Dividends
Dividendes
Dividends are a form of property income received
by owners of shares to which they become entitled
as a result of placing funds at the disposal of
corporations. Raising equity capital through the
issue of shares is an alternative way of raising
funds to borrowing.
Divorce
Divorce is the final legal dissolution of a marriage;
a separation of husband and wife that confers on
the parties the right to remarriage under civil,
religious and/or other provisions in accordance
with the laws of the country
In contrast to loan capital, however, equity capital
does not give rise to a liability that is fixed in
monetary terms and it does not entitle the holders
of shares of a corporation to a fixed or
predetermined income.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Context: Dividends are the distribution of earnings
allocated to shares and other forms of participation
in the equity of incorporated private enterprises,
co-operatives, and public corporations. Dividends
are the distribution of earnings allocated to shares
and other forms of participation in the equity of
incorporated private enterprises, co-operatives,
and public corporations. These can be recorded on
the date they are payable, on the date they are
paid, or at some other point in time (Glossary of
Foreign Direct Investment Terms, OECD, 2001 –
unpublished).
Doctors‟ consultations
Doctors' consultations refers to contacts with an
ambulatory care physician divided by the
population. Contacts in out-patient wards should
be included.
Context: The number of contacts includes:
- visits/ consultations of patients at the physician‘s
office;
- physician‘s visits made to a person in institutional
settings such as liaison visits or discharge planning
visits, made in a hospital or nursing home with the
intent of planning for the future delivery of service
at home;
- telephone contacts when these are in lieu of a
first home or hospital visit for the purpose of
preliminary assessment for care at home;
- visits made to the patient‘s home.
Source: SNA 7.113
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Divisia approach
A price or quantity index that treats both prices
and quantities as continuous functions of time. By
differentiation with respect to time, the rate of
change in the value of the aggregate in question is
partitioned into two components one of which are
the price index and the other the quantity index.
The number of physician contacts according to the
above definition is only a crude measure of the
volume of services provided, as services are added
regardless of their complexities. Several countries
record only general practitioners, others include
specialists.
Context: In practice, the indices cannot be
calculated directly but it may be possible to
approximate them by chain indices in which the
links consist of period to period indices linking
consecutive periods.
Source: OECD Health Data 2007: Statistics and
Indicators for 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2007,
Data sources, definitions and methods
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Documentation
Documentation is descriptive text used to define or
describe an object, design, specification,
instructions or procedure
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
214
53, Geneva, 2000
Domestic employees are foreign persons admitted
for the specific purpose of providing personal
services to the foreign diplomatic and consular
personnel in the country
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
See also: Document, reference, Metadata,
statistical
Doha Development
Agenda
Multilateral trade negotiations in the World Trade
Organisation that were initiated in November 2001,
in Dohar, Qatar.
Domestic factor
incomes
Domestic factor incomes is the compensation of
employees and operating surplus originating in
domestic production; in other words, included in
the valued added of resident producers
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2002-2007,
OECD, Paris, 2002 – Annex II. Glossary of Terms
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Domain groups
A domain group comprises international
organisations and/or national agencies working,
formally or informally, towards the development of
international guidelines and recommendations
relevant to one or more statistical subject matter
domains.
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Domestic material
consumption (DMC)
This indicator measures the total amount of
material directly used in an economy, excluding
hidden flows. DMC equals DMI minus exports (in
economy – wide material flow accounting).
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
See also: Domain of study, statistical - UN,
Statistical subject matter domain
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.206
Domar weights
Pondération de Domar
Domar weights are weights used to combine
industry- level, gross output-based multi-factor
productivity (KLEMS) to higher- level aggregates.
Domar weights are special in that they do not
normally add to one. This reflects the combined
effects of integration and aggregation
See also: Direct material input (DMI)
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Domestic processed
output (DPO)
This indicator represents the total mass of
materials which have been used in the national
economy, before flowing into the environment.
These flows occur at the processing,
manufacturing, use, and final disposal stages of
the economic production-consumption chain.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
See also: KLEMS multi-factor productivity
Domestic currency
The domestic currency is that which is legal tender
in the economy and issued by the monetary
authority for that economy, or for the common
currency area to which the economy belongs.
Context: Exported materials are excluded because
their wastes occur in other countries. Included in
DPO are emissions to air from commercial energy
combustion and other industrial processes,
industrial and household wastes deposited in
landfills, material loads in waste water, materials
dispersed into the environment as a result of
product use (dissipative flows), and emissions from
incineration plants. Material flows recycled in
industry are not included in DPO (in economy –
wide material flow accounting).
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Domestic employees
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
Personnel de maison
d'agents
diplomatiques
215
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.202
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
See also: n,k rule
Domestic support
Soutien intérieur
Domestic support refers to the annual level of
support, expressed in monetary terms, provided to
agricultural production. It is one of the three pillars
of the Uruguay Round Agreement on Agriculture
targeted for reduction
Dominant firm
A dominant firm is one which accounts for a
significant share of a given market and has a
significantly larger market share than its next
largest rival. Dominant firms are typically
considered to have market shares of 40 per cent or
more.
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Context: Dominant firms can raise competition
concerns when they have the power to set prices
independently. An industry with a dominant firm is
therefore often an oligopoly in that there are a
small number of firms. However, it is an
asymmetric oligopoly because the firms are not of
equal size.
Domestic tourism
Domestic tourism is the tourism of resident visitors
within the economic territory of the country of
reference
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, para 2.61
Normally, the dominant firm faces a number of
small competitors, referred to as a competitive
fringe. The competitive fringe sometimes includes
potential entrants. Thus the dominant firm may be
a monopolist facing potential entrants.
Domestic tourism
consumption
Domestic tourism consumption comprises the
consumption of resident visitors within the
economic territory of the country of reference.
Like a monopolist, the dominant firm faces a
downward sloping demand curve. However, unlike
the monopolist, the dominant firm must take into
account the competitive fringe firms in making its
price/output decisions. It is normally assumed that
the dominant firm has some competitive
advantage (such as lower costs) as compared to
the fringe.
Context: The final destination of the visitor might
be within or outside the country of reference, but
the consumption activity that is referred to has to
take place within this country of reference. It
might include goods or services produced abroad
or by non-residents but sold within the country of
reference (imported goods and services).
The term competitive fringe arises from the basic
theory of dominant firm pricing. It is generally
assumed that the dominant firm sets its price after
ascribing a part of the market to the competitive
fringe which then accepts this price as given.
Dominant firms may be the target of competition
policy when they achieve or maintain their
dominant position as a result of anti-competitive
practices.
Note that this definition is broader than the
common understanding of the term ―domestic‖
within tourism statistics (involving residents of the
country of reference travelling and remaining
within the country), and as defined here domestic
tourism consumption includes what was
traditionally identified as the domestic portion of
outbound tourism consumption
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, paras. 2.61, 2.62
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Domestic visitors
Domestic visitors are those whose country of
residence is the country visited; they may be
nationals of this country or foreigners
See also: Abuse of dominant position
Dominant market
position
See Dominant firm, Price leadership
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, para 2.25
See also: Dominant firm, Price leadership
Donor (imputation)
In hot-deck edit/imputation, a donor is chosen
from the set of edit-passing records based on its
similarity to the fields in the record being donated
to (being imputed within). Values of fields
(variables) in the donor are used to replace the
corresponding contradictory or missing values in
the edit-failing record that is receiving information.
Dominance rule
Synonym of (n,k) rule.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
216
This type of replacement may or may not assure
that the imputed record satisfies edits.
Dose-response
Relation dose-réaction
relationship
The dose—response relationship refers to changes
in the prevalence or incidence of a given effect
associated with changes in the level of a possible
cause
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Hot deck, Hot-deck imputation
Dose response
function
Dose-response functions measure the relationship
between exposure to pollution as a cause and
specific outcomes as an effect. They refer to
damages/production losses incurred in the current
year, regardless of when the pollution occurs.
DOSIS
Development of Statistical Information Systems
DOTS detection rate
The fraction of all incident smear-positive cases
that are detected by DOTS programmes is the
DOTS detection rate which is a ratio of the annual
new smear-positive notifications (under DOTS) to
estimated annual new smear-positive incidence
(country). The value of the denominator comes
from WHO's estimates for each country.
Context: A mathematical relationship is established
which relates how much a certain amount of
pollution impacts on production, capital,
ecosystems, human health etc. By relating a
specific measure of an environmental impact to a
measure of pollution exposure while controlling for
other factors, the role of pollution in causing the
environmental impact can be estimated. This
estimate can then be used to predict the
environmental improvement (deterioration)
corresponding to a decrease (increase) in
exposure.
Context: These estimates are derived from several
sources of data using various methods. The
methods and data vary from one country to
another. The case detection rate (CDR) and the
DOTS detection rate (DDR) are identical when a
country reports only from DOTS areas. This should
happen only when DOTS coverage is 100%. The
ratio of DDR to DOTS coverage is an estimate of
the case detection rate within DOTS areas, which
would ideally be 70% or greater as coverage
increases.
Dose-response functions come in a variety of
forms, which may be linear or non-linear and may
or may not contain thresholds (levels of exposure
above which damages increase sharply). For
example, those describing effects of various air
pollutants on agriculture have proved to be
particularly complex, incorporating both positive
and negative effects, because of the potential for
certain pollutants (for example, those containing
sulphur and nitrogen) to act as fertilisers. Ideally
these functions and other models are derived from
epidemiological studies which study the observed
effects of pollutants on actual populations of
people, crops, etc., rather than relying on
simulations.
Although these indices are termed "rates", they
are actually ratios. The number of case
notifications is usually smaller than estimated
incidence because of incomplete coverage by
health services, under-diagnosis, or deficient
recording and reporting. However, it is possible for
the calculated detection rate to exceed 100% due
to (1) intense case finding in an area that has a
backlog of chronic cases, (2) over-reporting e.g.
double-counting, (3) over-diagnosis, or (4) the
under-estimation of incidence.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
paras. 9.58 & 9.59
Source: World Health Organization. WHO Report
2003. Global Tuberculosis Control -- Surveillance,
Planning, Financing. Geneva, 2003.
Dots per inch (DPI)
A measure of the degree of resolution of any
device that provides an image consisting of dots.
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Dose-effect
Relation dose-effet
relationship
The dose-effect relationship is the relationship
between the dose of harm-producing substances or
factors and the severity of their effect on exposed
organisms or matter
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
DOTS treatment
success
Treatment success is defined as the proportion of
registered patients who were cured plus the
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
217
proportion who completed treatment to all
registered cases.
parameters which govern the size of the second
sample to achieve a desired overall result.
Source: World Health Organization. WHO Report
2003. Global Tuberculosis Control -- Surveillance,
Planning, Financing. Geneva, 2003.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Double deflation
Double déflation
Double deflation is a method whereby gross value
added is measured at constant prices by
subtracting intermediate consumption at constant
prices from output at constant prices; this method
is feasible only for constant price estimates which
are additive, such as those calculated using a
Laspeyres‘ formula (either fixed-base or for
estimates expressed in the previous year‘s prices)
See also: Multi-phase sampling
Double time
Penalty or premium rate (e.g., for overtime work,
for work on Sundays and holidays) amounting to
twice the employee‘s regular rate of pay for each
hour worked.
Source: SNA 16.5
Source: Glossary of Compensation Terms – United
States Bureau of Labor Statistics, August 1998
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://stats.bls.gov/ocs/sp/ncbl0062.pdf
See also: Single indicator method of deflation
Double-declining
balance depreciation
Amortissement
degressif à taux
double
Double-declining balance is a form of geometric
depreciation in which the constant annual rate of
capital consumption is set equal to 2*V/T, where V
is the value of the asset when new and T is the
service life of the asset in years
Double entry
For a unit or sector, national accounting is based
on the principle of double entry, as in business
accounting , whereby each transaction must be
recorded twice, once as a resource (or a change in
liabilities) and once as a use (or a change in
assets)
Source: SNA 2.57
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
Double leveraging of
capital
Situations where related entities share capital. For
example, if a deposit-taker owns equity in another
deposit-taker in the group, capital is said to be
double leveraged because both entities are resting
activity on the same pool of capital. When capital
is double leveraged, the capital actually available
to the group to meet unanticipated losses is less
than the data implies.
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Double-zero
agreement
In the double zero agreements, the EU and the
CEEC typically agree to offer duty free quotas for a
specific quantity of a given agricultural product,
while anything above the/ quota is subject to duty.
Further, the EU and the CEEC agree not to use any
export subsidies for the given agricultural product.
Every agreement has been concluded bilaterally
between the EU and each CEEC country and that,
consequently, the contents vary from one case to
another.
Double sampling
Source: OECD, 2004, OECD Agricultural Outlook:
2004-2013, OECD, Paris, Glossary
Échantillonnage
double
A standard form of sample design for industrial
inspection purposes. In accordance with the
characteristics of a particular plan, two samples
are drawn, n1 and n2, and the first sample
inspected. The batch can then be accepted or
rejected upon the results of this inspection or the
second sample be inspected and the decision made
upon the combined result.
DPI
See Dots per inch
See also: Dots per inch (DPI)
DQAF
See Data Quality Assessment Framework (DQAF)
Context: The term has also been used somewhat
loosely for what is called multi-phase sampling and
the two-stage version of multi-stage sampling.
There is a further usage whereby a first sample
provides a preliminary estimate of design
See also: Data Quality Assessment Framework
(DQAF)
DQRS
218
See Data Quality Reference Site (DQRS)
Drip Irrigation is a water—saving technique of
surface irrigation through pipes made of plastics. It
delivers the water drop by drop to plants through
tiny holes, and prevents waterlogging of soils
See also: Data Quality Reference Site (DQRS)
Drawback system
The 'drawback' system covers goods in free
circulation, with a reimbursement of, or rebate on,
import duties payable on the goods if they are
exported outside the Community's customs
territory as compensating products.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Driving force-stateresponse framework
A driving force—state—response framework is a
framework for indicators for sustainable
development adapted from the pressure—state—
response framework
Source: Eurostat, 1998, "Statistics on the trading
of goods - User guide", Office for Official
Publications of the European Communities,
Luxembourg, p.28
Drift
An index is said to ―drift‖ if it does not return to
unity when prices in the current period return to
their levels in the base period. Chain indices may
drift when prices fluctuate over the periods they
cover.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Also known as ―chain-linking bias.‖
Driving force-StateResponse Framework
(for agricultural
activities)
Driving force – State – Response Framework is a
conceptual framework to describe environmental
linkages, whereby ―driving forces‖ are the factors
that influence agricultural activities, the ―states‖
are the outcomes of these activities, and
―responses‖ are the actions by society to influence
outcomes
See also: Framework for indicators of sustainable
development (FISD)
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Drift-net fishing
Pêche au filet dérivant
Drift-net fishing is a type of fishing involving very
long nets that drift with the winds and currents,
thus creating a webbing curtain in which fish are
enmeshed. It may result in (a) commercially
important species‘ being unusable when landed
owing to a long soak time or damage by predators
and (b) incidental by—catch of non—targeted fish
and other animals
Drobisch price index
A price index defined as the arithmetic average of
the Laspeyres price index and the Paasche price
index. It is a symmetric index and a pseudosuperlative index.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
See also: Long-line fishing, or long-lining
Drinking water
Normes de la qualité
standards
de l‟eau potable
Drinking water standards are standards
determining the quality of drinking water in the
context of prevailing environmental, social,
economic and cultural conditions, with reference to
the presence of suspended matter, excess salts,
unpleasant taste and all harmful microbes. Meeting
of those standards does not necessarily imply
purity
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Drop-lock bond
The drop-lock bond (DL bond) combines the
features of both floating- and fixed-rate securities.
The DL bond is issued with a floating-rate interest
that is reset semiannually at a specified margin
above a base rate, such as six months LIBOR. This
continues until the base rate is at or below a
specified trigger rate on an interest fixing date or,
in some cases, on two consecutive interest fixing
dates. At that time the interest rate becomes fixed
at a specified rate for the remaining lifetime of the
bond.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Water quality criteria
Drip irrigation
Irrigation goutte á
goutte
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
219
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments.
Dual mode
Describes a handset that works on both analogue
and digital networks.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Source: Cellular Mobile Pricing Structures and
Trends, Working Party on Telecommunication and
Information Services Policies – November 1999,
page 9, Select Glossary of Mobile Terms
Dropouts
Dropouts are defined as those students who leave
the specified level in the educational system
without obtaining a first qualification.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/54/42/2538118.pdf
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Dual records system
A dual records system is the simultaneous
collection of vital events, mainly births and deaths
and the appropriate exposed-to-the-risk
population, by two collecting methods which,
ideally, are independent of each other:
See also: Survival rates
Drug-related crime
"Drug-related crimes‖ may be understood to mean
intentional acts that involve the cultivation,
production, manufacture, extraction, preparation,
offering for sale, distribution, purchase, sale,
delivery on any terms whatsoever, brokerage,
dispatch, dispatch in transit, transport, importation
and exportation of internationally controlled drugs.
(a) a continuous vital event recording procedure
which may be other than the civil registration
system; and
(b) a periodic household sample survey conducted
in the same geographical area.
Source: United Nations, "Manual for the
Development of a System of Criminal Justice
Statistics (2003)", United Nations, New York, 2003
Matching of the events reported by the two
procedures provides methods of improving the
estimate of the total number of vital events
Hyperlink:
http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/ramon/statmanuals/fi
les/SeriesF_89_EN.pdf
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Dry port
Inland terminal which is directly linked to a
maritime port.
See also: Multi-round survey, Single round surveys
Dual-currency bond
A dual-currency bond is a hybrid debt instrument
with payment obligations over the life of the issue
in two different currencies. The borrower makes
coupon payments in one currency, but redeems
the principal at maturity in another currency in an
amount fixed at the time of the issue of the bonds.
The price of the bonds in the secondary market is
indicated as a percentage of the redemption
amount.
Source: Terminology on combined transport,
UNECE/ECMT/EC, United Nations, New York and
Geneva, 2001
DSIS
Distributed Statistical Information Services
DSL
See Digital Subscriber Line
Context: The following are variants of dualcurrency bonds:
See also: Digital Subscriber Line (DSL)
-
DTP
Desktop publishing
Dual band
Describes a handset that works on 800 MHz
cellular and 1900 MHz PCS frequencies.
Foreign Interest Payment Security (FIPS)
Adjustable Long-term Putable Security (ALPS)
Yen-linked Bond
Multiple Currency Clause Bond
Special Drawing Right (SDR) Bond
Shogun or Geisha Bond
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Source: Cellular Mobile Pricing Structures and
Trends, Working Party on Telecommunication and
Information Services Policies – November 1999,
page 9, Select Glossary of Mobile Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/54/42/2538118.pdf
220
Dublin Core
See Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (DCMI)
Due-for-payment
recording
Enregistrement sur la
base de la date
d‟exigibilité
Due-for-payment recording is an accounting
method showing flows which give rise to cash
payments at the latest times they can be paid
without incurring additional charges or penalties
and, in addition to these, actual cash payments at
the moments they occur; the period of time (if
any) between the moment a payment becomes
due and the moment it is actually made is bridged
by recording a receivable or a payable in the
financial accounts
See also: Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (DCMI)
Dublin Core Metadata
Initiative (DCMI)
The Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (DCMI) is an
organization dedicated to promoting the
widespread adoption of interoperable metadata
standards and developing specialized metadata
vocabularies for describing resources that enable
more intelligent information discovery systems.
Context: The DCMI is built on a community of
individuals from many different backgrounds and
disciplines located in organizations and institutions
all over the world. These individuals and
organizations committed to building and
developing metadata standards, practices, policies
and technologies are the foundation of this
initiative.
Source: SNA 3.93
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Accrual accounting
Dumb barge
Chaland
Inland waterways transport (IWT) freight vessel
designed to be towed which does not have its own
means of mechanical propulsion.
The original workshop for the Initiative was held in
Dublin, Ohio in 1995. Hence the term "Dublin
Core" in the name of the Initiative. Since that time
there have been a total of nine workshops held in
England, Australia, Finland, Germany, Canada,
Japan and the United States.
Context: The fact that a dumb barge is fitted with
an auxiliary engine does not change its nature.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Dublin Core Metadata Initiative website
Hyperlink: http://dublincore.org/about/
Due care
Due care can be defined as the effort that an
ordinarily reasonable and prudent person would
use under the same or similar conditions to avoid
harm to the company or to another party.
Dumb tanker barge
Chaland-citerne
Dumb barge for the bulk transport of liquids or
gases.
Context: Tankers for the transport in bulk of
powdered products such as cement, flour, plaster,
etc., are to be excluded and are to be counted
among dumb barges.
Context: In view of the heightened risks
encountered in weak governance zones, companies
will want to reinforce the risk management
techniques that they use in other investment
contexts.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: OECD, 2006, Annual Report on the OECD
Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises:
Conducting Business in Weak Governance Zones,
OECD, Paris
See also: Heightened managerial care
Due professional care
Calls for the application of the care and skill
expected of a reasonably prudent and competent
auditor in similar circumstances. Due professional
care is exercised when audits are carried out in
accordance with standards set for the profession.
Dump
Décharge sauvage
A dump is a site used to dispose of solid wastes
without environmental controls
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Dumping (of products
overseas)
Dumping refers to the practice by firms of selling
products abroad at below costs or significantly
below prices in the home market. The former
implies predatory pricing; the latter, price
discrimination.
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
221
Context: Dumping of both types is viewed by many
governments as a form of international predation,
the effect of which may be to disrupt the domestic
market of foreign competitors. Economists argue,
however, that price discriminatory dumping, where
goods are not sold below their incremental costs of
production, benefits consumers of the importing
countries and harms only less efficient producers.
A duopoly is an industry consisting of two sellers.
It is therefore a special case of oligopoly. In
industrial organization economic theory, duopoly is
often analysed as a simplified example of oligopoly
behaviour.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT) rules, dumping is discouraged and firms
may apply to their respective government to
impose tariffs and other measures to obtain
competitive relief.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
As in the case of predatory pricing or selling below
costs, arguments have been advanced questioning
the economic feasibility of dumping at prices below
costs over extended periods of time.
See also: Oligopoly
Duplicate sample
Échantillon doublé
A sample collected concurrently, i.e. in the course
of the same sample survey under comparable
conditions, with a first sample. It acts in much the
same way as a replication except that in some
cases the only thing which can be replicated is the
act of taking a second independent sample.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
For example, a second independent sample in a
survey will afford additional information on the
sampling error but nothing has been replicated in
the sense of a repeated experiment beyond the act
of selecting a duplicate sample. The act of taking
several such samples may be called replicated
sampling.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Anti-dumping measures
Dumping (of waste)
Mise en décharge
sauvage
Dumping is waste disposal in an uncontrolled
manner
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Duplicated sample, Interpenetrating
samples (sub samples)
Dumping at sea
Immersion
Dumping at sea is the disposal of hazardous and
non-hazardous substances in the open sea
Duplicated sample
Échantillon dupliqué
A sample which is taken up twice for enquiry by
two different parties of investigators. Two
interpenetrating samples assigned to two
investigating parties are sometimes so arranged,
for purposes of control of field operations, as to
have common sample units these common units
constitute a duplicated (sub-)sample.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Dumping margin
See Anti-dumping duty
This should be distinguished from a duplicate
sample.
See also: Anti-dumping duty, Anti-dumping
measures
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Dunnage
Material laid beneath or wedged between cargo to
prevent damage during transport.
See also: Duplicate sample
Source: International Merchandise Trade,
Australia, Concepts, Sources and Methods,
Glossary, Australian Bureau of Statistics
Durability of a
building
The durability of a building refers to the period of
time for which the structure remains habitable,
subject to regular maintenance
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/0/6B7D
040A646F264ECA256A5B001BD777?Open&Highlig
ht=0,warehouse
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.305
Duopoly
222
Duration of a fixed income instrument is a
weighted average term to maturity. The time delay
until the receipt of each cash flow is weighted by
the contribution of that cash flow to the total
present value of the bond.
Durable consumption
good
A consumption good that can be used repeatedly
or continuously for purposes of consumption over a
long period of time, typically several years.
Context: Because coupon securities return cash to
the investor earlier than say zero coupon bonds,
their "duration" is shorter than a zero coupon of
equal maturity. Investors attracted to these
instruments are, for example, those that need to
hedge long liabilities and so do not want to be
concerned with "reinvestment risk" i.e. the
possibility that market interest rates may fall in the
future; and/or those who are constrained to the
amount of cash they can invest but want maximum
exposure to a market.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Durable good
Bien durable
A durable good is one which may be used
repeatedly or continuously over a period of more
than a year, assuming a normal or average rate of
physical usage
Bonds with enhanced ―duration‖ refers to a group
of debt securities where the interest and
repayment structure of the bond is such as to
lengthen the "duration" of the security compared
with a traditional fixed interest security. Examples
include zero coupon bonds, perpetual bonds and
bunny bonds
Source: SNA 9.38
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Financial Terminology Database, Bank of
England
See also: Non-durable good
Durable input
An input that can be continuously used over a
period longer than the time period being used in
the index which is generally a month or a quarter.
In practice an input that can be used for several
years.
See also: Bunny bonds, Zero-coupon bonds
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Duration of marriage
The duration of a marriage refers to the interval of
time between the day, month and year of marriage
to date. It is often expressed in completed years
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Duration of
Durée des
programme (of
programmes
education)
Programme duration refers to the standard number
of years in which a student can complete the
education programme.
Duration
Duration is the weighted average term to maturity
of a debt instrument. The time period until the
receipt/payment of each cash flow, such as six
months, is weighted by the present value of that
cash flow, as a proportion of the present value of
total cash flows over the life of the instrument.
Present value can be calculated using the yield to
maturity or another interest rate. The more the
cash flows are concentrated toward the early part
of a debt instrument‘s life, the shorter the duration
relative to the time to maturity.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Duration of stay
The duration of stay for a traveller to be
considered engaged in a tourism activity in a
locality, his/her stay in this place must last less
than one consecutive year. When a visitor stays in
a place for longer than one year, this place
becomes part of his/her new usual environment
and he/she ceases to be considered a visitor to it.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
On the other hand, those engaged in short-term
courses or stays (e.g., summer courses, summer
camps, medical treatment of short duration) are
visitors to the location visited.
Duration of a fixed
income instrument
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, para 2.18
223
(staircase, passage, gallery, etc.). Detached rooms
for habitation which are clearly built, rebuilt,
converted, etc., to be used as part of a dwelling
should be counted as part of the dwelling
Duration of
unemployment
Duration of unemployment refers to the duration of
the period during which the person recorded as
unemployed was seeking or available for work. The
reported duration should consist of a continuous
period of time up to the reference period
Source: Bulletin of Housing and Building Statistics
for Europe and North America, UNECE, Geneva,
2000, Annex II, Definitions and General Terms,
page 82
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 11.110
See also: Dwellings - SNA
Dwelling construction
(activity)
In dwelling construction four types of building
activity are distinguished:
Dust
Poussières
Dust refers to particles light enough to be
suspended in air
- new construction: the erection of an entirely new
structure, whether or not the site on which it was
built was previously occupied;
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
- restoration: repairs by which at least one
dwelling or other structure is effectively reinstated
and where substantial parts of the existing
structure are used;
Dust arrester
A dust arrester is a device for catching dust,
usually from flue gases. Consequently, much of the
dust caught is fly ash
- extension: the enlargement of buildings by which
space is added;
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
- conversion: structural changes carried out within
a building
Source: Bulletin of Housing and Building Statistics
for Europe and North America, UNECE, Geneva,
2000, Annex II, Definitions and General Terms,
page 82
Dutot index
A price index defined as the ratio of the
unweighted arithmetic average of the prices in the
current period to the unweighted arithmetic
average of the prices in the base period. It is an
elementary index.
Dwelling occupancy
status
The dwelling occupancy status classification
recommended by the United Nations comprises:
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
. occupied
. vacant
- seasonally vacant
- non-seasonally vacant
- for rent
- for sale
- for demolition
- other
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Dwelling - SNA
Logements - SCN
Dwellings are buildings that are used entirely or
primarily as residences, including any associated
structures, such as garages, and all permanent
fixtures customarily installed in residences;
movable structures, such as caravans, used as
principal residences of households are included
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.369
Dynamic Asian
Countries
Dynamic Asian Countries is a country grouping
comprising Chinese Taipei; Hong Kong China;
Indonesia; Malaysia; the Philippines; Singapore
and Thailand
Source: AN.1111 – Annex to chapter XIII)
See also: Dwelling – UN
Dwelling Ŕ UN
Logement - NU
A dwelling is a room or suite of rooms and its
accessories in a permanent building or structurally
separated part thereof which by the way it has
been built, rebuilt, converted, etc., is intended for
private habitation. It should have a separate
access to a street (direct or via a garden or
grounds) or to a common space within the building
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
224
Early retirement for labour market reasons
includes only special schemes in which workers
receive retirement pensions because they are out
of work or otherwise for reasons of labour market
policy. Disability pensions are not included.
Dystrophic water
Dystrophic water is a shallow body of water that
contains much humus and/or organic matter. The
highly acidic water impairs fish life
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
These programme expenditures depend largely on
the extent to which early pensions are subsidised
rather than funded within regular pension plans,
e.g. by actuarially calculated reductions of the
amounts paid
E road
Route E
The international "E" network consists of a system
of reference roads as laid down in the European
Agreement on Main International Arteries, Geneva,
15 November 1975 and its amendments.
Source: Definitions of the Standardised categories
and Sub-categories of Labour Market Programmes,
OECD, 2001
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Earmarked taxes
Taxes raised and allocated to specific expenditure
programs, often through an extra-budgetary fund.
EAA
Economic Accounts for Agriculture
Earnings (wages and
salaries) Ŕ ILO
Earnings (wages and salaries) is the concept of
earnings as applied in wages statistics, relates to
remuneration in cash and in kind paid employees
for time worked or work done together with
remuneration for time not worked, such as annual
vacation and other paid leave or holidays.
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
EAGGF
See European Agricultural Guidance and Guarantee
Fund
See also: European Agricultural Guidance and
Guarantee Fund (EAGGF)
Earnings exclude employers‘ contributions in
respect of their employees paid to social security
and pension schemes and also the benefits
received by employees under these schemes.
Earnings also exclude severance and termination
pay
Early foetal death
An early foetal death is the death prior to the
complete expulsion or extraction from its mother
of a product of conception of less than 20
completed weeks of gestation
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning an Integrated System of
Wages Statistics Adopted by the 12th International
Conference of Labour Statisticians, October 1973,
para. 8
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Early leaver
See Early retirement
See also: Earnings (wages and salaries) – UN
See also: Early retirement
Earnings (wages and
salaries) Ŕ UN
Statistics of earnings (wages and salaries) should
relate to employees‘ gross remuneration, that is,
the total before any deductions are made by the
employer in respect of taxes, contributions of
employees to social security and pension schemes,
life insurance premiums, union dues and other
obligations of employees
Early retirement
Retraite anticipée
A situation when an individual decides to retire
earlier and draw the pension benefits earlier than
their normal retirement age.
Context: Identical term, "Early leaver"
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: International Recommendations for
Industrial Statistics, United Nations, New York,
1983, Statistical Papers, Series M, No. 48, Rev. 1,
para. 121
See also: Deferred retirement
Early retirement for
labour market reasons
See also: Earnings (wages and salaries) – ILO
Earnings per share
225
Earnings per share is a company's profit divided by
the total shares outstanding
See also: European Conference of Ministers of
Transport (ECMT)
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Eco-development
Ecodéveloppement
Eco-development refers to development at regional
and local levels, consistent with the potentials of
the area involved, with attention given to the
adequate and rational use of natural resources,
technological styles and organizational forms that
respect the natural ecosystems and local social and
cultural patterns.
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Earth Summit
Sommet “Planète
Terre”
See United Nations Conference on Environment
and Development
The term is also used to describe an integrated
approach to environment and development
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development
Earthwatch
Plan Vigie
Earthwatch is a general term for the global
environmental assessment efforts of the United
Nations system as co-ordinated by the United
Nations Environment Programme to improve the
gathering and sharing of environmental
information and provide early warning of
environmental problems requiring international
action
Eco-domestic product
Produit interieur
écologique
See Environmentally adjusted net domestic
product
Eco-efficiency profiles
Eco-efficiency profiles combine economic
contribution and environmental burden by
industry. The economic contribution is
represented, for example, by the percent each
industry contributes to GDP or employment. The
environmental burden is represented by the
percent each industry contributes to the emission
of various residuals, or the use of materials and
energy.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
E-banking
Banking operations conducted using the internet.
Source: BIS Business papers, November 2001,
Glossary, J. Hawkins
See ―Environmental economic profiles‖.
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/bispap07l.pdf
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 4.101
ECB
See European Central Bank
See also: European Central Bank
ECCI
European Employment Cost Index
See also: Environmental economic profiles
ECOFIN
See EU Council
ECE
Commission
économique pour
l'Europe - des Nations
unies
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
See also: EU Council
Ecolabels
Ecolabels indicate multiple environmental
parameters – such as noise, water use, and energy
use – associated with the manufacture, use and
disposal of products.
ECFIN
Economic and Financial Affairs DG (European
Commission)
Source: Energy Labels and Standards, Energy
Efficiency Policy Profiles, International Energy
Agency, 2001
ECHP
European Co-ordinated Household Panels
Ecological amplitude
Sphère écologique
Ecological amplitude are the limits of
environmental conditions within which an organism
can live and function
ECMT
CEMT
See European Conference of Ministers of Transport
226
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
An ecological footprint is the land (and water) area
of the planet or particular area required for the
support either of humankind‘s current lifestyle or
the consumption pattern of a particular population.
It is the inverse of the carrying capacity of a
territory
Ecological approach to
sustainable
development
Economic and social systems are sub-systems of
the global environment; sustainability in the
economic and social spheres is subordinate to
sustainability of the environment. Development,
from the ecological viewpoint, is seen to refer to
the ―capacity of [an ecosystem] to respond
positively to change and opportunity‖ or the
―maintenance of [ecosystems‘] dynamic capacity to
respond adaptively‖ (Golley, 1990). The key
property to be sustained then is the capacity of
ecosystems to respond with resilience to external
perturbations and changes.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Ecological impact
Impact écologique
Ecological impact is the effect of human activities
and natural events on living organisms and their
non—living environment
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Environmental impact
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 1.13
Ecological statistics
Statistiques
écologiques
Ecological statistics refers to the application of
statistical methods to the description and
monitoring of ecosystems. Such monitoring may
require modelling (beyond statistical
measurement) which is the subject of the related
domain of statistical ecology
Ecological balance
Equilibre écologique
The ecological balance is the equilibrium between,
and harmonious coexistence of, organisms and
their environment
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Ecology
Écologie
Ecology is the totality or pattern of relationships
between organisms and their environment
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Ecological dominance
Domination
écologique
Ecological dominance refers to the exertion of a
major controlling influence of one or more species
upon all other species by virtue of their number,
size, productivity or related activities
Eco-management and
auditing scheme
(EMAS)
A voluntary initiative established by the European
Commission and intended to improve companies‘
environmental performance. Its aim is to recognise
and reward those organisations that go beyond
minimum legal compliance and continuously
improve their environmental performance.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Ecological equilibrium Equilibre naturel
See Ecological balance
Source: OECD, 2007, Business and the
Environment: Policy Incentives and Corporate
Responses, OECD, Paris
See also: Ecological balance
Ecological ethics
Etho-écologie
Ecological ethics are moral principles governing the
human attitude towards the environment, and
rules of conduct for environmental care and
preservation
E-commerce
See Electronic commerce
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Electronic commerce
Ecological footprint
See also: Activity – ISIC Rev. 3
Economic activity
See Activity - ISIC Rev. 3
Empreinte écologique
227
collectively, and from which economic benefits may
be derived by their owners by holding them, or
using them, over a period of time (the economic
benefits consist of primary incomes derived from
the use of the asset and the value, including
possible holding gains/losses, that could be
realised by disposing of the asset or terminating it)
Economic activity
classification
Same as Activity classification
See also: Activity classification
Economic and
Financial Committee
The Economic and Financial Committee is a
consultative Community body set up at the start of
European Monetary Union (EMU) Stage Three,
when the Monetary Committee was dissolved.
Source: SNA 10.2 and 13.12 [11.16]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Context: The Member States, the European
Commission and the European Central Bank (ECB)
each appoint no more than two members of the
Committee. The two members appointed by the
Member States are selected respectively from
among senior officials from the national
administrations and the national central banks.
Economic benefits
from environmental
functions (SEEA)
Comprise direct use benefits, indirect use benefits,
option benefits, bequest benefits and existence
benefits.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.35 sq.
Article 114 (2) of the Treaty contains a list of the
tasks of the Economic and Financial Committee,
which include reviewing the economic and financial
situation of the Member States and of the
Community.
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Economic flows
Flux économiques
Economic flows reflect the creation,
transformation, exchange, transfer or extinction of
economic value; they involve changes in the
volume, composition, or value of an institutional
unit‘s assets and liabilities
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
Economic approach
The approach to index number theory that
assumes that the observed price and quantity data
are generated as solutions to various economic
optimization problems. The quantities are assumed
to be functions of the prices and not independent
variables.
Source: SNA 3.9
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Also known as the ―micro-economic approach‖.
Economic instruments
A means by which decisions or actions of
government affect the behaviour of producers and
consumers by causing changes in the prices to be
paid for these activities. Environmental taxes fall
into this category, as do direct charges for
government provided environmental services. In
fact the boundary between these two is rather fluid
and may change noticeably over quite a short
period of time.
Context: In the CPI context, the economic
approach usually requires the CPI to be some kind
of cost of living index.
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 6.5
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Economic instruments Instruments
(environmental
économiques
protection policy)
Economic instruments are fiscal and other
economic incentives and disincentives to
Economic assets
Actifs économiques
Economic assets are entities functioning as stores
of value and over which ownership rights are
enforced by institutional units, individually or
228
incorporate environmental costs and benefits into
the budgets of households and enterprises.
promoting regulation, and by improving regulatory
frameworks for market functioning and prudential
oversight.
The objective is to encourage environmentally
sound and efficient production and consumption
through full-cost pricing. Economic instruments
include effluent taxes or charges on pollutants and
waste, deposit—refund systems and tradable
pollution permits
Source: Regulatory Reform: A Synthesis, OECD,
Paris, 1997, page 11
Economic rent
See Rent - OECD
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Rent - OECD
Economic sphere
The economic sphere is defined in relation to the
flows covered in the SNA. This means that all flows
related to the three types of economic activity
covered in national accounts (production,
consumption and accumulation) are included. All
flows of products belongs to the economic sphere.
See also: Cost internalisation, Deposit-refund
system, Environmental externalities
Economic interest Ŕ
Centre d‟intérêt
centre of
économique
An institutional unit is said to have a centre of
economic interest within a country when there
exists some location within the economic territory
of the country on, or from, which it engages, and
intends to continue to engage, in economic
activities and transactions on a significant scale,
either indefinitely or over a finite but long period of
time
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.79
Source: SNA 14.12 [4.15]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Economic territory (of Territoire économique
a country) Ŕ ESA
(d‟un pays) Ŕ SEC
The economic territory of a country consists of the
geographic territory administered by a
government; within this territory, persons, goods,
and capital circulate freely.
Economic model
A simplified representation of economic reality
showing the interrelationships between selected
economic variables.
Source: Alexander, P., Baden, S., 2000, Glossary
on macroeconomics from a gender perspective,
Institute of Development Studies, University of
Sussex
Context: In a maritime country, economic territory
include islands that belong to the country and are
subject to the same fiscal and monetary authorities
as a mainland; goods and persons move freely to
and from the mainland and the islands without any
customs or migration formalities. The economic
territory of a country includes the airspace,
territorial waters, and continental shelf lying in
international waters over which the country enjoys
exclusive rights or over which it has, or claims to
have, jurisdiction in respect of the right to fish or
to exploit to fuel or minerals below the sea bed.
The economic territory of a country also includes
territorial enclaves in the rest of the world. (BPM
para. 59).
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/52/56/31594934.p
df
Economic production
Production
économique
Economic production is an activity carried out
under the control and responsibility of an
institutional unit that uses inputs of labour, capital,
and goods and services to produce outputs of
goods or services
The term economic territory means:
Source: SNA 6.15
— the geographic territory administered by a
government within which persons, goods, services
and capital move freely;
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
-any free zones, including bonded warehouses and
factories under customs control;
Economic regulations
Economic regulations intervene directly in market
decisions such as pricing, competition, market
entry, or exit.
— the national air-space, territorial waters and the
continental shelf lying in international waters, over
which the country enjoys exclusive rights;
Reform aims to increase economic efficiency by
reducing barriers to competition and innovation,
often through deregulation and use of efficiency-
— territorial enclaves, i.e. geographic territories
situated in the rest of the world and used, under
international treaties or agreements between
229
States, by general government agencies of the
country (embassies, consulates, military bases,
scientific bases etc.);
Economic union
An economic union is a common market with
provisions for the harmonisation of certain
economic policies, particularly macroeconomic and
regulatory. The European Union is an example of
an economic union
- deposits of oil, natural gas, etc. in international
waters outside the continental shelf of the country,
worked by units resident in the territory as defined
in the preceding subparagraphs.
Source: Glossary of Insurance Policy Terms, OECD,
Centre for Co-operation with Non-Members, 1999
The economic territory does not include
extraterritorial enclaves (i.e. the parts of the
country's own geographic territory used by general
government agencies of other countries, by the
Institutions of the European Union or by
international organisations under international
treaties or agreements between States)
See also: Common market, Customs union, Free
trade area, Regional trading arrangement
Economically active
persons
Personnes
économiquement
actives
See Economically active population
Source: ESA [2.05, 2.06]
See also: Economically active population
See also: Economic territory (of a country) –
SNA/UN
Economically active
population
Personnes
économiquement
actives Ŕ BIT
Economically active population comprises all
persons of either sex who furnish the supply of
labour for the production of economic goods and
services as defined by the United Nations System
of National Accounts during a specified timereference period
Economic territory (of Territoire économique
a country) Ŕ SNA
(d‟un pays) Ŕ SCN/NU
The economic territory of a country consists of the
geographic territory administered by a government
within which persons, goods, and capital circulate
freely.
It includes: (a) the airspace, territorial waters, and
continental shelf lying in international waters over
which the country enjoys exclusive rights or over
which it has, or claims to have, jurisdiction in
respect of the right to fish or to exploit fuels or
minerals below the sea bed; (b) territorial enclaves
in the rest of the world; and (c) any free zones, or
bonded warehouses or factories operated by
offshore enterprises under customs control (these
form part of the economic territory of the country
in which they are physically located).
Context: The SNA (paras. 6.18 and 6.22) and
Principles and Recommendations for Population
and Housing Censuses, Revision 1, United Nations,
1998, Series M, No. 67, Rev. 1., define the
economically active population ("usually active" or
"currently active") comprising all persons of either
sex above a specified age who furnish the supply
of labour for the production of economic goods and
services (employed and unemployed, including
those seeking work for the first time), as defined
by the System of National Accounts (SNA), during
a specified time reference period.
Source: SNA 14.9 and International Merchandise
Trade Statistics, Concepts and Definitions, United
Nations, New York, 1998, Studies in Methods,
Series M, No. 52, Rev. 2, page 27, para. 3
The economically active population may be related
to the total population for the derivation of the
crude participation rate, or, more appropriately, to
the population above the age prescribed for the
measurement of the economically active
population. Production includes all individual or
collective goods or services that are supplied to
units other than their producers, or intended to be
so supplied, including the production of goods or
services used up in the process of producing such
goods or services; the own-account production of
all goods that are retained by their producers for
their own final consumption or gross capital
formation; the own-account production of housing
services by owner-occupiers and of domestic and
personal services produced by employing paid
domestic staff. Not economically active population
comprises the balance of the population.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Economic territory (of a country) – ESA,
Statistical territory (of a country) – UN, Trade
systems
Economic territory (of Territoire économique
an international
(d‟une organisation
organisation)
internationale)
The economic territory of an international
organisation consists of the territorial enclave, or
enclaves, over which it has jurisdiction; these
consist of clearly demarcated areas of land or
structures which the international organisation
owns or rents and which it uses for the purposes
for which the organisation was created by formal
agreement with the country, or countries, in which
the enclave or enclaves are physically located
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning Economically Active
Population, Employment, Unemployment and
Underemployment Adopted by the 13th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians,
October 1982, para. 5
Source: SNA 14.10
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
230
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
concentration.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Economically inactive
population
The economically inactive population comprises all
persons who were neither "employed" nor
"unemployed" during the short reference period
used to measure "current activity". This population
is split into four groups:
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Plant specific economies of scale, Product
specific economies of scale
- Attendant at educational institutions;
Economies of scope
Economies of scope exist when it is cheaper to
produce two products together (joint production)
than to produce them separately.
- Retired;
- Engaged in family duties;
- Other economically inactive.
Source: Eurostat, 1999, Guidelines and table
programme for the Community programme of
population and housing censuses in 2001, Vol. 1:
Guidelines, Office for Official Publications of the
European Communities, Luxembourg
Context: For example, it may be less costly to
provide air service from point A to points B and C
with one aircraft than have two separate air flights,
one to point B and another to point C. Similarly, a
steer produces beef and hide and it may be
inefficient to breed steers separately for beef and
for hide.
Economically
Prix économiquement
significant prices
significatifs
Prices are said to be economically significant when
they have a significant influence on the amounts
the producers are willing to supply and on the
amounts purchasers wish to buy
While many factors such as technology may
explain economies of scope, of particular
importance is the presence of common input(s)
and/or complementarities in production. Firms may
often endeavour to exploit economies of scope in
order to produce and offer multiple products at
lower costs.
Source: SNA 6.45 [4.58]
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Economies of scale
Economies of scale refers to the phenomenon
where the average costs per unit of output
decrease with the increase in the scale or
magnitude of the output being produced by a firm.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Economy
Economy means acquiring the necessary resources
(finance, staff, buildings, equipment, etc.) to carry
out an activity at the least cost.
Similarly, the opposite phenomenon, diseconomies
of scale, occurs when the average unit costs of
production increase beyond a certain level of
output. At the point where the average costs are at
a minimum, the minimum efficient scale (MES) of
output of a firm or plant is reached.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
A distinction is often made between different types
of economies of scale such as:
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
- Product specific economies of scale; and
- Plant specific economies of scale.
Economy-wide job
turnover rate
The economy-wide job turnover rate is simply the
absolute sum of net employment changes across
all establishments or firms expressed as a
percentage of total employment.
Context: The maximum efficient scale of output is
reached at the point just before diseconomies set
in, that is unit costs of production start to increase.
Between the range of minimum and maximum
efficient scale of output, there may also exist
constant returns to scale where the average unit
costs of production remain unchanged as output
increases. The minimum and maximum scales of
output, in relation to the total demand or market
size have an important bearing on the number and
size distribution of firms in an industry and on
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, July 1996,
Chapter 5, Employment adjustment, workers and
unemployment, page 165
231
biocoenosis) and the changes in these stocks.
See also: Job turnover
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.327
Economy-wide
Material Flow
Accounts
An account that provides an aggregate overview of
annual material inputs and outputs of an economy
in tonnes.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.191
Ecosystem inputs
Ecosystem inputs cover the substances absorbed
from the ecosystem for purposes of production and
consumption such as the gases needed for
combustion and production processes as well as
oxygen, carbon dioxide, water and nutrients.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
paras. 3.42 & 2.165
Ecoregion
Ecorégion
An ecoregion is a homogeneous area of one or
more ecosystems that interact with relatively self—
contained human activities
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Ecosystem services
Ecosystem services cover the provision of
ecosystem inputs, the assimilative capacity of the
environment and the provision of biodiversity.
Ecosphere
Ecosphère
The ecosphere refers to the biosphere, together
with all the ecological factors that operate upon
organisms
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.42
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Ecosystem
Ecosystème
An ecosystem is a system in which the interaction
between different organisms and their environment
generates a cyclic interchange of materials and
energy
Ecotourism
Ecotourisme
Ecotourism is travel undertaken to witness the
unique natural or ecological quality of particular
sites or regions, including the provision of services
to facilitate such travel
Context: Groups of organisms and the physical
environment they inhabit. Three main types of
ecosystem assets are recognised in the SEEA;
terrestrial ecosystems, aquatic ecosystems and
atmospheric systems.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.73 EA.3
ECOTRIM
ECOTRIM
Ecotrim is a program that supplies a set of
mathematical and statistical techniques to carry
out temporal disaggregation.
Context: Ecotrim is written in Visual Basic and
C++. It offers a user friendly approach to temporal
disaggregation. The user is asked to specify the
techniques that he wants to run, besides the
obvious information concerning the time series to
be treated. Ecotrim offers the possibility to work in
two different ways: it can be used in an interactive
mode or in batch mode according to the
accountant's requirements.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Ecosystem account
An account that describes the stocks of various
categories of ecosystems (biotopes and
232
Source: Handbook on quarterly national accounts,
1999 Edition, Eurostat, p.192
See Checking rule specification
See also: Checking rule specification
Ecozone
See Ecoregion
Edit(ing) matrix
An edit(ing) matrix is a matrix used in editing. In
hot-deck imputation, the matrix contains
information from edit-passing records that is used
to donate information to (impute values in) the
edit-failing record.
Ecozone
See also: Ecoregion
ECP
See European comparison programme
Typically, there will be a variety of matrices that
correspond to the different sets of variables that
are matched on. The matrices are updated
continuously as a file of records is processed and
additional edit-passing records become available
for updating the matrices.
See also: European Comparison Programme
ECU
See European Currency Unit
See also: European Currency Unit (ECU)
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
EDEN
Eurostat Dissemination Environment
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Edgeworth price index
See Marshall Edgeworth price index
See also: Marshall Edgeworth price index
Editing bounds
Editing bounds are bounds on the distribution of a
measure used on survey data so that when raw,
unedited data are outside the bounds the data is
subject to review and possible correction (change).
EDI
See Electronic data interchange (EDI)
See also: Electronic data interchange (EDI)
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
EDICOM
Electronic Data Interchange on Commerce
EDIFACT
Electronic Data Interchange for administration,
commerce and transport. EDIFACT was prepared
by UN/ECE Trade Division and adopted by ISO/TC
154. The UN/ECE has also prepared Message
Design Guidelines which are included in the
UN/ECE Trade Data Interchange Directory. The
standard was published in 1988 and amended with
very small changes in 1990.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Editing change
A code that is inserted on a form as a result of an
editing process. For example, where a woman is
coded as the "wife" of the head of the household
and the field for marital status is blank, the code
for "married" may be inserted as an editing change
in this case.
Source: ISO International Standard 9735:1988
Electronic data interchange for administration,
commerce and transport (EDIFACT) Application
level syntax rules, September 1996
Hyperlink:
http://www.nls.fi/ptk/standardisation/2.html
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
See also: Electronic data interchange (EDI),
GESMES
EDIFLOW
A project which is compiling a survey of data flows
from Member States to Eurostat.
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Editing efficiency
An efficient edit is good at identifying suspicious
data. Edits that incorrectly flag large amounts of
valid data are not very efficient. If such edits
require an analyst to re-contact the respondent to
verify the data, the analyst will have less time to
perform other tasks, such as converting nonrespondents. The hit rate may be used as an
Edit rule
See Checking rule
See also: Checking rule
Edit rule specification
233
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
indicator of editing efficiency.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Editing of individual data, Editing of
logical units
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Editing of logical units
Editing of logical records is a logical level of
checking and correction during which the
relationships among data in two or more records
are considered, namely in a group of records that
are logically coupled together.
Editing match
For hot-deck imputation, the fields in an editfailing record that do not fail edits are matched
against edit-passing records. Often the editpassing record that is closest to the edit-failing
record in terms of some metric is chosen as the
donor record.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
If the edit-passing records are in random order,
then the (possibly erroneous) assumption is that
the donation is at random from a valid set of
donors. This type of matching is sometimes
referred to as statistical matching.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
See also: Editing of individual data, Editing of
individual records
Editing procedure
An editing procedure is the process of detecting
and handling errors in data. It usually includes
three phases:
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
· the definition of a consistent system of
requirements,
· their verification on given data, and
Editing of individual
data
Editing of individual data is the lowest logical level
of checking and correction during which the
relationships among data items are not considered.
· elimination or substitution of data which is in
contradiction with the defined requirements.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Editing of individual records, Editing of
logical units
Editing rationality
An editing process that focuses on improving the
incoming data quality and hence the overall quality
of the survey data. This may include moving most
of the editing as close as possible to the collection
of data, limiting manual follow-up to those flagged
records with the heaviest potential impact on
estimates, and applying a total quality
management approach to data editing.
Editing of individual
records
Editing of individual records is the logical level of
checking and correction during which the
relationships among data items in one record are
considered.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
234
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.153
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Level of education
Educational institution
Educational institutions are defined as entities that
provide instructional services to individuals or
education-related services to individuals and other
educational institutions.
EDMS
Electronic Document Management System
Context: Whether or not an entity qualifies as an
educational institution is not contingent upon
which public authority (if any) has responsibility for
it. For example, tertiary institutions are classified
as educational institutions regardless of which
ministry or other authority may have ultimate
responsibility for them.
EDP
See Electronic data processing
See also: Electronic data processing (EDP)
Education
Education is defined as organised and sustained
communication designed to bring about learning.
In some cases, the Ministry of Agriculture or
Defence might have responsibility. Educational
institutions are sub- divided into Instructional
educational institutions and Non-instructional
educational institutions
Context: Communication in this context requires a
relation between two or more persons involving
the transfer of information (messages, ideas,
knowledge, strategies, etc.).
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 64
Organised means planned in a pattern or sequence
with established aims or curricula and which
involves an educational agency that organises the
learning situation and/or teachers who are
employed (including unpaid volunteers) to
consciously organise the communication.
See also: Level of education, Private education
institution, Public education institution
Educational personnel
The classification is based on function and
organises staff into four main functional categories.
Sustained means that the learning experience has
the elements of duration and continuity.
The classification is:
Learning is taken as any change in behaviour,
information, knowledge, understanding, attitudes,
skills, or capabilities which can be retained and
cannot be ascribed to physical growth or to the
development of inherited behaviour patterns
i) Instructional personnel;
ii) Professional support for students;
iii) Management/Quality control/Administration;
and
iv) Maintenance and operations personnel.
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 28
Teaching staff (teachers) and teachers‘ aides make
up the category instructional personnel.
Context: For the purposes of Indicator D2 in the
OECD Education at a Glance, only teaching staff is
taken into account.
Education enrolment
Persons enrolled and/or registered in a programme
of education.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization. Revised Recommendation
concerning the International Standardization of
Educational Statistics. Paris, 1978. Also contained
in UNESCO Statistical Yearbook, chap. 2. Paris,
annual.
See also: Full-time equivalent teacher, Full-time
teacher, Instructional personnel, Maintenance and
operations personnel, Management/Quality
control/Administration, Part-time teacher, Ratio of
students to teaching staff, Teaching staff, Teaching
time
Educational
Niveau de formation
attainment
Educational attainment is defined as the highest
grade completed within the most advanced level
attended in the educational system of the country
where the education was received. Some countries
may also find it useful to present data on
educational attainment in terms of the highest
grade attended
Educational
Diplômes de fin
qualifications
d'études
Educational qualifications are the degrees,
diplomas, certificates, professional titles and so
forth that an individual has acquired whether by
full-time study, part-time study or private study,
whether conferred in the home country or abroad,
and whether conferred by educational authorities,
235
special examining bodies or professional bodies.
A group of observations may contain a limited
number of outlying observations at either or both
ends of the range. A very rough measure of
dispersion may be obtained by taking the
―effective‖ range, i.e. the range after these
outlying values have been removed.
The acquisition of an educational qualification
therefore implies the successful completion of a
course of study or training programme
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.164
The removal may have to be a matter of subjective
judgement and inferences based on effective range
are of somewhat doubtful value: in fact the term
itself is not a good one.
See also: Level of education
EEA
EEE
See European Economic Area
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: European Economic Area (EEA)
EEA
AEE
European Environment Agency
Effectiveness
Effectiveness means the extent to which the
activity's stated objectives have been met.
EET system
Régime EET
A form of taxation of pension plans, whereby
contributions are exempt, investment income and
capital gains of the pension fund are also exempt
and benefits are taxed from personal income
taxation.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
See also: ETE system, TEE system
Efficiency
Efficacité
Efficiency means achieving maximum output from
a given level of resources used to carry out an
activity.
EEZ
ZEE
See Exclusive Economic Zone
See also: Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ)
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Effect of time passing
The fact that the future benefits to be provided by
an asset are one year closer at the end of the
period than at the beginning. Assimilated to the
return to capital and net operating surplus.
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.162 & Box 7.1
Efficiency (in
Efficacité
statistical estimation)
The concept of efficiency in statistical estimation is
due to Fisher (1921) and is an attempt to measure
objectively the relative merits of several possible
estimators.
Effective control of
enterprises
See Control of enterprises
Context: The criterion adopted by Fisher was that
of variance, an estimator being regarded as more
―efficient‖ than another if it has smaller variance;
and if there exists an estimator with minimum
variance v the efficiency of another estimator of
variance v1 is defined as the ration v/v1.
See also: Control of enterprises
Effective exchange
rate
See Nominal effective exchange rate and Real
effective exchange rate
It was implicit in this development that the
estimator should obey certain other criteria such
as consistency. For small samples, where other
considerations such as bias enter, the concept of
efficiency may require extension or modification.
See also: Nominal effective exchange rate, Real
effective exchange rates
Effective range
The word is also used to denote the properties of
experimental designs, one design being more
efficient than another if it secures the same
Étendue réelle
236
precision with less expenditure of time or money.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Effort restrictions
Limitation de l‟effort
Effort restrictions are fisheries management
measures involving restrictions on the amount of
effort that may be expended in harvesting a fish
stock
Efficiency (of
Efficience
production processes)
Efficiency refers to the degree to which a
production process reflects ‗best practice‘, either in
an engineering sense (‗technical efficiency‘) or in
an economic sense (‗allocative efficiency‘).
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Context: Full technical efficiency characterises a
production process where the maximum possible
output has been achieved, given a fixed set of
inputs and given a certain technology. Full
allocative efficiency prevails when the input-output
combination is cost- minimising and/or profit
maximising
EFT
See Electronic funds transfer
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
See also: European Free Trade Association (EFTA)
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
See also: Point of sale
See also: Electronic funds transfer (EFT)
EFTA
See European Free Trade Association
EFTPOS
See Point of sale
Efficiency of nitrogen
use in agriculture
indicator
The OECD Efficiency of nitrogen use in agriculture
indicator measures the physical nitrogen
input/output ratio
E-government
The term "e-government" focuses on the use of
new information and communication technologies
(ICTs) by governments as applied to the full range
of government functions. In particular, the
networking potential offered by the Internet and
related technologies has the potential to transform
the structures and operation of government.
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture:
Methods and Results, Executive Summary, OECD,
2000, page 22
Source: E-government: Analysis Framework and
Methodology, OECD Public Management Service,
Public Management Committee, 2001
See also: Soil surface nitrogen balance indicator
Hyperlink:
http://www.olis.oecd.org/olis/2001doc.nsf/c5ce8ff
a41835d64c125685d005300b0/0b677ed527d35bc
0c1256b21004f4b6a/$FILE/JT00118445.PDF
Effluent
Effluent
Effluent is liquid waste product (whether treated or
untreated) discharged from an industrial process
or human activity that is discharged into the
environment
EIA
EIE
See Environmental impact assessment
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Environmental impact assessment (EIA)
EIB
European Investment Bank
Effluent charge
Taxe de déversement
An effluent charge is a fee or tax to be paid on
discharges into the environment, based on the
quantity and/or quality of discharged pollutants
EKS method
A multilateral method developed by O. Elteto, P.
Koves and B. Szulc [Schultz] that computes the
nth root of the product of all possible Fisher
indexes between n countries. It has been used at
the detailed heading level to obtain heading
parities, and also at the GDP level. EKS has the
properties of base-country invariance and
transitivity.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Economic instruments
Effluent standards
Norme de rejet
Effluent standards refer to the maximum amount
of pollutants permitted in effluents
Context: It is the method used by Eurostat and the
237
OECD to calculate PPPs for basic headings and to
aggregate basic heading PPPs to obtain PPPs for
each level of aggregation up to and including GDP.
- the PPPs based on products representative in the
second country.
Strictly speaking, the EKS is a procedure whereby
any set of intransitive binary index numbers are
made transitive while respecting characteristicity.
Products representative in both countries are used
for both PPPs.
With the EKS-S method, the ―Fisher type index‖
between two countries is calculated as the
geometric mean of three PPPs:
The procedure is independent of the method used
to calculate the intransitive binary indices.
Basically, the method used to obtain the
intransitive binary PPPs for a basic heading or
aggregate involves calculating first a matrix of
Laspeyres type PPPs, then a matrix of Paasche
type PPP and finally, by taking the geometric mean
of the two, a matrix of Fisher type PPPs. The Fisher
type PPPs are made transitive and multilateral by
applying the EKS procedure which involves
replacing the Fisher type PPP between each pair of
countries by the geometric mean of itself squared
and all the corresponding indirect Fisher type PPPs
between the pair obtained using the other
countries as bridges. The resulting EKS PPPs
provide real final expenditures that are not
additive, nor subject to the Gerschenkron effect.
- the PPPs based on products representative in
both countries,
- the PPPs based on products representative in the
first country but not the second, and
- the PPPs based on products representative in the
second country but not the first.
Symmetry is obtained by giving equal weight in
the calculation to the two PPPs that are based on
products representative of only one country.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Within the context of Eurostat-OECD comparisons,
EKS results are considered to be better suited to
comparisons across countries of the price and
volume levels of individual aggregates. EKS results
are the official results of Eurostat-OECD
comparisons.
See also: EKS method
El Niño
Abnormally warm ocean climate conditions, which
in some years affect the Eastern coast of Latin
America (centred on Peru) often around Christmas
time. The anomaly is accompanied by dramatic
changes in species abundance and distribution,
higher local rainfall and flooding, massive deaths of
fish and their predators (including birds). Many
other climatic anomalies around the world (e.g.
draughts, floods, forest fires,) are attributed to
consequences of El Niño.
See also ―Laspeyres type PPP‖ and ―Paasche type
PPP‖ because their formulation depends on
whether they are being used to calculate basic
heading PPPs or to aggregate basic heading PPPs.
Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Source: FAO Glossary
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
Hyperlink: http://www.fao.org/glossary/
Elasticity of demand,
price
The price elasticity in demand is defined as the
percentage change in quantity demanded divided
by the percentage change in price. Since the
demand curve is normally downward sloping, the
price elasticity of demand is usually a negative
number. However, the negative sign is often
omitted.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
See also: EKS-S method, Laspeyres type PPP,
Paasche type PPP
EKS-S method
The Èltetö-Köves-Szulc-Sergeev method is a
variant of the EKS method for calculating PPPs for
basic headings that, under certain circumstances,
is better able to handle the asymmetry in the
number of representative products priced by
countries.
Context: In principle, the price elasticity may vary
from (minus) infinity to zero. The closer to infinity,
the more elastic is demand; and the closer to zero,
the more inelastic is demand. In practice,
elasticities tend to cluster in the range of minus 10
to zero. Minus one is usually taken as a critical cutoff point with lower values (that is less than one)
being inelastic and higher values (that is greater
than one) being elastic. If demand is inelastic a
price increase will increase total revenues while if
demand is elastic, a price increase will decrease
revenues.
Context: With the EKS method, the Fisher type
index is calculated as the geometric mean between
two PPPs:
- the PPPs based on products representative in the
first country; and
238
Demand curves are defined for both the industry
and the firm. At the industry level, the demand
curve is almost always downward sloping.
However, at the firm level the demand curve may
be downward sloping or horizontal. The latter is
the case of the firm in a perfectly competitive
industry whose demand is infinitely elastic. When
the firm‘s demand curve is downward sloping, the
firm has some control over its price.
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
The price elasticity of demand is determined by a
number of factors, including the degree to which
substitute products exist (see cross price elasticity
of demand). When there are few substitutes,
demand tends to be inelastic. Thus, firms have
some power over price. When there are many
substitutes, demand tends to be elastic and firms
have limited control over price.
Context: Alternatively, the Concise Oxford
Dictionary defines electricity as a form of energy
occurring in elementary particles and macroscopic
bodies either statically or dynamically (The Concise
Oxford Dictionary of Current English, Oxford
University Press (1982), Seventh Edition (London).
Electricity - CPC
Electrical energy (Class 1710)
Gross electricity production is measured at the
terminals of all alternator sets in a station; it
therefore includes the energy taken by station
auxiliaries and losses in transformers that are
considered integral parts of the station.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
The difference between gross and net production is
generally calculated as 7 per cent for conventional
thermal stations, 1 per cent for hydro stations, and
6 per cent for nuclear, geothermal and solar
stations. Hydro stations' production includes
production from pumped storage plants (Energy
Statistics of OECD Countries: 1999-2000, 2002
Edition, International Energy Agency, Paris).
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Cross price elasticity of demand
Elasticity of income
after tax
Shows percentage change in after-tax income
following a 1per cent change of income before tax
(defined more precisely as one minus a marginal
tax rate divided by one minus a corresponding
average tax rate).
Source: Central Product Classification (CPC).
Version 1.0. United Nations, New York, 1998,
Series M, No. 77, Ver. 1.0
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
Source: OECD, 2007, Taxing Wages - 2005/2006,
2006 Edition, OECD, Paris
See also: Electricity
Electric locomotive
Locomotive électrique
Locomotive with one or more electric motors,
deriving current primarily from overhead wires or
conductor rails or from accumulators carried on the
locomotive. A locomotive so equipped which has
also an engine (diesel or other) to supply current
to the electric motor when it cannot be obtained
from an overhead wire or from a conductor rail is
classed as an electric locomotive.
Electricity plants
Electricity plants refers to plants which are
designed to produce electricity only. If one or more
units of the plant is a combined heat and power
plant (CHP) unit then the whole plant is designated
as a CHP plant.
Source: Electricity information 2001, International
Energy Agency, Paris – Part II
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Electrified line
Ligne électrifée
Line with one or more electrified running tracks.
Sections of lines adjacent to stations that are
electrified only to permit shunting and not
electrified as far as the next stations are to be
counted as non-electrified lines.
Electric power
Electricité
Energy produced by hydro-electric, geothermal,
nuclear and conventional thermal power stations,
excluding energy produced by pumping stations,
measured by the calorific value of electricity (3.6
TJ/GWh).
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Pumping station is a power station with a
reservoir which is filled by the use of pumps.
Electrified track
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
239
Voie électrifée
Track provided with an overhead trolley wire or
with conductor rail to permit electric traction.
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/editingglo
ssary.pdf
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: EDIFACT, GESMES TS
Electronic commerce
Electronic commerce refers to commercial
transactions occurring over open networks, such as
the Internet. Both business-to-business and
business-to-consumer transactions are included.
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Context: Measuring electronic commerce is difficult
for a number of reasons including defining what
constitutes electronic commerce, the speed of its
growth and evolution and the fact that in many
cases firms conduct both electronic commerce and
traditional commerce simultaneously.
See also: Automated data processing (ADP), Data
processing (DP)
Electronic data
processing (EDP)
Pertains to data processing equipment that is
predominantly electronic, such as an electronic
digital computer.
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Electronic funds
transfer (EFT)
A standard mechanism for electronically
transmitting funds between two parties.
Quantifying the value associated with electronic
commerce activities can be challenging since many
of its key qualities -- convenience, variety and
ease of access to information -- are difficult to
measure. This leads to a situation where it appears
unlikely that official statistical offices will be able to
provide accurate statistics on electronic commerce
and quantitative insight into the nature of this
activity will have to rely on private providers of
data which suffer from a number of shortcomings,
not the least of which is a transparent definition of
what is meant by electronic commerce.
Source: BIS Business papers, November 2001,
Glossary, J. Hawkins
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/bispap07l.pdf
Electronic funds
transfer at the point
of sale (EFTPOS)
See Point of sale
See also: Point of sale
Source: Measuring Electronic Commerce, OECD,
1997
Electronic mail
A means for an originator of information to
distribute information to an unlimited number of
recipients via a value added network service which
mimics the functions of the paper postal services.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/32/52/2094340.pdf
Source: Memory of the World: Safeguarding the
Documentary Heritage - A guide to Standards,
Recommended Practices and Reference Literature
Related to the Preservation of Documents of All
Kinds, International Advisory Committee for the
UNESCO Memory of the World Programme SubCommittee on Technology for the General
Information Programme and UNISIST United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization - Part 9 - Glossary
Electronic data
interchange (EDI)
Electronic exchange of data usually in forms that
are compatible so that software or a combination
of individuals and software can put it in a
compatible form at the receiving end if necessary.
Context: EDI offers businesses the opportunity to
retrieve information electronically from their
internal systems and to forward that information to
trade partners/suppliers/customers/government
through a communications network. An example
might be pulling data of one type of data base
management system into a sequential format and
then transferring the data to a second location
where the data are stored in a format different
from the originating data base management
system.
Hyperlink:
http://www.unesco.org/webworld/mdm/administ/
en/guide/guide011.htm
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Glossary of Terms on
Statistical Data Editing", Conference of European
Statisticians Methodological material, Geneva,
2000
Electronic money
Electronic money (e-money) is an electronic store
of monetary value on a technical device that may
be widely used for making payments to
undertakings other than the issuer without
necessarily involving bank accounts in the
transaction, but acting as a prepaid bearer
instrument.
Hyperlink:
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
240
2000, Glossary
See also: Internet transaction
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf)
Elementary aggregate
The lowest level of aggregation for which value
data are available and used in the calculation of
the producer price index (PPI). Elementary
aggregates consist of relatively homogeneous sets
of goods or services. Their values are used as
weights when averaging the elementary price
indices associated with them to obtain indices for
higher-level aggregates. They may also serve as
strata from which the products selected for pricing
are sampled.
See also: Multi-purpose prepaid card
Electronic purse
See Multi-purpose prepaid card
See also: Multi-purpose prepaid card
Electronic
questionnaire
An electronic questionnaire contains questions are
in a software system that can be answered by an
individual. Examples might be a software system
that is on a laptop computer where respondents
can answer questions directly into the laptop
(possibly without knowledge on the part of
interviewers of the details of the answers) or
through queries on an Internet page.
Context: The smallest aggregate for which
expenditure data are available and used for CPI
purposes. The values of the elementary aggregates
are used to weight the price indices for elementary
aggregates to obtain higher-level indices. The
range of goods and services covered by an
elementary aggregate should be relatively narrow,
and may be further narrowed by confining the
goods and services to those sold in particular types
of outlet or in particular locations. Elementary
aggregates also serve as strata for the sampling of
prices.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Electronic software
distribution
agreement
Used by the owner of a software product to
authorise a distributor to provide software on line.
Distributors must ensure that the end-user accepts
the terms of the agreement before downloading
the software. Distributors should also maintain the
software on a secure server and must comply with
exports laws and restrictions where applicable.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Elementary price
index
Specifically, an elementary price index is a price
index for an elementary aggregate. As such, it is
calculated from individual price observations
without using weights. More generally, the term
can be used to describe any price index that is
calculated without weights.
Source: Measuring Electronic Commerce, OECD
Working Party on the Information Economy, 1998,
Software Publishers Association (SPA), (1996),
page 29 - A typology of Internet and e-commerce
agreements. Adapted from The SPA Guide to
Contracts and the Legal Protection of Software,
September, Washington D.C.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/32/52/2094340.pdf
Context: Three examples of elementary index
number formulae are the Carli, the Dutot and the
Jevons.
Electronic transaction
An electronic transaction is the sale or purchase of
goods or services, whether between businesses,
households, individuals, governments, and other
public or private organisations, conducted over
computer-mediated networks. The goods and
services are ordered over those networks, but the
payment and the ultimate delivery of the good or
service may be conducted on or off-line
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: OECD Expert Group on Defining and
Measuring E-commerce, April 2000
Elementary unit
Unité élémentaire
One of the individuals which, in the aggregate,
compose a population: the smallest unit yielding
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
241
information which, by suitable aggregation, leads
to the population under investigation.
ecosystems
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Cases occur where the term may be ambiguous;
e.g. if an age distribution is to estimated from a
sample of households then the person is the
elementary unit; but if, at the same time, the size
of household is to be estimated, the household is
elementary unit.
Emission factor
Coefficient d‟émission
The emission factor is the ratio between the
amount of pollution generated and the amount of a
given raw material processed. The term may also
refer to the ratio between the emissions generated
and the outputs of production processes
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Eligible debt
In the context of the Paris Club, debt that can be
rescheduled—namely, debt that is contracted
before the cutoff date, with maturities of one year
or longer.
Emission inventory
Inventaire des
émissions
An emission inventory is a listing, by source, of the
amounts of pollutants actually or potentially
discharged. Such an inventory is used to establish
and put forth emission standards
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Emission standard
Norme d‟émission
An emission standard is the maximum amount of
polluting discharge legally allowed from a single
source, mobile or stationary
email
See Electronic mail
See also: Electronic mail
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
EMAS
See Eco-management and auditing scheme
See also: Eco-management and auditing scheme
(EMAS)
Emissions accounts
Hybrid flow accounts limited to the description of
the uses of fossil fuels and corresponding air
emissions.
Embodied technical
change
See Technical change, embodied
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 4.39
See also: Technical change, embodied
EMI
IME
See European Monetary Institute (EMI)
See also: European Monetary Institute (EMI)
Emission
Emission
Emission is the discharge of pollutants into the
atmosphere from stationary sources such as
smokestacks, other vents, surface areas of
commercial or industrial facilities and mobile
sources, for example, motor vehicles, locomotives
and aircraft
Emissions permits
The right to generate in the course of production
activity a certain amount of specific emissions, for
example greenhouse gases. Emissions permits are
a form of intangible non-produced assets.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 6.53
Emission damage
Dommages dus aux
émissions
Emission damage refers to the effects of (air)
pollution on buildings, monuments, organisms and
242
Employees Ŕ ILO
Employees are all those workers who hold the type
of job defined as paid employment jobs.
Employees with stable contracts are those
employees who have had, and continue to have,
an explicit (written or oral) or implicit contract of
employment, or a succession of such contracts,
with the same employer on a continuous basis.
e-money
See Electronic money
See also: Electronic money
Employed persons
The employed comprise all persons above a
specified age who during a specified brief period,
either one week or one day, were in the following
categories:
On a continuous basis implies a period of
employment which is longer than a specified
minimum determined according to national
circumstances. Regular employees are those
employees with stable contracts for whom the
employing organisation is responsible for payment
of taxes and social security contributions and/or
where the contractual relationship is subject to
national labour legislation.
(a) paid employment:
- at work: persons who during the reference period
performed some work for a wage or salary, in cash
or in kind;
- with a job but not at work: persons who, having
already worked in their present job, were
temporarily not at work during the reference
period and had a formal attachment to their job.
This formal attachment should be determined in
the light of national circumstances, according to
one or more of the following criteria: the continued
receipt of wage or salary; an assurance of return
to work following the end of the contingency, or an
agreement as to the date of return; the elapsed
duration of absence from the job which, wherever
relevant, may be that duration for which workers
can receive compensation benefits without
obligations to accept other jobs;
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning International Classification
of Status in Employment Adopted by the 15th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians,
January 1993, para. 8
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
See also: Employees – ESA, Employees – SNA,
Employees (establishment surveys)
Employees Ŕ SNA
Personne occupée SCN
An employee is a person who enters an
agreement, which may be formal or informal, with
an enterprise to work for the enterprise in return
for remuneration in cash or in kind
(b) self-employment
- at work; persons who during the reference period
performed some work for profit or family gain, in
cash or in kind;
- with an enterprise but not at work: persons with
an enterprise, which may be a business enterprise,
a farm or a service undertaking, who were
temporarily not at work during the reference
period for any specific reason.
Source: SNA 7.23
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
For operational purposes the notion of ―some
work‖ may be interpreted as work for at least one
hour
See also: Employees – ESA, Employees – ILO,
Employees (establishment surveys)
Employees
(establishment
surveys)
Employees in establishment surveys include all
persons who work in or for the establishment and
receive pay, in cash or in kind, as a rule at regular
intervals. Persons include all persons in the
establishment as defined for employment
(establishment surveys) other than working
proprietors and unpaid workers
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning Economically Active
Population, Employment, Unemployment and
Underemployment Adopted by the 13th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians,
October 1982, para. 9
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Source: International Recommendations for
Industrial Statistics, United Nations, New York,
1983, Statistical Papers, Series M, No. 48, Rev. 1,
para. 98
Employees Ŕ ESA
Employees consist of the group of households for
which the income accruing from compensation of
employees is the largest source of income for the
household as a whole
See also: Employees – ESA, Employees – ILO,
Employees – SNA
Employees‟
compensation
See Compensation of employees - SNA
Source: ESA [2.80]
See also: Employees – ILO, Employees – SNA,
Employees (establishment surveys)
See also: Compensation of employees – SNA
243
Employers‘ actual social contributions are the
amounts payable by employers for the benefit of
their employees to social security funds, insurance
enterprises, autonomous pension funds or other
institutional units responsible for the
administration and management of social
insurance schemes
Employees‟ social
Cotisations sociales à
contributions
la charge des salariés
Employees‘ social contributions are the amounts
payable by employees to social security funds and
private funded social insurance schemes
Source: SNA 8.69
Source: SNA 7.44 [8.67]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Employer‟s pension
Plans de retraite
plan
d'employeur
See Occupational pension plan. Identical term,
"Company pension plans"
Employers‟ imputed
Cotisations sociales
social contributions Ŕ imputées à la charge
ESA
des employeurs Ŕ SEC
Employers‘ imputed social contributions represent
the counterpart to unfunded social benefits (less
eventual employees‘ social contributions) paid
directly by employers to their employees or former
employees and other eligible persons without
involving an insurance enterprise or autonomous
pension fund, and without creating a special fund
or segregated reserve for the purpose
See also: Occupational pension plan
Employers Ŕ ESA
Employeurs Ŕ SEC
Employers (including own-account workers) consist
of the group of households for which the (mixed)
incomes accruing to the owners of household
unincorporated enterprises from their activity as
producers of market goods and services with or
without paid employees are the largest source of
income for the household as a whole, even if it
does not always account for more than a half of
total household income
Source: ESA [4.10 - 11]
See also: Employers‘ imputed social contributions
– SNA
Employers‟ imputed
Cotisations sociales
social contributions Ŕ imputées à la charge
SNA
des employeurs Ŕ SCN
Employers‘ imputed social contributions are equal
in value to the amount of social contributions that
would be needed to secure the de facto
entitlements to the social benefits they
accumulate; they arise only in cases where social
benefits are provided by employers directly to their
employees, former employees or dependants out
of their own resources without involving an
insurance enterprise or autonomous pension fund,
and without creating a special fund or segregated
reserve for the purpose
Source: ESA [2.79]
See also: Employers – ILO, Employers - SNA
Employers Ŕ ILO
Employeurs Ŕ BIT
Employers are those workers who, working on
their own account or with one or a few partners,
hold the type of job defined as a self-employed
job, and in this capacity, on a continuous basis
(including the reference period) have engaged one
or more persons to work for them in their business
as employees
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning International Classification
of Status in Employment Adopted by the 15th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians,
January 1993, para. 9
Source: SNA 7.45
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
See also: Employers‘ imputed social contributions
– ESA
See also: Employers – ESA, Employers - SNA,
Owner-managers
Employers‟ social
contributions
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Cotisations sociales à
la charge des
employeurs
Employers‘ social contributions are payments
(either actual or imputed) by employers which are
intended to secure for their employees the
entitlement to social benefits should certain events
occur, or certain circumstances exist, that may
adversely affect their employees‘ income or
welfare - sickness, accidents, redundancy,
retirement, etc
See also: Employers – ESA, Employers – ILO
Source: SNA 7.43
Employers‟ actual
social contributions
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Employers - SNA
Employeurs Ŕ SCN
Employers are self-employed persons with paid
employees
Source: SNA 7.25
Cotisations sociales
effectives à la charge
des employeurs
244
See also: Employment – ILO, Employment
(establishment surveys)
Employment Ŕ
Emploi Ŕ Eurostat
Eurostat
Employment is one of the main variable groups
covered by structural business statistics. The two
main measures used are:
Employment Ŕ ILO
Emploi Ŕ BIT
Persons in employment comprise all persons above
a specified age who during a specified brief period,
either one week or one day, were in the following
categories:
— the number of persons employed and
— the number of employees.
- paid employment;
- self employment.
More complex measures are sometimes produced
by measuring the number of hours worked or by
conversion into full-time equivalent units. In
addition some particular categories of employment
are measured, such as part-time employment,
female employment, self-employment,
apprentices, homeworkers and unpaid employment
(unpaid family workers and working proprietors).
Context: Persons who during a specified brief
period such as one week or one day, (a) performed
some work for wage or salary in cash or in kind,
(b) had a formal attachment to their job but were
temporarily not at work during the reference
period, (c) performed some work for profit or
family gain in cash or in kind, (d) were with an
enterprise such as a business, farm or service but
who were temporarily not at work during the
reference period for any specific reason. (Current
International Recommendations on Labour
Statistics, 1988 Edition, ILO, Geneva, page 47)
Context: The Community Labour Force Survey
defines employment (in accordance with the
International Labour Office) as follows:
Persons in employment are those, aged 15 years
and over and living in private households, who
during the reference week did any work for pay or
profit for at least one hour, or were not working
but had jobs from which they were temporarily
absent. Family workers are also included
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning Economically Active
Population, Employment, Unemployment and
Underemployment Adopted by the 13th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians,
October 1982, para. 9
The European System of Accounts (ESA) defines
employment as covering both employees and selfemployed persons, who are engaged in some
productive activity that falls within the production
boundary of the system.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
1. Employees:
Employees are defined as all persons who, by
agreement, work for another resident institutional
unit and receive a remuneration. An employeremployee relationship exists when there is an
agreement, which may be formal or informal,
between an enterprise and a person, normally
entered into voluntarily by both parties, whereby
the person works for the enterprise in return for
remuneration in cash or in kind.
Note: Employees corresponds to the International
Labour Office definition of ‗paid employment‘.
See also: Employment – Eurostat, Employment
(establishment surveys)
Employment
(establishment
surveys)
Employment in establishment surveys is the total
number of persons who work in or for the
establishment including working proprietors, active
business partners and unpaid family workers, as
well as persons working outside the establishment
when paid by and under the control of the
establishment, for example, sales representatives,
outside service engineers and repair and
maintenance personnel.
2. Self-employed persons:
Self-employed persons are defined as persons who
are the sole owners, or joint owners, of the
unincorporated enterprises in which they work,
excluding those unincorporated enterprises that
are classified as quasi-corporations. Self-employed
persons are classified here if they are not also in a
paid employment which constitutes their principal
activity: in that latter case they are classified
under employees. Self-employed persons also
include the following categories: unpaid family
workers, outworkers and workers engaged in
production undertaken entirely for their own final
consumption or own capital formation, either
individually or collectively.
The enumeration may refer to a specified day, pay
period or calendar week in the inquiry period
Context: Also included are salaried managers and
salaried directors of incorporated enterprises. The
total should include part-time workers and
seasonal workers on the payroll, persons on shortterm leave (sick leave, maternity leave, annual
leave or vacation) and on strike, but not persons
on indefinite leave, military leave or pension.
Excluded are directors of incorporated enterprises
and members of shareholders committees who are
paid solely for their attendance at meetings, labour
made available to the establishment by other units
and charged for, such as contract workers paid
through contractors, persons carrying out repair
and maintenance work in the establishment on
Source: The European Union Labour Force Survey,
Methods and Definitions, Eurostat, 1996, ESA
11.11-11.16 and Eurostat
245
behalf of other units and all homeworkers.
(inclusive of working proprietors, partners working
regularly in the enterprise and unpaid family
workers), as well as persons working outside the
enterprise but who belong to it and are directly
paid by it.
Source: International Recommendations for
Industrial Statistics, United Nations, New York,
1983, Statistical Papers, Series M, No. 48, Rev. 1,
paras. 92-94
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: Employment – Eurostat, Employment –
ILO
Employment (in
inland waterways
transport enterprise)
Average number of persons working during the
given period in an inland waterways transport
(IWT) enterprise (inclusive of working owners,
partners working regularly in the enterprise and
unpaid family workers), as well as persons working
outside the enterprise but who belong to it and are
directly paid by it.
Employment (in sea
transport enterprises)
Number of persons employed at 31 December in a
sea transport enterprise (inclusive of working
persons employed outside the enterprise but who
belong to it and are directly paid by it).
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Employment
protection
Employment protection refers both to regulations
concerning hiring (e.g. rules favouring
disadvantaged groups, conditions for using
temporary or fixed-term contracts, training
requirements) and firing (e.g. redundancy
procedures, mandated prenotification periods and
severance payments, special requirements for
collective dismissals and short-time work
schemes).
Employment (in oil
pipeline enterprises)
Average number of persons working during the
given period in an oil pipeline transport enterprise
and persons working outside the enterprise but
who belong to it and are directly paid by it.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Various institutional arrangements can
provide employment protection: the private
market, labour legislation, collective bargaining
arrangements and not the least, court
interpretations of legislative and contractual
provisions. Some forms of de facto regulations are
likely to be adopted even in the absence of
legislation, simply because both workers and firms
derive advantages from long-term employment
relations.
Employment (in
Emploi (transports
railway enterprises)
ferroviaires)
Average number of persons working during the
given period in a railway enterprise, as well as
persons working outside the enterprise but who
belong to it and are directly paid by it.
Context: Statistics should include the staff
employed for performing all principal and ancillary
activities of the enterprise (railway operation,
renewal, new construction, road and shipping
services, electricity generation, hotels and
restaurants etc.).
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, June 1999,
Chapter 2, Employment Protection and Labour
Market Performances, page 51
See also: Employment protection legislation (EPL)
Employment
protection legislation
(EPL)
The OECD uses the term Employment protection
legislation (EPL) in the context of employment
protection legislation generally. It refers to all
types of employment protection measures,
whether grounded primarily in legislation, court
rulings, collectively bargained conditions of
employment or customary practice.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Employment (in road
transport enterprises)
Average number of persons working during the
given period in a road transport enterprise
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, June 1999,
Chapter 2, Employment Protection and Labour
246
Market Performances, page 50
corresponds directly to societal standards for
education and work eligibility. However, in some
economies, particularly developing ones, it is often
appropriate to include younger workers because
―working age‖ can, and often does, begin earlier.
Some economies in these circumstances will use a
lower official bound and include younger workers in
their measurements. Similarly, some economies
have a limit for eligibility at the upper ages, such
as 65 or 70 years and over, although this
requirement is imposed rather infrequently.
See also: Employment protection
Employment rate,
Eurostat
Employment rate represent persons in employment
as a percentage of the population of working age
(15- 64 years)
Source: The European Union Labour Force Survey,
Methods and Definitions, 1998 edition, Eurostat,
p.13
Apart from issues concerning age, the population
base for employment ratios can vary across
economies. In most cases, the civilian noninstitutional population of working age is used,
excluding members of the armed forces – either
the total or those stationed within the borders –
and individuals residing in mental, penal or other
types of institutions. Many economies, however,
include the armed forces in the population bases of
their employment ratios even when they do not
include them in the employment figures, which are
most often likely to be ―civilian‖ measures.
Employment related
income
Employment related income includes all the
payments, in cash, in kind or in services, which are
received, over a given reference period, by
individuals for themselves or in respect of their
family members, by virtue of their involvement in
current or former paid employment jobs.
Context: The concept of ―employment-related
income‖ is much broader in scope than earnings.
In addition to the components of earnings derived
from paid-jobs, the Resolution adopted by the 16th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians
defines employment-related income as including
the wage components cited above.
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, pages 49 and 53
Employment, health
and social work
Employment in health and social work includes the
number of full-time equivalent persons employed
in ISIC Rev. 3 Division 85, Health and Social Work.
This includes:
Employment-related income also specifically
includes income for self-employment jobs. The
concept excludes income unrelated to current or
former employment, such as property income,
income attributed to private insurance policy
holders, and social benefits received without
regard to the employment status. The definition
applies equally to person currently in paid
employment, retirees, and the unemployed.
851 - Human health activities
852 - Veterinary activities
853 - Social work activities
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Source: 16th International Conference of Labour
Statisticians, Resolution concerning the
measurement of employment-related income,
October 1998, para. 5
See also: ISIC
Employment, health,
total
Total health employment refers to the number of
full-time equivalent persons employed (including
self-employed) in health services, including
'contracted out' staff and excluding pharmaceutical
and medical equipment manufacturing employees.
See also: Earnings (wages and salaries) – ILO
Employment to
population ratio
The employment-to-population ratio is defined as
the proportion of an economy‘s working-age
population that is employed.
Context: As an indicator, the employment-topopulation ratio provides information on the ability
of an economy to create jobs; for many countries
it ranks in importance with the unemployment
rate. Although a high overall ratio is typically
considered ―good‖, the indicator alone does not
provide information on labour market problems
such as low earnings, underemployment, poor
working conditions, or the existence of a large
informal sector.
Administrative staff, private for-profit and nonprofit medical benefit insurers are included.
For most economies, the working-age population is
defined as persons aged 15 years and older,
although this varies slightly from economy to
economy. The ILO standard for the lower age limit
is, in fact, 15 years. For many economies, this
Context: The following classes of the International
Standard Industrial Classification (ISIC) Rev. 3 are
involved.
Health professionals working outside health
services are excluded (e.g. physicians employed in
industry).
Full-time equivalent conversions vary across
countries but are taken, unless otherwise noted, to
be 35 hours or more per week.
8511 - Hospital activities
247
Methods
8512 - Medical and dental practice activities
8519 - Other human health activities
5231 - Retail sale of pharmaceutical and medical
goods, cosmetic and toilet articles
5239 - Other retail sales not elsewhere classified
7512 - Regulation of the activities of agencies that
provide health care education, cultural services
and other social services excluding social security
7530 - Compulsory social security activities
6603 - Non-life insurance
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Employment-based
Etrangers engagés
settlers
pour un emploi
Employment-based settlers are foreigners selected
for long-term settlement because of their
qualifications and prospects in the receiving
country‘s labour market. However, they are not
admitted expressly to exercise a particular
economic activity
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Employment, status in Situation dans
l'emploi
Status in employment refers to the status of an
economically active person with respect to his or
her employment, that is to say, the type of explicit
or implicit contract of employment with other
persons or organizations that the person has in
his/her job.
Empty road traffic
Circulation routière à
vide
Any movement of a road vehicle for which the
gross-gross weight of goods carried including that
of equipment such as containers, swap bodies and
pallets is nil; as well as any movement of motorcoaches, buses, trolleybuses and trams without
any passenger.
Context: The basic criteria used to define the
groups of the classification are the economic risk,
an element of which is the strength of the
attachment between the person and the job, and
the type of authority over establishments and
other workers that the person has or will have in
the job. Care should be taken to ensure that an
economically active person is classified by status in
employment on the basis of the same job(s) as
used for classifying the person by ―occupation‖,
―industry‖ and ―sector‖.
Context: The movement of a road vehicle carrying
empty equipment such as containers, swap bodies
and pallets is not considered as empty journey.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
It is recommended that the economically active
population should be classified by status in
employment as follows:
- employees, among whom it may be possible to
distinguish between employees with stable
contracts (including regular employees) and other
employees;
- employers;
- own-account workers;
- contributing family workers;
- members of producers' co-operatives;
- persons not classifiable by status.
EMU
UEM
European Economic and Monetary Union
See also: European Economic and Monetary Union
Encryption
The use of cryptographic algorithms to encode
clear text data (plaintext) into ciphertext to
prevent unauthorised observation.
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1.
United Nations, New York, 1998, Series M, No. 67,
Rev. 1, paras. 2.226-2.227
Source: A glossary of terms used in payments and
settlement systems, July 2001, Committee on
Payment and Settlement Systems, Bank for
International Settlements
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/cpss00b.pdf
Employment,
temporary
Temporary employment comprises work under a
fixed- term contract, in contrast to permanent
work where there is no end-date. Employment
under temporary contracts often entails a different
set of legal obligations on behalf of employers; in
particular, certain aspects of employment
protection legislation do not apply to temporary
contracts
End of pipe
technologies
expenditure
Expenditure on ―end-of-pipe‖ technologies used to
treat, handle or dispose of emissions and wastes
from production. This type of spending is normally
easily identified even within the context of ancillary
activity because it is usually directed toward an
―add on‖ facility which removes, transforms or
reduces emissions and discharges at the end of the
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
248
production process.
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.98
See also: Period-average exchange rate
End-of-pipe protection Protection au point de
rejet
End-of—pipe protection refers to added technical
installations for environmental control of
emissions. They operate independently from the
production process or are an identifiable part
added on to production facilities
End stage renal failure
patients
End stage renal failure patients (ESRF) refers to
the total number of patients alive on December
31st of each year who are receiving different forms
of renal replacement therapy:
haemodialysis/haemoinfiltration, intermittent
peritoneal dialysis, continuous ambulatory
peritoneal dialysis (CAPD), continuous cyclical
peritoneal dialysis (CCPD), or with a functioning
transplant
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Clean technology
Endogenous variables
Endogenous variables designates variables in an
economic/econometric model that are explained,
or predicted, by that model
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Context: The statistical representation and analysis
of multivariate systems generally involves a
primary division of variates into those which are
endogenous and those which are exogenous.
Endogenous variates are those which form an
inherent part of the system, as for instance price
and demand in an economic system.
Endangered species
Espèce en péril
Endangered species are taxa in danger of
extinction and whose survival is unlikely if causal
factors continue operating.
Included are taxa whose numbers have been
drastically reduced to a critical level or whose
habitats have been so drastically impaired that
they are deemed to be in immediate danger of
extinction. Also included are those that possibly
are already extinct, in so far as they definitely
have not been seen in the wild in the past 50 years
Exogenous variates are those which impinge on
the system from the outside, e.g. rainfall or
epidemics of disease. It is possible for a variate to
be endogenous in one model and exogenous in
another, for example, rainfall might be regarded as
exogenous to an economic model of the
automobile industry but endogenous to a
meteorological model describing climatic states. (A
Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th edition,
prepared for the International Statistical Institute
by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the International
Statistical Institute by Longman Scientific and
Technical)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Endangered Species
Act (ESA)
The Endangered Species Act (ESA) is a statute
enacted in the United States in 1973 to conserve
species and ecosystems.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Under its auspices, species facing possible
extinction are listed as ―threatened‖ or
―endangered,‖ or as ―candidate‖ species for such
listings. When such a listing is made, recovery and
conservation plans are drawn up to ensure the
protection of the species and its habitat
See also: Exogenous variables
Energy accounts
Hybrid accounts that show the supply and use of
energy, by type of energy, and categories of
supply and use.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 4.62
End-of-period
exchange rate
An end-of-period exchange rate is the exchange
rate ruling on the final working day of a given
period
249
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Energy balances
Bilans énergétiques
See Materials and energy balances
See also: Materials and energy balances
Energy consumption
by road transport
Consommation
d'énergie par le
transport routier
Final energy consumed by road motor vehicles.
Energy budget
Budget énergétique
An energy budget is a record of the flow of energy
through a system
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Energy comparison
labels
Energy comparison labels indicate the energy
efficiency of a particular model relative to similar
models on the market, and are usually, though not
always, mandatory.
Energy consumption
Consommation
by ships
d'énergie des navires
Final energy consumption by ships.
Context: This includes final energy consumption by
unladen ships.
Source: Energy Labels and Standards, Energy
Efficiency Policy Profiles, International Energy
Agency, 2001
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Energy consumed for
transport by oil
pipeline
Consommation
d'energie pour le
transport par
oléoducs
Final energy consumed for movement of products
by oil pipeline.
Energy conversion
Taux de conversion de
factors
l‟énergie
Energy conversion factors are specific coefficients
used to determine equivalence between units of
mass and volume, energy and work and power;
conversion factors are also used to convert
quantities of energy production and consumption
from their original physical units into a common
unit of measurement
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Energy consumption
by inland waterways
transport (IWT)
Final energy consumption by inland waterways
transport (IWT) vessels.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Equivalent factors
Context: This includes final energy consumption by
unladen IWT vessels.
Energy endorsement
labels
Energy endorsement labels affixed only to models
meeting or exceeding a certain efficiency level,
indicate by their presence models of superior
energy efficiency. They are by definition,
voluntary.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Also known as Energy quality marks
Energy consumption
by rail transport
Source: Energy Labels and Standards, Energy
Efficiency Policy Profiles, International Energy
Agency, 2001
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
Energy labels
Energy labels are markings, with supporting
promotion and directories, which show products‘
energy use or efficiency according to a common
measure.
Consommation
d'energie par le
transport ferroviaire
Final energy consumed by tractive vehicles for
both traction and heating.
250
averages or product category averages.
Source: Energy Labels and Standards, Energy
Efficiency Policy Profiles, International Energy
Agency, 2001
Source: Energy Labels and Standards, Energy
Efficiency Policy Profiles, International Energy
Agency, 2001
Energy quality marks
See Energy endorsement labels
Energy valuation
Evaluation
énergétique
The energy theory of valuation attempts to replace
monetary valuation, for example, in accounting or
project costing by energy values. The underlying
theory is based on the view that, in the final
analysis, all goods are generated by solar energy
See also: Energy endorsement labels
Energy sources
Sources d‟énergie
Energy sources are all solid, liquid and gaseous
fuels; electricity; uranium; steam and hot water;
and the traditional fuels such as fuelwood,
charcoal, vegetal and animal wastes
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Enhanced concessions
See Concessional restructuring
See also: New and renewable energy sources
Energy standards
Energy standards are mandatory programmes
(regulations) stipulating the minimum efficiency
levels or maximum energy-use levels acceptable
for products sold in a particular country of region.
See also: Concessional restructuring
Enhanced structural
adjustment facility
(ESAF)
Renamed the Poverty Reduction and Growth
Facility (PRGF) in November 1999.
Context: They are often called minimum efficiency
standards or minimum energy performance
standards (MEPS)
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: Energy Labels and Standards, Energy
Efficiency Policy Profiles, International Energy
Agency, 2001
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Energy supply
(apparent
consumption)
Total primary energy domestic supply (sometimes
referred to as energy use) is calculated by the
International Energy Agency as production of fuels
+ inputs from other sources + imports - exports international marine bunkers + stock changes.
See also: Structural adjustment facility (SAF)
Enhanced structural
adjustment facility
(ESAF) Ŕ Heavily
indebted poor country
(HICP) trust
A trust established by the IMF in February 1997 to
provide assistance to the countries deemed eligible
for assistance under the HIPC Initiative by the
Boards of the IMF and the World Bank. Through
this trust, the IMF will provide grants (or, in
exceptional circumstances, highly concessional
loans) that will be used to retire a country‘s
obligations falling due to the IMF after the
completion point.
It includes coal, crude oil, natural gas liquids,
refinery feedstocks, additives, petroleum products,
gases, combustible renewables and waste,
electricity and heat. Domestic supply differs from
final consumption in that it does not take account
of distribution losses. The supply and use of energy
commodities are converted to Kg. oil equivalent
using standard coefficients for each energy source.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: United Nations. Energy Statistics -Definitions, Units of Measure and Conversion
Factors. Series F, No. 44 (United Nations
publication, Sales No. E.86.XVII.21)
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Energy targets
Energy targets are voluntary programmes in which
governments or utilities persuade, but do not
require, manufacturers to lower the energy use or
raise the energy efficiency of their products. The
product coverage can vary from all products on the
market, to a given percentage of the products on
the market, to a market-wide average. They can
also be applied to manufacturer-based fleet
Enhanced Toronto
terms
See Concessional restructuring
See also: Concessional restructuring
251
ENI
See Environmentally adjusted national income
An enterprise is an institutional unit in its capacity
as a producer of goods and services; an enterprise
may be a corporation, a quasi- corporation, a nonprofit institution, or an unincorporated enterprise
Enrichment
Enrichissement
Enrichment is the addition of nitrogen,
phosphorous and carbon compounds or other
nutrients into a water body, thereby increasing the
potential for growth of algae and other aquatic
plants. Most frequently, enrichment results from
the inflow of sewage effluents or from agricultural
run—off
Source: SNA 5.17 [5.1]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Enterprise – Eurostat, Enterprise – ISIC
Rev. 3
Entertainment,
Œuvres récréatives,
literary or artistic
littéraires ou
originals
artistiques originales
Entertainment, literary or artistic originals are the
original films, sound recordings, manuscripts,
tapes, models, etc, on which drama performances,
radio and television programming, musical
performances, sporting events, literary and artistic
output, etc, are recorded or embodied
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Enrolment rate
Enrolment rates are expressed as net enrolment
rates, which are calculated by dividing the number
of students of a particular age group enrolled in all
levels of education by the number of people in the
population in that age group.
Source: AN.1123 – Annex to chapter XIII
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Entitlement
In institutional economics, a relationship, such as
ownership or leasehold, to an asset or a stream of
income, as distinct from the income or asset itself.
In a private ownership market economy,
entitlements may be based on inheritance or
transfer, or on acquisition of commodities through
trade, entrepreneurship, or own labour. The
concept of entitlements comes from law, and is
useful to underscore institutional structure whether of property ownership or a job contract. It
links economic outcomes to social elements, the
law and practice.
Enterprise Ŕ Eurostat Enterprise Ŕ Eurostat
An enterprise is defined as the smallest
combination of legal units that is an organisational
unit producing goods or services, which benefits
from a certain degree of autonomy in decisionmaking, especially for the allocation of its current
resources. An enterprise carries out one or more
activities at one or more locations
Source: Council Regulation (EEC) No 696/93 of 15
March 1993 on the statistical units for the
observation and analysis of the production system
in the Community, OJ No L 76, p.1, section III/A of
the annex
Source: Alexander, P., Baden, S., 2000, Glossary
on macroeconomics from a gender perspective,
Institute of Development Studies, University of
Sussex
See also: Enterprise – ISIC Rev. 3, Enterprise –
SNA
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/52/56/31594934.p
df
Enterprise Ŕ ISIC Rev. Enterprise Ŕ CITI Rév.
3
3
An enterprise is an institutional unit or the smallest
combination of institutional units that encloses and
directly or indirectly controls all necessary
functions to carry out its production activities.
Entity
A concrete or abstract thing including associations
among these things e.g. a person, object, event,
idea, process, etc.
An enterprise may be a corporation, a quasicorporation, a non-profit institution, or an
unincorporated enterprise
Context: An entity exists whether data about it are
available or not. [ISO/IEC 2382-17:1999,
17.02.05]
A real world phenomenon of a given type. In
database management systems, the collection of
objects (e.g. persons or places) that share the
same attributes. Entities are defined during
conceptual database design (Handbook on
Geographic Information Systems and Digital
Mapping, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 79,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Affairs, Statistics Division, New York, 2000, Annex
VI - Glossary).
Source: ISIC Rev. 3, para. 79
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
See also: Enterprise – Eurostat, Enterprise – SNA
Enterprise Ŕ SNA
Entreprise Ŕ SCN
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
252
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: Attribute, ISO / IEC 11179, Ontology
Entrepreneurial
Revenu d'entreprise
income
The entrepreneurial income for a corporation,
quasi-corporation, or institutional unit owning an
unincorporated enterprise engaged in market
production is its operating surplus or mixed income
plus property income receivable on the financial or
other assets owned by the enterprise, minus
interest payable on the liabilities of the enterprise
and rents payable on land or other tangible nonproduced assets rented by the enterprise
Entry rates
Entry rates are expressed as net entry rates, which
represent the proportion of people of a synthetic
age-cohort who enter the tertiary level of
education, irrespective of changes in the
population sizes and of differences between OECD
countries in the typical entry age.
The net entry rate of a specific age is obtained by
dividing the number of first-time entrants to each
type of tertiary education of that age by the total
population in the corresponding age group
(multiplied by 100).
Source: SNA 7.18
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
The sum of net entry rates is calculated by adding
the net entry rates for each single year of age.
Entrepreneurs and
Entrepreneurs et
investors (as settlers) investisseurs (qui
s'installent)
Entrepreneurs and investors (as settlers) are
foreigners granted the right to long-term
settlement in a country on condition that they
invest a minimum sum of money or create new
productive activities in the receiving country
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Enumerated domain
A enumerated domain is a value domain that is
specified by a list of all permissible values
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Enumerator
An enumerator refers to survey personnel charged
with carrying out that part of an enumeration
consisting of the counting and listing of people or
assisting respondents in answering the questions
and in completing the questionnaire
Entropy
See Concentration indexes
Entry of a road vehicle Véhicule routier entré
Any loaded or empty road motor vehicle which
entered the country by road.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Context: If a road motor vehicle is entering the
country by another mode of transport, only the
active mode is considered to have entered that
country.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Environment
Environnement
The environment is the totality of all the external
conditions affecting the life, development and
survival of an organism
Context: The naturally produced physical
surroundings on which humanity is entirely
dependent in all its activities. The various uses to
which these surroundings are put for economic
ends are called environmental functions.
Entry of an inland
Bateau de navigation
waterways transport
intérieure entré
(IWT) vessel
Any laden or unladen inland waterways transport
(IWT) vessel which entered the country by inland
waterway.
United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.31
Context: If an IWT vessel is entering the country
by another mode of transport, only the active
mode is considered to have entered that country.
253
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Natural resource accounting, Physical
accounting, System of integrated environmental
and economic accounting (SEEA)
Environment impact
Notice dímpact sur
statement
l‟environnement
An environmental impact statement is a document
prepared by an agency on the environmental
impacts of its project/programme proposals
Environmental
activities
Activities which reduce or eliminate pressures on
the environment and which aim at making more
efficient use of natural resources.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: Examples are investing in technologies
designed to prevent or reduce pollution, restoring
the environment after it has been polluted,
protecting the economy from a deteriorated
environment, recycling, conservation and resource
management and the production of environmental
goods and services.
See also: Environmental impact assessment (EIA)
Environment industry
The grouping of all producers of environmental
products ; these consist of cleaner technologies
and products, pollution management services and
resource management.
In addition, there are some activities which,
though not primarily aimed at protecting the
environment, may have environmentally beneficial
effects. Damage avoidance and treatment may
also be included in the field of interest though
these activities are more concerned with rectifying
damage already done than with preventing it in the
first place.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.86
Lastly, and perhaps less obviously, minimisation of
natural hazards may be included although these
are activities to protect the economy from the
environment where the others are concerned with
protecting the environment from the economy.
Environment statistics Statistiques de
l‟environnement
Environment statistics are statistics that describe
the state and trends of the environment, covering
the media of the natural environment (air/climate,
water, land/soil), the biota within the media, and
human settlements.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
paras. 5.4 & 5.25
Context: Environment statistics are integrative in
nature, measuring human activities and natural
events that affect the environment, the impacts of
these activities and events, social responses to
environmental impacts, and the quality and
availability of natural assets. Broad definitions
include environmental indicators, indices and
accounting
Environmental assets
(SEEA)
Naturally occurring entities that provides
environmental ―functions‖ or services.
Environmental assets in the SEEA are broader than
environmental assets in the SNA: they cover all
assets including those which have no economic
values, but bring indirect uses benefits, options
and bequest benefits or simply existence benefits
which cannot be translated into a present day
monetary value.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Environmental
Comptabilité de
accounting
l‟environnement
Environmental accounting refers to:
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
7.92
- national accounting: physical and monetary
accounts of environmental assets and the costs of
their depletion and degradation;
- corporate accounting: the term usually refers to
environmental auditing, but may also include the
costing of environmental impacts caused by the
corporation
See also: Natural assets
Environmental assets
accounts
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
254
Context: Un-remedied degradation which carries
forward to a future period.
Accounts that describe in physical and/or monetary
units the stocks and changes in stocks of
environmental assets.
United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 10.162
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.91 sq
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Environmental
Assainissement de
cleanup
l‟environnement
Environmental clean—up refers to action taken to
deal with the release of a hazardous substance
that could affect humans and/or the environment.
The term clean-up is sometimes used
interchangeably with the terms remedial action,
response action or corrective action as opposed to
the terms preventive action or anticipatory action
Environmental
Dégradation de
degradation
l'environnement
Environmental degradation is the deterioration in
environmental quality from ambient concentrations
of pollutants and other activities and processes
such as improper land use and natural disasters
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Environmental protection, Environmental
restoration
Environmental
economic profiles
A characterisation of the economic contribution
and environmental burden by industry. Economic
contribution is the contribution an industry makes
to GP or employment and environmental burden
may be represented as the percent of emissions or
residuals or use of material and energy over the
total.
Environmental
Conditionnement de
conditioning
l‟environnement
Environmental conditioning is the modification of
the environment of one or more organisms by their
activities, including reaction and co-action
(liberation of oxygen, for example, by water plants
in an aquarium)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 4.101
Environmental costs
Côut écologique
Environmental costs are costs connected with the
actual or potential deterioration of natural assets
due to economic activities.
Such costs can be viewed from two different
perspectives, namely as (a) costs caused, that is,
costs associated with economic units actually or
potentially causing environmental deterioration by
their own activities or as (b) costs borne, that is,
costs incurred by economic units independently of
whether they have actually caused the
environmental impacts
Environmental effect
Effet écologique
An environmental effect is the result of
environmental impacts on human health and
welfare. The term is also used synonymously with
environmental impact
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Ecological impact, Environmental impact
Environmental
equilibrium
See Ecological balance
See also: Damage cost, Defensive environmental
costs
Environmental debt
Dette écologique
Environmental debt refer to the accumulation of
past environmental impacts of natural resource
depletion and environmental degradation, owed to
future generations
Equilibre
See also: Ecological balance
Environmental
Frais écologiques
expenditures
Environmental expenditures are capital and current
expenditures related to characteristic activities and
255
facilities specified in classifications of
environmental protection activities
Environmental impact Impact écologique
Environmental impact refers to the direct effect of
socio-economic activities and natural events on the
components of the environment
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Environmental
Externalités
externalities
écologiques
Environmental externalities refer to the economic
concept of uncompensated environmental effects
of production and consumption that affect
consumer utility and enterprise cost outside the
market mechanism.
See also: Ecological impact, Environmental effect
Environmental impact Etude d‟impact sur
assessment (EIA)
l‟environnement (EIE)
An environmental impact assessment (EIA) is an
analytical process that systematically examines the
possible environmental consequences of the
implementation of projects, programmes and
policies
As a consequence of negative externalities, private
costs of production tend to be lower than its
―social‖ cost. It is the aim of the ―polluter/userpays‖ principle to prompt households and
enterprises to internalise externalities in their
plans and budgets
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Environment impact statement
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Environmental
Indicateur de
indicator
l‟environnement
An environmental indicator is a parameter, or a
value derived from parameters, that points to,
provides information about and/or describes the
state of the environment, and has a significance
extending beyond that directly associated with any
given parametric value. The term may encompass
indicators of environmental pressures, conditions
and responses
See also: Economic instruments, Polluter-paysprinciple
Environmental
Fonctions écologiques
functions
Functions provided by the environment. They
correspond to the various uses to which naturally
produced physical surroundings are put for
economic ends. Three types of environmental
functions are distinguished: resource functions,
sink functions and service functions.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: Environmental functions refer to
environmental services, including spatial functions,
waste disposal, natural resource supply and life
support.
See also: Biological indicator
Environmental
Eco-étiquetage
labelling
Environmental labelling provides an indication of
the environmental impact—related characteristics
of a product, typically on the package containing
the product, by private or public institutions
Glossary of Environment Statistics, Studies in
Methods, Series F, No. 67, United Nations, New
York, 1997.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
paras. 7.31 & 7.35
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Environmental media Milieu écologique
Environmental media refer to abiotic components
of the natural environment, namely, air, water and
land
See also: Natural capital
Environmental health Indicateurs sanitaires
indicators
de l‟environnement
Environmental health indicators are indicators that
describe the link between environment and health
by measuring the health effect due to exposure to
one or several environmental hazards
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Environmental
products
The products of environmental activities as well as
the specific products used for intermediate
consumption or fixed capital formation of
environmental activities. Also included are
connected and adapted products.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
256
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.79
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.74
Environmental
Protection de
protection
l‟environnement
Environmental protection refers to any activity to
maintain or restore the quality of environmental
media through preventing the emission of
pollutants or reducing the presence of polluting
substances in environmental media. It may consist
of:
Environmental
protection and
resource management
activities
Environmental protection and resource
management activities include not only those
where the primary purpose is environmental
protection but also activities which are not
necessarily carried out for environmental
protection reasons but which nevertheless produce
clear, measurable environmental benefits. An
example is spending on energy-saving equipment.
(a) changes in characteristics of goods and
services,
(b) changes in consumption patterns,
Context: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.25
(c) changes in production techniques,
(d) treatment or disposal of residuals in separate
environmental protection facilities,
(e) recycling, and
(f) prevention of degradation of the landscape and
ecosystems.
Environmental
protection capital
stock
An assessment of the capital stock used for
environmental protection activities, which allows to
derive consumption of fixed capital for
environmental protection.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Classification of environment protection
activities (CEPA), Environmental cleanup
Environmental
protection activities
Environmental protection activities are those where
the primary purpose is the protection of the
environment; that is, the avoidance of the
negative effects on the environment caused by
economic activities. The activities are generally
classified according to the classification of
environmental protection activities (CEPA 2000).
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.112
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.29
Environmental
protection
expenditure
The OECD and Eurostat system of collection of
environmental protection expenditure and
revenues data.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.151
Environmental
protection ancillary
activities
Ancillary activities carried out by enterprises‘ own
employees coming within the definition of
environmental protection. Examples are in-house
waste or waste water collection and treatment, air
scrubbers in power plants and environmental
management units within enterprises.
Environmental
257
protection
expenditure accounts
(EPEA)
An internal satellite account comprising production
and generation of income accounts and supply and
use table for environmental protection activities
and products.
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.82
Environmental quality Qualite de
l‟environnement
Environmental quality is a state of environmental
conditions in environmental media, expressed in
terms of indicators or indices related to
environmental quality standards
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.95
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Environmental
protection external
activities
These activities which result in an output which is
separately identified in national accounts, by
reference to the ISIC classification. Main external
protection activity is ISIC 90 ―sewage, and refuse
disposal, sanitation and similar activities‖. Other
environmental protection activities may be found
in ISIC 37 (recycling), 45 (construction), 51 (for
example wholesaling of waste materials and scrap
including sorting), 73 (research and development),
75 (general administration), etc.
Environmental quality Norme de qualité de
standard
l‟environnement
An environmental quality standard is a limit for
environmental disturbances, in particular, from
ambient concentration of pollutants and wastes,
that determines the maximum allowable
degradation of environmental media
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Environmental R&D
Research and development (R&D) expenditures
which are targeted to a great extent toward
identifying more efficient means of addressing
environmental problems.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.69
Source: OECD, 2007, Business and the
Environment: Policy Incentives and Corporate
Responses, OECD, Paris
Environmental
protection input
output table
A symmetric table makes a bridge between the
physical input-output table and environmental
protection expenditure, separating internal and
external environmental protection services and
fixed capital for environmental protection.
Environmental
Réfugié écologique
refugee
An environmental refugee is a person displaced
owing to environmental causes, notably land loss
and degradation, and natural disaster
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.202
Environmental
requirements of
products
The total direct and indirect uses of natural
resources or residual emissions generation;
environmental requirement is calculated using
input-output techniques.
Environmental
protection services
The products of environmental protection
activities; sometimes referred for short as
environmental services in the SEEA.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 4.119
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
258
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 1.1
Environmental
restoration
Environmental restoration is reactive
environmental protection. It includes:
(a) reduction or neutralization of residuals,
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
(b) changes in the spatial distribution of residuals,
(c) support of environmental assimilation, and
(d) restoration of ecosystems, landscape and so
forth
Environmental sphere
The environmental sphere includes all physical
entities other than products and corresponding
flows. The environmental sphere provides
resources to, and receives residuals from, one or
more national economies.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Environmental cleanup, Environmental
protection
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.80
Environmental
restructuring
Environmental restructuring refers to permanent
structural change in the environment, resulting
from infrastructure development such as
settlements, transport, energy development and
environmental rehabilitation
Environmental taxes
A tax whose tax base is a physical unit (or a proxy
of it) that has a proven specific negative impact on
the environment. Four subsets of environmental
taxes are distinguished: energy taxes, transport
taxes, pollution taxes and resources taxes. Taxes
should not be confounded neither with payments of
rent nor with purchase of an environmental
protection service.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Environmental risk
Evaluation du risque
assessment
écologique
See Risk assessment (of pollution)
See also: Risk assessment (of pollution)
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
paras. 2.102 & 6.26
Environmental
Fonctions de
services
l‟environnement
Environmental services refer to qualitative
functions of natural non—produced assets of land,
water and air (including related ecosystem) and
their biota.
There are three basic types of environmental
services:
Environmental theme
A specific environmental phenomena or concern:
greenhouse effect, ozone layer depletion,
acidification, eutrophication, etc. Various residuals
are converted into theme equivalent using
conversion factors.
(a) disposal services which reflect the functions of
the natural environment as an absorptive sink for
residuals,
(b) productive services which reflect the economic
functions of providing natural resource inputs and
space for production and consumption, and
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 4.94
(c) consumer or consumption services which
provide for physiological as well as recreational
and related needs of human beings
Context: These services include the provision of
raw materials and energy used to produce goods
and services, the absorption of waste from human
activities, and the basic roles in life support and
the provision of other amenities such as landscape.
Environmentally
adjusted net domestic
product (eaNDP)
United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
259
emissions prior to discharge, or utilize and recycle
production residues.
Environmentally adjusted net domestic product
equals depletion adjusted NDP less maintenance
costs.
The assessment of these technologies should
account for their interaction with the
socioeconomic and cultural conditions under which
they are implemented
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 10.185 & box 10.9
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Clean technology
Environmentcommercial 'win-wins'
Investments or measures which result in both
improved environmental performance and
commercial performance (i.e. profitability).
Environmentally
beneficial activities
These activities which may be primarily undertaken
for economic reasons but yield substantial
environmental benefits even though the primary
purpose is not the protection of the environment.
Source: OECD, 2007, Business and the
Environment: Policy Incentives and Corporate
Responses, OECD, Paris
Context: Examples are investment in energy or
material saving equipment such as insulation and
heat recovery, activities aimed at saving water
such as investments in irrigation systems,
industrial or household facilities to reduce water
consumption, or recycle water, and the use of
products adapted for lower water consumption
(such as specially adapted washing machines).
Environmentally beneficial activities are part of
environmental activities.
Environment-related
Activités de defense
defensive activities
de l‟environnement
Environment-related defensive activities are
activities that may include:
(a) preventive environmental protection,
(b) environmental restoration,
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.56
(c) avoidance of damage from repercussions of
environmental deterioration, and
(d) treatment of damages caused by
environmental repercussions
See also: Environmental activities
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Environmentally
cleaner products
See Adapted products
See also: Defensive environmental costs
EONIA
EONIA (euro overnight index average) is a
measure of the effective interest rate prevailing in
the euro interbank overnight market. It is
computed as a weighted average of the interest
rates on unsecured overnight contracts on deposits
denominated in euro, as reported by a panel of
contributing banks
See also: Adapted products
Environmentally
related taxes
Environmentally related taxes are defined as any
compulsory, unrequited payment to general
government levied on tax-bases deemed to be of
particular environmental relevance.
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Source: OECD, 2003, OECD Environmentally
related taxes database, Paris
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/document/29/0,2340,en_264
9_33713_1894685_1_1_1_1,00.html
EP
See European Parliament
Environmentally
Ecotechnologies
sound technologies
Environmentally sound technologies are techniques
and technologies capable of reducing
environmental damage through processes and
materials that generate fewer potentially damaging
substances, recover such substances from
See also: European Parliament
Epidemiology
Épidemiologie
The quantitative study of health problems;
nowadays the term is used without necessary
reference to infectious disease.
260
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Ordinary share
Equity
Equity refers to the value of the interest of an
owner or partial owner in an asset
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
EPL
See Employment protection legislation (EPL)
See also: Employment protection legislation (EPL)
Equilibrium
Distribution en
distribution
équilibre
A physical, economic or social system which has
settled down to a stable statistical behaviour has a
stationary, or equilibrium, distribution which
specifies the limiting proportions spent in the
designated states of the system.
Equity capital
Capital-actions
Equity capital comprises: (i) equity in branches;
(ii) all shares in subsidiaries and associates (except
nonparticipating, preferred shares that are treated
as debt securities and included under direct
investment, other capital); and (iii) other capital
contributions
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms, OECD, 2001 - unpublished
Equity linked bond
An equity-linked bond comprises features of both
debt and equity. Equity-linked bonds are debt
instruments that contain an option to purchase
(either by conversion of existing debt or by
exercising the right to purchase) an equity stake in
the issuer, its parent, or another company at a
fixed price. These instruments are usually issued
when stock market prices are rising because
companies can raise funds at lower than market
interest rates while investors receive interest
payments, and potentially lock into capital gains.
Equilibrium exchange
rate
The equilibrium exchange rate is the long-term
exchange rate that equals the purchasing power
parity (PPP) of a currency in a world where all
goods are traded and where markets are fully
efficient. Such convergence, proposed by the ―PPP
theory of exchange rates‖ would imply that the
same price levels should be observed across
countries.
Source: Purchasing power parities – measurement
and uses, P. Schreyer, F. Koechlin, OECD Statistics
Brief, March 2002, No. 3, page 7
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Equi-representativity
The property whereby the composition of the item
list for a basic heading is such that each country is
able to price that number of representative items
which is commensurate with the heterogeneity of
products and price levels covered by the basic
heading and its expenditure on the basic heading.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Equity linked
derivatives
Derivatives whose value derives from equity
prices.
The object is to obtain PPPs that are both unbiased
and reliable.
Context: These include:
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
- Equity future—traded on an organized exchange,
in which counterparties commit to buy or sell a
specified amount of an individual equity or a
basket of equities or an equity index at an agreed
contract price on a specified date;
See also: Representativity
Equities
Equities refer to ownership interests of
stockholders in a firm, usually in the form of stock
(not bonds)
- Equity option—gives the purchaser the right but
not the obligation to purchase (call) or sell (put) a
specified amount of an individual equity or a
basket of equities or an equity index at an agreed
contract price on or before a specified date; and
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
- Equity swap—in which one party exchanges a
rate of return linked to an equity investment for
261
the rate of return on another equity investment.
aggregating energy sources or assessing
contributions‖ to environmental problems from
diverse sources (for example, the contribution of
different pollutants to global warming)
Net cash settlements are usually made.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Energy conversion factors
Equivalent mobile
operators
This is a way of counting the number of operators
in countries where regional licensing applies. If a
country has 10 regions, each with three operators,
the number of mobile equivalent operators for that
country is three.
Equity market
The market in which equities are issued and
traded.
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
In countries where there are different numbers of
operators in different regions, the largest number
of operators in the same market is used to
determine the national equivalent.
Equity participation
Equity participation refers to interest in a firm in
the form of equities
Source: Cellular Mobile Pricing Structures and
Trends, Working Party on Telecommunication and
Information Services Policies – November 1999,
page 9, Select Glossary of Mobile Terms
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/54/42/2538118.pdf
Erlang
Standard unit of measurement of
telecommunications traffic capacity and usage
demand. Used in traffic engineering for throughput
and capacity planning. One erlang equals one
standard voice circuit in use full time.
Equity warrant bond
(Debt-with-equity
warrants)
Equity warrant bonds are debt securities that
incorporate warrants, which give the holder the
option to purchase equity in the issuer, its parent
company, or another company during a
predetermined period or on one particular date at
a fixed contract price.
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Context: The warrants are detachable and may be
traded separately from the debt security. The
exercise of the equity warrant will normally
increase the total capital funds of the issuer
because the debt is not replaced by equity but
remains outstanding until the date of its
redemption. The issue of equity warrant bonds
reduces the funding costs for borrowers because
the investor will generally accept a lower yield in
anticipation of the future profit to be gained from
exercising the warrant.
ERM
European Exchange Rate Mechanism
ERM II
See Exchange Rate Mechanism II
See also: Exchange Rate Mechanism II (ERM II)
Error
The difference between the observed value of an
index and its ―true‖ value. Errors maybe random or
systematic. Random errors are generally referred
to as ―errors‖. Systematic errors are called
―biases‖.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Equivalent factors
Coefficients
d‟équivalence
Equivalent factors are factors used to convert
quantities from their original physical units into a
common accounting unit for the purpose of
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
See also: Bias
262
An error arising from imperfections in the method
of observing a quantity, whether due to
instrumental or to human factors.
Error detecting
characters
Error detecting characters are codes or given set of
code words whose relationship to the set of valid
codes is known, such that when a transcription
error occurs, the relationship is violated and the
error is detected with certainty or very high
probability.
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003.
Error report
See Report on errors
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
See also: Report on errors
Error statistics
Error statistics comprise a statistical report of
errors found. It usually provides the error rate in
individual data items and the occurrence of
particular kinds of errors.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Error detection
See Detection of errors in data
See also: Detection of errors in data
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Error diagnostics
See Report on errors
See also: Report on errors
ESA 1995
SEC 1995
See European Standard Accounts 1995
Error localisation
Error localisation is the (automatic) identification of
the fields to impute in an edit-failing record. In
most cases, an optimization algorithm is used to
determine the minimal set of fields to impute so
that the final (corrected) record will not fail edits.
See also: European System of Accounts 1995
(ESA)
Escrow accounts
In the context of external debt payments, accounts
typically held in banks outside of the debtor
country through which a portion of the export
proceeds of a debtor is channelled. Typically
involve balances of one-year maturity to cover
future debt-service payments. Creditors who are
the beneficiaries of such accounts thus obtain extra
security for their loans and effective priority in
debt service.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Error of estimation
The difference between an estimated value and the
true value of a parameter or, sometimes, of a
value to be predicted.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Context: It is immediately associated with
accuracy since accuracy is used to mean "the
inverse of the total error, including bias and
variance" (Kish L., "Survey Sampling", 1965). The
larger the error, the lower the accuracy.
ESS
European Statistical System
ESSPROS
SESPROS
ESSPROS is the European System of Social
Protection Statistics developed by Eurostat.
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003
See also: Accuracy, Estimate
Establishment Ŕ ESA
Établissement - SEC
According to the Regulation on statistical units the
local kind-of-activity unit (local KAU) corresponds
Error of observation
263
to the operational definition of the establishment.
According to the European System of Accounts
(ESA) the local KAU is called the establishment in
the System of National Accounts (SNA) and ISIC
Rev. 3
Context: The expression is widely used to denote
the rule by which such particular values are
calculated. It seems preferable to use the word
estimator for the rule of procedure, and estimate
for the values to which it leads in particular cases.
Source: ESA [2.106] footnote 15 and Council
Regulation (EEC), No. 696/93, Section III G (2), of
15.03.1993 on the statistical units for the
observation and analysis of the production system
in the Community
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003.
See also: Error of estimation, Estimator, Nonsampling error, Trend estimates
See also: Establishment – ISIC Rev. 3,
Establishment – SNA, ISIC
Estimating equation
Équation estimante
An equation involving observed quantities and an
unknown which serves to estimate the latter; one
of a set of such equations involving several
unknowns.
Establishment Ŕ ISIC Établissement Ŕ CITI
Rev. 3
Rév. 3
An establishment is an enterprise, or part of an
enterprise, which engages in one, or
predominantly one, kind of economic activity at or
from one location or within one geographic area,
for which data are available, or can meaningfully
be compiled, that allow the calculation of the
operating surplus
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: ISIC Rev. 3, para. 106
See also: Establishment – ESA, Establishment –
SNA
Estimation
Estimation
Estimation is concerned with inference about the
numerical value of unknown population values
from incomplete data such as a sample.
Establishment Ŕ SNA
Établissement - SCN
An establishment is an is an enterprise, or part of
an enterprise, that is situated in a single location
and in which only a single (non- ancillary)
productive activity is carried out or in which the
principal productive activity accounts for most of
the value added
Context: If a single figure is calculated for each
unknown parameter the process is called point
estimation. If an interval is calculated within which
the parameter is likely, in some sense, to lie, the
process is called interval estimation.
Source: SNA 5.21, 6.80
Sample survey data only relates to the units in the
sample. Therefore the sample estimates need to
be inflated to represent the whole population of
interest. Estimation is the means by which this
inflation occurs. The estimation process is also
referred to as ―grossing up‖.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Establishment – ESA, Establishment –
ISIC Rev. 3
Establishment
involved in a labour
dispute
An establishment involved in a labour dispute is
one in which one or more groups of employees are
directly involved in action due to a labour dispute,
or in which such action is effected by the
employer. The definition of an establishment
should be in accordance with the most recent
guidelines of the United Nations.
Under the SDDS, estimation is of particular
relevance to deriving missing data in the
compilation of national accounts and consumer and
producer aggregates (e.g., extrapolation of annual
benchmark using value or volume changes from
industrial surveys, use of fixed input/output ratios,
etc, for current price for national accounts, and
price imputations for consumer and producer
prices) and the techniques applied in updating the
ancillary information used in the estimation
process.
Source: International Labour Organisation (ILO)
Resolution Concerning Statistics of Strikes,
Lockouts and other Action Due to Labour Disputes
(January 1993), page 2-3
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003.
See also: Compilation practices, Estimate,
Estimator, Interval estimation, Point estimation,
Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS)
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Estimation
Estimation
Estimation is concerned with inference about the
numerical value of unknown population values
from incomplete data such as a sample.
Estimate
In the strict sense, an estimate is the particular
value yielded by an estimator in a given set of
circumstances.
Context: If a single figure is calculated for each
264
unknown parameter the process is called point
estimation. If an interval is calculated within which
the parameter is likely, in some sense, to lie, the
process is called interval estimation.
See Euro area
Sample survey data only relates to the units in the
sample. Therefore the sample estimates need to
be inflated to represent the whole population of
interest. Estimation is the means by which this
inflation occurs. The estimation process is also
referred to as ―grossing up‖.
See also: Euro area
Under the SDDS, estimation is of particular
relevance to deriving missing data in the
compilation of national accounts and consumer and
producer aggregates (e.g., extrapolation of annual
benchmark using value or volume changes from
industrial surveys, use of fixed input/output ratios,
etc, for current price for national accounts, and
price imputations for consumer and producer
prices) and the techniques applied in updating the
ancillary information used in the estimation
process.
The EU15 comprised the following 15 countries:
Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France,
Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg,
Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, United
Kingdom.
Source: OECD Main Economic Indicators, OECD,
monthly, Data presentation notes
EU15
Was the number of member countries in the
European Union prior to the accession of ten
candidate countries on 1 May 2004.
Source: OECD, Main Economic Indicators, monthly,
OECD, Paris
See also: EU19, EU27
EU19
All EU countries prior to the accession of the 10
candidate countries on 1 May 2004, plus the four
eastern European member countries of the OECD,
namely Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Slovak
Republic.
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003.
See also: Compilation practices, Estimate,
Estimator, Interval estimation, Point estimation,
Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS)
Source: OECD, Main Economic Indicators, monthly,
OECD, Paris
Estimator
Estimateur
A rule or method of estimating a parameter of a
population.
See also: EU15, EU25
EU27
See European Union
Context: It is usually expressed as a function of
sample values and hence is a variable whose
distribution is of great importance in assessing the
reliability of the estimate to which it leads.
Source: OECD Main Economic Indicators, monthly,
OECD, Data presentation notes
See also: European Union
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003.
EURIBOR
The EURIBOR (or euro interbank offered rate) is
the rate at which a prime bank is willing to lend
funds in euro to another prime bank. The EURIBOR
is computed daily for interbank deposits with a
maturity of one week and one to 12 months as the
average of the daily offer rates of a representative
panel of prime banks, rounded to three decimal
places
See also: Estimate, Estimation
ETE system
Régime ETE
A form of taxation whereby contributions are
exempt, investment income and capital gains of
the pension fund are taxed and benefits are also
exempt from personal income taxation.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
See also: EET system, TEE system
Ethane
Ethane is a naturally gaseous straight-chain
hydrocarbon. It is a colourless paraffinic gas which
is extracted from natural gas and refinery gas
streams.
Euro
The euro is the name of the European currency
adopted by the European Council at its meeting in
Madrid on 15 and 16 December 1995 and used
instead of the European Currency Unit (ECU)
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
EU13
265
See also: ECU, Euro area
Euro zone
See Euro area
Euro area
The Euro area is the area comprising those
[European Union] Member States in which the euro
has been adopted as the single currency in
accordance with the Treaty and in which a single
monetary policy is conducted under the
responsibility of the Governing Council of the
European Central Bank (ECB). In 2000 the euro
area comprised Austria, Belgium, Finland, France,
Germany, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the
Netherlands, Portugal, Spain. Greece became a
member of the Euro area on 1 January 2001.
Slovenia became a member of the Euro area on 1
January 2007.
Zone euro
See also: Euro area
Eurobond
Bond issued by a borrower in a foreign country,
denominated in a Eurocurrency (e.g. US dollar,
Canadian dollar, yen, euro, etc), under-written and
sold by an international syndicate of financial
institutions.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Context: Also commonly referred to as the Euro
zone or Euroland.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Eurodollars
Eurodollars are US dollar deposits held by various
financial institutions outside of the United States.
While the market for dollars in circulation outside
the United States emerged in Europe in the 1960's
, dollar deposits are now found around the world.
More recently, a similar Eurocurrency market has
been developing around the world
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
See also: euro, European Currency Unit (ECU)
Euro commercial
paper (ECP)
Euro Commercial Paper is an unsecured general
obligation in the form of a promissory bearer note,
issued on a discount or interest-bearing basis by
large commercial and industrial organizations.
Maturities of ECP range from a few days up to one
year, with most being 182 days; the minimum
amount is usually $500,000.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Context: ECP provides a flexible alternative to
short-term finance credit lines with commercial
banks, and the rate for prime issuers is usually set
at a small margin above that offered by prime
bank money market securities of comparable
maturities.
Euroland
See Euro area
See also: Euro area
Euronote
A short-term, negotiable bearer promissory note
usually issued at a discount with maturities of less
than one year. (Issued in bearer form; may be
held as a global certificate.)
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
EURO STOXX
STOXX Limited (www.stoxx.com) publishes the
Dow Jones STOXX indices which measure stock
price developments in Europe as a whole. The Dow
Jones EURO STOXX index is one member of this
index family.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
This index aggregates the prices of a broad range
of stocks from those countries belonging to the
euro area. Furthermore, three types of sector
index (economic and market sectors as well as
industry groups) are available for the Dow Jones
EURO STOXX index
European Agricultural
Guidance and
Guarantee Fund
(EAGGF)
The European Agricultural Guidance and Guarantee
Fund (EAGGF) is a fund within the overall
European Union budget for the financing of the
Common Agricultural Policy (CAP).
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
Context: It has two sections: the EAGGF
Guarantee section and the EAGGF Guidance
266
section. The EAGGF Guarantee finances the
expenditure of the common organisations of the
market (the measures intended to regularise the
agricultural markets and the refunds for exports to
third countries).
Source: European Commission website
European Comparison
Programme
The European comparison programme is the ICP
regional programme for Europe carried out under
the auspices of the United Nations Economic
Commission for Europe.
Depending on the products, the operations may
take the form of intervention prices, production aid
or premiums, compensatory aid for withdrawal of
products from the market or storage aid.
It also provides the financing for non-Objective 1
rural development activities, with the exception of
the EU rural development initiative (LEADER
PLUS), specific veterinary measures, plant health
measures and information campaigns relating to
CAP. With Agenda 2000, the EAGGF Guarantee
Section has become almost the only source of
funding for agricultural expenditure.
It is organized by Eurostat, the OECD, the
Interstate Statistical Committee of the
Commonwealth of Independent States and the
State Committee of the Russian Federation on
Statistics.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
The EAGGF Guidance Section finances rural
development measures covered by activities under
Objective 1 and the EU rural development initiative
(LEADER PLUS). The EAGGF fund is often referred
to by its French abbreviation FEOGA.
See also: International comparison program
European Conference
of Ministers of
Transport (ECMT)
Conférence
Européenne des
Ministres des
Transports (CEMT)
The European Conference of Ministers of Transport
(ECMT) is an intergovernmental organisation
established by a Protocol signed in
Brussels on 17 October 1953.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
European Central
Bank
The European Central Bank (ECB) lies at the centre
of the European System of Central Banks (ESCB)
and the Eurosystem and has legal personality
under Community Law. It ensures that tasks
conferred upon the Eurosystem and the ESCB are
implemented either by its own activities pursuant
to the Stature of the European System of Central
Banks and of the European Central Bank or
through the national central banks
It is a forum in which Ministers responsible for
transport, and more specifically the inland
transport sector, can co-operate on policy. Within
this forum, Ministers can openly discuss current
problems and agree upon joint approaches aimed
at improving the utilisation and at ensuring the
rational development of European transport
systems of international importance.
Context: As of September 2001, there are 41 full
Member countries, 6 Associate countries and 2
Observer countries. Twenty-one of these countries
have joined since 1991.
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
At present, the ECMT's role primarily consists of:
See also: European System of Central Banks
(ESCB), Eurosystem
- Helping to create an integrated transport system
throughout the enlarged Europe that is
economically and technically efficient, meets the
highest possible safety and environmental
standards and takes full account of the social
dimension.
European Commission
The European Commission (Commission of the
European Communities) is the institution of the
European Community which ensures the
application of the provisions of the Treaty. The
Commission develops Community policies,
proposes Community legislation and exercises
powers in specific areas.
- Helping also to build a bridge between the
European Union and the rest of the continent at a
political level.
- Providing a forum for analysis and discussion on
forward looking transport policy issues for the
countries involved.
In the area of economic policy, the Commission
recommends broad guidelines for economic policies
in the Community and reports to the European
Union Council on economic developments and
policies. It monitors public finances within the
framework of multilateral surveillance and submits
reports to the Council.
Source: European Conference of Ministers of
Transport (ECMT) website
Hyperlink: http://www1.oecd.org/cem/about.htm
It consists of 25 members, one from each of the
Member States.
European Council
267
The European Council provides the European Union
with the necessary impetus for its development
and defines the general political guidelines thereof.
It brings together the Heads of State or
Government of the Member States and the
President of the European Commission
1994 that links Iceland, Norway and Liechtenstein
to the European Union Internal Market through the
creation of a ―European Economic Area‖.
Within the EEA, uniform rules regarding the four
freedoms, competition, state-aid and public
procurement apply.
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Context: The relevant Community legislation for
the Internal Market and the EEA-specific
adaptations are integrated into the 22 Annexes
and 48 Protocols to the EEA Agreement and
subsequently transposed into national legislation of
the three European Free Trade Association (EFTA)
States. These Annexes and Protocols are
constantly updated as relevant new or amended
European Union legislation is adopted.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
See also: EU Council
European Currency
Unité monétaire
Unit (ECU)
européene (écu)
European Currency Unit (ECU) was a basket
currency made up of the sum of fixed amounts of
12 of the 15 currencies of the European Union
Member States. The value of the ECU was
calculated as a weighted average of the value of its
component currencies.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
European Free Trade
Association (EFTA)
The European Free Trade Association (EFTA) is a
free-trade area established in 1958 with a view to
eliminating tariffs on goods produced in and traded
among member states. Most agricultural products
are not subject to EFTA schedule tariff reductions.
The ECU was replaced by the euro on a one-forone basis on 1 January 1999
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
Current members: Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway,
Switzerland
See also: Euro
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
European Economic
and Monetary Union
The Treaty of Rome and subsequent treaties
(Maastricht, Amsterdam, Nice) describes the
process of achieving Economic and Monetary Union
(EMU) in the European Union in three stages.
European Monetary
Institute (EMI)
The European Monetary Institute (EMI) was a
temporary institution established at the start of
Stage Two of Economic and Monetary Union (EMU)
on 1 January 1994.
Stage One of EMU started in July 1990 and ended
on 31 December 1993; it was mainly characterised
by the dismantling of all internal barriers to the
free movement of capital within the European
Union.
The two main tasks of the EMI were to strengthen
central bank co-operation and monetary policy coordination and to make the preparations required
for the establishment of the European System of
Central Banks (ESCB), for the conduct of the single
monetary policy and for the creation of a single
currency in Stage Three. It went into liquidation
following the establishment of the European
Central Bank (ECB) on 1 June 1998
Stage Two of EMU began on 1 January 1994. It
provided for, inter alia, the establishment of the
European Monetary Institute (EMI), the prohibition
of financing of the public sector by the central
banks, the prohibition of privileged access to
financial institutions by the public sector and the
avoidance of excessive government deficits.
Stage Three started on 1 January 1999 with the
transfer of monetary competence to the
Eurosystem and the introduction of the euro.
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
European Parliament
The European Parliament consists of 730
representatives (as at 1 July 2005) of the citizens
of the Member States. It is a part of the legislative
process, although with different prerogatives
according to the procedures through which EU law
European Economic
Espace économique
Area (EEA)
européen (EEE)
The European Economic Area (EEA) is an
agreement which entered into force on 1 January
268
is to be enacted.
on national accounting, the System of National
Accounts (1993 SNA, or simply SNA). However,
the ESA is focused more on the circumstances and
data needs in the European Union.
In the framework of Economic and Monetary Union
(EMU), the Parliament has mainly consultative
powers. However, the Treaty establishes certain
procedures for the democratic accountability of the
European Central Bank (ECB) to the Parliament
(presentation of the annual report, general debate
on the monetary policy, hearings before the
competent parliamentary committees).
Source: ESA para. 1.01
European System of
Central Banks (ESCB)
The European System of Central Banks (ESCB) is
composed of the European Central Bank (ECB) and
the national banks of all 15 Member States, in
addition to the members of the Eurosystem, the
national banks of the Member States which did not
adopt the euro at the start of Stage Three of
Economic and Monetary Union (EMU).
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
European Payments
Council (EPC)
Governance body consisting of 52 representatives
of institutions, including commercial banks,
cooperative banks and savings banks, entrusted
with bringing about the single euro payment area
and with representing the European banking
industry on issues related to payment systems.
The ESCB is governed by the Governing Council
and the Executive Board of the ECB, and, as a
third decision-making body of the ECB, by the
General Council.
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
Source: European Central Bank, 2003, Annual
Report: 2003, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
See also: European Central Bank, Eurosystem
European System for
Système européen de
the Collection of
rassemblement
Economic Information d‟informations
on the Environment
économiques sur
(SERIEE)
l‟environnement
The European System for the Collection of
Economic Information on the Environment
(SERIEE) is a system consisting mainly of data on
environmental protection expenditure and
economic data on the use and management of
natural resources.
European Union
Union européene
The European Union comprises the following 27
countries: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus,
Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland,
France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy,
Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands,
Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovak Republic,
Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom.
Links to physical data such as the amount of waste
and other pollutants generated or avoided, and the
use of water and other resources, are to be
established in parallel as far as possible.
See also: Candidate countries, Euro area,
European Economic and Monetary Union
Source: OECD Main Economic Indicators, OECD,
monthly, Data presentation notes
European Union
Council
The European Union (EU) Council is an institution
of the European Community. It is made up of
representatives of the governments of the Member
States, normally the ministers responsible for the
matters under consideration (therefore often
referred to as the Council of Ministers).
The System is designed to form a series of satellite
accounts of the national accounts
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
The EU Council meeting in the composition of the
ministers of finance and economy is often referred
to as the ECOFIN Council. In addition, the EU
Council may meet in the composition of the Heads
of State or Government
European System of
Accounts 1995 (ESA)
The European System of National and Regional
Accounts (1995 ESA, or simply: ESA) is an
internationally compatible accounting framework
for a systematic and detailed description of a total
economy (that is a region, country or group of
countries), its components and its relations with
other total economies.
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
Context: The 1995 ESA replaces the European
System of Integrated Economic Accounts published
in 1970 (1970 ESA; a second, slightly modified
edition appeared in 1978). The 1995 ESA is fully
consistent with the revised world-wide guidelines
See also: European Council
Eurostat
269
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
The Statistical Office of the European
Communities. Eurostat is part of the European
Commission and is responsible for the production
of Community statistics
Eutrophication
potential Ŕ inland
water
The aggregate measure of the inland water
eutrophication potential of some substances,
calculated through the conversion factor of
phosphorous and nitrogen compounds (waste
water discharges and air emissions of NOx and
NH3) into phosphorous equivalents.
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
Eurosystem
The Eurosystem comprises the European Central
Banks (ECB) and the national central banks of the
Member States which have adopted the euro in
Stage Three of Economic and Monetary Union
(EMU). There are currently 12 national central
banks in the Eurosystem. The Eurosystem is
governed by the Governing Council and the
Executive Board of the ECB.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.28
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Eutrophication
potential Ŕ marine
water
The aggregate measure of the marine water
eutrophication potential of some substances,
calculated through the conversion factor of
nitrogen containing residual flows (waste water
discharges and air emissions of NOx and NH3) into
kilograms of nitrogen.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
See also: European Central Bank, European
System of Central Banks (ESCB)
Eurosystem's foreign
exchange liquidity
position
Eurosystem‘s foreign exchange liquidity position
this comprises the Eurosystem‘s international
reserves and the Eurosystem‘s other foreign
currency claims and liabilities, including positions
vis-à-vis euro area residents such as, for instance,
foreign exchange deposits placed with banking
institutions resident in the euro area
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.28
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Evaluation (of a
development activity)
The systematic and objective assessment of an ongoing or completed project, programme or policy,
its design, implementation and results. The aim is
to determine the relevance and fulfilment of
objectives, development efficiency, effectiveness,
impact and sustainability.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
Eurosystem's
international reserves
The reserve assets of the euro area consist of the
Eurosystem‘s reserve assets, i.e. the reserve
assets of the European Central Bank (ECB), and
the reserve assets held by the national central
banks of the participating Member States.
Context: An evaluation should provide information
that is credible and useful, enabling the
incorporation of lessons learned into the decision–
making process of both recipients and donors.
Evaluation also refers to the process of
determining the worth or significance of an
activity, policy or program. An assessment, as
systematic and objective as possible, of a planned,
on-going, or completed development intervention.
Reserve assets must be under the effective control
of the relevant monetary authority, whether the
ECB or the national central bank of one of the
participating Member States, and refer to highly
liquid, marketable and creditworthy foreign (noneuro) currency-denominated claims on non-euro
area residents, plus gold, special drawing rights
and the reserve positions in the International
Monetary Fund of the participating national central
banks
Note: Evaluation in some instances involves the
definition of appropriate standards, the
examination of performance against those
standards, an assessment of actual and expected
results and the identification of relevant lessons.
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Source: OECD Development Co-operation
Directorate (DAC), Glossary
270
Methods and definitions, 1998 Edition", Office for
Official Publications of the European Communities,
Luxembourg, p.66
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
Evaluation of editing
There are several methods available to evaluate an
edit system.
Event space
See Sample space
See also: Sample space
One method is to compare the raw (unedited) data
file with the edited file for each question. By
ordering the changes by descending absolute
magnitude, the cumulative impact of the editing
changes to the total editing change or to the
estimated item total can be displayed in graphs
and tables.
Everything-But-Arms
(EBA)
The Everything-But-Arms (EBA) Initiative of the
European Union eliminates EU import tariffs and
restrictions for numerous goods, including
agricultural products, from the least developed
countries. The tariff elimination is scheduled in four
steps from July 2006 to October 2009.
Context: This technique can be used to identify
questionnaire problems and respondent errors.
Source: OECD, 2004, OECD Agricultural Outlook:
2004-2013, OECD, Paris, Glossary
When forms are reviewed before data capture or
when general editing changes are noted on the
questionnaires, evaluation studies can be carried
out by selecting a sample of forms and analysing
the effect of the editing procedures on individual
data items.
Evolutionary goods
Goods that are similar to or extensions of existing
goods. They are typically produced on the same
production line using production inputs and
processes that is largely the same as those used to
produce existing goods. It is possible, at least in
theory, to adjust for any quality differences
between an evolutionary good and an existing
good.
A widely used technique to evaluate new editing
methods is to simulate the new process using a
raw data file from the survey. By replacing values
flagged according to the new method with the
values from the tabulation file containing the data
edited by the alternative editing process, it
becomes possible to compare estimates from this
newly edited file with estimates from the tabulation
file.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Ex ante control
The auditor is involved in authorising public
expenditure. Payment orders and supporting
documentation received are checked whether the
transactions have been properly authorised, are
legal and regular, and whether there are sufficient
provisions in the budget.
Evapotranspiration
Evapotranspiration is the removal of moisture from
soil by evaporation plus transpiration by plants
growing in that soil
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Evening work
The definitions of evening work and night vary
considerably so that it is not easy to establish a
strictly common basis for all Member States.
Generally speaking, however, "evening workers"
can be considered to be work done after the usual
hours of working time in this Member State, but
before the usual sleeping hours. This implies the
possibility of sleeping at normal times (whereas
"night work" implies an abnormal sleeping
pattern).
Ex poste control
There are at least three types of ex poste control:
- Those supreme audit institutions (SAIs) with a
judicial function examine and pass judgement on
the records of those individuals who have personal
responsibility for the use of public funds.
Source: Eurostat, 1999, "Labour force survey:
271
- Financial audit, including the examination of
documentation relating to a series of transactions,
allows the SAI to report on the state accounts and
provides the basis for the legislature to give some
form of discharge or opinion.
required to reduce unit costs of production to a
minimum. Excess capacity is a characteristic of
natural monopoly or monopolistic competition. It
may arise because as demand increases, firms
have to invest and expand capacity in lumpy or
indivisible portions. Firms may also choose to
maintain excess capacity as a part of a deliberate
strategy to deter or prevent entry of new firms.
- Performance audit, focusing on particular aspects
of public expenditure, addresses wider issues of
economy, efficiency and effectiveness.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Excess feed cost
Excess feed cost is a supplementary cost resulting
from market price support on quantities of crops
domestically produced and consumed as feed by
livestock producers. It is deducted from the
producer support estimate (PSE) for livestock and
the consumer support estimate (CSE) for crops.
This avoids double-counting when aggregating the
PSE and CSE for crops and livestock.
Exact disclosure
Exact disclosure occurs if a user is able to
determine the exact attribute for an individual
entity from released information.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Exceptional financing
As an alternative to—or in conjunction with—the
use of reserve assets, IMF credit and loans, and
liabilities constituting foreign authorities‘ reserves,
to deal with payments imbalance, exceptional
financing denotes any other arrangements made
by the authorities of an economy to finance
balance of payments needs.
Excess prices
Excess prices refers to prices set significantly
above competitive levels as a result of monopoly
or market power.
Context: However, in practice, in absence of a
conspiracy or price fixing agreement or evidence of
market power stemming from high concentration,
it is very difficult to establish a threshold beyond
which a price may be considered excessive or
unreasonable. Because the basic method of
organizing production in a market economy is
through the price system, price flexibility is critical.
Prices fluctuate in order to bring supply and
demand into equilibrium.
Context: The identification of exceptional financing
transactions is linked to an analytical concept
rather than being based on precise criteria. Among
the transactions regarded as exceptional financing
transactions are debt forgiveness, debt-for-equity
swaps, and other types of transactions relating to
debt reorganizations. Under certain circumstances,
some borrowings by the government or other
sectors might meet the criterion.
Temporary shortages in supply or increases in
demand will cause prices to rise and provide
incentives for increased production and entry of
new suppliers. Moreover, it should be noted that
price and/or profit comparisons between different
firms, markets, or countries are fraught with legal
and economic problems. Attempts by government
to control or force a roll back of prices that are not
a result of restrictions on competition are
inconsistent with the philosophy underlying
competition policy.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Excess capacity
Excess capacity refers to a situation where a firm
is producing at a lower scale of output than it has
been designed for.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Context: It exists when marginal cost is less than
average cost and it is still possible to decrease
average (unit) cost by producing more goods and
services. Excess capacity may be measured as the
increase in the current level of output that is
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
272
Excessive competition
See Cut-throat competition
Exchange Rate
Mechanism II (ERM
II)
Exchange Rate Mechanism II is the exchange rate
arrangement which provides the framework for
exchange rate policy co-operation between the
euro area and EU Member States not participating
in the euro area from the start of Stage Three of
Economic and Monetary Union (EMU).
See also: Cut-throat competition
Excessive deficit
procedure
The provision defined in Article 104 of the Treaty
and specified in the Protocol on the excessive
deficit procedure requires EU Member States to
maintain budgetary discipline, defines criteria for a
budgetary position to be considered an excessive
deficit and sets out the steps to be taken following
the observation that the criteria for the budget
balance or government debt have not been
fulfilled. This is supplemented by the Council
Regulation (EC) No 1467/97 of 7 July 1997 on
speeding up and clarifying the implementation of
the excessive deficit procedure, which is an
element of the Stability and Growth Pact.
Context: Membership of the mechanism is
voluntary. Nevertheless, Member States with a
derogation can be expected to join the mechanism.
Currently, the Danish krone participates in ERM II
with a fluctuation band around the central rate
against the euro of ±2.25%. Prior to the adoption
of the euro by Greece on 1 January 2001, the
Greek drachma participated in ERM II with a
fluctuation band of ±15%.
Foreign exchange intervention and financing at the
margins of the standard or narrower fluctuation
bands are, in principle, automatic and unlimited,
with very short-term financing available. The
European Central Bank (ECB) and the participating
non-euro area national central banks could,
however, suspend automatic intervention if this
were to conflict with their primary objective of
maintaining price stability.
Source: European Central Bank, 2003, Annual
Report: 2003, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
See also: Stability and Growth Pact
Excessive hours of
work
See Inadequate employment related to excessive
hours
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
See also: Inadequate employment related to
excessive hours
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
Exchange rate
(nominal)
The nominal exchanges rate is the price of one
currency in terms of another
Exchange rate, endof- period
See End-of-period exchange rate
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
See also: End-of-period exchange rate
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Exchange rate, period
average
See Period-average exchange rate
Exchange rate
adjustment
An exchange rate adjustment is a procedure
adopted to eliminate the valuation effects arising
from movements in exchange rates from data
expressed in a common currency (generally the US
dollar)
See also: Period-average exchange rate
Exchange rates
Taux de change
Exchange rates are the price of one country‘s‘
currency in relation to another.
Context: Exchange rates are classified by IMF into
three broad categories, reflecting the role of the
authorities in the determination of the exchange
rates and/or the multiplicity of exchange rates in a
country:
Source: Guide to the International Banking
Statistics, Bank for International Settlements,
Basel, Switzerland, 2000, Part III – Glossary of
Terms
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/meth07.pdf
- market rate: is used to describe exchange rates
determined largely by market forces;
Exchange rate gains
or losses
Exchange rate gains or losses can be either
realised gains/losses or unrealised gains/losses
- official rate: is used to describe The exchange
rate determined by authorities;
- for countries maintaining multiple exchange
arrangements, the rates may be labelled principle
rate, secondary rate, and tertiary rate.
Source: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms, OECD, 2001 – unpublished
Exchange rates may be expressed as period
273
nations claim and exercise sovereign rights and
exclusive fishery management authority over all
fish and all Continental Shelf fishery resources.
(Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries: Glossary,
February 1998)
average rates or end of period rates.
(International Financial Statistics Yearbook, IMF,
Washington D.C, 2000, Introduction, page ix)
Source: The Dictionary of International Business
Terms, J.K. Shim, J.G. Siegel, M.H. Levine,
Glenlake Publishing Co. Ltd., 1998
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Nominal effective exchange rate, Real
effective exchange rates
Exclusive right
Droit exclusif
An exclusive right is a right to do something (e.g.,
to catch fish) that is exclusive to the holder(s) of
the right
Exchangeable issue
A bond or note that can be exchanged for existing
shares or bonds of a third party at predetermined
prices during specified periods of time.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Excursionists
Excursionnistes
Excursionists (also called ―same-day visitors‖) are
persons who do not reside in the country of arrival
and stay for just a day without spending the night
in a collective or private accommodation within the
country visited.
Excise duties
Droits d‟accise
Excise duties consist of special taxes levied on
specific kinds of goods, typically alcoholic
beverages, tobacco and fuels; they may be
imposed at any stage of production or distribution
and are usually assessed by reference to the
weight or strength or quantity of the product
Context: This category includes cruise passengers
who arrive in a country on a cruise ship and return
to the ship each night to sleep on board as well as
crew members who do not spend the night in the
country. It also includes residents of border areas
who visit the neighbouring country during the day
to shop, visit friends or relatives, seek medical
treatment, or participate in leisure activities.
Source: SNA 7.69 and OECD 5121
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Exclusive
When the occurrence of one event automatically
excludes the possibility of the second event
occurring at the same time.
See also: Foreign excursionists
Source: Statistics Canada, Educational Resources,
Glossary of Statistical Terms
Exercise price
Exercise price is the pre-specified price at which
the security underlying a futures or option contract
may be bought or sold on the contract‘s expiration
date.
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca/english/edu/prototype/glos
sary/gloss.htm
Source: OECD, June 2004, Glossary, OECD
Economic Outlook, Paris, France
Exclusive dealing
See Vertical restraints
See also: Vertical restraints (or restrictions)
Exhaust gases
Gaz d‟échappement
Exhaust gases are gases produced by the burning
of petrol (gasoline) in combustion engines. Exhaust
gases are harmful to human beings, plants and
animals
Exclusive Economic
Zone économique
Zone (EEZ)
exclusive (ZEE)
An Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) is a concept
adopted at the Third United Nations Conference on
the Law of the Sea (1982), whereby a coastal
State assumes jurisdiction over the exploration
and exploitation of marine resources in its adjacent
section of the continental shelf, taken to be a band
extending 200 miles from the shore
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Exhaustion
The principle that once a product has been sold on
a market, the intellectual property owner no longer
has any rights over it. (A debate among WTO
member governments is whether this applies to
products put on the market under compulsory
Context: The Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ)
comprises an area which extends either from the
coast, or in federal systems from the seaward
boundaries of the constituent states (3 to 12
nautical miles, in most cases) to 200 nautical miles
(370 kilometres) off the coast. Within this area,
274
licences.)
Exit of a road vehicle Véhicule routier sorti
Any loaded or empty road motor vehicle which
leaves the country by road.
Countries‘ laws vary as to whether the right
continues to be exhausted if the product is
imported from one market into another, which
affects the owner‘s rights over trade in the
protected product.
Context: If a road motor vehicle is leaving the
country by another mode of transport, only the
active mode is considered as leaving that country.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
See also: Parallel imports
Exhaustive
When a set of events comprises all possible
occurrences of a reference set.
Source: Statistics Canada, Educational Resources,
Glossary of Statistical Terms
Exit of an inland
Bateau de navigation
waterways transport
intérieure sorti
(IWT) vessel
Any laden or unladen inland waterways transport
(IWT) vessel which left the country by inland
waterway.
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca/english/edu/prototype/glos
sary/gloss.htm
Context: If an IWT vessel is leaving the country by
another mode of transport, only the active mode is
considered as leaving that country.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Exhaustive(ness) (of
national accounts)
GDP estimates are said to be exhaustive when
they include all productive activities within the
1993 SNA production boundary, i.e. there are no
non-measured productive activities.
Exhaustiveness is the state of being exhaustive.
Exogenous rate of
return
A normative rate of return used for calculating the
resource rent as the difference between the net
operating surplus and the return to produced
capital.
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
7.193
Existing fixed asset
Actif fixe existant
An existing fixed asset is one which has already
been acquired by at least one resident user, or
produced on own account, and whose value has,
therefore, already been included in the gross fixed
capital formation of at least one user at some
earlier point in time in the current or some
previous accounting period
Exogenous variables
Exogenous variables designates variables that
appear in an economic/econometric model, but are
not explained by that model (i.e. they are taken as
given by the model)
Source: SNA 10.39
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Existing good
Bien existant
An existing good is a good which has already been
disposed of to a user by the unit that produced or
imported it, either in the current or a previous
period
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
See also: Endogenous variables
Source: SNA 9.31
Expected
Obsolescence
obsolescence
attendue
Expected obsolescence is the loss in value of an
asset through obsolescence that the purchaser was
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
275
expecting to occur when the asset was acquired. It
is a synonym for ―foreseen‖ obsolescence and is
included in consumption of fixed capital
public.
Context: At ISCED levels 0-3, student welfare
services include such things as meals, school
health services, and transportation to and from
school. At the tertiary level, they include halls of
residence (dormitories), dining halls, and health
care.
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
Services for the general public include such things
as museums, radio and television broadcasting,
sports, and recreational or cultural programmes.
See also: Foreseen obsolescence
Expected value
The hypothetical average from the conceived
replicates of the survey all conducted under the
same essential conditions.
Day or evening childcare provided by pre-primary
and primary institutions is not included as an
ancillary service.
Entities providing ancillary services cover separate
organisations that provide such education-related
services as vocational and psychological
counselling, placement, transportation of students,
and student meals and housing.
Source: Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, "Glossary of Nonsampling Error
Terms: An Illustration of a Semantic Problem in
Statistic", Statistical Policy Working Paper,
December, 1978
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Expected years of
schooling
See School expectancy
See also: Expenditure on educational core
services, Expenditure on research and devlopment
(R&D)
See also: School expectancy
Expenditure on
corrective eye-glasses
and contact lenses
Expenditure on corrective eye-glasses and contact
lenses as well as the corresponding cleansing fluid.
Also included is the fitting by opticians.
Expenditure
categories
The level of aggregation between main aggregates
and expenditure groups.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Context: Note: This item corresponds to HC.5.2.1
in the ICHA-HC functional classification.
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Expenditure classes
The level of aggregation between expenditure
groups and basic headings.
Expenditure on
Dépenses au titre des
educational core
services principaux
services
d'éducation
Expenditure on educational core services includes
all expenditure that is directly related to instruction
and education. This should cover all expenditure
on teachers, school buildings, teaching materials,
books, tuition outside schools, and administration
of schools.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Expenditure groups
The level of aggregation between expenditure
categories and expenditure classes.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
See also: Expenditure on ancillary (education)
services, Expenditure on research and devlopment
(R&D)
Expenditure on
Dépenses au titre des
ancillary (education)
services auxiliaires
services
Ancillary services are services provided by
educational institutions that are peripheral to the
main educational mission. The two main
components of ancillary services are student
welfare services and services for the general
Expenditure on
Dépenses au titre des
educational
etablissements
institutions
d'enseignement
Expenditure on educational institutions includes
expenditure on instructional educational
institutions as well as expenditure on noninstructional educational institutions.
276
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
maternal and child
health care
Expenditure on maternal and child health care
often comprises of maternal and child health,
family planning and counselling. This covers a wide
range of medical services such as genetic
counselling and prevention of specific congenital
abnormalities, prenatal and postnatal medical
attention, baby health care, pre-school and school
child health and vaccinations. (Function HC.6.1)
See also: Direct expenditure on educational
institutions, Non-instructional educational
institutions - OECD
Expenditure on food,
hygiene & drinking
water control
Expenditure on food, hygiene & drinking water
control comprises of a variety of activities of a
public health concern that are part of other public
activities such as inspection and regulation of
various industries, including water supply. (ICHA
health-related function HC.R.4).
Source: A System of Health Accounts, OECD,
2000, chapter 3 and chapter 9
Expenditure on
medical goods (total,
public, private)
Expenditure on medical goods (total, public,
private) comprises medical goods dispensed to
out- patients and the services connected with
dispensing, such as retail trade, fitting,
maintaining, and renting of medical goods and
appliances. Included are services of public
pharmacies, opticians, sanitary shops and other
specialised or non-specialised retail traders
including mail ordering and teleshopping
Context:
Activities under this item are part of various
COFOG functions (COFOG, 04 Economic Affairs
(various industries); and 06.3 Water supply which
includes supervision and regulation of water
purity)
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Expenditure on health
and education and
training
Expenditure on health education and training
comprises government and private provision of
education and training of health personnel,
including the administration, inspection or support
of institutions providing education and training of
health personnel. This corresponds to postsecondary and tertiary education in the field of
health (according to ISCED-97 code) by central
and local government, and private institutions such
as nursing schools run by private hospitals. (ICHA
health related function HC.R.2)
Expenditure on nonDépenses non
instruction
éducatives
Expenditure on non-instruction is all expenditure
broadly related to student living costs.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Expenditure on
orthopaedic and other
prosthetics
Total expenditure on orthopaedic and other
prosthetics comprises expenditure on orthopaedic
appliances and other prosthetics: orthopedic
shoes, artificial limbs and other prosthetic devices,
orthopaedic braces and supports, surgical belts,
trusses and supports, neck braces.
Source: A System of Health Accounts, OECD,
2000, chapter 9, page 124-125
Expenditure on health
research and
development
Expenditure on health research and development
refers to research and development programmes
directed towards the protection and improvement
of human health.
Context: Note: This item corresponds to HC.5.2.2
in the ICHA-HC functional classification.
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
It includes research and development on food
hygiene and nutrition and also research and
development on radiation used for medical
purposes, biochemical engineering, medical
information, rationalisation or treatment and
pharmacology (including testing medicines and
breeding of laboratory animals for scientific
purposes) as well as research relating to
epidemiology, prevention of industrial diseases and
drug addiction
Expenditure on
pharmaceutical
industry research and
development
Expenditure on pharmaceutical industry research
and development refers to research and
development activities undertaken by the
corporate sector in order to develop new
compounds to correct somatic or psychic
dysfunction or to improve individuals‘ state of
Source: Frascati Manual, OECD 1994d, page 122
Expenditure on
277
health, irrespective of the source of funding
This includes interventions against smoking,
alcohol and substance abuse. It excludes
vaccination programmes
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Source: A System of Health Accounts, OECD,
2000, chapter 9, page 122
Expenditure on
pharmaceuticals and
other medical nondurables, total
Total expenditure on pharmaceuticals and other
medical non-durables comprises pharmaceuticals
such as medicinal preparations, branded and
generic medicines, drugs, patent medicines,
serums and vaccines, vitamins and minerals and
oral contraceptives.
Expenditure on
therapeutic
appliances and other
medical durables
Expenditure on therapeutic appliances and other
medical durables comprises a wide range of
medical durable goods such as glasses, hearing
aids, and other medical devices.
Also included are orthopaedic appliances and other
prosthetics (HC.5.2.4) as well as medico-technical
devices, including wheelchairs (HC.5.2.4).
Context: Note: This item corresponds to HC.5.1 in
the ICHA-HC functional classification
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Context: Note: This item corresponds to HC.5.2 in
the ICHA-HC functional classification.
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Expenditure on
prevention and public
health, total
Total expenditure on prevention and public health
comprises expenditure on services designed to
enhance the health status of the population as
distinct from the curative services which repair
health dysfunction. Typical services are vaccination
campaigns and programmes. (Function HC.6 in the
ICHA)
Expenditure outside
Dépenses en dehors
educational
des etablissements
institutions
d'enseignement
Expenditure outside educational institutions is
expenditure on educational services purchased
outside institutions, e.g., books, computers,
external tuition, etc. It also deals with student
living costs and costs of student transport not
provided by institutions.
Context: Note that prevention and public health
functions included in the OECD Health Data do not
cover all fields of public health in the broadest
sense of a cross-functional common concern for
health matters in all political and public actions.
Some of these broadly defined public health
functions (such as emergency plans and
environmental protection) are not part of
expenditure on health.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Expenditure over the Dépenses cumulées
average duration of
sur la durée moyenne
tertiary studies
des études tertiaires
Expected expenditure over the average duration of
tertiary studies is calculated by multiplying current
annual expenditure by the typical duration of
tertiary studies.
Source: A System of Health Accounts, OECD,
2000, chapter 3 and chapter 9, HC.6, page 121
Expenditure on
Dépenses au titre de
research and
la recherche et du
development (R&D)
developpement (R&D)
See Research and development expenditure OECD
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Expenditure taxes
Impôts sur la dépense
Expenditure taxes are taxes payable on the total
expenditures of persons or households instead of
on their incomes; they are part of ―miscellaneous
current taxes‖
See also: Research and development expenditure OECD
Expenditure on school
health services
Expenditure on school health services comprises a
variety of services of health education and
screening (for example, by dentists), disease
prevention and the promotion of healthy living
conditions and lifestyles provided in school.
Source: SNA 8.54 [OECD 6000]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
This includes basic medical treatment if provided
as an integral part of the public health function,
such as dental treatment. (ICHA function HC 6.2)
Expenditure weights
278
what commonly constitutes the rules of "good
judgement" or the art of "good guessing" in a field.
A wisely used representation for the knowledge
base is the rule or if /then statement. The "if part"
lists a set of conditions in some logical
combination. Once the "if part" of the rule is
satisfied, the "then part" can be concluded or
problem solving action taken. Expert systems with
knowledge represented in rule form are called rulebased systems.
The shares of expenditure components in currentprice GDP.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
See also: Weights - ISI
Expenditures
Dépenses
Expenditures are the values of the amounts that
buyers pay, or agree to pay, to sellers in exchange
for goods or services that sellers provide to them
or to other institutional units designated by the
buyers
The inference engine makes inferences by
determining which rules are satisfied by facts,
ordering the satisfied rules, and executing the rule
with the highest priority.
Expert data editing systems make so-called
intelligent imputations based on a specified
hierarchy of methods to be used in imputing an
item. One item may use a deterministic approach
followed by a hot-deck approach, while another
item might require a model-based approach. Each
item on the questionnaire would be resolved
according to its own hierarchy of approaches, the
next being automatically tried when the previous
method has failed.
Source: SNA 9.22
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Expenditures on
Dépenses en biens et
goods and services
en services produits
produced on own
pour compte propre
account
Expenditures on goods and services produced on
own account are the imputed values of goods or
services produced as outputs of unincorporated
enterprises owned by households that are retained
for consumption by members of the household
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: SNA 9.52
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Automated imputations
Experimental
development
Experimental development is systematic work,
drawing on existing knowledge gained from
research and/or practical experience, that is
directed to producing new materials, products or
devices; to installing new processes, systems and
services; or to improving substantially those
already produced or installed.
Explicit edit
An explicit edit is an edit explicitly written by a
subject matter specialist.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: OECD Frascati Manual, Sixth edition,
2002, para. 64, page 30
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Hyperlink: http://www1.oecd.org/dsti/sti/statana/prod/eas_fras.htm
See also: Implied edit
Expert system
An expert system is an intelligent computer
program that uses knowledge and inference
procedures to solve problems that are difficult
enough to require significant human expertise for
their solution.
Explicit quality
adjustment
A direct estimate of how much of the change in the
price of a product is due to changes in its physical
or economic characteristics. It requires an
evaluation of the contributions of the differences in
particular characteristics to the differences in the
observed prices of two products. It includes quality
adjustments based on hedonic methods.
Context: Every expert system consists of two
principal parts: the knowledge base and the
inference engine. The knowledge base contains
both factual and heuristic knowledge. Factual
knowledge consists of items commonly agreed
upon by spokesmen in a particular field. Heuristic
knowledge is the less rigorous, more experiential
and more judgmental knowledge of performance or
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
279
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
See also: Implicit quality adjustment, Quality
adjustment
The rationale for permitting export cartels is that it
may facilitate cooperative penetration of foreign
markets, transfer income from foreign consumers
to domestic producers and result in a favourable
balance of trade.
Explicitly defined
conflict rule
An explicitly defined conflict rule is a conflict rule
which in defined by the people responsible for the
correctness of the data.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Cartel
Export credit agency
An agency in a creditor country that provides
insurance, guarantees, or loans for the export of
goods and services.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Exploratory survey
See Pilot survey
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Pilot survey
Exponential growth
Exponential growth refers to the situation where
growth compounds continuously at every instant of
time.
Export credits
Crédit-export
Export credits are government financial support,
direct financing, guarantees, insurance or interest
rate support provided to foreign buyers to assist in
the financing of the purchase of goods from
national exporters
Because compounding takes place at intervals
much longer than an instant, a geometric growth is
a ―special case‖ of exponential growth.
Context: Exponential growth rates may take the
form of annual growth rates, quarter-on-previous
quarter growth rates or month-on-previous month
growth rates.
Context: A loan extended to finance a specific
purchase of goods or services from within the
creditor country. Export credits extended by the
supplier of goods—such as when the importer of
goods and services is allowed to defer payment —
are known as supplier‘s credits; export credits
extended by a financial institution, or an export
credit agency in the exporting country are known
as buyer‘s credits. (IMF, 2003, External Debt
Statistics: Guide for Compilers and Users –
Appendix III, Glossary, IMF, Washington DC.
Available from
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm)
The exponential growth rate is the growth rate
between two points in time for certain population
indicators, notably labour force and population.
This growth rate is based on a model of continuous
exponential growth between two points in time. It
does not take into account the intermediate values
of the series. Nor does it correspond to the annual
rate of change measured at a one-year interval.
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
3: Guidelines for the reporting of different types of
data
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Export duties
Droits sur les
exportations
Export duties consist of general or specific taxes on
goods or services that become payable when the
goods leave the economic territory or when the
services are delivered to non-residents; profits of
export monopolies and taxes resulting from
multiple exchange rates are excluded
Export cartel
An Export cartel is an agreement or arrangement
between firms to charge a specified export price
and/or to divide export markets.
Context: Many competition law statutes exempt
such agreements from the conspiracy provisions
provided that the cartel does not lead to injurious
effects on competition in the domestic market,
e.g., give rise to price fixing agreements or result
in reduction in exports.
Source: SNA 7.68 [OECD 5124]
280
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
l‟exportation
Export subsidies consist of all subsidies on goods
and services that become payable to resident
producers when the goods leave the economic
territory or when the services are delivered to nonresident units; they include direct subsidies on
exports, losses of government trading enterprises
in respect of trade with non- residents, and
subsidies resulting from multiple exchange rates
Export Enhancement
Program (EEP)
Programme
d‟encouragement á
l‟exportation (EEP)
The Export Enhancement Program (EEP) is a US
programme initiated in May 1985 under a
Commodity Credit Corporation charter to subsidise
the export of certain products to specified
countries.
Context: Export subsidies are subsidies given to
traders to cover the difference between internal
market prices and world market prices, such as
through the EU export refunds and the US Export
Enhancement Program.
Context: The programme was formally authorised
by the Food Security Act of 1985 and has been
extended since under the Farm Act of 1990 and
the FAIR Act of 1996.
Export subsidies are now subject to value and
volume restrictions under the Uruguay Round
Agreement on Agriculture. (Agricultural Policies in
OECD Countries: Monitoring and Evaluation 2000:
Glossary of Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD)
Under the EEP, exporters are awarded generic
commodity certificates which are redeemable for
commodities held in CCC stores, thus enabling
them to sell commodities to designated countries
at prices below those on the US market.
Source: SNA 7.76
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Export price index
An export price index is an index calculated for the
price(s) of one or any specified group of
commodities entering into international trade
using, ideally, f.o.b. export prices
Export taxes
Impôts à l‟exportation
Export taxes are taxes on goods or services that
become payable when the goods leave the
economic territory or when the services are
delivered to non-residents; they include export
duties, profits of export monopolies and taxes
resulting from multiple exchange rates
Context: An export price index measures changes
in the prices of exports of merchandise from a
country. (Producer and International Trade Price
Indexes: Concepts Sources and Methods,
Australian Bureau of Statistics, Canberra, 1995,
Chapter 10, Export Price Index.)
Source: SNA 7.68 [15.47]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Methods Used in Compiling the United
Nations Price Indexes for External Trade, Vol. 1.,
United Nations, 1987, Series M, No. 82, v. I
Export-performance
measure
Requirement that a certain quantity of production
must be exported.
See also: Import price index
Export refunds
Export refunds are variable export subsidies given
to traders to cover the difference between the
internal European Union price of a commodity and
its world market price
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Exports of goods and Exportations de biens
services Ŕ SNA
et de services - SCN
Exports of goods and services consist of sales,
barter, or gifts or grants, of goods and services
from residents to non-residents. The treatment of
exports and imports in the SNA is generally
identical with that in the balance of payments
accounts as described in the Balance of Payments
Manual
Export restitution‟s
Restitution‟s à
(refunds)
l‟exportation
Export restitution‘s (refunds) are European Union
export subsidies provided to cover the difference
between internal prices and world market prices
for particular commodities
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Export subsidies
Context: The international standard for the
concepts and definitions for merchandise trade are
outlined in the UN publication, International
Merchandise Trade Statistics – Concepts and
Definitions, United Nations, 1998, Series F, No. 52,
Rev. 2
Subventions à
281
net borrowing‘ is the same than in the SNA capital
account.
Source: SNA 14.88 [14.91, 14.94]. See also ESA
[3.128].
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 10.73 & box 10.6
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Exports of goods and services –
merchandise trade – UN
Exports of goods and
services Ŕ UN
Exports of goods and services – merchandise trade
comprise goods leaving the statistical territory of a
country.
Extended fund facility
(EFF)
An IMF lending facility established in 1974 to assist
member countries in overcoming balance of
payments problems that stem largely from
structural problems and require a longer period of
adjustment than is possible under a Stand-By
Arrangement. A member requesting an Extended
Arrangement outlines its objectives and policies for
the whole period of the arrangement (typically
three years) and presents a detailed statement
each year of the policies and measures it plans to
pursue over the next 12 months. The phasing and
performance criteria are comparable to those of
Stand-By Arrangements, although phasing on a
semiannual basis is possible. Countries must repay
EFF resources over a period of four and a half to
10 years.
In the general trade system, the definition of the
statistical territory of a country coincides with its
economic territory.
In the special trade system, the definition of the
statistical territory comprises only a particular part
of the economic territory, mainly that part which
coincides with the free circulation area for goods.
The free circulation area is a part of the economic
territory of a country within which goods may be
disposed of without Customs restrictions
Context: To promote the comparability of
international merchandise trade statistics and
taking into account the commercial and data
reporting practices of the majority of countries, it
is recommended that the statistical value of
exported goods be an FOB-type value.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: International Merchandise Trade Statistics
– Concepts and Definitions, United Nations, 1998,
Series F, No. 52, Rev. 2, para. 111- 130
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Exports of goods and services – SNA,
Fob price, Imports of goods and services – UN
See also: Stand-by agreement
Expression node
A node in a transformation scheme that is part of a
hierarchy of nodes that together define or
document an expression.
Extended generation
of income account
This account extends the SNA generation of
income account including the various flows related
to the natural resources. The balancing item is the
depletion adjusted operating surplus.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 10.70
Extendable bond
The investor has the option at one or several fixed
dates to extend the maturity.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Extended household
Ménage élargi
An extended household is defined as a household
consisting of any of the following:
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
- a single family nucleus and other persons related
to the nucleus, for example, a father with
child(ren) and other relative(s) or a married couple
with other relative(s) only;
Extended capital
account
This account reintegrates into the SNA capital
account the various adjustments made to the
current accounts. The balancing item ‗net lending /
- two or more family nuclei related to each other
without any other persons, for example, two or
282
more married couples with child(ren) only;
DE-GD(97)163
- two or more family nuclei related to each other
plus other persons related to at least one of the
nuclei, for example, two or more married couples
with other relative(s) only;
See also: Internal auditing
External balance of
goods and services
Solde des échanges
extérieurs de biens et
de services
The external balance of goods and services is the
value of exports of goods and services less imports
of goods and services
- two or more persons related to each other, none
of whom constitute a family nucleus
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.82
Source: SNA 2.166 and Table 2.3 V.I
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Extensive sampling
Échantillonnage
A term used to denote sampling where the subject
matter, or geographical coverage, of a sample is
diffuse or widespread as opposed to intensive,
where it is narrowed to a small field.
External debt, Gross
Dette extérieure
Gross external debt, at any given time, is the
outstanding amount of those current, and not
contingent liabilities owed to non-residents by
residents of an economy that require payment(s)
either of principal and/or interest by the debtor at
some point(s) in the future
Extensive sampling may refer either to a case
where a wide variety of topics are covered
superficially, rather than a few topics in detail or a
large area is surveyed broadly, rather than a small
area studied in detail.
Source: External Debt Statistics: Guide for
Compilers and Users (Draft), IMF, Washington DC,
March 2000, Appendix III, Glossary of Terms
Context: The term could also be used with
reference to time, that is to say, of sampling
covering a long period.
External diseconomy
See Externalities - OECD
It would be convenient to distinguish the cases as
space-extensive, item-extensive and timeextensive respectively.
See also: Externalities - OECD
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
External economies /
diseconomies
See Externalities
See also: Intensive sampling
External positions
See Cross-border positions
See also: Externalities
External assets and
Compte des actifs et
liabilities account
passifs extérieurs
The external assets and liabilities account reflects
the level and composition of the stock of external
financial assets and liabilities of the economy that
result from the external transactions accounts and
accumulation accounts
See also: Cross-border positions
Externalisation of
environmental
protection ancillary
activities
The ancillary activity is treated as if it were an
external activity, identifying all the costs, including
labour input and the consumption of fixed capital
related to the activity. The value of the ancillary
output is then set equal to the costs incurred and
is treated as intermediate consumption in much
the same way as an external purchase of services
by the establishment.
Source: SNA 14.156
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
External auditors
Refers to the auditors of an organisation which are
not under the control of the organisation and may
not report to objectives set by the organisation.
External auditors are often distinguished from
internal auditors.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.75
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
Externalities - OECD
283
Externalities refers to situations when the effect of
production or consumption of goods and services
imposes costs or benefits on others which are not
reflected in the prices charged for the goods and
services being provided.
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.30 B
Extra-budgetary
activities
The term generally refers to sets of government
transactions that are not included in the annual
budget presentation. These may not be subject to
the same level of scrutiny or accounting standards
as the annual budget.
Context: Pollution is an obvious example of a
negative externality, also termed an external
diseconomy. Chemicals dumped by an industrial
plant into a lake may kill fish and plant life and
affect the livelihood of fishermen and farmers
nearby.
In contrast, a positive externality or external
economy may arise from the construction of a road
which opens a new area for housing, commercial
development, tourism, etc. The invention of the
transistor generated numerous positive
externalities in the manufacture of modern
telecommunication, stereo and computer
equipment. Externalities arise when property rights
cannot be clearly assigned.
Context: A wide variety of extra-budgetary
arrangements are used, including extra-budgetary
funds (such as social security funds) set up under
separate legislation that may or may not have a
separate annual appropriation. Other examples
include commodity funds that use proceeds of
commodity aid, earmarking specific kinds of
revenue for specific purposes not included in the
annual budget, or any other use of public funds
that is not appropriated.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Extraction of natural
resources (value)
The total quantity of extractions of natural
resources times the realised price per unit.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Externalities - SNA, Market failure
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.168
Externalities - SNA
Externalités
Externalities are changes in the condition or
circumstances of institutional units caused by the
economic actions of other units without the
consent of the former
Source: SNA [3.51]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Extramural R&D
Dépenses extramuros de R&D
Extramural expenditures includes all the R&D
expenditures spent outside of the statistical unit.
Those data are a useful supplement to the
information collected on intramural expenditures.
These extramural expenditure data are essential
for providing statistics on R&D performed abroad
but financed by domestic institutions.
See also: Externalities - OECD
Extinct species
Espèce disparu
Extinct species are species not definitely located in
the wild during the past 50 years
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: OECD, Main definitions and conventions
for the measurement of Research and
Experimental Development (R&D), A summary of
the Frascati Manual 1993, p.20
Extra cost (criterion)
In the case of more environmentally friendly
technologies and changes in processes and
products, the investment and operating
expenditure are compared to those of a ―standard‖
or less environmentally beneficial alternative, if
there is one, or the estimated additional cost of
incorporating the environmentally beneficial
feature.
See also: Intramural expenditures (on research
and development)
Extranet
Linked network of intranets or part of a company‘s
intranet that is extended to users outside the
company. They may be used to share securely part
of a business‘s information or operations with
suppliers, vendors, partners or customers.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Source: BIS Business papers, November 2001,
Glossary, J. Hawkins
284
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/bispap07l.pdf
Facilities-based
service supplier (or
operator)
A telecommunications service provider owning, as
opposed to leasing, networks used to provide
telecommunications services.
Extraterritoriality
Extraterritoriality refers to the application of one
country‘s laws within the jurisdiction of another
country.
Source: Telecommunications services: Glossary of
terms – World Trade Organisation
Context: In the context of competition policy, the
issue of extraterritoriality would arise if the
business practices of firm(s) in one country had an
anti-competitive effect in another country which
the latter considered to be in violation of its laws.
For example, an export cartel formed by
companies which may be exempt from competition
laws of country A may nevertheless be viewed as a
price-fixing agreement to limit competition in
markets of country B and in violation of the latter
country‘s antitrust laws.
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/tratop_e/serv_e/t
elecom_e/tel12_e.htm
Facsimile devices
(FAX)
Devices that allow for the communication of a
printed page between remote locations, usually
over private lines or the public dial-up telephone
system.
Another situation that could arise is a merger
between two competing firms in one country
resulting in substantial lessening of competition in
the markets of another country. (This can arise if
the merging companies are primarily exportoriented and account for the bulk of the market in
the importing country.)
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Whether or not companies can be successfully
prosecuted for violations of competition laws of
another country is importantly dependent, among
other factors, on the nature of the sovereign
relationship between the countries involved, where
the alleged violation has taken place, the legal
status of the business practice or action in the
originating country and the existence of subsidiary
operations and significant assets in the affected
country against which legal actions can be brought
forward.
Factor cost
Coût des facteurs
Gross value added at factor cost is not a concept
used explicitly in the System of National Accounts
but it can easily be derived by subtracting the
value of any taxes, less subsidies, on production
payable out of gross value added
Source: SNA 6.229
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Factor incomes
Factor incomes comprises compensation of
employees by, and operating surplus of, producers
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Face value
The amount of principal to be repaid (for example,
the redemption amount of a bond). Sometimes
called initial contractual value, for loans, the face
value is the original amount of the loan as stated
in the loan contract. If the loan is not fully
disbursed, then the face value will include future
disbursements, just as the face value of a zerocoupon bond includes interest that has not yet
accrued.
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Factor reversal test
Test de réversibilité
par rapport aux
facteurs
The factor reversal test requires that multiplying a
price index and a volume index of the same type
should be equal to the proportionate change in the
current values (e.g. the ―Fisher Ideal‖ price and
volume indexes satisfy this test, unlike either the
Paasche or Laspeyres indexes)
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Context: Suppose the roles of the prices and
quantities in a price index are reversed to yield a
quantity index of exactly the same functional form
as the price index. The factor reversal test used
under the axiomatic approach requires that the
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
285
product of this quantity index and the original price
index should be identical with the proportionate
change in the value of the aggregate in question.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Also known as the ―product test‖.
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Monetary Fund, Washington
DC
Failing firm
A failing firm is a firm that has been consistently
earning negative profits and losing market share to
such an extent that it is likely to go out of
business.
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Context: The concept becomes an issue in merger
analysis when the acquiring firm argues that the
acquisition of such a firm does not result in
substantial lessening of competition since it is
likely to exit the market anyway. If this is true, the
"current" market share of the failing firm may have
no "future" competitive significance and should be
weighted accordingly.
Source: SNA 16.24
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Factory gate price
A basic price with the ―factory gate‖ as the pricing
point, that is, the price of the product available at
the factory, excluding any separately billed
transport or delivery charge.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
FAIR Act, 1996
FAIR Act, 1966
The FAIR Act, 1996, officially known as the Federal
Agriculture Improvement and Reform Act of 1996.
This US legislation replaces the 1990 Farm Act and
governs almost all aspects of food and agriculture
policy during the period 1996-2002
Failed edit
A failed edit identifies data errors with certainty.
Examples are a geographic code for a Canadian
province that does not exist in a table of
acceptable geographic codes.
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Fair value - IMF
The fair value of a financial asset or liability refers
to the value that approximates the value that
would arise from a market transaction between
unrelated parties.
Context: Fair values can be used in most situations
in which market-price data are unavailable. Two
general methods for establishing fair values
involve use of either:
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
· Market prices of financial assets and liabilities
that are market traded but otherwise similar to the
non-traded financial assets and liabilities that are
being fair valued; or
Failed edit graph
A failed edit graph as used by the U.S. Bureau of
the Census, a graph containing nodes
(corresponding to fields) which are connected by
arcs (an arc between two nodes indicates that the
two fields are involved in an edit failure.) Deleting
a node is equivalent to choosing that field to be
imputed. A minimal set of deleted nodes is
equivalent to a minimal set as defined by Fellegi
and Holt.
· Discounted present values of future cash flows
from nontraded financial assets and liabilities
Source: Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual,
IMF, Washington, 2000, paras. 219-220
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/mfs/manual/i
ndex.htm
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
See also: Fair value - OECD
Fair value - OECD
286
Juste valeur - OCDE
use.
The price at which an asset would change hands
between a willing buyer and a willing seller, neither
being under any compulsion to buy or to sell and
both having reasonable knowledge of relevant
facts.
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.63
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Family-based settlers
Immigrants admis au
titre du regroupement
familial
Family-based settlers are foreigners selected for
long-term settlement because of the family ties
they have with citizens or foreigners already
residing in the receiving country
See also: Fair value - IMF, Market value - OECD(2)
Fallowing - OECD
Fallowing is the management practice of leaving
land in an uncropped state for a period of time
prior to sowing another crop. Its purpose is to
allow for the accumulation and retention of water
and mineralised nutrients in the soil, and generally
to also allow for weed control
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
FAO
See Food and Agriculture Organisation
See also: Fallow agricultural land - UN
See also: Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO)
Fallowing - UN
Jachère
Fallow agricultural land refers to arable land not
under rotation that is set aside for a period of time
ranging from one to five years before it is
cultivated again; or land, usually under permanent
crops, meadows or pastures, that is not being used
for such purposes for a period of at least one year.
Farm financial
resources
Farm financial resources or farm income consist of
market returns on agricultural production, loans
and equity capital, and transfers due to agricultural
policies from taxpayers (government budgetary
support) and consumers (through market price
support)
Arable land that is normally used for the cultivation
of temporary crops, but temporarily used for
grazing, is included
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Farm gate price
A basic price with the ―farm gate‖ as the pricing
point, that is, the price of the product available at
the farm, excluding any separately billed transport
or delivery charge.
See also: Fallowing - OECD
FAME
Forecasting, Analysis and Modelling Environment a database tool mainly used for the production of
statistical tables.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Family cash benefits
Family cash benefits includes expenditure which
support families (i.e. excluding one-person
households). This expenditure is often related to
the costs associated with raising children or with
the support of other dependants
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
See also: Producer price (agricultural commodities)
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Farm Security and
Rural Investment
(FSRI) Act, 2002
(United States)
The new six year US Farm Act known as the Farm
Security and Rural Investment (FSRI) Act 20022007, was signed on 13 May will replace the FAIR
Act of 1996.
Family within the
Famille à l'intérieur du
household
ménage
The family within the household is defined as those
members of the household who are related, to a
specific degree, through blood, adoption or
marriage. The degree of relationship used in
determining the limits of the family in this sense is
dependent upon the uses to which the data are to
be put and so cannot be established for world-wide
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2002-2007,
OECD, Paris, 2002 – Annex II. Glossary of Terms
287
Farmstead
Ferme
A farmstead is an entity comprising the main
building, adjacent yards, kitchen, garden and
family orchard on a farm
Federal Communications Commission
FDI
See Foreign Direct Investment
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Foreign direct investment
Feasible region
See Acceptance region
Fatal edit
A fatal edit identifies data errors with certainty.
Examples are a geographic code for a Canadian
province that does not exist in a table of
acceptable geographic codes.
See also: Acceptance region
Federal Milk
Marketing Orders
(FMMO)
Programmes fédéraux
d‟organisation de la
commercialisation du
lait
The Federal Milk Marketing Orders (FMMO) is a
system designed to facilitate the marketing of milk
in the United States, by specifying conditions
under which milk handlers must operate within
certain geographic areas
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
See also: Fatal errors, Query edit
Feedlot
Elevage hors-sol
A feedlot is a relatively small confined area for the
controlled feeding of animals. It tends to
concentrate large amounts of animal wastes that
cannot be absorbed by the soil and hence may be
carried to nearby streams or taken by rainfall run
off
Fatal errors
Fatal errors are errors identified by fatal edits.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Feerd-Hastly Method
See Least square method for autocorrection
See also: Fatal edit
See also: Least squares method for autocorrection
Fatal occupational
injury
For measurement purposes, a Fatal occupational
injury is an occupational injury leading to death
within one year of the day of the occupational
accident.
Fellegi-factor check
A Fellegi-factor check is a check of measuring units
verifying whether the data has been given in
correct units.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning statistics of occupational
injuries (resulting from occupational accidents),
adopted by the Sixteenth International Conference
of Labour Statisticians (October 1998), page 5
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Fellegi-Holt systems,
tenets, principles
In reference to assumptions and editing and
imputation goals put forth by Fellegi and Holt in
their 1976 Journal of the American Statistical
Association paper. A key feature of the Fellegi-Holt
model is that it shows that implied edits are
FATS
See Foreign Affiliates Trade in Services (FATS)
See also: Foreign Affiliates Trade in Services
(FATS)
FCC
288
needed to assure that a set of values in data fields
that are not imputed always lead to final (imputed)
records that satisfy all edits.
Field capacity refers to the amount of water held in
a soil after gravitational water has drained away
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Field of study (in
Domaine de formation
education statistics)
Field of study, as defined in International Standard
Classification of Education (ISCED), is as the
subject matter taught in an education programme.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Context: For details and implementation, see the
Fields of Education and Training - Manual
(EUROSTAT, 1999).
FEOGA
See European Agricultural Guidance and Guarantee
Fund
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: European Agricultural Guidance and
Guarantee Fund (EAGGF)
FIFO (first-in-firstout)
FIFO (First-in-firstout ) premier entré,
premier sorti
FIFO (first-in-first-out) is an inventory valuation
method based on the assumption that goods are
withdrawn from inventories in the same order as
they entered
Ferry
See Passenger ship
See also: Passenger ship
Fertility rates, Total
Refers to the number of children that would be
born per woman, assuming no female mortality at
child bearing ages and the age-specific fertility
rates of a specified country and reference period.
Source: SNA 6.70
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: United Nations, 1958, Multilingual
Demographic Dictionary, English Section.
Department of Economic and Social Affairs,
Population Studies, No. 29, United Nations, New
York, para . 634
See also: LIFO (last-in-first- out)
Fighting brand
A Fighting brand refers to a new brand of an
existing or similar product which is priced very low
or below costs and is made available for a limited
time period in specific market areas in order to
combat competition from other (usually smaller)
firms.
Fertilizers
Engrais
Fertilizers are organic or inorganic substances
containing chemical elements that improve the
growth of plants and the fertility of the soil. The
percentage content of nutrients in organic
fertilizers (manure‘s) is relatively low.
Context: Firms introduce "fighting brands" to avoid
lowering the prices charged for their established
brands as this may prove to be costly for reasons
such as these established brands being priced
uniformly across a wide number of markets.
Fighting brands' are often viewed as a form of
predation or anticompetitive practice intended to
drive out competitors from a given market. As with
other forms of predation, however, their chances
of success are limited.
In inorganic or mineral fertilizers, the nutrients are
inorganic salts, obtained by extraction and/or
physical and chemical processes. The three
primary plant nutrients are nitrogen, phosphorus
and potassium
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Field
A column in a database table.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Field capacity
See also: Predatory pricing
File format
Arrangement of data in a computer file (e.g.
records and fields, numeric and alphanumeric,
fixed or floating-point etc.). Usually referred to
Capacité au champ
289
simply as format.
The fund member‘s earnings that are used to
calculate the pension benefit in a defined benefit
plan; it is typically the earnings of the last few
years prior to retirement.
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Final consumption
Consommation finale
Final consumption consists of goods and services
used up by individual households or the
community to satisfy their individual or collective
needs or wants
File transfer protocol
(FTP)
A standard set of conventions for exchanging
computer data files in digital communications
systems such as the Internet.
Source: SNA 1.49
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Final consumption
expenditure of
government
Dépense de
consommation finale
des administrations
publiques
Government final consumption expenditure
consists of expenditure, including imputed
expenditure, incurred by general government on
both individual consumption goods and services
and collective consumption services
Film Optical Sensing
Device for Input to
Computers (FOSDIC)
An optical device that reads the location of filled-in
dots on a precisely aligned form that has been
microfilmed, converting the data to a magnetic
tape format. FOSDIC dots represent numeric or
alphabetic codes.
Source: SNA 9.94
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Final consumption
Dépense de
expenditure of
consommation finale
households
des ménages
Household final consumption expenditure consists
of the expenditure, including imputed expenditure,
incurred by resident households on individual
consumption goods and services, including those
sold at prices that are not economically significant
Filter
Filtre
Any method of isolating harmonic constituents in a
time series; a mathematical analogy of the
―filtering‖ of a ray of light or sound by removing
unsystematic effects and bringing out the
constituent harmonics.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: SNA 9.94 [9.45]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Filtration
Filtration
Filtration refers to a treatment process for
removing solid particulate matter from water by
passing it through porous media such as sand or
artificially produced filters. This process is often
used to remove particles that contain pathogenic
organisms
Final consumption
Dépense de
expenditure of nonconsommation finale
profit institutions
des ISBLSM
serving households
Final consumption expenditure of non-profit
institutions serving households (NPISHs) consists
of the expenditure, including imputed expenditure,
incurred by resident NPISHs on individual
consumption goods and services
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: SNA 9.94
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Final average
earnings
Gains moyens de fin
de carrière
Final earnings scheme Régime des gains de
290
fin de carrière
See Final salary scheme
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Final salary scheme
Final expenditure
Dépense finale
Final expenditure consists of final consumption
expenditure and gross fixed capital formation
See also: Defined benefit pension plans - OECD,
Final average earnings, Flat rate scheme
Final use quadrant
Quadrant des emplois
finals
The final use quadrant (of the ―use table‖ in an
input-output system) shows exports, final
consumption expenditure and gross capital
formation at purchasers‘ prices in the columns
each classified by products in the rows
Source: SNA [1.57]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Final expenditure
price index (FEPI)
A measure of the changes in prices paid by
consumers, businesses and government for final
purchases of goods and services. Intermediate
purchases are excluded.
Source: SNA 15.73
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Finance companies
Finance companies are institutional units primarily
engaged in the extension of credit to non-financial
corporations and households.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Context: Many finance companies are captive
subsidiaries that raise funds to be used by the
parent corporations.
Final maturity date
The date on which a debt obligation is contracted
to be extinguished.
Captive finance companies that are separate
institutional units and that do not issue liabilities
included in broad money should be classified as
other financial intermediaries.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Finance companies that are not separate should be
included as part of the parent corporations in the
appropriate subsector.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual,
IMF, Washington, 2000, para. 100
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/mfs/manual/i
ndex.htm
See also: Original maturity of an instrument,
Remaining (residual) maturity
Final products
Products purchased for own use and not for resale
or for embodiment in a product for resale; those
purchased by households, by government or by
business on capital account.
Financial accelerators
Refers to response of credit market conditions to
"shocks" to the economy that may amplify and
spread the effect of the shocks. For example,
credit may become harder to obtain for households
and firms in an economic downturn, which can
make the downturn more severe and prolonged.
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
Source: OECD Economic Outlook Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/28/54/1890650.ht
m
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Financial account Ŕ
Compte financier ESA
SEC
The financial account records, by type of financial
instrument, the changes in the financial assets and
liabilities that compose net lending or borrowing.
The classification of assets and liabilities used in
the financial account is identical to that used in the
balance sheets
Final salary scheme
Régime du dernier
salaire
A type of defined benefit plan, whereby the
pension benefit is typically based on the last few
years‘ earnings before retirement.
Context: Identical term, "Final earnings scheme"
291
tax reductions, tax subsidies, or other special tax
provisions are not included;
Source: ESA 8.50-8.51 [III.2]
See also: Financial account – SNA
ii) Student loans, which are reported on a gross
basis, that is, without subtracting or netting out
repayments or interest payments from the
borrowers (students or households).
Financial account Ŕ
Compte financier SNA
SCN
The financial account records all transactions in
financial assets and liabilities
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: SNA 11.1 [1.9, 11.103]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Financial assets
Actifs financiers
Financial assets are entities over which ownership
rights are enforced by institutional units,
individually or collectively, and from which
economic benefits may be derived by their owners
by holding them, or using them over a period of
time; they differ from other assets in the SNA in
that there is a counterpart liability on the part of
another institutional unit (except for monetary gold
and Special Drawing Rights (SDRs)
See also: Financial account – ESA
Financial agencies
Financial agencies refers to the bodies responsible
for the regulation, supervision, and oversight of
the financial and payment systems, including
markets and institutions, which aim to promote
financial stability, market efficiency, and clientasset and consumer protection.
Source: SNA 13.20 [10.5, 11.16, 11.17, (AF) –
Annex to chapter XIII]
Context: Some countries have an agency that has
been established with responsibility for regulating
and supervising an array of financial institutions
(banking, insurance, and securities firms) and
markets (securities, derivatives, and commodity
futures). For most countries, the oversight
responsibility for the financial sector is shared
among several agencies.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Non-financial assets
Financial auxiliaries
Auxiliaires financiers
Financial auxiliaries consist of all resident
corporations and quasi-corporations engaged
primarily in activities closely related to financial
intermediation but which do not themselves
perform an intermediation role
Thus, responsibility for the conduct of bank
regulation and supervision or for bank deposit
insurance policies in some countries may be
assigned to the central bank, or to an independent
bank supervisory or deposit insurance agency, or
split among several units of government.
Source: SNA 4.96
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Similarly, responsibility for the conduct of policies
related to the oversight of certain categories of
financial institutions may be assigned to the
central bank or to a specialized agency.
Financial claims
Créances financières
Financial claims and obligations arise out of
contractual relationships between pairs of
institutional units.
Source: Code of Good Practices on Transparency in
Monetary and Financial Policies, Part 1—
Introduction, Approved by the IMF Executive Board
on July 24, 2000.
A financial claim:
(a) entitles a creditor to receive a payment, or
payments, from a debtor in circumstances
specified in a contract between them; or
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/mae/mft/sup/part
1.htm#appendix_III
(b) specifies between the two parties certain rights
or obligations, the nature of which requires them
to be treated as financial
Financial aid to
Aides financieres aux
students
élèves et étudiants
Financial aid to students comprises:
Source: SNA 11.17 [10.4, 11.18]
i) Government scholarships and other government
grants to students or households. These include, in
addition to scholarships and similar grants
(fellowships, awards, bursaries, etc.), the following
items: the value of special subsidies provided to
students, either in cash or in kind, such as free or
reduced-price travel on public transport systems;
and family allowances or child allowances that are
contingent on student status. Any benefits
provided to students or households in the form of
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Financial control
See Management control
See also: Management control
Financial corporations Sociétés financières
292
Financial corporations consist of all resident
corporations or quasi-corporations principally
engaged in financial intermediation or in auxiliary
financial activities which are closely related to
financial intermediation
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Financial guarantee
corporations
Financial guarantee corporations insure customers
against losses to specified financial corporations or
against financial loss on specific contracts.
Source: SNA 4.77 [2.20]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Guarantors must establish financial capability for
fulfilling potential obligations, and they must
agree— usually for a fee—to insure that investors
receive payment on securities or other financial
contracts.
See also: Non-financial corporations
Financial credit
See Buyer credit
See also: Buyer (buyer‘s) credit
In addition, the financial guarantee corporations
grouping includes specialized corporations that
protect depositors and investors against the failure
of individual financial corporations.
Financial derivative
intermediaries
Financial derivative intermediaries consist of units
that engage primarily in issuing or taking positions
in financial derivatives recognized as financial
assets
Context: Distinguishing precisely between financial
guarantee corporations and insurance corporations
is difficult.
Source: Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual,
IMF, Washington, 2000, para. 100
Guarantee corporations:
(1) do not have a definable pool of assets
constituting insurance technical reserves,
(2) do not carry positions off balance sheet,
(3) may not be regulated as insurance
corporations, and
(4) may be limited to specific types of financial
transactions.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/mfs/manual/i
ndex.htm
Financial derivatives
Sociétés financières
Financial derivatives are financial instruments that
are linked to a specific financial instrument or
indicator or commodity, and through which specific
financial risks can be traded in financial markets in
their own right; their value derives from the price
of the underlying item (i.e. the reference price)
and, unlike debt instruments, no principal amount
is advanced to be repaid and no investment
income accrues.
In borderline cases, these units should be classified
as insurance corporations.
Source: Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual,
IMF, Washington, 2000, para. 101
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/mfs/manual/i
ndex.htm
Context: In accordance with the 2000 revision of
the fifth edition of the IMF‘s Balance of Payments
Manual (BPM5), income from financial derivatives
(such as interest rate swaps) is no longer
considered to be Income on Debt (Interest) in the
balance of payments.
Financial Instrument Instrument financier
for Fisheries Guidance d‟orientation de la
(FIFG)
pêche (IFOP)
The Financial Instrument for Fisheries Guidance
(FIFG) is the European Union‘s principal instrument
for funding measures such as the permanent
withdrawal of vessels, fleet renewal and
modernisation, investment in aquaculture, and
development of coastal waters, port facilities,
processing and marketing
OECD & IMF, 2004, Glossary of Foreign Direct
Investment Terms and Definitions, Paris and
Washington DC
Source: SNA 11.34 [(AF) – Annex to chapter XIII]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Financial enterprises
Entreprises
financières
Financial enterprises are enterprises that are
principally engaged in financial intermediation or in
auxiliary financial activities which are closely
related to financial intermediation
Financial
Intermédiaires
intermediaries
financiers
Financial intermediaries are units which incur
liabilities on their own account on financial markets
by borrowing funds which they lend on different
terms and conditions to other institutional units
Source: SNA 4.79
Context: For the purposes of balance of payments
data, financial intermediaries are defined as being:
293
(i) other depository institutions (banks, other than
the central bank);
See also: Financial lease – SNA
Financial lease Ŕ SNA
Contrat de crédit-bail
- SCN
A financial lease is a contract between lessor and
lessee whereby the lessor purchases a good that is
put at the disposal of the lessee and the lessee
pays rentals that enable the lessor, over the period
of the contract, to cover all, or virtually all, costs,
including interest; all the risks and rewards of
ownership are, de facto, transferred from the legal
owner of the good (the lessor) to the user of the
good (the lessee)
(ii) other financial intermediaries, except insurance
companies and pension funds; and
(iii) financial auxiliaries.
The definition would therefore include Special
Purpose Enterprises (SPEs), whose sole function is
financial intermediation, and enterprises such as
security dealers, whose function is the provision of
services auxiliary to financial intermediation.
Source: SNA 6.124
OECD & IMF, 2004, Glossary of Foreign Direct
Investment Terms and Definitions, Paris and
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 6.121
See also: Financial lease – BPM
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Financial leasing
companies
Financial leasing companies engage in financing
the purchase of tangible assets. The leasing
company is the legal owner of the goods, but
ownership is effectively conveyed to the lessee,
who incurs all benefits, costs, and risks associated
with ownership of the assets
Financial
Intermédiation
intermediation
financière
Financial intermediation is a productive activity in
which an institutional unit incurs liabilities on its
own account for the purpose of acquiring financial
assets by engaging in financial transactions on the
market; the role of financial intermediaries is to
channel funds from lenders to borrowers by
intermediating between them
Source: Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual,
IMF, Washington, 2000, para. 100
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/mfs/manual/i
ndex.htm
Source: SNA 4.78
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Financial liability
A financial liability (1) requires a debtor to make a
payment, or payments, to a creditor in
circumstances specified in a contract between
them; or (2) specifies between the two parties
certain rights or obligations, the nature of which
requires them to be treated as financial
Financial
intermediation
services indirectly
measured (FISIM)
Services
d‟intermédiation
financière
indirectement
mesurés (SIFIM)
Financial intermediation services indirectly
measured (FISIM) is an indirect measure of the
value of financial intermediation services provided
but for which financial institutions do not charge
explicitly
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: SNA 6.124
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Financial management
Covers the legal and administrative systems and
procedures put in place to permit government
ministries and agencies to conduct their activities
so as to ensure correct usage of public funds which
meets defined standards of probity and regularity.
Financial lease Ŕ BPM
Contrat de crédit-bail
- MBP
The financial lease essentially is a method by
which the lessee finances the purchase of goods.
The financial lease entails a financial claim, which
is the asset of the lessor and the liability of the
lessee
Source: BPM para. 417
These activities include the raising of revenue, the
management and control of public expenditure and
financial accounting and reporting, and, in some
cases, asset management.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
294
Useful Terms
macroeconomic stability stemming from the
capacity of the financial sector to absorb
macroeconomic shocks.
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Financial policies
Financial policies refers to policies related to the
regulation, supervision, and oversight of the
financial and payment systems, including markets
and institutions, with the view to promoting
financial stability, market efficiency, and clientasset and consumer protection.
Financial Soundness
Indicators (FSIs)
FSIs are indicators of the current financial health
and soundness of the financial institutions in a
country, and of their corporate and household
counterparts. They include both aggregated
individual institution data and indicators that are
representative of the markets in which the financial
institutions operate.
Source: Code of Good Practices on Transparency in
Monetary and Financial Policies, Part 1—
Introduction, Approved by the IMF Executive Board
on July 24, 2000.
Context: FSIs are calculated and disseminated for
the purpose of supporting macroprudential
analysis. This is the assessment and surveillance of
the strengths and vulnerabilities of financial
systems, with the objective of enhancing financial
stability and, in particular, limiting the likelihood of
failure of the financial system.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/mae/mft/sup/part
1.htm#appendix_III
Financial sector
The financial sector is the set of institutions,
instruments, and the regulatory framework that
permit transactions to be made by incurring and
settling debts; that is, by extending credit.
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC, para.
1.2
Context: The financial system makes possible the
separation of the ownership of wealth from the
control of physical capital. As an economy
develops, the financial sector deepens, strengthens
and widens: terms that refer to the increase in the
nature and number of financial instruments, the
interrelationship and sophistication of financial
institutions, and the geographical penetration and
extent of financial markets (for short, financial
sector development).
Financial Stability
Forum (FSF)
The FSF was created in February 1999 to promote
international financial stability through enhanced
information exchange and international
cooperation in financial market supervision and
surveillance.
Context: The FSF brings together, on a regular
basis, national authorities responsible for financial
stability in significant international financial
centres, international financial institutions, sectorspecific international groupings of regulators and
supervisors, and committees of central bank
experts. The Forum is serviced by a secretariat
housed at the BIS.
Source: Alexander, P., Baden, S., 2000, Glossary
on macroeconomics from a gender perspective,
Institute of Development Studies, University of
Sussex
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/52/56/31594934.p
df
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Financial Sector
Assessment Program
(FSAP)
A joint IMF and World Bank program introduced in
May 1999, the FSAP aims to increase the
effectiveness of efforts to promote the soundness
of financial systems in member countries.
Financial statement
The accounts drawn up by an organisation to
report its financial affairs. Financial statements are
often prepared under regulations governing
matters such as their content and publication.
Context: Supported by experts from a range of
national agencies and standard-setting bodies,
work under the program seeks to identify the
strengths and vulnerabilities of a country's
financial system; to determine how key sources of
risk are being managed; to ascertain the sector's
developmental and technical assistance needs; and
to help prioritize policy responses. It also forms the
basis of Financial System Stability Assessments, in
which IMF staff address financial sector issues of
relevance to IMF surveillance, including risks to
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
295
Financial statement
assertion
An assertion relating to a set of financial
statements which may be considered by an auditor
as part of the audit procedures. For example, an
assertion may be made that the financial
statements reflect a complete record of all of the
financial transactions carried out by an
organisation in the period, and an auditor may
carry out procedures to test that assertion.
In the balance of payments, transactions in the
financial account component of the capital and
financial account would correspond to entries in
columns for the financial account of the rest of the
world, but changes in assets of the rest of the
world would represent changes in liabilities for the
compiling economy and vice versa
Source: BPM para. 52
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
See also: Financial transactions – SNA
Financial transactions Opérations financières
Ŕ SNA
Ŕ SCN
Financial transactions between institutional units
and between institutional units and the rest of the
world cover all transactions involving change of
ownership of financial assets, including the
creation and liquidation of financial claims
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Financial statistics
Financial statistics consist of a comprehensive set
of stock and flow data on the financial assets and
liabilities of all sectors of an economy. The financial
statistics are organised and presented in formats
designed to show financial flows among the sectors
of an economy and corresponding financial asset
and liability positions
Source: SNA 11.13
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Financial transactions – BPM
Source: Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual,
IMF, Washington DC, 2000, para. 11
Financing of national
environmental
protection
expenditure
One of the table of the SERIEE system that
describes the way environmental protection
expenditure are financed by the various categories
of units.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/mfs/manual/i
ndex.htm
See also: Monetary statistics
Financial system
A financial system consists of institutional units
and markets that interact, typically in a complex
manner, for the purpose of mobilizing funds for
investment, and providing facilities, including
payment systems, for the financing of commercial
activity.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.135
Context: The role of financial institutions within the
system is primarily to intermediate between those
that provide funds and those that need funds, and
typically involves transforming and managing risk.
Particularly for a deposit-taker, this risk arises
from its role in maturity transformation, where
liabilities are typically short term, (e.g., demand
deposits), while its assets have a longer maturity
and are often illiquid (e.g., loans).
See also: SERIEE
Findings (audit)
Pertinent statements of fact. Audit findings emerge
by a process of comparing what should be with
what is.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Financial markets provide a forum within which
financial claims can be traded under established
rules of conduct, and can facilitate the
management and transformation of risk. They also
play an important role in identifying market prices
(―price discovery‖).
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC, para.
2.2
Fine-tuning operation
A non-regular open market operation executed by
the Eurosystem mainly in order to deal with
unexpected liquidity fluctuations in the market.
Financial transactions Opérations financières
Ŕ BPM
Ŕ MBP
296
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
See also: FIFO (first-in-first- out), LIFO (last-infirst- out)
First-order autocorrelation
Is a measure of to what extent the level of
economic activity currently depends upon the level
in the past. The higher the degree of dependence
the longer or more persistent the business cycle
will be.
Finished goods,
Stocks de produits
inventories of
finis
See Inventories of finished goods
See also: Inventories of finished goods
Finite population
A population of individuals which are finite in
number.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Source:
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th edition,
prepared for the International Statistical Institute
by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the International
Statistical Institute by Longman Scientific and
Technical
See also: Autocorrelation
Fiscal consolidation
Fiscal consolidation is a policy aimed at reducing
government deficits and debt accumulation
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Firewall
A hardware- and/or software-based system that is
used as an interface between the internet and a
computer system to monitor and filter incoming
and outgoing communications.
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: A glossary of terms used in payments and
settlement systems, July 2001, Committee on
Payment and Settlement Systems, Bank for
International Settlements
Fiscal drag
Fiscal drag is the (endogenous) effect of changes
in economic activity and incomes on tax revenues
due to the progessivity of the tax system
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/cpss00b.pdf
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Firmware
Computer programs and procedures programmed
onto a card or board and inserted into or fixed in a
computer. It is not changeable by software
commands.
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Fiscal operations
Fiscal operations are actions taken by the
government to implement budgetary policies, such
as revenue and expenditure measures, as well as
issuance of public debt instruments and public debt
management.
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Source: Code of Good Practices on Transparency in
Monetary and Financial Policies, Part 1—
Introduction, Approved by the IMF Executive Board
on July 24, 2000.
First-generation
Élèves de la première
students
génération
―First-generation‖ are those students who reported
in the Programme for International Student
Evaluation (PISA) that they were born in the
country of assessment but whose parents were
born in another country.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/mae/mft/sup/part
1.htm#appendix_III
See also: Native students, Non-native students
Fiscal sustainability
A set of policies is sustainable if a borrower is
expected to be able to continue servicing its debt
without an unrealistically large future correction to
the balance of income and expenditure.
First-in-first-out
(FIFO)
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
First-in-first-out
(FIFO) : premier
entré, premier sorti
See FIFO
Fiscal transparency
297
Openness toward the public at large about
government structure and functions, fiscal policy
intentions, public sector accounts, and projections.
Fisher type PPP
The PPP for a basic heading or an aggregate
between two countries that is defined as the
geometric mean of the Laspeyres type PPP and the
Paasche type PPP for the basic heading or the
aggregate.
It involves ready access to reliable,
comprehensive, timely, understandable, and
internationally comparable information on
government activities so that the electorate and
financial markets can accurately assess the
government‘s financial position and the true costs
and benefits of government activities, including
their present and future economic and social
implications.
Context: See also ―Laspeyres type PPP‖ and
―Paasche type PPP‖ because their formulation
depends on whether they are being used to
calculate basic heading PPPs or to aggregate basic
heading PPPs.
(Kopits, George, and Jon Craig, 1998,
Transparency in Government Operations, IMF
Occasional Paper No. 158 (Washington:
International Monetary Fund), p. 1)
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Fisher‟s Ideal Index
Indice idéal de Fisher
(price)
(de prix)
Fisher‘s Ideal price index is the geometric mean of
the Laspeyres and Paasche price indices
FISD
See Framework for indicators of sustainable
development
Source: SNA 16.24
See also: Framework for indicators of sustainable
development (FISD)
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Fish
Produits de la mer
The term fish when used as a noun, can include:
See also: Fisher‘s Ideal Index (volume), Time
reversal test
(a) parts of a fish;
(b) shellfish, crustaceans, other marine animals
and any parts of shellfish, crustaceans or other
marine animals; and
(c) the eggs, sperm, spawn, larvae, spat and
juvenile stages of fish, shell fish, crustaceans and
other marine animals
Fisher‟s Ideal Index
Indice idéal de Fisher
(volume)
(de volume)
Fisher‘s Ideal volume index is the geometric mean
of the Laspeyres and Paasche volume indices
Context: A measure of change in volume from
period to period. It is calculated as the geometric
mean of a chain Paasche volume index and a chain
Laspeyres volume index. In other words, it is an
average of two distinct measures of change in
volume: one calculated as if prices were constant
in the first of two adjacent periods (Laspeyres
volume) and the other calculated as if prices were
constant in the second of the two adjacent periods
(Paasche volume) - (Chain Fisher Volume Index,
Glossary - Statistics Canada. Available at
http://www.statcan.ca/english/concepts/chainfishe
r/glossary.htm#index).
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Fish farming
See Aquaculture
Pisiculture
See also: Acquaculture
Fish stock
The living resources in the community or
population. Use of the term fish stock usually
implies that the particular population is more or
less isolated from other stocks of the same species
and hence self-sustaining. In a particular fishery,
the fish stock may be one or several species of
fish. In environmental accounting the fish stock of
a country includes all stocks which occur within the
country‘s EEZ and the part of the shared fish stock
allocated to the country on the basis of
international agreements.
Source: SNA 16.24
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Fisher‘s Ideal Index (price), Time
reversal test
Fishery
A fishery is one or more stocks of fish that can be
treated as a unit for purposes of conservation and
management and that can be identified on the
basis of geographical, scientific, technical,
recreational, and economic characteristics
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.280
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
298
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
paras. 6.36 & 6.49
Fishery Committee for Comité des pêches
the Eastern Central
pour l‟Atlantique
Atlantic (CECAF)
Centre-Est (COPACE)
The Fishery Committee for the Eastern Central
Atlantic (CECAF) is an inter-governmental
organisation established in 1967 under the
auspices of the United Nations Food and
Agricultural Organisation (FAO). Its main functions
are to promote the rational use of fisheries
resources, to assist in establishing a basis for
regulatory measures and to encourage training. Its
area of competence is the eastern central Atlantic
between Cape Spartel and the Congo River
FISIM (financial
intermediation
services indirectly
measured)
Services
d‟intermédiation
financière
indirectement
mesurés (SIFIM)
See Financial intermediation services indirectly
measured
See also: Financial intermediation services
indirectly measured (FISIM)
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Fitting
Fitting is the process of verifying whether the data
item value is in the previously specified interval.
Fishing community
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Communauté de
pêche
A fishing community is a community that is
substantially dependent on, or substantially
engaged in, the harvest or processing of fishery
resources to meet social and economic needs; the
fishing vessel owners, operators, crew and fish
processors that are based in such a community
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Fixed assets Ŕ ESA
Actifs fixes - SEC
Fixed assets are defined in national accounts as
non-financial produced assets that are used
repeatedly or continuously in production for more
than one year.
Fishing effort
Effort de pêche
The fishing effort is a measure of the amount of
fishing. Frequently some surrogate is used relating
to a given combination of inputs into the fishing
activity, such as the number of hours or days
spent fishing, numbers of hooks used (in long- line
fishing), kilometres of nets used, etc.
Fixed assets include not only dwellings, buildings,
structures, machinery and equipment but also
cultivated assets such as livestock for breeding and
vineyards. They also include intangible assets such
as computer software and entertainment, literary
or artistic originals.
The European Union defines fishing effort as fleet
capacity (tonnage and engine power) x days at sea
(time; t); the formulas are GT x t and kW x t
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Context: The SNA sets down three main types of
produced assets: fixed assets, inventories and
valuables. Both fixed assets and inventories are
assets that are held only by producers for purposes
of production.
Fishing rights /
licences
The right to exploit fishing grounds over more than
one year. When they are transferable, fishing
rights constitute an intangible non-produced asset.
Fishing rights must be distinguished from fishing
licences. Fishing licenses are payable annually and
cover the right to fish in specific waters only for
the year covered and their payment should be
regarded as a form of rent and not as the
acquisition of an asset.
In company accounts, fixed assets are not limited
to produced assets and so include land. They also
include, with certain exceptions, a wider range of
intangible assets as well as financial assets.
In business statistics, the interest in fixed assets
has traditionally centred on tangible assets
(including land), but has widened recently to also
include both intangible and financial assets.
Source: (ESA [7.15, Table 7.1]
Context: In SNA rents on land include the rents
payable to the owners of inland waters and rivers
for the right to exploit such waters for recreational
or other purposes, including fishing.
See also: Fixed assets – SNA
Fixed assets Ŕ SNA
Actifs fixes - SCN
Fixed assets are tangible or intangible assets
produced as outputs from processes of production
that are themselves used repeatedly or
continuously in other processes of production for
more than one year
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
299
Source: SNA 10.33 [1.49, 10.7, 10.26, 13.15,
(AN.11) – Annex to chapter XIII]
Fixed basket test
A test that may be used under the axiomatic
approach which requires that if all the quantities
remain unchanged (that is, the sets of quantities in
both periods are identical) the price index should
equal the proportionate change in the value of the
aggregate.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Fixed assets – ESA
Fixed base index
Indice à base fixe
An index number for which the base period for the
calculations is selected and remains unchanged
during the lifetime of the index. This is in
contradiction to a chain base index.
Also known as the ―constant quantities test‖.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
See also: Chain index - ISI
Fixed constraint check
See Fitting
Fixed basket
A set of commodities with specified and
unchanging quantitative proportions among its
constituent goods and services.
See also: Fitting
Fixed costs
Fixed costs are costs that do not vary with the
amount produced. Examples are interest on debt,
property taxes and rent.
Source: Your Guide to the Consumer Price index,
Prices Division, Statistics Canada, Glossary of
Terms.
Context: Economists also add to fixed cost an
appropriate return on capital which is sufficient to
maintain that capital in its present use. This
reflects the idea that all economic costs are
opportunity costs, the cost of foregone
alternatives. Thus, the return to capital if
employed elsewhere constitutes its opportunity
cost.
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca/english/freepub/62-557XIB/free.htm
Fixed basket price
index
The traditional conceptualisation of a price index.
The index measures the change in value of a fixed
set of quantities - commonly described as a ―fixed
basket of good and services‖ - between two
periods.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993.
A fixed basket or fixed weight index is sometimes
described as a ―pure price index‖.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Context: Because the quantities or weights remain
fixed, any change in the index is due to price
changes only. In principle, there is no restriction
on the quantities that make up the basket. They
may be those of one of the two periods being
compared, or they may refer to the quantities in
some third period, or constitute a hypothetical
basket such as an average of the quantities in the
two periods. Moreover, the quantities may refer to
a much longer period of time than the periods of
the index: for example, quantities produced over a
period of a year or more may be used for a
monthly or quarterly producer price index (PPI).
See also: Costs, Variable costs
Fixed place of work
outside the home
Travailleurs ayant un
lieu de travail fixe en
dehors du domicile
Persons with a fixed place of work outside the
home includes those who do not have a fixed place
of work but who report to a fixed address at the
beginning of their work period (for example, bus
drivers, airline pilots and stewards), including
individuals who travel to work, on a regular basis,
across the border to a neighbouring country.
Persons working at changing sites, for example, in
construction, should be recorded at the location of
their current worksite rather than the address of
their employer‘s place of business, if appearance at
this site will be required for at least one week
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.245
300
same output with the same technology.
Fixed rate bond
A bond whose coupon payments remain
unchanged for the life of the bond or for a certain
number of years.
In other words, changes in the index arise solely
from changes in input prices and are not influenced
by changes in outputs. Cost minimizing behaviour
is assumed on the part of the producer.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Fixed sample
Échantillon fixe
When a survey is repeated on several occasions,
but observations are taken on the same sample
instead of a new sample for each occasion, the
sample is said to be fixed.
Fixed-rate bond
A fixed-rate, interest-bearing debt security.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
See also: Bunny bonds
Fixed weight price
index
See Fixed basket or fixed weight price index
Fixed-weighted price
index
Also known as "Laspeyres" indexes, these are price
indexes where a fixed pattern of expenditure from
some base period is used to aggregate the detailed
price indexes in each period.
See also: Fixed basket or fixed weight price index
Fixed-input output
price index (FIOPI)
The theoretical model for an output producer price
index (PPI) based on the assumption of fixed
technology and inputs. It requires the index to
reflect changes in revenue resulting from the sale
of the same products - although not necessarily
the same mix of products - produced under the
same circumstances and sold under the same
terms.
Source: Chain Fisher Volume Index, Glossary Statistics Canada
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca/english/concepts/chainfishe
r/glossary.htm#index
Fixity
The practice of fixing the results of an International
Comparison Programme (ICP) aggregation for a
country group when the country group is compared
with a larger group. For example, the relation of
France and Italy as given by Geary-Khamis or EKS
for the 15 EU countries would be fixed so that
within OECD, the France-Italy relationship would
be preserved.
In other words, changes in the index arise solely
from changes in output prices and are not
influenced by changes in inputs. Revenue
maximizing behaviour is assumed on the part of
the producer.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Context: When results are calculated originally for
a group of countries and then later the results are
calculated for a wider group of countries, the PPPs
between the original group of countries shall
nevertheless be preserved.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
The convention whereby the price and volume
relativities between a group of countries that were
established in a comparison covering just that
group of countries remain unchanged, or fixed,
when the countries of the group are included in
comparisons with a wider group of countries.
Fixed-output input
price index (FOIPI)
The theoretical model for an input producer price
index (PPI) based on the assumption of fixed
technology and outputs. It requires the index to
reflect changes in costs resulting from the
purchase of the same inputs - although not
necessarily the same mix of inputs - purchased
under the same terms in order to produce the
For example, the price and volume relativities for
EU Member States established by Eurostat remain
301
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
unchanged when the EU Member States are
included in a comparison covering OECD Member
Countries.
If fixity was not observed, there would be two sets
of results for EU Member States. The two set would
not necessarily be in agreement because the
relative position of countries can change as the
composition of the group of countries being
compared changes. Fixity ensures that Eurostat,
the OECD and participating countries have only
one set of results to explain to users.
Flag state (for fishing État du pavilion
vessel)
A flag state in relation to a fishing vessel, is the
state under whose laws the fishing vessel is
registered or licensed; in the case of a fishing
vessel that is not registered or licensed under the
laws of any state, the flag states is the state whose
flag the fishing vessel is entitled to fly
Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
Flat
Flat (Châssis)
A loadable platform having no superstructure
whatever but having the same length and width as
the base of a container and equipped with top and
bottom corner fittings.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Context: This is an alternative term used for
certain types of specific purpose containers namely platform containers and platform-based
containers with incomplete structures.
Flag
A flag is a attribute of a cell in a data set
representing qualitative information on the value
of that cell.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Examples of qualitative information that
can be exchanged via a flag are: "provisional
value", "estimated value", "revised value",
"forecast", "unreliable or uncertain data (see
explanatory texts)", "break in series (see
explanatory texts)", "more information in...".
Flat Rate Internet
Access Call
Origination (FRIACO)
Access to call origination services for calls to
internet service providers which is charged at an
unmetered or flat rate.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
See also: Footnote, Qualitative data
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Flag of convenience
countries
Flag of convenience countries are countries with
favourable tax rules and other regulations
attracting part or whole companies whose main
business (originally shipping, now often production
or services) is outside the country
Flat rate scheme
Régime à taux
uniforme
A type of defined benefit scheme, whereby the
pension benefit is only based on the length of
membership in the scheme and is not affected by
earnings.
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Flag state
Etat du pavillon
Country of registry of a sea going vessel.
See also: Defined benefit pension plans - OECD,
Final salary scheme
Context: A sea going vessel is subject to the
maritime regulations in respect of manning scales,
safety standards and consular representation
abroad of its country of registration.
Flat wagon
Wagon plat
Wagon without roof or sides, or wagon without
roof but with sides not higher than 60 cm, or
swing-bolster wagon, of ordinary or special type.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
302
Context: Wagons designed exclusively to carry
containers, swap-bodies or goods vehicles are
excluded.
transferable securities with flexible interest rate,
fixed rate, fixed interest periods, and issued in
predetermined and uniform amounts. (External
Debt: Definition, Statistical Coverage and
Methodology, A Report by an International Working
Group on External Debt Statistics of the World
Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD, OECD, Paris, 1988,
Glossary)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
FRNs may also use short-term obligations of the
U.S. government (Treasury bills) to establish their
interest rate. Interest is payable at the end of each
interest period.
Flexible inputs
Flexible inputs are inputs to the production process
(e.g., harvesting fish) that can be substituted for
or by other inputs. The more flexible an input, the
greater the substitutability
Variants of FRN are:
-
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Flexible policy
measures
Environmental policy measures which give the
regulated agent the flexibility to adopt the most
efficient means of meeting the policy objective in
question.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Source: OECD, 2007, Business and the
Environment: Policy Incentives and Corporate
Responses, OECD, Paris
Floor area
The floor area of buildings is the sum of the area of
each floor of the building measured to the outer
surface of the outer walls including the area of
lobbies, cellars, elevator shafts and in multidwelling buildings all the common spaces. Areas of
balconies are excluded.
Flip-flop floating rate
note (FRN)
FRN that combines an FRN with a very long final
maturity, or even a perpetual issue, and an
investor option to convert after a specified period
into a short-dated FRN that typically pays a lower
margin over LIBOR than the original issue. The
investor further has the option at a later date to
convert back into the initial issue before
redemption of the short-dated note.
Context: In dwelling statistics two concepts of floor
space of a dwelling are used:
- useful floor space, which is the floor space of
dwellings measured inside the outer walls,
excluding cellars, non-habitable attics and, in
multi-dwelling houses, common areas;
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
- living floor space, which is the total area of
rooms falling under the concept of rooms
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Source: Bulletin of Housing and Building Statistics
for Europe and North America, UNECE, Geneva,
2000, Annex II, Definitions and General Terms,
page 83
Floating-rate notes
(FRNs)
FRNs are medium- to long-term debt obligations
with variable interest rates that are adjusted
periodically (typically every one, three, or six
months). The interest rate is usually fixed at a
specified spread over one of the following specified
deposit rates:
- London
- London
- London
of LIBOR
Drop-lock Bond
Mismatch FRN
Mini-max (or Collared) FRN
Capped FRN
Flip-Flop FRN
Convertible rate FRN
Variable rate note
See also: Room – UN, Volume of buildings
Floppy disk
A type of computer storage medium, capable of
storing up to 2 MB of data. Most commonly
available in 3.5 inch size.
interbank offered rate (LIBOR),
interbank bid rate (LIBID), or
interbank mean rate (LIMEAN) (average
and LIBID)
Source: Memory of the World: Safeguarding the
Documentary Heritage - A guide to Standards,
Recommended Practices and Reference Literature
Related to the Preservation of Documents of All
Kinds, International Advisory Committee for the
UNESCO Memory of the World Programme Sub-
Context: Floating rate notes are negotiable and
303
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.89
Committee on Technology for the General
Information Programme and UNISIST United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization - Part 9 - Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.unesco.org/webworld/mdm/administ/
en/guide/guide011.htm
Flows of natural
resources
All natural resources originate in the environmental
sphere. Some remain there and so do not enter
the physical flow accounts even though they
should be recorded in stock levels. Those which are
drawn into the economy become immediately
transformed into products; that is, they exist
within the context of a market which puts a
monetary value on them. This is also the case in
principle for resources harvested for own account
use, for example fuel wood collected by
households, the extraction of construction
materials and water, even though in practice
valuation may be difficult.
Flow rescheduling
In the context of the Paris Club, the rescheduling
of specified debt service falling due during the
consolidation period and, in some cases, of
specified arrears outstanding at the beginning of
the consolidation period.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Context: Because natural resources are converted
to products when they enter an economy, few
natural resources are shown as entering the
national economy from another country‘s
environment directly; such resources are generally
routed through the originating country‘s economy
and are shown as imports of products not of
natural resources. One exception is fish where
non-residents may be entitled to fish in national
waters without the catch ever entering the national
economy. Another is extraction of water from a
jointly owned catchment area or watercourse.
See also: Stock-of-debt operation
Flow series / data
Statistical series presented as flow series/data are
accumulated during the reference period, for
example, passenger car registrations, where the
figure for the reference period is the sum of daily
registrations
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Glossary
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.88
See also: Levels (monthly, quarterly, annual),
Stock series/data
Flows in real terms
Prix constants
Many flows, such as cash transfers or gross
operating surplus, do not have price and quantity
dimensions of their own into which they can be
decomposed so such flows cannot be measured at
constant prices; however, they can be measured
―in real terms‖ by deflating their values by price
indices in order to measure their real purchasing
power over some selected basket of goods and
services that serves as numeraire
Flows of residuals
There are three classes of residuals flows. The
largest and most significant flows are from the
national economy to the national environment.
Secondly, the discharge from production which is
made directly into a different environment. The
last type of residual flow is the transmission of
residuals from one environmental sphere to
another by natural mechanisms; for example,
residuals carried in air currents or flowing water
bodies.
Source: SNA 16.2
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Flows of ecosystem
inputs
Like natural resources, ecosystem inputs flow from
the environment to the economy. The largest and
most obvious flows are from the national
environment to the national economy. Other flows
include the consumption of ecosystem inputs by
resident producers operating outside their national
territory, for example international transport
carriers and tourists.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
paras. 3.91-3.93
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Fluorocarbon
Fluorocarbone
A fluorocarbon is a gas used as a propellant in
aerosols. It contributes to the destruction of the
304
ozone layer in the stratosphere, thereby allowing
harmful forms of solar radiation to reach the
earth‘s surface
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Non-response, Non-response errors
Fob price
Prix f.a.b.
The f.o.b. price (free on board price) of exports
and imports of goods is the market value of the
goods at the point of uniform valuation, (the
customs frontier of the economy from which they
are exported).
Follow-up survey (or
multi-round survey or
multi-phase survey)
A follow-up survey (or multi-round survey or multiphase survey) is a type of survey in which
households included in it are repeatedly
interviewed in the second, third, fourth or more
visits, to obtain information on vital events by
noting the changes in composition of the
households that have taken place between
successive visits
It is equal to the c.i.f. price less the costs of
transportation and insurance charges, between the
customs frontier of the exporting (importing)
country and that of the importing (exporting)
country
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Source: SNA 14.36 and 14.40 [15.36] and
International Merchandise Trade Statistics,
Concepts and Definitions, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Studies in Methods, Series M, No. 52,
Rev. 2, page 35, para. 5
Food and Agriculture
Organisation (FAO)
Organisation des
Nations Unies pour
l‟alimentation et
l‟agriculture (FAO)
The Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) is a
United Nations agency, founded in 1945, whose
remit is to monitor and improve the distribution
and production of food and agricultural products
throughout the world
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Cif price
Focus group
Also referred to as Interview or Group Discussion.
An interviewing technique whereby respondents
are interviewed in a group setting.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Context: It is used to stimulate the respondents to
talk freely, and to encourage the free expression of
ideas or explore attitudes and feelings about a
subject. It is often used to explore the range or
issues and respondent reaction to subject matter
in order to guide the design of a questionnaire.
Food balance sheet
A food balance sheet presents a comprehensive
picture of the pattern of a country's food supply
during a specified reference period. The food
balance sheet shows for each food item - i.e. each
primary commodity and a number of processed
commodities potentially available for human
consumption - the sources of supply and its
utilization.
Source: Statistics Canada, Educational Resources,
Glossary of Statistical Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca/english/edu/prototype/glos
sary/gloss.htm
Context: The total quantity of foodstuffs produced
in a country added to the total quantity imported
and adjusted to any change in stocks that may
have occurred since the beginning of the reference
period gives the supply available during that
period.
Foetal death rate
The foetal death rate refers to the number of foetal
deaths occurring among the population of a given
geographical area during a given year per 1,000
total births (live births plus foetal deaths)
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
On the utilization side a distinction is made
between the quantities exported, fed to livestock,
used for seed, put to manufacture for food use and
non-food uses, losses during storage and
transportation, and food supplies available for
human consumption.
Follow-up
A further attempt to obtain information from an
individual in a survey or field experiment because
the initial attempt has failed or later information is
available.
The per caput supply of each such food item
available for human consumption is then obtained
by dividing the respective quantity by the related
data on the population actually partaking of it.
Data on per caput food supplies are expressed in
terms of quantity and - by applying appropriate
305
food composition factors for all primary and
processed products - also in terms of caloric value
and protein and fat content.
feed, water or soil.
Although the mortality rate in adult animals from
this disease is generally low and the disease
presents no risk for humans, because it is highly
contagious infected animals in a given country are
generally culled and other countries place an
embargo on imports of live animals and fresh,
chilled or frozen meat from the country of
infection. In that case, only smoked, salted or
dried meat and meat preserves may be imported
from the country concerned.
Annual food balance sheets tabulated regularly
over a period of years will show the trends in the
overall national food supply, disclose changes that
may have taken place in the types of food
consumed, i.e., the pattern of the diet, and reveal
the extent to which the food supply of the country,
as a whole, is adequate in relation to nutritional
requirements
Source: FAOSTAT Agricultural Data, Food and
Agricultural Organisation of the United Nations,
Rome
In addition, given the possibility of contagion
between different species of cloven-hoofed
animals, when foot and mouth disease breaks out
in one species in a given country, exports of meat
from all four types of animal are suspended.
Hyperlink:
http://www.fao.org/waicent/faostat/agricult/fbse.htm
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Food chain
The food chain is a sequence of organisms each of
which uses the next lower member of the
sequence as a food source
Footnote
A footnote is a note or other text located at the
bottom of a page of text, manuscript, book or
statistical tabulation that provides comment on or
cites a reference for a designated part of the text
or table.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: Attention is drawn to the footnote by
means of a mark, number, etc, in the main body of
the text. A footnote generally contains information
that is related to but of lesser importance than the
larger work in the main body of the text or table.
Food security
Concept which discourages opening the domestic
market to foreign agricultural products on the
principle that a country must be as self-sufficient
as possible for its basic dietary needs.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
See also: Flag
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Forecasting
Prévision
―Forecasting‖ and ―prediction‖ are often used
synonymously in the customary sense of assessing
the magnitude which a quantity will assume at
some future point of time: as distinct from
―estimation‖ which attempts to assess the
magnitude of an already existent quantity. For
example, the final yield of a crop is ―forecast‖
during the growing period but ―estimated‖ at
harvest.
Food web
The food web is a network of many interlinked food
chains
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: The errors of estimation involved in
prediction from a regression equation are
sometimes referred to as ―forecasting errors‖ but
this expression is better avoided in such as
restricted sense. Likewise terms such as ―index
numbers of forecasting efficiency‖, in the sense of
residual error variances in regression analysis, are
to be avoided.
Foot and mouth
Fiévre aphteuse
disease
Foot and mouth disease is a highly contagious
disease, which chiefly affects cloven-hoofed animal
species (cattle, sheep, goats and pigs).
Context: Its symptoms are the appearance of
vesicles (aphthae) on the animals‘ mouths (with a
consequent reduction in appetite) and feet. It is
caused by a virus which may be found in the
animals‘ blood, saliva and milk. The virus is
transmitted in a number of ways, via humans,
insects, most meat products, urine and faeces,
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Prediction
306
the currency of that market, underwritten and sold
by a national under-writing and selling group of
the lenders‘ country. (Usually issued in bearer or
registered form.)
Forecasting errors
See Forecasting
See also: Forecasting
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Foreclosure of
competition
See Anti-competitive practices
See also: Anticompetitive practices
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Foreign affiliate
See Foreign direct investment enterprise
See also: Foreign direct investment enterprise
Foreign border
Travailleurs étrangers
workers
frontaliers
Foreign border workers are foreign persons
granted permission to be employed on a
continuous basis in the receiving country provided
they depart at regular and short intervals (daily or
weekly) from that country)
Foreign Affiliates
Trade in Services
(FATS)
Foreign Affiliates Trade in Services (FATS)
statistics measure the commercial presence abroad
of service suppliers through affiliates in foreign
markets, and therefore are closely related to
statistics on foreign direct investment.
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Data on the activities of majority-owned foreign
affiliates in the compiling economy are usually
referred to as inward FATS, and those relating to
majority-owned foreign affiliates of the compiling
economy that are established abroad are referred
to as outward FATS.
Foreign business
Etrangers voyageant
travellers
pour affaires
Foreign business travellers are foreign persons
granted the permission to engage in business or
professional activities that are not remunerated
from within the country of arrival. Their length of
stay is restricted and cannot surpass 12 months
FATS statistics cover a range of variables that
comprise some, or all, of the following: sales
(turnover) and/or output, employment, value
added, exports and imports of goods and services,
number of enterprises, etc.
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Source: Trade in Goods and Services: Statistical
Trends and Measurement Challenges, A. Lindner,
B. Cave, L. Deloumeaux, J. Magdeleine, OECD
Statistics Brief, October 2001, No.1, page 7
Foreign controlled
Sociétés (non
corporations (nonfinancières et
financial and
financières) sous
financial)
contrôle étranger
Foreign controlled corporations (non-financial and
financial) consist of all resident corporations and
quasi-corporations that are controlled by nonresident institutional units
Foreign assets
Actifs extérieurs
Foreign assets consist mainly of financial claims
over non-resident institutional units
Source: SNA 12.113
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 4.76 and 4.84
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Foreign bank
A foreign bank is a bank with head office outside
the country in which it is located
See also: Direct foreign investment enterprise
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Foreign currency
A foreign currency is a currency other than the
domestic currency.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Foreign bond
Securities - for example, Yankee, Samurai,
Shogun, Shibosai, Bulldog, Matador, and Daimyo
bonds - issued by a borrower in a domestic capital
market other than its own, usually denominated in
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
307
Foreign currency
linked derivatives
Derivatives whose value is linked to foreign
currency exchange rates.
Foreign direct investment (FDI) is the category of
international investment that reflects the objective
of a resident entity in one economy to obtain a
lasting interest in an enterprise resident in another
economy
Context: The most common foreign-currencylinked derivatives are:
Source: SNA 14.151 and 14.152 [Table 11.2, BPM
359 and 362]
- Forward-type foreign exchange rate contracts,
under which currencies are sold or purchased for
an agreed exchange rate on a specified day;
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
- Foreign exchange swaps, whereby there is an
initial exchange of foreign currencies and a
simultaneous forward purchase/sale of the same
currencies;
Foreign direct
Entreprise
investment enterprise d‟investissements
directs (étrangers)
A foreign direct investment enterprise is an
incorporated or unincorporated enterprise in which
a direct investor resident in another economy owns
10 per cent or more of the ordinary shares or
voting power (for an incorporated enterprise) or
the equivalent (for an unincorporated enterprise)
- Cross-currency interest rate swaps, whereby—
following an initial exchange of a specified amount
of foreign currencies—cash flows related to interest
and principal payments are exchanged according
to a predetermined schedule; and
Source: SNA 14.152, BPM 362 [7.119]
- Options that give the purchaser the right but not
the obligation to purchase or sell a specified
amount of a foreign currency at an agreed contract
price on or before a specified date.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Foreign exchange
companies
Foreign exchange companies comprise units that
buy and sell foreign exchange in retail or wholesale
markets
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual,
IMF, Washington, 2000, para. 101
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/mfs/manual/i
ndex.htm
Foreign currency
transactions
(banking)
Foreign currency transactions refer to transactions
denominated in a currency other than the local
(domestic) currency of the country in which the
banking office is located
Foreign exchange rate
See Exchange rate and Exchange rate - IMF.
See also: Exchange rates
Source: Guide to the International Banking
Statistics, Bank for International Settlements,
Basel, Switzerland, 2000, Part III – Glossary of
Terms
Foreign exchange
reserves
Foreign exchange rate reserves are the stocks of
foreign currency denominated assets plus, in a
number of cases, gold, held by at a central bank
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/meth07.pdf
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Foreign diplomatic
and consular
personnel
Foreign diplomatic and consular personnel are
foreigners admitted under diplomatic visas or
permits
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Foreign exchange
Swap - de devises
swap
A foreign exchange swap is a spot sale/purchase of
currencies and a simultaneous forward
purchase/sale of the same currencies
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Source: SNA 11.38
Foreign direct
investment
Investissements
internationaux directs
Hyperlink:
308
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Interest rate swap – SNA, Swaps, Swaps
– cross-currency interest rate
Foreign excursionists
Excursionnistes
étrangers
Foreign excursionists (also called ―same-day
visitors‖) are foreign persons who do not reside in
the country of arrival and stay for just a day
without spending the night in a collective or private
accommodation within the country visited.
Foreign migrant
Travailleurs migrants
workers
étrangers
Foreign migrant workers are foreigners admitted
by the receiving State for the specific purpose of
exercising an economic activity remunerated from
within the receiving country. Their length of stay is
usually restricted as is the type of employment
they can hold
Context: This category includes cruise passengers
who arrive in a country on a cruise ship and return
to the ship each night to sleep on board as well as
crew members who do not spend the night in the
country.
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
It also includes residents of border areas who visit
the neighbouring country during the day to shop,
visit friends or relatives, seek medical treatment,
or participate in leisure activities.
See also: Seasonal migrant workers
Foreign military
personnel
Foreign military personnel are foreign military
servicemen, officials and advisers stationed in the
country. Their dependants and domestic
employees are sometimes allowed to accompany
them
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
See also: Excursionists
Foreign inland
Bateau étranger pour
waterways transport ( le transport par voies
IWT) vessel
navigables intérieures
IWT vessel which is registered at a given date in a
country other than the reporting country.
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Foreign parent group
A foreign parent group consists of:
1) the foreign parent;
2) any foreign person, proceeding up the foreign
parent‘s ownership chain, that owns more than
50% of the person below it, up to and including
the ultimate controller; and
Foreign Interest
Payment Security
(FIPS)
FIPS is an instrument in the Swiss capital market.
Its features are similar to a reverse dual-currency
bond that offers interest payments in a foreign
currency but keeps the principal in Swiss francs.
3) any foreign person, proceeding down the
ownership chain(s) of each of these members, that
is owned more than 50% by the person above it.
Source: OECD, 2005, Measuring Globalisation:
OECD Handbook on Economic Globalisation
Indicators, OECD, Paris - Glossary
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Foreign population of Population étrangère
a country
d'un pays
The foreign population of a country refers to all
persons who have that country as country of usual
residence and who are the citizens of another
country
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Foreign key
In relational database management systems, a
filed or item in a table that contains a value
identifying rows in another table. It is used in
joining two tables by defining the relationship
between two elements of a relational database. A
foreign key is the primary key in the other table.
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Foreign retirees (as
309
Retraités étrangers
settlers)
(immigrants)
Foreign retirees (as settlers) are persons beyond
retirement age who are granted the right to stay
over a long period or indefinitely in the territory of
a State other than their own provided that they
have sufficient independent income and do not
become a charge to that State
Foreign tourists
Touristes étrangers
Foreign tourists are foreign persons admitted
under tourist visas (if required) for purposes of
leisure, recreation, holiday, visits to friends or
relatives, health or medical treatment, or religious
pilgrimage. They must spend at least a night in a
collective or private accommodation in the
receiving country and their duration of stay must
not surpass 12 months
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Foreign road vehicle
Véhicule routier
étranger
A road vehicle registered in a country other than
the reporting country and bearing registration
plates of that foreign country.
Foreign trainees
Stagiaires étrangers
Foreign trainees are persons admitted by a country
other than their own to acquire particular skills
through on-the-job training. Foreign trainees are
therefore allowed to work only in the specific
institution or establishment providing the training
and their length of stay is usually restricted
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Foreign settlers
See Migrants for settlement
Foreign-born
Population d'un pays
population of a
née à l'étranger
country
The foreign-born population of a country is all
persons who have that country as the country of
usual residence and whose place of birth is located
in another country
See also: Migrants for settlement
Foreign students
Étudiant étranger
Foreign students are persons admitted by a
country other than their own, usually under special
permits or visas, for the specific purpose of
following a particular course of study in an
accredited institution of the receiving country
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Context: Foreign students are students who do not
hold the citizenship of the country for which the
data are collected. While pragmatic and
operational, this classification may give rise to
inconsistencies resulting from national policies
regarding naturalisation of immigrants, combined
with the inability of several countries to report
separately foreign students net of those holding
permanent residence permits.
Foreigners admitted
for family formation
or reunification
Etrangers admis au
titre du regroupement
familial ou de la
fondation d'une
famille
Foreigners admitted for family formation or
reunification are foreigners admitted because they
are the immediate relatives of citizens or
foreigners already residing in the receiving country
or because they are the foreign fiancée(e)s or the
foreign adopted children of citizens.
As a result, countries where naturalisation of
immigrants is stringent and identification of nonresident foreign students impossible over-estimate
the size of the foreign student body, compared to
countries granting citizenship to their immigrants
more easily.(Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris,
2002, Glossary)
The definition of immediate relatives varies from
country to country but it generally includes the
spouse and minor children of the person concerned
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
See also: Student
Foreign subsidiary
See Subsidiary
Foreigners admitted
for humanitarian
reasons (other than
asylum proper or
See also: Subsidiary
310
Etrangers admis pour
des raisons
humanitaires (autres
que l'asile proprement
temporary protection) dit ou la protection
temporaire)
Foreigners admitted for humanitarian reasons
(other than asylum proper or temporary
protection) are foreigners who are not granted full
refugee status but are nevertheless admitted for
humanitarian reasons because they find
themselves in refugee-like situations
Foreigners in transit are persons who arrive in the
receiving country but do not enter it formally
because they are on their way to another
destination
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Foreigners seeking
Etrangers
asylum
demandeurs d'asile
Foreigners seeking asylum is a category that
encompasses both persons who are allowed to file
an application for asylum (asylum-seekers proper)
and those who do not enter the asylum
adjudication system formally but are nevertheless
granted the permission to stay until they can
return safely to their countries of origin (that is to
say, they become foreigners granted temporary
protected status)
See also: Asylum-seekers, Foreigners granted
temporary protected status, Foreigners seeking
asylum, Refugees
Foreigners admitted
Etrangers autorisés à
for settlement
s'installer
Foreigners admitted for settlement are foreign
persons granted the permission to reside in the
receiving country without limitations regarding
duration of stay or exercise of an economic
activity. Their dependants, if admitted, are also
included in this category
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
See also: Asylum-seekers, Foreigners admitted for
humanitarian reasons (other than asylum proper or
temporary protection), Foreigners granted
temporary protected status, Refugees
Foreigners granted
temporary protected
status
Etrangers auxquels un
statut de protection
temporaire a été
accordé
Foreigners granted temporary protected status are
foreigners who are allowed to stay for a temporary
though possibly indefinite period because their life
would be in danger if they were to return to their
country of citizenship
Foreigners whose
Etrangers immigrants
entry or stay is not
clandestins
sanctioned
Foreigners whose entry or stay is not sanctioned
refers to foreigners who violate the rules of
admission and stay of the receiving country and
are deportable, as well as foreign persons
attempting to seek asylum but who are not allowed
to file an application and are not permitted to stay
in the receiving country on any other grounds
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
See also: Asylum-seekers, Foreigners admitted for
humanitarian reasons (other than asylum proper or
temporary protection), Foreigners seeking asylum,
Refugees
Foreigners whose
Etrangers dont le
status is regularised
statut est régularisé
Foreigners whose status is regularised are
foreigners whose entry or stay has not been
sanctioned by the receiving State or who have
violated the terms of their admission but who are
nevertheless allowed to regularise their status.
Foreigners having the Etrangers ayant le
right to free
droit de s'établir
establishment
librement
Foreigners having the right to free establishment
are foreigners who have the right to enter, stay
and work within the territory of a country other
than their own by virtue of an agreement or treaty
concluded between their country of citizenship and
the country they enter
Although most persons regularising their status
have already been present in the receiving country
for some time, their regularisation may be taken to
represent the time of their official admission as
international migrants
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Foreigners in transit
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Etrangers en transit
Foreseen
311
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.243
obsolescence
Foreseen obsolescence is the loss in value on an
asset through obsolescence that the purchaser was
expecting to occur when the asset was acquired.
Foreseen obsolescence is included in consumption
of fixed capital
Forest health
Forest health is affected by both natural and
human factors. Defoliation is the most commonly
used factor in describing forest health. It is
expressed as the amount or proportion of trees
whose crown is more than 25 per cent defoliated.
Other symptoms of forest damage that reduce
stand quality are the amount and percentage of
dead, fallen and broken trees, decayed trees, stem
defects, top damage, discoloration and multiple
symptoms. It should be noted, however, that dead
and decayed trees are also often seen as a forest
characteristic that improves biodiversity.
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
See also: Normal obsolescence
Forest account for
timber
A forest account for timber in physical terms shows
the opening and closing stocks of standing timber
and the changes between the beginning and the
end of the accounting period.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.231
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.182
Forested land
Land with tree crown cover (or equivalent stocking
level) of more than 10 per cent and an area of
more than 0.5 hectares. The trees should be able
to reach a minimum height of 5 metres at maturity
in situ.
Forest age structure
The age structure of a forest is often expressed as
the area of the forest consisting mainly of trees of
the same age (i.e., by age class) or by proportions
of trees in different age classes. The age-class
division used is dependent on the ages of trees of
different species. For forest accounting purposes, it
is useful to have the age-structure expressed in
terms of timber volumes. This may be derived by
combining data on the number of trees with the
average volume of timber for a tree of a given age.
Since the volume of a mature tree is much larger
than for a young tree, the distribution of timber
volume may be very different from the distribution
of number of trees.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.151
Forested land
available for wood
supply
Forested land available for wood supply covers
areas where legal, economic, or environmental
restrictions do not have a significant impact on the
supply of wood. It includes areas where harvesting
of timber is not taking place, for example, because
of long term utilisation plans or intentions.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.227
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.158
Forest estate
The composite asset constituted by the forest land
and the standing timber. It includes any forest
related environmental assets included in the area
concerned.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
Forested land not
available for wood
supply
Forested land not available for wood supply
includes areas where legal, economic, or
312
environmental restrictions prevent any significant
wood production.
Formal identifier
Any variable or set of variables which is
structurally unique for every population unit, for
example a population registration number. If the
formal identifier is known to the intruder,
identification of a target individual is directly
possible for him or her, without the necessity to
have additional knowledge before studying the
microdata. Some combinations of variables such as
name and address are pragmatic formal identifiers,
where non-unique instances are empirically
possible, but with negligible probability.
Context: Legal and/or environmental restrictions
refer to protection for environmental and
biodiversity conservation and other protection,
including restrictions to ensure protection against
soil erosion, avalanches and so on, and for special
environmental, scientific, historical, cultural or
spiritual interest. Economic restrictions appear in
areas where physical productivity or wood quality
is too low or harvesting and transport costs are too
high to warrant wood harvesting, apart from
occasional cuttings for own consumption.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.157
Format
Size and general arrangement of a written or
printed document.
Context: The specified arrangement of data. In
computer parlance it frequently refers to the
format of a data record. (Computerized systems of
land resources appraisal for agricultural
development, Chidley, T.R.E., J. Elgy and J.
Antoine (1993), FAO World Soil Resources Reports,
72)
Forfaiting
A mechanism, most commonly used in mediumand long-term credit, involving the purchase of
promissory notes or bills of exchange by the
forfeiter, at a discount. Banks or other financial
services entities often own forfeit companies.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
See also: Format, file
Form of
representation
The form of representation refers to the name or
description of the form of representation for the
data element. e.g. 'quantitative value, 'code', text',
'icon'
FORTRAN
(Formula Translator) A high level programming
language used mainly to solve scientific and
engineering problems.
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
See also: Representation term
Formal edit
A formal edit verifies whether the given functions
of two or more data items meet the given
condition.
Forward contract
Contrat à terme
«forward » (contrat
de garantie)
A forward contract is an unconditional financial
contract that represents an obligation for
settlement on a specified date; at the inception of
the contract, risk exposures of equal market value
are exchanged and hence the contract has zero
value; some time must elapse for the market value
of each party‘s risk to differ so that an asset
(creditor) position is created for one party and a
liability (debtor) position for the other.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Forward contracts are typically, but not always,
settled by the payment of cash or the provision of
some other financial instrument rather than the
313
actual delivery of the underlying item and
therefore are valued and traded separately from
the underlying item
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Source: SNA 11.37
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Forward exchange
rate
A forward exchange rate is the exchange rate in
contract for receipt of and payment for foreign
currency at a specified date usually for 30 days, 90
days or 180 days in the future, at a stipulated
current or ―spot‖ price
FOSDIC
See Film optical sensing device for input to
computers
See also: Film Optical Sensing Device for Input to
Computers (FOSDIC)
Fossil fuels
Combustibles fossiles
Fossil fuels are coal, oil and natural gas. They are
derived from the remains of ancient plant and
animal life
Source: The Dictionary of International Business
Terms, J.K. Shim, J.G. Siegel, M.H. Levine,
Glenlake Publishing Co. Ltd, 1998
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Forward foreign
Contrat de change à
exchange contracts
terme de devises
Forward foreign exchange contracts involve two
counterparties who agree to transact in foreign
currencies at an agreed exchange rate in a
specified amount at some agreed future date
Fragile States
Those failing to provide basic services to poor
people because they are unwilling or unable to do
so.
Source: SNA 11.38
Source: OECD, 2006, DAC Guidelines and
Reference Series Applying Strategic Environmental
Assessment: Good Practice Guidance for
Development Co-operation, OECD, Paris
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Forward rate
agreements (FRAs)
Contrats de garantie
de taux (forward rate
agreements-FRA)
Forward rate agreements (FRAs) are arrangements
in which two parties, in order to protect
themselves against interest rate changes, agree on
a notional interest rate to be paid, at a specified
settlement date, on a notional amount of principal
that is never exchanged; FRAs are settled by net
cash payments and the only payment that takes
place relates to the difference between the agreed
FRA rate and the prevailing market rate at the time
of settlement
Frame
Base
A list, map or other specification of the units which
define a population to be sampled.
Context: The frame consists of previously available
descriptions of the objects or material related to
the physical field in the form of maps, lists,
directories, etc., from which sampling units may be
constructed and a set of sampling units selected.
(Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in Statistics:
Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg, October
2003)
Source: SNA 11.38 [7.106]
The frame may or may not contain information
about the size or other supplementary information
about the units, but should have enough details so
that a unit, if included in the sample, may be
located and taken up for inquiry. The nature of the
frame exerts a considerable influence over the
structure of a sample survey. It is rarely perfect,
and may be inaccurate, incomplete, inadequately
described, out of date or subject to some degree of
duplication. Reasonable reliability in the frame is a
desirable condition for the reliability of a sample
survey based on it.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Forward type
derivatives
A contract in which two counterparties commit to
exchange an underlying item—real or financial—in
a specified quantity, on a specified date, at an
agreed contract price or, in the specific example of
a swaps contract, agree to exchange cash flows,
determined by reference to the price(s) of, say,
currencies or interest rates according to
predetermined rules. In essence, two
counterparties are trading risk exposures of equal
market value.
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003.
See also: Area sampling, Frame error, Undercoverage
314
Frame error
Frame error may be caused by the inherent
limitations of input data, or by delays and errors in
data acquisition and processing.
development (FISD), Stress-response
environmental statistical system
Franchising
Franchising is a special type of vertical relationship
between two firms usually referred to as the
"franchisor" and "franchisee". The two firms
generally establish a contractual relationship where
the franchisor sells a proven product, trademark or
business method and ancillary services to the
individual franchisee in return for a stream of
royalties and other payments.
Context: Frame errors cover:
— coverage errors - erroneous inclusions,
omissions and duplications;
— classification errors - units not classified, or
misclassified by industry, geography or size;
The contractual relationship may cover such
matters as product prices, advertising, location,
type of distribution outlets, geographic area, etc.
— contact errors - units with incomplete or
incorrect contact data.
Source: Lessler, J.T. and Kalsbeek, W.D. (1992),
"Non Sampling Error in Survey", New York: John
Wiley or US department of Commerce (1978),
"Glossary of Non Sampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics",
Statistical Policy Working Paper 4, Office of Federal
Statistical Policy Standards.
Context: Franchise agreements generally fall under
the purview of competition laws, particularly those
provisions dealing with vertical restraints.
Franchise agreements may facilitate entry of new
firms and/or products and have efficiency
enhancing benefits. However, franchising
agreements in certain situations can restrict
competition as well.
See also: Frame
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Framework for
indicators of
sustainable
development (FISD)
The framework for indicators of sustainable
development (FISD) is a conceptual framework for
environmental, social and economic indicators that
addresses the concerns of potential data users as
reflected in Agenda 21 (United Nations, 1993b) of
the United Nations Conference on Environment and
Development with the information categories of
the framework for environmental data production
(FDES). It was developed by the United Nations
Statistics Division in 1994
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Fraud
―Fraud‖ may be understood to mean the
acquisition of another person‘s property by
deception.
Context: The severest form of an irregularity. The
term fraud is defined in the Convention on the
protection of the European Communities‘ financial
interest decided the 26 July 1995 (OJ No. C316,
27.11.1995).
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Driving force-state-response framework,
Framework for the development of environment
statistics (FDES)
The Convention is drawn up in accordance with the
rules for the EU third pillar as the rules concerns
penal issues (the regulation mentioned above
concerns administrative measures and sanctions
and are therefore drawn up under the rules of the
first pillar).
Framework for the
development of
environment statistics
(FDES)
Cadre pour le
développement des
statistiques de
l‟environnement
(FDES)
The framework for the development of
environment statistics (FDES) is a conceptual
framework that assists in the development,
coordination and organization of environment
statistics and related socio-economic and
demographic statistics. It was developed by the
United Nations Statistics Division in 1984, and is
based on stress—response principles of
environmental impacts
The definition of fraud affecting the EU-budget
(given in Paragraph 1 of Article 1 of the
Convention) is quite lengthy. The core is that it
needs intentional act or omission to have an
irregularity defined as a fraud and therefore
punishable by Court proceedings (all other acts can
therefore only be sanctioned through
administrative measures as fines and denial of
further funding, etc.) states:
For the purposes of this Convention, fraud
affecting the European Communities‘ financial
interests shall consist of:
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
(a) in respect of expenditure, any intentional act or
omission relating to:
See also: Framework for indicators of sustainable
315
- the use or presentation of false, incorrect or
incomplete statements or documents, which has as
its effect the misappropriation or wrongful
retention of funds from the general budget of the
European Communities or budgets managed by, or
on behalf of, the European Communities;
A casual term used to infer that a country which
does not make any trade concessions, profits,
nonetheless, from tariff cuts and concessions made
by other countries in negotiations under the mostfavoured-nation principle.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
- non-disclosure of information in violation of a
specific obligation, with the same effect;
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
- the misapplication of such funds for purposes
other than those for which they were originally
granted.
(b) in respect of revenue, any intentional act or
omission relating to:
Free rider or riding
Free riding occurs when one firm (or individual)
benefits from the actions and efforts of another
without paying or sharing the costs.
- the use or presentation of false, incorrect or
incomplete statements or documents, which has as
its effect the illegal diminution of the resources of
the general budget of the European Communities
or budgets managed by, or on behalf of, the
European Communities;
For example, a retail store may initially choose to
incur costs of training its staff to demonstrate to
potential customers how a particular kitchen
appliance works. It may do so in order to expand
its sales. However, the customers may later
choose to buy the product from another retailer
selling at a lower price because its business
strategy is not to incur these training and
demonstration costs.
- non-disclosure of information in violation of a
specific obligation, with the same effect;
- misapplication of a legally obtained benefit, with
the same effect.
This second retailer is viewed as "free riding" on
the efforts and the costs incurred by the first
retailer. If such a situation persists, the first
retailer will not have the incentive to continue
(Effects of European Union Accession, Part 1:
Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms)
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: United Nations, "Manual for the
Development of a System of Criminal Justice
Statistics (2003)", United Nations, New York, 2003
Hyperlink:
http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/ramon/statmanuals/fi
les/SeriesF_89_EN.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Free market
A free market economy is one where scarcities are
resolved through changes in relative prices rather
than through regulation. If a commodity is in short
supply relative to the number of people who want
to buy it, its price will rise, producers and sellers
will make higher profits and production will tend to
rise to meet the excess demand. If the available
supply of a commodity is in a glut situation, the
price will tend to fall, thereby attracting additional
buyers and discouraging producers and sellers
from entering the market. In a free market, buyers
and sellers come together voluntarily to decide on
what products to produce and sell and buy, and
how resources such as labour and capital should be
used.
Free trade
Free trade occurs when goods and services can be
bought and sold between countries or sub-national
regions without tariffs, quotas or other restrictions
being applied.
Source: Government of Canada, Economic
Concepts, website
Free trade area
A free trade area is a grouping of countries within
which tariffs and non-tariff trade barriers between
the members are generally abolished but with no
common trade policy toward non-members. The
North American Free Trade Area (NAFTA) and the
European Free Trade Association (EFTA) are
examples of free trade areas.
Source:
Government of Canada, Economic Concepts,
website
Source: Glossary of Insurance Policy Terms, OECD,
Centre for Co-operation with Non-Members, 1999
See also: Common market, Customs union,
Economic union, Regional trading arrangement
Free rider (in foreign
trade)
Frequency
316
Fréquence
Methods
The rate at which something happens or is
repeated.
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Context: If a time series has a constant time
interval between its observations, this interval
determines the frequency of the time series (e.g.
monthly, quarterly, yearly).
Frequency table
Table de fréquences
A table drawn up to show the distribution of the
frequency of occurrence of a given characteristic
according to some specified set of class intervals.
It may be univariate or multivariate but there are
difficulties in presenting data tabulated according
to more than two variables.
In GESMES/TS, frequency is a dimension of the
time series key. Frequency must be assigned as a
dimension in every key family and it has to be the
first dimension. ("GESMES/TS User Guide",
Release 3)
In SDMX, "Frequency" is closely associated with
"Periodicity" to form a single entity, named
"frequency and periodicity". While frequency refers
to the time interval between the observations of a
time series, periodicity refers to the frequency of
compilation of the data (e.g., a time series could
be available at annual frequency but the
underlying data are compiled monthly, thus have a
monthly periodicity).
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Frequency, spectrum
/ spectrum
management
The spectrum or range of radio frequencies
available for communication, industrial, and other
uses.
Source: The Oxford Advanced Learners Dictionary,
Oxford University Press
See also: Dimension (dimensionality), GESMES TS,
Key (time series or sibling group), Observation,
Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange (SDMX),
Time series
Context: Frequency bands or segments are
assigned to various categories of users for specific
purposes, such as commercial radio and television,
terrestrial microwave links, satellites, and police.
Frequency array
A Frequency array is an array of frequencies
according to variate values, that is to say, a
frequency distribution. The term ―array‖ is often
used for the individual frequency distributions
which form the separate rows and columns of a
bivariate frequency table.
At the international level this is done by the
International Frequency Registration Board (IFRB)
of the International Telecommunication Union
(ITU). Individual national regulatory agencies
monitor the occupancy of the radio spectrum and
allocate frequencies to individual users or a groups
of users so as to enable a large number of services
to operate within specified limits of interference.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Telecommunications services: Glossary of
terms – World Trade Organisation
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/tratop_e/serv_e/t
elecom_e/tel12_e.htm
Frequency distribution Distribution de
fréquences
A specification of the way in which the frequencies
of members of a population are distributed
according to the values of the variates which they
exhibit. For observed data the distribution is
usually specified in tabular form, with some
grouping for continuous variates.
FTAA
Free Trade Area of the Americas
FTP
See File transfer protocol
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: File transfer protocol (FTP)
Fuel oil
This covers all residual (heavy) fuel oils (including
those obtained by blending). Kinematic viscosity is
above 10 cSt at 80 degrees C. The flash point is
always above 50 degrees C and density is always
more than 0.90 kg/l.
Frequency ratio
A frequency ratio is the proportion of national tariff
lines that are affected by a particular non- tariff
barrier or by a specified group of non tariff
barriers, irrespective of whether the products
affected are actually imported
Source: Oil Information 2001, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 3. General Definitions
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
317
participation are available, course load is measured
as the product of the fraction of the normal course
load for a full-time student and the fraction of the
school/academic year.
Full cost pricing
Full cost pricing is a practice where the price of a
product is calculated by a firm on the basis of its
direct costs per unit of output plus a markup to
cover overhead costs and profits. The overhead
costs are generally calculated assuming less than
full capacity operation of a plant in order to allow
for fluctuating levels of production and costs.
[FTE = (actual course load/normal course load) *
(actual duration of study during reference
period/normal duration of study during reference
period).]
Context: Full cost pricing is often used by firms as
it is very difficult to calculate the precise demand
for a product and establish a market price.
Empirical studies indicate that full cost pricing
methods are widely employed by business firms.
When actual course load information is not
available, a full-time student is considered equal to
one FTE.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
See also: Full-time student, Mode of study, Parttime student, Student, Study load
Full-time equivalent
teacher
A full-time equivalent (FTE) attempts to
standardise a full-time teacher‘s teaching load
against that of a part-time teacher.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Full coverage survey
Same as Census
See also: Census - UN
The basis for the calculation are the ―statutory
working hours‖ and not the ―total or actual working
hours‖ or ―total or actual teaching hours‖.
Full employment
Full employment occurs when the economy is
producing to its maximum sustainable capacity,
using labour, technology, land, capital and other
factors of production to their fullest potential.
The full-time equivalence of part-time educational
personnel is then determined by calculating the
ratio of hours worked by part-time personnel over
the statutory hours worked by a full-time
employee during the school year.
Source: Government of Canada, Economic
Concepts, website
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Full-time primary /
secondary level
student
All students enrolled in primary and secondary
level educational programmes should be
considered full-time when head-count data are
reported, if they attend school for at least 75 per
cent of the school day or week (as locally defined)
and if they would normally be expected to be in
the programme for the entire academic year.
Otherwise, they should be considered part-time.
Full line forcing
See Tied selling
See also: Tied selling
Full-time equivalent
Emploi équivalent
employment
plein temps
Full-time equivalent employment is the number of
full-time equivalent jobs, defined as total hours
worked divided by average annual hours worked in
full-time jobs
When determining full-time / part-time status, the
work- based component in combined school- and
work-based programmes should be included
Source: SNA 17.14 [15.102, 17.28]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 54
Full-time equivalent
student
A full-time equivalent (FTE) measure attempts to
standardise a student‘s actual course load against
the normal course load.
Full-time student
Students enrolled in primary and secondary level
educational programmes are considered to
participate full-time if they attend school for at
least 75 per cent of the school day or week (as
locally defined) and would normally be expected to
be in the programme for the entire academic year.
This includes the work-based component in
combined school and work-based programmes.
Calculating the full-time/part-time status requires
information on the time periods for actual and
normal course loads.
Context: For the reduction of head-count data to
FTEs, where data and norms on individual
318
At the tertiary level, an individual is considered
full-time if he or she is taking a course load or
educational programme considered requiring at
least 75 per cent of a full-time commitment of time
and resources. Additionally, it is expected that the
student will remain in the programme for the
entire year.
households.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
The classifications concerned are:
They are described as "functional" classifications
because they identify the "functions" - in the sense
of "purposes" or "objectives" - for which these
groups of transactors engage in certain
transactions.
Classification of individual consumption by purpose
(COICOP);
Classification of the functions of government
(COFOG);
Classification of the purposes of non-profit
institutions serving households (COPNI); and
Classification of outlays of producers by purpose
(COPP)
See also: Full-time equivalent student, Mode of
study, Part-time student, Student, Study load
Full-time teacher
A teacher employed for at least 90 per cent of the
normal or statutory number of hours of work for a
full-time teacher over a complete school year is
classified as a full-time teacher.
Source: SNA 18.1
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Educational personnel, Full-time teacher,
Instructional personnel, Part-time teacher, Ratio of
students to teaching staff, Teaching staff, Teaching
time, Working time in school
See also: Classification of individual consumption
by purpose (COICOP), Classification of outlays of
producers by purpose (COPP), Classification of the
functions of government (COFOG), Classification of
the purposes of non-profit institutions (COPNI)
Full-time tertiary level
student
At the tertiary level, an individual is considered
full-time if he/she is taking a courseload/educational programme considered to require
at least 75 per cent of a full-time commitment of
time and resources. Additionally, it is expected
that the student remains in the programme for the
entire year
Functional labour
markets
In the literature, definitions about what constitutes
a spatial or local labour market vary considerably.
Two main approaches can be distinguished.
In one, the labour market is defined as a
homogeneous area sharing common labour market
characteristics. Cluster analysis is the technique
most often used to identify such areas.
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 55
In the other approach, the labour market is
defined as a nodal area, the boundaries of which
are traced with the goal of containing the interrelations between its constituent entities. A typical
application of this approach is the mapping of
functional labour markets on the basis of the
commuting patterns of workers.
Fully consolidated
system
See Direct investment enterprise
See also: Direct investment enterprise
Function
Fonction
The concept of purpose, or function, relates to the
type of need a transaction or group of transactions
aims to satisfy or the kind of objective it pursues
The most appropriate spatial framework depends
on the purpose of the analysis that will be
conducted with it.
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, June 2000,
Chapter 2, Disparities in Regional Labour Markets,
page 34
Source: SNA 2.50
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Functional limitationfree life expectancy
Functional limitation-free life expectancy is the
average number of years an individual is expected
to live free of functional limitation if current
patterns of mortality and disability continue to
apply. Functional limitations mean restrictions in
abilities, for instance, to bend forward and pick up
something, or the ability to walk
Functional check
See Formal edit
See also: Formal edit
Functional
Nomenclatures
classifications
fonctionnelles
Functional classifications are designed to classify
certain transactions of producers and of three
institutional sectors, namely household, general
government and non-profit institutions serving
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
319
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Principle 4. The statistical agencies are entitled to
comment on erroneous interpretation and misuse
of statistics.
Functionally illiterate
A person is functionally illiterate who cannot
engage in all those activities in which literacy is
required for effective functioning of his group and
community and also for enabling him to continue
to use reading, writing and calculation for his own
and the community‘s development
Principle 5. Data for statistical purposes may be
drawn from all types of sources, be they statistical
surveys or administrative records. Statistical
agencies are to choose the source with regard to
quality, timeliness, costs and the burden on
respondents.
Principle 6. Individual data collected by statistical
agencies for statistical compilation, whether they
refer to natural or legal persons, are to be strictly
confidential and used exclusively for statistical
purposes.
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 15.63
See also: Functionally literate
Principle 7. The laws, regulations and measures
under which the statistical systems operate are to
be made public.
Functionally literate
See Literate, functionally
Principle 8. Coordination among statistical agencies
within countries is essential to achieve consistency
and efficiency in the statistical system.
See also: Literate, functionally
Fund member
Membre d'un fonds
An individual who is either an active (working or
contributing, and hence actively accumulating
assets) or passive (retired, and hence receiving
benefits), or deferred (holding deferred benefits)
participant in a pension plan.
Principle 9. The use by statistical agencies in each
country of international concepts, classifications
and methods promotes the consistency and
efficiency of statistical systems at all official levels.
Principle 10. Bilateral and multilateral cooperation
in statistics contributes to the improvement of
systems of official statistics in all countries.
Context: Identical terms, "Member", "Pension plan
member", "Pension fund member", "Plan member"
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Context: The notion that international
endorsement of a set of principles for official
statistics was necessary was born in the
Conference of European Statisticians. At the end of
the eighties the countries of Central Europe began
to change from centrally planned economies to
market-oriented democracies. A few years later
the Soviet Union was dissolved. Among the many
changes that these developments generated was
the need for complete transformation of the
national statistical systems.
See also: Active member
Fundamental
Principles of Official
Statistics
The Fundamental Principles for Official Statistics
adopted by the United Nations Statistical
Commission, in its Special Session of 11-15 April
1994 are:
Part of this transformation process was about
redefining the role of official statistics, as well
making it clear to governments and other users of
statistics that a good system of official statistics
must meet certain general criteria. In order to get
this message across, and to assist heads of
national statistical offices to defend the position of
their institutes, the Fundamental Principles of
Official Statistics were developed.
Principle 1. Official statistics provide an
indispensable element in the information system of
a society, serving the government, the economy
and the public with data about the economic,
demographic, social and environmental situation.
To this end, official statistics that meet the test of
practical utility are to be compiled and made
available on an impartial basis by official statistical
agencies to honour citizens‘ entitlement to public
information.
Source: Good Practices in Official Statistics
website, United Nations Statistical Division, New
York
Principle 2. To retain trust in official statistics, the
statistical agencies need to decide according to
strictly professional considerations, including
scientific principles and professional ethics, on the
methods and procedures for the collection,
processing, storage and presentation of statistical
data.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/goodprac/bpabout.asp
See also: Principles and practices for international
statistics
Principle 3. To facilitate a correct interpretation of
the data, the statistical agencies are to present
information according to scientific standards on the
sources, methods and procedures of the statistics.
Funded pension plan
Plans de retraite
capitalisés
Occupational or personal pension plans that
accumulate dedicated assets to cover the plan's
320
liabilities.
Funding rules
Règles de
financement
Regulation that requires the maintenance of a
certain level of assets in a pension fund in relation
to pension plan liabilities.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Book reserved pension plans, Pay as you
go (PAYG) plan, Unfunded pension plan
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Funding (pension
Capitalisation
plan)
The act of accumulating assets in order to finance
the pension plan.
Futures contracts Ŕ
Contrats à terme Ŕ
BPM
MBP
A futures contract is an agreement between two
parties to exchange a real asset for a financial
asset, or to exchange, on a specified date at
predetermined rate, two financial assets.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Funding level
Niveau de
(pension plan)
financement
The relative value of a scheme‘s assets and
liabilities, usually expressed as a percentage
figure.
Traded financial futures, including those for
interest rates, currencies, commodities, equities,
or other indices, are recorded in the financial
account in a similar manner to options
Source: BPM para. 407
Context: Identical term, "Level of funding"
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Futures contracts – SNA
See also: Funding ratio, Overfunding,
Underfunding
Futures contracts Ŕ
Contrats à terme Ŕ
SNA
SCN
Futures contracts are forward contracts traded on
organised exchanges
Funding plan (pension Plan de financement
benefits)
The timing of payments of contributions with the
aim of meeting the cost of a given set of benefits
under a defined benefit scheme.
Source: SNA 11.37
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Possible objectives of a funding plan might be that,
if the actuarial assumptions are borne out:
See also: Futures contracts – BPM
a) a specified funding level should be reached by a
given date;
Futures market
A futures market is a commodities market where
futures contracts are issued
b) the level of contributions should remain
constant, or should after a planned period be the
standard contribution rate required by the
valuation method used in the actuarial valuation.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
See also: Actuarial valuation
G10
See Group of 10 countries
Funding rate
See Contribution rate
Taux de financement
See also: G10 countries
See also: Contribution rate
G10 countries
The Group of Ten is made up of eleven industrial
countries (Belgium, Canada, France, Germany,
Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Sweden,
Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United
States) which consult and co-operate on economic,
monetary and financial matters.
Funding ratio
Coefficient de
capitalisation
The funding level expressed as a fraction.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Context: The Ministers of Finance and Central Bank
Governors of the Group of Ten usually meet once a
year in connection with the autumn meetings of
See also: Funding level (pension plan)
321
the Interim Committee of the International
Monetary Fund. The Governors of the Group of Ten
normally meet bimonthly at the Bank for
International Settlements. The Deputies of the
Group of Ten meet as needed, but usually between
two and four times a year. Ad hoc committees and
working parties of the Group of Ten are set up as
needed.
Source: University of Toronto G8 Information
Centre
Hyperlink: http://www.g7.utoronto.ca/
See also: Major seven countries
Game theory
Théorie des jeux
Generally, that branch of mathematics which deals
with the theory of contests between two or more
players under specified sets of rules. The subject
assumes a statistical aspect when part of the game
proceeds under a chance scheme, e.g. by the
throw of a die or when strategies are selected at
random.
Source: BIS website
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/about/gten.htm
G7 countries
See Major seven countries
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Major seven countries
G8
The G8 countries comprise: Canada, France,
Germany, Italy, Japan, Russian Federation, United
Kingdom, United States
Gamma radiation
Rayonnement gamma
Gamma radiation is a type of radiation comprising
true rays of energy, in contrast to alpha and beta
radiation‘s. Its properties are similar to those of
X—rays and other electromagnetic waves. It
comprises the most penetrating waves of radiant
nuclear energy but can be blocked by dense
materials such as lead
Context: Since 1975, the heads of state or
government of the major industrial democracies
have been meeting annually to deal with the major
economic and political issues facing their domestic
societies and the international community as a
whole. The six countries at the first summit, held
at Rambouillet, France, in November 1975, were
France, the United States, Britain, Germany, Japan
and Italy (sometimes referred to as the G6). They
were joined by Canada at the San Juan Summit of
1976 in Puerto Rico, and by the European
Community at the London Summit of 1977.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
From then on, membership in the Group of Seven,
or G7, was fixed, although 15 developing countries'
leaders met with the G7 leaders on the eve of the
1989 Paris Summit, and the USSR and then Russia
participated in a post-summit dialogue with the G7
since 1991.
Gas / diesel oil
Gas/diesel oil includes heavy gas oils. Gas oils are
obtained from the lowest fraction from atmospheric
distillation of crude oil, while heavy gas oils are
obtained by vacuum redistillation of the residual
from atmospheric distillation.
Starting with the 1994 Naples Summit, the G7 met
with Russia at each summit (referred to as the P8
or Political Eight). The Denver Summit of the Eight
was a milestone, marking full Russian participation
in all but financial and certain economic
discussions; and the 1998 Birmingham Summit
saw full Russian participation, giving birth to the
Group of Eight, or G8 (although the G7 continued
to function along side the formal summits). At the
Kananaskis Summit in Canada in 2002, it was
announced that Russia would host the G8 Summit
in 2006, thus completing its process of becoming a
full member.
Context: Gas/diesel oil distils between 180 degrees
C and 380 degrees C. Several grades are available
depending on uses: diesel oil for diesel
compression ignition (cars, trucks, marine, etc.),
light heating oil for industrial and commercial uses,
and other gas oil including heavy gas oils which
distil between 380 degrees C and 540 degrees C
and which are used as petrochemical feedstocks.
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris
The G7/8 Summit has consistently dealt with
macroeconomic management, international trade,
and relations with developing countries. Questions
of East-West economic relations, energy, and
terrorism have also been of recurrent concern.
From this initial foundation the summit agenda has
broadened considerably to include microeconomic
issues such as employment and the information
highway, transnational issues such as the
environment, crime and drugs, and a host of
political-security issues ranging from human rights
through regional security to arms control.
Gas / liquids from
biomass
Biogas is derived principally from the anaerobic
fermentation of biomass and solid wastes and
combusted to produce heat and/or power. Included
in this category are landfill gas and sludge gas
(sewage gas and gas from animal slurries) and
other biogas. Liquid biomass, which includes bioadditives such as ethanol, is also included in this
category.
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
322
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
"National statistics, methods and quality report:
Glossary of terms"; unpublished
Hyperlink:
http://www.statistics.gov.uk/methods_quality/data
_annex.asp
Gas coke
Gas coke is a by-product of hard coal used for the
production of town gas in gas works. Gas coke is
used for heating purposes.
Gateway exchange
An organized set of bilateral exchanges, in which
several data and metadata sending organizations
or individuals agree to exchange the collected
information with each other in a single, known
format, and according to a single, known process.
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Gas works gas
Gas works gas covers all types of gas produced in
public utility or private plants, whose main purpose
is the manufacture, transport and distribution of
gas. It includes gas produced by carbonisation
(including gas produced by coke ovens and
transferred to gas works), by total gasification
(with or without enrichment with oil products), by
cracking of natural gas, and by reforming and
simple mixing of gases and/or air. This heading
also includes substitute natural gas, which is a high
calorific value gas manufactured by chemical
conversion of a hydrocarbon fossil fuel.
Context: This pattern has the effect of reducing the
burden of managing multiple bilateral exchanges
(in data and metadata collection) across the
sharing organizations/individuals. This is also a
very common process pattern in the statistical
area, where communities of institutions agree on
ways to gain efficiencies within the scope of their
collective responsibilities.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
See also: Bilateral exchange
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
GATS
See General Agreement on Trade in Services
See also: General Agreement on Trade in Services
(GAT)
Gasoline type jet fuel
This includes all light hydrocarbon oils for use in
aviation turbine power units.
GATT
See General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
They distil between 100 degrees C and 250
degrees C. It is obtained by blending kerosenes
and gasoline or naphthas in such a way that the
aromatic content dos not exceed 25 per cent in
volume, and vapour pressure is between 13.7 kPa
and 20.6 kPa. Additives can be included to improve
fuel stability and combustibility.
See also: General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT)
GDP
PIB
See Gross domestic product (GDP)
See also: Gross domestic product
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
GDP Ŕ expenditure
PIB, dans l‟optique
based
des dépenses
See Gross Domestic Product - expenditure-based
Gateway
An interface between some external source of
information and a World Wide Web server. In this
instance a gateway is a web enabled search
mechanism which allows users to search a
distributed network of directory nodes.
See also: Gross domestic product – expenditure
based
Context: A gateway is a computer system for
exchanging information across incompatible
networks that use different protocols. The term
gateway has become synonymous with portal, or
Web portal, which proposes to be a major starting
site on the Web. Portals can be general (such as
Yahoo) or specific (such as the Canadian Federal
Government Web site).
Statistics Canada, Thesauri and Controlled
Vocabularies, Definitions, website
See also: Gross domestic product – income based
Source: Office for National Statistics (ONS),
See also: Gross domestic product – constant prices
GDP Ŕ income based
Le PIB, dans l‟optique
du revenu
See Gross Domestic Product Income-based
GDP Ŕ output based
PIB aux prix du
marché
See Gross Domestic Product Output-based
See also: Gross domestic product – output based
GDP at constant
prices
See Gross Domestic Product at constant prices
323
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
GDP at current prices
See Gross Domestic Product - current prices
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
See also: Gross domestic product – current prices
GDP at market prices
See Gross Domestic Product at market prices
See also: Gross domestic product at market prices
GEIS
See Generalised edit and imputation system
GDP deflator
See Gross domestic product (GDP) deflator
See also: Generalised edit and imputation system
(GEIS)
See also: Gross domestic product (GDP) deflator
Gene
Gène
A gene is an hereditary factor, transmitted from
generation to generation of plants and animals,
that is responsible for the determination of a
particular characteristic, for example, colour,
height or sex
Geary-Khamis method
An aggregation method in which category
"international prices" (reflecting relative category
values) and country purchasing power parities
(PPPs), (depicting relative country price levels) are
estimated simultaneously from a system of linear
equations. Has the property of base-country
invariance, matrix consistency and transitivity.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: The Geary-Khamis method is an average
price method first used by the ICP to compute
PPPs and real final expenditures above the basic
heading.
Gene probes / DNA
markers
A section of DNA of known structure or function
which is marked with a radioactive isotope, dye or
enzyme so that it can be used to detect the
presence of specific sequences of bases in another
DNA or RNA molecule.
It entails valuing a matrix of quantities using a
vector of international prices. The vector is
obtained by averaging national prices across
participating countries after they have been
converted to a common currency with PPPs and
weighted by quantities.
Source: OECD, 2005, A Framework for
Biotechnology Statistics, OECD, Paris, Annex 1:
Glossary of Terms Used in the List-Based Definition
The PPPs are obtained by averaging within
participating countries the ratios of national and
international prices weighted by expenditure.
Gene therapy
Gene delivery, the insertion of genes (e.g. via
retroviral vectors) into selected cells in the body in
order to:
The international prices and the PPPs are defined
by a system of interrelated linear equations that
require solving simultaneously.
- Cause those cells to produce specific therapeutic
agents.
The GK method produces PPPs that are transitive
and real final expenditures that are additive. It has
a number of disadvantages. One is that a change
in the composition of the group can change
significantly the international prices as well as the
relationships between countries. Another is that
the real final
expenditures are subject to the Gerschenkron
effect which can be large.
- Cause those cells to become (more) susceptible
to a conventional therapeutic agent that previously
was ineffective against that particular
condition/disease.
- Cause those cells to become less susceptible to a
conventional therapeutic agent.
Within the context of Eurostat-OECD comparisons,
GK results are considered to be better suited to the
analysis of price and volume structures across
countries. Eurostat and the OECD published in
their joint publication an annex with a selection of
GK results chosen specifically for such structural
analysis.
- Counter the effects of abnormal (damaged)
tumour suppressor genes via insertion of normal
tumour suppressor genes.
- Cause expression of ribozymes that cleave
oncogenes (cancer-causing genes).
- Introduce other therapeutics into cells.
Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Source: OECD, 2005, A Framework for
Biotechnology Statistics, OECD, Paris, Annex 1:
Glossary of Terms Used in the List-Based Definition
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
General programmes
324
(of education)
General programmes are programmes that are not
designed explicitly to prepare participants for a
specific class of occupations or trades or for entry
into further vocational or technical education
programmes. Less than 25 per cent of the
programme content is classified as vocational or
technical.
General cargo ship
Navire de charge
classique
Ship designed with holds for the carriage of diverse
types and forms of goods.
Context: This category includes reefer ships, Ro-Ro
passenger ships, Ro-Ro container ships, other RoRo cargo ships, general cargo/passenger ships and
other multi-purpose ships.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: Pre-vocational programmes, Programme
orientation, Upper secondary education (ISCED 3),
Vocational programmes
General Agreement on Accord général sur les
Tariffs and Trade
tarifs douaniers et le
(GATT)
commerce (GATT)
The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT) is a multilateral agreement, originally
negotiated in 1947 in Geneva among 23 countries,
to reduce tariffs and other trade barriers. It
provides a framework for periodic multilateral
negotiations on trade liberalisation.
General Data
Dissemination System
(GDDS)
The General Data Dissemination System (GDDS) is
a structured process through which IMF member
countries commit voluntarily to improving the
quality of the data produced and disseminated by
their statistical systems over the long run to meet
the needs of macroeconomic analysis.
Context: The most recent round of such
negotiations was the Uruguay Round. Part of the
final agreement of the Uruguay Round, concluded
in December 1993, led to the establishment of the
World Trade Organisation to replace the GATT; it
commenced operation on 1 January 1995.
Source: International Monetary Found (IMF),
"Guide to the General Data Dissemination
System", 2002
Hyperlink:
http://dsbb.imf.org/Applications/web/gdds/gddsgui
delangs/
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
See also: Data dissemination standards, IMF,
Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS)
See also: General Agreement on Trade in Services
(GAT)
General Fisheries
Conseil général des
Council for the
pêches pour la
Mediterranean
Méditerranée (CGPM)
(GFCM)
The General Fisheries Council for the
Mediterranean (GFCM) is an inter-governmental
organisation set up under the auspices of the
United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation
(FAO).
General Agreement on
Trade in Services
(GATS)
The General Agreement on Trade in Services
(GATS) is among the World Trade Organization's
most important agreements. The accord, which
came into force in January 1995, is the first and
only set of multilateral rules covering international
trade in services. It has been negotiated by the
Governments themselves, and it sets the
framework within which firms and individuals can
operate.
The GFCM‘s main functions are to: promote the
development, conservation and management of
living marine resources; formulate and recommend
conservation measures; and encourage
cooperative training projects. Its area of
competence is the Mediterranean, Black Sea and
connection waters. Created by a 1949 agreement
and amended in 1963 and 1976, it has been in
force since 1952
The GATS has two parts: the framework
agreement containing the general rules and
disciplines; and the national ―schedules‖ which list
individual countries‘ specific commitments on
access to their domestic markets by foreign
suppliers
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Source: World Trade Organisation GATS website GATS Fact and Fiction
General government Ŕ Administrations
BPM
publiques (comme
unités
institutionnelles) MBP
General government agencies that are resident of
an economy include all departments,
establishment, and bodies located in the economic
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/serv_e/gats_
factfiction1_e.htm
See also: General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT)
325
territory of an economy‘s central, state, and local
governments and embassies, consulates, military
establishments, and other entities which are
located elsewhere, of an economy‘s general
government.
methods
See also: ESA 1995
General government - Administrations
SNA
publiques (comme
unités
institutionnelles) SCN
The general government sector consists of the
totality of institutional units which, in addition to
fulfilling their political responsibilities and their role
of economic regulation, produce principally nonmarket services (possibly goods) for individual or
collective consumption and redistribute income and
wealth.
Context: The general government of an economy
covers all unclassified agencies of the public
authorities. Such agencies include: government
departments, offices, and other bodies that engage
the administration, defence and regulation of the
public order; promotion of economic growth,
welfare and technological development; and
provision of education, health, cultural,
recreational, and other social and community
services free of charge or at sales prices that do
not cover most or all the costs of production.
Context: The general government sector consists
mainly of central, state and local government units
together with social security funds imposed and
controlled by those units. In addition, it includes
non-profit institutions engaged in non-market
production that are controlled and mainly financed
by government units or social security funds.
Also included are other non-profit organizations
serving individuals or business enterprises that are
wholly, or mainly, financed and controlled by the
public authorities and non-profit organisations
primarily serving government bodies
Source: BPM paras. 85-86
Source: SNA 2.20, 4.9
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: General government - SNA
See also: General government – BPM
General government
gross debt
(Maastricht definition)
General government gross debt according to the
convergence criteria set out in the Maastricht
Treaty comprises currency, bills and short- term
bonds, other short- term loans and other mediumand long- term loans and bonds, defined according
to ESA 95.
General government
accounts
General government accounts are consolidated
central, state and local government accounts,
social security funds and non-market non-profit
institutions controlled and mainly financed by
government units
Context: Debt is consolidated within the general
government. Financial liabilities such as trade
credits extended to the government are not
included. Debt is valued at nominal value (face
value).
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
General government
administration of
health
General government administration of health
(except social security) comprises a variety of
activities of over-all Government administration of
health that can't be assigned to HC.1- HC.6:
activities such as formulation, administration coordination and monitoring of overall health
policies, plans, programmes and budgets
Index-linked debt is valued at its face value
adjusted by the index-related capital uplift accrued
to the end of the year. Gross debt according to the
Maastricht criterion differs from the SNA based
general government gross financial liabilities
concept of the OECD in essentially two respects.
First, gross debt according to the Maastricht
criterion does not include, in the terminology of the
SNA, trade credits and advances.
Source: A System of Health Accounts, OECD,
2000, chapter 9
Second, there is a difference in valuation
methodology in that government bonds are to be
valued at nominal values according to the
Maastricht definition, but at market value or at
issue price plus accrued interest according to SNA
rules
General government
expenditure on health
General government (excluding social security)
expenditure on health refers to expenditures
incurred by central, state/regional and local
government authorities, excluding social security
schemes. Included are non-market, non-profit
institutions that are controlled and mainly financed
by government units.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-and-
326
Context: Note: This item corresponds to HF.1.1 in
the ICHA-HF classification of health care financing
(see SHA, chapters 6 and 11)
General sales taxes
Impôts généraux sur
les ventes
General sales taxes consist of all general taxes
levied at one stage only (e.g. manufacturing or
wholesale or retail) plus multi-stage cumulative
taxes (also known as cascade taxes) where tax is
levied each time a transaction takes place without
any deduction for tax paid on inputs
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Source: OECD 5112 and 5113 [7.69]
General government
gross debt
(Maastricht definition)
See Gross debt, general government (Maastricht
definition)
General Services
Support Estimate
(GSSE)
The General Services Support Estimate (GSSE) is
an indicator of the annual monetary value of gross
transfers to services provided collectively to
agriculture and arising from policy measures which
support agriculture, regardless of their nature,
objectives and impacts on farm production,
income, or consumption of farm products.
See also: Gross debt – general government
(Maastricht definition)
General government
structural balance
The budget balance can be decomposed into a
cyclical and a non-cyclical, or structural,
component.
Context: It includes taxpayer transfers to: improve
agricultural production (research and
development); agricultural training and education
(agricultural schools); control of quality and safety
of food, agricultural inputs, and the environment
(inspection services); improving off-farm collective
infrastructures, including downstream and
upstream industry (infrastructures); assist
marketing and promotion (marketing and
promotion); meet the costs of depreciation and
disposal of public storage of agricultural products
(public stockholding); and other general services
that cannot be disagreggated and allocated to the
above categories due, for example, to a lack of
information (miscellaneous).
The decomposition is aimed at separating cyclical
influences on the budget balances resulting from
the divergence between actual and potential
output (the output gap), from those which are
non-cyclical. Changes in the latter can be seen as a
cause rather than an effect of output fluctuations
and may be interpreted as indicative of
discretionary policy adjustments.
It should be noted, however, that changes in
resource revenues -- as a result of oil price
changes, for example -- and in interest payments - as a result of past debt accumulation or changes
in interest rates -- are neither cyclical nor purely
discretionary. Yet these changes are reflected in
the evolution of the structural component of the
budget balance.
Unlike the Producer Support Estimate (PSE) and
Consumer Support Estimate (CSE) transfers, these
transfers are not received by producers or
consumers individually and do not affect farm
receipts (revenue) or consumption expenditure by
their amount, although they may affect production
and consumption of agricultural commodities. The
percentage GSSE is the ratio of the GSSE to the
Total Support Estimate
Context: One-off revenues from the sale of the
third generation mobile telephone (often called
Universal Mobile Telephone System) licenses are
excluded in computing the structural balance for
France (2001, 1.1% of GDP), Germany (2000,
2.5% of GDP), Italy (2000, 1.2% of GDP), the
Netherlands (2000, 0.7% of GDP) and Portugal
(2000, 0.4% of GDP) where reported or expected
revenues are substantial.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Source: OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
General trade system
The general trade system is in use when the
statistical territory of a country coincides with its
economic territory. Consequently, under the
general trade system, imports include all goods
entering the economic territory of a compiling
country and exports all goods leaving the economic
territory of a compiling country
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
General obligations
Obligations which should be applied to all services
sector at the entry into force of the agreement.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Source: International Merchandise Trade Statistics,
Concepts and Definitions, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Studies in Methods, Series M, No. 52,
Rev. 2, page 9, para. 66
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
See also: Economic territory (of a country) –
327
SNA/UN, Special trade system – UN, Statistical
territory (of a country) – UN
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Generalised edit and
imputation system
(GEIS)
A generalised edit and imputation system (GEIS) is
a processing system that was developed at
Statistics Canada to meet the requirements of the
Canadian economic surveys. Its main feature are
(i) an error localization function which uses a
minimum change approach, and (ii) an imputation
function which performs deterministic imputation,
donor imputation, and imputation by estimators.
Generational
accounting
Generational accounts are used to assess the
distributional implications of fiscal policy for
different cohorts. This is accomplished by
estimating the present value of net tax payments
(taxes paid less benefits received) over the lifetime
of different generations under current tax and
spending policies.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Context: A generation is defined as including all
males and females (separately accounted for,
because of differing tax and benefits profiles) born
in the same year.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
The technique has heavy data requirements and
the results depend on a large number of
simplifying assumptions. It is generally regarded
as a supplementary technique for analysis of
sustainability and intergenerational distribution.
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Generalised System of
Preferences (GSP)
The Generalised System of Preferences (GSP) is an
autonomous, country-specific policy that permits
tariff reductions or possibly duty-free entry of
certain imports from designated developing
countries
Generic specification
See Product specification
See also: Product specification
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Genetic effects (of
Effets génétiques
radiation)
The genetic effects (of radiation) are inheritable
changes, chiefly mutations, produced by the
absorption of ionizing radiation‘s. On the basis of
present knowledge, these effects are additive and
irreversible
Generally accepted
accounting principles
The accounting rules used to prepare financial
statements for publicly traded companies and
many private companies in the United States.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: Generally accepted accounting principles
(GAAP) for local and state governments operate
under a different set of assumptions, principles,
and constraints, as determined by the
Governmental Accounting Standards Board
(GASB). Currently, the Financial Accounting
Standards Board (FASB) sets accounting principles
for the profession. The US GAAP provisions differ
somewhat from International Financial Reporting
Standards, though efforts are under way to
reconcile the differences.
Genetic engineering
Génie génétique
Genetic engineering refers to the process of
inserting new genetic information into existing cells
for the purpose of modifying one of the
characteristics of an organism
Context: Refers to a set of technologies that
artificially move functional genes across species
boundaries to produce novel organisms as well as
to suppress or enhance gene functioning in the
same species (OECD Agricultural Outlook: 20022007, OECD, Paris, 2002 – Annex II. Glossary of
Terms)
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Generation of income Compte d‟exploitation
account
The generation of income account shows the types
of primary incomes and the sectors, sub-sectors or
industries in which the primary incomes originate,
as distinct from the sectors or sub-sectors destined
to receive such incomes
Altering the genetic material of cells or organisms
in order to make them capable of making new
substances or performing new functions.
Source: SNA 7.3
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
OECD, 2005, A Framework for Biotechnology
Statistics, OECD, Paris, Annex 1: Glossary of
Terms Used in the List-Based Definition
328
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
saving, since this spending may be considered to
be an investment in human capital (rather than
consumption, as in the traditional national
accounts).
Genetic modification
Genetic modification (genetic engineering) is the
manipulation of the genetic material of an
organism to produce desired traits, such as
nutritional quality, photosynthetic efficiency and
herbicide resistance
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 10.159
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Geocoded statistics
In general all statistics are somehow geocoded
meaning that they are referred to a regional
reference system using alphanumerical codes of
areas or locations (e.g. names, numbers).
Genetic resources
Ressources
génétiques
Genetic resources are genetic material of plants,
animals or micro—organisms of value as a
resource for future generations of humanity
Context: National Data refer to a whole country,
regional data refer to smaller areas (mostly
administrative regions, like the European NUTS
regions, divided in 3 levels).
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Manual of concepts on Land Cover and
Land Use Information Systems, Doc.
ESTAT/LAND/31rev1, p.85
Genetically Modified
OGM
Organisms (GMO)
A plant or animal micro-organism or virus, which
has been genetically engineered or modified
Geocoding
(a) A geographic information system (GIS)
function that determines a point location based on
an address.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
(b) The process of assigning geographic codes to
features in a digital database.
Genomics /
pharmacogenomics
The study of genes and their function. Advances in
genomics due to the Human Genome Project and
other genome research into plants, animals and
micro-organisms are enhancing our understanding
of the molecular mechanisms of genomes.
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Context: Genomics stimulates the discovery of
health care products by revealing thousands of
new biological targets for the development of
drugs and by identifying innovative ways to design
new drugs, vaccines and DNA diagnostics.
Genomic-based therapeutics includes both protein
drugs and small molecule drugs. Genomics is also
used in plant and animal breeding programmes.
Geodetic datum
To enable the representation of the Earth's surface
on a piece of paper, parameters of the size and the
shape of the Earth and the origin and orientation of
a co-ordinate system need to be defined. Such
parameters are described by so-called Geodetic
datums.
Source: OECD, 2005, A Framework for
Biotechnology Statistics, OECD, Paris, Annex 1:
Glossary of Terms Used in the List-Based Definition
Source: Manual of concepts on Land Cover and
Land Use Information Systems, Doc.
ESTAT/LAND/31rev1, p.75
Gentlemen's
agreement
See Collusion
Geodetic reference
system
The geodetic reference system is defined as 'a
complete reference system for positioning a point
on the earth, including datum, co-ordinate
description, co-ordinate system and possibly a
projection' (CEN 1998).
See also: Collusion
Genuine saving
Genuine saving adjusts SNA saving by deducting
the value of depletion of the underlying resource
asset and pollution damages, and considers
current educational spending as an increase in
Context: Any type of map is based on such a
positional reference system: each point on the
Earth's surface corresponds to a point referenced
329
on the map. In other words, it allows an
exhaustive description of the earth's surface.
Geographic
information
Geographic information is:
Source: Manual of concepts on Land Cover and
Land Use Information Systems, Doc.
ESTAT/LAND/31rev1, p.75
• information about places on the Earth's surface
• knowledge about where something is
• knowledge about what is at a given location
(GOODCHILD 1997)
Geographic
boundaries / national
territory
Boundaries that determine the national territory.
Context: Geographic information is traditionally
'stored' in analogue format on paper maps. This
format has several constraints concerned with the
presentation and the content of the information,
depending on the scale, the grade of generalisation
and the type of the map. Today, geographic
information is handled like many other types of
information in computerised systems.
Context: National territory does not correspond to
economic territory; some resident units pertaining
to the national economy (economic territory)
operate in foreign countries; conversely some units
pertaining to other national economies operate
within the national territory.
Ideal geographic objects have spatial boundaries
and a well defined set of attributes, for example
land parcels with accurate and precise boundaries
surveyed in the field and attributes like ownership,
actual use, permitted use, tax value and so on,
which apply uniformly to the whole object.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.82
Points, lines and areas delineate these geographic
objects in a defined and absolute geographic
reference system. Lines are composed by points
with exact co-ordinates of the absolute reference
system, areas (polygons) are composed by lines.
The information on the spatial delineation of such
geographic phenomena is called geographic data.
Geographic code
A unique alphanumeric identifier that is assigned to
a legal, administrative , statistical or reporting
unit.
Analogue geographic information systems (=Maps)
present those points, lines and areas
(areas=polygons) at a specified scale on a piece of
paper. Digital geographic information systems
store the real world co-ordinates of the geographic
objects in numerical format.
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Source: Manual of concepts on Land Cover and
Land Use Information Systems, Doc.
ESTAT/LAND/31rev1, p.85
Geographic coverage
Geographic coverage describes the locations
covered by the survey. These may be specified as
location names, various … codes for localities,
census map spots, and latitude and longitude
ranges …..
Geographical
distribution of the
flows of financial
resources to aid
recipients, annual
An annual publication of the OECD that shows the
sources of official development financing to
individual developing countries and territories.
Included in this publication are detailed data on
the geographical distribution of net and gross
disbursements, commitments, terms, and the
sectoral allocation of commitments.
Source: Survey Design and Statistical Methodology
Metadata, Software and Standards Management
Branch, Systems Support Division, United States
Bureau of the Census, Washington D.C., August
1998, Section 3.3.17, page 26
See also: Coverage
Geographic coverage
Geographic coverage describes the locations
covered by the survey. These may be specified as
location names, various … codes for localities,
census map spots, and latitude and longitude
ranges …..
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: Survey Design and Statistical Methodology
Metadata, Software and Standards Management
Branch, Systems Support Division, United States
Bureau of the Census, Washington D.C., August
1998, Section 3.3.17, page 26
Geographical
indications
See also: Coverage
330
Place names (or words associated with a place)
used to identify products (for example,
―Champagne‖, ―Tequila‖ or ―Roquefort‖) which
have a particular quality, reputation or other
characteristic because they come from that place.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Geometric depreciation – capital stock
Geometric distribution Distribution
géométrique
A distribution in which the frequencies fall off in
geometric progression as the variate values
increase.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Geographical
Système
information system
d‟information
(GIS)
géographique (SIG)
A geographical information system (GIS) can be
seen as a system of hardware, software and
procedures designed to support the capture,
management, manipulation, analysis, modelling
and display of spatially referenced data
Geometric growth
Geometric growth refers to the situation where
successive changes in a population differ by a
constant ratio (as distinct from a constant amount
for arithmetic change).
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 1.231
Context: Geometric growth rates may take the
form of annual growth rates, quarter-on-previous
quarter growth rates or month-on-previous month
growth rates.
Geographical zones,
MEI
See Main Economic Indicator main country
groupings
The geometric growth rate is applicable to
compound growth over discrete periods, such as
the payment and reinvestment of interest or
dividends. Although continuous growth, as
modelled by the exponential growth rate, may be
more realistic, most economic phenomena are
measured only at intervals, in which case the
compound growth model is appropriate.
See also: Main Economic Indicator main country
groupings
Geologic hazard
A geologic hazard is an extreme natural events in
the crust of the earth that pose a threat to life and
property, for example, earthquakes, volcanic
eruptions, tsunamis (tidal waves) and landslides
As with the exponential growth rate, the geometric
growth rate does not take account intermediate
values of the series.
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
3: Guidelines for the reporting of different forms of
data
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Geometric
Amortissement
depreciation Ŕ OECD
géométrique - OCDE
Geometric depreciation is a depreciation profile
based on a constant annual rate of capital
consumption over the life of the asset
Geometric Laspeyres
price index
A price index defined as the weighted geometric
average of the current to base period price
relatives using the value shares of the base period
as weights.
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Also known as the ―logarithmic Laspeyres price
index‖.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
See also: Geometric depreciation - SNA
Geometric
Dépréciation
depreciation - SNA
géométrique - SCN
Geometric depreciation is a depreciation profile
based on the efficiency and rentals on a fixed asset
declining at a constant geometric rate from period
to period
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Geometric mean
Moyenne géométrique
A measure of location which is one of the general
class of combinatorial power mean.
Source: SNA 6.195
331
GERD
See Gross domestic expenditure on research and
development
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Gross domestic expenditure on research
and development (GERD)
Gerschenkron effect
Applicable only to aggregation methods that use
either a reference price structure – that is, each
country‘s quantities are valued by a uniform set of
prices - or a reference volume structure – that is,
each country‘s prices are used to value a uniform
set of quantities - to compare countries.
Geometric moving
Moyenne mobile
average
géométrique
An expression to be avoided, as it is not based on
geometric means.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Context: For methods employing a reference price
structure, a country‘s share of total GDP - that is,
the total for the group of countries being compared
- will rise as the reference price structure becomes
less characteristic of its own price structure. For
methods employing a reference volume structure,
a country‘s share of total GDP will fall as the
reference volume structure becomes less
characteristic of its own volume structure. The
Gerschenkron effect arises because of the negative
correlation between prices and volumes.
Geometric Paasche
price index
A price index defined as the weighted geometric
average of the current to base period price
relatives using the value shares of the current
period as weights.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Also known as the ―logarithmic Paasche price
index‖.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
GESMES
GESMES (Generic Statistical Message) is a United
Nations standard (EDIFACT message) allowing
partner institutions to exchange statistical multidimensional arrays in a generic but standardised
way. It has been designed by Expert Group 6
(Statistics) of the European Board for EDI
Standardisation.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Context: GESMES/CB is a GESMES profile
Geometric period
average
For a continuous distribution with frequency
function f (x) the geometric mean may be defined
by the equation: / log G= / logxf(x)dx. /-
Source: European Central Bank (ECB), Bank for
International Settlement (BIS), Eurostat,
International Monetary Fund (IMF), Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD), "GESMES/TS User Guide", Release 3.00,
February, 2003; unpublished on paper
Source: Sir Maurice G. Kendall and William R.
Buckland for the International Statistical Institute.
A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, Fourth Edition.
London, Longman Group, 1982.
Hyperlink:
http://www.sdmx.org/Data/GesmesTS_rel3.pdf
See also: Attribute, EDIFACT, Electronic data
interchange (EDI), GESMES TS, GESMES/CB,
Statistical message
Geothermal energy
Energy available as heat emitted from within the
earth‘s crust, usually in the form of hot water or
steam. It is exploited at suitable sites:
GESMES CB
Message profile for data exchange used by the
central banking community.
- for electricity generation using dry steam or high
enthalpy brine after flashing;
Context: The message was renamed from
GESMES/CB to GESMES/TS in 2003.
- directly as heat for district heating, agriculture,
etc.
Source: European Central Bank (ECB), Bank for
International Settlement (BIS), Eurostat,
International Monetary Fund (IMF), Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD), "GESMES/TS User Guide", Release 3.00,
February, 2003; unpublished on paper
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
332
Gestational period
The gestational period refers to the interval in
completed weeks between the first day of the last
menstrual period of the mother and the day,
month and year of delivery irrespective of whether
the product of conception is a live birth or born
with no evidence of life (foetal death)
Hyperlink:
http://www.sdmx.org/Data/GesmesTS_rel3.pdf
See also: GESMES, GESMES TS, Time series
GESMES TS
GESMES Time Series data exchange message. It is
a message (a GESMES profile) allowing the
exchange of statistical time series, related
attributes and structural definitions using a
standardised format.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Context: The message has been renamed from
GESMES/CB to GESMES/TS in 2003, reflecting also
the adoption of the message by a large statistical
community, including the BIS, the ECB, Eurostat,
the IMF and OECD.
GFS
See Government Financial Statistics
See also: Government Financial Statistics (GFS)
This data-exchange message implements a timeseries data exchange model (GESMES/TS data
model), which allows users to exchange and
identify time series through a multidimensional key
and various associated metadata. It uses a generic
GESMES profile and, for the version described in
the GESMES TS user guide published by the
European Central Bank, the EDIFACT syntax.
GIF
Graphics Interchange Format
Gini index
The Gini index measures the extent to which the
distribution of income (or, in some cases,
consumption expenditure) among individuals or
households within an economy deviates from a
perfectly equal distribution.
Whereas the full GESMES message is a generic
statistical data model— with flexible syntax to
describe virtually any statistical data model—
GESMES/TS has a fixed syntax. This allows users
and their partner institutions to design and build
applications users need to "read" and "write"
GESMES/TS messages, while avoiding intermediate
files and special translators.
The Gini index measures the area between the
Lorenz curve and the hypothetical line of absolute
equality, expressed as a percentage of the
maximum area under the line.
A Gini index of zero represents perfect equality and
100, perfect inequality.
Source: European Central Bank (ECB), Bank for
International Settlement (BIS), Eurostat,
International Monetary Fund (IMF), Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD), "GESMES/TS User Guide", Release 3.00,
February, 2003; unpublished on paper
Context: For a formal definition of the Gini index
and examples, see
http://www.leftbusinessobserver.com/Gini_supple
ment.html
Hyperlink:
http://www.sdmx.org/Data/GesmesTS_rel3.pdf
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 704
See also: Attachment level, Attribute, Code list,
Data exchange, Definition, structural, Dimension
(dimensionality), GESMES, GESMES CB, GESMES
TS data model, Key family, Maintenance agency,
Period (interval), Sibling group, Statistical concept,
Structural definition, Structural metadata
Global bond
International issue placed at the same time in the
Euro and one or more domestic markets with
securities fungible between the markets.
GESMES TS data
model
A time-series data exchange model which allows to
exchange and identify time series through a
multidimensional key and various associated
metadata.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Global commons
Patrimoine commun
Global commons are natural assets outside
national jurisdiction such as the oceans, outer
space and the Antarctic
Source: European Central Bank (ECB), Bank for
International Settlement (BIS), Eurostat,
International Monetary Fund (IMF), Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD), "GESMES/TS User Guide", Release 3.00,
February, 2003; unpublished on paper
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Data item, Data model, GESMES TS, Key
(time series or sibling group)
333
Global Financial
Stability Report
Launched in March 2002, this semiannual IMF
publication focuses on current conditions in global
financial markets, highlighting issues of financial
imbalances and structural problems that could
pose risks to financial market stability and
sustained market access by emerging market
borrowers.
A digital cellular or personal communication
services (PCS) network.
Source: Cellular Mobile Pricing Structures and
Trends, Working Party on Telecommunication and
Information Services Policies – November 1999,
page 9, Select Glossary of Mobile Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/54/42/2538118.pdf
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Global warming
Réchauffement de la
planète
Global warming is a phenomenon believed to occur
as a result of the build—up of carbon dioxide and
other greenhouse gases. It has been identified by
many scientists as a major global environmental
threat
Global information
system (GIS)
database
A GIS database contains information about the
location of real-world features and the
characteristics of those features.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
See also: Climate change, Greenhouse effect
Global warming
potential
The aggregate measure of the contribution to the
greenhouse effect of some gases through their
conversion into carbon dioxide equivalent.
Global positioning
system (GPS)
A technology using satellites and portable receivers
to determine exact positions on the earth's
surface.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank , 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.27
Context: GPS is used extensively in field mapping,
surveying and navigation. GPS is maintained by
the United States Department of Defense.
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Globalisation
The term globalisation is generally used to describe
an increasing internationalisation of markets for
goods and services, the means of production,
financial systems, competition, corporations,
technology and industries.
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Global recoding
Problems of confidentiality can be tackled by
changing the structure of data. Thus, rows or
columns in tables can be combined into larger
class intervals or new groupings of characteristics.
This may be a simpler solution than the
suppression of individual items, but it tends to
reduce the descriptive and analytical value of the
table. This protection technique may also be used
to protect microdata.
Amongst other things this gives rise to increased
mobility of capital, faster propagation of
technological innovations and an increasing
interdependency and uniformity of national
markets
Source: Manual on Statistics of International Trade
in Services, Eurostat, IMF, OECD, UN, UNCTAD,
WTO, 2002 – Annex II, Glossary
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Hyperlink:
http://www1.oecd.org/std/TIS_Dec2000_Meeting/
DOCS/SERV2000_2e.pdf
Glossary
An alphabetized list of terms with definitions often
created by an organization to reflect its needs.
Normally lacks hierarchical arrangement or cross
references. Also known as a term list.
Global system for
mobile
communications
(GSM)
Context: A glossary also commonly contains an
334
explanation of words, concepts or terms that are
usually listed in alphabetical order (Economic
Commission for Europe of the United Nations
(UNECE), "Terminology on Statistical Metadata",
Conference of European Statisticians Statistical
Standards and Studies, No. 53, Geneva, 2000,
available at:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf).
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/mfs/manual/i
ndex.htm
Gold swaps
Gold swaps are forms of repurchase agreements
commonly undertaken between central banks or
between a central bank and other types of financial
institutions. They occur when gold is exchanged for
foreign exchange, at a specified price with a
commitment to repurchase the gold at a fixed price
on a specified future date so that the original party
remains exposed to the gold market. Its features
are, therefore, very similar to those of a repo
Examples of statistical glossary databases are
Eurostat's CODED Glossary (available at
http://forum.europa.eu.int/irc/dsis/coded/info/data
/coded/en.htm) and the OECD Glossary of
Statistical Terms (available at http://cs3hq.oecd.org/scripts/stats/glossary/index.htm).
Source: Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual,
IMF, Washington, 2000, para. 154
Source: Dublin Core
Hyperlink: http://www.dublincore.org
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/mfs/manual/i
ndex.htm
See also: Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (DCMI),
Term - ISO
GNI
See Gross National Income
Good governance
Good governance is characterised by participation,
transparency, accountability, rule of law,
effectiveness, equity, etc.
See also: Gross national income (GNI)
GNP
See Gross National product
Context: Good governance refers to the
management of government in a manner that is
essentially free of abuse and corruption, and with
due regard for the rule of law.
See also: Gross national product (GNP)
Going concern
Refers to the ability of an organisation to pay its
debts as they fall due. An organisation which is
able to do so is a going concern. One of the key
assumptions underlying the general preparation of
financial statements is that they are prepared on
the basis that the organisation is a going concern.
IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency, IMF,
Washington DC, Glossary
Source: OECD, 2006, DAC Guidelines and
Reference Series Applying Strategic Environmental
Assessment: Good Practice Guidance for
Development Co-operation, OECD, Paris
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
See also: Governance
Goodness of fit
Qualité de
l'adjustement
In general, the goodness of agreement between an
observed set of values and a second set which are
derived wholly or partly on a hypothetical basis,
that is to say, derive from the ―fitting‖ of a model
to the data.
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Gold loans
Gold loans (or gold deposits) may be undertaken
to obtain an income return on gold. The gold that
is placed on loan (or deposit) may be either a
financial asset (i.e., monetary gold) or a nonfinancial asset (i.e., non-monetary gold.) The gold
remains on the books of the gold lender, and the
lender retains the exposure to the market risk
arising from movements in the market price of
gold.
Context: The term is used especially in relation to
the fitting of theoretical distributions to
observation and the fitting of regression lines. The
excellence of the fit is often measured by some
criterion depending on the squares of differences
between observed and theoretical value, and if the
criterion has a minimum value the corresponding
fit is said to be ―best‖.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Gold loans (or deposits) are not backed by cash
collateral and, in some cases, are not backed by
non-cash collateral. However, the gold may be onsold by the borrower
Source: Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual,
IMF, Washington, 2000, para. 156
Goods Ŕ BPM
Biens - MBP
Goods usually comprise the largest category of
transactions that for the most part, involve
335
changes of ownership between resident and nonresidents.
See also: Goods – BPM, Goods - SNA
Goods and services
Compte de biens et
account
services
The goods and services account shows for the
economy as a whole and for groups of products,
the total resources in terms of output and imports,
and the uses of goods and services in terms of
intermediate consumption, final consumption,
gross capital formation and exports
Goods covers:
-
general merchandise
goods for processing
repairs on goods
goods procured in ports by carriers
non-monetary gold.
Context: In accordance with general balance of
payments principles, change of ownership is the
principle determining the coverage and time of
recording of international transaction in goods.
Certain exceptions are applied to the principle.
Exports and imports of goods are recorded at
market values at points of uniform valuation, that
is, the custom frontiers of exporting economies
Source: SNA 15.5
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Goods carried by
inland waterways
Marchandise
transportée par voies
navigables intérieures
Any goods moved by inland waterways transport
(IWT) freight vessel.
Source: BPM paras. 184, 196-202
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Context: This includes all packaging and
equipment such as containers, swap-bodies or
pallets.
See also: Goods – CPC, Goods - SNA
Goods - SNA
Biens - SCN
Goods are physical objects for which a demand
exists, over which ownership rights can be
established and whose ownership can be
transferred from one institutional unit to another
by engaging in transactions on markets; they are
in demand because they may be used to satisfy
the needs or wants of households or the
community or used to produce other goods or
services.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Goods carried by rail
Marchandise
transportée par
chemin de fer
Any goods moved by rail vehicles.
Context: The production and exchange of goods
are quite separate activities. Some goods may
never be exchanged while others may be bought
and sold numerous times. The separation of the
production of a good from its subsequent sale or
resale is an economically significant characteristic
of a good that is not shared by a service
This includes all packaging and equipment, such as
containers, swap-bodies or pallets as well as road
goods vehicles carried by rail.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: SNA 6.7
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Goods – BPM, Goods – CPC
Goods carried by road Marchandise
transportée par route
Any goods moved by road goods vehicles.
Goods Ŕ UN
Goods comprise division 0, agriculture, forestry
and fishery products; 1, ores and minerals;
electricity, gas and water; 2, food products,
beverages and tobacco; textiles, apparel and
leather products; 3, other transportable goods,
except metal products, machinery and equipment;
4, metal products, machinery and equipment
Context: This includes all packaging and
equipment such as containers, swap-bodies or
pallets.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Central Product Classification (CPC).
Version 1.0. United Nations, 1998, Series M, No.
77, Ver. 1.0, pages 25-27
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
Goods carried by sea
336
Marchandises
transportées par mer
the country by rail
(other than goods in
transit by rail
throughout)
dans le pays par rail
(autres que les
marchandises en
transit par le rail de
bout en bout)
Goods loaded on a foreign railway network and
transported by rail on the reporting railway
network for unloading in the country of this
reporting network.
Any goods moved by sea.
Context: This includes all packaging and
equipment such as containers, swap-bodies or
pallets. Mail is included; goods carried on or in
wagons, lorries, trailers, semi-trailers or barges
are also included.
Conversely, the following items are excluded: road
passenger vehicles with drivers, bunkers and
stores of vessels, fish landed from fishing vessels
and fish-processing ships, goods carried internally
between different basins or docks of the same
port.
Context: Wagons loaded on a foreign railway
network and carried by ferry to the reporting
network are included.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Goods having entered
the country by road
(other than goods in
transit by road
throughout)
Marchandises entrées
dans le pays par le
route (autres que les
marchandises en
transit par le route de
bout en bout)
Goods which, having been loaded on a road vehicle
in another country, entered the country by road
and were unloaded there.
Goods for resale Ŕ
Stocks de biens
inventories
destinés à la revente
See Inventories of goods for resale
See also: Inventories of goods for resale
Goods having entered
the country by inland
waterways (other
than goods in transit
by
Marchandises entrées
dans le pays voies
navigables intérieures
(autres que les
marchandises en
transit par voies
navigables intérieures
de bout en bout)
Goods which, having been loaded on an inland
waterways transport (IWT) vessel in another
country, entered the country by inland waterways
and were unloaded there.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Goods having entered Marchandises entrées
the country by sea
dans le pays par mer
Goods which, having been loaded on a seagoing
vessel in another country, entered the country by
sea and were unloaded there.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Goods having entered
the country by oil
pipeline (other than
goods in transit by oil
pipeline)
Marchandises entrées
dans le pays par
oléoducs (autres que
les marchandises en
transit par oléoducs
de bout en bout)
Goods which, having been pumped into an oil
pipeline in another country or that part of the
seabed allocated to it, entered the country by oil
pipeline and were pumped out there.
Goods having left the
country by inland
waterways (other
than goods in transit
by inland)
Marchandises sorties
du pays par voies
navigables intérieures
(autres que les
marchandises en
transit par voies
navigables intérieures
de bout en bout)
Goods which, having been loaded on an inland
waterways transport (IWT) vessel in the country,
left the country by inland waterways and were
unloaded in another country.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
Goods having entered Marchandises entrées
337
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Goods having left the
country by oil pipeline
(other than goods in
transit by oil pipeline)
Marchandises sorties
du pays par oléoducs
(autres que les
marchandises en
transit par oléoducs
de bout en bout)
Goods which, having been pumped into an oil
pipeline in the country or that part of the seabed
allocated to it, left the country by oil pipeline and
were pumped out in another country.
Goods in transit by
inland waterways
throughout
Marchandises en
transit par voies
navigables intérieures
de bout en bout
Goods which entered the country by inland
waterways and left the country by inland
waterways at a point different from the point of
entry, after having been carried across the country
solely by inland waterways in the same inland
waterways transport (IWT) freight vessel.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Transhipments from one IWT vessel to
another and changes of pusher tugs or tugs are
regarded as loading/unloading.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Goods having left the
country by rail (other
than goods in transit
by rail throughout)
Marchandises sorties
du pays par rail
(autres que les
marchandises en
transit par rail de bout
en bout)
Goods loaded on a reporting railway network and
transported by rail to be unloaded in a foreign
country.
Goods in transit by oil Marchandises en
pipeline throughout
transit par oléoducs
de bout en bout
Goods which entered the country by oil pipeline
and left the country by oil pipeline at a point
different from the point of entry, after having been
transported across the country solely by oil
pipeline.
Context: Wagons loaded on a railway network and
carried by ferry to a foreign network are included.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Goods which entered and/or left the
country in question by vessels after pumping
into/pumping out of an oil pipeline at the frontier
are included.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Goods having left the
country by road
(other than goods in
transit by road
throughout)
Marchandises sorties
du pays par la route
(autres que les
marchandises en
transit par la route de
en bout)
Goods which having been loaded on a road vehicle
in the country, left the country by road and were
unloaded in another country.
Goods in transit by
rail throughout
Marchandises en
transit par rail de bout
en bout
Goods loaded on a foreign railway network for a
destination on a foreign railway network which are
transported on the reporting railway network.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Wagons entering and/or leaving the
reporting network by ferry are included.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Goods having left the Marchandises sorties
country by sea
du pays par mer
Goods which, having been loaded on a seagoing
vessel in the country, left the country by sea and
were unloaded in another country.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
338
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Goods in transit by
road throughout
Goods which entered the country by road and left
the country by road at a point different from the
point of entry, after having been carried across the
country in the same goods road motor vehicle.
Goods loaded (for
transport by road)
Goods placed on a road vehicle and dispatched by
road.
Context: Transhipment from one goods road
vehicle to another or change of the road tractor
are regarded as loading/unloading.
Context: Transhipment from one goods road
vehicle to another or change of the road tractor
are regarded as loading after unloading.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Goods inland
waterways transport
(IWT) link
Relation de transport
de marchandises par
voies navigables
intérieures
The combination of the place of loading and the
place of unloading of the goods transported by
inland waterways whichever itinerary is followed.
Goods loaded (for
transport by sea)
Goods placed on a seagoing vessel and dispatched
by sea.
Context: Transshipment from one seagoing vessel
to another is regarded as loading after unloading.
Goods loaded include national goods,
transshipment goods (national or foreign goods
arriving in port by sea) and land transit goods
(foreign goods arriving in port by road, rail, air or
inland waterway).
Context: Places are defined by using international
classification systems such as NUTS (Nomenclature
of Territorial Units for Statistics - EUROSTAT).
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Goods loaded (for
inland waterways
transport)
Goods placed on an IWT vessel and dispatched by
inland waterways.
Goods oil pipeline
transport link
Relation de transport
de marchandises par
oléoducs
The combination of the pumping-in place and the
pumping-out place of the goods transported by oil
pipeline whichever itinerary is followed.
Context: Transhipment from one IWT vessel to
another is regarded as loading after unloading. The
same applies to changes of pusher tugs or tugs.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Places are defined by using international
classification systems such as NUTS (Nomenclature
of Territorial Units for Statistics - EUROSTAT).
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Goods loaded (for
transport by rail)
Goods placed on a rail vehicle and dispatched by
rail.
Goods rail transport
link
Relation de transport
de marchandises par
chemin de fer
The combination of the place of loading and the
place of unloading of the goods transported by rail
whichever the itinerary is followed.
Context: Unlike in road and inland waterway
transport, transhipments from one rail vehicle to
another and change of tractive vehicle are not
regarded as loading after unloading.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
Context: Places are defined by using international
classification, such as NUTS (Nomenclature of
339
Territorial Units for Statistics - EUROSTAT).
link
de marchandises par
mer
The combination of the port of loading and the port
of unloading of the goods transported by sea
whatever itinerary is followed.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Those ports are maritime ports (except
for fluvio-maritime transports for which it may be
inland waterway ports), coded with international
classification systems such as UN-LOCODE
(codification for ports and other places). Those
ports can be grouped according to their
geographical location by using international
classification systems such as NUTS (Nomenclature
for Territorial Units for Statistics - EUROSTAT).
Goods road motor
vehicle
Véhicule routier
automobile pour le
transport de
marchandises
Any single road motor vehicle designed to carry
goods (lorry), or any coupled combination of road
vehicles designed to carry goods, (i.e. lorry with
trailer(s), or road tractor with semi-trailer and with
or without trailer).
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Goods transported by
oil pipeline
Marchandise
transportée par
oléoducs
Any crude or refined liquid petroleum products
moved by oil pipelines.
Goods road transport
link
Relation de transport
de marchandises par
route
The combination of the place of loading and the
place of unloading of the goods transported by
road whichever itinerary is followed.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Places are defined by using international
classification systems such as NUTS (Nomenclature
of Territorial Units for Statistics - EUROSTAT).
Goods unloaded (after
transport by rail)
Goods taken off a rail vehicle after transport by
rail.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Unlike in road and inland waterway
transport, transhipments from one rail vehicle to
another and change of tractive vehicle are not
regarded as unloading before reloading.
Goods road vehicle
Véhicule routier pour
le transport de
marchandises
Road vehicle designed, exclusively or primarily, to
carry goods.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Vehicles designed for the transport of
both passengers and goods should be classified
either among the passenger road vehicles or
among the goods road vehicles, depending on their
primary purpose, as determined either by their
technical characteristics or by their category for
tax purposes.
Goods unloaded (from
inland waterways
transport)
Goods taken of an inland waterways transport
(IWT) vessel after transport by inland waterways.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Goods sea transport
Context: Transhipment from one IWT vessel to
another is regarded as unloading before reloading. The same applies to changes of pusher
tugs and tugs.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
Relation de transport
340
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
public institutions conduct public affairs and
manage public resources.
IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency, IMF,
Washington DC, Glossary
Goods unloaded (from
transport by road)
Goods taken off a road vehicle after transport by
road.
Source: OECD, 2006, DAC Guidelines and
Reference Series Applying Strategic Environmental
Assessment: Good Practice Guidance for
Development Co-operation, OECD, Paris
Context: Transhipment from one goods road
vehicle to another or change of the road tractor
are regarded as unloading before reloading.
See also: Good governance
Governing body (of
Organe directeur (du
the pension fund)
fonds de pension)
Governing body (of the pension fund): this is the
person(s) ultimately responsible for managing the
pension fund with the overriding objective of
providing a secure source of retirement income.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
In cases where operational and oversight
responsibilities are split between different
committees within an entity, the governing body is
the executive board of the entity. Where the
pension fund is not a legal entity, but managed
directly by a financial institution, that institution‘s
board of directors is also the governing body of the
pension fund.
Goods unloaded (from
transport by sea)
Goods taken off a seagoing vessel after transport
by sea.
Context: Transshipment from one seagoing vessel
to another is regarded as unloading before reloading. Goods unloaded include national goods,
transshipment goods (national or foreign goods
leaving a port by sea) and land transit goods
(foreign goods leaving a port by road, rail, air or
inland waterway).
Context: Identical term, "Administrator"
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Government balance
sheet
A comprehensive statement of the assets,
liabilities, and net worth (assets less liabilities) of
government at a point in time —usually year-end.
In practice, very few governments prepare
statements of their financial position that could be
described as balance sheets.
Goodwill clause
Clause used in Paris Club agreements under which
creditors agree in principle, but without
commitment to consider favourably subsequent
debt-relief agreements for a debtor country that
remains in compliance with the restructuring
agreement as well as with its IMF arrangement,
and has sought comparable debt relief from other
creditors. The clause can be intended for a future
flow restructuring or a stock-of-debt operation.
Context: Adoption of accrual accounting reports
and generally accepted methods of asset valuation
are prerequisites for a reliable balance sheet
presentation.
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Government bond
yields interest
Government bonds are its documentary promise to
repay borrowed money with interest at a rate
determined at issue starting on a date fixed at the
time of issue. Government bond yields refers to
one or more representing yields to maturity of
government bonds or other bonds that would
indicate longer term rates
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Governance
Governance is the exercise of political, economic
and administrative authority necessary to manage
a nation‘s affairs.
Source: International Financial Statistics Yearbook,
IMF, Washington D.C, 2000, Introduction, page
xvii
Context: The process by which decisions are made
and implemented (or not implemented). Within
government, governance is the process by which
Government
dependent /
341
independent
education institution
The terms government dependent and independent
education institution refer only to the degree of a
private institution's dependence on funding from
government sources; they do not refer to the
degree of government direction or regulation.
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Government
guarantee
The most common type is a governmentguaranteed loan, which requires the government to
repay any amount outstanding amount on a loan in
the event of default.
A government-dependent private institution is one
that receives more than 50 per cent of its core
funding from government agencies.
An independent private institution is one that
receives less than 50 per cent of its core from
government agencies.
Context: In some contracts with a public or private
sector entity, the government may provide a
revenue or demand guarantee that requires the
government to make up the difference if revenue
or quantity demanded is below the guaranteed
level. Similarly, contracts may also have exchange
rate or price guarantees.
―Core funding‖ refers to the funds that support the
basic educational services of the institutions. It
does not include funds provided specifically for
research projects, payments for services
purchased or contracted by private organisations,
or fees and subsidies received for ancillary
services, such as lodging and meals.
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Additionally, institutions should be classified as
government dependent if their teaching personnel
are paid by a government agency - either directly
or through government
Government net debt
Government net debt comprise all financial
liabilities minus all financial assets of general
government. Financial assets of the general
government sector have a corresponding liability
existing outside that sector. The exceptions are
monetary gold and Special Drawing Rights,
financial assets for which there is no counterpart
liability.
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education Sys
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 50
Government final
consumption
expenditure
Dépense de
consommation finale
des administrations
publiques
Government final consumption expenditure
consists of expenditure, including imputed
expenditure, incurred by general government on
both individual consumption goods and services
and collective consumption services
Monetary gold and Special Drawing Rights may be
included as assets of the general government
sector or they may be classified as assets of the
central bank, at the discretion of the government.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Source: SNA 9.94
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Government sector
The government sector consists of the following
resident institutional units: all units of central,
state or local government; all social security funds
at each level of government; all non-market nonprofit institutions that are controlled and financed
by government units.
Government Financial Statistiques de
Statistics (GFS)
finances publiques
(SFP)
Government Financial Statistics (GFS) is an
accounting framework developed by the
International Monetary Fund to provide guidelines
for the compilation of fiscal accounts
This sector does not include public corporations,
even when all the equity of such corporations is
owned by government units. It also does not
include quasi-corporations that are owned and
controlled by government units
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: SNA para. 4.113
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Government gross
debt
Government gross debt comprise all financial
liabilities of general government, typically mainly
in the form of government bills and bonds
Government units
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
342
Administrations
publiques (comme
entités jridiques)
Government units are unique kinds of legal entities
established by political processes which have
legislative, judicial or executive authority over
other institutional units within a given area
Grade (in school
education)
A grade (in school education) is a stage of
instruction usually covered in the course of a
school year
Source: SNA 4.104 [4.19]
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 1.188
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Government use
For patents: when the government itself uses or
authorizes other persons to use the rights over a
patented product or process, for government
purposes, without the permission of the patent
owner.
Graduated payments
In the context of Paris Club reschedulings, the
term refers to a repayment schedule where
principal repayments gradually increase over the
repayment period, reflecting an expected
improvement in the repayment capacity of a
debtor country. Creditors have made increasing
use of the graduated payments, replacing flat
payment schedules where equal amounts of
principal repayments were made over the
repayment period: from the creditor perspective,
graduated payments provide for principal
repayments starting earlier, and, from the debtor
perspective, they avoid a large jump in debt
service.
Context:
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Governmentdependent private
institution
A government-dependent private institution is an
institution that receives more than 50 per cent of
its core funding from government agencies.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
The term ―government dependent‖ refers only to
the degree of a private institution‘s dependence on
funding from government sources; it does not refer
to the degree of government direction or
regulation.
Graduates
Graduates are those who successfully complete an
educational programme during the reference year
of the data collection. One condition of a successful
completion is that students should have enrolled
in, and successfully completed, the final year of
the corresponding educational programme,
although not necessarily in the year of reference
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: Educational institution, Private education
institution, Public education institution
Context: Graduates are those students who were
enrolled in the final year of a level of education
(e.g., upper secondary education) and who
completed it successfully during the reference
year, regardless of their age. However, there are
exceptions (especially in tertiary education) where
graduation can also be recognised by the awarding
of a certificate without the requirement that the
participants are enrolled. (Education at a Glance,
OECD, Paris, 2002, Glossary)
GPS
See Global positioning system
See also: Global positioning system (GPS)
Grace period and
maturity
The grace period for principal is the period from
the date of signature of the loan or the issue of the
financial instrument to the first repayment of
principal. The repayment period is the period from
the first to last repayment of principal. Maturity is
the sum of both periods: grace plus repayment
periods.
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 39
See also: Discontinuers (students),
Graduation/Successful completion, Gross
graduation rates, Net graduation rates,
Unduplicated total count of graduates
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Graduation /
Successful completion
Successful completion is defined by each country.
In some countries, completion is defined in terms
343
of passing an examination or a series of
examinations. In other countries, completion
occurs after a requisite number of course hours
have been accumulated (although completion of
some or all of the course hours may also involve
examinations).
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Grants
Grants are transfers made in cash, goods or
services for which no repayment is required
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: Graduates, Gross graduation rates, Net
graduation rates, Unduplicated total count of
graduates
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
Graduation rate
See Gross graduation rates and Net graduation
rates
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
See also: Gross graduation rates, Net graduation
rates
Graphical data editing
Graphical editing uses graphs to identify anomalies
in data.
Grant element
The grant element reflects the financial terms of a
transaction: interest rate, maturity (interval to
final repayment) and grace period (interval to first
repayment of capital). It is a measure of the
concessionality (softness) of a loan. It is calculated
as the difference between the face value of a loan
and the discounted present value of the service
payments the borrower will make over the lifetime
of the loan, expressed as a percentage of the face
value.
Context: While such graphical methods can employ
paper, the more sophisticated use powerful
interactive methods that interconnect groups of
graphs automatically and retrieve detailed records
for manual review and editing.
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Glossary of Terms on
Statistical Data Editing", Conference of European
Statisticians Methodological material, Geneva,
2000
Source: OECD, 2004, Development Co-operation
Directorate (DAC), Glossary - CRS aid activity
database, OECD, Paris
Hyperlink: http://amrads.jrc.cec.eu.int/kbase/glossary/glossALL.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_14718511_1_1_1_1,00.html
See also: Data editing
Green accounting
Comptabilité verte
See Environmental accounting
Grant like flow
A transaction in which the donor country retains
formal title to repayment but has expressed its
intention in the commitment to hold the proceeds
of repayment in the borrowing country.
See also: Environmental accounting
Green ban
Interdiction verte
A green ban is a ban imposed on construction in
the inner part of a city so as to protect the urban
natural environment
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
Green belt
Zone verte
A green belt is a zone near a city that is restricted
as regards any further extension of urban area. It
serves as a buffer separating sources of pollution
from the city population
Grantor underwriting
notes (GUNs)
A floating-rate note facility is similar to a revolving
underwriting facility (RUF) in that a group of banks
(grantors) undertake to purchase any notes put
back to them by investors on any floating-rate
note (FRN) interest rate fixing date. Put notes are
then auctioned out to the market by the grantors.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Green GDP
PIB vert
Green GDP is a popular term for environmentally
adjusted gross domestic product
344
agriculture
The greenhouse gas indicator for agriculture
measures the gross agricultural emissions of three
gases:
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
- carbon dioxide (CO2),
- methane (CH4), and
- nitrous oxide (N2O),
Green revolution
Révolution verte
The green revolution is the increase in crop yields
based on cultivation of high—response varieties of
wheat, rice, maize and millet, and intensive use of
fertilizers, pesticides, irrigation and machinery
expressed in CO2 equivalents
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture:
Methods and Results, Executive Summary, OECD,
2000, page 36
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Greenhouse gases
Gaz de serre
Greenhouse gases refer to carbon dioxide, nitrous
oxide, methane, ozone and chloro—fluorocarbons
occurring naturally and resulting from human
(production and consumption) activities, and
contributing to the greenhouse effect (global
warming)
Greened economy
modelling
A technique that attempts to answer the question:
What level of GDP could be achieved if producers
and consumers faced a different set of relative
prices in the economy due to the existence of
actual prices for environmental functions?
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 2.178
Grid
Grillé
A rectangular mesh on a plane formed by two sets
of lines orthogonal to each other, each line of each
set being at a constant interval from the adjacent
lines. It is used in some forms of area sampling.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Greenhouse climate
Indice de réaction à
response index
l‟effet de serre
A greenhouse climate response index is an index
developed by the National Climatic Data Center of
the United States of America that includes the
following variables: much-above-normal
temperature, much-above-normal precipitation in
the cool months, extreme or severe drought in the
warm months, a much—greater— than—normal
proportion of annual precipitation falling on days
having more than 50.8 millimetres of precipitation,
and reduced day—to—day temperature swings
See also: Grid sampling
Grid sampling
Échantillonnage en
grillé
A form of cluster sampling., the clusters being
individual areas of a grid and hence consisting of
groups of basic cells arranged in some standard
geometrical pattern. The term ―configurational
sampling‖ is also used in the same sense.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Greenhouse effect
Effet de serre
The greenhouse effect is the warming of the
earth‘s atmosphere caused by a build-up of carbon
dioxide and other greenhouse or trace gases that
act like a pane of glass in a greenhouse, allowing
sunlight to pass through and heat the earth but
preventing a counterbalancing loss of heat
radiation
See also: Cluster samples, Grid
Gross
Brut
The term gross is a common means of referring to
values before deducting consumption of fixed
capital (generally used as in ―gross capital stock‖
or ―gross domestic product‖); all the major
balancing items in the accounts from value added
through to saving may be recorded gross or net
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Climate change
Source: SNA 6.201
Greenhouse gas
indicator for
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
345
Gross accumulation
See Accumulation
Gross capital stock Stock brut de capital SNA
SCN
Gross capital stock is the value of all fixed assets
still in use, at the actual or estimated current
purchasers‘ prices for new assets of the same type,
irrespective of the age of the assets
See also: Accumulation
Gross adjusted
Revenu disponible
disposable income
ajusté brut
Gross adjusted disposable income is derived from
the gross disposable income of an institutional unit
or sector by adding the value of the social
transfers in kind receivable by that unit or sector
and subtracting the value of the social transfers in
kind payable by that unit or sector
Source: SNA 6.199
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Gross capital stock – productivity
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Gross catch (in
acquatic resources
accounts)
The total live weight of fish caught.
Gross annual
increment (in forest
accounts)
The average annual volume of increment over the
reference period of all trees, with no minimum
diameter. Gross annual increment is thus
equivalent to natural growth in a year.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.295 & Figure 8.4
Source: SNA 8.24
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.179
Gross debt
Debt consists of all liabilities that require payment
or payments of interest and/or principal by the
debtor to the creditor at a date or dates in the
future.
Context: Thus, all liabilities in the GFS system are
debt, except for shares and other equity and
financial derivatives.
Gross capital
Formation brute de
formation
capital
Gross capital formation is measured by the total
value of the gross fixed capital formation, changes
in inventories and acquisitions less disposals of
valuables for a unit or sector
Net debt includes the stocks of all financial
liabilities minus the corresponding financial assets.
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Source: SNA 10.32
Gross domestic
expenditure on
research and
development (GERD)
Gross domestic expenditure on research and
development (GERD) is total intramural
expenditure on research and development
performed on the national territory during a given
period
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Gross fixed capital formation – SNA
Gross capital stock Ŕ
Stock brute de capital
OECD
- OCDE
Gross capital stock refers to the cumulative flow of
volume investments, corrected for retirement. In
the gross stock, assets are treated as new until
they are retired: it is assumed that they retain
their full productive capacity until removed from
the stock
Source: OECD Frascati Manual, Sixth edition,
2002, para. 423, page 121
Hyperlink: http://www1.oecd.org/dsti/sti/statana/prod/eas_fras.htm
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Gross domestic
Produit intérieur brut
product (GDP)
(PIB)
Gross domestic product is an aggregate measure
of production equal to the sum of the gross values
added of all resident institutional units engaged in
production (plus any taxes, and minus any
subsidies, on products not included in the value of
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
See also: Gross capital stock - SNA
346
their outputs). The sum of the final uses of goods
and services (all uses except intermediate
consumption) measured in purchasers' prices, less
the value of imports of goods and services, or the
sum of primary incomes distributed by resident
producer units
product – income based, Gross domestic product –
output based
Gross domestic
Produit intérieur brut
product (GDP) Ŕ
(PIB) dans l‟optique
income based
du revenu
Income-based gross domestic product is
compensation of employees, plus taxes less
subsidies on production and imports, plus gross
mixed income, plus gross operating surplus
Source: SNA 1.128 and 2.173-2.174
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 2.222
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Gross domestic
product (GDP) Ŕ
constant prices
Gross domestic product (GDP) at constant prices
refers to the volume level of GDP. Constant price
estimates of GDP are obtained by expressing
values in terms of a base period.
See also: Gross domestic product, Gross domestic
product – expenditure based, Gross domestic
product – output based
Gross domestic
Produit intérieur brut
product (GDP) Ŕ
(PIB), dans l‟optique
output based
de la production
Output-based gross domestic product is the sum of
the gross values added of all resident producers at
basic prices, plus all taxes less subsidies on
products
In theory, the price and quantity components of a
value are identified and the price in the base
period is substituted for that in the current period.
Two main methods are adopted in practice.
The first, referred to as "quantity revaluation", is
based on a methodology consistent with the above
theory (i.e., by multiplying the current period
quantity by the base period price).
Source: SNA 6.235 - 6.237
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
The second, commonly referred to as "price
deflation", involves dividing price indexes into the
observed values to obtain the volume estimate.
The price indexes used are built up from the prices
of the major items contributing to each value.
See also: Gross domestic product, Gross domestic
product – expenditure based, Gross domestic
product – income based
Gross domestic
Produit intérieur brut
product (GDP) at
(PIB) aux prix du
market prices
marché
Gross domestic product at market prices is the
sum of the gross values added of all resident
producers at market prices, plus taxes less
subsidies on imports
Source: Technical note describing OECD national
accounts, OECD
See also: Constant prices, Gross domestic product
– current prices
Gross domestic
product (GDP) Ŕ
current prices
Gross domestic product (GDP) at current prices is
GDP at prices of the current reporting period. Also
known as nominal GDP
Context: Non-deductable value added tax (VAT)
should be added (SNA 6.236-7).
Source: SNA 6.235
Source: Main Economic Indicators, OECD, Paris,
monthly, Part 1 – National Accounts
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Current prices, Gross domestic product –
constant prices
See also: Gross domestic product
Gross domestic
Produit intérieur brut
product (GDP) Ŕ
(PIB), dans l‟optique
expenditure based
des dépenses
Expenditure-based gross domestic product is total
final expenditures at purchasers‘ prices (including
the f.o.b. value of exports of goods and services),
less the f.o.b. value of imports of goods and
services
Gross domestic
product (GDP)
deflator
Volume of gross domestic product (GDP) calculated
by recalculating the values of the various
components of GDP at the constant prices of the
previous year or of some fixed base year,
frequently referred to as "GDP at constant prices",
divided by GDP at current prices.
Source: SNA 6.235
Source: SNA para. 16.71
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Gross domestic product (GDP) – constant
prices
See also: Gross domestic product, Gross domestic
Gross fixed capital
347
Formation brute de
formation - ESA
capital fixe Ŕ SEC
Gross fixed capital formation as defined by the
European System of Accounts (ESA) consists of
resident producers' acquisitions, less disposals, of
fixed assets during a given period plus certain
additions to the value of non-produced assets
realised by the productive activity of producer or
institutional units.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: Graduates, Graduation/Successful
completion, Net graduation rates, Unduplicated
total count of graduates
Gross investment in
tangible goods Ŕ
Eurostat
Gross investment in tangible goods is investment
during the reference period in all tangible goods.
Included are new and existing tangible capital
goods, whether bought from third parties or
produced for own use (i.e. capitalised production of
tangible goods) having a useful life of more than
one year including non-produced tangible goods
such as land
Context: Additions to the value of tangible nonproduced assets include major improvements to
land, such as land reclamation by construction of
dikes. Fixed assets are tangible or intangible
assets produced as outputs from processes of
production that are themselves used repeatedly, or
continuously, in processes of production for more
than one year. Gross fixed capital formation
consists of both positive and negative values.
- Positive values include: new or existing fixed
assets purchased, acquired through barter,
received as capital transfers in kind or acquired by
the user under a financial lease, production of fixed
assets which are retained for producers' own use,
major improvements to fixed assets and existing
historic monuments and the natural growth of
assets.
Source: Statistics in focus: Industry, trade and
services; Theme 4 – 7/2001 - Distributive trades
statistics, Eurostat, Methodological Notes, page 7
Gross national
Revenu national
disposable income
disponible brut
Gross national disposable income may be derived
from gross national income by adding all current
transfers in cash or in kind receivable by resident
institutional units from non-resident units and
subtracting all current transfers in cash or in kind
payable by resident institutional units to nonresident units
- Negative values include: disposals of fixed
assets, e.g. of existing fixed assets, which can be
either sold, surrendered in barter or surrendered
as capital transfers in kind. Disposals of fixed
assets are recorded as negative acquisitions and
exclude consumption of fixed capital and
exceptional losses, such as those due to drought or
other natural disasters
Source: SNA 8.16 [2.183]
Source: ESA [3.102-3.106]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Gross fixed capital formation – SNA
See also: National disposable income
Gross fixed capital
Formation brute de
formation Ŕ SNA
capital fixe Ŕ SCN
Gross fixed capital formation is measured by the
total value of a producer‘s acquisitions, less
disposals, of fixed assets during the accounting
period plus certain additions to the value of nonproduced assets (such as subsoil assets or major
improvements in the quantity, quality or
productivity of land) realised by the productive
activity of institutional units
Gross national income Revenu national brut
(GNI)
(RNB)
Gross national income (GNI) is GDP less net taxes
on production and imports, less compensation of
employees and property income payable to the
rest of the world plus the corresponding items
receivable from the rest of the world (in other
words, GDP less primary incomes payable to nonresident units plus primary incomes receivable
from non-resident units).
Source: SNA 10.33 and 10.51 [10.26]
An alternative approach to measuring GNI at
market prices is as the aggregate value of the
balances of gross primary incomes for all sectors;
(note that gross national income is identical to
gross national product (GNP) as previously used in
national accounts generally).
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Gross capital formation, Gross fixed
capital formation - ESA
Gross graduation
rates
Gross graduation rates refer to the total number of
graduates (the graduates themselves may be of
any age) at the specified level of education divided
by the population at the typical graduation age
from the specified level.
Source: SNA 2.81 and 7.16 and Table 7.2 [2.181]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Net national income
Gross national
product (GNP)
In many countries, defining a typical age of
graduation is difficult, however, because graduates
are dispersed over a wide range of ages.
348
Produit national brut
(PNB)
See Gross national income (GNI)
The rate of return of an asset or portfolio over a
specified time period, prior to discounting any fees
of commissions.
See also: Gross national income (GNI)
Gross operating
surplus - Eurostat
Gross operating surplus is the surplus generated
by operating activities after the labour factor input
has been recompensed. It can be calculated from
the value added at factor cost less the personnel
costs. It is the balance available to the unit which
allows it to recompense the providers of own funds
and debt, to pay taxes and eventually to finance all
or a part of its investment
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Net rate of return, Rate of return OECD(2)
Gross registered
Tonneaux de jauge
tonnes (GRT)
brute (TJB)
Gross registered tonnes (GRT) is a measurement
of ship weight. With fishing vessels often used as a
measure of fishing capacity, particularly for ships
built before 1994 (when the London Convention
replaced the Oslo Convention in providing
guidelines for the standard measurement of ship
capacity)
Source: Statistics in focus: Industry, trade and
services; Theme 4 – 7/2001 - Distributive trades
statistics, Eurostat, Methodological Notes, page 7
See also: Gross operating surplus - SEEA
Gross operating
surplus - SEEA
In SEEA gross operating surplus is equivalent to
economic rent or value of capital services flows or
benefit from the asset.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Gross removal
In aquatic resources accounts, the total live weight
of fish caught or killed during fishing operation.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.161 & Box 7.1
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.295 & Figure 8.4
See also: Gross operating surplus - Eurostat,
Operating surplus
Gross output
Production brute
Gross output is a synonym for output
Gross residual flow
Gross residual flows refer to the quantity of
residuals generated by all units in the national
economy during an accounting period (including
leakages from managed landfill sites).
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.55
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
See also: Output, Production – SNA
Gross output based
PMF en termes de
multi-factor
production brute
productivity
Gross output based multi-factor productivity (MFP)
is a synonym for KLEMS MFP
Gross saving
Épargne brute
Gross saving is gross disposable income less final
consumption expenditure
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Source: SNA 9.2
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
Gross sector output
The sum of the sales of output of the
establishments in the sector including the sales of
output among themselves. The sum of the sales of
the sector‘s output to other sectors in the economy
See also: KLEMS MFP
Gross rate of return
Taux de rendement
brut
349
and the sales of the sector‘s output within the
sector.
Gross value added at
factor cost
Gross value added at factor cost is GVA at market
prices less any indirect taxes plus any subsidies
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: Services: Statistics on Value Added and
Employment, OECD, 2000 edition, Introduction,
page 13
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Gross value added at
market prices
Gross value added at market prices is output
valued at market prices less intermediate
consumption valued at purchasers‘ prices
See also: Net sector output, Sectoral output
Gross tonnage (GT)
Jauge brute (JB)
Gross tonnage (GT) is a measurement of ship
volume. With fishing vessels often used together
with engine power (kW) as a measure of fishing
capacity, especially since the London Convention
took effect in 1994. The gross tonnage is a
function of the moulded volume of all enclosed
spaces of the ship
Source: Services: Statistics on Value Added and
Employment, OECD, 2000 edition, Introduction,
page 13
Gross value added at
producers‟ prices
Valeur ajoutée brute
aux prix du
producteur
Gross value added at producers‘ prices is output
valued at producers‘ prices less intermediate
consumption valued at purchasers‘ prices
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Gross tonne-kilometre Tonne-kilomètre brute
hauled (rail transport) remorquée
Unit of measure representing the movement over a
distance of one kilometre of one tonne of vehicle
and contents excluding the weight of tractive
vehicle.
Source: SNA 6.227, 15.37
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Context: The weight of railcars is included.
Gross vehicle weight
Poids maximum
(Legally permissible
autorisé
maximum weight)
Total of the weight of the vehicle (or combination
of vehicles) including its load when stationary and
ready for the road declared permissible by the
competent authority of the country of registration.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: This includes the weight of the driver and
of all persons carried at the same time.
Gross value added
Valeur ajoutée brute
Gross value added is the value of output less the
value of intermediate consumption; it is a measure
of the contribution to GDP made by an individual
producer, industry or sector; gross value added is
the source from which the primary incomes of the
SNA are generated and is therefore carried forward
into the primary distribution of income account
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: SNA 1.6 [2.172, 6.4, 6.222]
Gross-gross tonneTonne-kilomètre
kilometre hauled (rail brute-brute
transport)
remorquée
Unit of measure representing the movement over a
distance of one kilometre of one tonne of rail
vehicle including the weight of tractive vehicle.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Gross value added at Valeur ajoutée brute
basic prices
aux prix de base
Gross value added at basic prices is output valued
at basic prices less intermediate consumption
valued at purchasers‘ prices
Context: Weight of vehicle, of its load and tractive
unit are all included.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: SNA 6.226, 15.37 [6.231]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
350
groupes
A comparison between groups of individuals,
usually on the basis of a representative value
(such as a mean) from each.
Grossing / Netting
Combinations in which all elementary items are
shown for their full values are called gross
recordings. Combinations whereby the values of
some elementary items are offset against items on
the other side of the account or which have an
opposite sign are called net recordings.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Context: Individual units or sectors may have the
same kind of transactions both as a use and as a
resource (e.g., they both pay and receive interest)
and the same kind of financial instrument as an
asset and as a liability.
Group discussion
See Focus group
Source: United Nations, "System of National
Account (SNA) 1993"
See also: Focus group
Group pension funds
Fonds de pension de
groupe
Multi-employer pension funds that pool the assets
of pension plans established for related employers.
See also: Aggregation, Consolidation (in national
accounts)
Grossing up
See Estimation
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Estimation
Ground-level ozone
Ozone troposphérique
Ground—level ozone is ozone present as a
secondary pollutant in the lower atmosphere,
where its formation can be enhanced by other
pollutants. It is highly toxic at levels above 0.1
parts per million (p.p.m.)
See also: Individual pension fund, Industry
pension funds, Multi-employer pension funds,
Related member fund, Single employer pension
funds
Growing stock (in
forest accounts)
The living component of the standing volume.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.179
See also: Ozone
Ground-level pollution Pollution de la basse
Ground—level pollution refers to the weight of a
pollutant per unit volume in the region of the air
between the ground and a height of about two
metres above it
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Growth cycles
Growth cycles are recurrent fluctuations in the
series of deviations from trend. Thus, growth cycle
contractions include slowdowns as well as absolute
declines in activity, whereas business cycles
contractions includes only absolute declines
(recessions). The OECD cyclical indicator system
uses the "growth cycle" approach
Groundwater
Protection des eaux
protection
souterraines
See Protection of soil and groundwater
See also: Protection of soil and groundwater
Source: OECD Leading Indicator Website,
Glossary, 2001
Group
Groupe
A set of elements, individuals, or observations all
of which possess one, or more, characteristics in
common. The word also occurs occasionally in
statistics in its mathematical sense.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_34
349_1965941_1_1_1_1,00.html
See also: Business cycles - OECD
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Growth rate
See Rates of change
See also: Rates of change
See also: Class
Group comparison
Guaranteed annuity
Comparaison autre
351
Rente viagère
garantie
An annuity that is paid until the death of the
annuitant. If this occurs prior to a certain date, the
annuity is then paid to their dependants until that
date.
Habitat Conference
Conferénce sur
l‟habitat
Habitat Conference refers to the United Nations
Conference on Human Settlements. The first
conference was held in Vancouver, British
Columbia, 31 May—11 June 1976; the second
conference was held in Istanbul, 3—14 June 1996
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Annuity
Guaranteed bond
Guaranteed bonds have their interest, principal, or
both guaranteed by another corporation. It is
common for a parent company to guarantee bonds
issued by subsidiaries. (Bearer or registered; may
be held in book-entry form.)
Habitat diversity
Diversité des habitats
Habitat diversity refers to the range of habitats
present in a region
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Biodiversity
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Habitat protection
Protection de l‟habitat
Handicap
See Protection of species and habitat
Guaranteed external
debt
The provision by one institutional unit of a
guarantee to make future debt-service payments
to a nonresident creditor if certain conditions are
met, such as a default by the debtor, does not
negate the claim the creditor has on the debtor.
Thus, the debtor on whom the non-resident
creditor has a claim, and not the guarantor, should
record an external debt liability, unless and until
the guarantor assumes the external debt.
See also: Protection of species and habitats
Handicap
Désavantages
A handicap concerns constraints on the
relationship between the person with a disability
and the social and physical environment, for
example, in the areas of education, occupation,
information or communication (social dimension)
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.260
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
See also: Disability, Impairment
Handicap-free life
expectancy
Handicap-free life expectancy is the average
number of years an individual is expected to live
free of handicap if current patterns of mortality
and handicap continue to apply
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Guidelines
Directions or principles used in the development,
maintenance and application of rules.
Context: Guidelines are not necessarily mandatory,
but are provided as an aid to interpretation and
use of rules.
Hard coal
A black, natural fossil organic sediment with a
gross calorific value of more than 23 860 kJ/kg (5
700 kcal/kg) in the ash-free condition and with the
moisture content obtaining at a temperature of 30
degrees C and relative air humidity of 96 per cent,
and with a mean random reflectance of vitrinite of
at least 0.6.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Habitat
Habitat
A habitat is a place where an organism or
population (human, animal, plant, microorganism)
lives
Context: Hard coal is calculated by the
International Energy Agency as the sum of Coking
coal and Steam coal (Electricity information 2001,
International Energy Agency, Paris – Part II).
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
352
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Harmonised system
The commodity structure of external trade flows of
goods is analysed using various internationally
adopted commodity classifications which have
different levels of detail and are based on different
classification criteria.
Hardship allowance
Additional payment for working under adverse
conditions, for example, outside during periods of
extremely cold weather.
The complex nature of the basic customs and
statistical needs makes it necessary to have a
rather detailed commodity classification. The
Harmonised Commodity Description and Coding
System (Harmonised System, or HS), or extended
versions based on HS, such as the Combined
Nomenclature used by European Union countries,
provide such details. Classification using these
nomenclatures is based on the nature of the
commodity.
Source: Glossary of Compensation Terms – United
States Bureau of Labor Statistics, August 1998
Hyperlink:
http://stats.bls.gov/ocs/sp/ncbl0062.pdf
Hardware
Reference to the computer itself (central
processing unit, CPU), as well as to all peripheral
input and output devices, such as monitors, disks,
tape consoles, printers, plotters, digitizers,
scanners etc.
Context: However, for analytical purposes, such a
division of products is not the most appropriate.
Commodity categories more suitable for economic
analysis provided by the Standard International
Trade Classification (SITC) which classifies
commodities according to their stage of
production.
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
The HS is in principle, revised every few years. The
next revision is planned to come into force on 1
January 2002. It is managed by the World
Customs Organisation
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Source: International Merchandise Trade Statistics,
Concepts and Definitions, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Studies in Methods, Series M, No. 52,
Rev. 2, page 35, para. 92
See also: Software
Harmonic mean of
price relatives
An elementary index that constitutes the harmonic
average counterpart to the Carli index.
Harvesting capacity
Capacité de capture
(fishing)
Harvesting capacity is the capacity of the fishing
vessel or fleet of vessels to harvest fish, usually
expressed in terms of some measure of vessel
size, such as gross tonnage, hold capacity, or
power
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Harmonic means price
index
An elementary index that constitutes the harmonic
average counterpart to the Dutot index.
Hauled vehicleVéhicule remorquékilometre (rail
kilomètre
transport)
Unit of measure representing any movement of a
hauled vehicle over one kilometre.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Context: Railcars movement are included.
Shunting movements are excluded.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Harmonised consumer
price indexes
See HICP
Hazard Analysis [and] Analyse des risques et
Critical Control
mâitrise des points
Point[s] (HACCP)
crtitiques (HACCP)
See also: HICP
353
A Hazard Analysis [and] Critical Control Point[s]
(HACCP) system is a set of procedures intended to
predict food safety risks and prevent them before
they happen. It entails identifying all the points in
product processing and distribution where quality
can be degraded (e.g., through improper
temperature, improper handling, etc.) and
checking those points to prevent problems (in
contrast with procedures that check quality at the
end of the processing and distribution chain, by
which time damage may have already been done)
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hazardous goods
(carried by road)
The categories of hazardous goods carried by road
are those defined by the European Agreement
concerning the International Carriage of Dangerous
Goods by Road (ADR).
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Hazard pay
Extra pay to an individual worker or a group of
workers working under dangerous or undesirable
conditions.
Hazardous substance Substance dangereuse
A hazardous substance is any substance that poses
a threat to human health and the environment.
Hazardous substances are toxic, corrosive,
ignitable, explosive or chemically reactive
Source: Glossary of Compensation Terms – United
States Bureau of Labor Statistics, August 1998
Hyperlink:
http://stats.bls.gov/ocs/sp/ncbl0062.pdf
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hazardous air
pollutants
Polluants
atmosphériques
dangereux
Hazardous air pollutants are air pollutants that
may reasonably be expected to cause or contribute
to irreversible illness or death. They include
asbestos, beryllium, mercury, benzene, coke oven
emissions, radionuclides and vinyl chloride
Hazardous waste
Traitement des
treatment
déchets dangereux
The two categories of treatment of hazardous
waste are:
(a) physical hazardous waste treatment: an
approach including phase separation, such as
through lagooning, filtration or centrifugation, and
solidification into hard material allowing for landfill
disposal;
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Air pollutants
(b) thermal hazardous waste treatment: high—
temperature oxidation of wastes that converts
them into gases and solid residues
Hazardous goods
(carried by inland
waterways)
The categories of hazardous goods carried by
inland waterways are those defined by the
European Provisions Concerning the International
Carriage of Dangerous Goods by Inland Waterways
(ADN).
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hazardous wastes
Déchets dangereux
Hazardous wastes are wastes that, owing to their
toxic, infectious, radioactive or flammable
properties pose a substantial actual or potential
hazard to the health of humans and other living
organisms and the environment
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hazardous goods
(carried by rail)
The classes of hazardous goods carried by rail are
those defined by the International Regulations
concerning the Carriage of Dangerous Goods by
Rail (RID).
HBS
See Household budget surveys
See also: Household budget surveys
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
Head count
This refers to the method of data collection: the
number of individuals are counted, regardless of
354
the intensity of participation/length of their
programme.
Heads-up data entry
Heads-up data entry is data entry with a review at
time of entry. Heads up data entry requires
subject-matter knowledge by the individuals
entering the data. Data entry is slower, but data
review/adjustment is reduced since simple
inconsistencies in responses are found earlier in
the survey process. This mode is very effective
when the interviewer or respondent enter data
during the interview (CAI).
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: Full-time student, Full-time teacher,
Part-time student, Part-time teacher
Head of the household
The head of the household is one of the members
of the household recognised as the head of the
unit by the other members of the household unit or
by himself (or herself) if living alone
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Head office (bank)
The head office of a bank refers to a banking office
exercising control over and/or ownership of one or
more affiliates
See also: Heads-down data entry
Health
Santé
The Constitution of the World Health Organisation
states in its preamble: ―Health is a state of
complete physical, mental and social well-being
and not merely the absence of disease or
infirmity.‖
Source: Guide to the International Banking
Statistics, Bank for International Settlements,
Basel, Switzerland, 2000, Part III – Glossary of
Terms
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/meth07.pdf
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 14.40
Headage payments
Headage payments are budgetary payments made
to individual producers on the basis of the number
of head of a specific type of livestock to
supplement producer returns earned through sales
at market prices.
Health Accounts,
System of
The System of Health Accounts provides for health
accounting an economic framework and accounting
rules which are methodologically compatible with
the System of National Accounts, 1993 Revision
(SNA 93)
Headage payments are sometimes subject to an
upper limit on the number of livestock eligible per
holding, or constraints on stocking densities
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Source: A System of Health Accounts, Version 1,
OECD, 2000, page 99, para. 8.2
Health administration
and insurance
activities
Health administration and insurance activities are
activities of private insurers and central and local
authorities and social security. Included are the
planning, management, regulation, and collection
of funds and handling of claims of the delivery
system. (ICHA function HC.7)
Heads-down data
entry
Heads-down data entry refers to data entry with
no error detection occurring at the time of entry.
Data entered in a heads down mode is often
verified by re-keying the questionnaire and
comparing the two-keyed copies of the same
questionnaire. Data entered in a "heads-down"
fashion may later be corrected in either a "batch"
or an "interactive" data review process.
Source: A System of Health Accounts, OECD,
2000, chapter 9
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Health and social
support for students
Health and Social Support includes all personnel
employed in education systems who provide health
and social support services to students.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Heads-up data entry
355
(Réseau Espérance de vie en Santé), much work is
being conducted to further develop this type of
measure and to encourage more standardisation
and uniformity in the calculation and methodology
used to construct health expectancy.
It includes the following types of personnel: health
professionals such as doctors, dentists,
ophthalmologists, optometrists, hygienists, nurses,
and diagnosticians; psychiatrists and
psychologists; speech pathologists and
audiologists; occupational therapists; and social
workers
Context: According to the 1980 ICIDH framework,
health expectancies can be differentiated into:
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 46
- Impairment-free life expectancy;
- Disability-free life expectancy
According to the REVES committee on conceptual
harmonisation, the ICIDH disability-free life
expectancy might be differentiated into:
Health care activities
Activities of health care in a country comprises the
sum of activities performed either by institutions or
individuals pursuing, through the application of
medical, paramedical and nursing knowledge and
technology, the goals of:
-- Functional limitation-free life expectancy,
-- Activity restriction-free life expectancy,
-- Handicap-free life expectancy.
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
- promoting health and preventing disease;
- curing illness and reducing premature mortality;
- caring for persons affected by chronic illness who
require nursing care;
- caring for persons with health-related
impairment, disability, and handicaps who require
nursing care;
- assisting patients to die with dignity;
- providing and administering public health;
- providing and administering health programmes,
health insurance and other funding arrangements
Health expenditure
incurred by
corporations
Health expenditure incurred by corporations refers
to health expenditure incurred by corporations and
private employers providing occupational health
services and other unfunded medical benefits to
employees plus expenditure by non-profit
institutions serving households (excluding social
insurance) such as red cross, philanthropic and
charitable institutions, religious orders, lay
organisations; benefits provided for free by
medical care providers plus health expenditure
incurred by the rest of the world.
Source: A System of Health Accounts, Version 1,
OECD, 2000 page 42
Health care service
activities Ŕ ISIC Rev.
3
Health care service activities comprise the
following ISIC Rev. 3 Classes:
Context: Note: This item corresponds to the sum
of HF.2.4, HF.2.5 and HF.3 in the ICHA-HF
classification of health care financing (see SHA,
chapters 6 and 11)
5231 – Retail sale of pharmaceutical and medical
goods, cosmetic and toilet articles;
6603 – Non-life insurance;
7512 – Regulation of the activities of agencies that
provide health care education, cultural services
and other social services excluding social security;
7530 – Compulsory social security activities;
8511 – Hospital activities;
8512 – Medical and dental practice activities;
8519 – Other human health activities
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Health related
auxiliary programmes
Health related auxiliary programmes (ISCED 350)
are those at the second level, second stage dealing
with the principals and practices of medical
diagnostic and treatment procedures and of
general public health problems
Source: A System of Health Accounts, Version 1,
OECD, 2000 page 180
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
See also: ISIC
Health expectancy
Health expectancy is a general term referring to
the entire class of indicators expressed in terms of
life expectancy in a defined state of health.
Heat
In recent years, the production of heat for sale has
been increasing in importance. To reflect this, heat
production represents all heat production from
public combined heat and power (CHP) and heat
plants as well as heat sold by autoproducer CHP
and heat plants to third parties.
OECD Health Data provides estimates of disabilityfree life expectancy.
Through the international network of REVES
356
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
always more than 0.90 kg/l.
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Heat plants
Refers to plants which are designed to produce
heat only.
Heavy metals
Métaux lourds
Heavy metals are potentially toxic metals used in
industrial processes, for example, arsenic,
cadmium, chromium, copper, lead, mercury, nickel
and zinc. They may damage plant and animal life
at low concentrations and tend to accumulate in
the food chain
Source: Electricity information 2001, International
Energy Agency, Paris – Part II
Heated wagon
Wagon calorifique
Insulated wagon fitted with a heat-producing
appliance.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: Such a wagon is capable of raising the
temperature inside the empty body to, and
thereafter maintaining it for not less than 12 hours
without renewal of supply at, a practically constant
value of not less than +12 degrees C when the
mean outside temperature of the body is that
indicated for the two classes:
Hedge fund
A hedge fund is a pooled investment vehicle that is
privately organised and is administered by
professional investment managers.
It is different from another pooled investment
fund, the mutual fund, in that access is available
only to wealthy individuals and institutional
managers. Moreover, hedge funds are able to sell
securities short and buy securities on leverage,
which is consistent with their typically short-term
and high risk oriented investment strategy, based
primarily on the active use of derivatives and short
positions.
- Class A. Heated equipment for use when the
mean outside temperature is - 10 degrees C; and,
- Class B. Heated equipment for use when the
mean outside temperature is - 20 degrees C.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
US hedge funds are exempt from Securities and
Exchange Commission reporting requirements, as
well as from regulatory restrictions concerning
leverage or trading strategies
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Heavily indebted poor Pays pauvre très
countries (HIPCs)
endetté (PPTE)
Heavily indebted poor countries (HIPCs) comprise
a group of 41 developing countries classified as
being heavily indebted poor countries.
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
The group includes 32 countries with a 1993 GNP
per capita of $695 or less and whose 1993 present
value of debt to exports is higher than 200 percent
or whose present value of debt to GNP is higher
than 80 percent (World Bank classification of
severely indebted low-income countries).
Hedging
Hedging is the use of financial instruments, such
as futures contracts, to offset the risk in an
investment portfolio, as an increase in the value of
the hedging instrument will offset declines in the
other assets
Also, the group includes nine countries that have
received concessional rescheduling from Paris Club
creditors (or are potentially eligible for such
rescheduling)
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: External Debt Statistics: Guide for
Compilers and Users (Draft), IMF, Washington DC,
March 2000, Appendix III, Glossary of Terms
Hedonic method
Méthode hédoniste
The hedonic method is a regression technique used
to estimate the prices of qualities or models that
are not available on the market in particular
periods, but whose prices in those periods are
needed in order to be able to construct price
relatives.
Heavy fuel oil
(residual)
This comprises oils that make up the distillation
residue. It comprises all residual fuel oils, including
those obtained by blending. Its kinematic viscosity
is above 10 cSt at 80 degrees C. The flash point is
always above 50 degrees C and the density is
It is based on the hypothesis that the prices of
357
different models on sale on the market at the same
time are functions of certain measurable
characteristics such as size, weight, power, speed,
etc and so regression methods can be used to
estimate by how much the price varies in relation
to each of the characteristics.
covariance analysis) weight of each of these
characteristics in determining the price is
estimated. These weights can then be used to
factor out that part of the price change in the next
month which is due to changes in the
characteristics of the house, etc. sold. The
coefficients of the regressions are calculated first
by means of total construction price information
and their characteristics in the current year, and
on the basis of information on the same type for a
base period.
Context: A regression technique in which observed
prices of different qualities or models of the same
generic good or service are expressed as a function
of the characteristics of the goods or services in
question.
Each construction during the current period is
priced at what it would have cost during the
reference period, once its characteristics are
known. Indices are calculated from current prices
and then aggregated using either Laspeyres
formula if the values of the characteristics are
taken from the base period, or Paasche if they are
taken from the current period.
It is based on the hypothesis that products can be
treated as bundles of characteristics and that
prices can be attached to the characteristics.
The characteristics may be nonnumeric attributes
that are represented by dummy variables. The
regression coefficients are treated as estimates of
the contributions of the characteristics to the
overall prices. The estimates may be used to
predict the price of a new quality or model whose
mix of characteristics is different from that of any
product already on the market. The hedonic
method is used to estimate the effects of quality
changes on prices.
The problem with this method, which is based on
just a few elements of construction, is that it is
less discerning than the schedule of prices method
in detecting qualitative change. If construction
quality is enhanced the improvement will tend to
be underestimated and thus the actual increase in
prices overestimated.
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Monetary Fund, Washington
DC
Furthermore, the use of these techniques requires
the statistical agency to have access to trained
econometricians, as well as specialist knowledge of
the construction industry.
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: Sources and Methods: Construction Price
Indices, OECD, Eurostat, 1997, page 22
Source: SNA 16.126
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/document/4/0,2340,en_2649
_34247_2367940_1_1_1_1,00.html
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Construction price indices, Subsequent
breakdown methods (construction price indices)
Hedonic method (in
compilation of
construction price
indices)
The hedonic method in the compilation of
construction price indices entails the use of
regression techniques to construct hedonic indices
to measure purchasers‘ preferences for the
different characteristics of construction work. This
approach, which is used in the compilation of some
of the price indices compiled in the Netherlands,
Sweden and the United States, starts from the
premise that each construction is a combination of
characteristics, each of which has an implicit price.
This price is set by the market and is reflected in
the over-all prices for which different combinations
of these characteristics are sold, and where
different varieties of the same construction type,
each with its own peculiar combination of
characteristics, co-exist.
Hedonic pricing
applied to forest
estate
A method for separating the values of the various
‗functions‘ of a forest estate: the land value, the
timber value, the recreational (e.g. hunting,
aesthetic, etc.) value.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.247
Heightened care
See Heightened managerial care
Context: In addition to total price a limited number
(7 to 15) of characteristics (qualitative or
quantitative) are taken into account. For a house,
possible characteristics include: floor area, number
of floors, type of garage, method of heating,
number of toilets, etc.
See also: Heightened managerial care
Heightened
managerial care
Heightened managerial care (or heightened care)
is a variant of the risk management term - "due
Using econometric techniques (regression and
358
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
care". The use of the word "heightened" stresses
the fact that companies need to use extra vigilance
and care in managing the heightened risks
encountered in weak governance zones.
Heterogeneous
products
See Homogeneous products, Product differentiation
Context: Heightened care consists of extra efforts
in: board level involvement, gathering information
about the investment environment, verification and
follow-up, record keeping and documentation,
assessments, decision making, building in
safeguards, management practices for relevant
staff, associates and business partners (e.g.
selecting appropriate staff, associates and business
partners for at-risk positions and providing them
with appropriate incentives and special training),
monitoring and, where necessary, taking corrective
measures.
See also: Homogenous products
HICP
The Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices (HICP)
is the measure of prices used by the Governing
Council for the purpose of assessing price stability.
The HICP was developed by the European
Commission (Eurostat) in close liaison with the
national statistical institutes and the European
Monetary Institute (EMI), and later the European
Central Bank (ECB), in order to fulfil the Treaty
requirement for a consumer price index
constructed on a comparable basis, taking into
account differences in national definitions
Source: OECD, 2006, Annual Report on the OECD
Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises:
Conducting Business in Weak Governance Zones,
OECD, Paris
See also: Due care
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Helsinki Commission
Commission d‟Helsinki
(HELCOM)
(HELCOM)
The Helsinki Commission (HELCOM) is the short
name for the Baltic Marine Environment Protection
Commission, the governing body of the Convention
on the Protection of the Marine Environment of the
Baltic Sea Area
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
Hidden and indirect
flows (in MFA)
The displacement of environmental assets without
absorption into the economic sphere; example:
overburden from mining operations.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Helsinki package
Agreement that came into force in 1992. This
agreement prohibits (with some exceptions) the
provision of tied aid loans to high-income countries
(based on World Bank per capita income), and for
commercially viable projects.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.72
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hidden economy
See Underground economy
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Underground economy
See also: Arrangements on guidelines for officially
supported export credits
Hidden production
See Underground economy
Herbicide
Herbicide
A herbicide is a substance used to control weeds or
the growth of undesirable grass or plants
See also: Underground economy
Hierarchical data
See Data review
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Data review
Herfindahl Index
A measure of industry concentration. The value of
the index is the sum of the squares of the market
shares of all firms in an industry. Higher values
indicate greater concentration.
Hierarchy
Hierarchy refers to the classification structure
where a classification is arranged in levels of detail
from the broadest to the most detailed level. Each
level of the classification is defined in terms of the
categories at the next lower level of the
classification.
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Context: In SDMX this is known as a level based
359
hierarchy. SDMX also has the concept of the value
based hierarchy where the hierarchy of categories
is not organised into formal levels.
The definition is not intended to cover middle
ranking or more junior individuals in the foregoing
categories.
Source: "United Nations Glossary of Classification
Terms" prepared by the Expert Group on
International Economic and Social Classifications;
unpublished on paper
Source: OECD, 2006, Annual Report on the OECD
Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises:
Conducting Business in Weak Governance Zones,
OECD, Paris
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/class/family/glossary_s
hort.htm
High-level radioactive Déchets hautement
waste
radioactifs
High—level radioactive waste is waste generated in
the fuel cells of a nuclear reactor. It is typically
stored at reactor sites and nuclear fuel
reprocessing plants. In the absence of shielding, it
represents a serious health threat
High income countries
The World Bank classifies as high-income those
countries with GNP per capita income of $9,266 or
more in 2000.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
High-low graph
High sided wagon
Wagon with no roof and with rigid sides higher
than 60 cm.
For example, daily price variation might be
represented by taking time intervals of one month
on the abscissa and, at each monthly point,
showing the maximum and minimum price
attained during the previous month. The maxima
can be joined by a line to provide a graph of high
points; and similarly for the minima; or, for each
month, the high and low points may be joined by a
vertical bar.
Diagramme des
sommets et des creux
A form of graph used to depict ranges of variation
in successive intervals of time.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Higher level index
A term sometimes used to distinguish an
aggregate index from an elementary index.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Highly indebted poor
country (HIPC)
initiative
Framework for action to resolve the external debt
problems of heavily indebted poor countries
(HIPCs) that was developed jointly by the IMF and
the World Bank and was adopted in September
1996. The Initiative envisaged comprehensive
action by the international financial community,
including multilateral institutions, to reduce to
sustainable levels the external debt burden on
HIPCs, provided they build a track record of strong
policy performance.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
High-level
governmental and
political figures
High-level governmental and political figures are
individuals who are or have been entrusted with
prominent public functions in a foreign country.
Context: Following a comprehensive review of the
HIPC Initiative, a number of modifications to the
Initiative were approved in September 1999 to
provide faster, deeper, and broader debt relief and
strengthen the links between debt relief, poverty
reduction, and social policies.
Context: These include, for example, Heads of
State or of government, senior politicians, senior
government, judicial or military officials, senior
executives of state-owned corporations, important
political party officials. Business relationships with
family members or close associates of high-level
political figures involve business risks similar to
those with the political figures themselves.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
360
have been made. Hire purchase is usually
restricted to consumer durables, and most
purchasers are households. Financiers of hire
purchase contracts typically are separate
institutional units operating in close co-operation
with sellers of durable goods.
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Highly indebted poor
country (HIPC) trust
fund
The Trust Fund administered by the International
Development Association (IDA) to provide grants
to eligible heavily indebted poor countries (HIPCs)
for relief on debt owed to participating
multilaterals. The Trust Fund will either prepay, or
purchase, a portion of the debt owed to a
multilateral creditor and cancel such debt, or pay
debt service, as it comes due.
Source: Eurostat, 1996, "European System of
Accounts - ESA 1995", Office for Official
Publications of the European Communities,
Luxembourg, [Annex II]
Histogram
Histogramme
A univariate frequency diagram in which rectangles
proportional in area to the class frequencies are
erected on sections of the horizontal axis, the
width of each section representing the
corresponding class interval of the variate.
Context: The HIPC Trust Fund receives
contributions from participating multilateral
creditors and from bilateral donors. Contributions
can be earmarked for debt owed by a particular
debtor or to a particular multilateral creditor.
Donors can also provide contributions to an
unallocated pool and participate in decisions
regarding the use of these unallocated funds.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
The Trust Fund allows multilateral creditors to
participate in the Trust Fund in ways consistent
with their financial policies and aims to address the
resource constraints for certain multilateral
creditors.
Historic cost
Comptabilisation au
accounting
coût historique
Historic cost accounting is a valuation method
which requires goods or assets used in production
to be valued by the expenditures actually incurred
to acquire those goods or assets, however far back
in the past those expenditures took place; it is
commonly used in business accounting but not in
the national accounts
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: SNA 1.60
See also: Enhanced structural adjustment facility
(ESAF) – Heavily indebted poor country (HICP)
trust
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Highly migratory fish Stocks de poissons
species or stocks
grands migrateurs
Highly migratory fish species or stocks refers to
fish species or stocks that carry out extensive
migrations and can occur in both EEZs and high
seas. This term is usually used to denote tuna and
tuna-like species, marlins and swordfish
Historic monuments
Monuments
historiques
Historic monuments are fixed assets that are
identifiable because of particular historic, national,
regional, local, religious or symbolic significance;
they are usually accessible to the general public,
and visitors are often charged for admission to the
monuments or their vicinity
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Source: SNA 10.71
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
High-sulphur content
fuel oil
Heavy fuel oil with sulphur content of 1 per cent or
higher.
Historic prices
Prix historiques
The historic price is the price that was actually paid
for an asset when it was first acquired by a
resident user. It is a synonym for ―acquisition
price‖
Source: Oil Information 2001, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 3. General Definitions
See also: Low-sulphur content fuel oil
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Hire purchase
A durable good is sold to a purchaser in return for
agreed future payments. The buyer takes
possession of the good immediately, though in law
it remains the property of the seller or financier as
collateral/guarantee until all agreed payments
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
361
See also: Acquisition price
which direct a group of companies) are classified
as follows:
Historic volatility
Historic volatility is the standard deviation of
financial returns on an asset computed over a
window of a pre-specified number of past trading
dates.
a) in sector S.11, non-financial corporations, if the
preponderant type of activity of the group of
corporations which are market producers, as a
whole is the production of goods and non-financial
services;
Source: OECD Economic Outlook Glossary
b) in sector S.12, financial corporations, if the
preponderant type of activity of the group of
corporations as a whole is financial intermediation.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/28/54/1890650.ht
m
Source: ESA 2.13e
HITAS
A heuristic approach to cell suppression in
hierarchical tables.
See also: Holding corporations – SNA
Holding corporations Sociétés holdings Ŕ SNA
SCN
Holding corporations are corporations that control
a group of subsidiary corporations and whose
principal activity is owning and directing the group
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: SNA 4.100
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Holding company
A holding company is a purely financial concern
which uses its capital solely to acquire interests
(normally controlling interests) in a number of
operating companies.
See also: Holding corporations - ESA
Holding gains
Gains de détention
Positive or negative holding gains may accrue
during the accounting period to the owners of
financial and non-financial assets and liabilities as
a result of a change in their prices (holding gains
are sometimes referred to as ―capital gains")
Although the purpose of a holding company is
mainly to gain control and not to operate, it will
typically have representation on the boards of
directors of the operating firms.
Source: SNA 3.62
Holding companies provide a means by which
corporate control can become highly concentrated
through pyramiding. A holding company may gain
control over an operating company which itself has
several subsidiaries.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Holding period
Holding period is the time interval during which an
asset is held.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: OECD, June 2004, Glossary, OECD
Economic Outlook, Paris, France
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Holt method for
autocorrection
The Holt method for autocorrection is an automatic
correction method in which the least possible
number of data items is changed and the FellegiHolt model is used to determine acceptable sets of
values or ranges for the items that are imputed.
Sequential or simultaneous imputation via colddeck or hot-deck method may be applied.
Holding corporations - Sociétés holdings ESA
SEC
Holding corporations are institutional units whose
main function is to control and direct a group of
subsidiaries.
Context: Entities forming part of a group of units
engaged in production and keeping a complete set
of accounts are deemed to be institutional units
even if they have partially surrendered their
autonomy of decision to the central body (the
holding corporation) responsible for the general
direction of the group; the holding corporation
itself is deemed to be an institutional unit distinct
from the units which it controls, unless (b) below is
applicable. Holding corporations (i.e. corporations
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
362
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Homeworkers are a sub-division of persons
employed of the observation unit who carry out
their professional activity from their own home.
Only homeworkers who appear on the pay-roll of
the observation unit should be included
Home country
The country of residence of the head office of the
institutional entity.
Source: Definitions of Structural Business Statistics
Regulation (Commission Regulation (EC) No.
2700/98 of 17 December 1998) variables (16 13
5)
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Homeworkers on the
payroll (establishment
surveys)
Homeworkers on the payroll are persons employed
by the establishment, in general on a piece-work
basis, who work in their own home and whose
name appears on the payroll. Homeworkers paid
by sub-contractors are not included in employment
statistics for establishments.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Home page
The main or introductory page of a Web site. The
home page provides visitors with an overview and
links to the rest of the site. It often contains or
links to a table of contents.
Homeworkers on the payroll should be enumerated
for single period. Where the numbers are
significant and fluctuate. It may also be useful to
collect the average number in the enquiry periods
as defined for employees
Source: United Kingdom, Office for National
Statistics (ONS) website, site statistics
Hyperlink:
http://www.statistics.gov.uk/sitestatistics/interpret
ing.asp
Source: International Recommendations for
Industrial Statistics, United Nations, New York,
1983, Statistical Papers, Series M, No. 48, Rev. 1,
paras. 108-110
Homeless households
Homeless households are those households
without a shelter that would form within the scope
of living quarters
See also: Outworkers – SNA
Homogeneity
Homogénéité
This term is used in statistics in its ordinary sense,
but most frequently occurs in connection with
samples from different populations which may or
may not be identical. If the populations are
identical they are said to be homogeneous, and by
extension, the sample data are also said to be
homogeneous.
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.153
Homemakers
Personnes s'occupant
du foyer
Homemakers are persons of either sex, not
classified as usually economically active, who are
engaged in household duties in their own home,
for example, housewives and other relatives
responsible for the care of the home and children
(domestic employees, working for pay, however,
are classified as economically active
In a more restricted sense populations may be said
to be homogeneous in respect of some of their
constraints, e.g. k populations with identical means
but different dispersions are homogeneous in their
means.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.202
See also: Resistance
Homogeneity ratios
Despite the endeavour made to define the classes
of ISIC, or the most detailed level of any other
national activity classification, in such a way that
their activities should be confined to the range of
activities described in a single category of ISIC and
to the one geographic area in the relevant
geographic classification used, some of the
activities of establishments, or similar units, which
are classified to a given class will be characteristic
of other classes of the classification.
Homeworkers Eurostat
In compiling data classified according to kind of
economic activity, it will therefore be valuable to
Homeostasis
Homéostase
Homeostasis refers to the capability of ecosystems
to resist change and interference through selfregulation and self—maintenance (regeneration)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
363
compute measures of homogeneity in respect of
kinds of activity for the units falling into the
various categories of the scheme of classification.
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
The two most important ratios to assess the
homogeneity of the various categories are the
specialisation ratio and the coverage ratio.
Horizontal integration
See Merger
Source: ISIC Rev. 3, paras 55 and 154
See also: Merger
See also: Coverage ratio, Specialisation ratio
Horizontal integration Intégration
(of a fishery)
horizontale
A fishery (or industry) is horizontally integrated
when firms in the fishery operate and manage
multiple units at the same level of the supply
chain. For example, a firm that operates several
processing plants, across several regions or for
different species, is considered horizontally
integrated
Homogeneous process Processus homogène
A stochastic process is said to be homogeneous in
space if the transition probability between any two
state values at two given times depends only on
the difference between those state values.
The process is homogeneous in time if the
transition probability between two given state
values at any two times depends only on the
difference between those times.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Vertical integration (of a fishery)
Horizontal merger
A Horizontal merger is a merger between firms
that produce and sell the same products, i.e.,
between competing firms. Horizontal mergers, if
significant in size, can reduce competition in a
market and are often reviewed by competition
authorities. Horizontal mergers can be viewed as
horizontal integration of firms in a market or
across markets.
Homogeneous
production unit
A unit of homogeneous production is a producer
unit in which only a single (non-ancillary)
productive activity is carried out; this unit is not
normally observable and is more an abstract or
conceptual unit underlying the symmetric
(product- by-product) input-output tables
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: SNA 15.14
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Conglomerate merger, Merger, Vertical
merger
Homogenous products
Homogenous products are considered to be
homogenous when they are perfect substitutes and
buyers perceive no actual or real differences
between the products offered by different firms.
Horizontally
integrated enterprise
Entreprise
horizontalement
intégrée
A horizontally integrated enterprise is one in which
several different kinds of activities which produce
different kinds of goods or services for sale on the
market are carried out in parallel with each other
Price is the single most important dimension along
which firms producing homogenous products
compete.
Context: However, empirical experience
demonstrates that when the number of such firms
is few, the existence of homogenous products may
facilitate collusion. In various jurisdictions,
collusive arrangements have been found to exist in
homogenous products such as cement, flour, steel
and sugar.
Source: SNA 5.30
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Vertically integrated enterprise
In contrast, heterogeneous products differ
significantly from each other and are not easily
substitutable.
Host country (of
banks)
The host country of banks is the country where a
bank‘s foreign affiliate is located
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
364
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
concept of ―gross earnings‖, which consists of:
(a) pay for time worked, including basic time and
piece rates, overtime premiums, shift differentials,
other premiums and bonuses paid regularly each
pay period, and cost-of-living adjustments, and
Hot deck
A hot-deck is a correction base for which the
elements are continuously updated during the data
set check and correction. Typically edit-passing
records from the current database are used in the
correction database.
(b) other direct pay, such as pay for time not
worked (vacations, holidays and other paid leave
for personal or family reasons, civic duties, and so
on, except sick leave), seasonal or irregular
bonuses and other special payments, selected
social allowances and the cost of payments in kind.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: [Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 608
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Hours actually worked
Hours actually worked includes time spent at the
workplace on productive activities and on other
activities which are part of the tasks and duties of
the jobs concerned (for example, cleaning and
preparing working tools).
See also: Cold deck, Deck imputation
Hot deck imputation
Hot deck imputation is a method of imputation
whereby values of variables for good records in the
current (hot) survey file are used to impute for
blank values of incomplete records.
It also includes time spent at the place of work
when the person is inactive for reasons linked to
the production process or work organization (for
example, standby time), as during these periods
paid workers remain at the disposal of their
employer.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hours actually worked also includes short rest
periods spent at the place of work because they
are difficult to distinguish separately, even if
workers are not ―at the disposal‖ of their employer
during those periods. Explicitly excluded are lunch
breaks, as they normally are sufficiently long to be
easily distinguished from work periods.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Cold deck, Deck imputation
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 207
Hoteling rent
Rente naturelle
Hoteling rent is the net return realized from the
sale of a natural resource under particular
conditions of long—term market equilibrium. It is
defined as the revenue received minus all marginal
costs of resource exploitation, exploration and
development including a normal return to fixed
capital employed.
Hours paid for
―Hours paid for‖ are generally the hours actually
worked plus the hours paid for but not worked,
such as paid annual leave, paid public holidays,
paid sick leave, paid meal breaks and time spent
travelling between the home and the workplace.
Context: The Hoteling rent is used as a measure of
natural resource depletion in environmental
accounting.
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 528
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hours worked,
number
Statistics on the number of hours worked should
include:
See also: Rent (general)
Hourly direct pay
Hourly direct pay includes all payments made
directly to the worker, before any deductions for
workers‘ contributions to social security and
pension schemes, life and health insurance
premiums, union dues and other obligations,
income-tax liabilities, and so on.
- hours actually worked during normal hours of
work;
- time worked in addition to hours worked during
normal periods of work, and generally paid at
higher than normal rates (overtime);
Context: This definition is the equivalent of the ILO
- time spent at the place of work on work such as
365
preparation of the work place, repairs and
maintenance, preparation and cleaning of tools,
and the preparation of receipts, time sheets and
reports;
A household may be located in a housing unit or in
a set of collective living quarters such as a
boarding house, a hotel or a camp, or may
comprise the administrative personnel in an
institution. The household may also be homeless
- time spent at the place of work waiting or
standing by for such reasons as lack of supply of
work, breakdown of machinery, or accidents, or
time spent at the place of work during which no
work is done but for which payment is made under
a guaranteed employment contract;
Context: The SNA 93 definition of household is
more succinct, namely: "A household is a small
group of persons who share the same living
accommodation, who pool some, or all, of their
income and wealth and who consume certain types
of goods and services collectively, mainly housing
and food." (SNA 4.132 [4.20])
- time corresponding to short rest periods at the
work place, including tea and coffee breaks.
Statistics of hours worked should exclude:
- hours paid for but not worked, such as paid
annual leave, paid public holidays, paid sick leave;
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1.
United Nations, New York, 1998, Series M, No. 67,
Rev. 1, paras. 2.61-2.62
- meal breaks;
See also: Types of household
- time spent on travel from home to work and vice
versa
Household actual final Consommation finale
consumption
effective des ménages
Actual final consumption of households is the value
of the consumption goods and services acquired by
households, whether by purchase in general, or by
transfer from government units or NPISHs, and
used by them for the satisfaction of their needs
and wants; it is derived from their final
consumption expenditure by adding the value of
social transfers in kind receivable
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning Consumer Price Indices
Adopted by the 10th International Conference of
Labour Statisticians, October 1962, para. 5
Source: SNA 9.11 and 9.3 [9.72, 9.96]
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Total hours worked
Household budget
surveys
Sample surveys of households in which the
households are asked to provide data, or
estimates, of the amounts they spend on
consumption goods and services and for other
purposes over a given period of time.
Hours worked, total
Total des heures
travaillées
Total hours worked are the aggregate number of
hours actually worked during the period in
employee and self-employment jobs
Source: SNA 15.102
Context: Sometimes referred to as Household
consumption expenditure or Household
expenditure surveys
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Hours worked, number - ILO
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Household
Ménage
The concept of household is based on the
arrangements made by persons, individually or in
groups, for providing themselves with food or
other essentials for living. A household may be
either (a) a one-person household, that is to say, a
person who makes provision for his or her own
food or other essentials for living without
combining with any other person to form part of a
multi-person household or (b) a multi-person
household, that is to say, a group of two or more
persons living together who make common
provision for food or other essentials for living. The
persons in the group may pool their incomes and
may, to a greater or lesser extent, have a common
budget; they may be related or unrelated persons
or constitute a combination of persons both related
and unrelated.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Household
consumption
expenditure surveys
See Household budget surveys
See also: Household budget surveys
Household
expenditure surveys
366
See Household expenditure surveys
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Household budget surveys
Household final
Dépense de
consumption
consommation finale
expenditure
des ménages
Household final consumption expenditure consists
of the expenditure, including imputed expenditure,
incurred by resident households on individual
consumption goods and services, including those
sold at prices that are not economically significant
Household waste
Ordures ménagères
Household waste refers to waste material usually
generated in the residential environment. Waste
with similar characteristics may be generated in
other economic activities and can thus be treated
and disposed of together with household waste
Source: SNA 9.94 [9.45]
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Waste
Housing census
Recensements des
logements
A housing census is the total process of collecting,
compiling, evaluating, analysing and publishing or
otherwise disseminating statistical data pertaining,
at a specified time, to all living quarters and
occupants thereof in a country or in a welldelimited part of a country
Household production
for own use
Household production for own use comprise those
activities that are carried out by household
unincorporated enterprises that are not involved in
market production. By definition, such enterprises
are excluded from the informal sector
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary.
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 1.3
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
Housing situation
At the highest level, people are divided into three
categories:
Household saving
Household saving is defined in the OECD's
Economic Outlook as household sector saving as a
per cent of household sector disposable income.
People living in:
- conventional dwellings,
- non-conventional dwellings, and
- those living in households in collective living
quarters.
Source: OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Source: Eurostat, 1999, Guidelines and table
programme for the Community programme of
population and housing censuses in 2001, Vol. 1:
Guidelines, Office for Official Publications of the
European Communities, Luxembourg
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
See also: Disposable income, Saving
Household types
See Types of household and Household - UN
Housing tenure
Tenure refers to the arrangements under which the
household occupies all or part of a housing unit.
Types of tenure include ownership by a member of
the household, rental of all or part of the housing
unit by a member of the household, etc
See also: Household – UN, Types of household
Household
unincorporated
market enterprises
Entreprises
marchandes non
constituées en
sociétés appartenant
à des ménages
Household unincorporated market enterprises are
created for the purpose of producing goods or
services for sale or barter on the market.
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.410
Housing unit
Unité d'habitation
A housing unit is a separate and independent place
of abode intended for habitation by a single
household, or one not intended for habitation but
occupied as living quarters by a household at the
time of the census. Thus it may be an occupied or
vacant dwelling, an occupied mobile or improvised
housing unit or any other place occupied as living
They can be engaged in virtually any kind of
productive activity and they include unincorporated
partnerships but the liability of the partners for the
debts of the businesses must be unlimited for the
partnerships to be treated as unincorporated
enterprises
Source: SNA 4.144 and 4.145
367
quarters by a household at the time of the census.
This category includes housing of various levels of
permanency and acceptability
Human capital is productive wealth embodied in
labour, skills and knowledge
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.330
Human development
Développement
humain
Human development is the process of enlarging
people‘s choices. Their three essential choices are
to lead a long and healthy life, to acquire
knowledge and to have access to the resources
needed for a decent standard of living.
Houston terms
See Lower-middle-income-country terms
See also: Lower-middle-income country terms
Hovercraft (air
Aéroglisseur
cushion vehicle)
A vessel which supports herself a short distance
above the surface of the water (or land) on a
cushion of air contained by a flexible skirt attached
to the outer perimeter of the vehicle.
Additional choices, highly valued by many people,
range from political, economic and social freedom
to opportunities for being creative and productive
and enjoying personal self—respect and
guaranteed human rights
Context: Hovercrafts are used mostly as passenger
ferries.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: Sustainable development
Human genetic
research database(s)
(HGRDs)
See Biobank
HTML
HyperText Mark-up Language
See also: Biobank
Human settlements
Etablissements
humains
The term human settlements is an integrative
concept that comprises: (a) physical components
of shelter and infrastructure; and (b) services to
which the physical elements provide support, that
is to say, community services such as education,
health, culture, welfare, recreation and nutrition
HTTP
Hyper-Text Transfer Protocol
Hub
Central point for the collection, sorting,
transshipment and distribution of goods for a
particular area.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: This concept comes from a term used in
air transport for passengers as well as freight. It
describes collection and distribution through a
single point ("Hub and Spoke" concept).
Hybrid DB plan
Plans à prestations
définies hybrides
A defined benefits (DB) plan where benefits
depend on a rate of return credited to
contributions, where this rate of return is either
specified in the plan rules, independently of the
actual return on any supporting assets (e.g. fixed,
indexed to a market benchmark, tied to salary or
profit growth, etc.), or is calculated with reference
to the actual return of any supporting assets and a
minimum return guarantee specified in the plan
rules.
Source: Terminology on combined transport,
UNECE/ECMT/EC, UNITED NATIONS, New York and
Geneva, 2001
Hui-Heubel Ratio
A measure of resilience and depth in financial
markets. The ratio relates the volume of trades (as
a proportion of the outstanding stock of the
instrument) to its impact on prices. The larger the
volume of trades relative to the price changes, the
deeper and more resilient the market is.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Human capital
See also: Defined benefit (DB) occupational
pension plans, Defined contribution (DC)
occupational pension plans, Mixed DB plans,
Traditional DB plan
Capital humain
368
Hybrid flow accounts
A single matrix account containing both national
accounts in monetary terms and physical flow
accounts showing the absorption of natural
resources and ecosystem inputs and the
generation of residuals.
Weights defined as hybrid value, or hybrid
expenditure, shares.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 4.4
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Hydrocarbons
Hydrocarbures
Hydrocarbons are compounds of hydrogen and
carbon in various combinations that are present in
petroleum products and natural gas. Some
hydrocarbons are major air pollutants, some may
be carcinogenic and others contribute to
photochemical smog
Hybrid input-output
tables
A symmetric table where the SNA monetary input
output table is combined with the corresponding
physical input output table.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 4.9
HydrochloroHydrochlorofluorocarbones
fluorocarbons
(HCFC)
(HCFCs)
Hydrochloro-fluorocarbons (HCFCs) are compounds
used as replacements for chloro—fluorocarbons
(CFCs) in refrigeration because they are less active
ozone depleters
Hybrid supply and use
tables
A particular form of matrix accounting which
includes in the same table monetary flows relating
to products and physical flows relating to natural
resources, ecosystem inputs and residual
generation.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hydrofoil
Hydroptère
A fast vessel which, when at speed, lifts her hull
clear of the surface of the water, supporting
herself upon foils, or wings or legs, which project
beneath her bottom.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 2.69 & 4.8
Context: Hydrofoils are used mostly as passenger
ferries.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hybrid values or
expenditures
Hypothetical values, or expenditures, in which the
quantities are valued at a different set of prices
from those at which they were actually bought or
sold: for example, when the quantities purchased
in an earlier period are valued at the prices
prevailing in a later period.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Hydrologic cycle
Cycle hydrologique
A hydrologic cycle is a succession of stages
undergone by water in its passage from the
atmosphere to the earth and its return to the
atmosphere. The stages include evaporation from
the land or sea or inland water, condensation to
form clouds, precipitation, accumulation in the soil
or in bodies of water, and re—evaporation
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hybrid weights
Hydroponics
369
Hydroponique
Hydroponics is the cultivation of plants in water
with added fertilizers, the soil substrate thereby
being completely replaced
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 9.51
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
IAOS
International Association for Official Statistics
Hydropower
Hydroélectricité
Hydropower is electricity generation using the
power of falling water
IASS
See International Association of Survey
Statisticians
Context: Potential and kinetic energy of water
converted into electricity in hydroelectric plants
(Energy Statistics of OECD Countries: 1999-2000,
2002 Edition, International Energy Agency, Paris,
Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources).
See also: International Association of Survey
Statisticians (IASS)
IATA
International Air Transport Association
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
ICAO
International Civil Aviation Organisation
Hypermarket
A hypermarket or superstore is a retail self-service
establishment offering a broad range of food and
non-food products, with car parking facilities and
with a floor space of:
ICD
International Classification of Diseases and Related
Health Problems
- Belgium, Denmark, Spain, France, Greece, Italy,
Luxembourg, Netherlands, Portugal: 2 500 m² or
more;
ICGS
International Standard Classification of all Goods
and Services
- Germany: 1 500 m² to 4 999 m²;
(Verbrauchermarkt) 5 000 m² or more (SBWarenhaus);
ICIDH
See International Classification of Impairments,
Disabilities, and Handicaps
- Ireland, United Kingdom: 2 323 m² or more.
These superstores have a very reduced non-food
section compared with continental hypermarkets.
See also: International Classification of
Impairments, Disabilities, and Handicaps (ICIDH)
Source: Eurostat, 1993, "Retailing in the European
Single Market", Office for Official Publications of
the European Communities, Luxembourg
ICP
International Comparison Programme
See also: International comparison program
Hypothesis testing
Hypothèse à tester
A term used generally to refer to testing
significance when specific alternatives to the null
hypothesis are considered.
ICSE
International Standard Classification of Status in
Employment
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
ICSE
International Classification by Status in
Employment (ICSE-1993)
See also: International Classification by Status in
Employment (ICSE-1993)
Hypothetical
restoration costs
Hypothetical costs of restoring the environment to
defined standards. The hypothetical costs include
the mitigation/abatement of accumulated damage
required to return to this standard.
ICST (94)
International Standard Classification of Ships by
Type, Revised 1994
ICT Goods
See Information, Communication, Technology
(ICT) Goods
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
370
See also: Information, Communication Technology
(ICT) goods
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
ICT sector
See Information, Communication Technology (ICT)
Sector
See also: Key
See also: Information, Communication Technology
(ICT)
Identification risk
This risk is defined as the probability that an
intruder identifies at least one respondent in the
disseminated microdata. This identification may
lead to the disclosure of (sensitive) information
about the respondent. The risk of identification
depends on the number and nature of quasiidentifiers in the microdata and in the a priori
knowledge of the intruder.
Identifiable data
Information that allows the identification of the
survey respondent or data provider that it relates
to its identification to be determined either directly
(e.g. by name, address, reference number) or
indirectly (e.g. by some distinguishing feature such
as business activity, size, location).
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Ireland Central Statistics Office, Freedom
of Information – Appendix 5: Glossary of CSO
Terminology
Hyperlink:
http://www.cso.ie/text/foi/append5.html
Identified samples
Are specimens supplied from identified sources
with personal identifiers (such as names or patient
numbers) which are sufficient to allow the
researcher to link directly the biological
information and data with the individual from
whom the material was obtained.
Identification
Identification is the association of a particular
record within a set of data with a particular
population unit.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: OECD, 2006, Creation and Governance of
Human Genetic Research Databases, OECD. Paris
See also: Unidentified samples
Identifier
Identifier is a sequence of characters, capable of
uniquely identifying that with which it is
associated, within a specified context.
Identification data
Those personal data that allow direct identification
of the data subject, and which are needed for the
collection, checking and matching of the data, but
are not subsequently used for drawing up
statistical results.
Context: A name should not be used as an
identifier because it is not linguistically neutral.
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
See also: Country identifier, Data identifier, Data
provider series key, ISO / IEC 11179, Organisation
identifier
Identifying variable
A variable that either is a formal identifier or forms
part of a formal identifier.
Identification dataset
A dataset that contains formal identifiers.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Identification key
Synonym of key.
Identity
Specifications where the items compared in
different countries are as close to identical as
possible, as for the same brand name and model.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
371
International Electrotechnical Commission
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
See International Organisation for Standardisation
See also: International Organisation for
Standardisation (ISO)
IGU
See International Geographical Union
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
See also: International Geographical Union (IGU)
IIP
See International investment position
Identity preservation
Préservation de
l‟identité
Identity preservation is a tracking system of crop
management that preserves the identity of the
source or nature of the materials
See also: International investment position
Illegal production
Illegal production comprises:
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
- the production of goods or services whose sale,
distribution or possession is forbidden by law; and
Identity test
A test that may be used under the axiomatic
approach which requires that if the prices remain
unchanged between the two periods (that is, the
sets of prices are identical) the price index should
equal unity.
- production activities which are usually legal but
which become illegal when carried out by
unauthorised producers, e.g., unlicensed medical
practitioners (SNA 6.30).
There may be no clear borderline between the
underground economy and illegal production. For
example, production which does not comply with
certain safety, health or other standards could be
defined as illegal. (SNA 6.35).
Also known as the ―constant prices test‖.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
The scope of illegal production in individual
countries depends upon the laws in place. For
example, prostitution is legal in some countries but
illegal in others
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary.
Idle land
Friche
Idle land is land that was cultivated but is now in a
state of disuse; abandoned land; fallow land
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Hidden economy, Informal sector – ILO,
Informal sector – SNA, Underground economy
Illegitimate child
An illegitimate child is the child of parents who,
according to national law or customs, were not
married at the time of its birth
IEA Civic Education
Study
The International Association for the Evaluation
(IEA) Civic Education Study tested 14-year-olds in
28 countries, including 17 OECD countries, on their
knowledge of civic-related content, their skills in
understanding political communication, their
concepts and attitudes towards civics, and their
participation or practice in this area.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
The test was designed to identify and examine the
ways in which young people are prepared to
undertake their role as citizens in democracies,
both inside and outside the school.
Illiterate person
See Literate person
See also: Literate person
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Illness or morbid
condition
An illness or morbid condition may be defined as a
departure, subjective or objective, from a state of
IEC
372
physical or mental well-being, as a result of either
disease or injury
financial assistance to a member country seeking
to redress its balance of payments problems and to
help cushion the impact of adjustment. Nonconcessional resources are provided mainly under
Stand-By Arrangements and the Extended Fund
Facility (EFF), and concessional resources are
provided under the Poverty Reduction and Growth
Facility (PRGF).
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 14.41
ILO
BIT
See International Labour Organisation
See also: International Labour Organisation (ILO)
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
ILO international
labour standards
See Labour standards, international
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Labour standards, international
Immediate host /
investing country
Geographic analysis of direct investment
transactions is complicated by holding companies;
that is, when the ultimate parent enterprise‘s
investment in a foreign country is held through
another subsidiary in a third country. Because the
principle of classification used in balance of
payments regional statistics is based on the
change of ownership, direct investment flows
should be compiled only in respect of the
immediate host/investing country.
Imbedded process
A stochastic process in continuous time is observed
only at the time points where a change of state
occurs. These points of discontinuity can be
thought of as forming a new discrete time variable.
A new stochastic process can be derived by
defining the state of the process at time n to be
that immediately following the nth transition in the
old process. The new process in discrete time is
said to be ―imbedded‖ in the old process in
continuous time.
The same rule applies for the international
investment position statement; liabilities should be
classified by the country of residence of the owner
of the claim, and assets should be classified by the
country of the liability holder. However, it is
suggested that the stock of net assets of direct
investment could also be compiled in respect of the
ultimate host or controlling country, as
supplementary information
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
IMF
FMI
See International Monetary Fund
Source: Report on the Survey of Implementation
of Implementation of Methodological Standards for
Direct Investment – IMF, OECD, March 2000 –
Appendix II: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms.
See also: International Monetary Fund (IMF)
IMF adjustment
program
An adjustment program in a member country of
the IMF. An IMF-supported program is a detailed
economic program that is based on an analysis of
the economic problems of the member country. It
specifies the policies being implemented or that
will be implemented by the country in the
monetary, fiscal, external, and structural areas, as
necessary, in order to achieve economic
stabilization and set the basis for self-sustained
economic growth. It usually, though not
necessarily, refers to a program that is supported
by the use of IMF resources.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/bopage/pdf/mar2000.
pdf
Immediate interest
rates
Are those of an on-going nature such as policy
rates set by central banks, prime rates for business
loans, and those which are extremely short-term
such as overnight or next day interbank rates or
call money (i.e. money left at the banks' disposal).
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: OECD, monthly, OECD Main Economic
Indicators, OECD, Paris, Explanatory Notes
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Immigrant population
The immigrant population is usually defined in one
of two ways. Some countries have traditionally
focused on producing data that represents foreign
nationals (European countries and Japan) whilst
others refer to the foreign-born (Australia, Canada
and the United States).
IMF arrangement
Agreement between the IMF and a member
country on the basis of which the IMF provides
373
See also: Disability, Handicap
This difference in focus relates in part to the nature
and the history of immigration systems and
legislation on citizenship and Naturalisation
Impairment-free life
expectancy
Impairment-free life expectancy is the average
number of years an individual is expected to live
free of impairment if current patterns of mortality
and impairment continue to apply
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.145
Immunisation
Rendering a person or animal immune to certain
infections by the process of injecting either antigen
or a serum containing specific antibodies.
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Source: S.W.A. Gunn. Multilingual Dictionary of
Disaster Medicine and International Relief, English,
Français, Español, Arabic. Boston, Kluwer
Academic Publishers, 1990.
Implicit contingent
liabilities
Liabilities that reflect non-contractual obligations of
government (e.g., potential liabilities arising in
connection with financial sector restructuring).
Immunisation rate
(for children)
The immunisation rate for children refers to the
percentage of children reaching their first birthday
who have been fully immunised against Diphtheria,
Tetanus and Pertussis (DTP)
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
See also: Implied edit
Implicit edit
See Implied edit
Implicit price deflator Déflateur implicite des
prix
An implicit price deflator (IPD) is obtained by
dividing a current price value by its real
counterpart (the chain volume measure). When
calculated from the major national accounting
aggregates such as GDP, IPDs relate to a broader
range of goods and services in the economy than
that represented by any of the individual price
indexes (such as CPIs, PPIs).
Immunisation rate for
measles (for children)
The immunisation rate for children for measles
refers to the percentage of children reaching their
first birthday who have been fully immunised
against measles
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Movements in an implicit price deflator reflect both
changes in price and changes in the composition of
the aggregate for which the deflator is calculated
Source: Australian National Accounts: Concepts,
Sources and Methods: Glossary, Australian Bureau
of Statistics, Canberra, 2000
Impact pathway
A sequence of steps to be follow in order to
translate residual generation to monetary
estimates of particular forms of damage.
Implicit price index
The implicit price index is the price index derived
as the ratio of a value over a volume index
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 9.55
Source: Statistical Series for the Euro Area Conclusions and Recommendations of the OECD
ASTF Euro Subgroup, 15 May 2001
Implicit price index
based on constant
exchange rates (or
constant international
prices) of period t
The implicit price index based on constant
exchange rates (or constant international prices) of
period t is an aggregate price index derived as the
ratio of a value index at constant exchange rates
(or constant international prices) of period t-1 over
a volume index at constant exchange rates (or
Impairment
Déficiences
Impairment concerns any loss or deviation of
physiological, neurological or anatomical structure
or function of an organ or body part (organ and
body dimension)
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.260
374
constant international prices) of period t-1
If the whole of the observed price change is
assumed to be pure price change, there is
assumed to be no change in quality.
Source: Statistical Series for the Euro Area Conclusions and Recommendations of the OECD
ASTF Euro Subgroup, 15 May 2001
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Implicit price index
based on constant
exchange rates (or
constant international
prices) of period t0
The implicit price index based on constant
exchange rates (or constant international prices) of
period t0 is an aggregate price index derived as
the ratio of a value index at constant exchange
rates (or constant international prices) of period t0
over a volume index at constant exchange rates
(or constant international prices) of period t0.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
See also: Explicit quality adjustment, Quality
adjustment
Implied conflict rule
An implied conflict rule is a conflict rule which can
be deduced from the explicitly given conflict rules.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Context: This price index is suitable for statements
about domestic price developments in a
geographical zone. But note that in cases where
the geographical zone comprises some, or even
only one, high inflation country, the large domestic
price changes in this economy are fully reflected in
this price index and may dominate the measure to
the point of rendering it meaningless
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: Statistical Series for the Euro Area Conclusions and Recommendations of the OECD
ASTF Euro Subgroup, 15 May 2001
Implied edit
An implied edit is an unstated edit derived logically
from explicit edits that were written by a subject
matter specialist.
Implicit price index
based on current
exchange rates (or
current international
prices)
The implicit price index based on current exchange
rates (or current international prices) is an
aggregate price index derived as the ratio of a
value index at current exchange rates (or current
international prices) over a volume index at
constant exchange rates (or constant international
prices) of period t0.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Explicit edit
Context: When this price index is exchange-rate
based, it reflects the shifts in exchange rates and
devaluation or appreciation of individual currencies
can influence the price aggregate even if domestic
prices are unchanged. When the price index is PPPbased, it reflects domestic inflation of the
reference country or average inflation of the
reference countries
Implied volatility
Implied volatility is the value of the expected
volatility imputed from an option pricing model
such as the Black-Scholes formula, given the
option price, the asset‘s price, the exercise price,
the time to maturity, and the risk-free interest
rate.
Source: Statistical Series for the Euro Area Conclusions and Recommendations of the OECD
ASTF Euro Subgroup, 15 May 2001
Source: OECD Economic Outlook Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/28/54/1890650.ht
m
Implicit quality
adjustment
Inferring the change in the quality of a product
whose characteristics change over time indirectly
by estimating, or assuming, the ‗pure‘ price change
that has occurred. For example, if the pure price
change is assumed to be equal to the average for
some other group of products, the implied change
in quality is equal to the actual observed price
change divided by the assumed pure price change.
See also: Black-Scholes formula, Risk-free interest
rate
Import coverage ratio
An import coverage ratio is the share (or
percentage) of a country‘s own imports that is
subject to a particular non tariff barrier, or any one
of a specified group of non tariff barriers. They are
375
calculated by attaching actual values to bilateral
trade flows between various exporters and the
importing country.
Source: SNA 7.74
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Context: The import coverage ratio suffers from
the drawback that those products facing very
restrictive non-tariff barriers enter the calculation
with low weights. A further drawback of the ratio is
that, in common with the frequency ratio, it
captures the effects of relaxation of NTBs only
insofar as such measures are completely
eliminated. In situations where NTBs are not
eliminated, the import coverage ratio may even
give perverse results, which is not the case with
the frequency ratio
Importance of an item
In choosing items within a basic heading to be
priced, the importance of the item in terms of wide
availability and use should be a leading criterion.
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Importance sampling
Echantillonage
d'importance
This method of sampling, used in Monte Carlo
analysis, is to concentrate the distribution of
sample points in those parts of the variate interval
which are of greatest interest. It is a form of
stratified sampling with variable sampling fraction.
Import duties
Droits sur les
importations
Import duties consist of customs duties, or other
import charges, which are payable on goods of a
particular type when they enter the economic
territory
Source: SNA 7.66 [OECD 5123]
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Import price index
An import price index measures changes in the
prices of imports of merchandise into a country.
The index numbers for each reference period relate
to prices of imports landed into the country during
the period
Imports of goods and Importations de biens
services Ŕ SNA
et de services - SCN
Imports of goods and services consist of
purchases, barter, or receipts of gifts or grants, of
goods and services by residents from nonresidents. The treatment of exports and imports in
the System of National Accounts is generally
identical with that in the balance of payments
accounts as described in the Balance of Payments
Manual.
Source: Producer and International Trade Price
Indexes: Concepts Sources and Methods,
Australian Bureau of Statistics, Canberra, 1995,
Chapter 11, Import Price Index
See also: Export price index
Context: The international standard for the
concepts and definitions for merchandise trade are
outlined in the UN publication, International
Merchandise Trade Statistics, Concepts and
Definitions, United Nations, New York, 1998,
Studies in Methods, Series M, No. 52, Rev. 2
Import quotas
Quota d'importation
Import quotas are restrictions on the quantity and
or value of imports of specific commodities for
some given time period, which are administered
globally, selectively or bilaterally
Source: SNA 14.88 [14.91, 14.94]. See also ESA
[3.129].
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
See also: Imports of goods and services –
merchandise trade – UN
Import subsidies
Subventions sur les
importations
Import subsidies consist of subsidies on goods and
services that become payable to resident
producers when the goods cross the frontier of the
economic territory or when the services are
delivered to resident institutional units
Imports of goods and Importations de biens
services Ŕ UN
et de services - NU
Imports of goods and services (merchandise trade)
are goods which add to the stock of material
resources of a country by entering its economic
territory.
376
determine and assign replacement values for
missing, invalid or inconsistent data that have
failed edits. This is done by changing some of the
responses or assigning values when they are
missing on the record being edited to ensure that
estimates are of high quality and that a plausible,
internally consistent record is created. (Statistics
Canada, "Statistics Canada Quality Guidelines", 4th
edition, October 2003, page 41, available at:
http://www.statcan.ca:8096/bsolc/english/bsolc?c
atno=12-539-X&CHROPG=1)
Context: Goods simply being transported through
a country (goods in transit) or temporarily
admitted (except for goods for inward processing)
do not add to the stock of material resources of a
country and are not included in the international
merchandise trade statistics. In many cases, a
country's economic territory largely coincides with
its customs territory, which is the territory in which
the customs law of a country applies in full.
It is recommended that the statistical value of
imported goods be c.i.f.-type value
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Glossary of Terms on
Statistical Data Editing", Conference of European
Statisticians Methodological material, Geneva,
2000
Source: International Merchandise Trade Statistics
– Concepts and Definitions, United Nations, 1998,
Series F, No. 52, Rev. 2, paras. 14 and 115-116
See also: Cif price, Exports of goods and services –
UN, Imports of goods and services – SNA
Hyperlink: http://amrads.jrc.cec.eu.int/kbase/glossary/glossALL.htm
Improper involvement
in local political
activities
Clarification of the meaning of improper political
activity is a subject of ongoing relevance with
respect to OECD anti-corruption instruments.
See also: Missing data
Imputation
Imputation
Imputation is a procedure for entering a value for
a specific data item where the response is missing
or unusable.
At a minimum, political involvement is deemed
improper in a foreign country if it is illegal in a
company‘s home or host country. For instance,
under the legal systems of some countries, an
advantage promised or given to any person, in
anticipation of his or her becoming a foreign public
official, is illegal; under the legal systems of many
countries it is considered technically distinct from
the offence of bribery.
Context: Imputation is the process used to
determine and assign replacement values for
missing, invalid or inconsistent data that have
failed edits. This is done by changing some of the
responses or assigning values when they are
missing on the record being edited to ensure that
estimates are of high quality and that a plausible,
internally consistent record is created. (Statistics
Canada, "Statistics Canada Quality Guidelines", 4th
edition, October 2003, page 41, available at:
http://www.statcan.ca:8096/bsolc/english/bsolc?c
atno=12-539-X&CHROPG=1)
Context: More generally, in thinking about this
issue, companies might want to ask themselves
whether their political activities are transparent;
whether they would feel comfortable if these
activities were described in detail in the media;
and whether their activities are in the best
interests of the host country.
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Glossary of Terms on
Statistical Data Editing", Conference of European
Statisticians Methodological material, Geneva,
2000
Source: OECD, 2006, Annual Report on the OECD
Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises:
Conducting Business in Weak Governance Zones,
OECD, Paris
Hyperlink: http://amrads.jrc.cec.eu.int/kbase/glossary/glossALL.htm
See also: Missing data
Improvised housing
Unités d'habitation
units
improvisées
An improvised housing unit is an independent,
makeshift shelter or structure, built of waste
materials and without a predetermined plan for the
purpose of habitation by one household, which is
being used as living quarters at the time of the
census
Imputation variance
An imputation variance is a component of the total
variance of the survey estimate introduced by the
imputation procedure.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.349
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Imputation
Imputation
Imputation is a procedure for entering a value for
a specific data item where the response is missing
or unusable.
Imputed abatement
costs
Context: Imputation is the process used to
377
Imputed abatement costs correspond to
expenditures related with the measures which
would be necessary to reduce the direct pressures
on natural assets (for example from air emissions
or waste disposal). Ideally, imputed abatement
costs should always be calculated as the sum of
direct and indirect cost effects of additional
prevention measures.
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Imputed rents
See Owner-occupied housing
See also: Owner occupied housing
Imputed social
Cotisations sociales
contributions
imputées
Social contributions are imputed when employers
provide social benefits themselves directly to their
employees, former employees or dependants out
of their own resources without involving an
insurance enterprise or autonomous pension fund,
and without creating a special fund or segregated
reserve for the purpose; the imputed contributions
are equal in value to the amount of social
contributions that would be needed to secure the
de facto entitlements to the social benefits they
accumulate
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 9.37
Imputed expenditure Dépense imputée
Some transactions which it is desirable to include
in the accounts do not take place in money terms
and so cannot be measured directly; in such cases
a conventional value is imputed to the
corresponding expenditure (the conventions used
vary from case to case and are described in the
SNA as necessary)
Source: SNA 7.45
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA [3.34, 9.30]
Inactive member
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See Deferred member
Membre adhérent
inactif
See also: Deferred member
Imputed parities
The use of parities for one or several basic
headings as estimates of the parities for other
basic headings where similar items are purchased,
e.g., parities for books purchased by educational
institutions imputed from book purchases by
consumers.
Inactive persons
(labour market)
All persons who are not classified as employed or
unemployed are defined as inactive.
Source: Eurostat, 1999, "Labour force survey:
Methods and definitions, 1998 Edition", Office for
Official Publications of the European Communities,
Luxembourg, p.13
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
Inactivity rate
The inactivity rate is the proportion of the
population that is not in the labour force.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Context: When added together, the inactivity rate
and the labour force participation rate will sum to
100 per cent.
Imputed price
The price assigned to an item for which the price is
missing in a particular period. The term ‗‗imputed
price‘‘ may also refer to the price assigned to an
item that is not sold on the market, such as a good
or service produced for own consumption,
including housing services produced by owner
occupiers, or one received as payment in kind or
as a free transfer from a government or non-profit
institution.
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 391
See also: Participation rate
Inadequate
employment related
to excessive hours
Inadequate employment related to excessive hours
(also called ―overemployment‖) is defined as ―a
situation where persons in employment wanted or
sought to work less hours than they did during the
reference period, either in the same job or in
another job, accepting a corresponding reduction
of income‖.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Hyperlink:
378
Context: ―Excessive‖ hours of work may also be a
concern; persons may work more than a normal
work-week because of inadequate wages earned in
the job or jobs that they hold. Long hours can be
voluntary, or involuntary when imposed by
employers (Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 204)
Incineration at sea is the disposal of waste by
burning at sea on specially designed incinerator
ships. Ocean incineration includes the burning of
organo-chlorine compounds and other toxic wastes
that are difficult to dispose of
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: ILO: Final report, 16th International
Conference of Labour Statisticians, Geneva, 1998
Incineration with
recovery of energy
Incinération avec
récupération de
l‟energie
Incineration with recovery of energy refers to the
incineration in which evolving thermal energy is
used for the production of steam, hot water or
electric energy
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/tech
meet/16thicls/index.htm.
Inbound tourism
Inbound tourism is the tourism of non-resident
visitors within the economic territory of the country
of reference
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, para 2.61
Incinerator
Incinérateur
An incinerator is a furnace for burning wastes
under controlled conditions
Inbound tourism
consumption
Inbound tourism consumption comprises the
consumption of non-resident visitors within the
economic territory of the country of reference
and/or that provided by residents. Purchases that
took place in other countries are excluded. The
goods and services purchased in the country may
have been imported
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Income Ŕ Eurostat
Revenu Ŕ Eurostat
According to Article 24 of the Fourth Council
Directive income contains the following items:
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, paras. 2.61, 2.63
1. Net turnover.
2. Increase in stocks of finished goods and in work
in progress.
3. Work performed by the undertaking for its own
purposes and capitalised.
4. Other operating income.
5. Income from participating interests, with a
separate indication of that derived from affiliated
undertakings.
6. Income from other investments and loans
forming part of the fixed assets, with a separate
indication of that derived from affiliated
undertakings.
7. Other interest receivable and similar income,
with a separate indication of that derived from
affiliated undertakings.
8. Profit or loss on ordinary activities after
taxation.
9. Extraordinary income.
10. Profit or loss for the financial year
Incapacity for work
Incapacity for work refers to the inability of the
victim, due to an occupational injury, to perform
the normal duties of work in the job or post
occupied at the time of the occupational accident.
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning statistics of occupational
injuries (resulting from occupational accidents),
adopted by the Sixteenth International Conference
of Labour Statisticians (October 1998), page 2
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Source: Fourth Council Directive (EEC), No.
78/660, Article 24 of 25.07.1978 based on Article
54 (3) of the Treaty on the annual accounts of
certain types of companies
Incineration
Incinération
Incineration is the controlled burning of solid,
liquid or gaseous waste materials at high
temperatures
See also: Income – SNA
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Incineration at sea
Income Ŕ SNA
Revenu Ŕ SCN
Income, as it is generally understood in economics,
is theoretically defined as the maximum amount
that a household, or other unit, can consume
without reducing its real net worth.
Incinération en mer
379
Disposable income in the System of National
Accounts is equivalent to the economic theoretic
concept only when the net worth at the beginning
of the period is not changed by capital transfers,
other changes in the volume of assets or real
holding gains or losses
change in quantity demanded of a given product
due to a percentage change in income. The
measures of income elasticity of demand may be
either positive or negative numbers and these
have been used to classify products into "normal"
or "inferior goods" or into "necessities" or
"luxuries".
Context: Because of its use as an indicator of
economic well-being, the concept of ―income‖ also
receives wide usage, not only with respect to
individuals, but also household income. Although
there is considerable debate on the definitional
boundaries for income, for the micro-analyst,
whose primary interest is the measurement of
income distribution, income is primarily
determined on the basis of what an individual
perceives to be an income receipt of direct benefit
to him or her.
If as a result of an increase in income the quantity
demanded of a particular product decreases, it
would be classified as an "inferior" good. The
opposite would be the case of a "normal" good.
Margarine has in past studies been found to have a
negative income elasticity of demand indicating
that as family income increases, its consumption
decreases possibly due to substitution of butter.
This finding may, however, be less applicable
today given health concerns regarding heart
disease and cholesterol levels and new information
on beneficial attributes of margarine. This
illustrates the inherent risks likely to be associated
with generalizations or classification of products
based on income elasticity measures.
Total income is the broadest measure of income
and in this sense refers to regular receipts such as
wages and salaries, income from self-employment,
interest and dividends from invested funds,
pensions or other benefits from social insurance
and other current transfers receivable. Large and
irregular receipts from inheritances, etc, are
considered to be capital transfers because they are
unlikely to be spent immediately on receipt and are
‗one-off‘ in nature.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Because it is measured after the receipt of
property and transfer receipts, but before any
payments are made at the aggregate household
level, total income includes a degree of double
counting the extent of which varies between
countries due to differing institutional
arrangements. In countries where social insurance
schemes are more extensive the higher total
income will be relative to, say, income from
employment.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Income in kind
Revenu en nature
received by
reçu par les salariés
employees
Income in kind received by employees is measured
by the value of the goods and services provided by
employers to their employees in remuneration for
work done
In fact, the concept of total income of an individual
as a measure of the economic well-being of
individuals may be at best be regarded as a partial
measure of well-being in the light of a high
proportion of dual-earner, dual-income families
that exist in many OECD Member countries. The
precise relationship between employment-related
income and total income to household income
needs to be explored further.
Source: SNA 9.50
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Income on debt
(interest accrued)
Income on debt (interest accrued) consists of
interest payable on intercompany debt to/from
direct investors from/to associated enterprises
abroad. It covers interest on the borrowing and
lending of funds (including debt securities and
suppliers‘ credits) between direct investors and
direct investment enterprises
Source: SNA [8.15]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Disposable income, Income – Eurostat
Income elasticity of
demand
The Income elasticity of demand is the quantity
demanded of a particular product depends not only
on its own price (see elasticity of demand) and on
the price of other related products (see cross price
elasticity of demand), but also on other factors
such as income. The purchases of certain
commodities may be particularly sensitive to
changes in nominal and real income.
Source: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms, OECD, 2001 – not published
Income on equity
Income on equity comprises: (i) dividends and
distributed branch profits; and (ii) reinvested
earnings and undistributed branch profits
Source: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms, OECD, 2001 – not published
Context: The concept of income elasticity of
demand therefore measures the percentage
380
See Corporation
Income replacement
rate
Taux de
remplacement du
revenu
See also: Corporation
See Replacement rate
Increasing returns to
scale
See Economies of scale
See also: Replacement rate
Incomes of health and
social workers
(average)
Incomes of health and social workers refers to the
average compensation per employee in the health
and social work industry, before taxes
See also: Economies of scale
Incremental product
innovation
Incremental product innovation concerns an
existing product whose performance has been
significantly enhanced or upgraded. This again can
take two forms. A simple product may be improved
(in terms of improved performance or lower cost)
through use of higher performance components or
materials, or a complex product which consists of a
number of integrated technical subsystems may be
improved by partial changes to one of the
subsystems
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Incomes of
physicians, general
practitioners, dentists
Incomes of physicians, general practitioners,
dentists refers to the annual compensation per
physician, general practitioner and dentist
(including self-employed professionals)
Source: OECD Frascati Manual, Fifth edition, 1993,
Annex 2, para. 29, page 116
Hyperlink: http://www1.oecd.org/dsti/sti/statana/prod/eas_fras.htm
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Incumbent Local
Exchange Carrier
(ILEC)
A licensed local operator in the US and Canada
which historically operated all or almost all the
local loops in a geographic region. Compare with
CLEC.
Incomplete
achievement
See Non-response
See also: Non-response
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Incomplete census
See Census
See also: Census
See also: Competing Local Exchange Carrier
(CLEC)
Incomplete coverage
A survey (or census) should be called incomplete if
a substantial number of the units in the population
under study ate arbitrarily excluded.
Indefinite duration
contract of
employment
An indefinite duration contract of employment was
a contract between the employee and the
employer, for which the actual duration of the
contract has not been agreed in advance.
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Source: Eurostat, 1999, "Statistics on the structure
and distribution of earnings: Methods and
definitions", Data 1995, 1998 Edition, Office for
Official Publications of the European Communities,
Luxembourg, p.14
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Incomplete markets
See Market failure
Independence /
Independent auditor
Refers to an auditor who carries out audit work
freely and objectively.
See also: Market failure
Incomplete response
See Non-response
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
See also: Non-response
Incorporated
enterprise
Société par actions
381
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
involved in investing in the markets directly.
Issues linked to a consumer price index also
provide investors with protection against inflation.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Independent private
institution
An independent private institution is an institution
that receives less than 50 per cent of its core
funding from government agencies. The term
―independent‖ refers only to the degree of a
private institution‘s dependence on funding from
government sources; it does not refer to the
degree of government direction or regulation.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Index linking
See Indexation
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: Indexation
See also: Educational institution, Governmentdependent private institution, Private education
institution, Public education institution
Index number
A quantity which shows by its variations the
changes of a magnitude over time or space.
Independent variable Variable indépendante
This term is regularly used in contradistinction to
―dependent variable‖ in regression analysis. When
a variate y is expressed as a function of variables
x1, x2, …………, plus a stochastic term the x‘s are
known as ―independent variables‖.
Context: Index type refers to any of the various
indices (e.g., Laspeyres, modified Laspeyres,
Paasche, Value-Added, Fisher, Törnqvist, etc.)
used in the statistical production process.
Important features in the construction of an index
number are its coverage, base period, weighting
system and method of averaging observations. A
price index reflects an average of the proportionate
changes in the prices of a specified set of goods
and services between two periods of time (United
Nations, "System of National Account (SNA) 1993",
16.14, available at
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.a
sp).
Context: The terminology is rather unfortunate
since the concepts has no connection with either
mathematical or statistical dependence. Modern
usage prefers ―explanatory variable‖, ―predicated
variable‖ or, best of all, ―regressor‖.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003
Index item
An elementary or lower-level index with a fixed
weight within the upper-level index structure.
See also: Base period, Chain index - ISI,
Compilation practices, Index number, Laspeyres
Index number
problem
How to combine the relative changes in the prices
and quantities of various products into (i) a single
measure of the relative change of the overall price
level and (ii) a single measure of the relative
change of the overall quantity level. Or,
conversely, how a value ratio pertaining to two
periods of time can be decomposed in a
component that measures the overall change in
prices between the two periods - that is the price
index - and a component that measures the overall
change in quantities between the two periods that is the quantity index.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Index linked
derivatives
Index-linked securities are debt instruments with
coupon and/or principal payments linked to
commodity prices, interest rates, stock exchange,
or other price indices. The benefits to the issuer of
indexing include a reduction in interest costs if the
deal is targeted at a particular group of investors‘
requirements, and/or an ability to hedge an
exposed position in a particular market.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Context: The benefit to investors is in the ability to
gain exposure to a wide range of markets (for
example, foreign exchange or property markets)
without the same degree of risk that may be
382
Index points change
The change in an index number series from one
period to another expressed in terms of the
difference in the number of index points in each
index number.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Indexation, Mixed indexation (of pension
benefits), Price indexation (of pension benefits),
Wage indexation (for pension benefits)
Source: Producer and International Trade Price
Indexes, Glossary of terms – Australian Bureau of
Statistics
Indexation of
contracts
A procedure whereby a long-term contract for the
provision of goods or services includes a periodic
adjustment to the prices paid for the goods or
services based on the increase or decrease in the
level of a nominated price index. The purpose of
indexation is to take inflationary risk out of the
contract.
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs%40.nsf/66f3
06f503e529a5ca25697e0017661f/f2b7a9d7152e50
18ca25697e0018fc77!OpenDocument
Index points
contribution
A quantitative expression of how much each
component contributes to the magnitude of the All
Groups index number.
Also known as ―index linking‖ and ―contract
escalation.‖
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: Producer and International Trade Price
Indexes, Glossary of terms – Australian Bureau of
Statistics
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs%40.nsf/66f3
06f503e529a5ca25697e0017661f/f2b7a9d7152e50
18ca25697e0018fc77!OpenDocument
Index-linked
Obligations indexées
securities
Index-linked securities are financial instruments
for which the amounts of the coupon payments
(interest) and/or the principal outstanding are
linked to a general price index, a specific price
index or an exchange rate index
Index reference
period
The period for which the value of the index is set
at 100.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: SNA 7.104 [11.78]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Indicator (biological,
environmental)
See Biological indicator and Environmental
indicator
Indexation
Indexation
The periodic adjustment of the money values of
some regular scheduled payments based on the
movement of the CPI or some other price index.
The payments may be wages or salaries, social
security or other pensions, other social security
benefits, rents, interest payments, etc.
See also: Biological indicator, Environmental
indicator
Indicators of
Indicateurs relatifs à
sustainable
un développement
development
durable
See Sustainable development indicators
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Indirect comparison
A price or volume comparison between two
countries made through a third country. For
example, in the case of countries A, B and C, the
PPP between A and C is obtained by dividing the
PPP between A and B by the PPP between C and B.
Indexation (of
pension benefits)
The method with which pension benefits are
adjusted to take into account changes in the cost
of living (e.g. prices and/or earnings.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
383
— The third group concerns taxes and duties linked
to production. These are compulsory, unrequited
payments, in cash or in kind which are levied by
general government, or by the Institutions of the
European Union, in respect of the production and
importation of goods and services, the
employment of labour, the ownership or use of
land, buildings or other assets used in production
irrespective of the quantity or the value of goods
and services produced or sold.
Indirect compilation
method
An indirect compilation method is one in which a
national account data item is obtained indirectly,
often through the use of indicators, rather than
from direct observation through survey or
administrative source.
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary.
Context: For the purposes of national accounts,
taxes on production and imports can be separated
into five groups, the first and last of which are
essentially then same as the first and third groups
used in business statistics.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
— value added type taxes
— import duties
— taxes on imports excluding VAT and import
duties
— taxes on products except VAT and import taxes
— other taxes on production
Indirect identification
Inferring the identity of a population unit within a
microdata release other than from direct
identification.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Extract from the definitions of Structural
Business Statistics Regulation (Commission
Regulation (EC) No. 2700/98 of 17 December
1998) variables (12 11 0) and ESA [4.15]
See also: Indirect taxes – SNA
Indirect sampling
Échantillonnage
indirect
Sampling from documents, or some record of the
characteristics of a population, rather than the
recording of information obtained at first hand
from units of the population themselves. For
example, it is customary to obtain preliminary
information on the results of, say, a national
census by analysing a sample of the census forms
before the full analysis is undertaken; the
population is then subject to indirect sampling.
Indirect taxes Ŕ SNA
Impôts indirects Ŕ
SCN
As traditionally understood, indirect taxes are
taxes that supposedly can be passed on, in whole
or in part, to other institutional units by increasing
the prices of the goods or services sold; however
the term ―indirect taxes‖ is not used in SNA93;
rather, taxes are specifically identified by their
purpose (e.g. taxes on products)
Source: SNA 7.50
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Indirect taxes – Eurostat
See also: Direct sampling
Indirect use benefit
Indirect use benefits do not change the physical
characteristics of the environment and are
sometimes described as being ―non-consumptive‖.
The amenity benefit of landscape is one example.
Indirect taxes Ŕ
Impôts indirects Ŕ
Eurostat
Eurostat
For the purposes of structural business statistics,
indirect taxes can be separated into three groups:
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.36
— The first comprises VAT and other deductible
taxes directly linked to turnover which are
excluded from turnover. These taxes are collected
in stages by the enterprise and fully borne by the
final purchaser.
— The second group concerns all other taxes and
duties linked to products which are either: (1)
linked to turnover and not deductible; or (2) taxes
on products not linked to turnover. Included here
are taxes and duties on imports and taxes on the
production, export, sale, transfer, leasing or
delivery of goods and services or as a result of
their use for own consumption or own capital
formation.
Indirect volume
comparison
A volume comparison between two countries made
by dividing the expenditure ratio by the price ratio.
384
Context: Volume comparisons are usually made
indirectly.
expenditure by
households
The actual and imputed final consumption
expenditure incurred by households on individual
goods and services. It also includes expenditure on
individual goods and services sold at prices that
are not economically significant. By definition, all
final consumption expenditures of households are
for the benefit of individual households and are
individual.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Indirectly owned
direct investment
enterprises
As a matter of principle, foreign direct investment
statistics cover all enterprises in which direct
investors have, directly or indirectly, a direct
investment interest.
Context: Also referred to as ―final consumption
expenditure of households‖ and ―household final
consumption expenditure‖.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
The OECD Benchmark Definition of Foreign Direct
Investment and the IMF Balance of Payments
Compilation Guide describe the scope of
enterprises, both directly and indirectly owned,
that should be included in the definition. The
OECD‘s specification of this group of enterprises is
referred to as the ―Fully Consolidated System‖
(FCS)
See also: Final consumption expenditure of
households, Household final consumption
expenditure
Individual
consumption
expenditure by
NPISHs
The actual and imputed final consumption
expenditure incurred by NPISHs on individual
goods and services. In practice, most final
consumption expenditures of NPISHs are individual
in nature and so, for simplicity, all final
consumption expenditures of NPISHs are treated
by convention as individual.
Source: Report on the Survey of Implementation
of Implementation of Methodological Standards for
Direct Investment – IMF, OECD, March 2000 –
Appendix II: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/bopage/pdf/mar2000.
pdf
Context: Also referred to as ―final consumption
expenditure of NPISHs‖ and ―social transfers in
kind‖.
Individual [fishing]
Contingents ou quotas
quota
individuels (CI ou QI)
An individual [fishing] quota (IQ or IFQ) is an
allocation to an individual (a person or a legal
entity (e.g., a company)) of a right [privilege] to
harvest a certain amount of fish in a certain period
of time. It is also often expressed as an individual
share of an aggregate quota, or total allowable
catch (TAC).
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
See also: Final consumption expenditure of nonprofit institutions serving households, Social
transfers in kind
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Individual
Bien ou service de
consumption good or consommation
service
individuel
An individual consumption good or service is one
that is acquired by a household and used to satisfy
the needs and wants of members of that
household
Individual
consumption
expenditure by
government
The actual and imputed final consumption
expenditure incurred by general government on
individual goods and services.
Source: SNA 9.42
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Context: Also referred to as ―social transfers in
kind‖.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Individual
government ledger
accounts
The government (or general) ledger is the book
where all transactions by the central government,
as a debit or a credit, are recorded.
See also: Social transfers in kind
Individual
consumption
Context: The government ledger is generally
385
of Implementation of Methodological Standards for
Direct Investment – IMF, OECD, March 2000 –
Appendix II: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms.
maintained by the general accounting office. Each
transaction affecting a specific bank account is
reflected in a corresponding individual account of
the government ledger, thus allowing for a full
reconciliation with the bank statement.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/bopage/pdf/mar2000.
pdf
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Individual pension
Fonds de pension
funds
individuel
A pension fund that comprises the assets of a
single member and his/her beneficiaries, usually in
the form of an individual account.
Individual
transferable quota
(ITQ)
A type of quota (a part of a Total Allowable Catch)
allocated to individual fishermen or vessel owners
and which can be sold to others.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.273
See also: Group pension fund, Related member
fund
Individual quota
A quota (possibly a percentage) of a total
allowable catch (TAC) assigned to an individual, a
vessel or a company. If an individual quota is
transferable, it is referred to as an Individual
Transferable Quota (ITQ).
See also: Individual quota, Total allowable catch
(TAC)
Individual
transferable share
quota (ITSQ)
A management tool used to allocate a fixed share
of the quota to individual fishermen or companies.
ITSQs are usually granted as a form of long-term
fishing rights and are tradable (transferable).
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.292
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.273
See also: Individual transferable quota (ITQ)
Individual services
A term used to describe the services (and goods)
provided to individual households by NPISHs and
general government.
Context: Such services include housing, health,
recreation and culture, education and social
protection. They do not include the overall policymaking, planning, budgetary, co-ordinating
responsibilities of government ministries
overseeing individual services. Nor do they include
government research and development for
individual services. These activities cannot be
identified with specific individual households and
are considered to benefit households collectively.
They are classified under collective services.
Indoor air pollution
Pollution de l‟air des
locaux fermés
Indoor air pollution refers to chemical, biological
and physical contamination of indoor air. It may
result in adverse health effects. In developing
countries, the main source of indoor air pollution is
biomass smoke which contains suspended
particulate matter (5PM), nitrogen dioxide (NO2),
sulphur dioxide (SO2), carbon monoxide (Ca),
formaldehyde and polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons (PAHs).
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
In industrialized countries, in addition to NO2, CO,
and formaldehyde, radon, asbestos, mercury,
human-made mineral fibres, volatile organic
compounds, allergens, tobacco smoke, bacteria
and viruses are the main contributors to indoor air
pollution
Individual
transactions basis
Individual transactions basis data consist of data
collected for each of the transactions engaged in
by respondents
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Report on the Survey of Implementation
386
Industrial oilseeds
Oléagineau industriels
Industrial oilseeds are a category of oilseed
production in the European Union for industrial use
(i.e. bio- fuels) that is subject to subsidy limits
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Industrial waste (for
energy)
Industrial waste consists of solid and liquid
products (e.g. tyres) combusted directly, usually in
specialised plants, to produce heat and/or power
and that are not reported in the category solid
biomass.
Industrial production
Industrial production comprises the output of
industrial establishments, covering: mining and
quarrying; manufacturing; and electricity, gas and
water supply
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Source: International Recommendations for
Industrial Statistics, United Nations, 1983,
Statistical Office, Series M, No. 48, Rev. 1, para.
25
See also: Solid biomass
Industrial wastes
Déchets industriels
Industrial wastes are liquid, solid and gaseous
wastes originating from the manufacture of specific
products
Industrial production
index
An industrial production index is an index covering
production in mining, manufacturing and public
utilities (electricity, gas and water), but excluding
construction.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
The exact coverage, the weighting system and the
methods of calculation vary from country to
country but the divergences are less important
than e.g. in the case of the price and the wage
indices
See also: Waste
Industry Ŕ ESA
Branche d‟activité Ŕ
SEC/NACE
The European System of Accounts (ESA) defines
the term ‗Industry‘ as consisting of a group of local
KAUs engaged in the same, or similar, kind-ofactivity. At the most detailed level of classification,
an industry consists of all the local KAUs falling
within a single class (4- digits) of NACE Rev. 1 and
which are therefore engaged in the same activity
as defined in the NACE Rev. 1.
Context: Production indices are normally compiled
at monthly or quarterly frequency to measure
increases and decreases in production output.
Indices of industrial production that are compiled
in all OECD Member countries which are used as a
main short-term economic indicator in their own
right because of the impact that fluctuations in the
level of industrial activity have on the remainder of
the economy. The availability of such indices on a
monthly basis and the strong relationship between
changes in the level of industrial production and
economic cyclical behaviour facilitates the use of
production indices as a reference series in the
compilation of cyclical or leading indicators in a
number of countries and by the OECD.
Source: ESA [2.108]
See also: Industry – ISIC Rev. 3, Industry – SNA,
Industry – UN
Industry Ŕ ISIC Rev. 3 Industrie Ŕ CITI Rév.
3
Industry comprises Divisions 10-45 of ISIC Rev. 3.
These comprise ISIC Rev. 3 Tabulation Categories
C, D and E:
The most relevant international statistical
guidelines and recommendations for the
compilation of industrial production indices are
those published by the United Nations in Studies in
Methods – Index Numbers of Industrial Production,
(Series F, No. 1 (1950)). Recommendations for the
compilation of annual statistics for industry are
provided in another UN publication, International
Recommendations for Industrial Statistics (UN
Statistical Papers, 1983, Series M, No. 48 Rev. 1).
- mining and quarrying;
- manufacturing;
- electricity, gas and water
Source: ISIC Rev. 3
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
The focus of these recommendations, however, is
the compilation of annual statistics for industry,
though brief mention is given to sub-annual
statistics. More specific guidelines for member
countries of the European Union have been
published by Eurostat in Methodology of Industrial
Short-term Indicators: Rules and
Recommendations (Eurostat, 1996).
See also: Industry – ESA/NACE, Industry – SNA,
Industry – UN, ISIC
Industry Ŕ SNA
Branche d‟activité Ŕ
SCN
An industry consists of a group of establishments
engaged on the same, or similar, kinds of
production activity.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
387
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Context: There is no harmonised definition for the
term 'Industry' in business statistics due to its wide
usage in different circumstances.
Industry
concentration
See Concentration
'Industry' is often used as a synonym for 'activity',
for the 'industrial sector' and for 'industrial
activity'. However, it is broader than the industrial
sector in that it may be used to refer to a
population based on observation units other than
the enterprise or the local unit, namely the kind of
activity unit (KAU) or the local KAU. Care should be
taken to avoid confusion with a 'branch' which is
based on the unit of homogeneous production
(UHP) or the local UHP.
See also: Concentration
Industry layoffs
Employed persons laid off as a result of the plant
or company closing down or moving, insufficient
work or their position or shift being abolished.
Source: OECD, 2007, Employment Outlook: 2007
edition, OECD, Paris
The European System of Accounts (ESA) defines
the term 'Industry' as consisting of a group of local
KAUs engaged in the same, or similar, kind-ofactivity. At the most detailed level of classification,
an industry consists of all the local KAUs falling
within a single class (4-digits) of NACE Rev. 1 and
which are therefore engaged in the same activity
as defined in the NACE Rev. 1.
Industry pension
Fonds de pension
funds
sectoriels
Funds that pool the assets of pension plans
established for unrelated employers who are
involved in the same trade or businesses.
Industries comprise both local KAUs producing
market goods and services and local KAUs
producing non-market goods and services. An
industry by definition consists of a group of local
KAUs engaged in the same type of productive
activity, irrespective of whether or not the
institutional units to which they belong produce
market or non-market output.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Group pension funds, Individual pension
funds, Multi-employer pension funds, Related
member fund, Single employer pension funds
Industry-by-industry
table
Tableau branche
d‟activité x branche
d‟activité
An industry-by-industry table is a symmetric inputoutput table with industries as the dimension of
both rows and columns; as a result it shows which
industry uses the output of which other industry
The classification of productive activities used in
the System of National Accounts is ISIC (Rev.3)
Source: United Nations, "System of National
Account (SNA) 1993", par. 5.5 and 5.40
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.a
sp
Source: SNA 15.150
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Activity, Industry – ESA/NACE, Industry
– ISIC Rev. 3, Industry – UN, ISIC
Industry Ŕ UN
Industry refers to the activity of the establishment
in which the person worked or was employed
during the reference period
Infant mortality rate
Taux de mortalité
infantile
The infant mortality rate is the number of deaths
under one year of age occurring among the live
births in a given geographical area during a given
year, per 1,000 live births occurring among the
population of the given geographical area during
the same year
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 11.87
See also: Industry – ESA/NACE, Industry – ISIC
Rev. 3, Industry – SNA
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Industry (producer)
technology
Hypothèse d‟une
technologie
producteur
Industry (producer) technology is one of two types
of technology assumptions used in converting
supply and use tables into symmetric input-output
tables; it assumes that all products produced by an
industry are produced with the same input
structure
Inferential disclosure
Inferential disclosure occurs when information can
be inferred with high confidence from statistical
properties of the released data. For example, the
data may show a high correlation between income
and purchase price of a home. As the purchase
price of a home is typically public information, a
Source: SNA 15.144
388
third party might use this information to infer the
income of a data subject.
Organization (ILO) Resolutions Concerning
Statistics of Employment in the Informal Sector
Adopted by the 15th International Conference of
Labour Statisticians, January 1993, paras. 5, 8 and
9).
Context: In general, NSIs are not concerned with
inferential disclosure for two reasons. First, a
major purpose of statistical data is to enable users
to infer and understand relationships between
variables. If NSIs equated disclosure with
inference, no data could be released. Second,
inferences are designed to predict aggregate
behaviour, not individual attributes, and thus often
poor predictors of individual data values.
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning Statistics of Employment in
the Informal Sector Adopted by the 15th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians,
January 1993, para. 5
See also: Illegal production, Informal sector –
SNA, Underground economy
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Informal sector Ŕ SNA Secteur informel Ŕ
SCN
The informal sector is broadly characterised as
comprising production units that operate on a
small scale and at a low level of organisation, with
little or no division between labour and capital as
factors of production, and with the primary
objective of generating income and employment
for the persons concerned.
Influence (investor)
An investor exercises an influence on the
management of an enterprise if he owns directly at
least 10% of the ordinary shares or voting power
of this enterprise without controlling it directly or
indirectly.
Context: Operationally, the sector is defined on a
country specific basis as the set of unincorporated
enterprises owned by households which produce at
least some products for the market but which
either have less than a specified number of
employees and/or are not registered under
national legislation referring, for example, to tax or
social security obligations, or regulatory acts
Source: OECD, 2005, Measuring Globalisation:
OECD Handbook on Economic Globalisation
Indicators, OECD, Paris - Glossary
Influent
Influx
Influent is water, waste water or other liquid
flowing into a reservoir, basin or treatment plant
Source: SNA 1993, Annex to Chapter 4
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Illegal production, Informal sector – ILO,
Underground economy
Informal settlements
Informal sector Ŕ ILO
Secteur informel Ŕ
BIT
The informal sector is broadly characterised as
consisting of units engaged in the production of
goods or services with the primary objective of
generating employment and incomes to the
persons concerned.
Implantations
sauvages
Informal settlements are:
1. areas where groups of housing units have been
constructed on land that the occupants have no
legal claim to, or occupy illegally;
2. unplanned settlements and areas where housing
is not in compliance with current planning and
building regulations (unauthorized housing)
These units typically operate at a low level of
organisation, with little or no division between
labour and capital as factors of production and on
a small scale. Labour relations - where they exist are based mostly on casual employment, kinship
or personal and social relations rather than
contractual arrangements with formal guarantees
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Marginal settlements
Context: This broad definition is operationalised for
statistical purposes and the informal sector defined
as comprising those household unincorporated
enterprises with market production that are:
Informant
An informant is the individual whose responsibility,
designated by law, is to report to the local registrar
the fact of the occurrence of a vital event and to
provide all the information and characteristics
related to the event. Only on the basis of his or her
report may the event be legally registered by the
local registrar
- informal own account enterprises (optionally, all,
or those that are not registered under specific
forms of national legislation);
- enterprises of informal employers (optionally, all
those with less than a specified level of
employment and/or not registered and/or
employees not registered (International Labour
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
389
Another guiding principle was to use existing
classification systems in order to take advantage of
existing data sets and therefore ensure the
immediate use of the proposed standard. In this
case, the underlying system is the Harmonized
System (HS). The HS is the only commodity
classification system used on a sufficiently wide
basis to support international data comparison. A
large number of countries use it to classify export
and import of goods, and many countries use it (or
a classification derived from or linked to it) to
categorise domestic outputs.
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Information
Information (in information processing) refers to
knowledge concerning objects, such as facts,
events, things, processes, or ideas, including
concepts, that within a certain context has a
particular meaning.
Source: ISO/IEC 2382-1; 1992 - Economic
Commission for Europe of the United Nations
(UNECE), "Terminology on Statistical Metadata",
Conference of European Statisticians Statistical
Standards and Studies, No. 53, Geneva, 2000
The application of the ICT product definition to
selection of in-scope HS categories is a somewhat
subjective exercise. The fact that the HS is not
built on the basis of the functionality of products
makes it much more difficult. The distinction
between products which fulfil those functions and
products that simply embody electronics but
fundamentally fulfil other functions is not always
obvious.
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
It is possible to adopt a narrow or broad
interpretation of the guideline, though the OECD
chose a broader interpretation, an approach which
is consistent with that adopted to develop the ICT
sector definition.
Information system
A system which supports decision-making
concerning some piece of reality, the object
system by giving the decision makers access to
information concerning relevant aspects of the
object system and its environment
ICT goods as defined by the OECD in terms of the
HS are presented in the Annex to the paper
referred to in the Source Publication.
Context: A "statistical information system" is the
information system oriented towards the collection,
storage, transformation and distribution of
statistical information.
Source: OECD, 2003, A Proposed Classification of
ICT Goods, OECD Working Party on Indicators for
the Information Society, OECD, Paris
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva, 2000
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/5/61/22343094.pdf
.
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
See also: Information, Communication Technology
(ICT) Sector
Information,
Communication
Technology (ICT)
sector
The Information, Communication Technology
sector (ICT) is defined by the OECD in terms of the
following ISIC Rev. 3.1 classes:
See also: Statistical information system
Information,
Communication
Technology (ICT)
goods
ICT goods are those that are either intended to
fulfil the function of information processing and
communication by electronic means, including
transmission and display, OR which use electronic
processing to detect, measure and/or record
physical phenomena, or to control a physical
process.
Manufacturing
3000 – Office, accounting and computing
machinery
3130 – Insulated wire and cable 3210 – Electronic
valves and tubes and other electronic components
3220 – Television and radio transmitters and
apparatus for line telephony and line telegraphy
3230 – Television and radio receivers, sound or
video recording or reproducing apparatus, and
associated goods
3312 – Instruments and appliances for measuring,
checking, testing, navigating and other purposes,
except industrial process equipment
3313 – Industrial process equipment
ICT goods are defined by the OECD in terms of the
United Nations Harmonised System.
Context: The guiding principle for the delineation
of ICT goods is that such goods must either be
intended to fulfil the function of information
processing and communication by electronic
means, including transmission and display, OR use
electronic processing to detect, measure and/or
record physical phenomena, or to control a
physical process.
Services
390
of an observer or an instrument; a further
example, in the interrogation of human population,
is the distortion of truth by the respondent for
reasons of prestige, vanity or sympathy with the
investigator.
5151 – Wholesale of computers, computer
peripheral equipment and software
5152 - Wholesale of electronic and
telecommunications parts and equipment
6420 - Telecommunications
7123 - Renting of office machinery and equipment
(including computers)
72 - Computer and related activities
Context: It is possible also to speak of the inherent
bias of a method of estimation, although in this
context the word ―inherent‖ appears redundant.
For example, in the theory of index numbers it
may be shown that the standard formulae of
Laspeyres and Paasche possess an inherent bias
due to the methods of weighting and averaging the
items.
Context: The current OECD ICT sector definition
was originally approved in 1998. It was amended
slightly in 2002 to reflect ISIC Rev. 3.1 changes to
Wholesale.
Source: OECD, 2003, A Proposed Classification of
ICT Goods, OECD Working Party on Indicators for
the Information Society, Paris
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/5/61/22343094.pdf
.
See also: Information, Communication Technology
(ICT) goods, ISIC
Injuries in road traffic
accidents
Injuries in road traffic accidents refers to the
number of people injured in road traffic accidents
per million population
Informed consent
Informed consent refers to a person‘s agreement
to allow personal data to be provided for research
and statistical purposes.
Source: OECD Health Data 2007: Statistics and
Indicators for 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2007,
Data sources, definitions and methods
Agreement is based on full exposure of the facts
the person needs to make the decision
intelligently, including awareness of any risks
involved, of uses and users of the data, and of
alternatives to providing the data.
Inland waterways
Cabotage par voies
cabotage transport
navigables intérieures
National inland waterways transport (IWT)
performed by an IWT vessel registered in another
country.
Context: A basic ethical tenet of scientific research
on human populations is that sociologists do not
involve a human being as a subject in research
without the informed consent of the subject or the
subject‘s legally authorized representative, except
as otherwise specified.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Inland waterways
Convoi de navigation
convoy
intérieure
One or more non-powered inland waterways
transport (IWT) vessels which are towed or pushed
by one or more powered IWT vessels.
Infrastructure
The system of public works in a country, state or
region, including roads, utility lines and public
buildings.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Inland waterways
Flotte de navigation
fleet
intérieure
Number of IWT vessels registered at a given date
in a country and authorized to use inland
waterways open for public navigation.
Inherent bias
Biais inhérent
A rather loosely defined expression which in
general means, or ought to mean, a bias which is
due to the nature of the situation and cannot, for
example, be removed by increasing the sample
size or choosing a different type of estimator.
Context: Changes in the fleet refer to changes, in
total or within a vessel type, in the inland
waterway fleet of the reporting country, resulting
An example of inherent bias is the systematic error
391
from new construction, modification in type or
capacity, purchases or sales abroad, scrapping,
casualties, or transfers to or from the marine
register.
another is regarded as embarkment after
disembarkment.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Inland waterways
Relation de transport
passenger transport
de voyageurs par
link
voies navigables
The combination of the place of embarkment and
the place of disembarkment of the passenger
conveyed by inland waterways whichever itinerary
is followed.
Inland waterways
Parcours de
journey
navigation intérieure
Any movement of an IWT vessel from a specified
point of origin to a specified point of destination.
Context: Journey can be divided in a number of
stages or sections.
Context: Places are defined by using international
classification systems such as NUTS (Nomenclature
of Territorial Units for Statistics - EUROSTAT).
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Inland waterways
Voyageur par voies
passenger
navigables intérieures
Any person who makes a journey on board of an
IWT vessel. Service staff assigned to inland
waterways transport (IWT) vessels are not
regarded as passengers.
Inland waterways
passenger-kilometre
Voyageur-kilomètre
par voies navigables
intérieures
Unit of measure representing the transport of one
passenger by inland waterway over one kilometre.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: The distance to be taken into
consideration is the distance actually travelled by
the passenger.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Inland waterways
Voyageur par voies
passenger
navigables intérieures
disembarked
débarqué
A passenger disembarking from an inland
waterways transport (IWT) vessel after having
been conveyed by it.
Inland waterways
Circulation de
traffic
navigation intérieure
Any movement of an inland waterways transport
(IWT) vessel on a given network.
Context: A transfer from one IWT vessel to
another is regarded as disembarkment before reembarkment.
Context: When a vessel is being carried on another
vehicle, only the movement of the carrying vehicle
(active mode) is taken into account.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Inland waterways
passenger embarked
Voyageur par voies
navigables intérieures
embarqué
Passenger who boards an inland waterways
transport (IWT) vessel to be conveyed by it.
Inland waterways
traffic on national
territory
Context: A transfer from one IWT vessel to
392
Circulation de
navigation intérieure
sur le territoire
national
Any movement of an inland waterways transport
(IWT) vessel within a national territory irrespective
of the country in which the vessel is registered.
Inland waterways
transport (IWT)
passenger vessel
Bateau pour le
transport de
voyageurs par voies
navigables
Vessel designed exclusively or primarily for the
public carriage of passengers by navigable inland
waterways.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Inland waterways
transit
Transport par voies
navigables intérieures
en transit
Inland waterways transport (IWT) through a
country between two places (a place of
loading/embarkment and a place of
unloading/disembarkment) both located in another
country or in other countries provided the total
journey within the country is by an IWT vessel and
that there is no loading and unloading in that
country.
Inland waterways
Enterprise de
transport (IWT)
transport par voies
enterprise
navigables intérieures
Enterprise carrying out in one or more places
activities for the production of IWT services using
IWT vessels and whose main activities according to
the value added is inland waterway transport.
Context: IWT vessels loaded/unloaded at the
frontier of that country onto/from another mode of
transport are included.
In terms of activity classifications the following
classes are involved:
-- ISIC/Rev.3
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Class 6120 - Inland waterway transport
-- NACE/Rev.1
Class 61.20 - Fluvial transport
Context: Even those enterprises without salaried
employees are taken into account. Only units that
actually carry out an activity during the reference
period should be included. "Dormant" units or
those that have not as yet begun their activity are
excluded.
Inland waterways
Transport par voies
transport (IWT)
navigables intérieures
Any movement of goods and/or passengers using
an IWT vessel on a given inland waterways
network.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: When an IWT vessel is being carried on
another vehicle, only the movement of the carrying
vehicle (active mode) is taken into account.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Inland waterways
Bateau pour le
transport (IWT)
transport par voies
vessel
navigables intérieures
Floating craft designed for the carriage of goods or
public transport of passengers by navigable inland
waterways.
Inland waterways
transport (IWT)
freight vessel
Bateau pour le
transport de
marchandises par
voies navigables
Vessel with a carrying capacity of not less than 20
tonnes designed for the carriage of freight by
navigable inland waterways.
Context: Vessels under repair are included. Vessels
suitable for inland navigation but which are
authorized to navigate at sea (mixed seagoing and
inland waterways vessels) are included. This
category excludes: harbour craft, seaport lighters
and seaport tugs, ferries, fishery vessels,
dredgers, vessels performing hydraulic work and
vessels used exclusively for storage, floating
workshops, houseboats and pleasure craft.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
393
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
- Successful in having resulted in the
implementation of a new innovation (though not
necessarily commercially successful).
Inlier
An inlier is a data value that lies in the interior of a
statistical distribution and is in error. Because
inliers are difficult to distinguish from good data
values they are sometimes difficult to find and
correct.
- Ongoing, work in progress, which has not yet
resulted in the implementation of an innovation.
- Abandoned before the implementation of an
innovation.
OECD, 2005, ―The Measurement of Scientific and
Technological Activities: Guidelines for Collecting
and Interpreting Innovation Data: Oslo Manual,
Third Edition‖ prepared by the Working Party of
National Experts on Scientific and Technology
Indicators, OECD, Paris, para. 42
Context: A simple example of an inlier might be a
value in a record reported in the wrong units, say
degrees Fahrenheit instead of degrees Celsius.
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Glossary of Terms on
Statistical Data Editing", Conference of European
Statisticians Methodological material, Geneva,
2000
Source: OECD, 2005, ―The Measurement of
Scientific and Technological Activities: Guidelines
for Collecting and Interpreting Innovation Data:
Oslo Manual, Third Edition‖ prepared by the
Working Party of National Experts on Scientific and
Technology Indicators, OECD, Paris, para. 149
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/editingglo
ssary.pdf
Innovation activities,
Technological product
and process
Innovation activities include all scientific,
technological, organisational, financial and
commercial steps which actually lead, or are
intended to lead, to the implementation of
innovations. Some of these activities may be
innovative in their own right, while others are not
novel but are necessary to implementation.
See also: Outlier
Innovating firm,
technological product
and process
A technological product and process innovating
firm is one that has implemented technologically
new or significantly technologically improved
products or processes during the period under
review
Source: Measuring the ICT Sector: Information
Society, OECD, 2000, Defining the ICT Sector,
page 7
Context: During a given period, a firm‘s innovation
activities may be of three kinds:
- Successful in having resulted in the
implementation of a new innovation (though not
necessarily commercially successful).
Innovation
An innovation is the implementation of a new or
significantly improved product (good or service), or
process, a new marketing method, or a new
organisational method in business practices,
workplace organisation or external relations.
- Ongoing, work in progress, which has not yet
resulted in the implementation of an innovation.
- Abandoned before the implementation of an
innovation.
Source: OECD, 2005, ―The Measurement of
Scientific and Technological Activities: Guidelines
for Collecting and Interpreting Innovation Data:
Oslo Manual, Third Edition‖ prepared by the
Working Party of National Experts on Scientific and
Technology Indicators, OECD, Paris, para. 146
Source: OECD, 2005, ―The Measurement of
Scientific and Technological Activities: Guidelines
for Collecting and Interpreting Innovation Data:
Oslo Manual, Third Edition‖ prepared by the
Working Party of National Experts on Scientific and
Technology Indicators, OECD, Paris, paras. 40, 42
Innovation activities
Innovation activities are all scientific,
technological, organisational, financial and
commercial steps which actually, or are intended
to, lead to the implementation of innovations.
Some innovation activities are themselves
innovative, others are not novel activities but are
necessary for the implementation of innovations.
Innovation activities also include R&D that is not
directly related to the development of a specific
innovation.
Innovation cooperation
Innovation co operation involves active
participation in joint innovation projects with other
organisations. These may either be other
enterprises or non commercial institutions. The
partners need not derive immediate commercial
benefit from the venture. Pure contracting out of
work, where there is no active collaboration, is not
regarded as co operation. Co operation is distinct
from open information sources and acquisition of
knowledge and technology in that all parties take
an active part in the work.
Context: During a given period, a firm‘s innovation
activities may be of three kinds:
394
Context: Innovation co operation allows
enterprises to access knowledge and technology
that they would be unable to utilise on their own.
There is also great potential for synergies in co
operation as partners learn from each other.
biotechnology firm
Is defined as a biotechnology active firm that
applies biotechnology techniques for the purpose
of implementing new or significantly improved
products or processes (per the OECD Oslo Manual
for the measurement of innovation).
Source: OECD, 2005, ―The Measurement of
Scientific and Technological Activities: Guidelines
for Collecting and Interpreting Innovation Data:
Oslo Manual, Third Edition‖ prepared by the
Working Party of National Experts on Scientific and
Technology Indicators, OECD, Paris, para. 271
It excludes end users which innovate simply by
using biotechnology products as intermediate
inputs (for instance, detergent manufacturers
which change their formulation to include enzymes
produced by other firms via biotechnology
techniques).
Innovation in firms
Innovation in firms refers to planned changes in a
firm's activities with a view to improving the firm's
performance.
Source: OECD, 2005, A Framework for
Biotechnology Statistics, OECD, Paris, Chapter 2:
Basic Concepts and Definitions
Source: OECD, 2005, ―The Measurement of
Scientific and Technological Activities: Guidelines
for Collecting and Interpreting Innovation Data:
Oslo Manual, Third Edition‖ prepared by the
Working Party of National Experts on Scientific and
Technology Indicators, OECD, Paris, para. 101
Innovative firm
An innovative firm is one that has implemented an
innovation during the period under review.
Context: The broad definition of an innovative firm
may not be appropriate for all policy and research
needs. More narrow definitions can be useful in
many cases, particularly for comparisons of
innovation across sectors, firm size categories or
countries. An example of a more narrow definition
is a product or process innovator.
Innovations in pricing
Innovations in pricing involve the use of new
pricing strategies to market the firm‘s goods or
services.
Source: OECD, 2005, ―The Measurement of
Scientific and Technological Activities: Guidelines
for Collecting and Interpreting Innovation Data:
Oslo Manual, Third Edition‖ prepared by the
Working Party of National Experts on Scientific and
Technology Indicators, OECD, Paris, para. 152
Context: Examples are the first use of a new
method for varying the price of a good or service
according to demand (e.g. when demand is low,
the price is low) or the introduction of a new
method which allows customers to choose desired
product specifications on the firm‘s Web site and
then see the price for the specified product. New
pricing methods whose sole purpose is to
differentiate prices by customer segments are not
considered innovations.
Inorganic matter
Matières inorganiques
Inorganic matter are substances of mineral origin
that are not characterized by primarily carbon—
based structures
Source: OECD, 2005, ―The Measurement of
Scientific and Technological Activities: Guidelines
for Collecting and Interpreting Innovation Data:
Oslo Manual, Third Edition‖ prepared by the
Working Party of National Experts on Scientific and
Technology Indicators, OECD, Paris, para. 175
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Inorganic pesticides
Inorganic pesticides are compounds like sulphates,
arsenate‘s, chlorides of lead, copper and so forth
used for agricultural pest control
Innovative active firm
An innovation-active firm is one that has had
innovation activities during the period under
review, including those with ongoing and
abandoned activities. In other words, firms that
have had innovation activities during the period
under review, regardless of whether the activity
resulted in the implementation of an innovation,
are innovation-active.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
In-patient care
In-patient care refers to care for a patient who is
formally admitted (or ‗hospitalised‘) to an
institution for treatment and/or care and stays for
a minimum of one night in the hospital or other
institution providing in-patient care.
Source: OECD, 2005, ―The Measurement of
Scientific and Technological Activities: Guidelines
for Collecting and Interpreting Innovation Data:
Oslo Manual, Third Edition‖ prepared by the
Working Party of National Experts on Scientific and
Technology Indicators, OECD, Paris, para. 215
In-patient care is delivered in hospitals, other
nursing homes and residential care facilities or in
establishments which are classified according to
their focus of care under the ambulatory care
Innovative
395
industry but perform in-patient care as a
secondary activity.
Glossary of Statistical Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca/english/edu/prototype/glos
sary/gloss.htm
Included are services delivered to in-patients in
prison and army hospitals, tuberculosis hospitals
and sanatoriums. In-patient care includes
accommodation provided in combination with
medical treatment when the latter is the
predominant activity provided during the stay as
an in-patient.
See also: Data capture
Input editing
Input editing is editing that is performed as data is
input. The editing may be part of a data entry
system.
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Context: The process of analyzing the prices
reported by an individual respondent and querying
price changes that are above a specified level or
are inconsistent across product lines. Important
objectives of the process are to ensure that actual
transaction prices are reported and to detect any
changes in the specifications.
In-patient care beds
In-patient care beds are beds accommodating
patients who are formally admitted (or
‗hospitalised‘) to an institution for treatment
and/or care and who stay for a minimum of one
night in the hospital or other institution providing
in-patient care.
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Monetary Fund, Washington
DC
In-patient care is delivered in hospitals, other
nursing and residential care facilities or in
establishments which are classified according to
their focus of care under the ambulatory care
industry but perform in-patient care as a
secondary activity
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
In-patient care beds,
total
Total in-patient care beds refers to the average
daily census or mid-year count of the available
beds in all public and private in-patient institutions,
including acute care, psychiatric care and nursing
homes
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Input price approach
The approach used to obtain PPPs for non-market
services. Because there are no economically
significant prices with which to value the outputs of
these services, national accountants follow the
convention of estimating the expenditures on nonmarket services by summing the costs of the
inputs required to produce them. PPPs for nonmarket services are calculated with input prices as
these are the prices that are consistent with the
prices underlying the estimated expenditures.
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
See also: Available bed
Input decay
Vieillissement du côté
des intrants
Input decay is the loss in the physical efficiency of
an asset because, over time, it requires a greater
input of labour or materials to produce a given
quantity of capital services
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Input producer price
indices
A measure of the change in the prices of goods
and services bought as intermediate inputs by
domestic producers. Covers both domesticallyproduced intermediate inputs and imported
intermediate inputs. Valuation is at
purchasers‘ prices.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
Input device
A tool such as tape, cards, keyboard, diskette, CDROM, light pen, scanner, digital camera, via
Internet, etc., used to input data.
Context: Thus an input producer price index (PPI)
measures changes in the cost of the basket of
Source: Statistics Canada, Educational Resources,
396
purchases required as inputs into the production
process, but these inputs must not be primary
inputs like land, labour or capital inputs. Producer
input prices should exclude deductible taxes on
products (i.e. VAT) but include the retail or
wholesale margins of the supplier, since they
measure the actual cost of the good or service to
the producer.
Source: OECD, 2003, Promise and Problems of EDemocracy: Challenges of online citizen
engagement, OECD, Paris, Annex 1: Commonly
used E-Engagement Terms
Institutional coverage
- MetaStore
Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types refers to
the range of institutions covered by the data.
In constructing a family of input PPIs, import
prices are usually collected from a separate source
to produce a separate import price index. (Draft
Producer Price Index Manual, The Technical Expert
Groups on the Producer Price Index, Part 1 - The
Theory and Concepts of PPI Measurement, Chapter
2. The Purpose and Uses of Producer Price Indices,
paras. 2,3,5,6)
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
Institutional
framework
A set of rules used as the basis for producing
statistics.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Context: In SDMX, "Institutional Framework"
refers to a law or other formal provision that
assign primary responsibility as well as the
authority to an agency for the collection,
processing, and dissemination of the statistics; it
also includes arrangements or procedures to
facilitate data sharing and coordination between
data producing agencies ("reporting
requirements").
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
See also: Output producer prices, Producer price
index
Input-output table
Tableau entréessorties
An input-output table is a means of presenting a
detailed analysis of the process of production and
the use of goods and services (products) and the
income generated in that production.; they can be
either in the form of (a) supply and use tables or
(b) symmetric input-output tables
In detail, the institutional framework for statistics
may include information on:
- The legislation within which the statistical agency
operates. Typically it is proclaimed in one or more
statistics acts and in accompanying or
supplementary government regulations covering a
number of issues including the right to collect
data; ensuring confidentiality of data collected, etc.
Source: SNA 15.1 and 15.8 [2.211, 15.2]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
- The organisational structure of the statistical
agency. Such structures include economic data
collection, processing and analysis; social data
collection, processing and analysis; national
accounts, balance of payments and economic
analysis.
In-quota tariff
An in-quota tariff is the tariff applied on imports
within a tariff-rate quota. The in-quota tariff is less
than the over-quota tariff
- Planning framework under which major initiatives
and statistical outputs envisaged for the future are
envisaged.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
- Quality consciousness and organisational culture.
Insecticide
Insecticide
An insecticide is a substance that destroys or
controls insect pests
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Integrity, Internal access, Ministerial
commentary, Statistical Data and Metadata
Exchange (SDMX)
Institutional
households - Eurostat
The Economic Commission for Europe / Eurostat
recommendations define an institutional household
as ―a legal body for the purpose of long-term
inhabitation and provision of institutionalised care
given to a group of persons‖.
Instant messaging
A type of communications service that enables
users to create a private chat room with another
user. Typically, the instant messaging system
alerts users whenever somebody on their chat
room list is online, then the user can initiate a chat
session with that person.
397
Context: The text gives a non-exhaustive list of
examples, but does not propose any classification.
It is becoming increasingly important to measure
in detail the part of the population living in this
type of household, for example because of the
growing proportion of elderly population.
Moreover, the census is often the unique source of
information on that particular group, generally
excluded in household surveys.
according to the criteria relevant to that sector;
this permits a more precise description of the
economic behaviour of the units.
Source: Eurostat, "European System of Accounts ESA 1995", Office for Official Publications of the
European Communities, Luxembourg, 1996, 2.172.18
See also: Activity, Institutional unit – Eurostat,
Sector, institutional – SNA
Therefore the following classification is
recommended:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Institutional sector Ŕ
SNA
The SNA 93 states that Institutional units are
grouped together to form institutional sectors, on
the basis of their principal functions, behaviour,
and objectives.
Educational institutions
Health care institutions
Institutions for retired or elderly persons
Military institutions
Religious institutions
Other institutions.
Context: The resident institutional units that make
up the total economy are grouped into five
mutually exclusive sectors:
A particular institution could be placed in more
than one class (e.g. a school for hearing-impaired
persons giving general education but also carrying
out rehabilitation activities could be either an
educational institute or a health care institute). In
these cases the institution is classified according to
its principal purpose or target group. If the
principal purpose or target group is not clear, the
classification shows the order of priority in
determining the class.
-
non-financial corporations;
financial corporations;
general government;
non-profit institutions serving households;
households
SNA 4.6.
Source: SNA 2.20
Source: Guidelines and Table Programme for the
Community Programme of Population and Housing
Censuses in 2001, 1999 Edition - Volume I:
Guidelines
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Sector, institutional - ESA, Units,
institutional – SNA
See also: Institutional population, Institutions
Institutional
Population des
population
institutions
The institutional population comprises persons who
are not members of households. These include
persons living in military installations, correctional
and penal institutions, dormitories of schools and
universities, religious institutions, hospitals and so
forth.
Institutional unit Ŕ
Unité institutionnelle
Eurostat
Ŕ Eurostat
The institutional unit is an elementary economic
decision-making centre characterised by uniformity
of behaviour and decision-making autonomy in the
exercise of its principal function.
A unit is regarded as constituting an institutional
unit if it has decision-making autonomy in respect
of its principal function and keeps a complete set
of accounts.
Persons living in hotels or boarding houses are not
part of the institutional population and should be
distinguished as members of one- or multi-person
households, on the basis of the arrangements that
they make for providing themselves with the
essentials for living
Context: — In order to be said to have autonomy
of decision in respect of its principal function, a
unit must be responsible and accountable for the
decisions and actions it takes.
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, paras. 1.330,
1.331
— In order to be said to keep a complete set of
accounts, a unit must keep accounting records
covering all its economic and financial transactions
carried out during the accounting period, as well as
a balance sheet of assets and liabilities.
See also: Institutional households (Eurostat),
Institutions
Note: According to the Regulation on statistical
units, an institutional unit may correspond to an
enterprise in the corporate enterprises sector
Institutional sector ESA
An institutional sector, or simply "sector", is an
aggregation of institutional units on the basis of
the type of producer and depending on their
principal activity and function, which are
considered to be indicative of their economic
behaviour. A sector is divided into sub-sectors
Source: Council Regulation (EEC), No. 696/93,
Section III B of 15.03.1993 on the statistical units
for the observat in the Community
See also: Institutional unit – SNA
398
Institutional units Ŕ
SNA
An institutional unit may be defined as an
economic entity that is capable, in its own right, of
owning assets, incurring liabilities and engaging in
economic activities and in transactions with other
entities.
Institutional unit Ŕ
Unité institutionnelle
SNA
Ŕ SCN
An institutional unit is an economic entity that is
capable, in its own right, of owning assets,
incurring liabilities and engaging in economic
activities and in transactions with other entities
Source: SNA 4.2 [1.13, 2.19, 3.13]
Context: The resident institutional units that make
up the total economy are grouped into five
mutually exclusive sectors:
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
-
See also: Institutional unit – Eurostat
Institutional units ESA
The institutional unit is an elementary economic
decision-making centre characterised by uniformity
of behaviour and decision-making autonomy in the
exercise of its principal function. A resident unit is
regarded as constituting an institutional unit if it
has decision-making autonomy in respect of its
principal function and either keeps a complete set
of accounts or it would be possible and meaningful,
from both an economic and legal viewpoint, to
compile a complete set of accounts if they were
required.
SNA 4.6
Source: SNA 4.2
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Sector, institutional – SNA, Units,
institutional – ESA
Institutions
Institutions
Institutions comprise any set of premises in a
permanent structure or structures designed to
house (usually large) groups of persons who are
bound by either a common public objective or a
common personal interest.
Context: The need for aggregation means that it is
impossible to consider individual institutional units
separately; they must be combined into groups
called institutional sectors or simply sectors, some
of which are divided into sub-sectors (Eurostat,
"European System of Accounts - ESA 1995", Office
for Official Publications of the European
Communities, Luxembourg, 1996, 2.12).
Such sets of living quarters usually have certain
common facilities shared by the occupants (baths,
lounges, dormitories and so forth).
Criteria for assessing ‗similar type of economic
behaviour‘ are:
—
—
—
—
—
Hospitals, military barracks, boarding schools,
convents, prisons and so forth fall within this
category
type of producer;
private and public market producers;
private producers for own final use;
private and public other non-market producers;
principal activity and function.
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1.
United Nations, New York, 1998, Series M, No. 67,
Rev. 1, para. 2.359
The ESA distinguishes between the following
institutional sectors:
—
—
—
—
—
—
non-financial corporations;
financial corporations;
general government;
non-profit institutions serving households;
households
See also: Collective living quarters – UN,
Institutional households (Eurostat), Institutional
population
Non-financial corporations;
Financial corporations;
General government;
Households (as consumers or entrepreneurs);
Non-profit institutions serving households;
Rest of the world
Instream
Instream use or non—withdrawal use, that is, use
of water taking place within a stream channel, for
example, in hydroelectric power generation,
navigation, fish farming and recreation
The System of National Accounts 1993 states that
"Institutional units are grouped together to form
institutional sectors, on the basis of their principal
functions, behaviour, and objectives". (United
Nations, "System of National Account (SNA) 1993",
par. 2.20)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Instruction time
See Intended instruction time
Source: Eurostat, "European System of Accounts ESA 1995", Office for Official Publications of the
European Communities, Luxembourg, 1996, 2.12.
See also: Intended instruction time
See also: Sector, institutional - ESA, Units,
institutional – SNA
Instructional
educational
institutions
399
Etablissement
d'enseignement à
vocation pédagogique
Instructional educational institutions are
educational institutions that directly provide
instructional programmes (i.e., teaching) to
individuals in an organised group setting or
through distance education. Business enterprises
or other institutions providing short-term courses
of training or instruction to individuals on a ―oneto-one‖ basis are not included.
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
— Life insurance: includes insurance on a
contractual basis of following items: life assurance,
(which covers assurance on survival to a stipulated
age only, assurance on death only, assurance on
survival to a stipulated age or an earlier death, life
assurance with return of premiums, marriage
assurance and birth assurance) annuities,
supplementary insurance (insurance against
personal injury and disability resulting from an
accident or sickness), and permanent health
insurance;
Insurance - Eurostat
Assurance - Eurostat
The following types of insurance services can be
distinguished:
See also: Expenditure on educational institutions,
Non-instructional educational institution - UNESCO,
Non-instructional educational institutions - OECD
Instructional
personnel - OECD
Instructional Personnel comprises two subcategories: Classroom teachers at ISCED 0-4 and
academic staff at ISCED 5-6; and teacher aides at
ISCED 0-4 and teaching / research assistants at
ISCED 5-6.
— Non-life insurance: includes insurance against
following risks: accident, sickness, land vehicles,
railway rolling stock, aircraft, ships, goods in
transit, fire and natural forces, other damage to
property, motor vehicle liability, aircraft liability,
liability for ships, general liability, credit,
suretyship, miscellaneous financial loss and legal
expenses;
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: Educational personnel, Instructional
personnel - UNESCO, Maintenance and operations
personnel, Management/Quality
control/Administration, Ratio of students to
teaching staff, Teaching staff, Teaching time
- Reinsurance: an insurance enterprise undertaking
insurance with policy holders often transfers some
of the risks incurred to other insurance enterprises.
These transactions between insurance enterprises
are called reinsurance
Instructional
personnel - UNESCO
Instructional personnel includes two subcategories. The first: Classroom teachers at ISCED
0-4 and Academic staff at ISCED 5-6; the second
is Teacher aides at ISCED 0-4 involved in direct
student instruction. The classification includes:
classroom teachers; special 0-4 and Teaching /
Research assistants at ISCED 5-6
Source: First Council Directive (EEC), No. 79/267,
of 05.03.1979 on the coordination of laws,
Regulations and administrative provisions relating
to the taking-up and pursuit of the business of
direct life assurance, Article 1, First Council
Directive (EEC), No. 73/239, of 24.07.1973 on the
coordination of laws, Regulations and
administrative provisions relating to the taking-up
and pursuit of direct insurance other than life
assurance, Article 1, European System of Accounts
(ESA) 1995, [Annex III], P. 268 and Insurance in
Europe, Eurostat - DG XV, 1996
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 44
See also: Instructional personnel - OECD
Insulated wagon
Wagon isotherme
Covered wagon of which the body is built with
insulating walls, doors, floor and roof, by which the
heat exchanges between the inside and outside of
the body can be so limited that the overall
coefficient of heat transfer (K coefficient), is such
that the equipment is assignable to one or other of
the following two categories:
See also: Insurance – SNA
Insurance Ŕ SNA
Assurance ŔSCN
The activity of insurance is intended to provide
individual institutional units exposed to certain
risks with financial protection against the
consequences of the occurrence of specified
events.
- I N = Normally insulated equipment characterized by a K coefficient equal to or less
than 0.7 W/m 2 degrees C
It is also a form of financial intermediation in which
funds are collected from policyholders and invested
in financial or other assets which are held as
technical reserves to meet future claims arising
from the occurrence of the events specified in the
insurance policies
- I R = Heavily insulated equipment - characterized
by a K coefficient equal to or less than 0.4 W/m 2
degrees C
Source: SNA 6.135
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
400
services and to exclude other institutional units
from doing so except with the permission of the
owner (e.g. patented entities or purchased
goodwill)
See also: Insurance - Eurostat
Insurance
Sociétés d‟assurance
corporations
Insurance corporations consist of incorporated,
mutual and other entities whose principal function
is to provide life, accident, sickness, fire or other
forms of insurance to individual institutional units
or groups of units
Source: SNA 13.62 [(AN.22) – Annex to chapter
XIII]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 4.97
Integrated data
Observations
intégrées
A class of statistical data in which the values for
short unit intervals can be added together to give a
series of values relating to longer intervals; for
example, daily rainfall can be integrated into a new
series of weekly, monthly or annual rainfall figures
each of which will possess a longer time base than
the previous series.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Insurance technical
reserves
Réserves techniques
détenues par les
entreprises
d‟assurance
The technical reserves held by insurance
enterprises consist of the actuarial reserves
against outstanding risks in respect of life
insurance policies, including reserves for withprofit policies which add to the value on maturity
of with-profit endowments or similar policies,
prepayments of premiums and reserves against
outstanding claims
On the other hand, a series of, say, temperature
readings cannot be integrated in this sense and
series for longer time intervals must be derived by
averaging or the selection of typical values.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: SNA 7.123 [11.89, 13.75, (AF.6) – Annex
to chapter XIII]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Integrated economic
Comptes économiques
accounts Ŕ BPM
intégrés Ŕ SCN
Integrated economic accounts, in the form of Taccount, provide an overview of structural
elements of the System of National Accounts by
depicting various facets of economic phenomena
(e.g., production, income, consumption,
accumulation, and wealth) in three types of
accounts: current account, accumulation accounts,
and balance sheets.
Insured (guaranteed)
export credit
An export credit that carries a guarantee, issued
by an export credit agency, protecting the creditor
against political, commercial, or transfer risks in
the debtor country that may prevent the
remittance of debt-service payments.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Context: Resources, stocks of liabilities, and net
worth are shown on the right side of the accounts;
uses and stocks of assets are shown on the left
side in the tabular presentation. However, in the
account for goods and services, the sources of
supply (resources) from the economy‘s output and
imports are shown on the left side, and the
distribution of that supply is shown on the right
side. For each category of the transaction, the sum
of the entries on the right side of the account is
equal to the sum of the entries on the left side
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Export credit agency
Intangible fixed
Actifs fixes
assets
incorporels
Intangible fixed assets are non-financial produced
fixed assets that mainly consist of mineral
exploration, computer software, entertainment,
literary or artistic originals intended to be used for
more than one year
Source: BPM para. 45
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Source: AN.112 – Annex to chapter XIII
See also: Integrated economic accounts – SNA
Intangible nonActifs incorporels non
produced assets
produits
Intangible non-produced assets are assets that
entitle their owners to engage in certain specific
activities or to produce certain specific goods or
Integrated economic
Comptes économiques
accounts Ŕ SNA
intégrés Ŕ SCN
The integrated economic accounts comprise the full
set of accounts of institutional sectors and the rest
of the world, together with the accounts for
transactions (and other flows) and the accounts for
401
assets and liabilities
Digital Network
(ISDN)
An international telecommunications standard that
allows a communications channel to carry voice,
video, and other data.
Source: SNA 2.88
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Context: A digital local loop connection to the
nearest exchange. The bandwidth is not as high as
DSL or cable local loops.
See also: Integrated economic accounts – BPM
Integrated
investments
Also called cleaner technologies. These are new or
modified production facilities designed so that
environmental protection is an integral part of the
production process, reducing or eliminating
emissions and discharges and thus the need for
end-of-pipe equipment.
OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.98
Integrated survey
processing
The concept of integrated survey processing is that
all parts of the survey process be integrated in a
coherent manner, the results of one part of the
process automatically giving information to the
next part of the process.
See also: Clean technology
Integrated pest
Latte intégrée contre
management (IPM) Ŕ les ravageurs Ŕ OCDE
OECD
Integrated pest management (IPM) is an approach
to the management and control of agricultural
pests which relies on site- and condition-specific
information to manage pest populations below a
level that causes economic injury and that
minimises risks to humans and the natural
environment.
The Blaise system is an example of integrated
software in which the specification of the Blaise
Questionnaire gives rise to a data entry module as
well as CATI and CAPI instruments.
Although any among a wide range of pest control
agents may be used (including chemical sprays),
IPM generally stresses the use of alternatives, such
as crop rotations, mechanical cultivation, and
biological agents, where such methods are deemed
to be effective
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Context: The goals of Integrated Survey
Processing include the one-time specification of the
data, which in turn would reduce duplication of
effort and reduce the numbers of errors introduced
into the system due to multiple specifications.
See also: Integrated pest management (IPM) – UN
Integrated surveys
See Multi-subject surveys
Integrated pest
Latte intégrée contre
management (IPM) Ŕ les ravageurs - NU
UN
Integrated pest management (IPM) is a strategy
relying on natural mortality factors, such as
natural enemies, weather and crop management,
that seeks to promote tactics that disrupt these
factors as little as possible while enhancing their
effectiveness
See also: Multi-subject surveys
Integration
Intégration
Integration is a statistical process whereby units or
industries are combined to a larger unit under
consideration of the flows of intermediate
deliveries that may exist between the individual
units.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Output of the new, integrated unit is net of intraindustry flows and represents only deliveries
outside of the unit. Similarly, input of the
integrated unit is net of intra-industry deliveries.
Integration is a necessary step in the computation
of sectoral output measures
See also: Integrated pest management (IPM) –
OECD
Integrated Services
402
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Doha World Trade Organisation Ministerial:
Glossary of Terms. Available at:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
See also: Vertical integration
Integrity
Integrity refers to values and related practices that
maintain confidence in the eyes of users in the
agency producing statistics and ultimately in the
statistical product.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Intelligent Character
Recognition (ICR)
The art of interpreting written or printed characters
through image scanning and computer analysis.
Context: In SDMX, "Transparency" describes the
policy on the availability of the terms and
conditions under which statistics are collected,
processed, and disseminated. It also describes the
policy of providing advanced notice of major
changes in methodology, source data, and
statistical techniques; the policy on internal
governmental access to statistics prior to their
release; the policy on statistical products‘
identification
Source: Adapting new technologies to census
operations, Arij Dekker, Symposium on Global
Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing
Censuses: Mid-Decade Assessment and Future
Prospects, Statistics Division, Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations
Secretariat New York, 7-10 August 2001, Glossary
Confidence by users is built over time. One
important aspect is the trust in the objectivity of
statistics. It implies that professionalism should
guide policies and practices and it is supported by
ethical standards and by transparency of policies
and practices.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/docs/sym
posium_06.htm#_Toc8547016
Intended instruction
time
Intended instruction time refers to the number of
hours per year for which students receive
instruction in both the compulsory and noncompulsory parts of the curriculum. For countries
that have no formal policy on instruction time, the
number of hours was estimated from survey data.
Under the SDDS, "integrity" is the third of four
dimensions of the standard (i.e., data, access,
integrity, and quality) for which evidence of a
subscribing member's observance of the standard
can be obtained.
Source: International Monetary Fund, "Data
Quality Assessment Framework – DQAF –
Glossary", unpublished
Hours lost when schools are closed for festivities
and celebrations, such as national holidays, are
excluded. Intended instruction time does not
include non-compulsory time outside the school
day. It does not include homework, individual
tutoring or private study taken before or after
school.
See also: Accessibility, Institutional framework,
Internal access, Ministerial commentary, Quality –
IMF, Revision policy, Special Data Dissemination
Standard (SDDS), Statistical Data and Metadata
Exchange (SDMX)
Intellectual property
rights (IPRs)
Intellectual property rights refers to the general
term for the assignment of property rights through
patents, copyrights and trademarks. These
property rights allow the holder to exercise a
monopoly on the use of the item for a specified
period.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: Compulsory core curriculum, Compulsory
curriculum, Compulsory flexible curriculum, Noncompulsory curriculum
Intensive agriculture Agriculture intensive
Intensive agriculture refers to agricultural practices
that produce high output per unit area, usually by
intensive use of manure, agrochemicals,
mechanization and so on
By restricting imitation and duplication, monopoly
power is conferred, but the social costs of
monopoly power may be offset by the social
benefits of higher levels of creative activity
encouraged by the monopoly earnings.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: Ownership of ideas, including literary and
artistic works (protected by copyright), inventions
(protected by patents), signs for distinguishing
goods of an enterprise (protected by trademarks)
and other elements of industrial property.
See also: Green revolution
Intensive sampling
403
Échantillonnage
intensif
Like extensive sampling this expression may mean
two different things, either:
Interactive editing
Interactive editing is the checking and correcting
data in dialogue mode using video terminals. It can
be applied during data entry or on data that are
already in machine-readable form.
(a) sampling in a particular area with a dense
scatter of sampling points; or
(b) sampling wherein information on a restricted
range of topics is sought by probing on them very
deeply with an intricate schedule of questions.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Extensive sampling
See also: Interactive data review, On-line
correction
Inter- and intrabrand competition
See Brand competition
Interactive processing
In a computer system, the process of interacting
directly with a program and/or data for
immediately modifying, retrieving and/or
displaying information. This is usually done on a
computer screen.
See also: Brand competition (inter and intra)
Interaction (between Interaction (entre
species)
espèces)
Interaction (between species) refers to positive
and negative associations between species that
favour or inhibit mutual growth and evolution of
populations. It may take the form of competition,
predation, parasitism, commensalism or mutualism
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
See also: Batch processing
Interbank market,
international
See International interbank market
Interactive data
review
Interactive data review refers to checking and
correcting data in dialogue mode using video
terminals. It can be applied during data entry or on
data that are already in machine-readable form.
The questionnaire is immediately reviewed after
adjustments are made. The results are shown on a
video terminal and the data editor is prompted to
adjust the data or override the error flag. This
process continues until the questionnaire is
considered acceptable by the automated review
process. Then results of the next questionnaire's
review by the auto review processor are presented.
See also: International interbank market
Interbank overnight
lending market
The interbank overnight lending market is a
market where depository institutions buy or sell
funds needed to meet a reserve requirement at the
end of the trading day. In this market, banks can
sell their excess reserves to other banks with
insufficient reserves at the overnight inter-bank
lending rate.
A desirable feature of Interactive Data Editing
Software is to only present questionnaires
requiring adjustments.
The central bank typically serves as the
institutional basis of the overnight lending market.
Should demand for funds exceed/fall short of
expectations -- reflected also in a sharp movement
in the market determined overnight lending rate -the central bank may increase/decrease liquidity in
the system. Periodically, the central bank may
reduce/raise the target overnight lending rate in
order to signal a change in monetary policy
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
See also: Interactive editing, On-line correction
404
Interbank positions
Interbank positions refers to the asset and liability
positions of banks vis-à-vis other banks
Context: The most common are:
- Interest rate swaps, which involve an exchange
of cash flows related to interest payments, or
receipts, on a notional amount of principal in one
currency over a period of time;
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
- Forward rate agreements, in which a cash
settlement is made by one party to another
calculated by the difference between a market
interest rate of a specified maturity in one currency
on a specific date and an agreed interest rate,
times a notional amount of principal that is never
exchanged (if the market rate is above the agreed
rate, one party will agree to make a cash
settlement to the other, and vice versa); and
Interconnection /
interconnection
charge
A charge levied by network operators on other
service providers to recover the costs of the
interconnection facilities (including the hardware
and software for routing, signalling, and other
basic service functions) provided by the network
operators.
- Interest rate options that give the purchaser the
right to buy or sell a specified notional value at a
specified interest rate—the price traded is 100 less
the agreed interest rate, with settlement based on
the difference between the market rate and the
specified rate times the notional value.
Source: Telecommunications services: Glossary of
terms – World Trade Organisation
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/tratop_e/serv_e/t
elecom_e/tel12_e.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Interest
Intérêts
Interest is the amount that the debtor becomes
liable to pay to the creditor over a given period of
time without reducing the amount of principal
outstanding, under the terms of the financial
instrument agreed between them
Interest rate swap Ŕ
Taux d'intérêt
BPM
d'échange Ŕ MBP
An interest rate swap involves an exchange of
interest payments of different character (e.g.,
fixed rate and floating rate, two different floating
rates, fixed rate in one currency and floating rate
in another, etc.)
Source: SNA 7.93 and ESA 4.42
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Interest rate
Source: BPM para. 405
Interest concession
Bonnification
d‟intérêts
An interest concession is a reduction, compared
with commercial interest rates, in the interest rate
charged on a loan taken out. Such concessions are
typically provided directly by a government agency
or by a government grant to a lending bank (in the
case of a commercial loan).
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
See also: Foreign exchange swap, Interest rate
swap – SNA, Swaps – cross-currency interest rate
Interest rate swap Ŕ
Taux d'intérêt
SNA
d'échange Ŕ SCN
An interest rate swap contract involves an
exchange of cash flows related to interest
payments, or receipts, on a notional amount of
principal, which is never exchanged, on one
currency over a period of time; settlements are
often made through net cash payments by one
counterparty to the other
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Interest rate
An interest rate is the cost or price of borrowing,
or the gain from lending, normally expressed as an
annual percentage amount
Source: SNA 11.38
Source: The Handbook of International Financial
Terms, P. Moles, N. Terry, Oxford University Press,
1997
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Interest
See also: Foreign exchange swap, Interest rate
swap – BPM, Swaps – cross-currency interest rate
Interest rate linked
derivatives
Derivatives whose value is linked to interest rates.
Interest rate, treasury
bills Interest, banks
405
prime lending rates
See Interest, short-term rates
to avoid ambiguity about funding sources.
General-purpose intergovernmental transfers are
not included (e.g., revenue sharing grants, general
fiscal equalisation grants, or distributions of shared
taxes from a national government to provinces,
states, or Länder), even where such transfers
provide the funds that regional or local authorities
draw on to finance education.
See also: Interest, short-term rates
Inter-eXchange
Carrier (IXC)
An operator in the US and Canada which is
licensed to provide long-distance service between
two local areas.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
INTERLINK
INTERLINK is the OECD‘s world econometric model
Interface
A common boundary at which two different
computer systems or portions thereof join or
intersect. It can be mechanical or electronic, and
can also refer to the interaction between humans
and computers.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Interlocking
directorate
An interlocking directorate occurs when the same
person sits on the board of directors of two or
more companies. There is a danger that an
interlock between competing firms (direct
interlocks) may be used to co-ordinate behaviour
and reduce inter-firm rivalry.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Intergenerational
Equité entre
equity
générations
Intergenerational equity is the issue of sustainable
development referring, within the environmental
context, to fairness in the intertemporal
distribution of the endowment with natural assets
or of the rights to their exploitation
Direct interlocks are illegal in the U.S. under the
Clayton Act, but other countries are more lenient.
Empirical evidence suggests, however, that the
majority of interlocking directorates are between
financial and non-financial companies. Thus,
representatives of banks commonly sit on the
boards of competing firms. These indirect
interlocks are typically not a factor in competition
policy.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Intergenerational
mobility
Intergenerational mobility is defined as the extent
to which some key characteristics and outcomes of
individuals differ from those of their parents.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Context: Different strands of analysis have focused
on different types of indicators. The economic
literature has mainly focused on movements
between income (or earnings) classes or
percentiles of the distribution. The sociological
literature has mainly focused on movements
between occupations ranked according to their
prestige or social class.
Intermediate basket
A basket derived as the average of the baskets of
two time periods, usually the base and current
periods. The average can be arithmetic as in the
Marshall Edgeworth price index or geometric as in
the Walsh price index.
Source: OECD, 2007, Society at a Glance: OECD
Social Indicators, 2006 edition, OECD, Paris
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Intergovernmental
transfers
Intergovernmental transfers are transfers of funds
designated for education from one level of
government to another. The restriction to funds
earmarked for education is very important in order
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
406
Intermediate
Consommation
consumption
intermédiaire
Intermediate consumption consists of the value of
the goods and services consumed as inputs by a
process of production, excluding fixed assets
whose consumption is recorded as consumption of
fixed capital; the goods or services may be either
transformed or used up by the production process
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Intermodal transport Transport intermodal
Movement of goods (in one and the same loading
unit or a vehicle) by successive modes of transport
without handling of the goods themselves when
changing modes.
Source: SNA 6.147 and ESA 3.69
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Context: Vehicle can be a road or rail vehicle or a
vessel. The return movement of empty
containers/swap bodies and empty goods road
vehicles/trailers are not themselves part of
intermodal transport since no goods are being
moved. Such movements are associated with
intermodal transport and it is desirable that data
on empty movements be collected together with
data on intermodal transport.
Intermediate foetal
death
An intermediate foetal death refers to death prior
to the complete expulsion or extraction from its
mother of a product of conception at 20, but less
than 28 weeks of gestation
Multimodal Transport
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods,Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
- European Conference of Ministers of Transport
(ECMT) defines multimodal transport as the
"carriage of goods by at least two different modes
of transport". Intermodal transport is therefore a
particular type of multimodal transport.
Intermediate inputs
Facteurs
intermédiaires
Goods and services, other than fixed assets, used
as inputs into the production process of an
establishment that are produced elsewhere in the
economy or are imported. They may be either
transformed or used up by the production process.
Land, labour, and capital are primary inputs and
are not included among intermediate inputs.
- United Nations Convention on International
Multimodal Transport of Goods defines
international multimodal transport as "the carriage
of goods by at least two different modes of
transport on the basis of a multimodal transport
contract from a place in one country at which the
goods are taken in charge by the multimodal
transport operator to a place designated for
delivery in a different country;"
Also called ―intermediate products.‖
Combined Transport
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
- UN/ECE used the term combined transport as
being identical to the definition for intermodal
transport described above, but recently has taken
account of the ECMT- definition for combined
transport given below.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
- According to the rules of application of the
ECE/FAL Recommendation No.19 ―Code for Modes
of Transport‖ the definition is: ―Combined
transport: Combination of means of transport
where one (passive) transport means is carried by
another (active) means which provides traction
and consumes energy";
Intermediate products
Intermediate products are goods and services
consumed as inputs by a process of production,
excluding fixed assets
- For transport policy purposes the ECMT restricts
the term combined transport to cover: "Intermodal
transport where the major part of the European
journey is by rail, inland waterways or sea and any
initial and/or final leg carried out by road are as
short as possible".
Source: SNA 6.147
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Intermediate use
Quadrant des emplois
quadrant
intermédiaires
The intermediate use quadrant (of the use table)
shows intermediate consumption at purchasers‘
prices by industries in the columns and by
products in the rows
Source: SNA 15.72
Intermodal transport
407
Unité de transport
unit (ITU)
intermodale (UTI)
Container, swap body or semi-trailer/goods road
motor vehicle suitable for intermodal transport.
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Internal SNA satellite
account
An internal satellite account is a re arrangement of
the existing SNA transactions. SNA flows are
presented and aggregated differently and in some
case separated out from existing records by a
process of ―deconsolidation‖.
Internal access
Internal access refers to giving full transparency to
any necessary pre-release access within
government, as deemed appropriate by the
government.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 2.11
Context: Under the SDDS, this entails the listing of
persons or officials holding designated positions
within the government, but outside the agency
producing the data, who have pre-release access
to the data and the reporting of the schedule
according to which they receive access.
Internal support
Encompasses any measure which acts to maintain
producer prices at levels above those prevailing in
international trade; direct payments to producers,
including deficiency payments, and input and
marketing cost reduction measures available only
for agricultural production.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
See also: Institutional framework, Integrity,
Ministerial commentary, Revision policy, Special
Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS)
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Internal auditing
An independent appraisal function established
within an organisation.
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Internal tourism
Internal tourism is the tourism of visitors, both
resident and non-resident, within the economic
territory of the country of reference
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, para 2.61
See also: External auditors
Internal control
See Management control
Internal tourism
consumption
Internal tourism consumption comprises the
consumption of both resident and non-resident
visitors within the economic territory of the country
of reference and/or that provided by residents. It
is the sum of domestic tourism consumption and
inbound tourism consumption.
See also: Management control
Internal Ratings
Based approach (IRB)
The IRB approach of the Basel Capital Accord
provides a single framework by which a given set
of risk components or "inputs" are translated into
minimum capital requirements. The framework
allows for both a foundation method and more
advanced methodologies.
It may include goods and services imported into
the country of reference and sold to visitors.
Context: This aggregate provides the most
extensive measurement of visitor consumption in
the country of reference.
In the foundation method, banks estimate the
probability of default associated with each
borrower, and the bank supervisors supply the
other inputs. In the advanced methodology, a bank
with a sufficiently developed internal capital
allocation process is permitted to supply other
necessary inputs as well.
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, paras. 2.61 2.65
408
business data
For these data, the term ―international‖ refers to
banks‘ transactions in any currency with
nonresidents plus their transactions in foreign
(non-local) currency with residents.
Internal transactions Opérations internes
The SNA treats as transactions certain kinds of
actions within a unit to give a more analytically
useful picture of final uses of output and of
production; these transactions that involve only
one unit are called internal, or intra-unit,
transactions
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: SNA 3.44
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
International
Accounting Standards
A series of standards, developed by the Londonbased International Accounting Standards Board,
that provide the underlying conceptual framework
and specific standards for the preparation and
presentation of financial statements of commercial,
industrial, and business reporting enterprises,
whether in the public or the private sector.
International Banking
Statistics (IBS)
These data cover international banking business
and are compiled and disseminated by the BIS on
a quarterly basis. The IBS system has two main
datasets: locational banking statistics, which
provide data on a residence basis; and
consolidated banking statistics, for which reporting
banking institutions provide data on a worldwide
consolidated basis.
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
See also: Bank for International Settlements (BIS)
International
Association of Survey
Statisticians (IASS)
A section of the International Statistical Institute
(ISI)
International bond
Bond issued by a borrower in a foreign country.
International bonds include foreign bonds, parallel
bonds, and Eurobonds.
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
International Baltic
Sea Fishery
Commission (IBSFC)
Commission
internationale des
pêches de la Baltique
(IBSFC)
The International Baltic Sea Fishery Commission
(IBSFC) is a regional fisheries management
organisation established by the 1973 Gdansk
Convention on Fishing and Conservation of the
Living Resources in the Baltic Sea and the Belts.
International cartel
See Cartel
See also: Cartel
International civil
Fonctionnaires
servants
internationnaux
International civil servants are persons working for
international organisations located in a country
other than their own. They usually reside in that
country under special visas or permits. Their
dependants and domestic employees are generally
allowed to accompany or join them
The jurisdiction of the IBSFC includes the waters of
the Belts and the Oressund, in addition to the
Baltic Sea
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
International Bank for
Reconstruction and
Development (IBRD)
One of the five organisations of the World Bank
Group
International
Classification by
Status in Employment
(ICSE-1993)
See also: World Bank Group
International banking
409
The ICSE-93 consists of the following groups:
informing policies that affect economic and social
development as well as supporting poverty
measurement and monitoring efforts.
1. employees; among whom countries may need
and be able to distinguish ―employees with stable
contracts‖ (including ―regular employees‖);
2. employers;
3. own-account workers;
4. members of producers' cooperatives;
5. contributing family workers;
6. workers not classifiable by status.
All the major international development agencies,
including the World Bank, International Monetary
Fund (IMF), World Health Organization (WHO) and
United Nations Development Fund (UNDP) use PPP
data. Purchasing Power Parity takes into account
the cost of a common basket of goods in the
countries being compared) to analyze economic
and social conditions within their areas of concern.
The ICP offers them a powerful tool for
comparative research on economic and social
development.
The groups in the ICSE-93 are defined with
reference to the distinction between ―paid
employment‖ jobs on the one side and selfemployment jobs on the other. Groups are defined
with reference to one or more aspects of the
economic risk and/or the type of authority which
the explicit or implicit employment contract gives
the incumbents or to which it subjects them.
Context: International comparison project prior to
1989 and International comparison programme
since 1989.
Source: ILO: 15th International Conference of
Labour Statisticians, Report of the Conference.
CLS/15/1D.6 (Rev. 1) (Geneva, International
Labour Office, 1993).
It started as a research project in the 1960s with
the ultimate goal of establishing a regular
programme of worldwide PPP comparisons of GDP.
Comparisons were organised for 1970, 1973,
1975, 1980, 1985 and 1993. They covered 10, 16,
34, 60, 64 and 83 countries respectively.
Responsibility for these comparisons was shared
by the United Nations Statistics Division and the
University of Pennsylvania. The World Bank is the
current global co-ordinator of the ICP.
International
Classification of
Impairments,
Disabilities, and
Handicaps (ICIDH)
Classification
internationale des
handicaps :
déficiences,
incapacités et
désavantages
The International Classification of Impairments,
Disabilities, and Handicaps (ICIDH) promotes a
common framework and definitions of disability
related issues. The ICIDH was published in 1980
by the World Health Organisation, Geneva.
Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Source: World Bank, 2005, World Bank
International Comparison Program website, World
Bank, Washington DC
The ICIDH distinguishes three dimensions that can
be studied to monitor the situation of people with
disability: impairment (organ and body
dimension), disability (individual dimension) and
handicap (social dimension)
Hyperlink:
http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/DAT
ASTATISTICS/ICPEXT/0,,pagePK:62002243~theSit
ePK:270065,00.html
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.259
See also: European Comparison Programme
International Council Conseil international
for the Exploration of pour l‟exploration de
the Sea (ICES)
la mer (CIEM)
The International Council for the Exploration of the
Sea (ICES) is an intergovernmental organisation
that provides a scientific forum for the exchange of
information and ideas on the sea and its living
resources.
See also: Disability, Handicap, Impairment
International code
designator
An identifier of an organization identification
scheme. [ISO/IEC 6523-1:1998, 3.8]
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
It also provides a forum for the promotion and coordination of marine research by scientists within
its 19 member countries. Established in
Copenhagen in 1902, it currently operates under
the terms of its 1964 Convention. Each year, ICES
holds more than 100 meetings of its various
working groups, study groups, workshops and
committees, and an Annual Science Conference
See also: ISO / IEC 11179
International
comparison program
The International Comparisons Program (ICP) is a
global statistical initiative established to produce
internationally comparable price levels,
expenditure values, and Purchasing Power Parity
(PPP) estimates.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
See also: Advisory Committee on Fishery
Management (ACFM)
The goal is to provide a reliable and relevant
information base, with the ultimate objective of
410
Source: OECD, 2006, Annual Report on the OECD
Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises:
Conducting Business in Weak Governance Zones,
OECD, Paris
International
Development
Association (IDA)
IDA, established in 1960, is the concessional
lending arm of the World Bank Group. IDA
provides low income developing countries with
long-term loans on highly concessional terms:
typically a 10-year grace period, a 40-year
repayment period, and only a small servicing
charge.
International inland
waterways transport
Transport
international par
voies navigables
intérieures
Inland waterways transport between two places (a
place of loading/embarkment and a place of
unloading/disembarkment) located in two different
countries. It may involve transit through one or
more additional countries.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
International
Financial Reporting
Standards (IFRS)
A set of accounting standards. Currently they are
issued by the International Accounting Standards
Board (IASB).
International
interbank market
The international interbank market is an
international money market in which banks lend to
each other – either cross-border or locally in
foreign currency – large amounts of money,
usually for periods between overnight and six
months
Context: Many of the standards forming part of
IFRS are known by the older name of International
Accounting Standards (IAS).
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Hyperlink: http://www.iasb.org/Home.htm
International
Geographical Union
(IGU)
An organization of nations formed in 1922 to
identify problems in geography, initiate and
coordinate research involving several countries,
and organize the International Geographic
Congresses.
International
Position extérieure
investment position
globale
The international investment position is a
statistical statement, compiled at a specified date
such as year end, of: (i) the value and composition
of the stock of an economy‘s financial assets or the
economy‘s claims on the rest of the world, and (ii)
the value and composition of the stock of an
economy‘s liabilities to the rest of the world
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Source: BPM 14 [BPM 461]
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
International
humanitarian law
International humanitarian law is the body of law
which seeks, for humanitarian reasons, to limit the
effects of armed conflict. It protects persons who
are not or no longer participating in hostilities and
restricts the means and methods of warfare.
International Labour
Organisation (ILO)
The International Labour Organization is the UN
specialized agency which seeks the promotion of
social justice and internationally recognized human
and labour rights.
Context: International humanitarian law is also
known as the law of war or the law of armed
conflict. Although directed at the activities of
States and organised armed groups, awareness of
this body of law is also relevant for companies to
the extent that government forces may be involved
in the provision of security of their activities.
The ILO formulates international labour standards
in the form of Conventions and Recommendations
setting minimum standards of basic labour rights:
freedom of association, the right to organize,
collective bargaining, abolition of forced labour,
equality of opportunity and treatment, and other
411
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/54/42/2538118.pdf
standards regulating conditions across the entire
spectrum of work related issues.
It provides technical assistance primarily in the
fields of:
International
Monetary Fund (IMF)
The IMF is an international organization of 184
member countries. It was established to promote
international monetary cooperation, exchange
stability, and orderly exchange arrangements; to
foster economic growth and high levels of
employment; and to provide temporary financial
assistance to countries to help ease balance of
payments adjustment.
• vocational training and vocational rehabilitation;
• employment policy;
• labour administration;
• labour law and industrial relations;
• working conditions;
• management development;
• cooperatives;
• social security;
• labour statistics and occupational safety and
health.
Since the IMF was established its purposes have
remained unchanged but its operations — which
involve surveillance, financial assistance, and
technical assistance –have developed to meet the
changing needs of its member countries in an
evolving world economy.
It promotes the development of independent
employers' and workers' organizations and
provides training and advisory services to those
organizations. Within the UN system, the ILO has a
unique tripartite structure with workers and
employers participating as equal partners with
governments in the work of its governing organs.
Source: IMF website
Context: It was founded in 1919 and is the only
surviving major creation of the Treaty of Versailles
which brought the League of Nations into being
and it became the first specialized agency of the
UN in 1946.
Hyperlink: http://www.imf.org/external/about.htm
International Office of
Epizootics
Deals with international standards concerning
animal health.
Source: ILO website
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/about/index.htm
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
International labour
standards
ILO international labour standards embrace
numerous aspects of labour markets, ranging from
minimum wages and equal pay to health and
safety regulations. These standards can be
classified into six main categories:
-
International oil
pipeline transport
Transport
international par
oléoducs
Oil pipeline transport between two places (a
pumping-in place and a pumping-out place)
located in two different countries or on those parts
of the seabed allocated to them. It may involve
transit through one or more additional countries.
respect for fundamental human rights;
protection of wages;
employment security;
working conditions;
labour market and social policies;
industrial relations.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, July 1994,
Chapter 4, Labour Standards and Economic
Integration, page 138
International Mobile
Telecommunications
(IMT) 2000
International Mobile Telecommunications system
sometimes referred to as Universal Mobile
Telecommunications System (UMTS) or thirdgeneration mobile services (3G).
International
Organisation for
Standardisation (ISO)
ISO (the International Organisation for
Standardisation) and IEC (the International
Electrotechnical Commission) form the specialised
system for worldwide standardisation.
Source: Cellular Mobile Pricing Structures and
Trends, Working Party on Telecommunication and
Information Services Policies – November 1999,
page 9, Select Glossary of Mobile Terms
ISO officially began operations on 23 February
1947.
National bodies that are members of ISO or IEC
412
participate in the development of International
Standards through technical committees
established by the respective organisation to deal
with particular fields of technical activity. ISO and
IEC technical committees collaborate in fields of
mutual interest. Other international organisations,
governmental and non-governmental, in liaison
with ISO and IEC, also take part in the work.
International rail
Transport ferroviaire
transport
international
Rail transport between two places (a place of
loading and a place of unloading) in two different
countries. It may involve transit through one or
more additional countries.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: In the field of information technology,
ISO and IEC have established a joint technical
committee, ISO/IEC JTC 1. Draft International
Standards adopted by the joint technical
committee are circulated to national bodies for
voting. Publication as an International Standard
requires approval by at least 75% of the national
bodies casting a vote.
See also: National rail transport
International
registration data
identifier (IRDI)
The international registration data identifier (IRDI)
is an internationally unique identifier for a data
element
Source: Information Technology - Data
Management and Interchange - Metadata
Registries (MdR) - Part 3: Registry Metamodel
(MdR3) - ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 32 N 0643, 1 May
2001
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
International
Organisations
organisations
internationales
International organisations are entities established
by formal political agreements between their
members that have the status of international
treaties; their existence is recognised by law in
their member countries; they are not treated as
resident institutional units of the countries in which
they are located
International reserve Avoirs de réserve
assets
Reserve assets consist of those external assets
that are readily available to and controlled by a
country‘s authorities for direct financing of
international payments imbalances, for indirect
regulation of the magnitude of such imbalances
through intervention in foreign exchange markets
to affect their currency‘s exchange rate, and for
other purposes.
Source: SNA 4.164
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
International
outsourcing
See International subcontracting
The category of reserve assets defined in the IMF
Balance of Payments Manuel, Fifth Edition
comprises monetary gold, special drawing rights
(SDRs), reserve position in the IMF, foreign
exchange assets (consisting of currency, and
deposits and securities), and other claims
See also: International subcontracting
Source: SNA 11.61 [14.155] BPM para. 424
International prices
A term used in association with additive
aggregation methods. In the course of expressing
the expenditures on basic headings in a common
currency, additive aggregation methods value the
expenditures at international prices, where an
international price for a basic heading is defined as
the average of the national prices for the basic
heading prevailing in participating countries. The
average may be weighted or unweighted, PPP
adjusted or unadjusted. It may be an average of
prices or an average of price structures.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
In the GK method, for example, the average is
defined as a quantity-weighted arithmetic average
of the national prices adjusted by the global PPPs
across all countries.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: Organisation
See also: Eurosystem's international reserves
International road
Transport routier
transport
international
Road transport between two places (a place of
loading/embarkment and a place of
unloading/disembarkment) in two different
countries. It may involve transit through one or
more additional country or countries.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
International sea
transport
413
Transport
international par mer
Sea transport between two ports (a port of
loading/embarkment and a port of
unloading/disembarkment) located in two different
countries.
System
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Context: International one port transport is
included.
International
Standard
Bibliographic
Description (ISBD)
There are seven specific ISBDs as well as the
general ISBD - (G): monographs -(M), serial
publications -(S), cartographic material -(CM),
non-book material -(NBM), printed music -(PM),
antiquarian publications -(A), computer files -(CF).
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
International
Securities
Identification Number
(ISIN)
A number that uniquely identifies securities. ISINs
consist of a total of 12 characters.
Source: Memory of the World: Safeguarding the
Documentary Heritage - A guide to Standards,
Recommended Practices and Reference Literature
Related to the Preservation of Documents of All
Kinds, International Advisory Committee for the
UNESCO Memory of the World Programme SubCommittee on Technology for the General
Information Programme and UNISIST United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization - Part 9 - Glossary
Context: In 1989 the Group of Thirty (G30)
recommended the adoption of ISIN codes as the
international standard for the identification of
securities. Although ISINs had been in existence
since 1981, there is little evidence of their use
before 1989. In 1990 ANNA was formed with the
primary objective of maintaining and implementing
the international standard. The International
Standards Organization (ISO) designated ANNA as
the registration authority to coordinate all aspects
of the implementation of the ISIN numbering
system.
Hyperlink:
http://www.unesco.org/webworld/mdm/administ/
en/guide/guide011.htm
International
Classification
Standard
internationale type de
Classification of
l'éducation (CITE)
Education (ISCED).
The International Standard Classification of
Education (ISCED 1997) is the revised version of
the International Standard Classification of
Education which was adopted by UNESCO's
General Conference in replacement of the former
version. Since 1998, the new classification has
been used in the international collection of
education statistics. It is accompanied by the
ISCED Operational Manual
In 1994, at the initiative of ANNA, GIAM (the
Global ISIN Access Mechanism) was developed to
link NNAs and GIAM participants electronically,
allowing them to pass ISIN information to each
other.
In 1995, ISO designated ANNA as maintenance
agency and registration authority of the ISO 10962
(Classification of Financial Instruments [CFI]).
In the past several years, ANNA has been working
out a new strategy to guarantee the full
implementation of ISIN and CFI codes and the
swift and general availability of the codes to users.
The global financial industry has been rapidly
moving toward the automated processing of
securities transactions (Straight-Through
Processing), and the ability to precisely identify the
securities has become essential. In this context,
ANNA has developed a new network for the
exchange of information among participant
members, called GIAM-2, based on the
combination of CD-ROM and Internet technologies.
Context: The International Standard Classification
of Education (ISCED-97) is used to define the
levels and fields of education . For details on
ISCED 1997 and how it is nationally implemented
see Classifying Educational Programmes: Manual
For ISCED-97 Implementation in OECD Countries
(Paris, 1999). (Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris,
2002, Glossary)
Source: UNESCO Institute for Statistics website
Hyperlink:
http://www.unesco.org/education/information/nfsu
nesco/doc/isced_1997.htm
The standard provides a uniform structure for the
ISIN, a number that uniquely identifies securities.
It details NNAs that are responsible for issuing the
ISIN in each country. In those countries where no
NNA is in operation, three NNAs have agreed to act
as a substitute agency on a regional basis.
See also: Advanced Research Qualifications (ISCED
6), Educational attainment, Educational
qualifications, Level of education, Lower secondary
education (ISCED 2), Post-secondary non-tertiary
level of education (ISCED 4), Pre-primary
education (ISCED 0), Primary education (ISCED
1), Tertiary-type A education (ISCED 5A), Tertiarytype B education (ISCED 5B), Upper secondary
education (ISCED 3)
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VII:
International Securities identification Number Code
414
The most comprehensive database of existing
international statistical guidelines and
recommendations is maintained on the United
Nations Statistical Division website, the
Methodological publications in statistics. This
database also lists standards currently being
developed by international organisations.
International
Classification
Standard
internationale types
Classification of
des professions
Occupations (ISCO)
(CITP)
The International Standard Classification of
Occupations (1988) classifies persons according to
their actual and potential relation with jobs.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Jobs are classified with respect to the type of work
performed or to be performed. The basic criteria
used to define the system of major, sub-major,
minor and unit groups is the ―skill‖ level and ―skill
specialisation‖ required to carry out the tasks and
duties of the occupations, with separate major
groups for ―Legislators, senior officials and
managers‖ and for ―Armed forces‖.
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
See also: Statistical concept, Statistical standard,
Statistical standard
International
subcontracting
International subcontracting occurs when one firm,
the prime manufacturer or contractor (―principal‖),
contracts with another firm, the subcontractor or
―supplier‖, for a given production cycle, one or
more aspects of production design, processing or
manufacture, or construction or maintenance work.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
International
Standard Industrial
Classification of All
Economic Activities
(ISIC)
Classification
internationale type,
par industrie, de
toutes les branches
d‟activité economique
(CITI)
Context: The output is generally incorporated into
the principal‘s final products. Subcontracting can
also involve services, particularly studies,
accounting, engineering, R&D, advertising,
computer services or legal advice.
Refer ISIC
See also: ISIC
Source: OECD, 2005, Measuring Globalisation:
OECD Handbook on Economic Globalisation
Indicators, OECD, Paris - Glossary
International
Statistical Institute
(ISI)
An organization established to promote the
development and improvement of statistical
methods and their application throughout the
world. Encourages international cooperation among
statisticians and the exchange of information and
ideas.
International
Telecommunication
Union (ITU)
Headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland, the
International Telecommunication Union (ITU) is an
international organisation within which
governments and the private sector co-ordinate
global telecom networks and services. It is the
leading publisher of telecommunication technology,
regulatory standards information.
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002 – Appendix F.
Glossary of Organisations
International
statistical standard
The term international statistical standard refers to
the comprehensive body of international statistical
guidelines and recommendations that have been
developed by international organisations working
with national agencies.
Hyperlink: http://www.itu.int/home/index.html
International Textiles
and Clothing Bureau
(ITCB)
Geneva-based group of some 20 developing
country exporters of textiles and clothing.
Context: The formulation of international statistical
standards necessarily entails an extensive process
of consultation and discussion between
international organisations and between
international organisations and their member
countries.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
The standards cover almost every field of
statistical endeavour from data collection,
processing and dissemination and almost very
statistical subject. Such standards also include
international statistical classifications
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
International tourism
415
of services provided to residents of other countries
(or received by residents of the domestic territory)
The international tourist industry of a country may
be defined as the sum of domestic activities that
directly support the consumption of goods and
services of foreign tourists in the country.
Source: Measuring the ICT Sector: Information
Society, OECD, 2000, Data Item Definitions, Data
Sources and Methodologies, page 151
Context: Definition of the international tourist
industry is dependent on the definition of
international tourists, which in turn can be based
on a narrower definition of non-residents. That is,
tourists should include:
See also: Exports of goods and services – UN,
Imports of goods and services – UN
International Trade
Centre (ITC)
Originally established by the old GATT and is now
operated jointly by the WTO and the UN, the latter
acting through UNCTAD. Focal point for technical
cooperation on trade promotion of developing
countries.
(a) Persons visiting the country for less than one
year, specifically for purposes of recreation or
holiday, medical care, religious observances, family
affairs, participation in international sport and
cultural events, conferences and other meetings,
study tours and other student programmes, as well
as persons in transit to another country;
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
(b) Foreign students remaining for more than one
year;
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
(c) Crew members of foreign vessels and aircraft
docked in the country or on lay-over;
(d) Foreign business travellers who are in a given
country for less than one year;
International trade in
services
Échanges
internationaux de
services
Before the publication of the Trade in Services
Manual, the conventional statistical meaning of
international trade in services was that described
in the IMF Balance of Payments Manual, Fifth
edition (BPM5), which defines international trade in
services as being between residents and nonresidents of an economy. This also corresponds
very closely to the concept of trade in services in
the ―rest of the world‖ account of the 1993 System
of National Accounts. Such trade is described in
Chapter III of this Manual.
(e) Employees of international bodies who are on a
mission of less than one year;
(f) Nationals who are residents of other countries
who come back for visits of less than one year.
Source: United Nations, 1999, "Handbook of InputOutput Table Compilation and Analysis", Studies in
Methods: Handbook of National Accounts, Series F,
No. 74, UN, New York, p. 211
International tourist
Any person who travels to a country other than
that in which s/he has his/her usual residence but
outside his/her usual environment for a period not
exceeding 12 months and whose main purpose of
visit is other than the exercise of an activity
remunerated from with the country visited, and
who stay at least one night in a collective or
private accommodation in the country visited.
This concept of international trade in services
combines with the concept of international trade in
goods, to form international trade in goods and
services in the BPM5 current account. But, it is not
always practical to separate trade in goods from
trade in services. Services differ from goods in a
number of ways, most commonly in the immediacy
of the relationship between supplier and consumer.
Many services are non-transportable; i.e. they
require the physical proximity of supplier and
customer, for example, the provision of a hotel
service requires that the hotel is where the
customer wishes to stay, a cleaning service for a
business must be provided at the site of the
business, and a haircut requires that both
hairstylist and client be present. For international
trade in such non-transportable services to take
place, either the consumer must go the supplier or
the supplier must go to the consumer.
International trade agreements concerning
services, in particular those embodied in the
General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS),
make provision for agreement on suppliers moving
to the country of the consumer.
Source: United Nations and World Tourism
Organization. Recommendations on Tourism
Statistics. Series M, No. 83. (United Nations
publication, Sales No. E.94.XVII.6). (para. 29)
International trade
Commerce
international
The two main data items used in the concept of
international trade are imports and exports.
Imports of goods measures the value of goods that
enter the domestic territory of a country
irrespective of their final destination.
Exports of goods similarly measures the value of
goods which leave the domestic territory of a
country, irrespective of whether they have been
processed in the domestic territory or not.
To reflect this type of trade, the Manual extends
the definition of international trade in services to
include the value of services provided through
foreign affiliates established abroad, described
here as Foreign Affiliates Trade in Services (FATS).
Imports (and exports) of services reflect the value
416
Services are also supplied by individuals located
abroad, either as service suppliers themselves or
employed by service suppliers including those in
the host country. A large part of this type of trade
in services is covered by the BPM5 and FATS
frameworks.
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
International Union
List rouge de l‟UICN
for Conservation of
Nature (IUCN) red list
See Red list of threatened animals
Source: Manual on Statistics of International Trade
in Services, Eurostat, IMF, OECD, UN, UNCTAD,
WTO, 2002, page 18
See also: Red list of threatened animals
International visitors
International visitors are those whose country of
residence is different from the country visited;
these international visitors also include nationals
residing permanently abroad, who may represent
an important segment of the market, with special
characteristics
Hyperlink:
http://www1.oecd.org/std/TIS_Dec2000_Meeting/
DOCS/SERV2000_2e.pdf
International trade
statistics (ITS)
Statistiques du
commerce
international (SCI)
International Trade Statistics (or ITS) is one of the
Data Sources to compile BOP Statistics. ITS
measure the quantities and values of goods that
add to or subtract from a nation's stock of goods
as a result of movement into or out of a country.
These data are compiled from forms submitted (by
exporters, importers, or their agents) to custom
officials or directly to the ITS compiler.
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, para 2.25
International Whaling Commission baleinière
Commission (IWC)
internationale (CBI)
The International Whaling Commission (IWC) was
established in 1946 under the International
Convention for the Regulation of Whaling. The
purpose of the Convention is to provide for the
proper conservation of whale stocks and thus
make possible the orderly development of the
whaling industry. The main duty of the IWC is to
keep under review and revise as necessary the
measures laid down in the schedule to the
Convention which govern the conduct of whaling
throughout the world
Source: International Monetary Fund (IMF),
"Balance of payments compilation guide",
Washington D.C., 1995, p. 5
International
transactions reporting
system (ITRS)
An International transactions reporting system
(ITRS) measures individual balance of payments
cash transactions passing through the domestic
banks and foreign bank accounts of enterprises,
and noncash transactions and stock positions.
Statistics are compiled from forms submitted by
domestic banks to the compilers and from forms
submitted by enterprises to the compiler
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Internet
Internet
A global system of linked computer networks that
allows data communication services such as
remote log in, file transfer, electronic mail, bulletin
boards and news groups. The Internet is also the
foundation for the World Wide Web (WWW).
Source: Report on the Survey of Implementation
of Implementation of Methodological Standards for
Direct Investment – IMF, OECD, March 2000 –
Appendix II: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms.
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/bopage/pdf/mar2000.
pdf
Internet advertising
sponsorship
agreement
Designed for use by the operator of an highly
trafficked Web site which desires to permit another
party to place advertisements on that Web site for
the other party‘s goods, services or information.
International Union
UICN
for Conservation of
Nature (IUCN)
The International Union for Conservation of Nature
(IUCN), the World Conservation Union (formerly
the International Union for Conservation of Nature
and Natural Resources), located in Gland,
Switzerland aims to provide knowledge and
guidance about conservation and the sustainable
use of natural resources
Source: Measuring Electronic Commerce, OECD
Working Party on the Information Economy, 1998,
Software Publishers Association (SPA), (1996),
page 29 - A typology of Internet and e-commerce
agreements. Adapted from The SPA Guide to
Contracts and the Legal Protection of Software,
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
417
September, Washington D.C.
Generally, the sub-samples are distinguished not
merely by the act of separation into sub-samples
but by definite differences in survey or processing
features, e.g. when different parties are assigned
to different sub-samples, or one sub-sample is
taken up earlier in time than others.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/32/52/2094340.pdf
Internet protocol (IP)
The most important set of codes and conventions,
which enable the transfer of digital data on the
Internet.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Interpolation
Interpolation
The use of a formula to estimate an intermediate
data value.
Internet Service
Provider (ISP)
A company which provides end-users with a data
connection allowing access to the internet and the
associated services (World Wide Web, Email, Chat
rooms, Instant Messaging, Internet Telephony and
so on).
Context: A common example is the quarterly
estimation of output of non-profit institutions
serving households (NPISH) from annual national
accounts. A quarterly pattern for interpolation may
be derived:
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
- from proxy variables;
- from previous (discontinued) survey data;
- as a smooth mathematical function.
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003.
Internet transaction
An internet transaction is the sale or purchase of
goods or services, whether between businesses,
households, individuals, governments and other
public or private organisations, conducted over the
internet. The goods and services are ordered over
the internet, but the payment and the ultimate
delivery of the good or service may be conducted
on or off-line
See also: Benchmarking
Interquartile range
Amplitude
interquartile
The variate distance between the upper and lower
quartiles. This range contains one half of the total
frequency and provides a simple measure of
dispersion which is useful in descriptive statistics.
Source: OECD Expert Group on Defining and
Measuring E-commerce, April 2000
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Electronic transaction
Interpenetrating
samples (sub
samples)
When two or more samples are taken from the
same population by the same process of selection
the samples are called interpenetrating samples.
The samples may or may not be drawn
independently, linked interpenetrating samples
being an example of the latter. There may be
different levels of interpenetration corresponding
to different stages in a multi-stage sampling
scheme.
Interval distribution
Distribution des
intervalles
A probability distribution formed by the intervals,
or gaps, in time or distance between events or
occurrences.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Context: Thus, in a two-stage sampling scheme
with village as the primary and household as the
second stage unit, when the sample villages are
distributed into two interpenetrating sub-samples
we have interpenetration at the first stage only;
but when the sample of households within every
sample village is broken up into two
interpenetrating sub-samples we have
interpenetration at the second stage; and we can
have interpenetration of a mixed type, e.g. the
four sub-samples obtained by combining the two
earlier types.
Interval estimation
Estimation par
intervalle
The estimation of a population parameter by
specifying a range of values bounded by an upper
and a lower limit, within which the true value is
asserted to lie, as distinct from point estimation
which assigns a single value to the true value of
418
the parameter. The unknown value of the
population parameter is presumed to lie within the
specified interval either on a stated proportion of
occasions, under conditions of repeated sampling,
or in some other probabilistic sense.
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
See also: Intervention price, Intervention stocks
Intervention purchase
price
Price at which the European Commission will
purchase produce to support internal market
prices. It is usually below 100% of the intervention
price, which is an annually decided policy price.
Context: The first of these two approaches is that
of confidence intervals due to Neyman (1937),
which regards the value of the population
parameter as fixed and the limits to the intervals
as random variables. A second approach is that of
fiducial limits due to R.A. Fisher (1930) where the
population parameter is regarded as having a
―fiducial probability‖ distribution which determines
the limits.
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2002-2007,
OECD, Paris, 2002 – Annex II. Glossary of Terms
Intervention stocks
Stocks d‟intervention
Stocks held by national intervention agencies in
the European Union as a result of intervention
buying of commodities subject to market price
support. Intervention stocks may be released onto
the internal markets if internal prices exceed
intervention prices; otherwise, they may be sold
on the world market with the aid of export
restitutions.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Estimation
Interval since last
previous live birth
The interval since last previous live birth refers to
the time elapsed, in completed months, between
the day, month and year of the last previous
delivery of a live-born child and the date of
delivery of the last live birth
Source: OECD, 2004, OECD Agricultural Outlook:
2004-2013, OECD, Paris, Glossary
See also: Intervention price
Interview discussion
See Focus group
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
See also: Focus group
Interviewer bias
Biais lié à l'enquêteur
In surveys of human populations by interview, bias
in responses or recorded information which is the
direct result of the action of the interviewer. This
bias may be due, among other things, to failure to
contact the right person(s); to the failure of the
interviewer to establish proper relations with the
informant, with the result that imperfect or
inaccurate information is offered; or to systematic
errors in recording the answers received from the
respondent.
Intervention price
A form of administered price; the price at which
national intervention agencies are obliged to
purchase any amount of a commodity offered to
them regardless of the level of market price
(assuming that the commodities meet designated
specifications and quality standards). Thus, the
intervention price serves as a floor for market
prices.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Context: In the EU, intervention purchases
constitute one of the principal policy mechanisms
regulating the markets in cereals, butter and
skimmed milk powder, and beef. The Council of
Ministers sets intervention prices every year on the
basis of proposals by the Commission
Interviewer error
Effects on respondents' answers stemming from
the different ways that interviewers administer the
same survey.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
See also: Intervention purchase
Intervention purchase
Intervention purchase refers to the act of
purchasing a commodity once its market price
drops below a set administered price (the
intervention price) so as to raise its market price to
at least the level of the intervention price
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Intra-bank
419
Intra-bank refers to transactions between parts of
the same bank
Intra-industry trade
Different types of trade are captured in
measurements of intra-industry trade:
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
a) Trade in similar products (―horizontal trade‖)
with differentiated varieties (e.g. cars of a similar
class and price range).
b) Trade in ―vertically differentiated‖ products
distinguished by quality and price (e.g. exports of
high-quality clothing and imports of lower-quality
clothing).
Intra-company
Intra-company refers to transactions between
parts of the same company or the same group
Source: OECD, 2005, Measuring Globalisation:
OECD Handbook on Economic Globalisation
Indicators, OECD, Paris - Glossary
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Intramural
expenditures (on
research and
development)
Intramural expenditures are all expenditures for
research and development (R&D) performed within
a statistical unit or sector of the economy during a
specific period, whatever the source of funds.
Intra-company
transfer price
The value assigned on a per unit or per shipment
basis to goods transferred from one establishment
of an enterprise to another. It may or may not be
economically significant. However, it is not a
market price as ownership of the good does not
change hands.
Expenditures made outside the statistical unit or
sector but in support of intramural R&D (e.g.
purchase of supplies for R&D) are included. Both
current and capital expenditures are included.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: OECD Frascati Manual, Sixth edition,
2002, paras. 358-359, page 108
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Hyperlink: http://www1.oecd.org/dsti/sti/statana/prod/eas_fras.htm
See also: Transfer price
See also: Extramural R&D
Intra-firm trade
Intra-firm trade consist of trade between parent
companies of a compiling country with their
affiliates abroad and trade of affiliates under
foreign control in this compiling country with their
foreign parent group.
Intranet
An internet-like system only operating within a
single organisation.
Source: OECD, 2005, Measuring Globalisation:
OECD Handbook on Economic Globalisation
Indicators, OECD, Paris - Glossary
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/bispap07l.pdf
Source: BIS Business papers, November 2001,
Glossary, J. Hawkins
Intrastat
An EU harmonised survey to collect information on
external trade transactions directly from importers
and exporters introduced in January 1993 when
Customs controls were discontinued on the
completion of the EU Single Market.
Intra-household
allocation (of
resources)
The processes by which resources (more broadly
including income and consumption goods, tasks,
leisure, and investments in human capital) are
allocated among individuals and the outcomes of
those processes.
Source: Ireland Central Statistics Office, Freedom
of Information – Appendix 5: Glossary of CSO
Terminology
Hyperlink:
http://www.cso.ie/text/foi/append5.html
Source: Alexander, P., Baden, S., 2000, Glossary
on macroeconomics from a gender perspective,
Institute of Development Studies, University of
Sussex
Intra-unit
Opérations internes
transactions
The SNA treats as transactions certain kinds of
actions within a unit to give a more analytically
useful picture of final uses of output and of
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/52/56/31594934.p
df
420
production; these transactions that involve only
one unit are called internal, or intra-unit,
transactions
quantities, or all the current period quantities, are
multiplied by a positive scalar.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: SNA 3.44
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Intruder
A data user who attempts to link a respondent to a
microdata record or make attributions about
particular population units from aggregate data.
Intruders may be motivated by a wish to discredit
or otherwise harm the NSI, the survey or the
government in general, to gain notoriety or
publicity, or to gain profitable knowledge about
particular respondents.
Inventories
Stocks de produits
Inventories consist of stocks of outputs that are
still held by the units that produced them prior to
their being further processed, sold, delivered to
other units or used in other ways, and stocks of
products acquired from other units that are
intended to be used for intermediate consumption
or for resale without further processing
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: SNA 10.7 [13.15, 13.46, (AN.12) – Annex
to chapter XIII]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Stocks (industry), value
Inulin
Inulin syrups are extracted from chicory through a
process commercially developed in the 1980s.
They usually contain 83% fructose. Inulin syrup
production in the European Union is covered by the
sugar regime and subject to a production quota.
Inventories of
Stocks de produits
finished goods
finis
Inventories of finished goods consist of goods that
are ready for sale or shipment by the producer but
which are still held by the producer
Source: OECD, 2004, OECD Agricultural Outlook:
2004-2013, OECD, Paris, Glossary
Source: AN.123 - Annex to chapter XIII [10.111]
Inventories of goods
Stocks des biens
for resale
destinés à la revente
Inventories of goods for resale consist of goods
acquired by enterprises, such as wholesalers and
retailers, for the purpose of reselling them without
further processing (that is, not transformed other
than by presenting them in ways that are
attractive to the customer)
Invariance to changes
in the units of
measurement test
A test that may be used under the axiomatic
approach which requires that the price index does
not change when the physical, or quantity, units to
which the prices of the goods or services refer are
changed: for example, when the price of some
drink is quoted per litre rather than per pint.
Source: (AN.124) – Annex to chapter XIII [10.113]
Also known as the ―commensurability test‖.
See also: Stocks of finished goods to be shipped in
the same condition as received (industry)
Inventories of
Matières premières et
materials and supplies fournitures Ŕ stocks
de
Inventories of materials and supplies are goods
that their owners intend to use as intermediate
inputs in their own production processes, not to
resell
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: AN.121 – Annex to chapter XIII [10.99]
Invariance to
proportional change
in current or base
quantities test
A test that may be used under the axiomatic
approach which requires that the price index
remains unchanged when all the base period
Inventories of other
Autres travaux en
work-in-progress
cours Ŕ stocks
Inventories of other work-in-progress consist of
goods other than cultivated assets and services
that have been partially processed, fabricated or
assembled by the producer but that are not usually
sold, shipped or turned over to others without
421
further processing
number of individuals of specified type have
emerged. In this sense it is allied to sequential
sampling.
Source: (AN.1222) – Annex to chapter XIII
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Inventories of workStocks des travaux en
in- progress
cours
Inventories of work-in-progress consist of goods
and services that are partially completed but that
are not usually turned over to other units without
further processing or that are not mature and
whose production process will be continued in a
subsequent period by the same producer
Inverse table,
Tableau inverse de
Leontief
Leontief
See Leontief inverse table
Source: (AN.122) – Annex to chapter XIII [6.40,
6.72, 10.102]
See also: Leontief inverse table
Investment
companies
Investment companies are a type of financial
intermediary, which obtains money from investors
and uses that money to purchase financial assets.
In return, the investors receive shares in the
investment company, and thus indirectly own a
proportion of the financial assets that the company
itself owns. (Investments, W.F. Sharpe/G.J.
Alexander)
Inventories of workStocks des travaux en
in- progress on
cours sur actifs
cultivated assets
cultivés
Inventories of work-in-progress on cultivated
assets consist of livestock raised for products
yielded only on slaughter, such as fowl and fish
raised commercially, trees and other vegetation
yielding once-only products on destruction and
immature cultivated assets yielding repeat
products
Source: Institutional Investors Statistical
Yearbook, 2000 edition, Annex III, Glossary
Source: (AN.1221) – Annex to chapter XIII and
ESA Annex 7.1
Investment
expenditure on
infrastructure (for
inland waterways
transport)
Expenditure on new construction and extension of
existing infrastructure, including reconstruction,
renewal and major repairs.
Inverse correlation
Corrélation négative
See Correlation coefficient
See also: Correlation coefficient
Inverse probability
Probabilité inverse
The probability approach which endeavours to
reason from observed events to the probabilities of
the hypotheses which may explain them, as
distinct from direct probability, which reasons
deductively from given probabilities to the
probabilities of contingent events.
Context: Expenditure on locks is included.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: The word ―inverse‖ usually means inverse
in some logical relationship but is sometimes used
in the sense of ―prior in time‖. For example, in
connection with the analysis of stochastic
processes, it is sometimes desirable to consider
the past history of a system rather than its future
development. The past probabilities of transition
which have given rise to the present state are thus
sometimes called ―inverse‖. This usage is
comparatively rare and not to be recommended.
Investment
expenditure on
infrastructure (for sea
transport)
Expenditure on new construction, extension of
existing infrastructure, including reconstruction,
renewal and major repairs.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: Direct probability
Inverse sampling
Échantillonnage
binomial inverse
A method of sampling which requires that drawings
at random shall be continued until certain specified
conditions dependent on the results of those
drawings have been fulfilled, e.g. until a given
Investment
expenditure on
infrastructure (of
422
railways)
Expenditure on new construction and extension of
existing infrastructure, including reconstruction,
renewal and major repairs of infrastructure.
waterways transport)
Expenditure on purchase of vessels.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Infrastructure includes land, permanent way
constructions, buildings, bridges and tunnels, as
well as immovable fixtures, fittings and
installations connected with them (signalling,
telecommunications, catenaries, electricity substations, etc.) as opposed to rolling stock.
Investment
expenditure on
vessels (for sea
transport)
Expenditure on purchase of vessels.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Expenditures on major structural
alterations and major repairs, including
replacement of major items such as engines or
"jumboizing" are included.
Investment
expenditure on
infrastructure (on oil
pipeline transport)
Expenditure on new construction, extension of
existing infrastructure, including reconstruction,
renewal and major repairs.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Expenditure on pumping facilities is
included.
Investment
expenditures on
rolling stock
Expenditure for purchase
vehicles.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Investment
expenditure on road
vehicles
Expenditure on purchase
Dépenses
d'investissement dans
le matériel roulant
of the new railway
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Dépense
d'investissement en
véhicules routiers
of road vehicles.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Investment funds
Investment funds are institutional units, excluding
pension funds, that consolidate investor funds for
the purpose of acquiring financial assets. Examples
are mutual funds, including money market funds,
investment trusts, unit trusts, and other collective
investment units. Investors usually purchase
shares in the fund that represent a fixed proportion
of the fund.
Investment
expenditure on roads
Dépense
d'investissement en
routes
Expenditure on new construction and extension of
existing roads, including reconstruction, renewal
and major repairs.
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Investment grants
Investment
expenditure on
vessels (for inland
Source: SNA 10.137
Aides à
l‟investissement
Investment grants consist of capital transfers in
cash or in kind made by governments to other
resident or non-resident institutional units to
finance all or part of the costs of their acquiring
fixed assets
423
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
A share of a company bound by a trust deed,
formed to invest in specific types of securities.
Shares in an investment trust can usually be
bought and sold only through the stock exchange.
Investment in
knowledge
Investment in knowledge is defined as the sum of
expenditures in research and development (R&D),
on total higher education (public and private) and
on software.
Sometimes referred to as a ―closed-end‖ fund.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Context: Investment in this context has a broader
connotation than its usual meaning in economic
statistics. It includes current expenditures, such as
on education and R&D, as well as capital outlays,
such as purchases of software and construction of
school buildings.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Invisible
underemployment
Invisible underemployment refers to individuals
who are working in jobs where their skills are not
adequately utilised.
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD Factbook: 2005,
OECD, Paris, p. 118
Investment income
Investment income (property income in the 1993
System of National Accounts) covers income
derived from a resident entity's ownership of
foreign financial assets. The most common types of
investment income are income on equity
(dividends) and income on debt (interest).
Context: By its very nature Invisible
underemployment is difficult to measure. [OECD
Employment Outlook, July 1995, page 45]
In the Resolution Concerning the measurement of
underemployment and inadequate employment
situations adopted by the 16th International
Conference of Labour Statisticians in October 1998
recommendations concerning the measurement of
underemployment are limited to time-related
underemployment.
Source: BPM para. 274
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Source: International Labour Organisation (ILO)
Resolution Concerning statistics of economically
active population, employment, unemployment
and underemployment, adopted by the 13th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians
(October 1982)
See also: Property income
Investment pools
Investment pools are institutional units that are
organized financial arrangements, excluding
pension funds, that consolidate Other Financial
Intermediaries investor funds for the purpose of
acquiring financial assets.
See also: Time related underemployment,
Underemployment, Visible underemployment
Invoiced value added TVA facturée
tax (VAT)
Invoiced value added tax (VAT) is the VAT payable
on the sales of a producer; it is shown separately
on the invoice which the producer presents to the
purchaser
Examples are mutual funds, investment trusts, unit
trusts, and other collective investment units.
Investors usually purchase shares representing
fixed proportions of the fund.
Context: The liquidity of investment pools can vary
considerably. In many countries, investment pools
are illiquid or have limited liquidity. In others,
shares issued by investment pools are as (or
nearly as) liquid as deposits and other liabilities
issued by depository corporations. If the liabilities
of liquid investment pools are included in broad
money, they should be classified as other
depository corporations
Source: SNA 6.209
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Involuntary part-time
work
Involuntary part-time work comprises three
groups: i) individuals who usually work full-time
but who are working part-time because of
economic slack; ii) individuals who usually work
part-time but are working fewer hours in their
part-time jobs because of economic slack; and iii)
those working part-time because full-time work
could not be found
Source: Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual,
IMF, Washington, 2000, para. 100
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/mfs/manual/i
ndex.htm
Investment trust
share
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
424
Iron, pig iron and crude steel refers to various
mineral aggregates from which the metal is
obtained by the conversion of various iron ores by
reduction either into pig iron, in blast furnaces or
electric furnaces, or into a spongy form (sponge
iron) or into lumps by various direct reduction
processes. Iron ore is measured by the weight of
the ore and may contain varying concentrations of
metal.
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
See also: Part-time employees, number of Eurostat, Part-time employment/work
Inward Foreign
Affiliates Trade in
Services (FATS)
See Foreign Affiliates Trade in Services (FATS)
Comprises:
See also: Foreign Affiliates Trade in Services
(FATS)
- iron ores and concentrates, other than roasted
iron pyrites (Central Product Classification (CPC)
Group 141) ; and
Inward investment
Inward investment refers to direct investment in
the reporting economy
- basic iron and steel (CPC Group 411)
Source: Central Product Classification (CPC).
Version 1.0. United Nations, New York, 1998,
Series M, No. 77, Ver. 1.0
Source: Report on the Survey of Implementation
of Implementation of Methodological Standards for
Direct Investment – IMF, OECD, March 2000 –
Appendix II: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/bopage/pdf/mar2000.
pdf
Irradiation
Irradiation
Irradiation is the exposure to radiation of
wavelengths shorter than those of light (gamma,
X- ray, or ultraviolet) for medical purposes or the
destruction of bacteria in milk or other food
Ionosphere
Ionosphère
The ionosphere is the layer of the upper
atmosphere extending upwards from about 80
kilometres above the earth‘s surface in which
atoms tend to be ionized by incoming solar
radiation
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Irregular component
of a time series
The irregular component of a time series is the
residual time series after the trend-cycle and the
seasonal components (including calendar effects)
have been removed. It corresponds to the high
frequency fluctuations of the series.
IOUTO
International Union of Official Travel Organizations
Context: The irregular component results from
short term fluctuations in a series which are not
systematic and in some instances not predictable,
e.g. uncharacteristic weather patterns. Some
irregular effects can however be expected in
advance, e.g. changes in value added tax.
IP
See Internet protocol
See also: Internet protocol (IP)
IPC
International Patent Classification
In a highly irregular series, these fluctuations can
dominate movements, which will mask the trend
and seasonality. (ABS)
IRBD
See International Bank for Reconstruction and
Development
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
4: Guidelines for the reporting of different forms of
data
See also: International Bank for Reconstruction
and Development (IBRD)
IRDI
See International registration data identifier
Irregularities
Defined in Article 1, Paragraph 2 in the horizontal
Council regulation on the protection of the
Communities‘ financial interests (2988/95) as
following:
See also: International registration data identifier
(IRDI)
Iron, pig iron and
crude steel
―Irregularity‖ shall mean any infringement of a
provision of a Community law resulting from an act
425
or omission by an economic operator, which has,
or would have, the effect of prejudicing the general
budget of the Communities or budgets managed
by them, either by reducing or losing revenue
accruing from own resources collected directly on
behalf of the Communities, or by an unjustified
item of expenditure.
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
See also: International Standard Classification of
Education (ISCED).
ISCED
See International Standard Classification of
Education.
ISCO
See International Standard Classification of
Occupations (ISCO)
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
See also: International Standard Classification of
Occupations (ISCO)
Irreversibility (of
Irreversibilité (des
environmental
dommages subis par
damage)
l‟environnement)
Irreversibility (of environmental damage) refers to
the permanent loss of environmental assets or
environmental quality, requiring preventive action
rather than restoration or clean—up
ISDN
See Integrated services digital network
See also: Integrated Services Digital Network
(ISDN)
ISI
See International Statistical Institute
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: International Statistical Institute (ISI)
ISIC
CITI
ISIC is the United Nations International Standard
Industrial Classification of All Economic Activities.
This classification is the international standard for
the classification of productive economic activities.
The main purpose is to provide a standard set of
economic activities so that entities can be
classified according to the activity they carry out.
Irrevocable exchange
rates
The irrevocable exchange rates for the countries in
the Euro area are the fixed exchange rates against
the euro for each of the eleven countries in the
area as at 1 January 1999. These countries and
the exchange rates are:
-
The hierarchical structure of the classification
comprises: - Tabulation Categories – one letter
alpha code A to Q; - Divisions – two-digit codes; Groups – three-digit codes; - Classes – four-digit
codes The third revision of ISIC is used in the 1993
SNA
Austria – 13.7603
Belgium – 40.3399
Finland – 94573
France – 6.55957
Germany – 1.95583
Ireland – 0.787564
Italy – 1936.27
Luxembourg – 40.3399
Netherlands – 2.20371
Portugal – 200.482
Spain – 166.386
Context: The current version of ISIC (ISIC Rev.4)
was approved by the United Nations Statistics
Commission (UNSC) in 2006 and has been posted
on the United Nations Statistical Division's website.
The irrevocable exchange for Greece, which
subsequently joined the Euro area, at 1 January
2001 is 340.75
Source: International Standard Industrial
Classification of all Economic Activities, Rev. 3,
United Nations, New York, 1990, Statistical Papers
Series M, No. 4 Rev. 3
The irrevocable exchange for Slovenia, which
subsequently joined the Euro area, at 1 January
2007 is 239.640
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
Source: OECD Main Economic Indicators, OECD,
Paris, monthly, Part 4 (Exchange Rates
Islamic banking
Activities of Islamic financial institutions differ from
those of standard commercial depository
corporations in that predetermined interest on
financial transactions is prohibited. The
nonpayment of interest on liabilities does not in
itself preclude instruments from being classified as
external debt.
Irrigation
Irrigation
Irrigation is the artificial application of water to
land to assist in the growing of crops and pastures.
It is carried out by spraying water under pressure
(spray irrigation) or by pumping water onto the
land (flood irrigation)
Context: The classification of Islamic banking
instruments as external debt, or not, can be
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
426
- re-use and standardization of data over time,
space, and applications
- harmonization and standardization of data within
an organization and across organizations
- management of the components of data
- re-use of the components of data
determined by the following general guidance.
- Islamic instruments—deposits include
conventional and transferable deposits, such as
Amanah and Qardhasan deposits—as well as
various investment participation certificates that
are not investments in the permanent capital of a
financial institution and do not have the
characteristics of tradable securities.
ISO/IEC 11179 is six part standard:
Part 1 - Framework - Contains an overview of the
standard and describes the basic concepts
Part 2 - Classification - Describes how to manage a
classification scheme in a metadata registry
Part 3 - Registry metamodel and basic attributes Provides the basic conceptual model, including the
basic attributes and relationships, for a metadata
registry
Part 4 - Formulation of data definitions - Rules and
guidelines for forming quality definitions for data
elements and their components
Part 5 - Naming and identification principles Describes how to form conventions for naming
data elements and their components
Part 6 - Registration - Specifies the roles and
requirements for the registration process in an
ISO/IEC 11179 metadata registry.
- Islamic instruments—debt securities consist of
various investment participation certificates that
have the characteristics of tradable securities and
are not permanent capital of an institutional unit.
Included in this category are the most tradable
investment certificates recorded as liabilities of a
financial corporation.
- Islamic instruments—loans cover arrangements
in which a financial institution makes prepayments
for clients, finances ventures or trade, or supplies
working capital to clients. The arrangements may
include short-term or other partnerships in which a
financial institution is not making permanent,
equity-type investments.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Isoglucose
Isoglucose is a starch-based fructose sweetener,
produced by the action of glucose isomerase
enzyme on dextrose. This isomerisation process
can be used to produce glucose/fructose blends
containing up to 42% fructose. Application of a
further process can raise the fructose content to
55%. Where the fructose content is 42%,
isoglucose is equivalent in sweetness to sugar.
Isoglucose production in the European Union is
covered by the sugar regime and subject to a
production quota.
Islamic Financial
Services Board
Established in Malaysia in November 2002, it is an
association of central banks and monetary
authorities, as well as other institutions, that are
responsible for the regulation and supervision of
the Islamic financial services industry.
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Source: OECD, 2004, OECD Agricultural Outlook:
2004-2013, OECD, Paris, Glossary
ISO
See International Organisation for Standardisation
Isometric chart
Diagramme
isométrique
A chart which attempts to depict three-dimensional
material on a plane. It is a form of axonometric
chart where the distances on the three axes are
measured on an equal scale. There are various
conventional combinations for the angles at which
two out of three axes are drawn vis-à-vis the
horizontal.
See also: International Organisation for
Standardisation (ISO)
ISO / IEC 11179
The International Standard ISO/IEC 11179 on
metadata registries addresses the semantics of
data, the representation of data, and the
registration of the descriptions of data. ISO/IEC
11179 specifies the kind and quality of metadata
necessary to describe data, and it specifies the
management and administration of that metadata
in a metadata registry (MDR).
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Context: The purposes of the ISO/IEC 11179
standard are to promote the following:
Isotype method
See Pictogram
- standard description of data
- common understanding of data across
organizational elements and between organizations
See also: Pictogram
427
ISSN
International Standard Serial Number
rotation
The deliberate replacement of a sampled product,
or item, for which prices are being collected, by
another product before the replaced product has
disappeared from the market or individual
establishment. It is designed to keep the sample of
products up to date and reduce the need for forced
replacements caused by the disappearance of
products.
Issue-based fora
See Discussion forum
See also: Discussion forum
ISWG
Inter Secretariat Working Group
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Item (in price indices)
An individual good or service in the sample of
products selected for pricing.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Item response rate
The ratio of the number of eligible units responding
to an item to the number of responding units
eligible to have responded to the item.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: Madow, W., Nisselson, H., and Olkin, I.,
"Incomplete Data in Sample Surveys", Academic
Press, New York, 1983
Item analysis
In psychological testing, analysis based on the
responses to individual questions is referred to as
an item analysis.
See also: Non-response, Non-response rate,
Refusal rate
Item specification
See Product specification
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Product specification
Item substitution
The replacement of a sampled product, or item, by
a new product.
Item coverage MetaStore
Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types refers to
the range of items covered by the data.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Item list
See Basket
Items
See Products
See also: Basket
See also: Products
Item non-response
The type of nonresponse in which some questions,
but not all, are answered for a particular unit.
ITR
Implicit tax rate
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
ITRS
See International transactions reporting system
See also: International transactions reporting
system (ITRS)
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
ITS
International trade statistics
See also: Non-response
Item or product
428
ITU
See International Telecommunication Union (ITU)
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
See also: International Telecommunication Union
(ITU)
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
IUCN
See International Union for Conservation of Nature
(IUCN)
See also: International Union for Conservation of
Nature (IUCN)
Job losers
Job losers are workers who permanently lost a
(stable or temporary) job in the last few years and
who are currently unemployed or out of the labour
force.
Java
A programming language that allows the creation
of software packages that can run on multiple
platforms (i.e. operating systems). Java programs,
called aplets, can be sent or retrieved through the
Internet to be executed on a remote computer.
Job losers are examined as a stock, whose
demographic characteristics are identified,
together with the last job held and the length of
time without a job.
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, July 1990,
Chapter 2, Displacement and Job Loss, page 43
See also: Displaced workers
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Job loss
Job loss refers to the disappearance of jobs
because of fundamental structural economic
changes as distinct from transient fluctuations in
demand. These structural changes include
technological innovation, changes in the pattern of
international trade, shifts in the location of
activities, and changes in the structure of
employment and organisation within enterprises.
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, July 1990,
Chapter 2, Displacement and Job Loss, page 43
Jet fuel
This comprises both gasoline and kerosene type jet
fuels meeting specifications for use in aviation
turbine power units.
Job tenure
Job tenure is typically measured by the length of
time workers have been in their current job or with
their current employer, and so refers to continuing
spells of employment rather than to completed
spells.
J-curve effect
J-curve effect is the expression used to describe
the initial deterioration and subsequent
improvement of the trade balance following a
depreciation of the exchange rate
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, June 2001,
Chapter 3, The Characteristics and quality of
Service Jobs, page 93
Jevons price index
A price index defined as the unweighted geometric
average of the current to base period price
relatives. It is an elementary index.
See also: Job turnover
Job turnover
Job turnover, at the level of an individual
establishment or firm, is simply the net change in
employment between two points in time – the total
number of jobs created less the number of jobs
which have disappeared.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
It does not include job vacancies which remain
unfilled and jobs that begin and end over the
interval of observation, which is most often one
year.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Context: Comparing employment levels at two
points in time permits establishments or firms to
be classified into four groups:
Job description
A set of tasks or activities to be performed by an
individual which delimits the function of the job (or
position) occupied by that individual.
i. opening, i.e. those with no employment at the
beginning and employment at the end;
429
iii. expanding, i.e. those with employment in both
periods, but at a higher level at the end;
attachment to their job‘ in the form, for instance,
of ‗an assurance of return to work or an agreement
as to the date of return‘. Such an understanding
between an employer and a person on lay-off or
away on training is not counted as a job in the
system
iv. contracting, i.e. those with employment in both
periods , but at a lower level at the end.
Source: .
ESA [11.22-23]
ii. closing, i.e. those with employment recorded at
the beginning and none at the end;
Summing net employment changes over opening
and expanding establishments gives job gains,
while the sum of employment declines from closing
and contracting establishments gives job losses.
The balance of job gains and job losses is then job
turnover.
See also: Jobs – SNA
Jobs Ŕ SNA
Emplois (contrats) SCN
Jobs are contracts (explicit or implicit) between a
person and an institutional unit to perform work in
return for compensation (or mixed income) for a
defined period or until further notice
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, July 1996,
Chapter 5, Employment adjustment, workers and
unemployment, page 165
Source: SNA 15.102 [17.8]
See also: Economy-wide job turnover rate, Job
tenure, Labour turnover
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Job-related continuing
education and training
Job-related continuing education and training
refers to all organised, systematic education and
training activities in which people take part in
order to obtain knowledge and/or learn new skills
for a current or a future job, to increase earnings,
to improve job and/or career opportunities in a
current or another field and generally to improve
their opportunities for advancement and
promotion.
See also: Jobs – ESA, Occupation – ILO
Join (in relational
database
management
systems)
In relational database management systems, the
process of attaching values from a database table
to another table based on linking a foreign key to
its primary instance in the external table.
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Jobs Ŕ ESA
Emplois (contrats) SEC
A job is defined as an explicit or implicit contract
(relating to the provision of labour input, not to
supplying output of a good or service) between a
person and a resident institutional unit to perform
work (activities which contribute to the production
of goods or services within the production
boundary) in return for compensation (including
mixed income of self-employed persons) for a
defined period or until further notice.
Joint enterprise
Enterprise commune
(fishing)
The term joint enterprise is a technical term
primarily used in the context of bilateral fishing
agreements between the European Community and
third countries. Similar to a joint ventures, joint
enterprises are a combination of interests between
Community vessel owners and fisheries interests in
the third countries
Context: In that definition, both employee and
self-employment jobs are covered: that is, an
employee job if the person belongs to another
institutional unit than the employer and a selfemployment job if the person belongs to the same
institutional unit as the employer.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Joint monopoly profits
See Joint profit maximisation
The concept of jobs differs from the concept of
employment:
See also: Joint profit maximisation
— It includes second, third, etc. jobs of the same
person. Those second, third, etc. jobs of a person
may either successively follow one another within
the reference period (usually, a week) or, as when
someone has an evening job as well as a daytime
job, run in parallel.
Joint OECD-Eurostat
Purchasing Power
Parity (PPP)
Programme
Under the Joint OECD-Eurostat Purchasing Power
Parity (PPP) Programme, the OECD and Eurostat
share the responsibility for calculating PPPs.
Broadly, Eurostat handles the calculations for the
European Union (EU) countries and for the EU
— On the other hand, it excludes persons
temporarily not at work but who have a ‗formal
430
―Candidate countries‖. The OECD deals with the
non- European OECD Member countries and the
other non- EU countries such as Russia, China,
Ukraine, etc, which are included in the PPP
Programme
against the potential benefits of pooling risks,
sharing capital costs and diffusing knowledge. At
present there is considerable debate in many
countries over the degree to which research joint
ventures should be subject to competition law.
Source: OECD National accounts, Purchasing
Power Parities website
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/faq/0,2583,en_2649_34357_
1799281_1_1_1_1,00.html
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Joint products
Produits liés
Joint products refers to the situation when two or
more products are produced simultaneously by a
single productive activity they are joint products
Joint venture (fishing) Société mixte
The term joint venture is a term that generally
refers to a joint-stock company formed by
combining the capital of one or more firms. This
combination of capital often occurs between firms
in different countries. The combination of capital
often provides opportunities for trade in fisheries
products and trade in fisheries services (e.g.,
fishing vessels)
Source: SNA 5.43 [15.19]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Joint profit
maximisation
Joint profit maximization refers to a situation
where members of a cartel, duopoly, oligopoly or
similar market condition engage in pricing- output
decisions designed to maximize the groups' profits
as a whole. In essence, the member firms seek to
act as a monopoly.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Joule
Joule
Unit of measurement of energy consumption :
1 terajoule = 10 12 Joule = 2,78 x 10 5 kWh),
1 terajoule = 23.88459 TOE
Context: Note should be made that joint profit
maximization does not necessarily entail collusion
or an agreement among firms. The firms may
independently adopt price-output strategies which
take into account rival firms' reactions and thereby
produce joint profit maximization.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
JPEG
Joint Photgraphic Experts Group (a standardised
image compression technique).
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Judgement sample
Échantillon au jugé
In the terminology of Deming (1947) a judgement
sample is, in general, any sample which is not a
probability sample.
Joint venture
A joint venture is an association of firms or
individuals formed to undertake a specific business
project. It is similar to a partnership, but limited to
a specific project (such as producing a specific
product or doing research in a specific area).
Context: The dichotomy is not, perhaps, perfect;
for example, the visible stars of the sky are not a
―probability sample‖ of the matter in the universe,
nor does it appear proper to describe them as a
―judgement sample‖. It seems best to confine this
term to the case where some element of human
judgement enters directly into the selection of the
sample.
Context: Joint ventures can become an issue for
competition policy when they are established by
competing firms. Joint ventures are usually
justified on the grounds that the specific project is
risky and requires large amounts of capital. Thus,
joint ventures are common in resource extraction
industries where capital costs are high and where
the possibility of failure is also high. Joint ventures
are now becoming more prevalent in the
development of new technologies.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
In terms of competition policy, the problem is to
weigh the potential reduction in competition
431
See also: Non-probability sampling, Purposive
sample, Quota sample
Association (IATA).
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Judicial (legal)
separation
A judicial (legal) separation is the disunion of
married persons according to the laws of each
country, without conferring on the parties the right
to remarriage
Key
A set of key variables.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Juridical person
A juridical person, in the General Agreement on
Trade in Services (GATS), means any legal entity
duly constituted or otherwise organised under
applicable law, whether for profit or otherwise, and
whether privately-owned or governmentallyowned, including any corporation, trust,
partnership, joint venture, sole proprietorship or
association.
Key (time series or
sibling group)
The key uniquely defines a time series or sibling
group within a data set.
Context: Every time series takes a value for every
dimension of the key family to which the series
belongs. The meaning attached to the value of one
dimension is not permitted to depend upon the
values of any other dimensions.
Source: Manual on Statistics of International Trade
in Services, Eurostat, IMF, OECD, UN, UNCTAD,
WTO, 2002 – Annex II, Glossary
Source: European Central Bank (ECB), Bank for
International Settlement (BIS), Eurostat,
International Monetary Fund (IMF), Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD), "GESMES/TS User Guide", Release 3.00,
February, 2003; unpublished on paper
Hyperlink:
http://www1.oecd.org/std/TIS_Dec2000_Meeting/
DOCS/SERV2000_2e.pdf
Kalman filter
Filtre de Kalman
An iterative technique of dynamic linear modelling,
used mainly for estimating the parameters of
autoregressive moving-average time series models
with Gaussian residuals
Hyperlink:
http://www.sdmx.org/General/Projects.htm
See also: Definition, structural, Dimension
(dimensionality), GESMES TS, Key structure,
Sibling group, Statistical concept, Time series
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Key family
See Data structure definition
See also: Data structure definition
Key statistical
concepts used MetaStore
A statistical concept is a statistical characteristic of
a time series or an observation.
Kerosene
Kerosene comprises refined petroleum distillate
intermediate in volatility between gasoline and
gas/diesel oil. It is a medium oil distilling between
150 degrees C and 300 degrees C.
Context: Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types
this item should define key statistical concepts
included in the domain of study.
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
Kerosene type jet fuel
This is medium distillate used for aviation turbine
power units.
See also: Statistical concept
Key structure
A key structure is an ordered set of coded
statistical concepts whose combination of values
(dimension values) uniquely identifies each time
series within a data set.
It has the same distillation characteristics and flash
point as kerosene (between 150 degrees C and
300 degrees C but not generally above 250
degrees C). In addition, it has particular
specifications (such as freezing point) which are
established by the International Air Traffic
Source: European Central Bank (ECB), Bank for
432
International Settlement (BIS), Eurostat,
International Monetary Fund (IMF), Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD), "GESMES/TS User Guide", Release 3.00,
February, 2003; unpublished on paper
Kind-of-activity unit - Unité d‟activité
SNA
économique Ŕ SCN
A kind-of-activity unit is an enterprise, or a part of
an enterprise, which engages in only one kind of
(non-ancillary) productive activity or in which the
principal productive activity accounts for most of
the value added.
Hyperlink:
http://www.sdmx.org/Data/GesmesTS_rel3.pdf
Source: SNA 5.19
See also: Dimension (dimensionality), GESMES TS,
Key (time series or sibling group), Key family,
Statistical concept
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Key variable
A variable in common between two datasets, which
may therefore be used for linking records between
them. A key variable can either be a formal
identifier or a quasiidentifier.
See also: Kind-of-activity unit – ISIC Rev. 3, Kindof-activity unit –Eurostat, Local kind of activity
unit, Local unit - SNA
Kind-of-activity unit Ŕ Unité d‟activité
Eurostat
économique Ŕ
Eurostat
The kind of activity unit (KAU) groups all the parts
of an enterprise contributing to the performance of
an activity at class level (4- digits) of NACE Rev. 1
and corresponds to one or more operational
subdivisions of the enterprise. The enterprise's
information system must be capable of indicating
or calculating for each KAU at least the production
value, intermediate consumption, manpower costs,
the operating surplus and employment and gross
fixed capital formation
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Keyword
A keyword is one or more significant words used
for retrieval of data elements.
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179,
Part 1, Framework for the specification and
standardization of data elements, 1999
See also: Data element, ISO / IEC 11179
Source: Council Regulation (EEC), No. 696/93,
Section III D of 15.03.1993 on the statistical units
for the observation and analysis of the production
system in the Community
KILM
Refers to the International Labour Organisation‘s
Key Indicators of the Labour Market
See also: Kind of activity unit - SNA, Kind-ofactivity unit – ISIC Rev. 3, Local kind of activity
unit, Local unit – Eurostat
Kitchen
Cuisine
A kitchen is defined as a space that conforms in all
respects to the criteria for a room and is equipped
for the preparation of the principal meals of the
day and intended primarily for that purpose
Kilometre of standard
river
Standardised unit of account representing a river
stretch of one kilometre with a water flow of one
cubic metre of water per second.
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.393
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.128
See also: Room – UN
KLEMS multi-factor
productivity
KLEMS multi-factor productivity (MFP) is a
productivity measure that relates gross output to
primary (capital and labour) and intermediate
inputs (energy, other intermediate goods,
services)
Kind-of-activity unit Ŕ Unité d‟activité
ISIC Rev. 3
économique Ŕ CITI
Rév. 3
A kind-of-activity unit is an enterprise, or a part of
an enterprise, which engages in one kind of
economic activity without being restricted to the
geographic area in which that activity is carried out
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
Source: ISIC Rev. 3, para. 91
See also: Kind of activity unit - SNA, Kind-ofactivity unit –Eurostat, Local kind of activity unit,
Local unit – ISIC Rev. 3
See also: Gross output based MFP
433
Knock-on-effect
Effet d'entraînement
Effects on other variables/sectors derived from
changes in activity in one variable/sector
Knowledge-based
economy
―The knowledge based economy‖ is an expression
coined to describe trends in advanced economies
towards greater dependence on knowledge,
information and high skill levels, and the increasing
need for ready access to all of these by the
business and public sectors.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Context: Knowledge and technology have become
increasingly complex, raising the importance of
links between firms and other organisations as a
way to acquire specialised knowledge. A parallel
economic development has been the growth of
innovation in services in advanced economies.
Knowbot
See Knowledge robot
See also: Knowledge robot
Knowledge
management
Knowledge management involves activities related
to the capture, use and sharing of knowledge by
the organisation. It involves the management both
of external linkages and of knowledge flows within
the enterprise, including methods and procedures
for seeking external knowledge and for
establishing closer relationships with other
enterprises (suppliers, competitors), customers or
research institutions. In addition to practices for
gaining new knowledge, knowledge management
involves methods for sharing and using knowledge,
including establishing value systems for sharing
knowledge and practices for codifying routines.
Source: OECD, 2005, ―The Measurement of
Scientific and Technological Activities: Guidelines
for Collecting and Interpreting Innovation Data:
Oslo Manual, Third Edition‖ prepared by the
Working Party of National Experts on Scientific and
Technology Indicators, OECD, Paris, para. 71
Kurtosis
Aplatissement
A term used to describe the extent to which a
unimodal frequency curve is ―peaked‖; that is to
say, the extent of the relative steepness of ascent
in the neighbourhood of the mode. The term was
introduced by Karl Pearson in 1906.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Context: Examples of knowledge management
practices aimed at improving the internal flow and
use of information are:
- Databases of worker ―best practices‖.
- Regular education or training programmes.
Kyoto Convention
The International Convention on the simplification
and harmonization of Customs procedures (Kyoto
Convention) was signed at Kyoto in May 1973 and
entered into force in 1974. The Convention
discussed the universal harmonisation of customs
procedures, other than classification and valuation.
- Informal and formal work teams that promote
worker communication and interaction.
- Integration of activities, which promotes
interaction among employees from different areas,
for example engineers and production workers.
Source: OECD, 2005, ―The Measurement of
Scientific and Technological Activities: Guidelines
for Collecting and Interpreting Innovation Data:
Oslo Manual, Third Edition‖ prepared by the
Working Party of National Experts on Scientific and
Technology Indicators, OECD, Paris, para. 303
The World Customs Organization (WCO) adopted
the revised Convention in June 1999 reflecting
current and expected future demands of
international trade.
Source: International Merchandise Trade,
Australia, Concepts, Sources and Methods,
Glossary, Australian Bureau of Statistics
Knowledge robot
Intelligent agent gathering information on the
Internet; more specific than search engines.
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/0/6B7D
040A646F264ECA256A5B001BD777?Open&Highlig
ht=0,warehouse
Source: Adapting new technologies to census
operations, Arij Dekker, Symposium on Global
Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing
Censuses: Mid-Decade Assessment and Future
Prospects, Statistics Division, Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations
Secretariat New York, 7-10 August 2001, Glossary
Labour cost Ŕ Eurostat Coûts du travail Eurostat
Labour cost is defined as the total expenditure
borne by employers in order to employ workers, a
concept which has been adopted in the Community
framework and complies broadly with the
international definition of the International
Conference of Labour Statisticians (Geneva, 1966).
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/docs/sym
posium_06.htm#_Toc8547016
434
ndex.htm
Context: Labour costs include the direct costs
linked to remuneration for work carried out such as
direct remuneration, bonuses and ex gratia
payments not paid at each pay period, payments
for days not worked, severance pay, benefits in
kind. They also include indirect costs linked to
employees, independently of the remuneration
paid by the employer, such as collectively agreed,
contractual and voluntary social security
contributions, direct social benefits, vocational
training costs, other social expenditure (cultural
and medical services, transport costs, etc.), and
taxes relating to employment regarded as labour
costs, less any subsidies received
See also: Labour cost – Eurostat, Labour price
index
Labour dispute
A labour dispute is a state of disagreement over a
particular issue or group of issues over which there
is conflict between workers and employers, or
about which grievance is expressed by workers or
employers, or about which workers or employers
support other workers or employers in their
demands or grievances.
Source: International Labour Organisation (ILO)
Resolution Concerning Statistics of Strikes,
Lockouts and other Action Due to Labour Disputes
(January 1993), page 2-3
Source: Community Survey of Labour Costs,
Methods and Definitions, Eurostat, 1992, P. 8
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
See also: Labour cost – ILO
Labour cost Ŕ ILO
Coûts du travail - BIT
For the purpose of labour cost statistics, labour
cost is the cost incurred by the employer in the
employment of labour.
Labour force
participation rate
See Participation rate
The statistics concept of labour cost comprises
remuneration for work performed, payments in
respect of time paid for but not worked, bonuses
and gratuities, the cost of food, drink and other
payments in kind, cost of workers‘ housing borne
by employers, employers‘ social security
expenditures, cost to the employer for vocational
training, welfare services and miscellaneous items,
such as transport of workers, work clothes and
recruitment, together with taxes regarded as
labour cost
See also: Participation rate
Labour force, total
See Total labour force - ILO
See also: Total labour force – ILO
Labour market
dynamics
Labour market dynamics refers to changes in jobs
that take place as well as entries into and
departures from economic activity affected by
hirings, separations and the establishment and
closure of self-employment activities.
Context: Statistics of labour costs are based on the
concept of labour as a cost to an employer rather
than from the perspective of earnings to an
employee. The concept of labour cost is broader
than compensation of employees as it includes
expenditure on welfare services, recruitment and
training and other miscellaneous costs including
work clothes and taxes on employment
(International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning Statistics of Labour Cost
Adopted by the 11th International Conference of
Labour Statisticians, October 1966, para. 3)
Context: The statistical secretariats of Eurostat,
OECD and the ILO have co-operated in supporting
national efforts to develop relevant statistics.
Eurostat‘s work has focused on the use of
retrospective questions in the European Labour
Force Survey (ELFS) as well as on the smaller and
more experimental European Community
Household panel (ECHP).
The level and structure of labour costs and the way
they change over time can play a central role in
wage negotiations or in implementing and
assessing employment, wages and other social
policies. Information on labour cost per unit of
labour input (that is, per time unit) is particularly
useful in the analysis of certain industrial
problems, as well as in the field of international
economic co-operation, international trade and
competitiveness (Key Indicators of the Labour
Market (KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 475)
OECD work has focused on the problems and
possibilities of estimating flows either from the
rotation pattern of most labour force surveys (i.e.
the fact that the same respondents are interviewed
in several survey rounds), or from information
about the length of the current periods of
employment.
The most recent results from up to 18 OECD
countries were presented to the OECD Working
Party on Employment and Unemployment Statistics
in April 2001.
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning Statistics of Labour Cost
Adopted by the 11th International Conference of
Labour Statisticians, October 1966, para. 3
Work in the ILO has focused on the possibility of
finding a simple way of describing the dynamic
labour experience of individuals over a particular
reference period (e.g. one year).
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
435
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 692
as being an instrument to measure changes in
average hourly labour costs.
See also: Labour market flows
Context: The aim of an LPI therefore is to provide
a pure price index. In common with other price
indices the ―purity‖ of an LPI depends on the
success in holding quantity and quality changes in
the labour input constant. These changes that may
occur from one period to another comprise a
number of influences: including movement of
employees from one sector to another (e.g.
manufacturing to services), shifts from unskilled to
skilled employment, from full-time to part-time
employment. Longer-term changes can occur when
the workforce increases skill level.
Labour market flows
Statistics on labour market flows describe the
labour market experience of individuals over the
reference period, that is, how many persons have
moved into and out of jobs and into and out of
being unemployed or outside the labour market,
rather than just changes in the number of persons
in these situations and in the labour force
characteristics of groups.
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 689
Labour cost indices on the other hand measure
changes in average hourly labour costs, taking into
account not only price changes but also changes in
the composition and the characteristics of the
labour input. In an LPI therefore, even if there are
no changes in wages or salaries or indirect costs
attached to individual jobs, the labour cost index
can increase or decrease because, for example, the
share of overtime hours may have increased or the
share of low paid workers in a certain industry
increased.
See also: Labour market dynamics
Labour market
training
Labour market training measures are those
undertaken for reasons of labour market policy,
other than special programmes for youth and the
disabled. Expenditures include both course costs
and subsistence allowances to trainees, when such
are paid. Subsidies to employers for enterprise
training are also included, but not employer‘s own
expenses
There is variation in the approaches used in
Australia, New Zealand and the United States in
keeping quantity and quality changes in labour
input constant.
Source: Definitions of the Standardised categories
and Sub-categories of Labour Market Programmes,
OECD, 2001
There is also no current international standard
defining the component items of the price of labour
services to be included in LPIs. All three countries
include components of wages and salaries though
there are differences in the inclusion or exclusion
of non-wage benefits costs. Although the indices
cover a large portion of the components that make
up the total price of labour services they cannot be
equated with the components of labour costs as
defined by the International Labour Organisation.
Labour markets
See Functional labour markets
See also: Functional labour markets
Labour price index
There is currently no international definition of a
labour price index (LPI) or international standard
for the compilation of such indicators.
Source: "A Review of concepts and national
experiences on wages, labour cost and labour price
statistics", an unpublished paper prepared for a
meeting of the OECD Working Party on
Employment and Unemployment Statistics, June
2002
The United States Bureau of Labour Statistics
(BLS) defines a labour price index (their
Employment Cost Index) as an index designed to
measure changes in the hourly compensation of a
fixed ―basket of jobs‖.
See also: Labour cost – ILO
In that sense LPIs are similar to other price indices
such as the consumer price index (CPI) which
measures the price changes in a fixed basket of
consumer goods. The focus of an LPI is to measure
changes in the price of labour, defined as
compensation per employee hour worked.
Labour productivity
Labour productivity is defined as output per unit of
labour input.
The Australian Bureau of Statistics similarly defines
an LPI (their Wage Cost Index) as an index that
measures changes over time in wage and salary
cost for employee jobs unaffected by changes in
the quality or quantity of worked performed.
Changes in wages and salaries resulting from
changes in the composition of the labour market
are excluded from LPI movements.
Economic growth in an economy or a sector can be
ascribed either to increased employment or to
more effective work by those who are employed.
The latter can be described through statistics on
labour productivity. The driving forces behind
improvements in labour productivity are the
accumulation of machinery and equipment,
improvements in organisation as well as physical
and institutional infrastructures, improved health
and skills of workers (―human capital‖) and the
generation of new technology.
Context: Unit labour costs on the other hand refer
to labour cost per unit of output.
Finally, Eurostat, in its initial work on the
development of an European Union LPI defines it
436
Lag correlation
Corrélation avec
décalage
The correlation between two series where one of
the series has a lag with reference to the other.
Labour productivity estimates can:
- serve to develop and monitor the effects of
labour market policies. For example, high labour
productivity is often associated with high levels or
particular types of human capital, indicating
priorities for specific education and training
policies;
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
- be used to understand the effects of wage
settlements on rates of inflation or to ensure that
such settlements will compensate workers for
realised productivity improvements;
LAN
See Local area network
- contribute to the understanding of how labour
market performance affects living standards.
See also: Local area network (LAN)
Land Ŕ ESA
Terrains - SEC
Land covers the ground, including the soil covering
and any associated surface waters, over which
ownership rights are enforced. Also included are
major improvements that cannot be physically
separated from the land itself.
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 621
See also: Unit labour costs - OECD
Labour turnover
Labour turnover is concerned with movements of
individuals into jobs (hirings) and out of jobs
(separations) over a particular period.
Excluded are any buildings or other structures
situated on it or running through it cultivated
crops, trees and animals subsoil assets
noncultivated biological resources and water
resources below the ground.
Labour turnover is the sum of job turnover, which
relates to the expansion and contraction of
establishments or firms, and the movement of
workers into and out of ongoing jobs in
establishments or firms. Workers leave firms and
firms hire other workers to replace them,
regardless of whether the firm itself is growing or
declining.
Land consists of land underlying buildings and
structures, land under cultivation, recreational land
and associated surface water and other land and
associated surface water
Source: ESA [Annex 7.1]
See also: Land – SNA
Context: The difference between job and labour
turnover can be illustrated as follows: Suppose a
given establishment has 100 people employed at
time t and 110 at t+1. During this period, 10
people have been hired to fill newly created posts.
The job turnover rate, i.e. the net change in
employment is 10%. But, suppose that, during the
same period, 10 individuals left the establishment
and 10 were hired to replace them. Labour
turnover, which concerns the movement of
workers into and out of jobs, is 30% [the sum of
all hirings (20) and separations (10) divided by
initial employment (100)].
Land Ŕ SNA
Terrains - SCN
Land is the ground, including the soil covering and
any associated surface waters, over which
ownership rights are enforced; included are major
improvements that cannot be physically separated
from the land itself but it excludes any buildings or
other structures situated on it or running through
it; cultivated crops, trees and animals; subsoil
assets; non-cultivated biological resources and
water resources below the ground
Source: AN.211 – Annex to chapter XIII [13.54]
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, July 1996,
Chapter 5, Employment adjustment, workers and
unemployment, page 165
See also: Land – ESA, Land classification, Land-use
classification
Land and buildings
Terrains et bâtiments
Land and buildings comprises all land and buildings
located within an economy, except that owned by
foreign governments (such as embassies) are, by
convention, regarded as being owned by residents.
See also: Job turnover
Lag
Décalage
An event occurring at time t+k(k>0) is said to lag
behind event occurring at time t, the extent of the
lag being k. An event occurring k time units before
another may be regarded as having a negative lag.
If an actual owner is a non-resident, the owner is
treated as if the ownership had been transferred to
a resident notional institutional unit that is deemed
to own the land and buildings. The non-resident
has a financial investment in this notional unit,
which is therefore a direct investment enterprise
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms, OECD, 2001 – not published
437
Land conservation concerns the flow of water
resources across agricultural land (which can cause
flooding and landslides) and the loss of soil
sediment from agricultural land into rivers, lakes
and reservoirs
Land and ecosystems
accounts
Assets accounts applied to land and eco-systems.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.309
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Land cover
Land cover reflects the (bio) physical dimension of
the earth‘s surface and corresponds in some
regard to the notion of ecosystems. Typical
examples for land cover categories are built-up
areas, grassland, forests or rivers and lakes.
Land and surface
water
Land and surface water assets are defined as the
areas within the national territory that provide
direct or indirect use benefits (or that may provide
such benefits one day) through the provision of
space for economic and non-economic (for
example recreational) human activities. Land and
surface water assets are sub-divided into five
categories: land underlying buildings and
structures; agricultural land and associated surface
water; wooded land and associated surface water;
major water bodies; and other land.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.322
Land cover change
matrix
The land-cover change matrix cross-tabulates land
cover at two different points in time. It shows how
much of the opening stock of a land cover category
is still the same in the closing stock and the gross
flows between the different categories of land
cover.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.61, EA.2
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.345
Land basic accounts
Basic land accounts relate the use of land and land
cover from an environmental perspective, in terms
of stocks and changes in stocks In particular they
show the changes in land classified to each type of
land cover over a period with identification as to
whether this is due to human or natural processes.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.337
Land degradation
Dégradation des sols
Land degradation is the reduction or loss of the
biological or economic productivity and complexity
of rain—fed cropland, irrigated cropland, or range,
pasture, forest or woodlands resulting from natural
processes, land uses or other human activities and
habitation patterns such as land contamination,
soil erosion and the destruction of the vegetation
cover
Land classification
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Classification des
terres
Land classification refers to land categories,
reflecting quality classes, capability classes or
grade, depending upon the characteristics of the
land and/or its potential for agricultural use
Land diversion
See Land set-aside
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Land set-aside
Land ownership
By convention, land can only be owned by
residents. So if a nonresident purchases land, then
Land conservation
438
a notional resident entity is created on which the
nonresident has a financial claim.
Land under cultivation is land on which agricultural
or horticultural production is carried on for
commercial or subsistence purposes, including, in
principle, land under plantations, orchards and
vineyards
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Source: AN.2112) – Annex to chapter XIII
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Land underlying
buildings and
structures
Terrains supportant
des bâtiments et des
ouvrages de génie
civil
Land underlying buildings and structures is land on
which dwellings, non-residential buildings and
structures are constructed or into which their
foundations are dug, including yards and gardens
deemed an integral part of farm and non-farm
dwellings and access roads to farms
Land reclamation
Régénération des
terres
Land reclamation is the gain of land from the sea,
or wetlands, or other water bodies, and restoration
of productivity or use to lands that have been
degraded by human activities or impaired by
natural phenomena
Source: AN.2111) – Annex to chapter XIII
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Land underlying
buildings and
structures within
urban areas
The SEEA asset classification of land underlying
buildings and structures identifies subcategories:
within urban areas and; outside urban areas. The
definition of an urban area will vary from country
to country, but a working definition is any area
where at the time of the most recent census there
was a population of 1000 or more persons and a
population density of 400 or more persons per
square kilometre.
Land set-aside
Land set-aside, or land diversion refers to the
removal of land from production, usually for supply
control, regional development or environmental
purposes.
Set-aside is sometimes required as a condition for
farmers to receive support payments
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.63, EA 21
See also: Supply control
Land supplementary
accounts
Accounts that differentiate land basic accounts in a
consistent way by more detailed description of
issue oriented aspects like sealing of soil,
partitioning (fragmentation) of land, intensity of
use, biotopes, quality, regional situations, etc.
Land use
Land use is based on the functional dimension of
land for different human purposes or economic
activities. Typical categories for land use are
dwellings, industrial use, transport, recreational
use or nature protection areas.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
paras. 8.336 & 8.356
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.322
Land tenure
Régime foncier
Land tenure is the right to the exclusive occupancy
and use of a specified area of land
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Land classification, Land-use
classification, Multiple land use
Land use by industries
and households
A matrix that cross distributes the national land
according to land use and the users: industries and
households.
Land under cultivation Terrains cultivés
439
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.295 & Figure 8.4
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.341
Land-use
Classifcation des
classification
utilisations des terres
A land—use classification is a classification
providing information on land cover, and the types
of human activity involved in land use. It may also
facilitate the assessment of environmental impacts
on, and potential or alternative uses of, land.
Land use land cover
matrix
A matrix that cross distributes the national land
according to land use and land cover classification,
for a single point in time.
The classification, developed by the Economic
Commission for Europe, consists of seven main
categories:
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
8.339
(a) agricultural land,
(b) forest and other wooded land, (c) built—up and
related land, excluding scattered farm buildings,
(d) wet open land,
(e) dry open land with special vegetation cover,
(f) open land without, or with insignificant,
vegetation cover and (g) waters
Landfill
Décharge
Landfill refers to the final placement of waste in or
on the land in a controlled or uncontrolled way
according to different sanitary, environmental
protection and other safety requirements.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Lane
Voie
One of the longitudinal strips into which a
carriageway is divisible, whether or not defined by
longitudinal road markings, which is wide enough
for one moving line of motor vehicles other than
motor cycles.
See also: Land – SNA, Multiple land use
See also: Landfill site
Landfill site
A place where residuals are disposed of. In the
SEEA landfill sites are treated as a sort of physical
capital formation. When landfill sites are managed,
disposing of residuals in landfill sites is regarded as
a flow of residuals within the economy.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.49
Language - ISO
Language is a system of signs for communication,
usually consisting of a vocabulary and rules [ISO
5127:2001, 1.1.2.01]
Source: ISO/IEC 11179-3 "Information
technology-Metadata registries (MDR)-Part 3:
Registry metamodel and basic attributes",
February 2003
See also: Landfill
Landings (in acquatic
resources accounts)
The net weight of the quantities landed as
recorded at the time of the landing of:
See also: ISO / IEC 11179, Language - UN, Special
language
Language - UN
In the context of this glossary, a means of verbal
communication used by a large community,
including the words, their pronunciation and the
methods of combining them.
- whole or eviscerated fish, fillets, livers, roes, etc.
- fresh, iced, chilled or frozen, cured or canned
products, etc.
- fish meals, liver oils, body oils, etc.
- other edible or inedible fishery products, etc.
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
440
Context: At the basic heading level, the PPP is
defined as a quasi-weighted geometric average of
the price relatives between country B and country
A for the products representative of country A. At
an aggregate level, the PPP is defined as the
weighted arithmetic average of the PPPs between
country B and country A for the basic headings
covered by the aggregate with the expenditure
shares of country A being used as weights.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Language spoken at
Langue parlée à la
home
maison
In Programme for International Student
Assessment (PISA), students were asked if the
language spoken at home most of the time is the
language of assessment, another official national
language, other national dialect or language, or
another language.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
The responses were then grouped into two
categories: the language spoken at home most of
the time is different from the language of
assessment, from other official national languages,
and from other national dialects or languages, and;
the language spoken at home most of the time is
the language of assessment, other official national
languages, or other national dialects or languages.
See also: Paasche type PPP
Laspeyres volume
Indice de volume de
index
Laspeyres
A Laspeyres volume index is a weighted arithmetic
average of quantity relatives using the values of
the earlier period as weights
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: SNA 16.16
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Laspeyres index
number
A Laspeyres index number is a form of index
number where prices, quantities or other units of
measure over time are weighted according to their
values in a specified base period
See also: Paasche volume index, Time reversal
test
Last-in-first-out
(LIFO)
Last-in-first-out
(LIFO) : dernier entré,
premier sorti
Last-in-first-out (LIFO) is an inventory valuation
method based on the assumption that the first
good withdrawn from inventory is the last one
which entered
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, Fourth
Edition, Kendall, Sir Maurice G., and William R.
Buckland for the International Statistical Institute,
Longman Group, 1982, London
Source: SNA 6.70
See also: Index number
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Laspeyres price index
Indice de prix de
Laspeyres
A price index defined as a fixed weight, or fixed
basket, index which uses the basket of goods and
services of the base period. The base period serves
as both the weight reference period and the price
reference period. It is identical with a weighted
arithmetic average of the current to base period
price relatives using the value shares of the base
period as weights.
See also: FIFO (first-in-first- out)
Late foetal death
A late foetal death is death prior to the complete
expulsion or extraction from its mother of a
product of conception at 28 weeks or more of
gestation
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Also called a ―base weighted index‖.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Late interest charges
The additional interest that may be levied on
obligations overdue beyond a specified time; in
some Paris Club agreements, late interest charges
have been specifically excluded from the debt
consolidation.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
See also: Paasche price index, Time reversal test
Laspeyres type PPP
A PPP for a basic heading or an aggregate between
two countries, country B and country A, where the
reference country is country A and the weights are
those of country A.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
441
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Leases and other transferable contracts are leases
or contracts where the lessee has the right to
convey the lease to a third party independently of
the lessor (e.g. leases of land and buildings and
other structures, concessions or exclusive rights to
exploit mineral deposits or fishing grounds,
transferable contracts with athletes and authors
and options to buy tangible assets not yet
produced)
Late retirement
Retraite tardive
See Deferred retirement, Postponed retirement
See also: Deferred retirement, Postponed
retirement
Source: (AN.222) – Annex to chapter XIII
Latent variable
Variable latente
A variable which is unobservable but is supposed
to enter into the structure of a system under
study, such as demand in economics or the
―general‖ factor in psychology. Unobservable
quantities such as errors are not usually described
as latent.
Leasing (of an asset)
Leasing refers to the renting of an asset for a given
period of time, as an alternative to outright
purchase
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Least Developed
Countries (LDCs)
As agreed by the United Nations Economic and
Social Council: The General Assembly, on the
recommendation of the Committee for
Development Policy, decides on the countries to be
included in the list of the least developed
countries. List of least developed countries: Africa:
Angola, Benin, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cape Verde,
Central African Republic, Chad, Comoros, D. R. of
the Congo, Djibouti, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea,
Ethiopia, Gambia, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Lesotho,
Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania,
Mozambique, Niger, Rwanda, Sao Tome and
Principe, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Sudan,
Togo, Uganda, U.R. of Tanzania, Zambia; Asia and
the Pacific: Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan,
Cambodia, Kiribati, Lao P.D.R., Maldives,
Myanmar, Nepal, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tuvalu,
Vanuatu, Yemen; Latin America and the
Caribbean: Haiti.
Layout of
representation
The layout of representation is the layout of
characters in data element values expressed by a
character string representation
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
LDP
See Loan Deficiency Payments (United States)
Lead
Plomb
Lead is a heavy metal whose compounds are
highly poisonous to health. Its use in gasoline,
paints and plumbing compounds has been
generally reduced
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: United Nations. Office of the High
Representative for the Least Developed Countries,
Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island
Developing States (OHRLLS). United Nations
Internet site www.un.org/specialrep/ohrlls/ohrlls/default.htm
Leaded motor
gasoline
Motor gasoline with TEL (tetraethyl lead) and/or
TML (tetramethyl lead) have been added to
enhance octane rating.
Least-squares growth
rate
The least-squares growth rate, r, is estimated by
fitting a linear regression trend line to the
logarithmic annual values of the variable in the
relevant period.
Source: Oil Information 2001, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 3. General Definitions
See also: Unleaded motor gasoline
Context: Least-squares growth rates are used
whenever there is a sufficiently long time series to
permit a reliable calculation. No growth rates are
calculated if more than half the observations in a
period are missing.
Leading indicators
See Composite leading indicators (CLI)
See also: Composite leading indicators (CLI)
Leases and other
Baux et autres
transferable contracts contrats cessibles
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
442
3: Guidelines for the reporting of different types of
data
Rev. 3
CITI Rév. 3
Legal entities are entities whose existence is
recognised by law or society, independently of the
persons or institutions which own them
Least-squares method Méthod des moindres
carrés
A technique of estimation by which the quantities
under estimate are determined by minimising a
certain quadratic form in the observations and
those quantities.
Source: ISIC Rev. 3, para. 64
See also: Legal entities – SNA
Legal entities Ŕ SNA
Personnes morales SCN
Legal entities are types of institutional units which
are created for purposes of production, mainly
corporations and non-profit institutions (NPIs), or
government units, including social security funds;
they are capable of owning goods and assets,
incurring liabilities and engaging in economic
activities and transactions with other units in their
own right
In general, the method may be regarded as
possessing an empirical justification, in that the
process of minimisation gives an optimum fit of
observation to theoretical models; but for certain
more restricted cases it has demonstrable
optimum properties.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: SNA 1.13 [4.5]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Legal entities – ISIC Rev. 3
Least-squares method
for autocorrection
The least squares method for autocorrection is an
automatic correction method in which:
Legitimate child
A legitimate child is a child born to parents who
were legally married at the time of its birth in
accordance with the laws or customs of the
country
1. the least possible number of data items are
changed;
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
2. the changed record is the closest one (measured
by the weighted sum of squares of deviations of
the changed data) to the original (incorrect)
record.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Legitimisation
Legitimisation is the process of formal investing of
a person with the status and rights of legitimacy,
according to the laws of the country.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Leave for family
reasons
Leave for family reasons is leave granted to take
care of a sick child or for other family reasons.
Lemons
Tacots
Lemons is used in the literature on capital
measurement to mean defective capital goods. It is
sometimes alleged that prices of second hand
assets are biased downwards because buyers
assume that the sellers are disposing of their
defective assets or ―lemons"
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, July 1995,
Chapter 5, Long-term leave for parents in OECD
countries, page 174
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
LEC
Local Exchange Carrier
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
LEG
Leadership Group
Lender of last resort
Legal entities Ŕ ISIC
Personnes morales Ŕ
443
Prêteur en dernier
ressort
classifications, IMF, Washington DC. Available at
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm)
A lender of last resort is a lender, typically a
central bank, which provides financial institutions
with funds when they cannot borrow from the
market. The availability of such lending is intended
to prevent systemic problems due to liquidity
shortage in individual institutions
Source: SNA 11.25
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Level (monthly,
quarterly, annual)
data
Data expressed as levels are expressed in absolute
terms (values, numbers, units) for a given period
(month, quarter, year).
Leontief inverse table
Tableau inverse de
Leontief
The columns of the Leontief inverse (input-output)
table show the input requirements, both direct and
indirect, on all other producers, generated by one
unit of output
Context: Flow data for annual and quarterly levels
may be presented as either the:
- sum of the component quarters or months, or
Source: SNA 15.175
- average of the component months or quarters.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Stock data by definition only have one value for
each frequency (i.e. year, quarter, month)
Source: Organisation for Economic Co-operation
and Development (OECD), "Main Economic
Indicators", monthly
Lerner index
See Market power
See also: Market power
See also: Flow series/data, Stock series/data
Less-favoured area
(LFA)
In the European Union, less-favoured area (LFA) is
a term used to describe an area with natural
handicaps (lack of water, climate, short crop
season and tendencies of depopulation), or that is
mountainous or hilly, as defined by its altitude and
slope.
Level of education
Level of education (International Standard
Classification for Education (ISCED) one-digit
code), which represents a broad section of the
education ―ladder‖, that is, the progression from
very elementary to more complicated learning
experience, embracing all fields and programme
groups that may occur at that particular stage of
the progression.
Context: LFAs benefit from area and headage
compensatory allowances, and from a number of
payments for structural adjustment. National
governments designate their respective LFAs. In
the Czech Republic, these are areas with less
favoured conditions for agricultural production.
These areas benefit from specific area and
headage payments, and additional interest rate
subsidies to support investment. In Hungary, these
are areas with less favoured conditions for
agricultural production (low quality land), which
are defined in terms of the ―Golden Crown
Standard‖, reflecting its productive potential
ISCED is a three-stage classification with a coding
system for five digits, providing successive
subdivisions from level to field to programme
group
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 15.40
See also: Educational attainment, Educational
institution, Educational qualifications, ISCED
Level of funding
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Niveau de
financement
See Funding level
See also: Funding level (pension plan)
Letters of credit
Lettres de crédit
Letters of credit are promises to make payment
only when certain documents specified by contract
are presented
Leverage
Having exposure to the full benefits arising from
holding a position in a financial asset, without
having to fully fund the position with own funds.
Context: Letters of credit provide a guarantee that
funds will be made available, but no financial
liability exists until funds are actually advanced.
(IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide for
Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
Context: Leverage refers to the use of borrowed
funds to increase profitability and buying power. In
accounting and finance, it is the amount of long
term debt relative to equity. The higher the ratio
the greater the leverage. (The OECD Economic
444
Outlook: Sources and Methods. Available from
http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-and-methods)
circumstances specified in a contract between
them
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: SNA [10.4]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Licence fees
Frais de permis
See Payments by households to obtain certain
licences
Leveraged buyout
See Buyout
See also: Payments by households to obtain
certain licences
See also: Buyout
License (fishing)
Also known as a permit, a license or permit is a
document authorising the taking of fish according
to the terms established by the regulating
authority
Levies on output
Levies on output are taxes on farm output which
reduce the price received by producers
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
See also: Market Price Support (MPS)
Licensing
Licensing refers to granting legal permission to do
something, such as produce a product. The license
confers a right which the person or firm did not
previously possess. Some licenses are granted free
of charge, but most require payment. Licenses are
legal agreements which may contain restrictions as
to how the license is employed.
Lexical
Lexical pertains to words or the vocabulary of a
language as distinguished from its grammar and
construction
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Context: There are two broad cases of licensing
which are relevant to competition policy.
Lexicon
(a) A dictionary or glossary relating to a particular
language or sphere of interest.
The first is licenses granted by governments to
entrants in specific industries. Licensing systems
exist in many communication industries (radio and
T.V. broadcasting), professions (doctors) and
services (banking, liquor outlets). The terms of
licenses vary, but they are often accompanied by
various restrictions on the firm. Those restrictions
(or regulations) may apply to price, quality or
amount of service. Government licensing
represents an important barrier to entry in these
industries.
(b) The vocabulary of an individual person, an
occupational group or a professional field.
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
The second use of licensing is in patent, copyright
and trademark cases whereby authority (in the
form of a license) is granted by the owner to
another party to make, reproduce, buy or sell the
item. Copyright, trademark and patent holders
may license others to use or produce the good,
usually in return for a fixed payment and a royalty
rate. In most cases, a patent holder has no
preference between licensing and producing his
invention himself because he can maximize his
return through payment of the licensing fees.
LFS
Labour force survey
Liabilities (Value of in
a pension fund)
Value of liabilities.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
However, patent holders are not required to either
use or license their technology. Thus, there may be
a restriction of technology diffusion which also acts
as a barrier to entry. In many countries there is a
provision for revoking patents or imposing
compulsory licensing when it can be proved that
the patent has been abused through non-use or
anticompetitive restrictions on licensing. In
practice, compulsory licensing is seldom used.
See also: Assets (of a pension fund), Liability
Liability
Passifs
A liability is an obligation which requires one unit
(the debtor) to make a payment or a series of
payments to the other unit (the creditor) in certain
445
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Life table
Table de mortalité
A table showing the number of persons who, of a
given number born or living at a specified age, live
to attain successive higher ages, together with the
number who die in the intervals.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Licensing agreement
(in use of confidential
data)
A permit, issued under certain conditions, for
researchers to use confidential data for specific
purposes and for specific periods of time. This
agreement consists of contractual and ethical
obligations, as well as penalties for improper
disclosure or use of identifiable information. These
penalties can vary from withdrawal of the license
and denial of access to additional data sets to the
forfeiting of a deposit paid prior to the release of a
microdata file.
Life-support system
Système d‟entretien
de la vie
A life—support system is part of an ecosystem that
determines the existence, abundance and
evolution of a particular population. The term
frequently refers to the functions of natural
systems essential to human survival, including the
provision of oxygen, food, water and so forth
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: A licensing agreement is almost always
combined with the signing of a contract. This
contract includes a number of requirements:
specification of the intended use of the data;
instruction not to release the microdata file to
another recipient; prior review and approval by the
releasing agency for all user outputs to be
published or disseminated; terms and location of
access and enforceable penalties.
Lifetime fertility
Lifetime fertility refers to the number of children
ever born alive during the entire reproductive
period of the woman
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
LIFO (last-in-firstout)
Life expectancy
Espérance de vie (à la
naissance)
Life expectancy at birth and ages 40, 60, 65 and
80 is the average number of years that a person at
that age can be expected to live, assuming that
age-specific mortality levels remain constant.
LIFO (last-in-firstout) : dernier entré,
premier sorti
See Last-in-first-out
See also: FIFO (first-in-first- out), Last-in-first-out
(LIFO)
Lignite
Defined as non-agglomerating coal with a gross
calorific value of less than 4 165 kJ/kg (17.4 GJ/t).
Source: OECD Health Data 2007: Statistics and
Indicators for 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2007,
Data sources, definitions and methods
Source: Electricity information 2001, International
Energy Agency, Paris – Part II
Life length
The period of time for which an asset is expected
to remain in use. For natural resources this is often
calculated as the stock divided by the average
annual (net) extraction rate.
Limit pricing
Limit pricing refers to the pricing by incumbent
firm(s) to deter or inhibit entry or the expansion of
fringe firms. The limit price is below the short-run
profit-maximizing price but above the competitive
level.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
7.183 & Box 7.2
Context: There are a number of models of limit
pricing and a considerable debate over the issue of
whether it is in fact profitable for firms to engage
in such behaviour. Limit pricing implies that firms
sacrifice current profits in order to deter entry and
earn future profits. It is not clear whether this
strategy is always superior to one where current
446
prices (and profits) are higher, but decline over
time as entry occurs.
A method of sampling in a geographical area. Lines
are drawn across the area and all members of the
population falling on the line, or intersected by it,
are included in the sample. If the lines are straight
parallels equally spaced across the area concerned,
then the sampling becomes one form of systematic
sampling. If, instead of all intercepts on the lines,
a series of evenly spaced points are chosen on
each line, the sampling is equivalent to choosing
the points on a lattice and may also be regarded as
two-stage line sampling.
In the early literature on limit pricing, the ability of
incumbents to establish such prices was linked to
the existence of structural barriers to entry.
However, this required rather stringent
assumptions about the behaviour of incumbents,
notably that incumbents would maintain output in
the face of entry, and that this threat was believed
by potential entrants. The more recent literature
has focused on strategic barriers to entry, notably
the actions which incumbents can take to persuade
entrants that they will not accommodate entry.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Linear approximation
of the annualised
growth rate
Linear approximation of the annualised growth rate
is a quick calculation of the annualised growth rate
that show the rate of change that would be
measured for a quarter or month if maintained for
a full year. Quarterly rates of change are multiplied
by 4 and monthly rates of change are multiplied by
12.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Limits of error
The limits of error are the maximum overestimate
and the maximum underestimate from the
combination of the sampling and the nonsampling
errors.
Context: Such rates attempt to facilitate
comparison of data for different time periods (e.g.
years and quarters). However, because the impact
of any irregular is magnified, use of this form of
growth rate presentation is not recommended,
especially as the key headline series.
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
3: Guidelines for the reporting of different types of
data
Line (railway)
One or more adjacent running tracks forming a
route between two points. Where a section of
network comprises two or more lines running
alongside one another, there are as many lines as
routes to which tracks are allotted exclusively.
See also: Annualised growth rate (annualised rate
of change), Annualised semi-annual growth rate
Linear correlation
Corrélation linéaire
An obsolete expression once used to denote either
(a) the product moment correlation in cases where
the corresponding regressions were linear or (b) a
co-efficient of correlation constructed from linear
functions of the observations. The expression is
best avoided altogether.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Line graph
A graph in which successive points representing
the value of a variable at selected values of the
dependent variable are connected by straight lines.
(e.g., unemployment rates among youth over the
last ten years).
Linear edits
Linear edits are edits arising from linear
constraints.
Source: McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific and
Technical Terms (Third Edition, 1984).
Line sampling
Example:
If v1, v2, v3 are variables and a, b, and c are real
constants, linear inequality edits are given by:
1. a <= v1 & v2 <= b (This is two edits. Each can
be converted to linear inequality.)
2. a v1 + b v2 <= c
Échantillonnage en
lignes
447
3. v1 + v2 = v3
Link factor
A ratio used to join a new index series to an old
index series to form a continuous series.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: A Guide to the Consumer Price Index 13th Series, Glossary, Australian Bureau of
Statistics
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/0/9171
F5CDC94489A9CA25697E0018FD59?Open&Highlig
ht=0,glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Nonlinear edits
Link relative
Chaîne de rapports
In index number theory, the value of a magnitude
in a given period divided by the value in the
previous period.
Linear programming
Programmation
linéaire
The procedure used in maximising or minimising ,
a linear function of several variables when these
variables, or some of them, are subject to
constraints expressed in linear terms: these may
be equations or inequalities. The term
―programming‖ in this context indicates a schedule
of actions.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Chain index - ISI, Chain relative
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Link to release
calendar - MetaStore
Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types refers to
a link to a general statement on the schedule of
release of data.
Line-item budgeting
A general term used to describe a relatively
unsystematic budgetary chart of accounts.
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
Context: In addition to standard votes or ―lines‖
for items such as ―salaries and wages,‖ separate
lines for new requirements are introduced as they
arise, thus giving rise to lengthy, ad hoc forms for
appropriating and accounting for spending.
See also: Release calendar
Linked samples
Échantillons en chaîne
Two samples of same size in which there is a oneone correspondence between their respective
sample units. The link between a pair of
corresponding units may be rigid in the sense that
one of them uniquely determines the other, or it
may be semi-rigid in that one of them restricts the
choice of the other, e.g. a pair of linked grids may
be separated by a fixed distance. Linking among
three or more samples is also possible.
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Lines of credit
Lignes de crédit
Lines of credit provide a guarantee that funds will
be made available but no financial asset exists
until funds are actually advanced
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: SNA 11.25
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Linking
The technique used to join a new index series (e.g.
one having a changed composition and weighting
pattern) to an old index series to form a
continuous series. The technique ensures that the
resultant linked index reflects only price variations
(e.g. the introduction of the new items and weights
does not of itself affect the level of the index).
Linguistics
The scientific study of human language in all its
aspects, including phonetics, phonology,
morphology, syntax and semantics.
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Context: Splicing together two consecutive
sequences of price observations, or price indices,
that overlap in one or more periods. When the two
sequences overlap by a single period, the usual
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
448
procedure is simply to rescale one or other
sequence so that the value in the overlap period is
the same in both sequences and the spliced
sequences form one continuous series.
See Gas/liquids from biomass
See also: Gas/liquids from biomass
Source: Producer and International Trade Price
Indexes, Glossary of terms – Australian Bureau of
Statistics
Liquid yield option
note (LYON)
A LYON combines the features of a zero-coupon
bond with those of a convertible bond. The zerocoupon bond pays no interest until it is redeemed
at or before maturity; the difference between the
issue price and the redemption price represents
the accrued interest. In addition, the LYON bond
may be converted by the holder into stock of the
issuing corporation within a specified period and at
a specified conversion price.
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs%40.nsf/66f3
06f503e529a5ca25697e0017661f/f2b7a9d7152e50
18ca25697e0018fc77!OpenDocument
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Liquefaction
Liquéfaction
Liquefaction refers to the conversion of the
insoluble organic matter in wastes to a soluble
state, thereby effecting a reduction in their solid
contents
Liquidity
In terms of markets, liquidity generally refers to
the ability to buy and sell assets quickly and in
large volume without substantially affecting the
asset‘s price. In terms of instruments, liquidity
generally refers to those assets that can be
converted into cash quickly without a significant
loss in value.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Liquefied petroleum
gases (LPG)
These are the light hydrocarbons fraction of the
paraffin series, derived from refinery processes,
crude oil stabilisation plants and natural gas
processing plants comprising propane and butane
or a combination of the two. They are normally
liquefied under pressure for transportation and
storage.
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Liquidity risk
The risk that assets may not be readily available to
meet a demand for cash. Because deposit-takers‘
assets are typically of longer maturity than their
liabilities, monitoring deposit-takers‘ liquidity risk
through FSIs, such as liquid assets to total assets
and liquid assets to short-term liabilities, is
important for financial soundness analysis.
Context: Light hydrocarbons of the paraffin series
which are derived solely from the distillation of
crude oil.
The LPG comprise propane and butane or a
mixture of these two hydrocarbons. They can be
liquefied under low pressure (5-10 atmospheres).
In the liquid state and at a temperature of 38
degrees C they have a relative vapour pressure
less than or equal to 24.5 bars. Their specific
gravity ranges from 0.50 to 0.58 (Glossary for
Transport Statistics, prepared by the
Intersecretariat Working Group on Transport
Statistics – Eurostat, European Conference of
Ministers of Transport (ECMT), United Nations
Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE)).
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Lisbon Agreement
Treaty, administered by WIPO, for the protection
of geographical indications and their international
registration.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
List of code words
Liquid biomass
449
See Code list
See also: Code list
Lithosphere
Lithosphère
The lithosphere is the upper layer of the earth,
including the earth‘s crust and upper mantle
List price
The price of a product as quoted in the producer‘s
price list, catalogue, internet site, etc. The gross
price exclusive of all discounts, surcharges, rebates
and the like that apply to an actual transaction.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Also known as ―book price‖.
Livestock for
Animaux d‟élevage,
breeding, dairy,
animaux laitiers,
draught, etc.
animaux de trait, etc.
Livestock for breeding, dairy, draught, etc consist
of livestock that are cultivated for the products
they provide year after year
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: (AN.11141) – Annex to chapter XIII
Living quarters
Living quarters are structurally separate and
independent places of abode. They may:
See also: Book value, Offer prices
List sample
Échantillonnage sur
une liste
A sample selected by taking entries from a list of
the items constituting the population under review.
The usual method of selecting entries is to take
them at equal intervals, the starting point being
selected at random.
(a) have been constructed, built, converted or
arranged for human habitation, provided that they
are not at the time of the census used wholly for
other purposes and that, in the case of improvised
housing units and collective living quarters, they
are occupied at the time of the census; or
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
(b) although not intended for habitation, actually
be in use for such a purpose at the time of the
census
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.230
Listed voting stocks
Are equity/shares that give voting rights to the
holder and are listed on an official stock exchange.
Living wage
A wage sufficiently high to permit a worker to keep
a given standard of living.
Source: OECD, 2005, Measuring Globalisation:
OECD Handbook on Economic Globalisation
Indicators, OECD, Paris - Glossary
Source: Glossary of Compensation Terms – United
States Bureau of Labor Statistics, August 1998
Literate person
Une personne sait lire
et écrire
A literate person is one who can, with
understanding, both read and write a short, simple
statement on his or her everyday life. An illiterate
person is one who cannot write such a simple
statement
Hyperlink:
http://stats.bls.gov/ocs/sp/ncbl0062.pdf
Lloyd-Moulton price
index
A particular case of a constant elasticity of
substitution price index.
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.145
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Literate, functionally
A person is functionally literate who can engage in
all those activities in which literacy is required for
effective functioning of his group and community
and also for enabling him to continue to use
reading, writing and calculation for his own and the
community‘s development
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Load capacity
(environmental)
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 15.62
450
Capacité de charge
See Critical load
due on a loan instrument in the event of
nonpayment by the borrower.
See also: Critical load
Load capacity (for
road vehicles)
Maximum weight of goods declared permissible by
the competent authority of the country of
registration of the vehicle.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Loading unit
Container, swap body.
Loan rate (United
Taux de prêt (ÉtatsStates)
Unis)
The loan rate is the commodity price at which the
Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) offers nonrecourse loans to participating farmers producing
programme crops. The crops covered by the
programme are used as collateral for these loans.
The loan rate serves as a floor price for
participating farmers in the sense that they can
default on their loan and forfeit their crop to the
CCC rather than sell it in the open market at a
lower price
Unité de chargement
Context: ―Flats‖, which are used in maritime
transport, should be considered to be a special
type of container and are therefore included here.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Loan-loss provisions
These are net allowances that deposit-takers make
against bad or impaired loans, based on their
judgment as to the likelihood of losses occurring.
Loan-loss provisioning affects both income and,
depending on the type of provisions made, capital.
Loan agreement
The legal evidence and terms of a loan.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Loans Ŕ BPM
Crédits Ŕ MBP
Loans comprise those financial assets created
through the direct lending of funds by a creditor
(lender) to a debtor (borrower) through an
arrangement in which the lender either receives no
security evidencing the transactions or receives a
non-negotiable document or instrument.
Loan deficiency
Paiement
payments (United
compensatoire au
States)
titre de prêt
Loan deficiency payments are a type of nonrecourse loan whereby, for wheat, feed grain,
upland cotton, rice and oilseeds, a producer may
agree to forgo loan eligibility and receive an output
subsidy, the rate of payment of which is the
amount by which the applicable county's loan rate
exceeds the marketing loan repayment rate.
Producers may elect to apply for this payment
during the loan availability period on a quantity of
the programme crop not exceeding their loaneligible production. This, combined with marketing
loan gains, represent the benefits made available
to US farmers when commodity prices fall relative
to loan rates.
Included are loans to finance trade, other loans
and advances, use of Fund credit and loans from
the Fund, etc. In addition, financial leases and
repurchase agreements are covered under loans.
Loans are subdivided into long- and short-term
categories, which reflect the retention of the
maturity structure referred to previously
Source: BPM para. 415
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Source: OECD, 2004, OECD Agricultural Outlook:
2004-2013, OECD, Paris, Glossary
See also: Loans – SNA
Loan guarantee
A legally binding agreement under which the
guarantor agrees to pay any or all of the amount
Loans Ŕ SNA
Crédits Ŕ SCN
Loans are financial assets that are created when
creditors lend funds directly to debtors, that are
451
Rev. 3
evidenced by non-negotiable documents, or for
which the lender receives no security evidencing
the transaction
Source: Council Regulation (EEC), No. 696/93,
Section III G of 15.03.1993 on the statistical units
for the observation and analysis of the production
system in the Community and ESA 2.106, footnote
15
Source: (AF.4) – Annex to chapter XIII [11.83]
See also: Loans – BPM
Loans (also Credits)
Transfers for which repayment is required. Only
loans with maturities of over one year are included
in Development Assistance Committee (DAC)
statistics. Data on net loans include deductions for
repayments of principal (but not payment of
interest) on earlier loans. This means that when a
loan has been fully repaid, its effect on total net
official development assistance (ODA) over the life
of the loan is zero.
See also: ISIC, Local unit – Eurostat, Local unit –
ISIC Rev. 3, Local unit - SNA
Local labour markets
See Functional labour markets
See also: Functional labour markets
Local loop
The connection between the end-user's premises
and the nearest local exchange, multiplexor or
concentrator. The local loop is usually in the form
of a pair of copper wires, but could also be a fibreoptic cable or a co-axial cable.
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
Local loop unbundling
(LLU)
The provision of access to both physical ends of
the local loop (in some cases access to the local
loop is shared between two companies, as when
one company provides data services and another
voice services over the same local loop).
Local area network
Réseau local
(LAN)
The electronic linking, by cable or infrared beams,
of several or all computer workstations within a
specific physical area to a file server or storage
and processing device. It allows all users
connected to the network to access the server's
software and data files and to exchange electronic
messages via an electronic mail system.
Frequently includes printers, scanners, and other
related equipment.
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Local recoding
A disclosure control technique for microdata where
two (or more) different versions of a variable are
used dependent on some other variable. The
different versions will have different levels of
coding. This will depend on the distribution of the
first variable conditional on the second. A typical
example occurs where the distribution of a variable
is heavily skewed in some geographical areas. In
the areas where the distribution is skewed minor
categories may be combined to produce a courser
variable.
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
See also: Internet, World Wide Web (WWW)
Local government
Administrations
locales
Local government units are institutional units
whose fiscal, legislative and executive authority
extends over the smallest geographical areas
distinguished for administrative and political
purposes
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: SNA 4.128
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Local kind of activity
unit
The local kind-of activity unit (local KAU) is the
part of a KAU which corresponds to a local unit.
Local suppression
Protection technique that diminishes the risk of
recognition of information about individuals or
enterprises by suppressing individual scores on
identifying variables.
According to the European System of Accounts
(ESA) the local KAU is called the establishment in
the System of National Accounts (SNA) and ISIC
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
452
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Local-content scheme
Local-content scheme is a government policy that
requires manufacturers of a particular product
(e.g. cigarettes or fruit juice) to obtain
domestically a specified minimum percentage of
their basic agricultural input (e.g. tobacco or fruit
from domestic producers)
Local unit Ŕ Eurostat
Unité locale Ŕ
Eurostat
The local unit is an enterprise or part thereof (e.g.
a workshop, factory, warehouse, office, mine or
depot) situated in a geographically identified place.
At or from this place economic activity is carried
out for which - save for certain exceptions - one or
more persons work (even if only part-time) for one
and the same enterprise
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Locality
Localité
For census purposes, a locality is defined as a
distinct population cluster (also designated as
inhabited place, populated centre, settlement and
so forth) in which the inhabitants live in
neighbouring sets of living quarters and that has a
name or a locally recognised status.
Source: Council Regulation (EEC), No. 696/93,
Section III F of 15.03.1993 on the statistical units
for the observation and analysis of the production
system in the Community
See also: Local unit – ISIC Rev. 3, Local unit - SNA
Local unit Ŕ ISIC Rev. Unité locale Ŕ CITI
3
The concept of the local unit covers all economic
activities carried out by an enterprise at or from
one location.
It thus includes fishing hamlets, mining camps,
ranches, farms, market towns, villages, towns,
cities and many other population clusters that
meet the criteria specified above
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.49
Context: The definition has only one dimension in
that it does not refer to the kind of activity that is
carried out. Location may be interpreted according
to the purpose, narrowly, such as specific address,
or more broadly, such as within province, state,
country, etc. (United Nations Glossary of
Classification Terms. Prepared by the Expert Group
on International Economic and Social
Classifications)
Lockout
A lockout is a total or partial temporary closure of
one or more places of employment, or the
hindering of the normal work activities of
employees, by one or more employers with a view
to enforcing or resisting demands or expressing
grievances, or supporting other employers in their
demands or grievances.
Source: ISIC Rev. 3, para 99
Hyperlink:
http://www.un.org/Depts/unsd/class/glossary_sho
rt.htm
Source: International Labour Organisation (ILO)
Resolution Concerning Statistics of Strikes,
Lockouts and other Action Due to Labour Disputes
(January 1993), page 2-3
See also: Local unit – Eurostat, Local unit - SNA
Local unit - SNA
A local unit is an enterprise, or part of an
enterprise, which engages in productive activity at
or from one location
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Source: SNA 5.20
Locomotive
Locomotive
Railway vehicle equipped with prime mover and
motor or with motor only used for hauling railway
vehicles.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Local unit – Eurostat, Local unit – ISIC
Context: Only vehicles with a power of 110 kW and
above at the draw hook are classed as
locomotives; vehicles with less power being
described as "light rail motor tractors" are
excluded. Light rail motor tractor is low power
tractive unit used for shunting or for work trains
and short-distance or low-tonnage terminal
services. The special non-passenger tractive units
for high speed trains are included, even when
these vehicles are part of an indivisible set.
Local-content
measure
Requirement that the investor purchase a certain
amount of local materials for incorporation in the
investor‘s product.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
453
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
terminal.
Context: In English, also called "Freight village". In
Italian, also called "Interporto".
Logarithmic Laspeyres
price index
See Geometric Laspeyres price index
Source: Terminology on combined transport,
UNECE/ECMT/EC, United Nations, New York and
Geneva, 2001
See also: Geometric Laspeyres price index
Logarithmic Paasche
price index
Geometric Paasche price index
Lo-Lo (Lift-on Lift-off)
Loading/unloading by the vessel‘s own
derricks/cranes or by shore based cranes.
See also: Geometric Paasche price index
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Logging
Abattage
Logging is the process of harvesting trees, sawing
them into appropriate lengths and transporting
them to a sawmill
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
London certificates of
deposit
See Certificate of deposit (CD)
Logical condition
check
A logical condition check verifies whether a given
logical condition is met. It is usually employed to
check qualitative data.
See also: Certificate of deposit (CD)
London Club
A group of commercial banks whose
representatives meet periodically to negotiate the
restructuring of debts of sovereign borrowers.
There is no organizational framework for the
London Club comparable to that of the Paris Club.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Logical level of the
checking rule
The logical level of the checking rule refers to the
logical level of the data structure to which the
given checking rule refers (individual data item,
record, logical group of records, and the like).
London Eurodollar
banker‟s acceptance
(LEBA)
A short-term, negotiable, bearer money market
instrument in the form of a ―bill of exchange‖
drawn by a company on a prime bank and
accepted by the bank. LEBAs are generally issued
with maturities of three or six months, in either
interest-bearing or discount-to-yield form.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
The rate of interest on a LEBA is usually set at a
margin below the three- to six-month LIBOR rate
to approximate a rate close to the three- or sixmonth prime bank CD rate. The interest is
calculated on the basis of the actual days over a
360-day year. After a LEBA is accepted by the
bank on which it is drawn, it becomes a primary
obligation of that bank.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Logistic centre
Geographical grouping of independent companies
and bodies which are dealing with freight transport
(for example, freight forwarders, shippers,
transport operators, customs) and with
accompanying services (for example, storage,
maintenance and repair), including at least a
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
454
London Group
See City groups
Hyperlink: http://stats.bls.gov/bls/glossary.htm
See also: City groups
Long-line fishing
Pêche à la palangre
Long-line fishing, or long-lining is a fishing method
that involves setting out a large number of short
lines carrying hooks, which are attached to a
longer main line at regular intervals. The short
lines are suspended horizontally at a
predetermined depth with the help of surface
floats. Main lines can reach 150 kilometres in
length and have several thousand hooks
London Interbank
Offered Rate (LIBOR)
The London interbank offered rate for deposits,
such as the six-month dollar LIBOR. LIBOR is a
reference rate for the international banking
markets and is commonly the basis on which
lending margins are fixed. Thus, an original loan
agreement or a rescheduling agreement may set
the interest rate to the borrower at six-month
dollar LIBOR plus 1.5 percent, with semiannual
adjustments for changes in the LIBOR rate. Also,
interest rate swap rates are quoted in reference to
LIBOR; that is, the quoted rate is the fixed-rate
side of the swap because the floating-rate side is
LIBOR.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
See also: Drift-net fishing
Long-lining
See Long-line fishing
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
See also: Long-line fishing
Long-range transport
of air pollutants
Transport à longue
distance des polluants
atmosphériques
Long-range transport of air pollutants (LRTAP)
refers to the atmospheric transport of air
pollutants within a moving air mass for a distance
greater than 100 kilometres
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
London terms
See Concessional restructuring
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Concessional restructuring
Long maturities
option
In the context of the Paris Club, an option under
which the consolidated amount is rescheduled over
a long period of time, but without a reduction in
the present value of the debt.
Long-term care beds
in hospitals
Long-term care beds in hospitals are hospital beds
accommodating patients requiring long-term care
due to chronic impairments and a reduced degree
of independence in activities of daily living.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Inclusion:
- Beds in long-term care departments of general
hospitals
- Beds for long-term care in specialty (other than
mental health and substance abuse) hospitals
- Beds for palliative care
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Longer-term
refinancing operation
A regular open market operation executed by the
Eurosystem in the form of reverse transactions.
Such operations are carried out through a monthly
standard tender and normally have a maturity of
three months.
Exclusion:
- Beds in mental health and substance abuse
hospitals
- Beds for rehabilitation.
Source: OECD Health Data 2007: Statistics and
Indicators for 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2007,
Data sources, definitions and methods
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Long-term care beds
in nursing homes
Beds in nursing and residential care facilities are
available beds for people requiring ongoing health
and nursing care due to chronic impairments and a
reduced degree of independence in activities of
daily living (ADL) in establishments primarily
engaged in providing residential care combined
Longitudinal data
Data in which many units are observed over
multiple time periods.
Source: U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of
Labor Statistics, Glossary, unpublished on paper
455
require an original maturity in excess of two years
with either nursing, supervision or other types of
care as required by the residents. The care
provided can be a mix of health and social
services.
Source: (AF.42) – Annex to chapter XIII
See also: Long-term loans - DAC, Short-term loans
- SNA
Context: Inclusions:
Long-term migrants
Migrant de longue
durée
A long-term migrant is a person who moves to a
country other than that of his or her usual
residence for a period of at least a year (12
months), so that the country of destination
effectively becomes his or her new country of usual
residence. From the perspective of the country of
departure, the person will be a long- term
emigrant and from that of the country of arrival,
the person will be a long-term immigrant
- Beds in all types of nursing and residential care
facilities dedicated to long-term nursing care
- Beds used for palliative care
Exclusions:
- Beds in nursing and residential care facilities
which do not provide ongoing health and nursing
care (including ADL) together with accommodation
- Beds available in hospitals (even those beds
dedicated to long-term nursing care).
Context: The United Nations define long-term
migrants as comprising:
Source: OECD Health Data 2007: Statistics and
Indicators for 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2007,
Data sources, definitions and methods
- long-term emigrants are residents or persons
who have resided continuously in the country for
more than one year, who are departing to take up
residence abroad for more than one year;
- long-term immigrants are non-residents or
persons who have arrived for a length of stay of
more than one year but have not yet continuously
lived in the country for more than one year.
Long-term external
debt
External debt that has a maturity of more than one
year. Maturity can be defined either on an original
or remaining basis.
Whilst this definition has not been widely adopted
and is difficult to apply, it continues to provide a
useful benchmark and focus for further efforts
towards harmonisation. (International Migration
Statistics for OECD Countries: Sources and
Comparability of Migration Statistics, OECD, page
7)
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
See also: Original maturity of an instrument,
Remaining (residual) maturity
Long-term
instruments
Long-term instruments are instruments with a
maturity of more than 5 years
Long-term securities
other than shares
Titres autres
qu‟actions à long
terme
Long-term securities other than shares consist of
securities other than shares that have an original
maturity of more than one year; however, to
accommodate variations in practice between
countries, long-term may be defined to include an
original maturity in excess of two years
Source: Glossary of Government Debt Terms,
OECD, unpublished, 2001
Long-term loans - DAC
Used for loans with an original or extended
maturity of more than one year.
Source: (AF.32) – Annex to chapter XIII
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
Long-term
unemployment
Long-term unemployment is defined as that
involving people out of work and looking for work
for 12 months or more.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
See also: Long-term loans - SNA
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, September
1988, Chapter 2, Longer-run Labour Market
Issues, page 71
Long-term loans - SNA Crédits à long terme
Long-term loans consist of loans that have an
original maturity normally of more than one year,
except that, to accommodate variations in practice
between countries, long-term may be defined to
Lorenz curve
456
A Lorenz curve plots the cumulative percentages of
total income received against the cumulative
percentages of recipients, starting with the poorest
individual or household.
Source: SNA 7.78
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Context: For a formal definition of a Lorenz curve,
and examples, see
http://www.panix.com/%7Edhenwood/Gini_supple
ment.html
Loss-leader selling
Loss-leader selling is a marketing practice of
selling a product or service at a loss in order to
attract customers to buy other products at regular
prices. Although this practice is illegal in some
jurisdictions, in others it is viewed benevolently as
a promotional device that has the procompetitive
effect of increasing total sales.
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 704
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Lorry
Camion
Rigid road motor vehicle designed, exclusively or
primarily, to carry goods.
Context: This category includes vans which are
rigid road motor vehicles designed exclusively or
primarily to carry goods with a gross vehicle
weight of not more than 3 500 kg. This category
may also include "pick-ups".
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Low birthweight
Low birthweight is the number of live births
weighing less than 2500 grams as a percentage of
total live births
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: OECD Health Data 2007: Statistics and
Indicators for 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2007,
Data sources, definitions and methods
Loss of information
Perte d'information
This term is used in two entirely different senses:
(a) to denote the actual loss of information in the
ordinary sense, e.g. by the destruction of records;
(b) to denote failure to extract all the information
which exists in the available data about a
particular matter.
Low income countries
In the context of the Paris Club, countries eligible
to receive concessional terms. The Paris Club
decides eligibility on a case-by-case basis, but only
countries eligible to receive highly concessional
IDA credits from the World Bank Group are
included. The World Bank classifies as low-income
those countries with GNP per capita income of
$755 or less in 2000.
In the second case the failure may be due to
avoidable causes, such as the use of inefficient
statistics; or it may, in the technical sense of the
word ―information‖ be due to the fact that no
single estimator exists embodying all the
―information‖ which exists in the sample under
scrutiny.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Lowe price index
A price index that measures the proportionate
change between periods 0 and t in the total value
of a specific basket of goods and services. The
basket does not necessarily have to consist of the
actual quantities in some period. This type of index
is described as a Lowe index after the index
number pioneer who first proposed this general
type of index.
Losses of government Pertes des
trading organisations organismes publics de
commercialisation
Losses of government trading organisations consist
of the losses incurred by government trading
organisations whose function is to buy and sell the
products of resident enterprises; when such
organisations incur losses as a matter of deliberate
government economic or social policy by selling at
lower prices than those at which they purchased
the goods, the difference between the purchase
and the selling prices should be treated as a
subsidy
Context: The class of indices covered by this
definition is very broad and includes, by
appropriate specification of the terms q, the
Laspeyres, Paasche, Edgeworth and Walsh indices,
for example. Lowe indices are widely used for CPI
purposes, the quantities in the basket typically
457
being those of some weight reference period b,
which precedes the price reference period 0.
Context: Official development assistance credits
are rescheduled over 20 years, including a grace
period of up to 10 years. This set of rescheduling
terms also includes the limited use of debt swaps
on a voluntary basis. The World Bank classifies as
lower-middle income those countries with GNP per
capita income of between $756 and $2,995 in
2000.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Lower bound
The lowest possible value of a cell in a table of
frequency counts where the cell value has been
perturbed or suppressed.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Low-level radioactive Déchets de faible
wastes
activité
Low—level radioactive wastes are a subcategory of
radioactive wastes comprising those that, because
of their low radionuclide content, do not require
shielding during normal handling and
transportation
Lower quartile
See Quartile
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Quartile
Lower secondary
education (ISCED 2)
Premier cycle de
l'enseignement
secondaire (CITE 2)
Lower secondary education (ISCED 2) generally
continues the basic programmes of the primary
level, although teaching is typically more subjectfocused, often employing more specialised
teachers who conduct classes in their field of
specialisation.
Low-sulphur content
fuel oil
Heavy fuel oil with sulphur content lower than 1
per cent.
Source: Oil Information 2001, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 3. General Definitions
Lower secondary education may either be
―terminal‖ (i.e., preparing students for entry
directly into working life) and/or ―preparatory‖
(i.e., preparing students for upper secondary
education). This level usually consists of two to six
years of schooling (the mode of OECD countries is
three years).
See also: High-sulphur content fuel oil
LPG
See Liquefied petroleum gases (LPG)
See also: Liquefied petroleum gases (LPG)
Lubricants
Lubricants are hydrocarbons produced from
distillate or residue; they are mainly used to
reduce friction between bearing surfaces. This
category includes all finished grades of lubricating
oil, from spindle oil to cylinder oil, and those used
in greases, including motor oils and all grades of
lubricating oil base stocks.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: International Standard Classification of
Education (ISCED).
Lower-level index
See Elementary price index
See also: Elementary price index
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Lower-middle-income
country terms
In the context of the Paris Club, refers to the
rescheduling terms granted, since September
1990, to lower-middle-income countries. These
terms are non-concessional and originally provided
for flat repayment schedules, but in recent years
graduated payment schedules have often been
agreed upon for commercial credits, namely, with
a maturity of up to18 years, including a grace
period of up to 8 years.
Luxembourg
agreement
A formal decision on further "CAP reform - a longterm perspective for sustainable agriculture" was
taken by the EU Council of farm ministers meeting
in Luxembourg on 26 June 2003. The reform
includes far-reaching amendments of current
policies, including further reductions in support
prices, partly offset by direct payments and a
further decoupling of most direct payments, such
458
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.25
as the new single farm payment from current
production. The different elements of the reform
will enter into force in 2004 and 2005. A single
farm payment will enter into force in 2005. If a
member state needs a transitional period due to its
specific agricultural conditions it may apply the
single farm payment from 2007 at the latest.
Machine tools
Machine tools comprises: Machine-tools and parts
and accessories thereof (Central Product
Classification (CPC) Group 442)
Source: OECD, 2004, OECD Agricultural Outlook:
2004-2013, OECD, Paris, Glossary
Source: Central Product Classification (CPC).
Version 1.0. United Nations, New York, 1998,
Series M, No. 77, Ver. 1.0
Lyon terms
See Concessional restructuring
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
See also: Concessional restructuring
M1
M1 is a measure of money supply including all
coins and notes plus personal money in current
accounts
Machinery and
Machines et
equipment (assets)
équipements
Machinery and equipment (assets) consist of
transport equipment and other machinery and
equipment other than that acquired by households
for final consumption
Source: Dictionary of Banking and Finance, Second
Edition, P.H. Collins, 1991, Peter Collins Publishing
See also: M2, Monetary aggregates – OECD,
Money supply
Source: (AN.1113) – Annex to chapter XIII
M2
M2 is a measure of money supply, including coins
and notes and personal money in current and
deposit accounts
Macrodata
See Tabular data
See also: Tabular data
Source: Dictionary of Banking and Finance, Second
Edition, P.H. Collins, 1991, Peter Collins Publishing
Macro-editing
A procedure for tracking suspicious data by
checking aggregates or applying statistical
methods on all records or on a subset of them.
See also: M1, Monetary aggregates – OECD,
Money supply
Context: A macro-edit detects individual errors by:
Maastricht Treaty
Traité de Maastricht
The Maastricht Treaty is a treaty ratified by all
European Union member states in 1993 and
implemented by means of extensive amendment to
the Treaty of Rome, including the change from the
name European Economic Community to European
Union.
1) checks on aggregated data, or
2) checks applied to the whole body of records.
The checks are typically based on the models,
either graphical or numerical formula based, that
determine the impact of specific fields in individual
records on the aggregate estimates. (Economic
Commission for Europe of the United Nations
(UNECE), "Glossary of Terms on Statistical Data
Editing", Conference of European Statisticians
Methodological material, Geneva, 2000, available
at
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/editingglo
ssary.pdf
The Maastricht Treaty includes sections on political
union and on economic and monetary union, as
well as a redefinition of the role of legislative and
executive bodies. It establishes the principle of
subsidiarity, by which any action by the Union shall
not go beyond what is necessary to achieve the
objectives of the treaty
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Source: Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
May 2002
Mac Kelvey box
A table showing subsoil assets cross classified
according to economic viability of extraction and
probability of existence of the reserves.
See also: Data editing, statistical, Micro-editing,
Selective editing
Macroprudential
analysis
The assessment and monitoring of the strengths
and vulnerabilities of financial systems. It
encompasses quantitative information from both
FSIs and macroeconomic indicators that provide
(1) a broader picture of economic and financial
circumstances such as GDP growth and inflation,
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
459
along with information on the structure of the
financial system, and (2) qualitative information on
the institutional and regulatory framework—
particularly through assessments of compliance
with international financial sector standards and
codes—and the outcome of stress tests.
Fishery Conservation Fishery Conservation
and Management Act and Management Act
(MSFCMA)
(MSFCMA)
The Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act (MSFCMA) is a statute enacted in
1976 primarily to establish an Exclusive Economic
Zone in which foreign fishing could be controlled,
and to set up a conservation and management
structure for United States fisheries
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Mad cow disease
See Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease
Mailbox
Refers to the requirement of the Trade-Related
Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS)
Agreement applying to WTO members which do
not yet provide product patent protection for
pharmaceuticals and for agricultural chemicals.
See also: Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD)
Madrid Agreement
Treaty, administered by WIPO, for the repression
of false or deceptive indications of source on
goods.
Since 1 January 1995, when the WTO agreements
entered into force, these countries have to
establish a means by which applications of patents
for these products can be filed. (An additional
requirement says they must also put in place a
system for granting ―exclusive marketing rights‖
for the products whose patent applications have
been filed.)
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Magnetic Ink
Character Recognition
(MICR)
The technique used in banking to encode account
numbers and check values so they can be
automatically debited from accounts.
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Main aggregates
The level of aggregation immediately below GDP.
There are seven main aggregates of which the
most important are individual consumption
expenditure by households, individual consumption
expenditure by government, collective
consumption expenditure by government and
gross fixed capital formation.
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI) units
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) units refer to a
diagnostic modality in which the magnetic nuclei
(especially protons) of a patient are aligned in a
strong, uniform magnetic field, absorb energy from
tuned radio frequency pulses, and emit radio
frequency signals as their excitation decays. These
signals, which vary in intensity according to
nuclear abundance and molecular chemical
environment, are converted into sets of
tomographic images by using field gradients in the
magnetic field, which permit 3-D localisation of the
point sources of the signals. Unlike conventional
radiography or CT, MRI does not expose patients
to ionising radiation
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Main Economic
Indicator main
country groupings
In additional to statistics for individual countries,
the OECD monthly Main Economic Indicators also
presents aggregates for the following five main
country groups of countries:
- Euro area (EMU);
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
- European Union (EU15);
- OECD Europe;
- OECD-Total;
Magnuson-Stevens
Magnuson-Stevens
- Major seven countries.
460
The OECD has also published a series of releases
focusing on the comparability of short-term
economic indicators published by the Organisation
in MEI. Those published to date contain
information on: industry, retail and construction
indicators; price indicators (CPI and PPI); and
wage related indicators (wages, earnings, unit
labour cost, labour costs). These are available on
the OECD statistics website.
Area totals are obtained either by simple
aggregation or as weighted averages of the
component country data
Source: OECD Main Economic Indicators, OECD,
Paris, monthly, Data presentation notes
See also: Euro area, Major seven countries, OECDEurope, OECD-total, Zones, CLI
Source: OECD Main Economic Indicators, OECD,
Paris
Main Economic
Principaux indicateurs
Indicators (MEI),
économiques, OCDE
OECD
The OECD‘s monthly Main Economic Indicators
provides an extensive range of short-term
economic indicators for the 30 OECD Member
countries and 6 non-member countries (Brazil,
China, India, Indonesia, Russian Federation, South
Africa) within the program of the OECD Centre for
Co-operation with Non-Members (CCNM). The
indicators are presented two ways:
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/document/48/0,2340,en_264
9_33715_1912816_1_1_1_1,00.html
Main refinancing
operation
A regular open market operation executed by the
Eurosystem in the form of reverse transactions. As
of 10 March 2004 such operations are carried out
through a weekly standard tender and normally
have a maturity of one week.
- by subject (Part One) where the emphasis is on
comparative data for key statistical series for
OECD Member countries;
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
- by country where detailed statistical series for
OECD Member countries and the Euro zone (Part
Two) and non-member countries (Part Three) are
presented.
Maintenance (cost)
Evaluation du côut
valuation
d‟entretien
(environmental
(comptabilité
accounting)
écologique)
Maintenance (cost) valuation (environmental
accounting) is a method of measuring imputed
environmental (depletion and degradation) costs
caused by economic activities of households and
industries. The value of the maintenance cost
depends on the avoidance, restoration,
replacement or prevention activities chosen
A final section (Part Four) presents data on a
variety of structural indicators for OECD Member
countries.
Context: The OECD‘s monthly publication, Main
Economic Indicators (MEI), provides an overall
view of short-term economic developments
through presentation of an extensive range of
specific short-term economic indicators within each
of the following subjects:
-
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
national accounts
production
business and consumer opinions
composite leading indicators
manufacturing
construction
domestic demand
labour market indicators
prices
finance
foreign trade
balance of payments
See also: Valuation of natural assets
Maintenance agency
Organisation responsible for maintaining or
updating artefacts such as statistical
classifications, glossaries, data structure definitions
(key families) and metadata structure definitions
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
These indicators are important instruments for the
formulation of economic policy at the national level
and for use by international organisations such as
the OECD, IMF, Eurostat and the European Central
Bank (ECB). They are well known, widely collected
and used extensively by countries and
international organisations.
See also: Classification, GESMES TS, Glossary, Key
family, Structural definition
Maintenance and
operations personnel
Maintenance and operations personnel refers to
personnel who support the maintenance and
operation of schools, school security and ancillary
services, such as the transportation of students to
and from school and food services operations.
"Main Economic Indicators: Sources and
Definitions", provides summary descriptions of
individual country methodologies used in the
compilation of the short-term economic indicators
included in MEI. This information is available on
the OECD statistics website.
This category includes the following types of
personnel: masons, carpenters, electricians,
461
locksmiths, maintenance repairers, painters and
paperhangers, plasterers, plumbers, and vehicle
mechanics. It also includes bus drivers and other
vehicle operators, construction workers, gardeners
and groundskeepers, bus monitors and crossing
guards, cooks/food carers, custodians, food
servers, dormitory supervisors, and security
guards.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
paras. 10.178 & 10.184
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: Maintenance costing
Maintenance
expenditure on
infrastructure (for
inland waterways
transport)
Expenditure for keeping infrastructure in working
order.
See also: Educational personnel, Instructional
personnel - OECD, Management/Quality
control/Administration, Ratio of students to
teaching staff, Teaching staff
Maintenance and
Entretien et
repairs (of fixed
réparation (d‟actifs
assets)
fixes)
Ordinary maintenance and repairs of fixed assets
are activities that owners or users of fixed assets
are obliged to undertake periodically in order to be
able to utilise assets over their expected service
lives (they are current costs that cannot be
avoided if the fixed assets are to continue to be
used).
Context: Expenditure on locks is included.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Maintenance and repairs do not change the fixed
asset or its performance, but simply maintain it in
good working order or restore it to its previous
condition in the event of a breakdown (note the
contrast between this item and ―major renovations
or enlargements")
Maintenance
expenditure on
infrastructure (for oil
pipeline transport)
Expenditure for keeping infrastructure in working
order.
Source: SNA 6.161
Context: Expenditure on pumping facilities is
included.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: Major renovations or enlargements (of
fixed assets)
Maintenance costing
A valuation technique used to answer the following
question: What would the value of net domestic
product have been for the same level of activity if
all the costs of environmental degradation had
been incurred and internalised within market
prices?
Maintenance
expenditure on
infrastructure (for
railways)
Expenditure for keeping infrastructure in working
order.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 2.176
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: Maintenance (cost) valuation
(environmental accounting), Maintenance costs
Maintenance
expenditure on
infrastructure (for sea
transport)
Expenditure for keeping infrastructure in working
order.
Maintenance costs
Hypothetical costs that would have been incurred
in order to meet hypothetical environmental
standards using current costs and technologies.
They comprise avoidance costs – structural
adjustment costs and abatement and restoration
costs.
Context: Maintenance dredging is included.
462
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
transport)
Expenditure for keeping vessels in working order.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Maintenance
Dépense d'entretien
expenditure on road
des véhicules routiers
vehicles
Expenditure for keeping road vehicles in working
order.
Major product
innovation
Major product innovation describes a product
whose intended use, performance characteristics,
attributes, design properties or use of materials
and components differ significantly compared with
previously manufactured products. Such
innovations can involve radically new technologies
or can be based on combining existing
technologies in new uses
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: OECD Frascati Manual, Fifth edition, 1993,
Annex 2, para. 29, page 116
Maintenance
Dépense d'entretien
expenditure on roads des routes
Expenditure for keeping roads in working order.
Hyperlink: http://www1.oecd.org/dsti/sti/statana/prod/eas_fras.htm
Context: This includes surface maintenance,
patching and running repairs (work relating to
roughness of carriageway‘s wearing course,
roadsides, etc.).
See also: Technological innovations
Major renovations or
enlargements (of
fixed assets)
Gros travaux de
rénovation ou
d‟agrandissement
(d‟actifs fixes)
Major renovations or enlargements of fixed assets
are activities which increase the performance or
capacity of existing fixed assets or significantly
extend their previously expected service lives and
so are classified as part of gross fixed capital
formation; the decision to renovate, reconstruct or
enlarge a fixed asset is a deliberate investment
decision which may be undertaken at any time and
is not dictated by the condition of the asset (note
the contrast between this item and ―maintenance
and repairs")
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Maintenance
Dépenses d'entretien
expenditure on rolling du matériel roulant
stock
Expenditure for keeping railway vehicles in working
order.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: SNA 6.162
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Maintenance and repairs (of fixed assets)
Major seven countries
The major seven countries comprise: Canada,
France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United
Kingdom, United States
Maintenance
expenditure on
vessels (for inland
waterways transport)
Expenditure for keeping vessels in working order.
Source: OECD Main Economic Indicators, OECD,
monthly, Data presentation notes
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: G8
Major water bodies
Bodies of water large enough to be separately
identified from the surrounding land. The size at
which a water body can be considered ―major‖ is
dependent upon the resolution of the underlying
land statistics. With the advent of geographic
information systems technology and remotely
sensed land statistics, it is possible to collect and
Maintenance
expenditure on
vessels (for sea
463
manipulate large volumes of detailed land
statistics. In countries in which these technologies
are available, a ―major‖ water body is likely to be
defined to be smaller than in countries with more
basic land statistics.
the resources used to deliver these programmes
are consistent with the stated aims and objectives
of the organisations concerned; that programmes
are protected from waste, fraud and
mismanagement; and that reliable and timely
information is obtained, maintained, reported and
used for decision making.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.70, EA.24
Context: It is the responsibility of an organisation‘s
management to establish and monitor
management control systems, not that of the
external auditor. However, an external auditor
should comment on the absence or adequacy of
such systems since a consequence of good
management controls is that less detailed auditing
of individual documents and transactions will be
necessary.
Malaria
A parasitic infection characterized by cycles of
chills, fever, sweating, anaemia, enlarged spleen
and a chronic relapsing course. Four types of
parasites affect man, through infection by the
anopheles mosquito. Most malarial areas are in the
tropics. Disasters, like floods and refugee
encampments, are conducive to the propagation of
the disease.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Source: S.W.A. Gunn. Multilingual Dictionary of
Disaster Medicine and International Relief, English,
Français, Español, Arabic. Boston, Kluwer
Academic Publishers, 1990. (p. 49)
See also: Accounting controls, Administrative
controls, Control/controls
Management
information system
(MIS)
An automated system designed to provide
progress and status information to management as
an aid to decision making.
Mall
A shopping centre or mall is a complex made up of
retail shops and various service enterprises which
is usually designed, planned, constructed and
managed as a single unit. In most cases such
complexes have their own car park. The whole
complex, including the type of trading and size of
outlets, is designed to cater either for the
population within a given radius or the specific
customer base for which, with an eye to the
existing commercial environment, it was
established.
Context: Refer to those sources of data and
records held within ministries or agencies which
are designed as a common pool of information to
assist managers in carrying out their
responsibilities. Financial management information
systems (FMIS)—a sub-set of MIS—are widely
regarded as essential for most ministries and
agencies to manage their resources better. Such
systems may also assist in the evaluation of
programme performance, in workload planning and
in monitoring progress towards objectives.
Management information systems form a key
element of management controls (Effects of
European Union Accession, Part 1: Budgeting and
Financial Control, OECD SIGMA Paper No. 19,
March 1998, Appendix 3: List of Useful Terms.
Available at
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163).
Source: Eurostat, 1993, "Retailing in the European
Single Market", Office for Official Publications of
the European Communities, Luxembourg
Managed investment
company
Managed investment company is an investment
company with a portfolio that may be altered at
the discretion of the company‘s portfolio manager.
(Investments, W.F. Sharpe/G.J. Alexander)
Source: Institutional Investors Statistical
Yearbook, 2000 edition, Annex III, Glossary
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Management buyout
See Buyout
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
See also: Buyout
Management control
Or Internal control is the organisation, policies and
procedures used to help ensure that government
programmes achieve their intended results; that
Management/Quality Personnel de gestion,
control/Administration de contrôle de la
qualité et
d'administration
464
Management/Quality control/Administration
comprises four categories: School Level
Management, Higher Level Management, School
Level Administrative Personnel and Higher Level
Administrative Personnel at all ISCED levels.
Glossary, Australian Bureau of Statistics
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/0/6B7D
040A646F264ECA256A5B001BD777?Open&Highlig
ht=0,warehouse
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Manifold classification Classification á
plusieurs entrées
If a population is divided into a number of mutually
exclusive classes according to some given
characteristic and then each class is divided by
reference to some second, third, etc.
characteristic, the final grouping is called a
manifold classification.
See also: Educational personnel, Instructional
personnel - OECD, Maintenance and operations
personnel, Ratio of students to teaching staff,
Teaching staff
Mandatory
Cotisation obligatoire
contribution
The level of contribution the member (or an entity
on behalf of the member) is required to pay
according to scheme rules.
Context: While some aspects of experimental
design in the factorial form are akin to manifold
classification, the term most often occurs with
reference to two characteristics, where the
manifold classification gives rise to a contingency
table.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Voluntary contribution
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Mandatory
occupational plans
Plan de retraite
professionnel
obligatoire
Participation in these plans is mandatory for
employers.
See also: Multiple classification
Employers are obliged by law to participate in a
pension plan. Employers must set up (and make
contributions to) occupational pension plans which
employees will normally be required to join. Where
employers are obliged to offer an occupational
pension plan, but the employees' membership is
on a voluntary basis, these plans are also
considered mandatory.
Manual correction
Manual correction is a human activity aimed at
changing the values of data items deemed
erroneous. The correction specified usually on the
diagnostic list is entered into the data set by
means of a program specially written for this
purpose.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
See also: Occupational pension plan, Voluntary
occupational plan
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Mandatory personal
pension plan
Plans de retraite
individuels
obligatoires
These are personal plans that individuals must join
or which are eligible to receive mandatory pension
contributions. Individuals may be required to make
pension contributions to a pension plan of their
choice normally within a certain range of choices or
to a specific pension plan.
Manual data review
Manual data review may occur prior to data entry.
The data may be reviewed and prepared/corrected
prior to key-entry. This procedure is more typically
followed when heads-down data entry is used.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
See also: Voluntary personal plan
Manifest
A document issued by a shipper, covering all cargo
stated to be in a ship or aircraft for delivery at a
particular seaport or airport.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: International Merchandise Trade,
Australia, Concepts, Sources and Methods,
Manual workers
465
See Production workers
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Production workers
Manufacturing - ISIC
Industries
manufacturières Ŕ
CITI Rév. 3
Manufacturing comprises Tabulation Category D
and Divisions 15-37 in the International Standard
Industrial Classification (ISIC) of All Economic
Activities, Revision 3.
Margin (trade)
Marge (commerciale)
A trade margin is the difference between the actual
or imputed price realised on a good purchased for
resale (either wholesale or retail) and the price
that would have to be paid by the distributor to
replace the good at the time it is sold or otherwise
disposed of
It is defined as the physical or chemical
transformation of materials of components into
new products, whether the work is performed by
power- driven machines or by hand, whether it is
done in a factory or in the worker's home, and
whether the products are sold at wholesale or
retail. Included are assembly of component parts
of manufactured products and recycling of waste
materials
Source: SNA 6.110
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Margin (transport)
Marges (de transport)
A transport margin consists of those transport
charges paid separately by the purchaser in taking
delivery of the goods at the required time and
place
Source: International Standard Industrial
Classification of All Economic Activities, Revision 3,
United Nations, 1990, Series M, No. 4, Rev. 3
Source: SNA 15.40 [15.42]
See also: Manufacturing – NACE
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Manufacturing Ŕ NACE Industries
manufacturières Ŕ
NACE
Manufacturing comprises all activities included
within NACE Section D. Both cottage industry
(crafts) and large scale activity are included. It
should be noted that the use of heavy plant or
machinery is not exclusive to NACE Section D
Marginal classification
In a bivariate frequency table it is customary to
show, as row and column totals, the univariate
frequencies of the two variates separately. This is
sometimes called marginal classification.
Similarly, for a multivariate frequency array the
arrays of one lower dimension formed by summing
one of the variates are occasionally said to be ,
marginal in relation to the original array. The
frequencies are said to be marginal.
Source: NACE Rev. 1, Introduction, Eurostat, May
1996, P. 21
Hyperlink:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/eurostat/ramon/cgi/Si
mWW
WFrame.SimResetBottomFrame?nID=NACE_REV1
&lId=&pId=
&test=&frameType=4&association=&property=DE
SCRIPTI ON&language=EN
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Manufacturing - ISIC, NACE
Marginal cost
See Costs
Manufacturing or
industrial milk
Manufacturing or industrial milk refers to milk used
for producing products such as casein, butter,
cheese and milk powder. Generally the term
excludes milk transformed into ―fresh‖ products,
such as yoghurt and cream
See also: Costs
Marginal distribution
The unconditional distribution of single variables,
or combinations of variables, in a multivariate
distribution.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Margin (financial)
Marges (financières)
Margins are payments of cash or collateral that
cover actual or potential obligations under financial
derivatives, especially futures or exchange-traded
options
Marginal factor cost
The incremental costs incurred by employing one
additional unit of input.
Source: SNA 11.43
466
Source: Synthesis report for the study on the
economic aspects of the management of marine
living resources, OECD (1996)
Marital status
The marital status is the civil status of each
individual in relation to the marriage laws or
customs of the country, i.e. never married,
married, widowed and not remarried, divorced and
not remarried, married but legally separated, de
facto union
Marginal land
Terres marginales
Marginal land is land of poor quality with regard to
agricultural use, and unsuitable for housing and
other uses
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Market
A market is where buyers and sellers transact
business for the exchange of particular goods and
services and where the prices for these goods and
services tend towards equality. In order for a
market to "clear" or function properly, the quantity
of goods and services demanded and supplied
must be equal at some given price.
Marginal revenue
See Revenues
See also: Revenues
Marginal settlements
Habitations
marginales
Marginal settlements are housing units that,
lacking basic amenities, are not considered fit for
human habitation
At any particular point in time, markets can be in
"equilibrium" or "disequilibrium" depending on
whether or not aggregate supply equals aggregate
demand at the prevailing price.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: Markets may be local, regional, national
or international in scope and do not necessarily
require buyers and sellers to meet or communicate
directly with each other. Business may be
transacted through the use of intermediaries as
well.
See also: Informal settlements
Marine Mammal
Marine Mammal
Protection Act
Protection Act
(MMPA)
(MMPA)
The Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) is a
statute enacted in 1972 by the United States to
protect marine mammals and their habitat. Species
covered by the Act include whales, dolphins, seals,
sea lions, and walruses
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Market definition
Marine park
Parc marin
A marine park is a permanent marine reservation
for the conservation of species. It constitutes an
extension, to the undersea world, of the concept of
the terrestrial national park
Market access
Accès au marché
Market access is governed by provisions of the
Uruguay Round Agreement on Agriculture which
refer to concessions contained in the country
schedules with respect to bindings and reductions
of tariffs and to other minimum import
commitments
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Marine pollution
Pollution marine
Marine pollution refers to direct or indirect
introduction by humans of substances or energy
into the marine environment (including estuaries),
resulting in harm to living resources, hazards to
human health, hindrances to marine activities
including fishing, impairment of the quality of sea
water and reduction of amenities
Market concentration
See Concentration
See also: Concentration
Market definition
The starting point in any type of competition
analysis is the definition of the "relevant" market.
There are two fundamental dimensions of market
definition:
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
(i) the product market, that is, which products to
467
group together; and
Market failure
Market failure is a general term describing
situations in which market outcomes are not
Pareto efficient. Market failures provide a rationale
for government intervention.
(ii) the geographic market, that is, which
geographic areas to group together.
Market definition takes into account both the
demand and supply considerations. On the demand
side, products must be substitutable from the
buyer‘s point of view. On the supply side, sellers
must be included who produce or could easily
switch production to the relevant product or close
substitutes.
Context: There are a number of sources of market
failure. For the purposes of competition policy, the
most relevant of these is the existence of market
power, or the absence of perfect competition.
However, there are other types of market failure
which may justify regulation or public ownership.
When individuals or firms impose costs or benefits
on others for which the market assigns no price,
then an externality exists. Negative externalities
arise when an individual or firm does not bear the
costs of the harm it imposes (pollution, for
example). Positive externalities arise when an
individual or firm provides benefits for which it is
not compensated.
Context: Market definition generally includes actual
and potential sellers, that is, firms that can rapidly
alter their production processes to supply
substitute products if the price so warrants. The
rationale for this is that these firms will tend to
dampen or curb the ability of existing firms in the
market to raise price above the competitive level.
The location of buyers and sellers will determine
whether the geographic market is local, regional,
national or international. If markets are defined
too narrowly in either product or geographic terms,
meaningful competition may be excluded from the
analysis.
On the other hand, if the product and geographic
markets are too broadly defined, the degree of
competition may be overstated. Too broad or too
narrow market definitions lead to understating or
overstating market share and concentration
measures.
Finally, there are cases in which goods or services
are not supplied by markets (or are supplied in
insufficient quantities). This may arise because of
the nature of the product, such as goods which
have zero or low marginal costs and which it is
difficult to exclude people from using (called public
goods; for example, a lighthouse or national
defence). It may also arise because of the nature
of some markets, where risk is present (called
incomplete markets; for example, certain types of
medical insurance).
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Market depth
Market depth is a dimension of market liquidity
and it refers to the ability of a market to handle
large trade volumes without a significant impact on
prices.
Market for corporate
control
In an economic system where the voting stock
(shares) of companies are publicly bought and sold
through the mechanism of a stock exchange, the
term "market for corporate control" refers to the
process by which ownership and control of
companies is transferred from one group of
investors and managers to another.
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
The share prices of companies publicly listed on
the stock exchange are often viewed as a
"barometer" indicating the extent to which
management is efficiently operating the
corporation and maximizing shareholder wealth.
Market
Établissements
establishments
marchands
Market establishments produce mostly goods and
services for sale at prices which are economically
significant
Context: Generally speaking, investors or
shareholders delegate substantial authority to
professional managers who are hired to make the
company‘s day-to-day pricing, production,
investment, marketing and other business
decisions. However, shareholders may not always
be in a position to monitor or oversee these
decisions, particularly if there are a large number
of such shareholders. Under these circumstances,
the company managers may not necessarily take
decisions that maximize shareholder wealth. They
Source: SNA 2.46
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Market exchange rate
See Exchange rates
See also: Exchange rates
468
may choose to shirk their duties by pursuing their
own personal goals such as avoiding risk,
maximizing their pay and fringe benefits, and
spending money on prestige projects.
See also: Market output – SNA
Market output Ŕ SNA
Production marchande
Ŕ SCN
Market output is output that is sold at prices that
are economically significant or otherwise disposed
of on the market, or intended for sale or disposal
on the market
Depending on the available information, the share
prices of the company will be valued low and this
would create incentives for takeover by a more
efficient group of managers and shareholders. By
taking control and subsequently changing
management or management practices and
reallocating resources, the assets of the acquired
company may be put to more highly valued uses.
The "market for corporate control" along with
competition in the markets for products and
services play an important role in reinforcing each
other in promoting efficiency.
Source: SNA 6.45
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Market output – ESA
Market power
Market power refers to the ability of a firm (or
group of firms) to raise and maintain price above
the level that would prevail under competition is
referred to as market or monopoly power. The
exercise of market power leads to reduced output
and loss of economic welfare.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Context: Although a precise economic definition of
market power can be put forward, the actual
measurement of market power is not
straightforward. One approach that has been
suggested is the Lerner Index, i.e., the extent to
which price exceeds marginal cost. However, since
marginal cost is not easy to measure empirically,
an alternative is to substitute average variable
cost. Another approach is to measure the price
elasticity of demand facing an individual firm since
it is related to the firm‘s price-cost (profit) margin
and its ability to increase price. However, this
measure is also difficult to compute.
See also: Takeover
Market non-profit
institutions serving
businesses
Institutions sans but
lucratif marchandes
au service des
entreprises
Market non-profit institutions serving businesses
are created by associations of the businesses
whose interests they are designed to promote and
are usually financed by contributions or
subscriptions from the group of businesses
concerned; the subscriptions are treated not as
transfers but as payments for services rendered
The actual or potential exercise of market power is
used to determine whether or not substantial
lessening of competition exists or is likely to occur.
An approach adopted in the administration of
merger policy in the United States and Canada
seeks to predict whether, post-merger, the parties
can institute a non-transitory price increase above
a certain threshold level (say 5 or 10 per cent)
which will vary depending on the case without
attracting entry of new firms or production of
substitute products. Their ability to maintain or
exceed this price threshold is assessed by detailed
examination of quantitative and qualitative market
structure and firm behaviour factors.
Source: SNA 4.59
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Market output Ŕ ESA
Production marchande
Ŕ SEC
Market output consists of output that is disposed of
on the market or intended to be disposed of on the
market.
Market output includes:
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
a) products sold at economically significant prices;
b) products bartered;
c) products used for payments in kind (including
compensation of employees in kind and mixed
income in kind);
d) products supplied by one local KAU to another
within the same institutional unit to be used as
intermediate inputs or for final uses;
e) products added to the inventories of finished
goods and work-in-progress intended for one or
other of the above uses (including natural growth
of animal and vegetable products and uncompleted
structures for which the buyer is unknown)
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Market price
Équivalents de prix du
equivalents
marché
Market price equivalents are proxies, or substitute
measures, for market prices in those cases for
which no actual market prices have been set; a
customary approach is to construct such prices by
analogy with known market prices established
Source: ESA [3.17-3.18]
469
From the seller‘s point of view the market price is
the basic price; from the buyer‘s point of view the
market price is the purchaser‘s price.
under conditions that are considered essentially
the same
Source: BPM paras. 95-96
Also referred to as ―transaction price‖.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Monetary Fund, Washington
DC
Market Price Support
(MPS)
Market Price Support (MPS) is an indicator of the
annual monetary value of gross transfers from
consumers and taxpayers to agricultural producers
arising from policy measures creating a gap
between domestic producer prices and reference
prices of a specific agricultural commodity
measured at the farm-gate level.
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: SNA para. 2.68
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Market prices – BPM
Context: Conditional on the production of a specific
commodity, MPS includes the transfer to producers
for total production (for domestic use and exports),
and is measured by the price gap applied to
current production.
Market producers Ŕ
Producteurs
ESA
marchands Ŕ SEC
Market producers are local kind-of-activity units
(KAUs) or institutional units the major part of
whose output is market output.
The MPS is net of financial contributions from
individual producers through producer levies on
sales of the specific commodity or penalties for not
respecting regulations such as production quotas
(levies on output ).
Context: It should be noted that if a local KAU or
institutional unit is a market producer its main
output is by definition market output, as the
concept of market output is defined after having
applied the distinction market, for own final use
and other non-market to the local KAU and
institutional unit that have produced that output
In the case of livestock production, it is net of the
market price support on domestically produced
coarse grains and oilseeds used as animal feed
(excess feed cost).
Source: ESA [3.24]
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
See also: Market producers – SNA
Market producers Ŕ
Producteurs
SNA
marchands Ŕ SCN
Market producers are producers that sell most or
all of their output at prices that are economically
significant
Market prices Ŕ BPM
Prix du marché - MBP
Market prices for transactions are the amounts of
money willing buyers pay to acquire something
from willing sellers
Source: SNA 4.58 [6.52]
Source: BPM 92 [2.68]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
See also: Market producers – ESA
Market risk
The risk of losses on financial instruments arising
from changes in market prices. Market risk covers
interest-rate, foreign exchange, equity price, and
commodity-price risk. As financial intermediaries
that take positions in financial instruments, such
losses in value affect the income and capital of
deposit-takers. The duration of assets and
liabilities can be used to estimate potential losses
arising from changes in market interest rates.
Another approach is through the use of stress
tests.
See also: Market prices – SNA
Market prices Ŕ SNA
Prix du marché SCN
Market prices are the actual price agreed upon by
the transactors. In the absence of market
transactions, valuation is made according to costs
incurred (non-market services produced by
government) or by reference to market prices for
analogous goods or services (services of owneroccupied dwellings)
Context: The amount of money a willing buyer
pays to acquire a good or service from a willing
seller. The actual price for a transaction agreed on
by the transactors. The net price inclusive of all
discounts, surcharges and rebates applied to the
transaction.
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
470
Market services Ŕ
Services marchand ISIC
CITI
Market services are defined as those services
produced for sale on the market at a price
intended to cover production costs and to provide
a profit for the producer.
scale are often positively correlated in market
economies. High levels of market share may
bestow market power on firms.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Market services comprise the following five ISIC
Tabulation Categories:
- Wholesale and Retail trade, repair of motor
vehicles, motor cycles and personal household
goods (G);
- Hotels and restaurants (H);
- Transport, storage and communications (I);
- Financial intermediation (J);
- Real estate, renting and business activities (K)
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Concentration
Market tightness
Market tightness is a dimension of market liquidity.
It is measured by the general cost incurred in a
transaction irrespective of market price.
Context: Under the 1993 System of National
Accounts (SNA) market and non-market services
are not separately reported if they are involved in
the same ISIC activity. However the 1968 SNA
recommended that market and non-market
services be separately identified
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Market transfers
Transfers to (when positive) or from (when
negative) consumers due to market price support
policies
Source: ISIC Rev. 3
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
See also: Market services – NACE, Non-market
services – OECD, Services – ISIC Rev. 3
Market services Ŕ
Services marchand NACE
NACE
Market services comprises 8 NACE-CLIO branches:
Market valuation
Evaluation marchande
Amounts of money that willing buyers pay to
acquire something from willing sellers; the
exchanges are made between independent parties
on the basis of commercial considerations only.
— recovery and repair services, wholesale and
retail trade services;
— lodging and catering services;
- inland transport services;
— maritime and air transport services;
— auxiliary transport services;
— communication services;
— services of credit and insurance institutions;
— other market services.
The market value of a debt instrument should be
based on the market price for that instrument
prevailing at the time to which the position
statement refers; that is, current market prices as
of the dates involved (beginning or end of the
reference period).
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: NACE-CLIO
Hyperlink:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/eurostat/ramon/cgi/Si
mWW
WFrame.SimResetBottomFrame?nID=NACE_REV1
&lId=&pId=
&test=&frameType=4&association=&property=DE
SCRIPTI ON&language=EN
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Nominal value
Market value
Valeur de marché
The price at which an asset would change hands if
it sold on the open market.
See also: Market services – ISIC, Non-market
services – NACE, Services – NACE
Market share
Market share is a measure of the relative size of a
firm in an industry or market in terms of the
proportion of total output or sales or capacity it
accounts for.
Context: Transactions are valued at the actual
prices agreed upon by the transactors. Market
prices are thus the basic reference for valuation in
the SNA. Assets and liabilities are valued at current
prices at the time to which the balance sheet
relates, not at their original prices.
In addition to profits, one of the frequently cited
business objectives of firms is to increase market
share. Market share, profits and economies of
Glossary of Government Debt Terms – OECD,
unpublished, 2001.
471
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Marketing innovation
A marketing innovation is the implementation of a
new marketing method involving significant
changes in product design or packaging, product
placement, product promotion or pricing.
See also: Fair value - OECD
Marketable securities
Marketable securities are securities that can easily
be sold. On a corporation‘s balance sheet , they
are assets that can be readily converted into cash for example, government securities, banker‘s
acceptances and commercial paper. (Dictionary of
Finance and Investment Terms , J. Downes and
J.E. Goodman)
Context: Marketing innovations are aimed at better
addressing customer needs, opening up new
markets, or newly positioning a firm‘s product on
the market, with the objective of increasing the
firm‘s sales.
The distinguishing feature of a marketing
innovation compared to other changes in a firm's
marketing instruments is the implementation of a
marketing method not previously used by the firm.
It must be part of a new marketing concept or
strategy that represents a significant departure
from the firm‘s existing marketing methods. The
new marketing method can either be developed by
the innovating firm or adopted from other firms or
organisations. New marketing methods can be
implemented for both new and existing products.
Source: Glossary of Government Debt Terms –
OECD, unpublished, 2001
Market-based
instruments
Market-based instruments seek to address the
market failure of 'environmental externalities'
either by incorporating the external cost of
production or consumption activities through taxes
or charges on processes or products, or by
creating property rights and facilitating the
establishment of a proxy market for the use of
environmental services.
Source: OECD, 2005, ―The Measurement of
Scientific and Technological Activities: Guidelines
for Collecting and Interpreting Innovation Data:
Oslo Manual, Third Edition‖ prepared by the
Working Party of National Experts on Scientific and
Technology Indicators, OECD, Paris, para. 169
Source: OECD, 2007, Business and the
Environment: Policy Incentives and Corporate
Responses, OECD, Paris
Marketing loan
(United States)
A marketing loan is a variation of the nonrecourse loan whereby, for specified commodities,
a producer may repay a loan at a lower rate than
the loan rate, equivalent to the prevailing world
market price.
Marketing agency (or
board)
A marketing agency (or board) is, generally, a
statutory body possessing certain legislated
regulatory powers over prices, quality standards,
foreign trade, etc
Under the 1985 Food Security Act, marketing loans
were implemented for cotton, rice and honey;
under the Farm Act of 1990, they were
implemented for soybeans and other oilseeds,
some cotton and rice, and are now mandatory for
wheat and feed grains; the 1996 FAIR Act retained
the provisions for some commodities
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Marketing Assistance
Loan Programme
Programme de prêt
d‟aide à la
commercialisation
The Marketing Assistance Loan Programme is a US
loan programme which since 1986 is designed to
provide producers of certain crops with financial
assistance when prices are low while avoiding a
disadvantage of the traditional loan programme –
the accumulation of government stocks that
depress prices when disposed of.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Marketing orders
(United States)
Marketing orders are measures intended to
stabilise markets, standardise quality and
packaging, regulate flows to the market and
authorise research and development for certain
farm commodities. They are used especially for
fruits, vegetables and nuts.
The programme effectively guarantees farmers a
minimum price. Farmers can obtain payments in
two ways. They can sell the crop and repay the
loan at the posted county price (a USDA estimate
of the local market price) and keep the difference
known as ―marketing gain‖. They can also obtain a
payment without taking out a loan
Marketing orders do not control pricing or
production directly, but are binding on the entire
industry in the area regulated.
A marketing order is requested by a group of
producers and must be approved by the Secretary
of Agriculture and a required number of the
commodity's producers (usually two-thirds) in the
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
472
area regulated. Orders are financed by production
levies
Master sample
Échantillon principal
A sample drawn from a population for use on a
number of future occasions, so as to avoid ad hoc
sampling on each occasion. Sometimes the master
sample is large and subsequent inquiries are based
on a sub-sample from it.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Marriage
Marriage is the act, ceremony or process by which
the legal relationship of husband and wife is
constituted. The legality of the union may be
established by civil, religious or other means as
recognised by the laws of each country
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Matched models
method (construction
price indices)
This method in the compilation of construction
price indices involves the specification of a sample
of representative construction projects (or
models), the matching of these ―model‖ projects
against actual projects carried out by contractors
in a specified period, the collection of prices for the
matched projects for each period, and the
weighting together of price movements for each
project.
Marriage order
The marriage order is the rank order (i.e. first,
second, third, etc) of the legal marriage being
contracted or of the legal marriage being dissolved
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Constant quality is maintained by calculating price
movements on a matched sample basis (i.e. the
price movements between adjacent periods are
based on the same ―model‖ projects each period).
Context: This methodology is used for the
calculation of price indices for standard project
home construction, as in the case of the price
indices for the construction and renovation of
privately built houses compiled in Australia. The
composition of the list of construction projects or
―models‖ to be matched against actual
construction projects is subject to continuous
review, and is determined by the continued
availability of price information relating to a
particular model specification. If the specification
of an individual model changes significantly, or if a
price is unable to be obtained, then that model is
excluded from the calculation of price movement.
Marshall Edgeworth
price index
A price index defined as the weighted arithmetic
average of the current to base period price
relatives which uses the quantities of an
intermediate basket as weights. The quantities of
the intermediate basket are arithmetic averages of
the quantities of the base and current periods. It is
a symmetric index and a pseudo-superlative index.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Price information for the actual finished
construction is obtained for each period from a
sample of builders/construction firms, real estate
organisations, government agencies, etc. They
relate to actual sales transacted during the period.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: Sources and Methods: Construction Price
Indices, OECD, Eurostat, 1997, page 21
Mass balances
A specific supply and use table where different
physical flows for products and/or residuals are
expressed in a common specific unit; for example
timber, forests products and wood waste converted
into ‗dry-matter tonnes of wood‘ .
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/document/4/0,2340,en_2649
_34247_2367940_1_1_1_1,00.html
See also: Construction price indices, Subsequent
breakdown methods (construction price indices)
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.189
Matched products
method
The pricing of identical products or models in
consecutive periods to ensure that the measured
price change cannot be affected by changes in
quality. In other words, pricing to constant
quantity. Price changes for perfectly matched
473
provided by conventional income measures.
products may be described as ―pure‖ price
changes.
Source: OECD, 2007, Society at a Glance: OECD
Social Indicators, 2006 edition, OECD, Paris
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Materiality
Refers to the significance of a matter in relation to
a set of financial or performance information. If a
matter is material to the set of information, then it
is likely to be of significance to a user of that
information.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
See also: Specification pricing
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Matched samples
Échantillons appariés
A pair, or set of, matched samples are those in
which each member of a sample is matched with a
corresponding member in every other sample by
reference to qualities other than those immediately
under investigation.
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Context: The object of matching is to obtain better
estimates of differences by ―removing‖ the possible
effects of other variables. For example, if it is
desired to investigate acuity of vision for a sample
of smokers as compared with a sample of nonsmokers, better comparisons can usually be made
if, to every member of one sample, there can be
associated a member of the other sample of the
same sex and about the same age.
Materials and energy Bilans de la matière et
balances
de l‟énergie
Materials and energy balances are accounting
tables that provide information on the material
input into an economy delivered by the natural
environment, the transformation and use of that
input in economic processes (extraction,
conversion, manufacturing, consumption) and its
return to the natural environment as residuals
(wastes).
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
The accounting concepts involved are founded on
the first law of thermodynamics, which states that
matter (mass/energy) is neither created nor
destroyed by any physical process
Matching distribution
Distribution
d'appareillage
Suppose two sets having n objects each are
numbered 1, 2, …., n and each is arranged in a
random order so as to form n pairs. Then the
number of pairs on which the two numbers are the
same has the matching distribution. More general
distributions are studied, in which there are several
qualitative characteristics, e.g. colour or suit
instead of numbering in the comparison of two
packs of cards or more than two sets are available.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Materials and supplies Stocks de matières
Ŕ inventories
premières et
fournitures
See Inventories of materials and supplies
See also: Inventories of materials and supplies
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Maternal death
The death of woman while pregnant or within 42
days of termination of pregnancy, irrespective of
the duration and site of the pregnancy, from any
cause related to or aggravated by the pregnancy
or its management but not from accidental causes.
Matching fields
See Editing match
Context: Maternal deaths should be divided into
two groups. Direct obstetric deaths and those
resulting from obstetric complications of the
pregnant state (pregnancy, labour and
puerperium), from interventions, omissions,
incorrect treatment, or from a chain of events
resulting from any of the above. Indirect obstetric
deaths are those resulting from previous existing
disease or disease that developed during
pregnancy and which was not due to direct
obstetric causes, but which was aggravated by
physiologic effects of pregnancy.
See also: Editing match
Material deprivation
Material deprivation refers to the inability for
individuals or households to afford those
consumption goods and activities that are typical in
a society at a given point in time, irrespective of
people‘s preferences with respect to these items.
Context: Measures of material deprivation provide
a complementary perspective on poverty to that
474
Source: World Health Organization. International
Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related
Health Problems, Tenth Revision (ICD-10), vol. 1.
Geneva, 1992. (definitions 4.4 and 4.5)
Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Maternal mortality
rate
The maternal mortality rate refers to the number
of deaths from puerperal causes occurring among
the female population of a given geographical area
during a given year, per 100, 000 live births
occurring among the population of the given
geographical area during the same year
Maturity (of a loan)
The date at which the final repayment of a loan is
due; by extension, a measure of the scheduled life
of the loan.
Context: Maturity is the period of time until the
redemption or expiration of a financial instrument
(Glossary of Government Debt Terms – OECD,
unpublished, 2001).
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
Maternity leave
Maternity leave is leave granted only to mothers
for a limited period of time around the time of
childbirth (although it is possible for the father to
take the post-natal part of the leave in extreme
circumstances, such as the mother‘s death or
illness).
Maturity structure
A time profile of the maturities of claims or
liabilities. Also known as ―maturity profile‖ or
―maturity distribution.‖
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, July 1995,
Chapter 5, Long-term leave for parents in OECD
countries, page 174
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Mathematical literacy Culture mathématique
Mathematical literacy is defined in the Programme
for International Student Assessment (PISA) as the
capacity to identify, understand and engage in
mathematics, and to make well-founded
judgements about the role that mathematics plays
in an individual‘s current and future private life,
occupational life, social life with peers and
relatives, and life as a constructive, concerned and
reflective citizen.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Maximum economic
Performance
performance in the
économique maximale
fishery
de la pêcherie
Maximum economic performance in the fishery is a
situation in which the fishery is generating the
maximum amount of economic benefits, as
measured as the sum of net benefits to fishers and
consumers, and resource rent
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
See also: Reading literacy, Scientific literacy
Matrix consistency
The property that makes it possible to have correct
country-to-country quantity relationships for each
detailed category and, at the same time, to obtain
the correct country-to-country quantity
relationships for any desired aggregation of
categories simply by summing the quantities for
the included categories.
Maximum Economic
Yield (MEY) in
Fisheries Accounts
When relating total revenues from fishing to total
fishing effort in a surplus production model, the
value of the largest positive difference between
total revenues and total costs of fishing (including
the cost of labour and capital) with all inputs
valued at their opportunity costs.
This requires that the quantities be stated in value
terms so that (a) the values for any category are
directly comparable between countries and (b) the
values for any country are directly comparable
between categories.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
475
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.279
See also: Maximum Economic Yield (MEY) in
Fisheries Accounts
See also: Maximum sustainable yield (MSY) in
Fisheries Accounts
Maximum sustainable Rendement maximum
yield, fishing (MSY)
soutenable (RMS)
Maximum sustainable yield (MSY) is the largest
long-term average catch or yield that can be taken
from a stock or stock complex under prevailing
ecological and environmental conditions
Maximum operating
Vitesse d'exploitation
speed
maximum
The highest speed allowed on commercial service
taking into account technical characteristics of the
infrastructure.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
MDG
See Millennium Development Goals
See also: Millennium Development Goals
Maximum size of data
element values
The maximum size of data element values refers to
the maximum number of storage units (of the
corresponding datatype) to represent the data
element value
Mean
Moyenne
When unqualified, the mean usually refers to the
expectation of a variate, or to the arithmetic mean
of a sample used as an estimate of the
expectation.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 1, Framework for the
specification and standardization of data elements,
1998
Maximum sustainable
yield
Maximum sustainable yield refers to the maximum
use that a renewable resource can sustain without
impairing its renewability through natural growth
or replenishment
Mean absolute error
Erreur absolu
moyenne
An alternative but much less desirable name for
the mean deviation.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Mean deviation
Maximum sustainable
yield (MSY) in
Fisheries Accounts
The highest theoretical equilibrium yield that can
be continuously taken (on average) from a stock
under existing (average) environmental conditions
without affecting significantly the reproduction
process.
Mean deviation
Écart moyen
A measure of dispersion derived from the average
deviation of observations from some central value,
such deviations being taken absolutely, i.e. without
reference to algebraic sign. The central value may
be the arithmetic mean or the median. Expressed
formally the mean deviation is the first absolute
moment.
Context: When relating total revenues from fishing
to total fishing effort in a surplus production
model, MEY is attained at a level of fishing effort
where marginal costs of fishing are equal to
marginal fishing revenues. At this level of fishing
effort, the difference between total revenues and
total costs of fishing, including the cost of labour
and capital with all inputs valued at their
opportunity costs, is maximized.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Mean range
Étendue moyenne
The arithmetic mean of the ranges of a set of
samples of the same size. The mean range in
repeated sampling may be used as an estimator
for the population standard deviation.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.279
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
476
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Mean square
Carré moyen
In general, the mean square of a set of values is
the arithmetic mean of the squares of their
differences from some given value, namely their
second moment about that value.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Mean value test for
quantities
A test that may be used under the axiomatic
approach which requires that the implicit quantity
index lies between the minimum and maximum
rates of growth of the individual quantities.
Context: When the mean square is regarded as an
estimator of certain parental variance components
the sum of squares about the observed mean is
usually divided by the number of degrees of
freedom, not the number of observations. It is still
known as a mean square, an expression which is
convenient if somewhat inaccurate.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Mean square deviation Déviation en moyenne
The second moment of a set of observations about
some arbitrary origin. If that origin is the mean of
the observations the mean square deviation is the
equivalent of the variance.
Measles
A highly contagious acute disease of childhood,
characterized by a spreading skin rash, fever,
cough, coryza, conjunctivitis, eruption of the
buccal mucosa (Koplik's spots) and prostration.
Overcrowding and disaster conditions are
conducive to outbreaks, with high mortality,
especially among the malnourished.
Context: An equivalent expression, especially when
the observations are variate values, is mean
square error. This latter term also occurs in older
writings in the sense of variance but should not be
employed in that sense.
Source: S.W.A. Gunn. Multilingual Dictionary of
Disaster Medicine and International Relief, English,
Français, Español, Arabic. Boston, Kluwer
Academic Publishers, 1990.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Measure
The phenomenon or phenomena to be measured in
a data set.
Mean square error
The mean square error is equal to the square of
the bias plus the variance of the estimator. If the
sampling method and estimating procedure lead to
an unbiased estimator, then the mean square error
is simply the variance of the estimator.
Context: In a data set, the instance of a measure
is often called an observation.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Context: The mean squared deviation of an
estimator from the true value, equal to the
variance plus the squared bias. (A Dictionary of
Statistical Terms, 5th edition, prepared for the
International Statistical Institute by F.H.C.
Marriott. Published for the International Statistical
Institute by Longman Scientific and Technical)
See also: Data set, Key family, Observation
Measurement errors
Measurement errors occur when the response
provided differs from the real value; such errors
may be attributable to the respondent, the
interviewer, the questionnaire, the collection
method or the respondent's record-keeping
system. Such errors may be random or they may
result in a systematic bias if they are not random.
Source: Quality Glossary, Eurostat
Mean value test for
prices
A test that may be used under the axiomatic
approach which requires that the price index lies
between the minimum price relative and the
maximum price relative.
Context: Measurement error includes the error in a
survey response as a result of respondent
confusion, ignorance, carelessness, or dishonesty;
the error attributable to the interviewer, perhaps
as a consequence of poor or inadequate training,
prior expectations regarding respondents‘
responses, or deliberate errors; and error
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
477
attributable to the wording of the questions in the
questionnaire, the order or context in which the
questions are presented, and the method used to
obtain the responses.
to, and thereafter maintaining it continuously in
the following manner at any desired practically
constant value t1 in conformity with the standards
defined below for the three classes:
Source: Statistics Canada, "Statistics Canada
Quality Guidelines", 4th edition, October 2003,
page 59
- Class A. Mechanically refrigerated wagon fitted
with a refrigerating appliance such that t1 may be
chosen between +12 degrees C and 0 degrees C
inclusive.
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca:8096/bsolc/english/bsolc?c
atno=12-539-X&CHROPG=1http
- Class B. Mechanically refrigerated wagon fitted
with a refrigerating appliance such that t1 may be
chosen between +12 degrees C and -10 degrees C
inclusive.
Measures for the
disabled
Measures for the disabled only include special
programmes for the disabled. The category does
not cover the total policy effort in support of the
disabled.
- Class C. Mechanically refrigerated wagon fitted
with a refrigerating appliance such that t1 may be
chosen between +12 degrees C and -20 degrees C
inclusive.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Definitions of the Standardised categories
and Sub-categories of Labour Market Programmes,
OECD, 2001
Measures for
unemployed and
disadvantaged youth
Measures for unemployed and disadvantaged
youth include remedial education, training or work
practice for disadvantaged youth to facilitate
transition from school to work. The principal target
group usually consist of those who do not follow
regular upper-secondary or vocational education
and are unsuccessful in finding jobs
Median
Médiane
The median is that value of the variate which
divides the total frequency into two halves.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Definitions of the Standardised categories
and Sub-categories of Labour Market Programmes,
OECD, 2001
Medical diagnostic
and treatment and
programmes
Medical diagnostic and treatment and programmes
(International Standard Classification of Education
(ISCED) 650) are programmes at the third level,
first stage, of the type that lead to a first university
degree or equivalent
Mechanical treatment
technology
Mechanical treatment technology involves wastewater treatment of a physical and mechanical
nature that results in decanted effluents and
separate sludge.
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Mechanical processes are also used in combination
with biological and advanced unit operations.
Mechanical treatment includes processes such as
sedimentation and flotation
Medical graduates
Number of students who have graduated in
medicine from medical faculties or similar
institutions, i.e., who have completed basic
medical education in a given year.
Source: Glossary of Environmental Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Advanced treatment technology (waste
water)
Context: In the European Union, a Directive has
defined basic medical training as comprising a total
of at least six years of study or 5,500 hours of
theoretical and practical training provided by, or
under the supervision of, a university (article 24,
Directive 2005/36/EC of the European Parliament
and of the Council).
Mechanically
Wagon frigorifique
refrigerated wagon
Insulated wagon either fitted with its own
refrigerating appliance, or served jointly with other
units of transport equipment by such an appliance
(mechanical compressor, "absorption" unit, etc.).
Source: OECD Health Data 2007: Statistics and
Indicators for 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2007,
Data sources, definitions and methods
Context: Such a wagon shall be capable, with a
mean outside temperature of + 30 degrees C, of
lowering the temperature inside the empty body
478
These scenarios basically indicate the requirements
necessary to bring economies back to overall
balance over the medium term - in terms of
closing the output and employment gaps.
Moreover, they typically act as baseline scenarios
for macro-economic simulations of the effects of
various alternative assumptions on economic policy
or other forces affecting the projections.
Medical science and
health-related
graduates
Medical science and health-related graduates
refers to the number of students enrolled or
graduating at different levels of medical and
health-related education. These levels are
classified according to ISCED (International
Standard Classification of Education) developed by
UNESCO, OECD, and EUROSTAT
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
MEDSTAT
Mediterranean Statistical Co-operation Programme
Medium-term budget
framework
A framework for integrating fiscal policy and
budgeting over the medium-term by linking a
system of aggregate fiscal forecasting to a
disciplined process of maintaining detailed
medium-term budget estimates by ministries
reflecting existing government policies. Forward
estimates of expenditures become the basis of
budget negotiations in the years following the
budget and the forward estimates are reconciled
with final outcomes in fiscal outcome reports.
MEDTOUR
Euro-Mediterranean co-operation in tourism
statistics
MEI
See Main Economic Indicators
See also: Main Economic Indicators, OECD (MEI)
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Member
Membre / adhérent
See Active member, Passive member, Fund
member, Pension plan member
Medium-term
instruments
See Medium-term notes (MTNs)
Context: Identical term, "Pension fund member"
See also: Active member, Fund member, Pension
plan member
See also: Medium term notes (MTNs)
Member of a
Membre d'une
producers‟ cocoopérative de
operative
production
A member of a producers‘ co-operative is a person
who holds a self-employment job in an
establishment organised as a co-operative, in
which each member takes part on an equal footing
with other members in determining the
organisation of production, sales and/or other
work, investments and the distribution of proceeds
among the members.
Medium-term notes
(MTNs)
These are debt instruments of usually one- to five
year maturity issued in bearer form under a
program agreement through one or more dealers.
Once a program is set up, issues can be made
quickly to take advantage of market conditions,
with issues structured more closely to investors‘
needs than in the public bond markets. Typically,
the MTN market is not as liquid as the international
bond market, so issuers may have to pay a higher
interest rate.
Note that employees of producers‘ co- operatives
are not classified to this group
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.233
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Merchandise trade
Goods which add or subtract from the stock of
material resources of a country by entering
(imports) or leaving (exports) its economic
territory. Goods simply being transported through
a country (goods in transit) or temporarily
admitted or withdrawn (except for goods for
inward or outward processing) do not add to or
subtract from the stock of material resources of a
country and are not included in the international
merchandise trade statistics. In many cases, a
Medium-term
projections or
scenarios
In the context of the OECD's Economic Outlook,
medium-term projections or scenarios look out five
to six years, and are published as part of the
OECD's projection exercise.
479
country's economic territory largely coincides with
its customs territory, which is the territory in which
the customs law of a country applies in full.
An amalgamation or joining of two or more firms
into an existing firm or to form a new firm.
A merger is a method by which firms can increase
their size and expand into existing or new
economic activities and markets.
Source: United Nations. International Merchandise
Trade Statistics -- Concepts and Definitions. Series
F, No. 52, Rev. 2 (United Nations publication, Sales
No. E.98.XVII.16). (para. 14)
Context: A variety of motives may exist for
mergers: to increase economic efficiency, to
acquire market power, to diversify, to expand into
different geographic markets, to pursue financial
and research and development synergies, etc.
Merchant fleet
Flotte marchande
Number of merchant ships registered at a given
date in a country and authorised to navigate at
sea.
Mergers are classified into three types:
- Horizontal merger;
Context: Changes in the fleet refer to changes in
total or within a ship type, in the seagoing fleet of
the reporting country, resulting from new
construction, modification in type or capacity,
transfers to or from a different flag state,
scrapping, casualties, or transfer to or from the
fluvial register. Vessels under repair are included.
- Vertical merger; and a
- Conglomerate merger
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Acquisition (ownership), Conglomerate
merger, Horizontal merger, Take-over, Vertical
integration, Vertical merger
Merchant ship
Navire marchand
Ship designed for the carriage of goods, transport
of passengers or specially fitted out for a specific
duty.
Meta-analysis
Quantitative study of published results relating to a
particular problem. Conclusions about
heterogeneity and overall significance are usually
based on published values of test estimates.
Context: Naval ships and ships used by public
administration and public services are excluded.
Merchant ships are divided into cargo carrying
ships and ships of miscellaneous activities. Ships of
miscellaneous activities include fish catching and
processing ships, tugs, dredges, research/survey
ships, and ships designed for offshore production
and support.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Metadata
Metadata is data that defines and describes other
data.
Context: For the ISO standard, metadata is
defined as data that defines and describes other
data and processes. This means that metadata are
data that describe other data, and data become
metadata when they are used in this way. This
happens under particular circumstances and for
particular purposes, as no data are always
metadata. The set of circumstances and purposes
(or perspective) for which some data are used as
metadata is called the context. So, metadata are
data about data in some context.
Mercosur
Mercosur
See Common Market of the South (Mercosur)
See also: Common Market of the South
(MERCOSUR)
Mercury
Mercure
Mercury is a heavy metal that can accumulate in
the environment and is highly toxic if breathed or
swallowed
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Data, Definition, structural, Metadata
layer, Metadata registry, Metadata system,
statistical, Metadata, statistical, Metadata,
structural
Merger
480
set of attributes related to statistical
metainformation
Metadata attribute
See Attribute
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva, 2000
See also: Attribute
Metadata content
standard
A metadata content standard is a standard that
specifies a set of metadata items and does not
specify the physical format of the content, the
services to be provided, or the syntax used
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
Source: Survey Design and Statistical Methodology
Metadata, Software and Standards Management
Branch, Systems Support Division, United States
Bureau of the Census, Washington D.C., August
1998, Section 1.1, page 1
See also: Definition, structural, Metadata,
Metadata content standard, Metadata registry,
Metadata system, statistical, Metadata, statistical,
Metadata, structural, Metainformation, statistical
Metadata object
Metadata object is an object type defined by a
metamodel.
See also: Metadata (relating to objects)
Metadata dimension
The higher level of the metadata structure (e.g.,
data, access, integrity and quality in the SDDS
format), which, combined with elements (e.g.,
coverage, periodicity, and timeliness) forms the
basic framework under which data are described.
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
See also: ISO / IEC 11179, Metadata item,
Metamodel, Object
Context: The SDDS prescribes that subscribing
members provide a summary description of
methodology for each data category, including
statements of major differences from international
guidelines. The term "methodology" is used in the
SDDS in a broad sense to cover the aspects of
analytical framework, concepts, definitions,
classifications, accounting conventions, sources of
data, and compilation practices.
Metadata registry
A metadata registry is an information system for
registering metadata.
Context: Within ISO/IEC International standard
11179, a metadata registry is a database of
metadata that supports the functionality of
registration.
Registration accomplishes three main goals:
identification, provenance, and monitoring quality.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Identification is accomplished by assigning a
unique identifier (within the registry) to each
object registered there.
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
See also: Special Data Dissemination Standard
(SDDS)
Provenance addresses the source of the metadata
and the object described.
Metadata item
Metadata item is an instance of a metadata object.
Monitoring quality ensures that the metadata does
the job it is designed to do.
Context: A metadata item has associated
attributes, as appropriate for the metadata object
it relates to.
A metadata registry manages the semantics of
data. Understanding data is fundamental to its
design, harmonization, standardization, use, reuse, and interchange. The underlying model is
designed to capture all the basic components of
the semantics of data, independent of any
application or subject matter area. Registration
also allows two or more administered items
describing identical objects to be identified, and it
will identify situations where similar or identical
names are in use for administered items that are
significantly different in one or more respects.
Each metadata item can have a distinct status:
mandatory (always required), conditional
(understood as required under certain specified
conditions) and optional (permitted but not
required).
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179-3 Information technology - Metadata registries
(MDR) - Part 3: Registry metamodel and basic
attributes", February 2003
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179-3 Information technology - Metadata registries
(MDR) - Part 1: Framework, March 2004.
See also: Attribute, ISO / IEC 11179, Metadata
object, Registry item, Related metadata reference
Metadata layer
A metadata layer is a layer in the reference model
for standardisation in statistics used to denote the
See also: Administered item, Definition, structural,
Metadata, Metadata layer, Metadata, statistical,
481
Metadata, structural, Registry item, Registry
metamodel
See also: ISO / IEC 11179
Class of substances which are crystalline when
solid and many of which are opaque, ductile,
malleable, dense and good conductors of heat and
electricity. Manufacture of basic metals in the
International Standard Classification of All
Economic Activities, Revision 3, comprises division
3 and includes the ferrous metals iron and steel,
the precious metals gold, silver and members of
the platinum group, and other non-ferrous base
metals such as copper, lead, chrome, manganese,
zinc, aluminium, nickel and tin and alloys of such
metals. CPC Vers. 1: Basic metals (division 41).
Metadata structure
definition
A collection of metadata concepts, structure and
usage when used to collect or disseminate
reference metadata.
Source: United Nations. International Standard
Industrial Classification of All Economic Activities
(ISIC), Third Revision. Series M, No. 4, Rev. 3
(United Nations publication, Sales No.
E.90.XVII.11).
Metadata set
Metadata set is any collection of metadata.
Source: ISO/IEC 11179-3 "Information
technology-Metadata registries (MDR)-Part 3:
Registry metamodel and basic attributes",
February 2003
Context: A reference metadata set also has a set
of structural metadata which describes how it is
organized. This metadata identifies what reference
metadata concepts are being reported, how these
concepts relate to each other (typically as
hierarchies), what their presentational structure is,
how they may be represented (as free text, as
coded values, etc.), and with which formal object
types they are associated.
Metamodel
A data model that specifies one or more other data
models.
Context: The metamodel provides a framework for
understanding the important metadata that needs
to be captured when describing data.
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
See also: Data model, ISO / IEC 11179, Metadata
object, Registry metamodel
See also: Concept, Maintenance agency, Structural
metadata
METANET
METANET is a network bringing together experts
from national statistical institutes, users of official
statistics, researchers and developers to harmonise
metadata and the methodology, definitions and
models used to describe statistical processing
systems. METANET is an open access network
where it is possible to participate at different
levels.
Metadataflow
definition
A structure which describes, categorises and
constrains the allowable content of a metadata set
that providers will supply for different reference
periods.
Context: A ―metadata flow‖, in this context, is an
abstract concept of the metadata sets, i.e. a
structure without any actual metadata. A
Metadataflow definition associates a Metadata
structure definition with one or more category
(possibly from different category schemes). This
gives a system the ability to state which metadata
sets are to be reported/disseminated for a given
category, and which metadata sets can be
reported using the Metadata structure definition.
METANET aims to build on all standards developed
for metadata including ISO 11179, the Dublin
Core, SDDS, GESMES/CB and those developed by
METIS.
Source: OECD Quality Framework
Hyperlink: http://www.epros.ed.ac.uk/metanet/
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
MetaStore
MetaStore is the OECD's corporate facility for the
storage, accessing and management of reference
metadata for statistics.
See also: Category, Data flow definition, Definition,
Metadata, Metadata set
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD Statistical Programme
of Work: 2005, OECD, Paris, p. 16
Metallic mineral
Réserves de minerais
reserves
métalliques
Metallic mineral reserves consist of ferrous and
non-ferrous metal ore deposits
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/39/59/34444861.p
df
Source: (AN.2122) – Annex to chapter XIII
See also: OECD.stat
Metals
Methane
482
Méthane
Methane (CH4) is a colourless, non—poisonous and
flammable gaseous hydrocarbon created by
anaerobic decomposition of organic compounds.
Methane is a potent greenhouse gas
and representatives from a large number of
national statistical institutes.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/documents/2000.11.
metis.htm
Methodological
soundness
Methodological soundness refers to constructs and
principles of accounting that are basic building
blocks of macroeconomic data.
Mezzanine finance
See Subordinated bond
Source: OECD Quality Framework
See also: Subordinated bond
MFN
See Most favoured nation (MFN) principle
Context: Concepts and definitions, scope,
classifications of flows/stocks and sectorization of
units, and valuation and time of recording are key
aspects of macroeconomic datasets. These are
typically covered in standards and guidelines that
are agreed on in international consultative
processes and in recognized sets of goods
practices. Thus, following the standards,
guidelines, and practices promotes soundness of
the data in these respects.
See also: Most favoured nation (MFN) principle
MFP
See Multi-factor productivity
See also: Multi-factor productivity (MFP)
MICR
See Magnetic ink character recognition
International comparability is enhanced to the
extent that countries follow international
standards.
See also: Magnetic Ink Character Recognition
(MICR)
Microaggregation
Records are grouped based on a proximity
measure of variables of interest, and the same
small groups of records are used in calculating
aggregates for those variables. The aggregates are
released instead of the individual record values.
Source: International Monetary Found (IMF), "Data
Quality Assessment Framework (DQAF) Glossary"
See also: Quality – IMF
Methodology
A methodology is a structured approach to solve a
problem
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Context: A set of research methods and techniques
applied to a particular field of study (Statistics
Canada, ―Statistics: Power from data‖, Glossary,
available at:
http://www.statcan.ca/english/edu/power/glossary
/gloss.htm).
Microclimate
Microclimat
A microclimate is a climatic structure of a small
area
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva, 2000
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
Micro-economic
approach
See Economic approach
See also: Methodology, statistical
METIS
Metadata information system.
See also: Economic approach
Micro-editing
An exhaustive check to find errors by inspecting
each individual observation.
METIS is a UN/ECE initiative primarily focused on
the development of a consensus on conceptual
issues and the development of guidelines in
relation to statistical metadata, i.e. information
needed for proper production and usage of
statistical data.
Context: Micro-editing is the process of finding
errors by inspection of individual observations.
Editing done at the record, or questionnaire level.
(Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing
Participants at the annual meetings of METIS
include Eurostat, ILO IMF, OECD, UNECE, UNSD
483
Group)
regarding the exercise of an economic activity
Source: Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
May 2002
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
See also: Data editing, statistical, Macro-edit,
Selective editing
Migrants having the
right to free
establishment or
movement
See Foreigners having the right to free
establishment
Micro-enterprises
See Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs)
See also: Small and medium-sized enterprises
(SMEs)
Mid-period price index
A price index that utilises either the quantity or
value weights from an intermediate period that lies
between the base period and the current period
when the number of periods between them is odd
or the average of the quantity or value weights for
two consecutive intermediate periods that lie
between the base period and the current period
when the number of periods between them is
even.
See also: Foreigners having the right to free
establishment
Migration for
Migration aux fins
employment
d'emploi
See Foreign migrant workers
See also: Foreign migrant workers
Military debts
Loans and other credits extended for military
purposes.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Mid-Term Review
See Luxembourg agreement on CAP reform
Milk quota scheme
Programme de quotas
laitiers
A milk quota scheme is a supply control measure
to limit the volume of milk produced or supplied.
See also: Luxembourg agreement
MIG
Main industrial groupings
Quantities up to a specified quota benefit from full
market price support. Over-quota volumes may be
penalised by a levy (as in the European Union,
where the ―superlevy‖ is 115 per cent of the target
price) or may receive a lower price.
Migrant workers
See Foreign migrant workers
See also: Foreign migrant workers
Allocations are usually fixed at individual producer
level. Other features, including arrangements for
quota reallocation, differ according to scheme
Migrants
According to the United Nations recommendations,
migrants consist of four categories:
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
- long-term immigrants (or emigrants);
- short-term immigrants (or emigrants);
- residents returning after (or leaving for) a period
working abroad, i.e. short-term emigrants
returning (or leaving); and
- nomads.
See also: Supply quotas
Millennium
Development Goal
indicators
The Millennium Development Goal (MDG)
indicators comprise a set of 48 indicators designed
to measure progress towards the achievement of
the eight Millennium Development Goals over the
period 1990 to 2015.
Source: International Migration Statistics for OECD
Countries: Sources and Comparability of Migration
Statistics, OECD, page 10
Migrants for
Migrants aux fins
settlement
d'installation
Migrants for settlement are foreigners granted the
permission to stay for a lengthy or unlimited
period, who are subject to virtually no limitations
Each year, the UN Secretary-General presents a
report to the United Nations General Assembly on
progress achieved towards implementing the
484
Declaration, based on data on the 48 selected
indicators, aggregated at global and regional
levels.
The eight MDGs range from halving extreme
poverty to halting the spread of HIV/AIDS and
providing universal primary education, all by the
target date of 2015.
Context: The United Nations Statistics Division
(UNSD) coordinates the preparation of data
analysis to assess progress made towards the
MDGs and maintains the database containing the
data series related to the selected indicators, as
well as other background series intended to
supplement the basic indicators, for more in-depth
analysis. This is undertaken in close collaboration
with agencies and organizations within and outside
the United Nations system.
Context: The individual Goals are to:
- Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger
- Achieve universal primary education
- Promote gender equality and empower women
- Reduce child mortality
The figures presented in the database are compiled
by specialized agencies within their area of
expertise. They are drawn from national statistics
provided by Governments to the international
statistical system-the United Nations Statistics
Division and the statistical offices of the various
agencies-and usually adjusted for comparability.
- Improve maternal health
- Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases
- Ensure environmental sustainability
- Develop a global partnership for development
The availability of data needed to calculate the
indicators in each country depends on the capacity
of the national statistical services to produce the
necessary data and/or to report them in a timely
manner to the relevant international agencies. In
some instances, national Governments may have
more recent statistics that have not been reported
to the international statistical system. In other
cases, countries do not produce the data required
for the compilation of the indicators. When this
occurs, agencies make estimates based on data
available on related variables or other
methodologies as described in the metadata
section of the database.
Source: United Nations, 2000, UN Development
Goals website, United Nations, New York
Hyperlink:
http://www.un.org/millenniumgoals/index.html
See also: Millennium Development Goal indicators
Mineral exploration
Prospection minière
et pétrolière
Mineral exploration consists of the value of
expenditures on exploration for petroleum and
natural gas and for non-petroleum deposits; it
includes prelicence costs, licence and acquisition
costs, appraisal costs and the costs of actual test
drilling and boring, as well as the costs of aerial
and other surveys, transportation costs, etc,
incurred to make it possible to carry out the tests
Since the periodic assessment of progress towards
the MDGs commenced, the international statistical
community has been concerned about the lack of
adequate data to compile the required indicators in
many parts of the developing world. At the same
time, the monitoring requirements themselves
have focused attention on this shortcoming and
raised awareness of the urgency to launch
initiatives for statistical capacity building.
Source: (AN.1121) – Annex to chapter XIII
Minimal set of conflict
rules
A minimal set of conflict rules is a minimal subset
of the complete set of conflict rules expressing the
same erroneous data combinations as the
complete set of conflict rules.
Source: UNSD, 2000, Millennium Development
Goal indicators website, United Nations, New York
Hyperlink: http://mdgs.un.org/unsd/mdg/
See also: Millennium Development Goals
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Millennium
Development Goals
In September 2000, leaders from 189 nations
agreed on a vision for the future: a world with less
poverty, hunger and disease, greater survival
prospects for mothers and their infants, better
educated children, equal opportunities for women,
and a healthier environment; a world in which
developed and developing countries worked in
partnership for the betterment of all.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Minimal set of fields
to impute
A minimal set of fields to impute refers to the
smallest set of fields requiring imputation that will
guarantee that all edits are passed.
This vision took the shape of eight Millennium
Development Goals, which provide a framework for
development planning for countries around the
world, and time-bound targets by which progress
can be measured.
485
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
stance of monetary policy. Lower limit to the
interest rates at which counterparties may submit
bids in the variable rate tenders of the main
refinancing operations. This is one of the key ECB
interest rates reflecting the stance of monetary
policy.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
See also: Weighted minimal set
Minimum energy
performance
standards (MEPS)
See Energy standards
Minimal unique
A combination of variable values that are unique in
the microdata set at hand and contain no proper
subset with this property (so it is a minimal set
with the uniqueness property).
See also: Energy standards
Minimum pension
Pension minimale
The minimum level of pension benefits the plan
pays out in all circumstances.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Context: Identical term, "Minimum benefit"
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Mini-max (or
Collared) floating-rate
note (FRN)
FRN with a minimum and a maximum interest rate.
Minimum size of data
element values
The minimum size of data element values is the
minimum number of storage units (of the
corresponding datatype) to represent the data
element value
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft))
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Mining wastes
Déchets d‟extraction
Mining wastes are mining-related by—products of
two types:
Minimisation of
natural hazards
Expenditures and activities aiming at the
minimisation of natural hazards and of their
impacts. They may include the following natural
hazards: forest fires, floods, avalanches,
landslides, storms, droughts, earthquakes and
volcanic eruptions.
(a) mining-and-quarrying extraction wastes which
are barren soils removed from mining and
quarrying sites during the preparation for mining
and quarrying and do not enter into the dressing
and beneficiating processes, and
(b). mining—and-quarrying dressing and
beneficiating wastes which are obtained during the
process of separating minerals from ores and other
materials extracted during mining-and-quarrying
activities.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.60
Minimum benefit
See Minimum pension
These wastes occupy valuable land and cause
harm to stream life when they are deposited near
the drainage area of a stream
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Prestation minimale
See also: Minimum pension
Ministerial
commentary
Internal access refers to the practice of giving full
transparency to any necessary pre-release access
within government-as deemed appropriate by the
Minimum bid rate
Lower limit to the interest rates at which
counterparties may submit bids in the variable rate
tenders of the main refinancing operations. This is
one of the key ECB interest rates reflecting the
486
government.
random error.
Context: Under the SDDS, this entails the
identification of any such commentary so as to
maintain the objectivity or freedom from political
judgement of the official statistical data being
disseminated.
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003
Mismatch floatingrate note (FRN)
FRN with a coupon structure that is refixed more
often and for different maturities than the interest
periods (e.g., the interest rate is based on six
months‘ LIBOR but adjusted every month).
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
See also: Institutional framework, Integrity,
Internal access, Special Data Dissemination
Standard (SDDS)
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Mirror statistics
Statistiques miroir
Bilateral comparisons of two basic measures of a
trade flow. Traditional tool for detecting the causes
of asymmetries in statistics.
Missing data
Observations which were planned and are missing.
Source: Eurostat, "Statistics on the trading of
goods - User guide", Office for Official Publications
of the European Communities, Luxembourg, 1998
Context: Missing data in a survey may occur when
there are no data whatsoever for a respondent
(non-response) or when some variables for a
respondent are unknown (item non-response)
because of refusal to provide or failure to collect
the response (ISI).
MIS
See Management information system
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003
See also: Management information system (MIS)
Miscellaneous current Impôts courants
taxes
divers
Miscellaneous current taxes consist of various
types of taxes paid periodically, usually once a
year; the most common are poll taxes,
expenditure taxes, payments by households to
obtain certain licences, and taxes on international
transactions
See also: Imputation, Non-response, Observation
Mistake (in the
context of PPPs)
A use of incorrect basic information or
inappropriate application of the calculation
procedure.
Source: SNA 8.54 [OECD 5127, 5200, 6000]
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Miscellaneous current Transferts courants
transfers
divers
Miscellaneous current transfers consist of various
different kinds of current transfers that may take
place between resident institutional units or
between resident and non-resident units.
Mixed credits
A credit that contains an aid element, so as to
provide concessional credit terms—such as a lower
rate of interest or a longer credit period.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
The most common are: (a) current transfers to
NPISHs; (b) current transfers between households;
(c) fines and penalties; (d) lotteries and gambling;
(e) payments of compensation.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: SNA 8.93 - 8.98
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Mixed cropping
Culture mixte
Mixed cropping is a system of sowing two or three
crops together on the same land, one being the
main crop and the others the subsidiaries
Misclassification
When a subject is falsely classified into a category
in which the subject does not belong. It may result
from misreporting by study subjects, from the use
of less than optimal measurement devices, or from
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
487
wages and prices.
Mixed DB plans
Plans à prestations
définies mixtes
Defined benefit (DB) plans that has two separate
DB and defined contribution (DC) components but
which are treated as part of the same plan.
Context: Identical term, "Swiss indexation"
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Price indexation (of pension benefits),
Wage indexation (for pension benefits)
See also: Defined benefit (DB) occupational
pension plans, Defined contribution (DC)
occupational pension plans, Hybrid DB plan,
Traditional DB plan
Mixed retailing
Non-specialised trade is non-specialist retailing or
wholesaling of more than one family of products,
sometimes including several types of service.
Mixed farm
Source: Eurostat, 1993, "Retailing in the European
Single Market", Office for Official Publications of
the European Communities, Luxembourg
Exploitation agricole
mixte
A mixed farm is a farm on which both crop
production and livestock—keeping are practised
simultaneously
Mixed sampling
Sondage mixte
Where a sample plan envisages the use of two or
more basic methods of sampling it is termed mixed
sampling. For example, in a multistage sample, if
the sampling units at one stage are drawn at
random and those at another by a systematic
method, the whole process is ―mixed‖.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Mixed imputations
In most systems there usually is a mixture of
categories used in some fixed rank fashion for all
items. For example, first a deterministic approach
is used. If it is not successful, then a hot deck
approach is tried. This is followed by a modelbased approach. If all these approaches fail, then a
manual imputation occurs through a human review
process.
Context: Usage is not uniform, but where samples
at one stage were drawn at random with
replacement and at another stage were drawn at
random without replacement, it would seem better
not to describe the whole process as ―mixed‖, the
essential basic method of random selection being
employed throughout.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Mobile housing units
Unité d'habitation
mobile
A mobile housing unit is any type of living
accommodation that has been produced to be
transported (such as a tent) or is a moving unit
(such as a ship, boat, barge, vessel, railroad car,
caravan, trailer, yacht and so on) occupied as
living quarters at the time of the census
See also: Automated imputations
Mixed income
Revenu mixte
Mixed income is the surplus or deficit accruing
from production by unincorporated enterprises
owned by households; it implicitly contains an
element of remuneration for work done by the
owner, or other members of the household, that
cannot be separately identified from the return to
the owner as entrepreneur but it excludes the
operating surplus coming from owner-occupied
dwellings
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.345
Mobile services
Radiocommunications services between ships,
aircraft, road vehicles, or hand-held terminal
stations for use while in motion or between such
stations and fixed points on land.
Source: SNA 7.8 [4.143, 7.81]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Telecommunications services: Glossary of
terms – World Trade Organisation
Mixed indexation (of
Indexation mixte
pension benefits)
The method with which pension benefits are
adjusted taking into account changes in both
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/tratop_e/serv_e/t
elecom_e/tel12_e.htm
488
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Mobility barriers
Mobility barriers are factors which impede the
ability of firms to enter or exit an industry, or to
move from one segment of an industry to another.
Model assumption
error
Model assumption errors occur with the use of
methods, such as calibration, generalised
regression estimator, calculation based on full
scope or constant scope, benchmarking, seasonal
adjustment and other models not included in the
preceding accuracy components, in order to
calculate statistics or indexes.
Context: "Mobility barriers" is therefore a general
term which includes barriers to entry, barriers to
exit, and barriers to intra-industry changes in
market position.
More specifically, mobility barriers may refer to
barriers to movement from one strategic group of
firms within an industry to another group.
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Model based
imputation
Model based imputation refers to the use of
averages, medians, regression equations, etc. to
impute a value.
Mode
Mode
The mode was originally conceived of as that value
of the variate which is possessed by the greatest
number of members of the population.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Context: Although the idea of the most frequently
encountered or fashionable value of the variate is
probably very old, it was not generally used in
statistics until popularised by K. Pearson (1894).
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
The concept is essentially of use only for
continuous distributions, although it can be
extended to the discontinuous case.
See also: Automated imputations
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Modelling
The construction of physical, conceptual or
mathematical simulations of the real world. Models
help to show relationships between processes
(physical, economic or social) and may be used to
predict the effects of changes in land use.
Mode of study
Mode of study refers to the study load of the
student, whether full-time or part-time.
Source: Guidelines for land-use planning, FAO
Development Series, FAO, 1993
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Models method
See Matched products method
See also: Full-time equivalent student, Full-time
student, Part-time student, Student, Study load
See also: Matched products method
Model
Modèle
A model is a formalised expression of a theory or
the causal situation which is regarded as having
generated observed data.
MODEM
(Modulator-Demodulator) An electronic device that
can be used to connect computers and terminals
over communication lines.
In statistical analysis the model is generally
expressed in symbols, that is to say in a
mathematical form, but diagrammatic models are
also found. The word has recently become very
popular and possibly somewhat over-worked.
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
Modes of delivery (for
international trade in
489
services)
How international trade in services is supplied and
consumed. Mode 1: cross border supply; mode 2:
consumption abroad; mode 3: foreign commercial
presence; and mode 4: movement of natural
persons.
Ŕ IMF
The three basic dimensions of monetary
aggregates are:
(1) the financial assets that are components of
monetary aggregates,
(2) the sectors that are money holders, and
(3) the sectors that are money issuers.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Source: Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual,
IMF, Washington DC, 2000, para. 281
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
See also: Broad money, Monetary aggregates –
OECD, Narrow money
Monetary aggregates Agrégats monétaires
Ŕ OECD
Ŕ OCDE
Monetary aggregates measure the stock of money
in circulation outside the banking system.
Modified accrual
accounting
Modified accrual accounting differs from accrual
accounting in that physical assets are expensed at
time of purchase.
Context: Because of the lack of clarity concerning
the concept of money there are various statistical
definitions of the money stock.
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Not all countries publish the same types of
aggregates, and even when aggregates have the
same name (e.g. M1, M2, M3, etc) their asset
composition often differs significantly.
See also: Accrual accounting
Modified cash
accounting
Modified cash accounting differs from cash
accounting in that it recognizes receipts and
disbursements committed in the budget year and
allows a specified period after year-end for
payments of these to be recorded and reported.
When the monetary policy strategy consists of
monetary aggregate targeting, the choice of the
definition of the targeted aggregate is guided
mainly by two considerations. The aggregate
should be sufficiently sensitive to interest rate
changes for the central bank to be able to control it
and display a stable relationship over time to the
movement of the overall price level.
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
See also: Cash accounting
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Modulation
A partial transfer of support from the first (support
to agriculture) to the second pillar (support to
other rural activities) of the EU Common
Agricultural Policy (CAP). With the latest reform of
the CAP, modulation was made compulsory,
resulting in a gradual reduction of payments
directly to farmers with the aim of boosting rural
development.
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
See also: Broad money, M1, M2, Monetary
aggregates – IMF, Narrow money
Monetary and
Financial Statistics
Manual
The IMF‘s Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual
(MFSM) provides guidelines for the presentation of
monetary and financial statistics. The MFSM is
harmonised with the System of National Accounts
1993 (1993 SNA)
Source: OECD, 2004, OECD Agricultural Outlook:
2004-2013, OECD, Paris, Glossary
Monetary accounts
(SEEA)
Accounts expressed in monetary terms, using only
currency as the unit of measure. Monetary is to be
taken as synonymous with ‗economic value‘ as
understood in economic theory.
Source: Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual,
IMF, Washington DC, 2000, paras. 1, 5
Monetary authorities
(sector)
The monetary authorities sector includes the
central bank institutional unit (or currency board,
monetary agency, etc.) and certain operations that
are usually attributed to the central bank but, in
some cases, are carried out by other government
institutions (or, in some instances, by commercial
banks).
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 1.40
Monetary aggregates
Such operations include the issue of currency,
Agrégats monétaires
490
maintenance and management of international
reserves—including those resulting from
transactions with the IMF—and the operation of
exchange stabilization funds
Monetary operations are actions taken by a central
bank to implement monetary policy, such as
influencing overall money market and credit
conditions in the economy. These consist of using
the monetary policy instruments according to
prescribed monetary policy operating procedures.
Source: Joint BIS-IMF-OECD-World Bank statistics
on external debt, metadata
Source: Code of Good Practices on Transparency in
Monetary and Financial Policies, Part 1—
Introduction, Approved by the IMF Executive Board
on July 24, 2000.
Hyperlink:
http://www1.oecd.org/dac/debt/htm/metadata.ht
m#Line%20A
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/mae/mft/sup/part
1.htm#appendix_III
Monetary
Comptabilité
environmental
monetaire de
accounting
l‟environnement
See Environmental accounting
Monetary policy
instruments
Monetary policy instruments are the various tools
that a central bank can use to influence money
market and credit conditions and pursue its
monetary policy objectives.
See also: Environmental accounting
Monetary financial
institutions (MFIs)
Financial institutions which together form the
money issuing sector of the euro area. These
include the European Central Bank, the national
central banks of the euro area countries, and credit
institutions and money market funds located in the
euro area.
Source: Code of Good Practices on Transparency in
Monetary and Financial Policies, Part 1—
Introduction, Approved by the IMF Executive Board
on July 24, 2000.
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/mae/mft/sup/part
1.htm#appendix_III
Monetary gold Ŕ BPM Or monétaire Ŕ MBP
Monetary gold is gold owned by the authorities (or
by others who are subject to the effective control
of the authorities) and held as a reserve asset.
Monetary statistics
Monetary statistics consist of a comprehensive set
of stock and flow data on the financial and nonfinancial assets and liabilities of an economy‘s
financial corporations sector.
Other gold (non-monetary gold), possibly including
commercial stocks held for trading purposes by
authorities who also own monetary gold, that is
owned by any entity in this Manual as any other
commodity.
Context: The organisation and presentation
recommended in the IMF Monetary and Financial
Statistics Manual, follow a hierarchical approach
based on two general data frameworks – sectoral
balance sheets and surveys.
Transactions in monetary gold occur only between
monetary authorities and their counterparts in
other economies or between monetary authorities
and international monetary organizations.
Monetary Gold is a reserve asset for which there is
no outstanding financial liability
Source: Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual,
IMF, Washington DC, 2000, para. 9
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/mfs/manual/i
ndex.htm
Source: BPM para. 438
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
See also: Financial statistics
Monetary sterilisation
See Open market operation
See also: Monetary gold – SNA, Non-monetary
gold
See also: Open market operation
Monetary gold Ŕ SNA Or monétaire Ŕ SCN
Monetary gold is gold owned by the monetary
authorities or others subject to their effective
control that is held as a financial asset and as a
component of foreign reserves
Monetary transactions Opération monétaire
A monetary transaction is one in which one
institutional unit makes a payment (receives a
payment) or incurs a liability (receives an asset)
stated in units of currency
Source: (AF.1) – Annex to chapter XIII
Source: SNA 3.16
See also: Monetary gold – BPM
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Monetary operations
491
Money purchase
pension plan - OECD
Plan à capital
constitutif de rente OCDE
A pension plan providing benefits on a money
purchase basis (i.e. the determination of an
individual member‘s benefits by reference to
contributions paid into the scheme in respect of
that member, usually increased by an amount
based on the investment return on those
contributions).
See also: Non-monetary transactions
Monetisation (of gold) Monétiser de l‟or
If authorities add to their holdings of monetary
gold by acquiring commodity gold, e.g. newly
mined gold or existing gold offered on the private
market, they are deemed to have monetised gold
Source: SNA 11.65
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Money laundering
The attempt to conceal or disguise the ownership
or source of the proceeds of criminal activity and
to integrate them into the legitimate financial
systems in such a way that they cannot be
distinguished from assets acquired by legitimate
means. Typically this involves the conversion of
cash-based proceeds into account-based forms of
money.
See also: Defined contribution pension plans,
Money purchase pension plans - SNA
Money purchase
pension plans - SNA
Régimes de pension à
prestations
proportionnelles
Money purchase pension plans are those for which
the level of contributions to the fund is
guaranteed, but benefits are directly dependent on
the assets of the fund; (money purchase pension
plans are also known as ―defined contribution
pension plans‖ in some countries)
Source: A glossary of terms used in payments and
settlement systems, July 2001, Committee on
Payment and Settlement Systems, Bank for
International Settlements
Source: SNA 13.79
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/cpss00b.pdf
See also: Defined contribution pension plans,
Money purchase pension plan - OECD
Money market
A money market is a market where debt securities,
issued with maturities of one year or less, are
traded
Money supply
Masse monétaire
The money supply is the total amount of money in
circulation in a country or group of countries in a
monetary union.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
There are several ways in which this can be
calculated: M1 is a measure of money supply
including all coins and notes plus personal money
in current accounts; M2 is M1 plus personal money
in deposit accounts; M3 is M2 plus government and
other deposits
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Money market
instruments
Money market instruments are debt securities that
generally give the owner the unconditional right to
receive a stated, fixed sum of money on a
specified date. These instruments usually are
traded, at a discount, in organized markets; the
discount is dependent upon the interest rate and
the time remaining to maturity. Included are such
instruments as treasury bills, commercial and
financial paper, banker‘s acceptances, negotiable
certificates of deposit (with original maturities of
one year or less), and short-term notes issued
under note issuance facilities.
Source: Dictionary of Banking and Finance, Second
Edition, P.H. Collins, 1991, Peter Collins Publishing
See also: Monetary aggregates – OECD
MONICA
MONICA is a project established by the WHO to
provide a cross-sectional and longitudinal
comparison of cardiovascular disease (coronary
heart disease event registration is obligatory,
stroke optional), and to relate these to risk factor
changes in the population over a ten year period.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
This monitors trends over 10 years, across 37
populations in 21 countries.
Context: It was set up to explain the diverse
trends in cardiovascular disease mortality, which
were observed from the 1970s onwards. The total
population aged 25-64 years being monitored is 10
million men and women.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Registers identify non-fatal definite myocardial
492
infarction and definite, possible, or unclassifiable
coronary deaths in men and women aged 35-64
years, followed up for 28 days in or out of hospital.
competition
Monopolistic competition describes an industry
structure combining elements of both monopoly
and perfect competition.
MONICA calculates rates from population
denominators to estimate trends in agestandardised rates and case fatality (percentage of
28-day fatalities = [100-survival percentage]).
As in perfect competition, there are many sellers
and entry and exit is relatively easy. However,
unlike the situation in perfect competition,
products are somewhat differentiated.
Source: Eurostat CODED Glossary
As a consequence, each firm faces a downward
sloping demand curve which gives it some power
over price. In this sense the firm is like a
monopolist, although the demand curve is more
elastic than that of the monopolist
Monitoring
Surveillance continue
(environmental)
Monitoring refers to the continuous or frequent
standardized measurement and observation of the
environment (air, water, land/soil, biota), often
used for warning and control
In essence, although the product is differentiated,
it does have substitutes so that the demand curve
facing the firm will depend on the prices charged
by rivals producing similar products.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: Monopolistic competition is probably the
most prevalent market structure, particularly in
service industries. Although it can be shown that
monopolistic competition is Pareto inefficient
because equilibrium price exceeds marginal cost,
this inefficiency is the result of producing a variety
of products. Because there are many firms and
free entry/exit, monopolistic competition is not
usually considered a problem for competition
policy. In equilibrium, monopolistic competitors
earn zero or low economic profits.
Monitoring of editing
The monitoring of editing refers to the process of
analyzing the audit trail and evaluating the edits
for efficiency.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Monoculture
Monoculture
Monoculture refers to the repeated cultivation of a
single crop on a given area of land
Monopoly
Monopoly is a situation where there is a single
seller in the market.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
In conventional economic analysis, the monopoly
case is taken as the polar opposite of perfect
competition. By definition, the demand curve
facing the monopolist is the industry demand curve
which is downward sloping. Thus, the monopolist
has significant power over the price it charges, i.e.
is a price setter rather than a price taker.
Monopolisation
Monopolisation refers to attempts by a dominant
firm or group of relatively large firms to maintain
or increase market control through various anticompetitive practices such as predatory pricing,
pre-emption of facilities, and foreclosure of
competition.
Context: Comparison of monopoly and perfectly
competitive outcomes reveals that the monopolist
will set a higher price, produce a lower output and
earn above normal profits (sometimes referred to
as monopoly rents). This suggests that consumers
will face a higher price, leading to a deadweight
welfare loss. In addition, income will be transferred
from consumers to the monopoly firm.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
The preceding arguments are purely static in
nature and constitute only part of the possible
harm resulting from monopoly. It is sometimes
argued that monopolists, being largely immune
from competitive pressures, will not have the
appropriate incentives to minimize costs or
undertake technological change. Moreover,
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Abuse of dominant position
Monopolistic
493
resources may be wasted in attempts to achieve a
monopoly position However, a counter argument
advanced is that a degree of monopoly power is
necessary to earn higher profits in order to create
incentives for innovation.
power arises in the context of defining market
structure. For example, in cases where monopoly
power is the issue, it may be useful to examine the
extent to which such power is offset by powerful
buyers. This is sometimes referred to as
countervailing power. The ability of a firm to raise
prices, even when it is a monopolist, can be
reduced or eliminated by monopsony or oligopsony
buyers. To the extent that input prices can be
controlled in this way, consumers may be better
off.
Monopoly should be distinguished from market
power. The latter is a term which refers to all
situations in which firms face downward sloping
demand curves and can profitably raise price
above the competitive level. Market power may
arise not only when there is a monopoly, but also
when there is oligopoly, monopolistic competition,
or a dominant firm.
A second important use of the concept of
monopsony power arises in cases of vertical
integration and merger. It is generally agreed that
where monopsony power exists, there will be an
incentive for vertical integration. Moreover, under
some circumstances it can be shown that vertical
integration, even when it occurs between a
monopolist and a monopsonist (bilateral
monopoly), can increase economic efficiency.
Monopolies can only continue to exist if there are
barriers to entry. Barriers which sustain
monopolies are often associated with legal
protection created through patents and monopoly
franchises. However, some monopolies are created
and sustained through strategic behaviour or
economies of scale. The latter are natural
monopolies which are often characterized by
steeply declining long-run average and marginal
costs and the size of the market is such that there
is room for only one firm to exploit available
economies of scale.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
For purposes of competition law and policy,
monopoly may sometimes be defined as a firm
with less than 100 per cent market share. Different
jurisdictions approach "monopoly" in different ways
depending upon market share criteria.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Monotonicity in prices
The property whereby if any current period price
increases or any base period price decreases the
price index increases.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
See also: Dominant firm, Perfect competition
Monopoly power
See Market power
Monotonicity in
quantities
The property whereby if any current period
quantity increases or any base period quantity
decreases the implicit quantity index that
corresponds to the price index increases.
See also: Market power
Monopoly rents
See Rent
See also: Rent
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Monopsony
A monopsony consists of a market with a single
buyer. When there are only a few buyers, the
market is defined as an oligopsony. In general,
when buyers have some influence over the price of
their inputs they are said to have monopsony
power.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Context: Monopsony (or oligopsony) in and of itself
is not often of concern in competition policy,
although it does imply a lack of competition. It
becomes more relevant when combined with
monopoly or oligopoly, that is with monopoly
power.
Monte-Carlo method
for autocorrection
The Monte-Carlo method for autocorrection is an
automatic correction method in which the
corrected data value is randomly chosen on the
basis of a previously supplied probability
distribution for this data item. The method
One common use of the notion of monopsony
494
employs computer algorithms for generating
pseudo-random variables with the given probability
distribution.
Month-on-previousmonth growth rates
Month-on-previous-month growth rates are rates
of change expressed with respect to the previous
month.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Context: Also often referred to as Month-to-month
(Period-to-period) growth rates, Month-overmonth growth rates, 1-month rate of change, or
Rate of change on the previous month.
For some phenomena, month-on-previous month
growth rates may be further differentiated by the
nature or pattern of the incremental difference
between each successive period and whether or
not the absolute values of these increments over a
given period are themselves constant or changing.
The most commonly used patterns of growth are:
arithmetic, geometric and exponential.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Monthly average
Moyenne mensuelle
By analogy with annual averages and moving
averages generally this term ought to refer to the
average values of a time series occurring within a
month, the resulting figure being representative of
that particular month.
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
3: Guidelines for the reporting of different types of
data
Context: In practice the phrase is sometimes used
to denote the averaging of monthly values
occurring in the same month, e.g. January from
year to year, the object being to provide a pattern
of seasonal fluctuation. This is objectionable and a
better expression would be ―seasonal average by
months‖.
Months for Cyclical
Dominance (MCD)
Months for Cyclical Dominance (MCD) is defined as
the shortest span of months for which the I/C ratio
is less than unity. I and C are the average monthto-month changes without regard to sign of the
irregular and trend-cycle component of the series,
respectively.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
There is a convention that the maximum value of
MCD should be 6. For quarterly series, there is an
analogous measure, quarters for Cyclical
Dominance (QCD), which has a maximum value
conventionally defined as 2
Monthly comparative
price levels
(purchasing power
parities (PPPs))
Monthly comparative price levels are defined as
the ratios of purchasing power parities (PPPs) for
private final consumption expenditure to exchange
rates
Source: OECD Leading Indicator Website,
Glossary, 2001
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_34
349_1965941_1_1_1_1,00.html
Source: OECD National accounts, Purchasing
Power Parities, Questions about PPPs website
Moped
Cyclomoteur
Two- or three-wheeled road vehicle which is fitted
with an engine having a cylinder capacity of less
than 50cc (3.05 cu.in) and a maximum authorized
design speed in accordance with national
regulations.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/faq/0,2583,en_2649_34357_
1799281_1_1_1_1,00.html
Month-on-previousmonth changes
Month-on-previous-month changes are changes in
levels expressed with respect to the previous
month.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Also often referred to as Month-to-month
(Period-to-period) changes, or Month-over-month
changes.
Moral hazard
Risque morel
Moral hazard describes behaviour when agents do
not bear the full cost of their actions and are thus
more likely to take such actions
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
3: Guidelines for the reporting of different types of
data
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
495
Methods
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT),
whereby any concession or privilege granted by
one contracting party to GATT to a product of
another contracting party will be unconditionally
granted to the like product of all other contracting
parties.
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Moratorium interest
Interest charged on rescheduled debt. In the Paris
Club, moratorium interest rates are negotiated
bilaterally between the debtor and creditor
countries and thus can differ among creditors. In
the London Club, where all creditors are deemed to
have access to funds at comparable rates, the
moratorium interest rate applies equally to all
rescheduled obligations under an agreement.
In practice, MFN treatment is no longer limited to
GATT contracting parties but applicable to other
trading partners within the World Trade
Organisation (WTO)
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Mortality table
Table de mortalité
A chart showing rate of death at each age.
Most timely data
The term refers to the direct investment statistics
that are first disseminated; that is, the data with
the shortest lapse of time between the end of the
reference period (or the reference date) and
dissemination of the data. Although disseminated,
such data may be preliminary and subject to
revision.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: OECD & IMF, 2004, Glossary of Foreign
Direct Investment Terms and Definitions, Paris and
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Unisex mortality table
Motor cars
Motor cars comprises: Motor cars and other
vehicles principally designed for the transport of
persons (except public-transport type vehicles
specially designed for travelling on snow, and golf
cars and similar vehicles (Central Product
Classification (CPC) Subclass 49113)
Mortgage-backed
security (MBS)
A generic term that refers to securities backed by
mortgages, including pass-through securities,
mortgage-backed bonds, mortgage pay-through
securities, and collateralized mortgage obligations.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Source: Central Product Classification (CPC).
Version 1.0. United Nations, New York, 1998,
Series M, No. 77, Ver. 1.0
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
Most comprehensive
data
Most comprehensive data refers to direct
investment statistics that are based on the most
comprehensive, regularly available sources of data.
Although disseminated, such data may be
preliminary and subject to revision.
See also: Motor vehicles
Motor coach
See Bus
See also: Bus
Source: Report on the Survey of Implementation
of Implementation of Methodological Standards for
Direct Investment – IMF, OECD, March 2000 –
Appendix II: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms.
Motor gasoline
(petrol)
Light hydrocarbon oil for use in internal
combustion engines, excluding those in aircraft.
Context: Motor gasoline is distilled between 35
degrees C and 215 degrees C and is used as a fuel
for land based spark ignition engines. Motor
gasoline may include additives, oxygenates and
octane enhancers, including lead compounds such
as TEL (Tetraethyl lead) and TML (tetramethyl
lead).
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/bopage/pdf/mar2000.
pdf
Most favoured nation
(MFN) principle
Most favoured nation (MFN) principle is a principle
of non discrimination embodied in Article 1 of the
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
496
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris
Motor vehicles
Motor vehicles (Central Product Classification (CPC)
Class 4911) comprises the following Subclasses:
- road tractors for semi-trailers;
- public-transport type passenger motor vehicles;
- motor cars and other motor vehicles principally
designed for the transport of - persons (except
public-transport type vehicles, vehicles specially
designed for travelling on snow, and golf cars and
similar vehicles);
- motor vehicles n.e.c. for the transport of goods;
- crane lorries;
- motor vehicles, for the transport of persons,
specially designed for travelling on snow; golf cars
and similar vehicles;
- special purpose motor vehicles n.e.c.
Moving average
A moving average is a method for smoothing time
series by averaging (with or without weights) a
fixed number of consecutive terms. The averaging
―moves‖ over time, in that each data point of the
series is sequentially included in the averaging,
while the oldest data point in the span of the
average is removed. In general, the longer the
span of the average, the smoother is the resulting
series.
Context: Moving averages are used to smooth
fluctuations in time series or to identify time series
components, such as the trend, the cycle, the
seasonal, etc.
Source: Central Product Classification (CPC).
Version 1.0. United Nations, New York, 1998,
Series M, No. 77, Ver. 1.0
A moving average replaces each value of a time
series by a (weighted) average of p preceding
values, the given value, and f following values of a
series.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
If p = f the moving average is said to be centred.
See also: Motor cars
The moving average is said to be symmetric if it is
centred, and if for each k =1, 2, ….., p = f, the
weight of the k-th preceding value is equal to the
weight of the k-th following one.
Motorcycle
Motocycle
Two-wheeled road motor vehicle with or without
side-car, including motor scooter, or three-wheeled
road motor vehicle not exceeding 400 kg (900 lb)
unladen weight. All such vehicles with a cylinder
capacity of 50 cc or over are included, as are those
under 50 cc which do not meet the definition of
moped.
The moving average is not defined for the first p
and the last f time series values. In order to
compute the moving average for those values, the
series must be backcasted and forecasted.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
4: Guidelines for the reporting of different forms of
data
Moving holidays
Moving holidays are holidays which occur each
year, but where the exact timing shifts. Examples
of moving holidays include Easter and Chinese New
Year. Easter generally falls in April but it can also
fall in late March.
Motorway
Autoroute
Road, specially designed and built for motor traffic,
which does not serve properties bordering on it,
and which:
(a) is provided, except at special points or
temporarily, with separate carriageways for the
two directions of traffic, separated from each
other, either by a dividing strip not intended for
traffic, or exceptionally by other means;
Context: Also known as variable holidays
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
4: Guidelines for the reporting of different forms of
data
(b) does not cross at level with any road, railway
or tramway track, or footpath;
Moving seasonal
Variation saisonnière
variation
mobile
A pattern of seasonal variation which changes with
time. It is usually obtained by determining a
seasonal pattern for a certain number k of
consecutive years and ―moving‖ the set of k years
along the series as for a moving average, so
obtaining a seasonal pattern for each year based
on the previous k years.
(c) is specially sign-posted as a motorway and is
reserved for specific categories of road motor
vehicles.
Entry and exit lanes of motorways are included
irrespectively of the location of the sign-posts.
Urban motorways are also included.
497
Context: The method has the advantage that it
avoids the under and over correction that might be
induced by a fixed seasonal pattern. However, it
may well become too flexible and remove more
than the true seasonal movement.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Multi-employer
bargaining
See Collective bargaining
It is also difficult to project into the future except
under assumptions which render it little different
from the fixed seasonal pattern.
See also: Collective bargaining
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Multi-employer
Fonds pension
pension funds
collectif
Funds that pool the assets of pension plans
established by various plan sponsors. There are
three types of multi-employer pension funds:
a) for related employers, i.e. companies that are
financially connected or owned by a single holding
group (group pension funds);
Moving weights
Poids mobile
In most cases where a moving average is taken of
a time series the weights composing the average
are constraints independent of time. For certain
purposes, however, it is desirable to have weights
which themselves reflect changing circumstances,
as for instance in index numbers of prices where
the quantities purchased may alter as time goes
on.
b) for unrelated employers who are involved in the
same trade or business (industry pension funds);
c) for unrelated employers that may be in different
trades or businesses (collective pension funds).
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
In such cases the weights themselves may be
moving averages of time series and are said to be
moving weights. More generally the term can be
used to describe any set of weights which change
with time.
See also: Group pension funds, Individual pension
funds, Industry pension funds, Single employer
pension funds
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Multi-factor
Productivité
productivity (MFP)
multifactorielle (PMF)
Multi-factor productivity (MFP) relates a change in
output to several types of inputs. MFP is often
measured residually, as that change in output that
cannot be accounted for by the change in
combined inputs
MPS
See Market Price Support (MPS)
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
See also: Market Price Support (MPS)
MUICP
Monetary Union Index of Consumer Prices
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
Multi-Annual
Programme
Guidance Programmes d‟orientation
(MAGP)
pluriannuel (POP)
Multi-Annual Guidance Programmes (MAGP) are
generally, 5 to 6 year programmes administered
by the European Commission that aim at
restructuring the European Union‘s fishing fleets.
The programmes fix ceilings for fishing effort by
the main segments of the fleet (e.g., trawlers,
netters).
See also: Single-factor productivity, Total factor
productivity
Multifibre
Arrangement (MFA)
Multifibre Arrangement (1974-94) under which
countries whose markets are disrupted by
increased imports of textiles and clothing from
another country were able to negotiate quota
restrictions.
MAGP III, which ran from 1992 through the end of
1996, aimed at an average 10 per cent reduction
in vessel capacity. MAGP IV, which will run from
1997 through 2001, is designed to ensure better
integration between resource conservation and the
structural adjustment aspects of the CFP.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
A specific adjustment has been drawn for each
fleet, backed up at the implementation stage by
aid granted from the FIFG
Multifunctionality, or
498
multifunctional
agriculture
Multifunctionality, or multifunctional agriculture are
terms used to indicate generally that agriculture
can produce various non-commodity outputs in
addition to food.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Multilateral creditors
These creditors are multilateral institutions such as
the IMF and the World Bank, as well as other
multilateral development banks.
The working definition of multifunctionality used by
the OECD associates multifunctionality with
particular characteristics of the agricultural
production process and its outputs:
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
(i) the existence of multiple commodity and noncommodity outputs that are jointly produced by
agriculture; and that
(ii) some of the non-commodity outputs may
exhibit the characteristics of externalities or public
goods, such that markets for these goods function
poorly or are non-existent.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Context: Idea that agriculture has many functions
in addition to producing food and fibre, e.g.
environmental protection, landscape preservation,
rural employment, etc (Doha World Trade
Organisation Ministerial: Glossary of Terms.
Available at
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
).
Multilateral exchange
The exchange of statistics and / or metadata
between a sending and several receiving
organisations for a specific data flow where all
parties agree on all aspects of the exchange
(including the mechanism for exchange, the
formats, the frequency or schedule, mode used for
communications and the actual content of the
exchange). This exchange process is also known as
gateway exchange.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Context: This exchange process has the effect of
reducing the burden of a sending organisation of
managing multiple unique bilateral exchanges of
statistics and / or metadata with several receiving
organisations. This is also a very common
exchange process in the statistical area, where
communities of national and international institutes
agree on ways to gain efficiencies within the scope
of their collective responsibilities. Apart from
Multilateral exchange, the SDMX initiative identifies
two other basic forms of exchange of statistics and
metadata between organisations, i.e. bilateral
exchange and data-sharing exchange.
Multilateral claims
Multilateral claims cover data for African
Development Bank, Asian Development Bank,
Inter- American Development Bank, IMF and World
Bank claims.
Stocks are the total of loans from African
Development Bank, Asian Development Bank and
Inter- American Development Bank, use of IMF
credit and IBRD loans and IDA credits from the
World Bank.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Flows are the sum of disbursements less principal
repayments on loans and IDA credits and IMF
purchases less IMF repurchases.
See also: Bilateral exchange, Data exchange, Data
sharing exchange
Source: Joint BIS-IMF-OECD-World Bank statistics
on external debt, metadata
Multilateral
operational agencies
In Development Aid Statistics (DAC) statistics,
these international institutions with governmental
membership which conduct all or a significant part
of their activities in favour of development and aid
recipient countries. They include multilateral
development banks (e.g. World Bank, regional
development banks), United Nations agencies, and
regional groupings (e.g. certain European Union
and Arab agencies).
Hyperlink:
http://www1.oecd.org/dac/debt/htm/metadata.ht
m#Line%20A
Multilateral
comparison
A price or quantity comparison of more than two
countries simultaneously that produces consistent
relations among all pairs; that is, one that satisfies
the circular test or the transitivity requirement.
A contribution by a DAC Member to such an
agency is deemed to be multilateral if it is pooled
with other contributions and disbursed at the
discretion of the agency.
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
499
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
collection of information concerning variate, y, is
relatively expensive, and there exists some other
variate, x, correlated with it, which is relatively
cheap to investigate, it may be profitable to carry
out sampling in two phases.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
At the first phase, x is investigated, and the
information thus obtained is used either (a) to
stratify the population at the second phase, when y
is investigated, or (b) as supplementary
information at the second phase, a ratio or
regression estimate being used.
Multi-level modelling
imputation
Multi-level modelling imputation is an imputation
rule defined by a sequence of decisions each based
on exclusive sets of observations.
Two-phase sampling is sometimes called ―double
sampling‖.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Context: Further phases may be added if desired.
It may be noted, however, that multiphase
sampling does not necessarily imply the use of any
relationships between variates x and y. The
expression is not to be confused with multi-stage
sampling.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Multimedia
A publication in which images, sound and text are
integrated.
See also: Double sampling, Multi-stage sampling
Multi-phase surveys
Multi-phase surveys involve the collection of
information in succeeding phases, with one phase
serving as the forerunner to the next. These
represent a special kind of multi-subject survey.
They may be partially integrated to the extent that
all of the information is collected for at least some
of the sample units
Source: Memory of the World: Safeguarding the
Documentary Heritage - A guide to Standards,
Recommended Practices and Reference Literature
Related to the Preservation of Documents of All
Kinds, International Advisory Committee for the
UNESCO Memory of the World Programme SubCommittee on Technology for the General
Information Programme and UNISIST United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization - Part 9 - Glossary
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 1.33
Hyperlink:
http://www.unesco.org/webworld/mdm/administ/
en/guide/guide011.htm
Multiple bar chart
Diagramme multiple à
colonnes
A chart depicting two or more characteristics in the
form of bars of length proportional in magnitude of
the characteristics. For example, a chart
comparing the age and sex distribution of two
populations may be drawn with sets of bars, one
bar of each pair for each population, and one pair
for each age group.
Multi-modal
(transport)
Transportation using more than one mode.
In the GATS negotiations, essentially door-to-door
services that include international shipping.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Multiple classification
Classification à
plusieurs entrées
An alternative name for manifold classification.
Sometimes the expression is restricted to the case
of quantitative variates.
Multi-phase sampling
Échantillonnage à
plusieurs degrés
It is sometimes convenient and economical to
collect certain items of information from the whole
of the units of a sample and other items of usually
more detailed information from a sub-sample of
the units constituting the original sample. This may
be termed two-phase sampling, e.g. if the
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
500
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Manifold classification
See also: Land-use classification
Multiple cropping
Polyculture
Multiple cropping is a system of cultivating
different crops simultaneously on the same land
Multiple official
Taux de change
exchange rates
officiels multiples
Multiple official exchange rates arise when the
monetary authorities maintain a regime of applying
two or more exchange rates to different categories
of transactions
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: SNA 14.80 [19 Annex A, BPM 134]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Multiple currency
clause bond
Issue with an investor‘s option to choose the
currency for redemption and sometimes also for
interest payments.
Multiplier
See Bunny bonds
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
See also: Bunny bonds
Multi-purpose prepaid
card
A Multi-purpose prepaid card is a stored value card
which can be used for a wide range of payment
purposes and which has the potential to be used
on a national or international scale, but which may
sometimes be restricted to a certain area. A
reloadable multi-purpose prepaid card is also
known as an electronic purse
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Multiple decision
Méthode de décisions
methods
multiples
A general term to describe statistical techniques
for dealing with problems where the possible
outcomes or decisions are more than two.
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Electronic mone
Multi-round survey
A multi-round survey is a survey which consists of
several rounds taken at successive points in time,
in contrast with a single round survey taken once
only
Multiple decision
Problème à décisions
problem
multiples
The problem of choosing one hypothesis or
decision from a set of k mutually exclusive and
exhaustive hypotheses or decisions on the basis of
some observations on a random variable. The
simple problem of testing a statistical hypothesis
against a single alternative is a special case of this,
when k = 2.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
See also: Dual records system, Single round
surveys
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Multi-stage sampling
Échantillonnage à
plusieurs degrés
A sample which is selected by stages, the sampling
units at each stage being sub-sampled from the
(larger) units chosen at the previous stage.
Multiple land use
Utilisation polyvante
des terres
Multiple land use refers to the use of land for more
than one purpose, for example, grazing of
livestock, recreation and timber production. The
term may also apply to the use of associated
bodies of water for recreational purposes, fishing
and water supply
The sampling units pertaining to the first stage are
called primary or first stage units; and similarly for
second stage units, etc.
Context: Where the sampling frame has to be
constructed in the course of the sampling
operation, multi-stage sampling has the additional
advantage that only the parts of the population
selected at any stage need to be listed for
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
501
sampling at the next stage.
rescheduling
agreement (MYRA) IMF
An agreement granted by official creditors that
covers consolidation periods of two or more years
in accordance with multiyear IMF arrangements,
such as the Extended Fund Facility (EFF) and the
Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility (PRGF). The
modalities of the agreement are that a succession
of shorter consolidations (tranches) are
implemented after certain conditions specified in
the Agreed Minute are satisfied, such as full
implementation to date of the rescheduling
agreement and continued implementation of the
IMF arrangements.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Multi-phase sampling
Multi-subject surveys
Multi-subject surveys cover a variety of different
subjects in the course of a single survey cycle.
Context: Such surveys are usually termed
―integrated‖ or fully integrated if all the subjects
are covered with all of the households.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
There are options whereby some of the subjects
are covered for all households but others are
alternated among different subsamples of
households. Still another option entails using
different subsamples for each subject but covering
all topics in this manner in each geographical area,
such as a village or city block, in the sample
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Multi-year rescheduling agreement
(MYRA) - OECD
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 1.20
Multi-year
rescheduling
agreement (MYRA) OECD
Multi-year rescheduling agreement (MYRA) is an
agreement that is made up of successive stages or
tranches to be implemented only after certain
specified conditions are met. Each tranche of the
MYRA legally comes into force only when Paris Club
creditors are satisfied that the conditions have
been fulfilled. These agreements should be
reported in Development Assistance Committee
(DAC) statistics in stages as each tranche of the
MYRA comes into force
Multivariate analysis
Analyse à plusieurs
variables
The expression is used rather loosely to denote the
analysis of data which are multivariate in the sense
that each member bears the values of p variates.
Context: The principle techniques of multivariate
analysis, beyond those admitting of a
straightforward generalisation, e.g. regression,
correlation and variance analysis, are factor and
component analysis, classification, discriminatory
analysis, canonical correlation and various
generalisations of homogeneity tests.
Source: Development Assistance Committee (DCA)
International Development Statistics – Handbook
for Reporting Debt Reorganisation on the DAC
Questionnaire
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://interdev.oecd.org/dac/pdf/debtreng.pdf
See also: Multi-year rescheduling agreement
(MYRA)
Multivariate edit
A multivariate edit is a type of statistical edit
where multivariate distributions are used to
evaluate the data and to find outliers.
Municipal note
Municipal notes are interest-bearing securities
issued by state and local governments as interim
financing for a period usually less than one year.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Municipal waste (for
energy)
Multi-year
502
Municipal waste consists of products that are
combusted directly to produce heat and/or power
and comprises wastes produced by the residential,
commercial and public services sectors that are
collected by local authorities for disposal in a
central location. Hospital waste is included in this
category.
Mutual fund shares
Mutual funds are financial institutions through
which investors pool their funds to invest in a
diversified portfolio of securities. The shares in the
fund purchased by individual investors represent
an ownership interest in the pool of underlying
assets—that is, the investors have an equity stake.
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Context: Because professional fund managers
make the selection of assets, mutual funds provide
individual investors with an opportunity to invest in
a diversified and professionally managed portfolio
of securities without the need of detailed
knowledge of the individual companies issuing the
stocks and bonds.
Municipal wastes
Déchets urbains
Municipal wastes are wastes produced by
residential, commercial and public services sectors
that are collected by local authorities for treatment
and/or disposal in a central location
Usually, fund managers must adequately inform
investors about the risks and expenses associated
with investment in specific funds. In other words,
the investor does not participate in the distribution
of profits to equity investors (if any), nor share in
any surplus on dissolution of the issuer.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Mutagen
Mutagène
Mutagen is a factor that can cause a change in
genetic properties
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Participating preference share,
Preference share
Mutation
Mutation
A mutation is a characteristic(s) possessed by an
individual not acquired from either parent but
capable of being transmitted to progeny
n,k rule
A cell is regarded as confidential, if the n largest
units contribute more than k % to the cell total,
e.g. n=2 and k=85 means that a cell is defined as
risky if the two largest units contribute more than
85 % to the cell total. The n and k are given by the
statistical authority. In some NSIs the values of n
and k are confidential.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Mutual fund
A mutual fund is a financial structure through
which investors pool their funds to invest in a
diversified portfolio of securities.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Individual investors purchase shares in the fund,
representing an ownership interest in the large
pool of underlying assets i.e. they have an equity
stake. The selection of assets is made by
professional fund managers.
NACE
Nomenclature generale des Activites economiques
dans les Communautes europeennes (NACE) refers
to the industrial classification as defined in
Revision 1 which is used by Eurostat.
Context: Mutual funds therefore give individual
investors the opportunity to invest in a diversified
and professionally managed portfolio of securities
without the need of detailed knowledge of the
individual companies issuing the stocks and bonds.
Fund managers must adequately inform investors
about the risks and expenses associated with
investment in specific funds. (Financial
Terminology Database, Bank of England)
Context: Between 1961 and 1963 the Classification
of industries established in the European
Communities was developed and became known
by its acronym NICE. In 1965 the classification of
trade and commerce in the European Communities
was compiled to cover all commercial activities
known as NCE. In 1967 a classification for services
was compiled followed by one for agriculture. In
1970 the General Industrial Classification of
Economic Activities within the European
Communities was compiled and known as NACE,
later as NACE 70 or NACE 1970.
Also known as unit trusts in the United Kingdom.
Source: Institutional Investors Statistical
Yearbook, 2000 edition, Annex III, Glossary
503
NACE Rev. 1 replaced NACE 1970. In so doing it
established a direct link between the European
classification and the internationally recognised
ISIC Rev. 3 developed under the auspices of the
United Nations. These two classifications are
directly compatible at the 2-digit level and more
detailed levels of ISIC Rev. 3 can be calculated by
aggregating the more detailed levels from NACE
Rev. 1.
See North American Industry Classification System
NACE Rev. 1
Name
The designation of an object by a linguistic
expression.
See also: North American Industry Classification
System (NAICS)
NAIRU
Non-accelerating inflation rate of unemployment
See also: Structural unemployment
17 Sections - letters A to Q
31 Subsections - 2-character alphabetical codes
60 Divisions - 2-digit codes
222 Groups - 3-digit codes
503 Classes - 4-digit codes
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
See also: ISO / IEC 11179
The NACE Rev. 1 Regulation was amended by a
Commission Regulation in 1993 which modified the
classification and a corrigendum was published in
1995.
Name of collection /
source used MetaStore
Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types refers to
full title of the original survey collection,
administrative source, database or publication
from where the data were obtained.
Source: NACE
Hyperlink:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/eurostat/ramon/cgi/Si
mWW
WFrame.SimResetBottomFrame?nID=NACE_REV1
&lId=&pId=&test=&frameType=4&association=&pr
operty=DESCRIPTI ON&language=EN
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
See also: International Standard Industrial
Classification of All Economic Activities (ISIC),
NACE / CLIO
Naphtha
Naphtha is a feedstock destined either for the
petrochemical industry (e.g. ethylene manufacture
or aromatics production) or for gasoline production
by reforming or isomerisation within the refinery.
NACE / CLIO
NACE / CLIO
General Industrial Classification of Economic
Activities in the European Communities
(Nomenclature générale des Activités économiques
dans les Communautés Européennes) - version
used for the input-output tables (European System
of Accounts 1979)
Naphtha comprises material in the 30 degrees C
and 210 degrees C distillation range or part of this
range.
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
NACE/CLIO was the branch of NACE 1970 used for
the compilation of input-output tables. It was
designed as a nomenclature of branches, made up
of "homogeneous production units", which are
analytical units. NACE/CLIO branches have been
defined by regrouped NIMEXE headings, and in all
but a few cases complete NIMEXE headings have
been used. As a result, NIMEXE headings of
several industrial origins fall under the branch
corresponding to the predominant production.
Naples terms
See Concessional restructuring
See also: Concessional restructuring
Narrow money
Monnaie au sens
étroit
Narrow money is a definition of the money supply
which is based on money as a medium of
exchange, rather than its broadest economic use
(known as broad money)
This classification is no longer in use (it has been
superseded by NACE Rev.1 in 1990).
Source: Eurostat
Source: The Handbook of International Financial
Terms, P. Moles, N. Terry, Oxford University Press,
1997)
See also: NACE
NAFTA
ALENA
See North American Free Trade Agreement
See also: Broad money, Monetary aggregates –
IMF
See also: North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA)
Nash equilibrium
In non-cooperative oligopoly theory it is necessary
to model the manner in which firms choose
strategies, given the fact that their decisions will
NAICS
504
affect their rivals.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
The most common assumption is that each firm
chooses its strategy so as to maximize profits,
given the profit-maximizing decisions of other
firms. The result is a Nash Equilibrium, developed
by the game theorist John Nash.
See also: System of National Accounts (SNA)
National Accounting
Matrix with
Environmental
Accounts (NAMEA)
A matrix presentation of monetary accounts
augmented by the input of natural resources and
ecosystem inputs and residual outputs in physical
terms. It is synonymous with hybrid supply and
use tables.
Context: A Nash equilibrium is a strategy selection
such that no firm can gain by altering its strategy,
given the existing strategies of its rivals. Thus, a
Nash equilibrium represents a best response by
any firm to the given strategies of the others.
Consider a duopoly, with each of two firms
choosing a strategy. The strategy pair chosen is a
Nash equilibrium if firm A‘s choice maximizes its
profits, given firm B‘s choice and firm 2 maximizes
its profits given firm 1‘s choice.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 2.73
Strategies refer to the decisions firms make.
Strategies may involve quantities, prices, or any
other relevant decisions (such as R&D, investment,
or location). The choice will depend on the nature
of the problem.
See also: Hybrid supply and use tables
National accounts
Comptes nationaux
National accounts are a coherent, consistent and
integrated set of macroeconomic accounts, balance
sheets and tables based on a set of internationally
agreed concepts, definitions, classifications and
accounting rules.
When the strategy analysed involves quantities,
the resulting equilibrium is termed a Cournot
(Nash) equilibrium. When the strategy involves
prices, it is called a Bertrand (Nash) equilibrium.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
National accounts provide a comprehensive
accounting framework within which economic data
can be compiled and presented in a format that is
designed for purposes of economic analysis,
decision-taking and policy-making.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Context: The accounts themselves present in a
condensed way a great mass of detailed
information, organized according to economic
principles and perceptions, about the working of an
economy. They provide a comprehensive and
detailed record of the complex economic activities
taking place within an economy and of the
interaction between the different economic agents,
and groups of agents, that takes place on markets
or elsewhere.
See also: Bertrand (Nash) Equilibrium, Cournot
(Nash) Equilibrium
National inland
Bateau national pour
waterways transport
le transport par voies
(IWT) vessel
navigables intérieures
IWT vessel which is registered at a given date in
the reporting country.
Context: Where registration of IWT vessels does
not apply in a specific country, a national IWT
vessel is a vessel owned by a company tax
resident in that country.
In practice the accounts are compiled for a
succession of time periods, thus providing a
continuing flow of information that is indispensable
for the monitoring, analysis and evaluation of the
performance of an economy over time.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
The accounts provides information not only about
economic activities, but also about the levels of an
economy's productive assets and the wealth of its
inhabitants at particular points of time. Finally,
they also include an external account that displays
the links between an economy and the rest of the
world.
National accountant
A national accountant is a person involved in the
preparation of the national accounts.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary.
Hyperlink: www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
See also: System of National Accounts (SNA)
505
The National Estate refers to components of the
cultural and natural environment that are of great
national value and need to be preserved for the
benefit of the community. Some components like
the Great Barrier Reef belong to the global world
heritage.
National annual price
A price that has been averaged both over all
localities of a country so as to take account of
regional variations in prices and over the days,
weeks, months or quarters of the reference year so
as to allow for seasonal variations in prices as well
as general inflation and changes in price
structures.
Such components possess aesthetic, historical,
scientific, social, cultural, ecological or other
special values and include parks and reserves,
beaches, coastlines, certain forests, rare species,
buildings and gardens of special merit, sites of
archaeological interest, museums and so forth
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
National disposable
Revenu national
income
disponible
National disposable income may be derived from
national income by adding all current transfers in
cash or in kind receivable by resident institutional
units from non-resident units and subtracting all
current transfers in cash or in kind payable by
resident institutional units to non-resident units
See also: Natural patrimony
National expenditure Dépense nationale
Capital formation and final consumption grouped
together constitute national expenditure
Context: National final expenditures on GDP that
are valued at national price levels and expressed in
national currencies.
Source: SNA 8.16
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
See also: Gross national disposable income
National environment
The environment corresponding to the national
territory, including the surrounding sea area
covered in an exclusive economic zone (EEZ)
agreement and the airspace over the country.
Source: SNA 2.187
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.81
National expenditure
on environmental
protection
National expenditure on environmental protection
is defined as the sum of:
- final and intermediate consumption of
environmental protection products by resident
units, other than those of the environmental
protection producers themselves;
National
environmental sphere
The environmental sphere which is associated with
the national territory including the surrounding sea
area covered in an exclusive economic zone (EEZ)
agreement and the airspace over the country.
Open oceans outside an EEZ and airspace outside
a national territory are part of the environmental
sphere but not part of any country‘s national
environment.
- plus capital formation on environmental
protection products;
- plus gross capital formation on other products
required for environmental protection activities;
- plus (current and capital) specific transfers by
residents units not captured in the items above;
- plus (current and capital) financing provided by
transfers to the rest of the world.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.80
National estate
- less financing by transfers received from the rest
of the world.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
Patrimoine national
506
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.133
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
National final
expenditures
See National expenditure
National oil pipeline
Transport national par
transport
oléodues
Oil pipeline transport between two places (a
pumping-in place and a pumping-out place)
located in the same country or in that part of the
seabed allocated to it. It may involve transit
through a second country.
See also: National expenditure
National income
Revenu national
National income is the total value of the primary
incomes receivable within an economy less the
total of the primary incomes payable by resident
units
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: SNA 7.14
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
National ownership
The effective exercise of a government‘s authority
over development policies and activities, including
those that rely – entirely or partially – on external
resources. For governments, this means
articulating the national development agenda and
establishing authoritative policies and strategies.
National inland
waterways transport
Transport national par
voies navigables
intérieures
Inland waterways transport between two places (a
place of loading/embarkment and a place of
unloading/disembarkment) located in the same
country irrespective of the country in which the
inland waterways transport (IWT) vessel is
registered. It may involve transit through a second
country.
Context: For [aid] donors, it means aligning their
programmes on government policies and building
on government systems and processes to manage
and coordinate aid rather than creating parallel
systems to meet donor requirements.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: OECD, 2006, DAC Guidelines and
Reference Series Applying Strategic Environmental
Assessment: Good Practice Guidance for
Development Co-operation, OECD, Paris
National language
Language in widespread and current use
throughout a specific country or in parts of its
territory, and often representative of the identity of
its speakers.
National parks
Parc nationaux
National parks are large natural areas not
materially altered by human activity where
extractive resource uses are not allowed and
whose purpose is to protect nature and scenic
areas of national and international significance for
scientific, educational and recreational use
It may or may not have the status of an official
language. Example: Rhaeto-Romance
(Ratoromanisch) in parts of Switzerland.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
National private
corporations (nonfinancial and
financial)
National private corporations include all resident
corporations and quasi-corporations that are not
controlled by government or by non-resident
institutional units
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
National numbering
agencies (NNAs)
NNAs have the sole right to allocate International
Security Identification Number (ISIN) codes to
securities within their own jurisdiction.
Source: SNA 4.75 and 4.84
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
National rail transport Transport ferroviaire
507
national
Rail transport between two places (a place of
loading and a place of unloading) located in the
same country irrespective of the country in which
the railway vehicles were registered. It may
involve transit through a second country.
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
National schedules (in
GATT)
The equivalent of tariff schedules in the General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), laying
down the commitments accepted — voluntarily or
through negotiation — by World Trade
Organisation (WTO) members.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
See also: International rail transport
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
National Regulatory
Authority (NRA)
In the EC directives, the regulatory institution
responsible for issuing licenses, controlling prices,
resolving disputes, etc.
National sea traffic
Circulation maritime
nationale
Sea traffic between two ports of a national territory
or one port sea traffic, irrespective of the country
in which the vessel is registered.
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
National resource
companies
A non-financial public corporation (state-owned
enterprise) that is involved in the exploration,
extraction, processing, or sale of minerals or oil.
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
National statistical
institute (NSI)
Same as National statistical office
National road
Transport routier
transport
national
Road transport between two places (a place of
loading/embarkment and a place of
unloading/disembarkment) located in the same
country irrespective of the country in which the
vehicle is registered. It may involve transit through
a second country.
See also: National statistical office (NSO)
National statistical
office (NSO)
The national statistical office is the leading
statistical agency within a national statistical
system.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
National road vehicle
Véhicule routier
national
A road vehicle registered in the reporting country
and bearing registration plates of that country, or
having been separately registered (trams,
trolleybuses, etc.).
National statistical
system (NSS)
The national statistical system (NSS) is the
ensemble of statistical organisations and units
within a country that jointly collect, process and
disseminate official statistics on behalf of national
government.
Context: Where registration of a road vehicle does
not apply in a specific country, a national road
vehicle is a vehicle owned or leased by a company
tax resident in that country.
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
508
National territory
All the territory within the national boundaries,
including the national environment.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Balance sheet – SNA
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.81
Nationality (of an
institutional entity)
Country of residence of the head office of an
institutional entity.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
National tourism
National tourism is the tourism of resident visitors,
within and outside the economic territory of the
country of reference
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, para 2.61
Native students
Élèves allochtones
―Native‖ students are those students who reported
in the Programme for International Student
Assessment (PISA) that they were born in the
country of assessment and who had at least one
parent born in that country.
National tourism
consumption
National tourism consumption comprises the
consumption of resident visitors, within and
outside the economic territory of the country of
reference. It is the sum of domestic tourism
consumption and outbound tourism consumption.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: First-generation students, Non-native
students
Natural assets
Actifs naturels
Natural assets are assets of the natural
environment. These consist of biological assets
(produced or wild), land and water areas with their
ecosystems, subsoil assets and air.
These purchases may include domestically
produced goods and services and goods and
services imported from non-resident producers
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, paras. 2.61, 2.67
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
National treatment (in
GATT)
The principle of giving others the same treatment
as one‘s own nationals. GATT Article III requires
that imports be treated no less favourably than the
same or similar domestically-produced goods once
they have passed customs.
See also: Environmental assets (SEEA)
Natural capital
Capital naturel
Natural capital are natural assets in their role of
providing natural resource inputs and
environmental services for economic production.
Context: Natural capital is generally considered to
comprise three principal categories: natural
resource stocks, land and ecosystems. All are
considered essential to the long-term sustainability
of development for their provision of ―functions‖ to
the economy, as well as to mankind outside the
economy and other living beings.
General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS)
Article XVII and the Trade-Related Aspects of
Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) Article 3 also
deal with national treatment for services and
intellectual property protection.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 1.23
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
National wealth
Patrimoine national
National wealth is the sum, for the economy as a
whole, of non-financial assets and net claims on
the rest of the world
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: SNA 13.2
509
natural gas. Their characteristics vary, ranging
from those of ethane, butane and propane to
heavy oils.
Natural forests
Forests with natural species and ecological
processes and for which there has been continuity
of ecological processes over a very long period of
time. The time period of continuity is sometimes
quoted as being of more than 200 years but this
may not be relevant for all types of forests.
NGL‘s are either distilled with crude oil in
refineries, blended with refined petroleum products
or used directly depending on their characteristics.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.158
Natural habitat
See Habitat
Habitat naturel
Natural gas Ŕ CPC
Gaz naturel
Natural gas, liquefied or in the gaseous state
(Central Product Classification (CPC) Class 1202)
See also: Habitat
Source: Central Product Classification (CPC).
Version 1.0. United Nations, New York, 1998,
Series M, No. 77, Ver. 1.0
See also: National estate, Natural patrimony
Natural heritage
See Natural patrimony
Héritage naturel
Natural increase (in
Accroissement naturel
population)
The difference between the number of live births
and the number of deaths during the year. The
natural increase (or natural decrease) is negative
when the number of deaths exceeds the number of
births.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
Source: Eurostat Glossary on Demographic
Statistics, 2000 Edition
See also: Natural gas – ECMT
Natural gas - IEA
Gaz naturel
Natural gas comprises gases, occurring in
underground deposits, whether liquefied or
gaseous, consisting mainly of methane. It includes
both "non-associated" gas originating from fields
producing only hydrocarbons in gaseous form, and
"associated" gas produced in association with
crude oil as well as methane recovered from coal
mines (colliery gas).
Natural losses
The average annual losses to the growing stock
during the reference period due to mortality from
other causes than cutting by man; for example,
natural mortality, disease, insect attack, fire, windthrow or other physical damages.
Production is measured after purification and
extraction of natural gas liquids (NGL) and sulphur,
and excludes reinjected gas, quantities vented or
flared. It includes gas consumed by processing
plants and gas transported by pipeline.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.179
Context: Natural gas is a mixture of hydrocarbon
compounds and small quantities of nonhydrocarbons existing in the gaseous phase or in
solution with oil in natural underground reservoirs
(Energy Statistics - Definitions, Units of Measure
and Conversion Factors, United Nations, 1987a,
New York, Factors. Series F, No. 44, page 5).
Natural monopoly
A natural monopoly exists in a particular market if
a single firm can serve that market at lower cost
than any combination of two or more firms.
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris
Natural monopoly arises out of the properties of
productive technology, often in association with
market demand, and not from the activities of
governments or rivals (see monopoly).
See also: Natural gas – CPC
Generally speaking, natural monopolies are
characterized by steeply declining long-run
average and marginal-cost curves such that there
is room for only one firm to fully exploit available
economies of scale and supply the market.
Natural gas liquids
Liquides de gaz
(NGL)
naturel (LGN)
Liquid or liquefied hydrocarbons produced in the
manufacture, purification and stabilization of
510
Context: In essence natural monopolies exist
because of economies of scale and economies of
scope which are significant relative to market
demand. Natural monopolies are thought to exist
in some portions of industries such as electricity,
railroads, natural gas, and telecommunications.
Because productive efficiency requires that only
one firm exist, natural monopolies are typically
subject to government regulation. Regulations may
include price, quality, and/or entry conditions.
Natural pollutant
Polluant naturel
A natural pollutant is a pollutant created by
substances of natural origin such as volcanic dust,
sea salt particles, photochemically formed ozone,
and products of forest fibres, among others
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Natural rate of
unemployment
See Structural unemployment
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Natural resource
Comptabilité des
accounting
ressources naturelles
Natural resource accounting is an accounting
system that deals with stocks and stock changes of
natural assets, comprising biota (produced or
wild), subsoil assets (proved reserves), water and
land with their aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Structural unemployment
Natural patrimony
Patrimoine naturel
The term natural patrimony derived from the
French patrimoine naturel, totality of natural
assets, including those of a historical or cultural
value
It is frequently used in the sense of physical
accounting as distinguished from monetary
(environmental) accounting
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: National estate, Natural patrimony
accounting
See also: Environmental accounting, Physical
accounting
Natural patrimony
Comptabilité du
accounting
patrimoine naturel
Natural patrimony accounting is a French
accounting system that attempts to include all
components of nature that can be quantitatively or
qualitatively changed by human activity (Theys,
1989).
Natural resources
Ressources naturelles
Natural resources are natural assets (raw
materials) occurring in nature that can be used for
economic production or consumption.
Context: The naturally occurring assets that
provide use benefits through the provision of raw
materials and energy used in economic activity (or
that may provide such benefits one day) and that
are subject primarily to quantitative depletion
through human use. They are subdivided into four
categories: mineral and energy resources, soil
resources, water resources and biological
resources.
It includes the description of non—renewable
resources, environmental media and living
organisms of ecosystems, agents that may affect
natural assets and systems, and impacts of human
beings on nature, both in monetary and in physical
terms
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.42, EA.1
See also: Natural patrimony
Natural person
A natural person in the Gernal Agreement on Trade
in Services (GATS) is an individual. A foreign
natural person in a country means an individual
who does not reside in the country, and who is a
national or has the right of permanent residence in
a foreign country
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Manual on Statistics of International Trade
in Services, Eurostat, IMF, OECD, UN, UNCTAD,
WTO, 2002, Annex II, Glossary
See also: Non-renewable natural resources,
Renewable natural resources
Hyperlink:
http://www1.oecd.org/std/TIS_Dec2000_Meeting/
DOCS/SERV2000_2e.pdf
Natural resources
exploration
511
When a direct investment enterprise is set up for
the exploration of natural resources, inward direct
investment flows provided to the direct investment
enterprise by the direct investor located abroad
that are used for exploration should be recorded as
direct investment, equity capital
which transport operations are performed. A
waterway forming a common frontier between two
countries is reported by both.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms, OECD, 2001 – not published
Natural resources
management and
exploitation activities
Activities related with the management of natural
resources (monitoring, control, surveys,
administration and actions for facilitating structural
adjustments of the sectors concerned) and their
exploitation (abstraction, harvesting …).
Navigable inland
Réseau de voies
waterways network
navigables intérieures
All navigable inland waterways open for public
navigation in a given area.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.37
Navigable inland
waterways regularly
used for transport
Voies navigables
intérieures
régulierement
utilisées pour les
transports
Waterways over which an amount of transport is
performed each year; this amount, expressed as
tonne-kilometres per kilometre of waterway, is
determined by the authority concerned in the light
of conditions prevailing on that country‘s waterway
network.
Natural selection
Sélection naturelle
Natural selection is the natural process by which
organisms that adapt to their environment survive
while those that do not adapt become eliminated
progressively
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Nature of the basic
data
See Source data
See also: Source data
Navigable lake
Lac navigable
Natural expanse of water open for navigation.
Navigable canal
Canal navigable
Waterway built primarily for navigation.
Context: Lagoons (brackish water area separated
from the sea by a coastal bank) are included.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Navigable inland
Voie navigable
waterway
intérieure
A stretch of water, not part of the sea, over which
vessels of a carrying capacity of not less than 50
tonnes can navigate when normally loaded. This
term covers both navigable rivers and lakes and
navigable canals.
Navigable river
Fleuve / rivière
navigable
Natural waterway open for navigation, irrespective
of whether it has been improved for that purpose.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: The length of rivers and canals is
measured in mid-channel. The length of lakes and
lagoons is measured along the shortest navigable
route between the most distant points to and from
512
―nested‖ in this sense.
NAWRU
Non-accelerating wage rate of unemployment
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Structural unemployment
NDP
Produit intérieur net
(PIN)
See Net domestic product (NDP
NESTI
OECD National Experts on Science and Technology
Indicators
See also: Net domestic product (NDP)
Negative externality
See Externalities
Net
Net
The term ―net‖ is a common means of referring to
values after deducting consumption of fixed capital
(generally used as in ―net capital stock‖ or ―net
domestic product‖); all the major balancing items
in the accounts from value added through to
saving may be recorded gross or net.
See also: Externalities - OECD
Neo-natal mortality
rate
The neo-natal mortality rate is the number of
deaths during the first 28 completed days of life
occurring among the live births in a given
geographical area during a given year, per 1,000
live births
It should be noted, however, that the term ―net‖
can be used in different contexts in the national
accounts, such as ―net income from abroad‖ which
is the difference between two income flows
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Source: SNA 6.201
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Nested design
Dispositif emboîté
A class of experimental design in which every level
of a given factor appears with only a single level of
any other factor. Factors which are not nested are
said to be crossed. If every level of one appears
with every level of the others, the factors are said
to be completely crossed: if not, they are partly
crossed.
Net (wealth) capital
stock
Net (wealth) capital stock refers to the current
market valuation of an industry‘s or an economy‘s
productive stock
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
See also: Net capital stock
Nested hypothesis
Hypothèses emboîtées
A sequence of hypotheses in which the hypothesis
at any stage is contained in all hypotheses later in
the sequence.
Net above-ground
productivity (NAP)
Net above-ground productivity (NAP) is the
accumulation of biomass in above-ground parts of
plants (trunks, branches, leaves, flowers, fruits)
over a specified period
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Nested sampling
Échantillonnage à
emboîtéments
A term used in two somewhat different senses:
Net accumulation
See Accumulation
(1) as equivalent to multi-stage sampling because
the higher stage units are ―nested‖ in the lower
stage units;
See also: Accumulation
Net Additions to Stock
(NAS)
This indicator measures the physical growth rate of
an economy. New materials are added to the
(2) where the sampling is such that certain units
are imbedded in larger units which form part of the
whole sample, e.g. the entry-plots of clusters are
513
economy‘s stock each year (gross additions) in
buildings and other infrastructure, and materials
incorporated into new durable goods such as cars,
industrial machinery and household appliances,
while old materials are removed from stock as
buildings are demolished and durable goods
disposed of (in economy wide material flow
accounting).
See Teaching time
See also: Teaching time
Net correlation
An alternative but obsolescent term for partial
correlation. The name is derived from the fact that
a partial correlation is the correlation between two
variates of a larger group when the remaining
variates are held constant giving, in a sense, a
―net‖ correlation.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.208
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Total correlation
Net adjusted
Revenu disponible
disposable income
ajusté net
Net adjusted disposable income is obtained from
the net disposable income of an institutional unit or
sector by adding the value of the social transfers in
kind receivable by that unit or sector and
subtracting the value of the social transfers in kind
payable by that unit or sector
Net cost criterion
Only expenditure undertaken for environmental
protection purposes which leads to a net increase
in cost (that is where spending exceeds any
savings or income arising before the net cost was
actually incurred) is included. When expenditure is
recorded, this criterion only applies to operating
expenditure.
Source: SNA 8.24
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.30
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Net annual increment
(in forest accounts)
The average annual volume over the reference
period of gross increment less natural losses.
Net domestic product Produit intérieur net
(NDP)
(PIN)
Net domestic product (NDP) is obtained by
deducting the consumption of fixed capital from
gross domestic product
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.179
Net borrowing
Source: SNA 2.175
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Besoin de
financement
Net equity of
households in life
insurance reserves
and in pension funds
Droits nets des
ménages sur les
réserves techniques
d‟assurance- vie et
sur les fonds de
pension
Net equity of households in life insurance reserves
and in pension funds consists of reserves held
against life insurance and annuity policies by
insurance enterprises, whether mutual or
incorporated, and by pension funds; these reserves
are considered to be assets of the policyholders
and not of the institutional units that manage them
See Net lending
See also: Net lending
Net capital stock
Stock net de capital
Net capital stock is the sum of the written-down
values of all the fixed assets still in use is
described as the net capital stock; it can also be
described as the difference between gross capital
stock and consumption of fixed capital
Source: SNA 6.199
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: (AF.61) – Annex to chapter XIII
See also: Net (wealth) capital stock
Net fixed capital
formation.
Net contact hours of
teaching
514
Formation nette de
capital fixe
Net fixed capital formation consists of gross fixed
capital formation less consumption of fixed capital
units or other sectors.
It is the balancing item in the capital account and
is defined as: (Net saving plus capital transfers
receivable minus capital transfers payable) minus
(the value of acquisitions less disposals of nonfinancial assets, less consumption of fixed capital).
Source: SNA 10.27 [12.102]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Negative net lending may also be described as ―net
borrowing"
Net foreign balance
Difference between exports and imports of goods
and services. Also referred to as net exports, or
balance of imports and exports.
Source: SNA 2.137 and Table 2.1 III.1 and 10.30
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
Net loan
From the viewpoint of a loan, the net flow is gross
disbursements less principal repayments.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Net graduation rates
Net graduation rates is the percentage of persons
within a virtual age cohort who obtain a tertiary
qualification, thus being unaffected by changes in
population size or typical graduation age. The net
graduation rate is calculated by dividing the
number of graduates by the population for each
single year of age.
Net material
accumulation in the
economic sphere
The balance of all physical flows from and to the
national economic sphere.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.153
See also: Graduates, Graduation/Successful
completion, Gross graduation rates, Unduplicated
total count of graduates
Net income from
abroad
Net income from abroad is the difference between
the total values of the primary incomes receivable
from, and payable to, non-residents
Net material
accumulation in the
environmental sphere
The balance of all physical flows from and to the
national environmental sphere.
Source: SNA 7.15
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.154
Net international
Position extérieure
investment position
nette
The net international investment position is the
stock of external assets minus the stock of
external liabilities
Source: BPM para. 55
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Net migration
Solde migratoire
The difference between immigration into and
emigration from the area during the year (net
migration is therefore negative when the number
of emigrants exceeds the number of immigrants).
Net lending
Capacité de
financement
Net lending is the net amount a unit or a sector
has available to finance, directly or indirectly, other
Source: Eurostat Glossary on Demographic
515
Statistics, 2000 Edition
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.170
Net national
Revenu national
disposable income
disponible net
Net national disposable income may be derived
from net national income by adding all current
transfers in cash or in kind receivable by resident
institutional units from non-resident units and
subtracting all current transfers in cash or in kind
payable by resident institutional units to nonresident units
Net present value
(NPV) of debt
The nominal amount outstanding minus the sum of
all future debt-service obligations (interest and
principal) on existing debt discounted at an
interest rate different from the contracted rate.
Source: SNA 8.16
Context: The concept is closely related to that of
opportunity cost: if the debtor has a loan that
bears a 3 percent rate of interest, it is clear that
the debtor is better off than by borrowing at 10
percent. But by discounting the future debt-service
obligations at 10 percent and comparing the
outcome with the amount borrowed, the NPV will
tell how much the opportunity to borrow at 3
percent, rather than at 10 percent, is worth to the
debtor.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Net national income
Revenu national net
Net national income (NNI) is the aggregate value
of the balances of net primary incomes summed
over all sectors is described as net national
income.
Gross national income (GNI) less the consumption
of fixed capital from GNI gives net national income
(NNI) at market prices
The NPV can be used to assess the profitability of
buying back bonds, although account needs to be
taken of how the buyback is to be financed.
Source: SNA 7.16 and Table 7.2 [2.182]
The Development Assistance Committee (DAC)
OECD grant element is an NPV concept, since the
grant element is the percentage that the NPV,
using a 10 percent rate of discount, represents of
the face value of the loan.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Gross national income (GNI)
In the context of the Paris Club and the HIPC
Initiative, sometimes present value is described
incorrectly as NPV.
Net non-life insurance Primes nettes
premiums
d‟assurancedommages
Net non-life insurance premiums are total non-life
insurance premiums less service charges
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: SNA 8.86
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Concessionality level, Grant element,
Present value
Net operating surplus
In SEEA net operating surplus is interpreted as the
return to capital, or the effect of time passing on
the net present value.
Net price (Hotelling)
The value of the resource stock is calculated as the
current rent per unit of resources times the size of
the stock, under the assumption that the resource
rent will rise at a rate equal to the rate of discount.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.162 & Box 7.1
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.206
See also: Operating surplus
Net present value
Valuation method to value stocks of natural
resources. It is obtained discounting future flows of
economic benefits to the present period.
Net price (in
environmental
accounting)
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
516
Prix net
Net price refers to the valuation used in
environmental accounting to estimate the
economic value of a natural resource and its
depletion. It is defined as the actual market price
of a natural resource output minus all marginal
exploitation costs including a normal return to
capital
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.55
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Net resource transfer
A net resource transfer is a current account deficit
excluding any net interest payments.
Net purchases abroad
Purchases by resident households outside the
economic territory of the country less purchases by
non-residential households in the economic
territory of the country.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Net saving
Épargne nette
Net saving is net disposable income less final
consumption expenditure
Net rate of return
Taux de rendement
The rate of return of an asset or portfolio over a
specified time period, after discounting any fees of
commissions.
Source: SNA 9.2
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Gross rate of return, Rate of return OECD(2)
Net sector output
The sum of the sales of output of the
establishments in the sector to other sectors of the
economy. Gross sector output for the sector less
the sales of the sector‘s output within the sector.
Net recordings
Enregistrements nets
Net recordings are combinations in which the
values of some elementary items are offset against
items on the other side of the account or which
have an opposite sign are called net recordings
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: SNA 3.117
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Net rent
Loyer net
Net rent is the total rent paid by a tenant to a
landowner less the amounts paid by the landowner
for land taxes or any maintenance expenses
incurred solely as a consequence of owning the
land (by convention, such taxes or expenses are
treated as payable by the tenant who is deemed to
deduct them from the rent that he would otherwise
be obliged to pay to the landowner)
See also: Gross sector output, Sectoral output
Net value added
Valeur ajoutée nette
Net value added is the value of output less the
values of both intermediate consumption and
consumption of fixed capital
Source: SNA 6.4, 6.222 [1.6]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 7.130
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Net value of a fixed
asset
Valeur nette (valeur
après amortissement)
d‟un actif fixe
The net (or written-down) value of a fixed asset is
equal to the actual or estimated current
purchaser‘s price of a new asset of the same type
less the cumulative value of the consumption of
fixed capital accrued up to that point in time
Net residual flow
Net residual flows refer to the quantity of residuals
that is ultimately rejected into the environment (or
into a landfill site) following any recycling/re-use or
predisposal treatment.
517
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: SNA 6.199
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Net worth
Valeur nette
Net worth is the value of all the non-financial and
financial assets owned by an institutional unit or
sector less the value of all its outstanding
liabilities.
Neuchatel Group
The Neuchatel Group is an informal co-operation
between the statistical offices of Denmark,
Norway, Sweden and Switzerland to clarify some
basic concepts and to arrive at a common
terminology for classifications.
It is a measure of the wealth of a unit or sector at
a point in time
The first meeting of the Group was held in
Neuchatel, Switzerland in June 1999. The meeting
resulted in a draft Neuchatel Terminology
document and a tentative conceptual model, in
which the object types of a classification database,
and the attributes connected with each object
type, are listed an described.
Source: SNA 3.68 and 10.1 [13.10, 13.82]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Context: The draft Terminology and conceptual
model was corrected, amended and further
developed during 1999 and 2000. Version 1 was
presented at the METIS meeting in Washington in
November 2000 and at subsequent Eurostat or
other international meetings on metadata. Version
2 was released on 5 September 2002.
Net-cost (criterion)
When identifying environmental expenditure, only
expenditure undertaken for environmental
protection purposes which leads to a net increase
in cost (that is where spending exceeds any
savings or income arising before the net cost was
actually incurred) is included. When expenditure is
recorded, this criterion only applies to operating
expenditure.
Classifications are generally regarded as a special
kind of metadata for statistics. They are
definitional, contents-oriented metadata, ordering
and describing the meaning of statistical data.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.30 C
Source: Neuchatel Terminology, Classification
database object types and their attributes, Version
2.0, Neuchatel Group, September 2002
See also: Classification
Neuchatel
terminology
See Neuchatel Group
Network of samples
See Interpenetrating samples
See also: Neuchatel Group
See also: Interpenetrating samples (sub samples)
Neutral holding gain
Gain neutre de
détention
A neutral holding gain is the value of the holding
gain that would accrue if the price of the asset
changed in the same proportion as the general
price level - i.e. merely kept pace with the general
rate of inflation or deflation
Network or facilities
The ensemble of equipment, sites, switches, lines,
circuits, software, and other transmission
apparatus used to provide telecommunications
services.
Source: Telecommunications services: Glossary of
terms – World Trade Organisation
Source: SNA 12.64
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/tratop_e/serv_e/t
elecom_e/tel12_e.htm
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Network sampling
Neutral holding gain
(by non-residents)
Composante gains
neutres de détention
(par les non
résidents)
The neutral holding gain (by non-residents) is the
value of the non-residents‘ holding gain that would
be required to maintain the purchasing power of
the asset - expressed in national currency - over
the time period involved, i.e. the holding gain
needed to keep pace with the overall change in the
Échantillonnage en
boule de neige
A procedure developed by Sirken (1970) for the
measurement of characteristics in rare populations.
For any counting rule for linking enumeration units
with elements, parameters can be defined which
characterise the network linking the enumeration
units to the members of the rare population group.
518
general price level
Source: SNA 14.145
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Entry rates, New entrants to a level of
education - UNESCO
New entrants to a
level of education UNESCO
New entrants to a level of education are students
who are entering any programme leading to a
recognised qualification at this level of education
for the first time, irrespective of whether the
students enter the programme at the beginning or
at an advanced stage of the programme
New and renewable
energy sources
Sources d „énergie
nouvelles et
renouvelables
New and renewable energy sources are energy
sources including solar energy, geothermal energy,
wind power, hydropower, ocean energy (thermal
gradient, wave power and tidal power), biomass,
draught animal power, fuelwood, peat, oil shale
and tar sands
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 37
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: New entrants to a level of education OECD
See also: Energy sources
New construction
New construction refers to site preparation for, and
construction of, entirely new structures and/or
significant extensions to existing structures
whether or not the site was previously occupied
New entrants to a
level of tertiary
education
New entrants to the tertiary level of education are
students who have never entered any tertiary level
before
Source: International Recommendations for
Construction Statistics, Statistical Papers, Series
M, No. 47, Rev. 1, United Nations, New York,
1997, para. 73
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 38
New goods
See Evolutionary goods and Revolutionary goods
New Cronos
Eurostat's New Cronos reference database contains
around 100 million statistical data covering every
economic and social sector. The information
normally covers all European Union Member
States; in many cases it is also available for Japan,
the United States of America and other Union trade
partners.
See also: Evolutionary goods, Revolutionary goods
New imputation
methodology
New imputation methodology is a generalization of
the hot-deck that employs sophisticated matching
methods to chose potential donors from a pool of
edit-passing records that most closely resemble
the edit-failing record being donated to.
Source: Eurostat CODED Glossary
New economy
The term ―New Economy‖ describes aspects or
sectors of an economy that are producing or
intensely using innovative or new technologies.
This relatively new concept applies particularly to
industries where people depend more and more on
computers, telecommunications and the Internet
to produce, sell and distribute goods and services.
The method uses additional metrics for comparing
numeric data and specific logic to assure that
records satisfy edits that are not available with
traditional hot-deck methods.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Government of Canada, Economic
Concepts, website
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
New entrants to a
level of education OECD
New entrants to a level of education are students
who are entering any programme leading to a
recognised qualification at this level of education
for the first time, irrespective of whether the
students enter the programme at the beginning or
at an advanced stage of the programme.
New orders indicators
New orders indicators provide a measure of the
value of orders received by the unit during the
reference period.
519
page 91]
It is defined as the value of all legally binding
contracts between a producer and a consumer for
future deliveries by the producer of goods or
services.
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, June 1998,
Chapter 3, Getting Started, Settling in: The
Transition from Education to the Labour Market,
page 91
Context: New orders are a leading indicator of
production in that they measure future demand
and production requirements.
NewCronos
See New Cronos
Enterprises may meet orders through: their own
production processes; by sub-contracting some or
all of the production process or through the resale
of goods purchased.
See also: New Cronos
New-good problem (in
prices indices)
Difficulty in comparing prices between two periods
when a product enters the basket only in period 2,
so that a price for the product does not exist in
period 1.
The comparability of the indicators compiled by
different countries is largely dependent on the
inclusion or exclusion of these and other elements.
Source: "A review of concepts and national
experiences in the compilation of demand
indicators and output indicators". An unpublished
paper prepared for a meeting OECD Short-term
Economic Statistics Expert Group, June 2002
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink: www.oecd.org/std/meeting-papers
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
New products (in
context of innovation)
New products are goods and services that differ
significantly in their characteristics or intended
uses from products previously produced by the
firm.
Newly Independent
States (NIS)
Newly Independent States of the former Soviet
Union.
Context: The first microprocessors and digital
cameras were examples of new products using
new technologies. The first portable MP3 player,
which combined existing software standards with
miniaturised hard drive technology, was a new
product combining existing technologies.
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2002-2007,
OECD, Paris, 2002 – Annex II. Glossary of Terms
Newsgroups
Similar to a discussion forum, to view and post
messages to a newsgroup. Users need a news
reader program that runs on their computer and
connects them to a news server on the Internet.
There are thousands of newsgroups.
Source: OECD, 2005, ―The Measurement of
Scientific and Technological Activities: Guidelines
for Collecting and Interpreting Innovation Data:
Oslo Manual, Third Edition‖ prepared by the
Working Party of National Experts on Scientific and
Technology Indicators, OECD, Paris, para. 158
Source: OECD, 2004, Promise and Problems of EDemocracy: Challenges of Online Citizen
Engagement, OECD, Paris, Annex 1: Commonly
used E-Engagement Terms
New school leavers
(as captured in labour
force surveys)
New school leavers as captured in labour force
surveys are defined as those individuals who were
in initial education about one year before the
survey, but who were not at the time of the
survey.
NIM
See New imputation methodology
See also: New imputation methodology
NIS
See Newly Independent States
Context: The most important drawback of the
collection of such information in a labour force
survey following the above definition is that the
transition process is captured in a snapshot survey
and it does not follow that the individuals in
question have permanently left initial education.
See also: Newly Independent States (NIS)
Nitrate
Nitrate
Nitrate is a nitrogen-containing compound that can
exist in the atmosphere or as a dissolved gas in
water. It may produce harmful effects on humans
and animals
Young adults, more so in some countries than
others, and more so for some levels of education
than others, can and do return to the educational
system.[OECD Employment Outlook, June 1998,
Chapter 3, Getting Started, Settling in: The
Transition from Education to the Labour Market,
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
520
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
ammonia, and organic nitrogen in waste water
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Nitric oxide
Oxyde nitrique
Nitric oxide (NO) is a gas formed by combustion
under high pressure and high temperature in an
internal combustion engine. It changes into
nitrogen dioxide in the ambient air and contributes
to photochemical smog
Nitrous oxide
Protoxyde d‟azote
Nitrous oxide (N20) is a relatively inert oxide of
nitrogen produced as a result of microbial action in
the soil, use of fertilizers containing nitrogen,
burning of timber, and so forth. This nitrogen
compound may contribute to greenhouse and
ozone—depleting effects
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Nitrification
Nitrification
Nitrification is a biological process involving the
conversion of nitrogen-containing organic
compounds into nitrates and nitrites. It is part of
the nitrogen cycle and considered to be beneficial
since it converts organic nitrogen compounds into
nitrates that can be absorbed by green plants
NME
See Non-member economies, OECD
See also: Non-member economies, OECD
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
NNI
See Net national income
See also: Net national income
Nitrites
Nitrites
Nitrites are nitrous oxide salts used in food
preservation
No fixed place of work Travailleurs sans lieu
de travail fixe
The no fixed place of work category is restricted to
persons whose work involves travel in different
areas and who do not report daily in person to a
fixed address, for example, itinerant traders or
hawkers, travelling salesmen and long-distance
lorry drivers
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Nitrogen fixation
Nitrogen fixation is the conversion of free nitrogen
to nitrogen combined with other elements;
specifically regarding soils, the assimilation of
atmospheric nitrogen from the soil air by soil
organisms to produce nitrogen compounds that
eventually become available to plants
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.245
NOE
See Non-observed economy (NOE)
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
See also: Non-observed economy (NOE)
Noise
Bruit
(Environmental)
Noise is an audible sound from traffic, construction
and so on that may generate unpleasant and
harmful effects (hearing loss). It is measured in
decibels.
Nitrogen oxide
Oxydes de l‟azote
Nitrogen oxide (NO2) is a product of combustion
from transportation and stationary sources. It is a
major contributor to acid depositions and the
formation of ground—level ozone in the
troposphere.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Noise (Statistical)
A convenient term for a series of random
disturbances borrowed through communication
engineering, from the theory of sound. In
communication theory noise results in the
possibility of a signal sent, x, being different from
the signal received, y, and the latter has a
probability distribution conditional upon x. If the
disturbances consist of impulses at random
Nitrogenous oxygen
demand (NOD)
Demande d'oxygène
pour la nitrification
(DON)
Nitrogenous oxygen demand (NOD) is a
quantitative measure of the amount of dissolved
oxygen required for the biological oxidation of
nitrogenous material, for example, nitrogen in
521
intervals it is sometimes known as ―shot noise‖.
hort.htm
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Classification
Nomenclature of
Territorial Units
(NUTS)
The Nomenclature of Territorial Units for Statistics
(NUTS) was established by Eurostat to provide a
single uniform breakdown of territorial units for the
production of regional statistics for the European
Union.
Noise abatement
Lutte contre le bruit
Noise abatement is an activity to reduce the
emission of noise or vibrations from a given
source, or to protect persons and built—up
structures from exposure to noise and vibrations
Although the NUTS classification has no legal value
per se, it has been used since 1988 in Community
legislation (Council Regulation (EEC) No 2052/88
on the tasks of the Structural Funds: O.J. L 185 of
15 July 1988).
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Eurostat, 1999, Nomenclature of territorial
units for statistics
NUTS, Eurostat, Luxembourg
Noise pollution
Pollution acoustique
Noise pollution is sound at excessive levels that
may be detrimental to human health
Nominal catch (in
acquatic resources
accounts)
The live weight equivalent of the landings, i.e.:
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
- landings on a round, fresh basis;
- landings on a round, whole basis;
- landings on an ex-water weight basis
Nomads
Nomades
Nomads are persons without a fixed place of usual
residence who move from one site to another,
usually according to well-established patterns of
geographical mobility.
It does not include unreported discards.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.295 & Figure 8.4
Context: When their trajectory involves crossing
current international boundaries, they become part
of the international flows of people. Some nomads
may be stateless persons because, lacking a fixed
place of residence, they may not be recognised as
citizens by any of the countries through which they
pass.
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Nominal effective
exchange rate
A nominal effective exchange rate is the exchange
rate of the domestic currency vis-à-vis other
currencies weighted by their share in either the
country‘s international trade or payments
Nomenclature
A nomenclature is a systematic naming of things or
a system of names or terms for things. In
classification, nomenclature involves a systemic
naming of categories or items.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Context: The terms ―classification‖ and
―nomenclature‖ are often used interchangeably,
despite the definition of a ―classification‖ being
broader than that of a ―nomenclature‖. A
nomenclature is essentially a convention for
describing observations, whereas a classification
structures and codifies the observations as well.
See also: Exchange rates, Real effective exchange
rates
Nominal expenditures
Expenditures in national currencies converted to a
common currency at exchange rates.
Source: "United Nations Glossary of Classification
Terms" prepared by the Expert Group on
International Economic and Social Classifications;
unpublished on paper.
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/class/family/glossary_s
522
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Nominal prices
Prices charged by providers of general government
services such as health and education and prices
that are heavily subsidized through government
funding or regulated by government policy.
Nominal final
expenditures
National final expenditures on GDP that have been
converted to a common currency with exchange
rates. Expenditures so converted remain valued at
national price levels and reflect both volume and
price differences between countries.
Such prices are not economically significant and
therefore do not provide signals of market driven
inflation.
Context: Also referred to as ―nominal values‖.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Nominal gross
domestic product
(GDP)
See Gross domestic product (GDP) - current prices
Nominal Protection
Co-efficient (NPC)
See Consumer Nominal Protection Co-efficient and
Producer Nominal Protection Co-efficient
See also: Gross domestic product (GDP) – current
prices
Nominal holding gain
Gain nominal de
détention
The nominal holding gain on a given quantity of an
asset is the value of the benefit accruing to the
owner of that asset as a result of a change in its
price or, more generally, its monetary value over
time
See also: Consumer Nominal Protection Coefficient (NACc), Nominal Protection Co- efficient
(NPC)
Nominal value (of a
debt instrument)
The nominal value of a debt instrument is the
amount that at any moment in time the debtor
owes to the creditor at that moment; this value is
typically established by reference to the terms of a
contract between the debtor and creditor.
Source: SNA 12.63
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Context: The nominal value of a debt instrument
reflects the value of the debt at creation, and any
subsequent economic flows, such as transactions
(for example, repayment of principal), valuation
changes (independent of changes in its market
price), and other changes.
Nominal holding gain
(by non-residents)
Gains nominaux de
détention (par les non
résidents)
The nominal holding gain (by non-residents) is that
value accruing to the non-resident creditors and
debtors as a result of a change in their
assets‘/liabilities‘ monetary value, during the time
that they are held, from the beginning to the end
of the accounting period; the change in the
monetary value of the asset may reflect a change
in its price (in national currency) and/or a change
in the relevant exchange rate
Conceptually, the nominal value of a debt
instrument can be calculated by discounting future
interest and principal payments at the existing
contractual interest rate(s) on the instrument; the
latter may be fixed rate or variable-rate.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: SNA 14.144
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Market valuation
Nominal interest
Intérêts nominaux
When a debtor is able to discharge his liability to
the creditor by repaying principal equal in money
value to the funds borrowed, the associated
interest payments are described as ―nominal"
Nominal values
See Nominal final expenditures
See also: Nominal final expenditures
Source: SNA 7.109
Nominal wage index
523
An index of nominal wages calculated by setting a
base year equal to 100 for nominal wages.
amounts on officially guaranteed or insured
financial credits since these are taken over by
export credit agencies from the original bank
creditors.
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 510
Guaranteed financial credits made by banking
institutions that do not report to the Bank for
International Settlements (BIS) are also included
here. These data only cover trade credits which
have been guaranteed or insured by the official
sector in the creditor country. They include credits
extended to both the public and private sector in
the borrowing country
See also: Nominal wages (annual averages of
hourly, daily, weekly or monthly wages), Real
wage index
Nominal wages
(annual averages of
hourly, daily, weekly
or monthly wages)
Nominal wages are generally derived from wages
and salaries at prices and either (a) number of
employees or (b) total number of hours of work of
employees.
Source: Joint BIS-IMF-OECD-World Bank statistics
on external debt, metadata
Hyperlink:
http://www1.oecd.org/dac/debt/htm/metadata.ht
m#Line%20A
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 510
Non sector allocable
aid
See Sector of destination (of aid)
Non-bank trade
related credits, shortterm
Short-term non-bank trade-related credits
comprise official and officially guaranteed or
insured suppliers' credits. These are credits
extended by exporters to importers abroad that
have a remaining maturity of one year.
See also: Sector of destination (of aid)
Context: They include:
Non-autonomous
pension funds
Non-autonomous pension funds schemes in which
employers maintain special reserves which are
segregated from their other reserves even though
such funds do not constitute separate institutional
units from the employers. These are referred to as
non-autonomous pension funds
- export credits with an original maturity of one
year or less; and
See also: Nominal wage index, Real wage index,
Real wages
- the amounts of principal due in the next year on
credits with an original maturity of over one year.
(At present arrears on debt with an original
maturity of over one year are not included here for
technical reasons. However, work is underway to
enable their incorporation into this category in the
future).
Context: In occupational plans, a pension fund that
is not legally separated from the plan sponsor. The
pension assets may form a reserve in the plan
sponsor's balance sheet ("book reserves") or they
may be held in legally separated vehicles but are
the property of the plan sponsor ("financial
reserves").
These data only cover trade credits which have
been extended, guaranteed or insured by the
official sector in the creditor country. They include
credits extended to both the public and private
sector in the borrowing country
Pension plan members have no legal claim on the
assets of a non-autonomous pension fund. (OECD
Working Party on Private Pensions, Pensions
Glossary, December 2002)
Source: Joint BIS-IMF-OECD-World Bank statistics
on external debt, metadata
Hyperlink:
http://www1.oecd.org/dac/debt/htm/metadata.ht
m#Line%20A
Source: SNA 8.63
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Non-competitive
services
A service is non-competitive if the market for
provision of that service can only sustain a single
firm. Usually this is due to the presence of
economies of scale - i.e., the service is a natural
monopoly. It may also be due to regulation.
Compare with competitive services.
See also: Autonomous pension funds
Non-bank trade
related credits
Non-bank trade-related credits comprise official
export credits, which by their nature are longterm, and officially guaranteed or insured
suppliers' credits, which are credits extended by
exporters to importers abroad.
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
They also include arrears and officially rescheduled
524
Only those resources that are currently, or are
likely soon to be, exploitable for economic
purposes, should be included. (ESA Annex 7.1)
See also: Competitive
Non-compulsory
curriculum
The non-compulsory curriculum is that which is
defined entirely at the school level or eventually at
the programme level if various programme types
exist.
Source: (AN.213) – Annex to chapter XIII. See
also ESA Annex 7.1
Non-debt liabilities
Includes unfunded pension obligations, exposure to
government guarantees, and arrears (obligatory
payments that are not made by the due-forpayment date) and other contractual obligations.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: Compulsory core curriculum, Compulsory
curriculum, Compulsory flexible curriculum,
Intended instruction time
Context: For example, a contract permitting a firm
to set up a mine may explicitly or implicitly
obligate the government to pay for the clean-up
costs when the mine is abandoned.
Non-consolidated debt
The debt that is wholly or partly excluded from
rescheduling. It has to be repaid on the terms on
which it was originally borrowed, unless creditors
agree otherwise.
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Non-deductible value TVA non déductible
added tax (VAT)
Non-deductible value added tax (VAT) is the VAT
payable by a purchaser which is not deductible
from his own VAT liability, if any
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: SNA 6.209
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Non-contributory
Régime de pension
pension scheme
non contributif
A pension scheme where the members do not have
to pay into the scheme.
See also: Deductible VAT, Value added tax (VAT) –
SNA
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Non-deliverable
forward contracts
(NDFs)
A non-deliverable forward contract is a foreign
currency financial derivative instrument. An NDF
differs from a normal foreign currency forward
contract in that there is no physical settlement of
two currencies at maturity. Rather, based on the
movement of two currencies, a net cash settlement
will be made by one party to the other.
See also: Contributory pension scheme
Non-coverage
Failure to locate or to visit some units in the
sample.
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Context: NDFs are commonly used to hedge local
currency risks in emerging markets where local
currencies are not freely convertible, where capital
markets are small and undeveloped, and where
there are restrictions on capital movements. Under
these conditions, an NDF market might develop in
an offshore financial centre, with contracts settled
in major foreign currencies, such as the U.S.
dollar.
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Non-cultivated
biological resources
Ressources
biologiques non
cultivées
Non-cultivated biological resources consist of
animals and plants that yield both once-only and
repeat products over which ownership rights are
enforced but for which natural growth and/or
regeneration is not under the direct control,
responsibility and management of institutional
units
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Context: Examples are virgin forests and fisheries
within the territory of the country.
Non-durable good
Bien non durable
A non-durable good is one which is used up
entirely in less than a year, assuming a normal or
525
average rate of physical usage
Non-financial quasi-corporations are quasicorporations whose principal activity is the
production of market goods or non-financial
services
Source: SNA [9.38]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Durable good
Source: SNA 4.68
Non-financial and
financial private
corporations
Private corporations are all resident corporations
and quasi-corporations that are not controlled by
government
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Quasi-corporations
Non-instructional
educational institution
- UNESCO
Non-instructional educational institutions are
educational institutions that provide
administrative, advisory or professional services,
frequently for other educational institutions.
Source: SNA 4.75
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Public corporations (non-financial and
financial), Quasi-corporations
Context: Non-Instructional Educational Institutions
include the following entities:
Non-financial and
Sociétés publiques
financial public
(non financières et
corporations
financières)
Public corporations are resident corporations and
quasi-corporations that are subject to control by
government units, with control over a corporation
being defined as the ability to determine general
corporate policy by choosing appropriate directors,
if necessary
- Entities administering educational institutions
include institutions such as national, state, and
provincial ministries or departments of education;
other bodies that administer education at various
levels of government (e.g. administrative offices of
local education authorities and education officers of
municipalities, and central agencies responsible for
the remuneration of staff or pension payments);
and analogous bodies in the private sector (e.g.
diocesan offices that administer Catholic schools,
and agencies administering admissions to
universities).
Source: SNA 4.72 and 4.84
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Private corporations (non-financial and
financial)
- Entities providing support services to other
educational institutions include institutions that
provide educational support and materials as well
as operation and maintenance services for
buildings. These are commonly part of the generalpurpose units of public authorities.
Non-financial assets
Actifs non financiers
Non-financial assets are entities, over which
ownership rights are enforced by institutional
units, individually or collectively, and from which
economic benefits may be derived by their owners
by holding them, or using them over a period of
time, that consist of tangible assets, both produced
and non-produced, and most intangible assets for
which no corresponding liabilities are recorded
- Entities providing ancillary services cover
separate organisations that provide such
education-related services as vocational and
psychological counselling, placement,
transportation of students, and student meals and
housing.
Source: (AN) – Annex to chapter XIII
See also: Financial assets
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 64
Non-financial
corporations
Non-financial corporations are corporations whose
principal activity is the production of market goods
or non-financial services
See also: Non-instructional educational institutions
Non-instructional
educational
institutions - OECD
Établissement
d'enseignement sans
vocation pédagogique
- OCDE
Non-instructional educational institutions are
educational institutions that provide
administrative, advisory or professional services to
other educational institutions, although they do not
enrol students themselves.
Source: SNA 4.68 [2.20]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Financial corporations
Non-financial quasicorporations
Quasi-sociétés non
financières
Context: Examples include national, state, and
526
provincial ministries or departments of education;
other bodies that administer education at various
levels of government or analogous bodies in the
private sector; and organisations that provide such
education-related services as vocational or
psychological counselling, placement, testing,
financial aid to students, curriculum development,
educational research, building operations and
maintenance services, transportation of students,
and student meals and housing.
linear. It is thus a misnomer; correlation, being a
pure number, cannot be non-linear. The usage is
not recommended.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Non-linear edits
Non-linear edits are edits from non-linear
constraints. For example, if v1 and v2 are
variables and b are real constants, then non-linear
edits are:
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Expenditure on educational institutions,
Non-instructional educational institution - UNESCO
Non-interview (nonresponse)
The type of nonresponse in which no information is
available from occupied sample units for such
reasons as: not at home, refusals, incapacity and
lost schedules.
1. v1 v2 b.
2. v1 exp(v2).
3. conditional edits.
4. Mahalanobis-distance edits with multivariate
normal data.
Context: The importance of nonlinear edits is that
they occur often but are not amendable to theory
in the determination of a minimal set. Some nonlinear edits, such as ratio edits, can be cast in a
linear form.
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Non-life insurance
claims
Indemnités
d‟assurancedommages
Non-life insurance claims are the amounts payable
in settlement of claims that become due during the
current accounting period (claims become due at
the moment when the eventuality occurs which
gives rise to a valid claim accepted by the
insurance enterprise), but excluding payments to
households in the form of social insurance benefits
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Linear edits
Non-linear regression
A regression model that is non-linear in the
parameters. The term has also been used for
regression equations non-linear in the regressors,
but this would be regarded as obsolete.
Source: SNA 8.87
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Non-life insurance
Primes d‟assurancepremiums
dommages
Non-life insurance premiums comprise both the
actual premiums payable by policyholders to obtain
insurance cover during the accounting period
(premiums earned) and the premium supplements
payable out of the property income attributed to
insurance policyholders, but excluding social
contributions
Non-market nonprofit
institutions
A legal or social entity created for the purpose of
producing non-market goods and services, but
whose status does not permit them to be a source
of income, profit, or other financial gain for the
units that establish, control, and mainly finance
them.
Source: SNA 8.86
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Context: The legal or social entity is a non-market
producer if the majority of its output is not sold at
an economically significant price.
Non-linear correlation Corrélation non
linéaire
This term is meant to relate to the correlation
between variates where the regression is not
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
527
associations, religious organisations and learned
societies, political parties, consumers‘ and civic
organisations etc. provided by private non-profit
institutions;
— non-market services of recreational and cultural
activities (entertainment‘s, sports grounds and
clubs, libraries, public archives, museums)
provided by private non-profit institutions
— domestic services
Non-market output Ŕ Production non
other
marchande Ŕ autre
Other non-market output consists of goods and
individual or collective services produced by nonprofit institutions serving households (NPISHs) or
government that are supplied free, or at prices
that are not economically significant, to other
institutional units or the community as a whole.
Such output is one of three broad categories of
output in the SNA, with the others being market
output and output produced for own final use
Source: NACE-CLIO
Hyperlink:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/eurostat/ramon/cgi/Si
mWWWFrame.SimResetBottomFrame?nID=NACE_
REV1&lId=&pId=&test=&frameType=4&associatio
n=&property=DESCRIPTION&language=EN
Source: SNA 6.49
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Market services – ISIC, Market services
– NACE, Non-market services – OECD, Services –
NACE
Non-market producers Producteurs non
marchands
Non-market producers are producers that provide
most of their output to others free or at prices
which are not economically significant
Non-market services Ŕ Services non
OECD
marchands - OCDE
Non-market services cover those services provided
to the community as a whole free of charge, or to
individual consumers either free of charge or at a
fee which is well below 50 per cent of production
costs.
Source: SNA 4.60 [6.52]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Context: Under the 1993 System of National
Accounts (SNA) market and non-market services
are not separately reported if they are involved in
the same International Standard Industry
Classification (ISIC) activity. However the 1968
SNA recommended that market and non-market
services be separately identified.
Non-market services Ŕ Services non
NACE
marchands Ŕ NACE
Non-market services comprises 4 NACE-CLIO
branches covering general public services, nonmarket services of education and research
provided by general government and private nonprofit institutions, non-market services of health
provided by general government and private nonprofit institutions, domestic services and other
non-market services n.e.c.
Non-market services may be produced by
Government, by private non-profit institutions
serving households and by private households who
employ domestic staff.
Context: These in turn comprise 10 NACE-CLIO
Groups:
Source: Services: Statistics on Value Added and
Employment, OECD, 2000 edition, Introduction,
page 11
— general public services of national defence, of
compulsory social security;
— non-market services of refuse disposal,
sanitation, cemeteries, provided by general
government;
— non-market services of social welfare, hostels,
tourist offices, employers‘ and professional
associations, economic organisations provided by
general government;
— non-market services of recreational and cultural
activities provided by general government
(entertainment‘s, sports grounds and clubs,
libraries, public archives, museums, botanical and
zoological gardens);
— non-market services of education provided by
general government and private non-profit
institutions;
— non-market services of research and
development provided by general government and
private non-profit institutions;
— non-market services of health provided by
general government and private non-profit
institutions;
— non-market services of social welfare, hostels,
tourist offices, trade unions, employers‘
See also: Market services – ISIC, Non-market
services – NACE, Services – SNA
Non-market
transactions
Transactions covering goods or services that their
producers supply to others free or at prices that
are not economically significant.
Examples of non-market transactions include own
account production by establishments for the
enterprises for which they form a part, own
account production by unincorporated enterprises
owned by households (such as the output of owner
occupiers and subsistence farmers), services
supplied to the community as a whole by
establishments owned by general government
(such as defence and public order and safety).
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
528
Non-monetary gold covers exports and imports of
all gold not held as reserve assets (monetary gold)
by the authorities. Non-monetary gold is treated as
any other commodity and, when feasible, is
subdivided into gold held as a store of value and
other (industrial) gold
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Non-measured
activity
A non-measured activity is an activity within the
1993 SNA production boundary that is not included
in gross domestic product (GDP) estimates.
Source: BPM para. 202
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary.
See also: Monetary gold – BPM
Non-monetary
Opérations non
transactions
monétaires
Non-monetary transactions are transactions that
are not initially stated in units of currency; barter
is an obvious example
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
Source: SNA 3.34
Non-measured
economy
The non-measured economy is the group of
activities within the 1993 SNA production boundary
that are non-measured.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Monetary transactions
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary.
Non-native students
―Non-native‖ students are those students who
reported in the Programme for International
Student Assessment (PISA) that they were born
outside the country of assessment and whose
parents were also born in another country.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Non-member
economies, OECD
Countries outside the OECD area or membership
See also: First-generation students, Native
students
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2002-2007,
OECD, Paris, 2002 – Annex II. Glossary of Terms
Non-null hypothesis
In general, a hypothesis alternative to the one
under test; the null hypothesis. In some contexts,
however, it is given the meaning of a hypothesis
under test where the effect is not equal to zero.
Non-metallic mineral Réserves de minerais
reserves
non métalliques
Non-metallic mineral reserves consist of stone
quarries and clay and sand pits; chemical and
fertiliser mineral deposits; salt deposits; deposits
of quartz, gypsum, natural gem stones, asphalt
and bitumen, peat and other non-metallic minerals
other than coal and petroleum
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: (AN.2123) – Annex to chapter XIII
Non-observation error
Failure to obtain data from parts of the survey
population which results from two sources:
noncoverage and nonresponse.
Non-monetary
Advantages non
benefits
monétaires
Non-monetary benefits are benefits that are not,
or cannot be, directly measured in terms of
monetary units. These include the satisfaction
realised from enjoying a certain way of life or style
of work, such as fishing in a rural coastal
community
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Non-monetary gold
Non-observed activity
Or non monétaire
529
An activity within the 1993 SNA production
boundary that is not observed, i.e. not directly
measured in the basic data from which national
accounts are compiled.
Non-participating
preferred shares
These are a type of preferred shares in which the
payment of a ―dividend‖ (usually at a fixed rate) is
calculated according to a predetermined formula
and not determined by the earnings of the issuer.
In other words, the investor does not participate in
the distribution of profits to equity investors (if
any), nor share in any surplus on dissolution of the
issuer.
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Non-observed
economy (NOE)
The groups of activities most likely to be nonobserved are those that are underground, illegal,
informal sector, or undertaken by households for
their own final use. Activities may also be missed
because of deficiencies in the basic statistical data
collection programme.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Participating preference share,
Preference share
Context: The groups of activities are referred to (in
the NOE Handbook) as the problem areas.
Activities not included in the basic data because
they are in one or more of these problem areas are
collectively said to comprise the non-observed
economy (NOE).
Non-point source of
Source diffuse
pollution
Non-point source of pollution are pollution sources
that are diffused and without a single point of
origin or not introduced into a receiving stream
from a specific outlet.
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary.
The pollutants are generally carried off the land by
storm water run- off. The commonly used
categories for non—point sources are agriculture,
forestry, urban areas, mining, construction, dams
and channels, land disposal and saltwater intrusion
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Non-official language
A language that, though relatively widely used,
lacks officially sanctioned status in a particular
legally constituted political entity. Example: French
in Lebanon; English in Israel.
Non-price predation
Non-price predation is a form of strategic
behaviour that involves raising rivals' costs. It is
potentially less costly and hence more profitable
than predatory pricing. Typical methods include
using government or legal processes to
disadvantage a competitor. A firm may be able to
force competitors to incur significant litigation or
administrative costs, at little cost to itself.
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Non-parametric
Limite de tolérance
tolerance limits
non paramètrique
Tolerance limits which do not depend on the
parameters of the parent population from which a
sample is drawn.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
It seems possible, but by no means universal
practice, to draw a distinction between nonparametric limits, in which the parent distribution
is known in form, and distribution-free limits in
which the form of the parent is unknown.
Non-probability
sample
A sample in which the selection of units is based in
factors other than random chance, e.g.
convenience, prior experience or the judgement of
a researcher.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
530
October 2003
Source: SNA 4.54 [4.18, 4.161]
See also: Probability sample, Sample
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Non-probability
Sondage non
sampling
probabiliste
A sample of units where the selected units in the
sample have an unknown probability of being
selected and where some units of the target
population may even have no chance at all of
being in the sample.
Non-profit institutions
controlled and mainly
financed by
government
Institutions sans but
lucratif contrôlées et
principalement
financées par les
administrations
publiques
Non-profit institutions controlled and mainly
financed by government are properly constituted
legal entities which exist separately from
government but which are financed mainly by
government and over which government exercises
control
Forms of non-probability sampling are numerous,
such as voluntary samples (only responses of
volunteers are used), quota samples, expert
samples.
Context: The non-random selection of a sample of
producers and products based on expert
knowledge or judgement. Also known as ―nonrandom sampling‖, ―purposive sampling‖ and
―judgemental sampling‖.
Source: SNA 4.62
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Monetary Fund, Washington
DC
Non-profit institutions Institutions sans but
engaged in market
lucratif engagées
production
dans une production
marchande
Non-profit institutions (NPIs) engaged in market
production consist of those NPIs which charge fees
determined by their costs of production and which
are sufficiently high to have a significant influence
on the demand for their services, but any
surpluses such institutions make must be retained
within those institutions as their status as ―Nonprofit institutions (NPIs)‖ prevents them from
distributing them to others
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: Assessment of the Quality in Statistics,
Fifth meeting, Luxembourg, 2-3 May 2002,
Eurostat, Item 4: Glossary
See also: Judgement sample, Probability sampling
Non-produced assets Actifs non produits
Non-produced assets are non-financial assets that
come into existence other than through processes
of production; they include both tangible assets
and intangible assets and also include costs of
ownership transfer on and major improvements to
these assets
Source: SNA 4.58
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: (AN.2) - Annex to chapter XIII, 10.6
[10.8, 13.17]
Non-profit institutions Institutions sans but
engaged in nonlucratif engagées
market production
dans une production
non marchande
Non-profit institutions engaged in non-market
production are NPIs that are incapable of providing
financial gain to the units which control or manage
them, and which must rely principally on funds
other than receipts from sales to cover their costs
of production or other activities
See also: Produced assets
Non-profit institutions Institutions sans but
(NPIs)
lucratif
Non-profit institutions (NPIs) are legal or social
entities created for the purpose of producing goods
and services whose status does not permit them to
be a source of income, profit or other financial gain
for the units that establish, control or finance
them.
Source: SNA 4.60
Context: In practice, their productive activities are
bound to generate either surpluses or deficits but
any surpluses they happen to make cannot be
appropriated by other institutional units. Nonprofit institutions serving households are separate
legal entities, which are private other non-market
producers. Their principal resources, apart from
those derived from occasional sales, are derived
from voluntary contributions in cash or in kind
from households in their capacity as consumers,
from payments made by general governments and
from property income. (ESA [2.87, 3.31])
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Non-profit institutions Institutions sans but
serving households
lucratif au service des
(NPISHs)
ménages (ISBLSM)
Non-profit institutions serving households
(NPISHs) consist of NPIs which are not
predominantly financed and controlled by
government and which provide goods or services
531
to households free or at prices that are not
economically significant
Non—renewable natural resources are exhaustible
natural resources such as mineral resources that
cannot be regenerated after exploitation
Source: SNA 4.64 and 4.65 [2.20]
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Natural resources, Renewable natural
resources
Non-public (private)
network
Any network used to communicate within an
organization (as distinct from providing service to
the public) or to supply such communications to
organizations, based on a configuration of own or
leased facilities. The term includes networks used
by private companies, state enterprises, or
government entities.
Non-repayable
margins
Nonrepayable margins reduce a financial liability
created under a financial derivative contract; the
entity that pays a nonrepayable margin no longer
retains ownership of the margin nor has the right
to the risks and rewards of ownership, such as the
receipt of income or exposure to holding gains and
losses
Context: Self-use of private networks and services
is addressed by the General Agreement on Trade
in Services (GATS) Annex on Telecommunications,
whereas the ability of competitive providers to sell
use of such networks and services to organizations
is addressed through commitments taken in GATS
schedules.
Source: SNA 11.43
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Repayable margins
Source: Telecommunications services: Glossary of
terms – World Trade Organisation
Non-resident
Non résident(e)
A unit is non-resident if its centre of economic
interest is not in the economic territory of a
country
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/tratop_e/serv_e/t
elecom_e/tel12_e.htm
Source: BPM para. 58 [1.14]
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Non-random sample
Échantillon non
aléatoire
A sample selected by a non-random method. For
example, a scheme whereby units are selected
purposively would yield a non-random sample.
Again, a sample obtained by taking members at
fixed intervals on a list is a non-random sample
unless the list was arranged in a random order.
See also: Resident – BPM
Non-resident, nonnational tertiary level
student
See Resident and non-resident non-national
tertiary level student
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Resident and non- resident non-national
tertiary level student
Non-residential
Bâtiments non
buildings Ŕ ESA
résidentiels Ŕ SEC
Non-residential buildings consists of buildings other
than dwellings, including fixtures, facilities and
equipment that are integral parts of the structures
and costs of site clearance and preparation.
Historic monuments identified primarily as nonresidential buildings are also included. Examples
include warehouse and industrial buildings,
commercial buildings, buildings for public
entertainment, hotels, restaurants, educational
buildings, health buildings, etc
See also: Biased sample, Non-probability sampling,
Quasi-random sampling
Non-recourse loan
(United States)
The non-recourse loan is the major instrument
used by the Commodity Credit Corporation to
support the price of programme crops. The loan is
―non-recourse‖ because the Government has no
option but to accept forfeiture of the crop in full
satisfaction of the loan obligation, even when the
market price of the commodity is below the loan
rate
Source: ESA Annex 7.1
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Non-renewable
natural resources
See also: Building – Eurostat, Building - UN, Nonresidential buildings – UN, Residential building
Non-residential
buildings Ŕ UN
Ressources naturelles
renouvelables
532
Bâtiments non
résidentiels Ŕ NU
A building is regarded as a non-residential building
when the minor part of the building (i.e. less than
half of its gross floor area) is used for dwelling
purposes.
See also: Follow-up, Item non-response, Nonresponse errors, Non-response rate, Refusal rate,
Response, Response rate, item, Weight
Non-residential buildings comprise:
Non-response bias
This is the bias resulting from limiting the survey
analysis to the available data.
-
Context: The bias that arises when those who do
not respond have different price experiences than
those who do respond.
industrial buildings;
commercial buildings;
educational buildings;
health buildings;
other buildings
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Monetary Fund, Washington
DC
Source: International Recommendations for
Construction Statistics, Statistical Papers, Series
M, No. 47, Rev. 1, United Nations, New York,
1997, para. 73 and Bulletin of Housing and
Building Statistics for Europe and North America,
UNECE, Geneva, 2000, Annex II, Definitions and
General Terms, page 83 and Yearbook of
Construction Statistics 1973-1980, United Nations,
New York, 1982
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: Quality Glossary, Eurostat
See also: Building - UN, Non-residential buildings –
ESA, Residential building
Non-response errors
Non-response errors occur when the survey fails to
get a response to one, or possibly all, of the
questions.
Non-response
Non réponse
A form of nonobservation present in most surveys.
Nonresponse means failure to obtain a
measurement on one or more study variables for
one or more elements k selected for the survey.
Non-response causes both an increase in variance,
due to the decrease in the effective sample size
and/or due to the use of imputation, and may
cause bias if the non-respondents and respondents
differ with respect to the characteristic of interest
The term encompasses a wide variety of reasons
for nonobservation: "impossible to contact", "not
at home", "unable to answer", "incapacity", "hard
core refusal", "inaccessible", "unreturned
questionnaire", and others. In the first two cases
contact with the selected element is never
established.
Context: Non-response errors result from a failure
to collect complete information on all units in the
selected sample. These are known as ―unit nonresponse‖ and ―item non-response‖.
Non-response errors affect survey results in two
ways.
Context: Non-response leads to an increase in
variance as a result of a reduction in the actual
size of the sample and the recourse to imputation.
This produces a bias if the non-respondents have
characteristics of interest that are different from
those of the respondents. Furthermore, there is a
risk of significantly underestimating the sampling
error, if imputed data are treated as though they
were observed data. (Statistics Canada, "Statistics
Canada Quality Guidelines", 4th edition, October
2003, page 59, available at
http://www.statcan.ca:8096/bsolc/english/bsolc?c
atno=12-539-X&CHROPG=1)
First, the decrease in sample size or in the amount
of information collected in response to a particular
question results in larger standard errors.
Second, and perhaps more important, a bias is
introduced to the extent that non-respondents
differ from respondents within a selected sample.
Non-response errors are determined by collecting
any or all of the following: unit response rate,
weighted unit response rate, item response rate,
item coverage rate, refusal rate, distribution of
reason for nonresponse, comparison of data across
contacts, link to administrative data for nonrespondents, estimate of non-response bias
(Statistical Policy Working Paper 15: Quality in
Establishment Surveys, Office of Management and
Budget, Washington D.C., July 1988, page 68).
There are two types of non-response:
First, a sampled unit that is contacted may fail to
respond. This represents "unit non-response".
Second, the unit may respond to the questionnaire
incompletely. This is referred to as "item nonresponse".
Source: Statistics Canada, "Statistics Canada
Quality Guidelines", 3rd edition, October 1998
Source: Sarndal C.E., Swensson B., Wretman J.,
"Model assisted survey sampling", Springer Verlag, New York, 1992
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca/english/freepub/12-539XIE/12-539-XIE.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca:8096/bsolc/english/bsolc?c
atno=12-539-X&CHROPG=1
See also: Coverage errors - UN, Follow-up, Nonresponse, Weight
533
Non-response rate
In sample surveys, the failure to obtain
information from a designated individual for any
reason (death, absence or refusal to reply) is often
called a non-response and the proportion of such
individuals of the sample aimed at is called the
non-response rate.
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003.
See also: Estimate, Response errors (in household
surveys), Sampling error
Non-tariff barriers
Non-tariff barriers refers to all barriers to trade
that are not tariffs. Examples of these include
countervailing and anti-dumping duties,
"voluntary" export restraints, subsidies which
sustain in operation loss making enterprises,
technical barriers to trade, and obstacles to the
establishment and provision of services.
Context: It would be better, however, to call this a
"failure" rate or "non-achievement" rate and to
confine "non-response" to those cases where the
individual concerned is contacted but refuses to
reply or is unable to do so for reasons such as
deafness or illness.
Context: Moreover, the term is often used to
include certain domestic measures, such as
restraints on distribution and non-competitive
practices that can also distort trade in the same
way as border measures do.
Non-availability of information in other situations,
e.g. arrival of the investigator for crop cutting
experiments after harvesting, may also be termed
non-response, or better, non-achievement.
When several items of information are to be
collected for the same sample unit, it may so
happen that information is not available for some
of the items but available for others. The term
non-response is usually not applied in such a
situation; but incomplete response or incomplete
achievement may be used.
Some of these instruments, in particular technical
regulations, minimum standards and certification
systems regarding health and consumer safety do
not ipso facto constitute barriers to trade, as they
are generally employed to meet legitimate policy
goals. However, there is a perception that, in some
circumstances these sorts of policy instruments are
being misused.
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
See also: Item non-response, Non-response,
Refusal rate, Sample
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Non-salary
Avantages non
compensation
salariaux
Non-salary compensation includes expenditure by
employers or public authorities on retirement
programmes, health care or health insurance,
unemployment compensation, disability insurance,
other forms of social insurance, non-cash
supplements (e.g., free or subsidised housing),
maternity benefits, free or subsidised child care,
and such other fringe benefits as each country may
provide. This expenditure does not include
contributions made by the employees themselves,
or deducted from their gross salaries.
Non-tariff measures
Non-tariff measures such as quotas, import
licensing systems, sanitary regulations,
prohibitions, etc.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Non-trade concerns
Similar to multifunctionality. The preamble of the
Agriculture Agreement specifies food security and
environmental protection as examples. Also cited
by members are rural development and
employment, and poverty alleviation.
See also: Salaries (of educational personnel), Staff
compensation
Non-sampling error
Erreur autre que
d'échantillonnage
An error in sample estimates which cannot be
attributed to sampling fluctuations.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Context: Non-sampling errors may arise from
many different sources such as defects in the
frame, faulty demarcation of sample units, defects
in the selection of sample units, mistakes in the
collection of data due to personal variations or
misunderstanding or bias or negligence or
dishonesty on the part of the investigator or of the
interviewer, mistakes at the stage of the
processing of the data, etc.
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Non-traded debt
Debt instruments that are not usually traded or
tradable in organized and other financial markets.
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
534
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
frequently subject to accidents of this kind. Losses
from normal accidental damage are included in
consumption of fixed capital
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
Non-use benefit
(existence benefit)
The benefit provided by an environmental entity
the existence of which is considered desirable to be
maintained although it has no prospect of being of
use to humans now or in the future.
Normal form of
conflict rule
The normal form of conflict rule is a conflict rule
which is defined by the logical product of
conditions on the values of individual data items in
a record.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.38
Example:
The conflict (branch - (101, 107, 112); production
104, 180; efficiency 0.8) is a conflict in the normal
form (CAN-EDIT).
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Non-voting stocks
Non-voting stocks are equity/shares that do not
give voting rights to the holder. The category
includes participating preference shares
Source: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms, OECD, 2001 – not published
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Voting stocks
Non-wage benefits
See Average hourly compensation cost
Normal hours of work
Normal hours of work are the hours of work fixed
by or in pursuance of laws or regulations, collective
agreements or arbitral awards, or the number of
hours in excess of which any time worked is
remunerated at overtime rates.
See also: Average hourly compensation cost
Non-wage labour cost
Non-wage labour costs refer to social insurance
expenditure and other labour taxes and include:
(a) employers expenditure for legally required
insurance programmes and contractual and private
benefit plans (retirement and disability pensions,
health insurance, income guarantee insurance and
sick leave, life and accident insurance,
occupational injury and illness compensation,
unemployment insurance and family allowances)
and, for some economies;
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 528
See also: Usual hours of work (per week)
Normal obsolescence Obsolescence normale
Normal obsolescence is the loss in value of an
asset through obsolescence that the purchaser was
expecting to occur when the asset was acquired. It
is a synonym for ―foreseen‖ obsolescence and is
included in consumption of fixed capital
(b) labour taxes, that is, taxes on payrolls or
employment or reductions to reflect subsidies even if they do not finance programmes that
benefit workers directly.
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 608
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
See also: Average hourly compensation cost
Normal accidental
Dommages
damage
accidentels normaux
Normal accidental damage is the loss in value of
assets from accidents that damage or destroy and
that were known to be likely to occur when the
assets were acquired. Transport equipment is
See also: Foreseen obsolescence
Normal pension age
Âge normal de la
pension
See Normal retirement age
535
Context: Identical term, "Retirement age"
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
See also: Normal retirement age
Normal retirement
Âge normal de la
age
retraite
Age from which the individual is eligible for pension
benefits.
North American Free
Accord de libreTrade Agreement
échange nord(NAFTA)
américain (ALENA)
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) is
a trilateral agreement on trade, including
agricultural trade, between Canada, Mexico and
the United States, phasing out tariffs and revising
other trade rules between the three countries over
a 15-year period. The agreement was signed in
December 1992 and came into effect on 1 January
1994
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Normal workdays
Normal workdays are those days on which work
would usually be carried out by the groups of
employees concerned or on which self-employed
workers would usually expect to work. Weekly
rest-days should therefore be excluded, as well as
any public holidays, etc., on which work was not
scheduled for the groups of employees involved or
on which the self-employed workers involved
would not usually have expected to work. If work
is organized in shifts, one shift should be
considered as one workday.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
North American
Industry Classification
System (NAICS)
The North American Industry Classification System
(NAICS) Manual replaces the 1987 Standard
Industrial Classification (SIC) Manual.
Source: International Labour Organisation (ILO)
Resolution Concerning Statistics of Strikes,
Lockouts and other Action Due to Labour Disputes
(January 1993), page 2-3
The NAICS Manual, as was the SIC Manual, is used
by Federal Government statistical agencies to
define and classify industries in the economy in a
consistent manner based on their primary
economic activity. The governments of Canada,
Mexico, and the United States developed the
NAICS Manual, which became effective January
1997.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Normalisation
(composite leading
indicators)
Normalisation is the process of transformation of
the detrended component series of the OECD
composite leading indicator required prior to
aggregation into the composite leading indicator
(CLI) in order to express the cyclical movements in
a comparable form (i.e. for either a multiplicative
or an additive model when estimating the trend);
the cyclical amplitude is homogenised.
Source: Glossary of Compensation Terms – United
States Bureau of Labor Statistics, August 1998
Hyperlink:
http://stats.bls.gov/ocs/sp/ncbl0062.pdf
North Atlantic Marine North Atlantic Marine
Mammal Commission Mammal Commission
(NAMMCO)
(NAMMCO)
The North Atlantic Marine Mammal Commission
(NAMMCO) is an inter-governmental organisation
established in 1992 by an Agreement signed by
Norway, Iceland, Greenland and the Faroe Islands.
The method used to calculate normalised indices is
to subtract the mean from the observed value and
then to divide the resulting difference by the mean
of the absolute values of the difference from the
mean.
Source: OECD Leading Indicator Website,
Glossary, 2001
The aim of the Agreement is to contribute, through
regional co-operation and consultation, to the
conservation, rational management and study of
marine mammals in the North Atlantic
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_34
349_1965941_1_1_1_1,00.html
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Normalization
Conceptual procedure in database design that
removes redundancy in a complex database by
establishing dependencies and relationships
between database entities. Normalisation reduces
storage requirements and avoids database
inconsistencies.
North Pacific Marine
North Pacific Marine
Sciences Organisation Sciences Organisation
(PICES)
(PICES)
The North Pacific Marine Sciences Organisation
(PICES) is an intergovernmental scientific
organisation that was established and held its first
536
- attending an educational institution;
meetings in 1992. Its purposes are to: promote
and coordinate marine research in the northern
North Pacific and adjacent seas, especially
northward of 30°N; advance scientific knowledge
about the ocean environment, global weather and
climate change, living resources and their
ecosystems, and the impacts of human activities;
and promote the collection and rapid exchange of
scientific information on these issues
- performing household duties;
- retiring on pension or capital income;
- other reasons, including disability or impairment
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1.
United Nations, New York, 1998, Series M, No. 67,
Rev. 1, para. 2.205
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
See also: Total labour force – ILO
North-east Atlantic
Commission des
Fisheries Commission pêches de l‟Atlantique
(NEAFC)
Nord- Est (CPANE)
The North-east Atlantic Fisheries Commission
(NEAFC) is a regional fisheries management
organisation founded in 1963 with the objectives of
promoting the conservation and optimum
utilisation of living marine resources within the
Convention area, and providing a forum for
consultation and exchange of information.
Not seasonally
adjusted
This term is used to describe data series not
subject to the seasonal adjustment process. In
other words, the effects of regular, or seasonal,
patterns have not been removed from these series.
Source: U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of
Labor Statistics, Glossary.
Hyperlink: http://stats.bls.gov/bls/glossary.htm
The Convention area covers the north-east
Atlantic, southern parts of the Baltic Sea and a
smaller part of the Mediterranean. Its regulatory
powers only apply to areas outside EEZs
See also: Seasonal adjustment
Note issuance
Facilités d‟émission
facilities (NIF) Ŕ SNA d‟effets
Underwritten note issuance facilities (NIFs) provide
a guarantee that a potential debtor will be able to
sell short-term securities (notes) that he issues
and that the bank or banks issuing the facility will
take up any notes not sold in the market or will
provide equivalent advances; the facility itself is
contingent, and the creation of the facility gives
rise to no entry in the financial account; only if the
underwriting institution is requested to make funds
available will it acquire an actual asset, which is
recorded in the financial account
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Northwest Atlantic
Organisation des
Fisheries Organisation pêches de l‟Atlantique
(NAFO)
Nord- Ouest (OPANO)
The Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organisation
(NAFO) is a regional fisheries management
organisation founded in 1979 to provide for the
conservation and management of fish stocks in the
Northwest Atlantic beyond Canada‘s EEZ.
Source: SNA 11.25
The Convention Area of NAFO encompasses:
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
(a) the waters of the Northwest Atlantic Ocean
north of 35°N latitude and west of a line extending
due north from 35°N latitude and 42°W longitude
to 59°N latitude, thence due west to 44°W
longitude, and thence due north to the coast of
Greenland; and
See also: Note-issuance facility (NIF) – IMF
Note issuance facility
(NIF) Ŕ IMF
A note issued under an NIF/RUF is a short-term
instrument issued under a legally binding medium
term facility—a form of revolving credit. A bank, or
banks, underwrite, for a fee, the issuance of this
three- or six-month paper and may be called upon
to purchase any unsold paper at each rollover
date, or to provide standby credit facilities.
(b) the waters of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Davis
Strait and Baffin Bay south of 78°10‘N latitude.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Not currently active
Population inactive du
population
moment
The not currently active population or,
equivalently, persons not in the labour force,
comprises all persons who were neither employed
or unemployed during the short reference period
used to measure current activity.
Context: The basic difference between an NIF and
an RUF is in the underwriting guarantee: under an
RUF the underwriting banks agree to provide loans
should the issue fail, but under an NIF they could
either lend or purchase the outstanding notes.
First developed in the early 1980s, the market for
NIFs grew substantially for a short period in the
mid-1980s. It was a potentially profitable market
for international banks at a time when the
syndicated credits market was depressed, following
They may, according to reason for not being
currently active, be classified in any of the
following groups:
537
the debt crisis of the early 1980s. By the early
1990s, euro commercial paper (ECP), and euro
medium-term notes (EMTNs) had become more
popular forms of finance.
incurred by resident NPISHs on individual
consumption goods and services
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 9.94
NPISHs (non-profit
ISBLSM (institutions
institutions serving
sans but lucratif au
households)
service des ménages)
See Non-profit institutions serving households
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Note issuance facilities (NIF) – SNA
See also: Non-profit institutions serving
households (NPISHs)
Notifier
A notifier is the designated person charged with
the responsibility of making known to the local civil
registrar the occurrence of a vital event well in
advance of the legally designated informant
NSO
See National statistical office
See also: National statistical office (NSO)
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Nuclear household
Ménage nucléaire
A nuclear household is defined as a household
consisting entirely of a single family nucleus. It
may be classified into:
- Married-couple family (with children/without
children);
- Father with children;
- Mother with children
No-tillage
No-tillage (also zero tillage) is a minimum tillage
practice in which the crop is sown directly into soil
not tilled since the harvest of the previous crop.
Weed control is achieved by the use of herbicides
and stubble is retained for erosion control. It is
typically practised in arable areas where fallowing
is important
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.82
Nuclear power plant
Centrale nucléaire
A nuclear power plant is a facility that converts
atomic energy into usable power. In a nuclear
electric power plant, heat produced by a reactor is
generally used to drive a turbine which in turn
drives an electric generator
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Notional (nominal)
amount of a financial
derivatives contract
The notional amount is that underlying a financial
derivatives contract and is necessary for
calculating payments or receipts, but which may or
may not be exchanged.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Nuclear waste
Pollution par les
pollution
déchets nucléaires
Nuclear waste pollution is pollution created by
mishandling and inappropriate storage of spent
nuclear fuel rods, and pieces of protective clothing
and tools that have become contaminated, and by
insecure transportation of highly radioactive
material over long distances to a processing plant
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
NPIs (non-profit
ISBL (institutions
institutions)
sans but lucratif)
See Non-profit institutions
Nuclear winter
Hiver nucléaire
Nuclear winter refers to widespread climatic
cooling caused by the probable effect of nuclear
warfare on such atmospheric conditions as would
reduce the amount of sunlight reaching the earth‘s
surface
See also: Non-profit institutions (NPIs) – SNA
NPISH final
Dépense de
consumption
consommation finale
expenditure
des ISBLSM
Final consumption expenditure of NPISHs consists
of the expenditure, including imputed expenditure,
538
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
It includes all persons who are on the payroll of
the enterprise, whether they are temporarily
absent (excluding long-term absences), part-time,
seasonal or home workers, apprentices, etc. The
number of persons employed excludes manpower
supplied to the unit by other enterprises and
persons carrying out repair and maintenance work
in the enquiry unit on behalf of other enterprises
Nuisance tariff
Tariff so low that it costs the government more to
collect it than the revenue it generates.
Source: Statistics in focus: Industry, trade and
services; Theme 4 – 7/2001 - Distributive trades
statistics, Eurostat, Methodological Notes, page 7
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Number of seats /
Nombre de places
berths in motor
assises / couchettes
coaches, buses and
des autocars, autobus
trolleybuses
et trollybus
Number of seats/berths, including the driver‘s,
available in the vehicle when it is performing the
service for which it is primarily intended.
Null hypothesis
Hypothèse nulle
In general, this term relates to a particular
hypothesis under test, as distinct from the
alternative hypotheses which are under
consideration. It is therefore the hypothesis which
determines the probability of the type I error. In
some contexts, however, the term is restricted to
an hypothesis under test of ―no difference‖.
Context: In case of doubt, the highest number of
seats/berths available should be taken into
account.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Nullification and
impairment
Damage to a country‘s benefits and expectations
from its WTO membership through another
country‘s change in its trade regime or failure to
carry out its WTO obligations.
Number raised
estimation
The application of weights to the individual survey
records. Number-raised weights are given by N/n
(where N is the total number of units in the
population for the stratum, and n is the number of
responding units in the sample for that stratum).
The weight assigned to each survey unit indicates
the number of units in the target population that
the survey unit is meant to represent.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
For example, a survey unit with a weight of 100
represents 100 units in the population. Using
number-raised weights, each survey unit in a
stratum is given the same weight. Number-raised
weights can only be used to weight simple random
samples.
Number of employees
in full-time equivalent
units
See Full-time equivalent employment
Context: The advantages of number-raised
estimation are: it does not require auxiliary data; it
is unbiased; and the accuracy of the estimates can
be calculated relatively simply. However, numberraised estimation is not as accurate as some other
methods.
See also: Full-time equivalent employment
Number of hours
worked
See Hours worked, total
Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics, Statistical
Concepts Library, "Labour Statistics: Concepts,
Sources and Methods", Chapter 16 - Overview of
Survey Methods, Canberra, 2001
See also: Hours worked – total
Number of persons
employed (Eurostat)
Number of persons employed refers to the total
number of persons who work in the observation
unit (employees receiving remuneration, working
proprietors and unpaid family workers) as well as
outside working persons who belong to the unit
and are paid by it.
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/abs%40.nsf/78
84593a92027766ca2568b5007b8617/93a0165bdf5
98509ca256aa000036c90!OpenDocument
See also: Estimation
539
Numéraire
A term used for the currency unit selected to be
the common currency in which PPPs and real and
nominal final expenditures are expressed.
a) The NUTS favours institutional breakdowns.
Different criteria may be used in subdividing
national territory into regions. These are normally
split between normative and analytic criteria:
The numéraire may be an actual currency unit
such as the Euro and the US dollar or an ―artificial‖
currency unit such as the PPS and the OECD dollar.
- normative regions;
- analytical (or functional) regions;
- institutional divisions.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
b) The NUTS favours regional units of a general
character. A territorial unit specific to certain fields
of activity (mining regions, rail traffic regions,
farming regions, labour-market regions, etc.) may
sometimes be used in certain Member States.
NUTS excludes specific territorial units and local
units in favour of regional units of a general
nature.
Numeric variable
A variable that describes a numerically measured
value (e.g., age, number of people in a
household).
c) The NUTS is a five-level hierarchical
classification (three regional levels and two local
levels). Since this is a hierarchical classification,
the NUTS subdivides each Member State into a
whole number of NUTS 1 regions, each of which is
in turn subdivided into a whole number of NUTS 2
regions and so on.
Source: Statistics Canada, Educational Resources,
Glossary of Statistical Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca/english/edu/prototype/glos
sary/gloss.htm
Source: Regions - Nomenclature of territorial units
for statistics - NUTS, 1999 Edition
Nutrient
Nutriment
A nutrient is a substance, element or compound
necessary for the growth and development of
plants and animals
Obesity
Obesity is defined as a body mass index (BMI) of
30 kg/m2 or more. The BMI is a single number
that evaluates an individual's weight status in
relation to height (weight/height2), with weight in
kilograms and height in metres)
Context: Nutrient is a substance required by an
organism for growth and development. Key crop
nutrients are nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium.
(Environmental Indicators for Agriculture – Vol. 3:
Methods and Results, OECD, 2001, glossary, pages
389-391)
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Object
Objet
An object refers to anything perceivable or
conceivable.
Nutrient cycle
Cycle d‟un nutriment
A nutrient cycle is a repeated pathway of a
particular nutrient or element from the
environment through one or more organisms and
back to the environment. Examples include the
carbon cycle, the nitrogen cycle and the
phosphorus cycle
Context: Objects may also be material (e.g. an
engine, a sheet of paper, a diamond), immaterial
(e.g. a conversion ratio, a project plan), or
imagined (e.g. a unicorn). [Adapted from ISO
1087-1:2000, 3.1.1]
In object-oriented design or programming, an
object is a concrete realisation of a class that
consists of data and the operations associated with
that data. An item that a user can manipulate as a
single unit to perform a task.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
NUTS
See Nomenclature of Territorial Units for Statistics
(Nomenclature des Unités Territoriales
Statistiques)
See also: Attribute, Characteristic, Class - ISO,
Metadata object, Object class, Ontology, Property
See also: Nomenclature of Territorial Units (NUTS)
Object class
A set of ideas, abstractions, or things in the real
world that can be identified with explicit
boundaries and meaning and whose properties and
behaviour follow the same rules.
NUTS classification
NUTS nomenclature
The NUTS classification was created and developed
according to the following principles:
540
- LEADER (rural development);
- URBAN (economic and social renewal of towns
and urban areas in crisis to encourage sustainable
development). 69.7% of the structural funds‘
funding is allocated to Objective 1, 11.5% to
Objective 2, 12.3% to Objective 3 and 5% to EU
initiatives
Context: Object class administration record is the
Administration record for an Object class.
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
See also: ISO / IEC 11179, Object, Property
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Object class term
An object class term is a component of the name
of a data element which represents the object
class to which it belongs; e.g. "employee"
Object-oriented
languages
Languages for computer programming that attach
code to objects and classes. Different from more
monolithic procedural languages.
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 1, Framework for the
specification and standardization of data elements,
1998
Source: Adapting new technologies to census
operations, Arij Dekker, Symposium on Global
Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing
Censuses: Mid-Decade Assessment and Future
Prospects, Statistics Division, Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations
Secretariat New York, 7-10 August 2001, Glossary
Objectives
Objectives are the purposes for which information
is required, stated within the context of the
program, research problem or hypotheses that
gave rise to the need for information
Source: Statistics Canada, "Statistics Canada
Quality Guidelines", 4th edition, October 2003,
page 11
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/docs/sym
posium_06.htm#_Toc8547016
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca:8096/bsolc/english/bsolc?c
atno=12-539-X&CHROPG=1
Observable error
A mathematical or stochastic variable, the values
of which can be directly observed, as distinct from
unobservable variables which enter into structural
equations but are not directly observable.
Objectives 1, 2 and 3
(for allocation of
European Union
structural funds)
Objectives 1, 2 and 3 are priority objectives for
allocating European Union (EU) structural funds for
the 2004-06 period.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Objective 1 seeks to promote the development and
adjustment of regions whose development is
lagging behind (defined as those areas with a
gross domestic product (GDP) of less than 75 per
cent of the EU average) including sparsely
populated regions (defined as the regions north of
the 62nd parallel with population density less than
8 inhabitants per km2) in Finland and Sweden
which were eligible to receive Objective 6 funding
for 1995-99.
Observation
Observation
An observation is the value, at a particular period,
of a particular variable.
Context: An individual price, or one of a number of
individual prices, collected for an item at an outlet.
Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Objective 2 supports economic and social
conversion in areas in structural difficulties. A
maximum 18% of the EU‘s population is covered
by this Objective, of whom 5% in rural areas.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Objective 3 seeks to support the adjustment and
modernisation of education, training and
employment policies. It applies outside Objective 1
regions.
See also: Classification, Coverage ratio, Data
collection, Derived statistics, Disaggregation,
GESMES TS, Measure, Missing data, Non-response,
Observation, pre-break, Statistical concept, Time
series, Variable
Context: In addition, there are four EU initiatives:
- INTERREG (transfrontier, transnational and
interregional cooperation);
- EQUAL (transnational cooperation to combat
discrimination and inequality on the labour
market);
Observation
confidentiality
541
See Confidentiality
"Job" is defined as a set of tasks and duties
executed, or meant to be executed, by one
person; a set of jobs whose main tasks and duties
are characterised by a high degree of similarity
constitutes an occupation. Persons are classified by
occupation through their relationship to a past,
present or future job
See also: Confidentiality, data
Observation point
Usually a product variety in an establishment. A
tightly specified item in a specific establishment.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: International Standard Classification of
Occupations (ISCO-88), ILO, Geneva, 1990,
Geneva, Introduction
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/clas
s/isco.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
See also: Jobs – SNA
Occupation Ŕ UN
Occupation refers to the type of work done during
the time-reference period by the person employed
(or the type of work done previously, if the person
is unemployed), irrespective of the industry or the
status in employment in which the person should
be classified.
Observation unit
Observation units are those entities on which
information is received and statistics are compiled
Context: During the collection of data, this is the
unit for which data is recorded. It should be noted
that this may, or may not be, the same as the
reporting unit.
The international standard for classification of
occupations is the International Standard
Classification of Occupations (ISCO-88),
International Labour Office, Geneva, 1990
Source: Statistical Office of the United Nations,
"International Standard Industrial Classification of
all Economic Activities, Third Revision", Statistical
Papers Series M No. 4, Rev. 3, United Nations,
New York, 1990, para. 63
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1.
United Nations, New York, 1998, Series M, No. 67,
Rev. 1, paras. 2.214- 2.215
See also: Analytical Unit - Eurostat, Analytical unit
– SNA, Classification, Entity, Observation,
Reporting unit, Statistical units – ISIC
See also: Jobs – SNA, Occupation – ILO
Observation value
See Observation
Occupational accident
An Occupational accident is an unexpected and
unplanned occurrence, including acts of violence,
arising out of or in connection with work which
results in one or more workers incurring a personal
injury, disease or death. As occupational accidents
are to be considered travel, transport or road
traffic accidents in which workers are injured and
which arise out of or in the course of work, i.e.
while engaged in an economic activity, or at work,
or carrying on the business of the employer.
See also: Observation
Observational error
Erreur d'observation
This term ought to mean an error of observation
but sometimes occurs as meaning a response
error.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning statistics of occupational
injuries (resulting from occupational accidents),
adopted by the Sixteenth International Conference
of Labour Statisticians (October 1998), page 2
See also: Non-sampling error
Obsolescence
Obsolescence
Obsolescence is the loss of an asset because a
newly introduced asset of the same class contains
improvements in productiveness or efficiency or
suitability in production.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
See also: Occupational disease, Occupational
injury
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001.
Occupational disease
The term occupational disease is linked to the
identification of a specific cause-effect relationship
between a harmful agent and the affected human
organism. However, it is not easy – and
considerably more difficult than in the case of
accidents – to prove that a disease is
occupationally conditioned, i.e. caused by
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
Occupation Ŕ ILO
542
conditions at, not outside work.
Occupational injury
An Occupational injury is any personal injury,
disease or death resulting from an occupational
accident; an occupational injury is therefore
distinct from an occupational disease, which is a
disease contracted as a result of an exposure over
a period of time to risk factors arising from work
activity.
Context: Because of the difficulty in proving a
disease to be occupational in origin, most countries
have produced lists of prescribed occupational
diseases. These are generally limited to those
diseases where a strong cause-effect relationship
has been proven.
However, with the number of categories ranging
from 50 to 90, national lists vary in terms of those
diseases recognised as occupational.
Recommended lists developed by the International
Labour Organisation and the European
Communities seem to have led only to limited
degree of harmonisation. [OECD Employment
Outlook, July 1990, Chapter 4, Occupational Illness
in OECD Countries, page 106]
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning statistics of occupational
injuries (resulting from occupational accidents),
adopted by the Sixteenth International Conference
of Labour Statisticians (October 1998), page 2
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, July 1990,
Chapter 4, Occupational Illness in OECD Countries,
page 105.
See also: Case of occupational injury, Occupational
accident, Occupational disease
See also: Occupational accident, Occupational
injury
Occupational pension Plans de retraite
plans
professionnels
Access to such plans is linked to an employment or
professional relationship between the plan member
and the entity that establishes the plan (the plan
sponsor).
Occupational health
care
Occupational health care comprises a wide variety
of health services such as surveillance of employee
health (routine medical check-ups) and therapeutic
care (including emergency health care services) on
or off-business premises (including government
and non-profit institutions serving households).
This excludes, however, remuneration- in-kind of
health services and goods that constitute
household actual final consumption rather than
intermediate consumption of business. (ICHA
function HC.6.9)
Occupational plans may be established by
employers or groups thereof (e.g. industry
associations) and labour or professional
associations, jointly or separately. The plan may
be administered directly by the plan sponsor or by
an independent entity (a pension fund or a
financial institution acting as pension provider). In
the latter case, the plan sponsor may still have
oversight responsibilities over the operation of the
plan.
Source: A System of Health Accounts, OECD,
2000, chapter 9, page 123
Context: Identical terms, "Company pension
plans", "Employer's pension plans"
Occupational health
Risques pour la santé
hazards
du travail
Occupational health hazards are hazards of
exposure to pollution, noise and vibrations in the
working environment. Exposure limits are
promoted by the International Labour Organization
(ILO)
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Mandatory occupational plan, Voluntary
occupational plan
Occupied persons
Salarié
In order to be classified as occupied - i.e. either
employed or self-employed - the person must be
engaged in an activity that falls within the
production boundary of the System of National
Accounts (SNA)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Occupational injuries
and diseases,
expenditure on
Expenditure on occupational injuries and diseases
records all cash payments such as paid sick leave,
special allowances and disability related payments
such as pensions, if they are related to prescribed
occupational injuries and diseases
Source: SNA 7.23
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Production boundary
Ocean dumping
Rejet en mer
Ocean dumping is the deliberate disposal of
hazardous wastes at sea from vessels, aircraft,
platforms or other human—made structures. It
includes ocean incineration and disposal into the
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
543
seabed and sub-seabed
The name given by users to the artificial currency
unit in which the PPPs and real final expenditures
for the OECD 30 are expressed – namely, ―US
dollars at average OECD price levels‖.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Ocean incineration
Context: ―US dollars at average OECD price levels‖
are US dollars that have the same purchasing
power over the whole of the OECD 30. Their
purchasing power is a weighted average of the
purchasing power of the national currencies of
OECD Member Countries. As such they reflect the
average price level in the OECD 30 or, more
precisely, the weighted average of the price levels
of Member Countries. ―US dollars at average OECD
price levels‖ or ―OECD dollars‖ are defined by
equating the total real final expenditure of the
OECD 30 on a specific basic heading, aggregate or
analytical category to the total nominal final
expenditure of the OECD 30 on the same basic
heading, aggregate or analytical category.
Incinération sur
navires
See Incineration at sea
See also: Incineration at sea
Octiles
The set of seven variate values which divide the
total frequency into eight equal parts.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
See also: Quantiles
OECD
See Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD)
OECD Social
Expenditure database
See SOCX
See also: Organisation for Economic Co-operation
and Development (OECD)
See also: SOCX
OECD Anti-Bribery
Convention
This Convention, and other related OECD
international legal instruments, require that all 30
OECD countries and six non-OECD economies
implement a comprehensive set of legal,
regulatory and policy measures to prevent, detect,
investigate, prosecute, and sanction the bribery of
foreign public officials. The Convention came into
force in 1999.
OECD Working Party
on Export Credits and
Credit Guarantees
This is a forum for discussing export credit issues
and for exchanging information among 28 of the
29 member countries of the OECD (only Iceland
does not participate).
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Context: The Convention requires that Parties
impose tough sanctions—including fines and
imprisonment — for bribery of foreign public
officials, also referred to as ―foreign bribery‖.
These sanctions must apply to both individuals and
companies who commit foreign bribery.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
The convention also requires that a nation‘s courts
confiscate any bribes and all profits obtained
through foreign bribery. Parties must also work
together to ensure its effective application—for
example, in gathering and exchanging evidence, or
through extradition.
OECD.stat
OECD.Stat is the OECD‘s central data repository
(―warehouse‖) where validated statistics and
related metadata are stored.
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD Statistical Programme
of Work: 2005, OECD, Paris, p. 15.
Source: OECD, 2007, Bribery in Public
Procurement: Methods, Actors and CounterMeasures, OECD, Paris
Hyperlink: http://stats.oecd.org/wbos/default.aspx
See also: MetaStore
OECD consensus
See Arrangements on guidelines for officially
supported export credits
OECD-Europe
OCDE Ŕ Europe
OECD-Europe comprises all European Union
Member countries of the OECD, i.e. countries in
EU15 plus the Czech Republic, Hungary, Iceland,
Norway, Poland, Slovak Republic, Switzerland,
Turkey.
See also: Arrangements on guidelines for officially
supported export credits
OECD dollar
Source: OECD, monthly, OECD Main Economic
Indicators, OECD, Paris, Data presentation notes
544
See also: EU15
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
OECD-total
OCDE Ŕ total
OECD-total comprises all Member countries of the
OECD. These are: Austria, Australia, Belgium,
Canada, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland,
France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland,
Ireland, Italy, Japan, Korea, Luxembourg, Mexico,
Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland,
Portugal, Slovak Republic, Spain, Sweden,
Switzerland, Turkey, United Kingdom, United
States
Official aid (OA)
Flows which meet conditions of eligibility for
inclusion in Official Development Assistance (ODA),
other than the fact that the recipients are on Part
II of the Development Assistance Committee
(DAC) List of Aid Recipients.
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
Source: OECD Main Economic Indicators, monthly,
Data presentation notes
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
Offer prices
The prices that sellers display as the prices at
which they are prepared to sell their products. The
prices of products as quoted in the seller‘s price
list, catalogue, internet site, advertisements, etc.
They are not necessarily transaction prices.
Depending on the country and/or the product, they
may or may not include delivery and installation
costs, VAT and other indirect taxes on products,
discounts, surcharges and rebates, invoiced service
charges and voluntary gratuities.
See also: Official Development Assistance (ODA)
loans
Official bilateral loans
OECD official bilateral loans statistics shows the
outstanding debt on loans, other than direct export
credits, extended by governments which are
members of the OECD‘s Development Assistance
Committee (DAC). Direct export credits extended
by the official sector are included in non-bank
trade credits. In addition to straightforward loans,
official bilateral loans include loans repayable in
kind, and eligible loans in Associated Financing
packages
Context: Also referred to as ―list prices‖.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Source: Joint BIS-IMF-OECD-World Bank statistics
on external debt, metadata
See also: List price
Off-farm sediment
flow indicator
The off-farm sediment flow indicator measures the
quantity of soil erosion sediments delivered to offfarm areas as a result of agricultural soil erosion
Hyperlink:
http://www1.oecd.org/dac/debt/htm/metadata.ht
m#Line%20A
Official creditors
Créancier officiel
Official creditors are international organisations,
governments and government agencies including
official monetary institutions
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture:
Methods and Results, Executive Summary, OECD,
2000, page 34
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Office automation
The integration of all information functions in the
office, which includes word processing, data
processing, electronic mail, graphics, and desktop
publishing.
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Official debt
Dette officielle
Official debt is debt owed to a bilateral government
agency or a multilateral development agency. As
well as debt arising from official development
assistance (ODA) and other official flows (OOFs), it
includes former private sector debt that has been
rescheduled by the official sector
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Office information
system (OIS)
An advanced word processing system in Data
Preparation Division that processes and stores
large volumes of census documents.
Source: Development Assistance Committee (DCA)
International Development Statistics – Handbook
for Reporting Debt Reorganisation on the DAC
Questionnaire
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Hyperlink:
htp://interdev.oecd.org/dac/pdf/debtreng.pdf
545
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
See also: Official Development Assistance (ODA)
loans, Other official flows (OOF)
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Official development
assistance (ODA)
Flows of official financing administered with the
promotion of the economic development and
welfare of developing countries as the main
objective, and which are concessional in character
with a grant element of at least 25 percent (using
a fixed 10 percent rate of discount). By
convention, ODA flows comprise contributions of
donor government agencies, at all levels, to
developing countries (―bilateral ODA‖) and to
multilateral institutions. ODA receipts comprise
disbursements by bilateral donors and multilateral
institutions. Lending by export credit agencies—
with the pure purpose of export promotion—is
excluded.
Official development
finance (ODF)
Used in measuring the inflow of resources to
recipient countries: includes
(a) bilateral official development assistance (ODA),
(b) grants and concessional and non concessional
development lending by multilateral financial
institutions, and
(c) Other Official Flows for development purposes
(including refinancing Loans) which have too low a
Grant Element to qualify as ODA.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
Official development
assistance (ODA)
loans
Grants or Loans to countries and territories on Part
I of the Development Assistance Committee (DAC)
List of Aid Recipients (developing countries) which
are:
Official exchange
rates
See Exchange rates
See also: Exchange rates
Official language
A language that has legal status in a particular
legally constituted political entity such as a State
or part of a State, and that serves as a language of
administration. Examples: Spanish in Chile; Italian
and German in Alto Adige (Italy).
(a) undertaken by the official sector;
(b) with promotion of economic development and
welfare as the main objective;
(c) at concessional financial terms [if a loan,
having a Grant Element of at least 25 per cent].
Context: In addition to financial flows, Technical
Co-operation is included in aid. Grants, Loans and
credits for military purposes are excluded. Transfer
payments to private individuals (e.g. pensions,
reparations or insurance payouts) are in general
not counted.
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee"
Official reserves
See Reserve assets
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
See also: Reserve assets, international
Official statistics
Official statistics are statistics disseminated by the
national statistical system, excepting those that
are explicitly stated not to be official.
See also: Official debt
Official development
bank
A non-monetary financial intermediary controlled
by the public sector. It primarily engages in
making long-term loans that are beyond the
capacity or willingness of other financial
institutions.
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
546
centre
Countries or jurisdictions with financial centres that
contain financial institutions that deal primarily
with nonresidents and/or in foreign currency on a
scale out of proportion to the size of the host
economy. Nonresident-owned or -controlled
institutions play a significant role within the centre.
The institutions in the centre may well gain from
tax benefits not available to those outside the
centre.
Officially supported
export credits
Loans or credits to finance the export of goods and
services for which an official export credit agency
in the creditor country provides guarantees,
insurance, or direct financing. The financing
element—as opposed to the guarantee/insurance
element—can be extended by an exporter
(supplier‘s credit), or through a commercial bank
in the form of trade related credit provided either
to the supplier, or to the importer (buyer‘s credit).
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Context: It can also be extended directly by an
export credit agency of the exporting countries,
usually in the form of medium-term finance as a
supplement to resources of the private sector, and
generally for export promotion for capital
equipment and large-scale, medium-term projects.
Under the rules of the Arrangement on Guidelines
for Officially Supported Export Credits covering
export credits with duration of two years or more,
up to 85 percent of the export contract value can
be officially supported.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Offshore in house
sourcing
See Offshoring
See also: Offshoring
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Offshore outsourcing
See Offshoring
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Offshoring
Offshoring
Generally, offshoring is used to describe a
business‘s (or a government‘s) decision to replace
domestically supplied service functions with
imported services produced offshore.
Offshore banking
centres
Offshore banking centres is an expression used to
describe countries with banking sectors dealing
primarily with non-residents and/or in foreign
currency on a scale out of proportion to the size of
the host economy
Context: This definition focuses on a business‘s
sourcing decision – should it produce the services
internally, source them domestically, or source
them from offshore? The imported services can
include a wide range of functions, such as
computer programming, payroll and accounting,
and customer call centres.
Source: Guide to the International Banking
Statistics, Bank for International Settlements,
Basel, Switzerland, 2000, Part III – Glossary of
Terms
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/meth07.pdf
When a business replaces services it had produced
internally (or had sourced from a domestic
supplier) with imported services, those services
and the domestic jobs associated with them are
said to have been ―offshored‖.
Offshore enterprises
In balance of payments accounts, the residency of
so called offshore enterprises is attributed to the
economies in which they are located without
regard to the special treatment they may receive
by the local authorities, such as exemptions from
taxes, tariffs, or duties.
Offshoring, though, has also (though less
frequently) been used to describe the movement of
domestic production (and the related jobs)
offshore. In this case, the definition focuses not on
imports of services from abroad, but on national
companies investing offshore.
The term ―offshoring‖ is sometimes used
synonymously with the term ―outsourcing‖.
However, outsourcing means acquiring services
from an outside (unaffiliated) company or an
offshore supplier. In contrast, a company can
source offshore services from either an unaffiliated
foreign company (offshore outsourcing) or by
investing in a foreign affiliate (offshore in-house
sourcing).
This treatment applies to enterprises such as those
engaged in the assembly of components
manufactured elsewhere and in the processing of
re-exported goods, to those engaged in trade and
financial operations, and to those located in special
zones (e.g. special trade zones, free-trade zones,
or tax-havens)
Source: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms, OECD, 2001 – not published
Source: United States Government Accountability
Office, September 2004, International Trade –
Current Government Data Provide Limited Insight
Offshore financial
547
into Offshoring of Services, Appendix II,
Washington DC
Oil pipeline network
All oil pipelines in a given area.
Hyperlink: www.gao.gov/new.items/d04932.pdf
Context: The territory of the area in question
includes that part of the seabed allocated to it
under a concession.
See also: Outsourcing
Offstream fish
farming
Offstream fish farming refers to the breeding,
rearing and farming of fish, as well as cultivation of
oysters for pearls or food, in offstream freshwater,
brackish water or saline water
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Oil pipeline transport
Any movement of crude or refined liquid petroleum
products in a given oil pipeline network.
Offstream use of
water
Offstream use of water is water withdrawn or
diverted from a groundwater or surface—water
source for public water supply, industry, irrigation,
livestock, thermoelectric power generation or other
uses
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Oil pipelines
Pipes for the movement of crude or refined liquid
petroleum products by pumping.
Oil meal marketing
year
Année de
commercialisation
(torteaux oléagineux)
Oil meal marketing year refers to the production
year beginning 1 October for the United States.
Context: Branch lines are included as well as oil
pipelines between the land and drilling platforms at
sea. Excluded are oil pipelines whose total length is
less than 50 km or whose inside diameter is less
than 15 centimetres and oil pipelines used only for
military purposes or located entirely within the site
boundaries of an industrial operation, as well as oil
pipelines that are entirely off-shore (i.e. located
solely out in the open sea).
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
International oil pipelines whose total length is 50
km or more are included even if the section in the
reporting country is less than 50 km long. Oil
pipelines consisting of two (or more) parallel
pipelines are to be counted twice (or more). Only
units which actually carry out an activity during the
reference period should be considered. "Dormant"
units or those not yet having begun their activity
are excluded.
Oil pipeline enterprise
Enterprise formed to carry out in one or more
places activities for the production of oil pipeline
transport services and whose main activities
according to the value-added is transport by oil
pipelines.
Context: In terms of activity classifications the
following classes are involved:
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
-- ISIC/Rev.3
2
: 6030 - Transport via pipelines.
-- NACE/Rev.1
3
: 60.30 - Transport via pipelines.
Only units that actually carry out an activity during
the reference period should be included.
"Dormant" units or those that have not as yet
begun their activity are excluded.
Oil prices (IEA)
Oil prices are those normally referring to the
average OECD import price of oil (cif) as calculated
by the International Energy Agency
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
548
Oil spill
Marée noire
An oil spill is oil, discharged accidentally or
intentionally, that floats on the surface of water
bodies as a discrete mass and is carried by the
wind, currents and tides. Oil spills can be partially
controlled by chemical dispersion, combustion,
mechanical containment and adsorption. They
have destructive effects on coastal ecosystems
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Old age cash benefits
Old-age cash benefits comprise all cash
expenditures (including lump-sum payments) on
old- age pensions within the public sphere.
Oilmeal
Tourteaux oléagineux
Oilmeal is defined as rapeseed meal (canola),
soybean meal, and sunflower meal in all countries,
except in Japan where it excludes sunflower meal
Context: Old-age cash benefits provide an income
for persons retired from the labour market or
guarantee incomes when a person has reached a
―standard‖ pensionable age or fulfilled the
necessary contributory requirements. This
category also includes early retirement pensions:
pensions paid before the beneficiary has reached
the ―standard‖ pensionable age relevant to the
programme. Excluded are programmes concerning
early retirement for labour market reasons which
are classified under unemployment.
OIS
See Office information system
See also: Office information system (OIS)
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001- 2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Oilseed oil marketing
year
Année de
commercialisation
(huiles oléagineuses)
Oilseed oil marketing year refers to the production
year beginning 1 October for the United States.
The OECD Social Expenditure Database (SOCX)
includes supplements for dependants paid to oldage pensioners with dependants under old-age
cash benefits.
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Source: An Interpretative Guide to the OECD
Social Expenditure Database (SOCX), OECD, page
12
Oilseeds
Oléagineux
Oilseeds are generally, seeds grown primarily for
the production of edible (i.e. cooking) oils.
Old-age pension
replacement rate
The old-age pension replacement rate is a measure
of how effectively a pension system provides
income during retirement to replace earnings
which were the main source of income prior to
retirement.
When used as a collective term in the context of
Producer Support Estimates (PSE) and Consumer
Support Estimates (CSE), the composition varies
by country and may include any or all of the
following: rape seed (colza), soybeans and
sunflower seed.
Source: OECD, 2007, Society at a Glance: OECD
Social Indicators, 2006 edition, OECD, Paris
Linseed and safflower seed are not included in the
definition of oilseeds used for PSE/CSE purposes,
except in a few cases where statistical difficulties
prevent the separating of data on these crops from
those for other oilseeds.
Oligopoly
An oligopoly is a market characterized by a small
number of firms who realize they are
interdependent in their pricing and output policies.
The number of firms is small enough to give each
firm some market power.
Cotton seed, grape seed, olives and groundnuts
(peanuts), from which edible oils are produced as
by-products, are excluded from the PSE and CSE
composites
Context: Oligopoly is distinguished from perfect
competition because each firm in an oligopoly has
to take into account their interdependence; from
monopolistic competition because firms have some
control over price; and from monopoly because a
monopolist has no rivals. In general, the analysis
of oligopoly is concerned with the effects of mutual
interdependence among firms in pricing and output
decisions.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
See also: Consumer Support Estimate (CSE),
Producer Support Estimate (PSE)
Oilseeds crop year
Campagne
(oléagineux)
Oilseeds crop year refers to the crop marketing
year beginning 1 April for Japan, 1 July for the
European Union and New Zealand, 1 August for
Canada and 1 October for Australia. The US crop
year begins 1 June for rapeseed, 1 September for
soybeans and for sunflower seed.
There are several types of oligopoly. When all firms
are of (roughly) equal size, the oligopoly is said to
be symmetric. When this is not the case, the
oligopoly is asymmetric. One typical asymmetric
oligopoly is the dominant firm. An oligopoly
549
industry may produce goods which are
homogeneous/ undifferentiated or it may produce
goods which are heterogeneous/ differentiated.
The analysis of oligopoly behaviour normally
assumes a symmetric oligopoly, often a duopoly.
Whether the oligopoly is differentiated or
undifferentiated, the critical problem is to
determine the way in which the firms act in the
face of their realized interdependence.
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
One-way call
origination
The local loop service connected to the originating
party provided by network A to network B where
network B does not also provide reciprocal services
to network A. For example, the origination service
provided by a LEG to originate long-distance calls
carried by an IXC in the US, or call origination
provided by a ILEC to an ISP.
In general, there are two broad approaches to this
problem. The first is to assume that firms behave
cooperatively. That is, they collude in order to
maximize joint monopoly profits. The second is to
assume that firms behave independently or noncooperatively. The analysis of oligopoly behaviour
under the non-cooperative assumption forms the
basis of oligopoly theory.
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Within non-cooperative oligopoly theory a
distinction is made between models in which firms
choose quantities and those in which they choose
prices. Quantity-setting models are often referred
to as Cournet models and price-setting models as
Bertrand models.
One-way call
termination
The local loop service connected to the receiving
party provided by network A to network B where
network B does not also provide reciprocal services
to network A. For example, the termination service
provided by a LEG to terminate long-distance
carried by an IXC in the US, or possibly the
termination service provided by a paging company
for a call from an ILEC to a paging company.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
See also: Perfect competition
Oligopsony
See Monopsony
On-lending of
borrowed funds
An institutional unit within an economy might
borrow funds from a nonresident(s) and then onlend the funds to a second institutional unit within
the economy. In such instances, the first
institutional unit—that is, the institutional unit that
borrowed from the nonresident(s)—should record
an external debt liability, with any subsequent onlending classified as a domestic claim/liability.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Monopsony
One-hoss shay
A model of depreciation, in which the durable
delivers the same services for each vintage: a
chair is a chair, no matter what its age (until it falls
to pieces and is scrapped). Also known as the light
bulb model of depreciation.
Context: The decisive consideration is whether the
creditor has a claim on the debtor, and in this
example the nonresident creditor has a claim on
the first institutional unit.
Context: A one-hoss shay is a colourful term taken
from the poem, ―The Deacon's Masterpiece‖, by
Oliver Wendell Holmes (in nineteenth century
American dialect, a ―one hoss shay‖ is a cart drawn
by a single horse.) ―Shay‖ is a corruption of the
French ―chaise‖ or ―postchaise‖.
If an institutional unit within an economy borrowed
from a nonresident(s) and on-lent the funds to a
nonresident, the unit should record both external
debt and an external claim. The nonresident
borrower would also record an external debt
liability in that economy‘s measure of external
debt.
The term is used to designate a capital asset that
exhibits neither input decay nor output decay
during its lifetime.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
550
straight to the e-consultation and the moderator
typically monitors every 24 hours and removes any
comments that breach the conditions of use.
On-line access
agreement
Designed for use by a provider of on-line services,
it covers the nature of the service to be provided,
the right of the service provider to restrict access,
to change its operating procedures, or to modify
the rules of access for the on-line service. Where
users may upload information to the service, the
service provider will also address issues of
ownership of proprietary rights and editorial
control over the uploaded content, and the user‘s
rights of privacy in electronic communications.
Source: OECD, 2004, Promise and Problems of EDemocracy: Challenges of Online Citizen
Engagement, OECD, Paris, Annex 1: Commonly
used E-Engagement Terms
On-site facility
A facility that has been established on the
premises of several NSIs. It is a place where
external researchers can be permitted access to
potentially disclosive data under contractual
agreements which cover the maintenance of
confidentiality, and which place strict controls on
the uses to which the data can be put.
Source: Measuring Electronic Commerce, OECD
Working Party on the Information Economy, 1998,
Software Publishers Association (SPA), (1996),
page 29 - A typology of Internet and e-commerce
agreements. Adapted from The SPA Guide to
Contracts and the Legal Protection of Software,
September, Washington D.C.
Context: The on-site facility can be seen as a 'safe
setting' in which confidential data can be analysed.
The on-site facility itself would consist of a secure
hermetic working and data storage environment in
which the confidentiality of the data for research
can be ensured. Both the physical and the IT
aspects of security would be considered here. The
on-site facility also includes administrative and
support facilities to external users, and ensures
that the agreed conditions for access to the data
were complied with.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/32/52/2094340.pdf
On-line correction
On-line correction is the process of correcting the
values in erroneous data items of a previously
checked data set on a video terminal.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Ontology
A formal specification of a conceptualization; i.e.
the objects, concepts and other entities that are
assumed to exist in some area of interest and the
relationships that hold among them.
See also: Interactive data review, Interactive
editing
Context: Ontology it is a branch of metaphysics
concerned with the nature and relations of being.
On-line facilitator
A facilitator is responsible for ensuring that the
comments stay on topic, summarising the
comments, and generally supporting the
deliberation process when required. Facilitation is
important if one of the objectives of the econsultation is to support deliberative engagement
between users.
In its general meaning, ontology is the study or
concern about what kinds of things exist - what
entities there are in the universe. It derives from
the Greek onto (being) and logia (written or
spoken discourse).
In artificial intelligence, an ontology is, according
to Tom Gruber, "the specification of
conceptualizations, used to help programs and
humans share knowledge." In this usage, an
ontology is a set of concepts - such as things,
events, and relations - that are specified in some
way in order to create an agreed-upon vocabulary
for exchanging information (http://wwwksl.stanford.edu/kst/what-is-an-ontology.html).
Source: OECD, 2004, Promise and Problems of EDemocracy: Challenges of Online Citizen
Engagement, OECD, Paris, Annex 1: Commonly
used E-Engagement Terms
On-line moderator
The role of the moderator is to ensure that all
comments adhere to the explicit conditions of use
and it is their responsibility to remove comments
that breach these rules. There are two main
options with regard to moderation: pre-moderation
and post-moderation. With the pre-moderation all
comments are sent to a moderator who decides
whether to accept them based on the conditions of
use, with post-moderation all comments go
Source: United Nations Statistical Commission and
Economic Commission for Europe
Conference of European Statisticians, Statistical
Standards and Studies - No. 53, "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", United Nations, Geneva,
2000
551
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
Open information sources provide access to
knowledge without the need to pay for the
knowledge itself, although there may be marginal
fees for access (membership in trade associations,
attendance at conferences, subscriptions to
journals).
See also: Concept, Entity, Object, Taxonomy - ISO
Open access (fishing)
Open access is the condition where access to the
fishery (for the purpose of harvesting fish) is
unrestricted; i.e., the right to catch fish is free and
open to all
Context: Open information sources do not provide
access to knowledge embodied in machinery or
equipment or the right to use knowledge protected
by patents and other forms of intellectual property,
although the knowledge behind the patent can be
accessed through patent databases. Some open
sources, such as attendance at fairs or exhibitions,
can give access to some tacit knowledge through
personal interaction with other participants.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Open burning
Open burning is outdoor burning of wastes such as
lumber, scrapped cars, textiles, sawdust and so
forth
Source: OECD, 2005, ―The Measurement of
Scientific and Technological Activities: Guidelines
for Collecting and Interpreting Innovation Data:
Oslo Manual, Third Edition‖ prepared by the
Working Party of National Experts on Scientific and
Technology Indicators, OECD, Paris, para. 265
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Open land
Terrain vague
Open land refers to non-built-up land with no, or
with insignificant, vegetation cover
Open ended classes
If, in a frequency distribution, the initial class
interval is indeterminate at its beginning and/or
the final class interval is indeterminate at its end,
the distribution is said to possess ―open ended‖
classes.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
This feature is undesirable owing to its effect upon
certain calculations which require the central value
of the class interval, e.g. the power moments. On
the other hand, it usually has no effect upon the
calculation of the quantiles and in particular the
median value of the variate.
Open market
operation
An open market operation is the sale or purchase
of mostly government securities, in a market open
to private investors, by a central bank.
Sales in the open market are an integral part of
monetary policy, allowing the central bank to
manage the volume of money and credit in the
economy. For instance, if the money supply rises
due to an unanticipated in-flow of foreign currency,
the central bank may act to counter the rise in
foreign exchange reserves by selling government
securities; an action referred to as (monetary)
sterilisation
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Open ended question
A question which does not admit of a limited
number of definite answers, as for example, ―What
do you think of the present Government?‖; as
opposed to a closed question such as ―Are you in
favour of the present Government?‖, the replies to
which can be classified as ―Yes‖, ―No‖, ―Don‘t
know‖.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
The distinction is important and useful in practice,
although it may be criticised from certain logical
and psychological standpoints.
Open pension funds
Fonds de pension
ouverts
Funds that supports at least one plan with no
restriction on membership.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Closed pension fund
Open information
sources
Open-ended
investment company
552
An open-end investment company is a managed
investment company, with an unlimited life, that
stands ready at all times to purchase its shares
from its owners and usually will continuously offer
new shares to the public. (Investments, W.F.
Sharpe/G.J. Alexander)
resources
The operating surplus adjusted for the depletion of
natural resources is equal to the net operating
surplus less the extraction of natural resources
plus the return to natural resources.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 10.38
Source: Institutional Investors Statistical
Yearbook, 2000 edition, Annex III, Glossary
Operating lease
Location simple
An operating lease is an agreement between a
lessor and lessee for the rental of machinery or
equipment for specified periods of time which are
shorter than the total expected service lives of that
machinery or equipment.
Operating surplus
adjusted for the
depletion of nonproduced biological
resources
Operating surplus adjusted for the depletion of
non-produced biological resources is equal to the
net operating surplus less gross extraction of nonproduced biological resources plus returns to nonproduced biological resources plus natural growth
of non-produced biological resources.
The lessor normally maintains a stock of
equipment in good working order which can be
hired on demand, or at short notice, by users and
is frequently responsible for the maintenance and
repair of the equipment as part of the service
which he provides to the lessee
Source: SNA 6.115 and 6.116
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 10.47
Operating surplus
Excédent
d‟exploitation
The operating surplus measures the surplus or
deficit accruing from production before taking
account of any interest, rent or similar charges
payable on financial or tangible non-produced
assets borrowed or rented by the enterprise, or
any interest, rent or similar receipts receivable on
financial or tangible non-produced assets owned by
the enterprise.
Operational leases
Operational leases are arrangements in which
machinery or equipment is rented out for specified
periods of time that are shorter than the total
expected service lives of the machinery or
equipment.
Note: for unincorporated enterprises owned by
households, this component is called ―mixed
income".
Context: Typically under an operational lease, the
lessor normally maintains the stock of equipment
in good working order, and the equipment can be
hired on demand or at short notice; the equipment
may be rented out for varying periods of time; and
the lessor is frequently responsible for the
maintenance and repair of the equipment as part
of the service which he provides to the lessee.
Under an operational lease, ownership of the
equipment does not change hands; rather, the
lessor is regarded as providing a service to the
lessee, on a continuous basis.
Context: In the SEEA the operating surplus is also
be described as the value of the flow of capital
services rendered by the assets in the same period
or the economic rent generated by the use of the
assets.
United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.161
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Source: SNA 7.8
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Mixed income
Operating surplus
adjusted for the
depletion of natural
Opinion survey
A sample survey which aims at ascertaining or
elucidating opinions possessed by the members of
553
a given human population with regard to certain
topics.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Optimum yield (in fish Rendement optimum
harvest)
An optimum yield is the amount of fish harvested
that:
Opportunity cost
Coût d‟opportunité
The concept of opportunity cost is commonly used
in economics; it is measured by reference to the
opportunities foregone at the time an asset or
resource is used, as distinct from the costs
incurred at some time in the past to acquire the
asset, or the payments which could be realised by
an alternative use of a resource (e.g. the use of
labour in a voluntary capacity being valued at the
wages which could have been earned in a paid job
(a) will provide the greatest overall benefit to the
national economy, particularly with respect to food
production and recreational opportunities, and
taking into account the protection of marine
ecosystems; or
(b) is prescribed as such on the basis of the
maximum sustainable yield from the fishery, as
qualified by any relevant economic, social, or
ecological factors; and
Source: SNA 1.60
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
(c) in the case of an over fished fishery, provides
for rebuilding to a level that produces the
maximum sustainable yield in the fishery.
Optimum allocation
In general, the allocation of numbers of sample
units to various strata so as to maximise some
desirable quantity such as precision for fixed cost.
Secondarily, allocation of numbers of sample units
to individual strata is an optimum allocation for a
given size of sample if it affords the smallest value
of the variance of the mean value of the
characteristic under consideration. Optimum
allocation in this sense for unbiased estimators
requires that the number of observations from
every stratum should be proportional to the
standard deviation in the stratum as well as to the
stratum number.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Option benefit
Option benefits are those derived from the
continued existence of elements of the
environment that may one day provide benefits for
those currently living.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.37
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Options Ŕ BPM
Options Ŕ MEP
Options are contracts that give the purchaser of
the option the right, but not the obligation, to buy
(a call option) or to sell (a put option) a particular
financial instrument or commodity at a
predetermined price (strike price) within a specific
time span (American option) or on a specific date
(European option).
Optimum
stratification
In a general sense a system of stratification in
sampling which optimises some given criteria.
Usually the criteria relate to a set of estimated
means and requires the minimisation of their
generalised variance.
Context: Some leading types of options are those
on foreign currencies, interest rates, equities,
commodities, specified indexes, etc. The buyer of
the option pays a premium (the option price) to
the seller (writer or issuer) for the latter‘s
commitment to sell or purchase the specific
amount of the underlying instrument or commodity
or to provide, on demand of the buyer, appropriate
remuneration
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Optimum test
A test which can be shown to possess a certain
desirable characteristic or group of characteristics
to a greater degree than any other test of the
same class.
Source: BPM para. 401
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
554
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
See also: Options – SNA
Options Ŕ SNA
Options Ŕ SCN
Options are contracts that give the purchaser of
the option the right, but not the obligation, to buy
(a ―call‖ option) or to sell (a ―put‖ option) a
particular financial instrument or commodity at a
predetermined price (the ―strike‖ price) within a
given time span (American option) or on a given
date (European option).
Ordinary rounding
Synonym of conventional rounding.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Many options contracts, if exercised, are settled by
a cash payment rather than by delivery of the
underlying assets or commodities to which the
contract relates
See also: Conventional rounding
Source: SNA 11.39
Ordinary share
Ownership share with full voting rights, commonly
known as ―equities.‖ Ordinary shares are usually
issued in registered form.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Options – BPM
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Options for identifying
the income element of
the resource rent
There are basically three options as concerns the
value of the income element of the resource rent
to be taken into account for the calculation of
depletion: the whole resource rent is income, the
whole resource is depletion and the income
element is zero, the income element equals to the
rate of return of the natural asset times the value
of the stock.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
See also: Equities
Ore carrier
Bulk carrier strengthened for the carriage of ore
cargoes.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 10.30 and box 10.1
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Organic compounds
Composés organiques
Organic compounds are compounds containing
carbon (excluding carbonates, bicarbonates,
carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide) that form
the basis of living matter. In domestic sewage,
organics are mainly metabolic wastes of faeces or
urine plus grease, detergents and so forth
Order price
The price quoted at the time the order is placed by
the purchaser.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Organic farming
Organic farming is a farming system that avoids
the use of artificial fertilizers, pesticides or
herbicides and uses organic manure‘s and organic
methods of crop rotation
Orderly marketing
arrangement (OMA)
Bilateral arrangement whereby an exporting
country (government or industry) agrees to reduce
or restrict exports without the importing country
having to make use of quotas, tariffs or other
import controls.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Organic fertilizers
555
Organic fertilizers are fertilizers derived from
animal products and plant residues containing
sufficient nitrogen
economies, sustainable development, territorial
economy and aid.
Source: OECD website
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/about/0,2337,en_2649_2011
85_1_1_1_1_1,00.html
Organisation
An organization is a unique framework of authority
within which a person or persons act, or are
designated to act, towards some purpose.
Organisation identifier
Organization identifier is the identifier assigned to
an organization within an organization
identification scheme, and unique within that
scheme.
Context: The attributes of an organisation are:
- organisation mail address: the mailing address of
the organisation;
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
- organisation name: a designation for the
organisation.
See also: Identifier, ISO / IEC 11179, Organisation
International organisations are entities established
by formal political agreements between their
members that have the status of international
treaties; their existence is recognised by law in
their member countries; they are not treated as
resident institutional units of the countries in which
they are located (United Nations, "System of
National Account (SNA) 1993", par.4.164).
Organisation role
The function or activities of an organisation, in
statistical processes such as collection, processing
and dissemination.
Source: ISO/IEC 11179-3 "Information
technology-Metadata registries (MDR)-Part 3:
Registry metamodel and basic attributes",
February 2003
See also: Data collection, Data consumer,
Organisation
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Organisational
innovation
An organisational innovation is the implementation
of a new organisational method in the firm‘s
business practices, workplace organisation or
external relations.
See also: Data source, International organisations,
ISO / IEC 11179, Organisation identifier,
Organisation, responsible
Organisation for
Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD)
The OECD groups 30 Member countries sharing a
commitment to democratic government and the
market economy. With active relationships with
some 70 other countries, non-government
organisations (NGOs) and civil society, it has a
global reach. Best known for its publications and
its statistics, its work covers economic and social
issues from macroeconomics, to trade, education,
development and science and innovation.
Context: Innovations in workplace organisation
involve the implementation of new methods for
distributing responsibilities and decision making
among employees for the division of work within
and between firm activities (and organisational
units), as well as new concepts for the structuring
of activities, such as the integration of different
business activities. An example of an
organisational innovation in workplace organisation
is the first implementation of an organisational
model that gives the firm‘s employees greater
autonomy in decision making and encourages
them to contribute their ideas.
The OECD plays a prominent role in fostering good
governance in the public service and in corporate
activity. It helps governments to ensure the
responsiveness of key economic areas with
sectoral monitoring. By deciphering emerging
issues and identifying policies that work, it helps
policy-makers adopt strategic orientations. It is
well known for its individual country surveys and
reviews.
Source: OECD, 2005, ―The Measurement of
Scientific and Technological Activities: Guidelines
for Collecting and Interpreting Innovation Data:
Oslo Manual, Third Edition‖ prepared by the
Working Party of National Experts on Scientific and
Technology Indicators, OECD, Paris, para. 177
Organism
Organisme
An organism is any living plant, animal or human
being
The OECD produces internationally agreed
instruments, decisions and recommendations to
promote rules of the game in areas where
multilateral agreement is necessary for individual
countries to make progress in a globalised
economy. Sharing the benefits of growth is also
crucial as shown in activities such as emerging
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
556
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Organophosphates
Composés
organophosphorés
Organophosphates are a group of phosphoruscontaining pesticide chemicals intended to control
insects. Examples are malathion and parathion
Oslo Convention
See Convention for the Protection of the Marine
Environment of the North-East Atlantic (OSPAR)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Convention for the Protection of the
Marine Environment of the North-East Atlantic
(OSPAR)
Oriented basic
research
Oriented basic research is research carried out with
the expectation that it will produce a broad base of
knowledge likely to form the background to the
solution of recognised or expected current or
future problems or possibilities
Other accounts
Autres comptes à
receivable / payable
recevoir/à payer
Other accounts receivable/ payable are financial
assets consisting of trade credit and advances and
other items due to be received or paid
Source: (AF.7) – Annex to chapter XIII [11.100]
Source: OECD Frascati Manual, Fifth edition, 1993,
para. 227, page 50
Other accumulation
Autres entrées
entries
d‟accumulation
Other accumulation entries cover transactions and
other economic flows not taken into account
elsewhere which change the quantity or value of
assets and liabilities.
Hyperlink: http://www1.oecd.org/dsti/sti/statana/prod/eas_fras.htm
See also: Applied research, Basic research, Pure
basic research
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179-3 Information technology - Metadata registries
(MDR) - Part 3: Registry metamodel and basic
attributes", February 2003
They include consumption of fixed capital and
acquisitions less disposals of non-produced nonfinancial assets; other economic flows of nonproduced assets, such as discovery or depletion of
subsoil resources or transfers of other natural
assets to economic activities; the effects of noneconomic phenomena such as natural catastrophes
and political events (wars for example); and
holding gains or losses due to changes in prices
See also: Administered item
Source: SNA 2.33
Original maturity of
an instrument
The original maturity of an instrument is the
maturity at the beginning
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Origin
The source (document, project, discipline or
model) for the Administered item.
Other action due to
labour disputes
Other action due to labour disputes consists of
action effected by one or more groups of workers
or by one or more employers, with a view to
enforcing or resisting demands or expressing
grievances, or supporting other workers or
employers in their demands or grievances, in
which there is no cessation of work.
Source: Glossary of Government Debt Terms,
OECD, unpublished, 2001
Orphans
Children who lost one or both natural parents.
Source: UNSD, 2005, Millennium Indicators
Database, United Nations, New York
Source: International Labour Organisation (ILO)
Resolution Concerning Statistics of Strikes,
Lockouts and other Action Due to Labour Disputes
(January 1993), page 2-3
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/mi/mi_goals.asp
Oscillation
Oscillation
An oscillation in a time series or, more generally,
in a series ordered in time or space is a more or
less regular fluctuation about the mean value of
the series. In this sense it is to be sharply
distinguished from a cycle, which is strictly
periodic; thus, while a cyclical series is oscillatory
an oscillatory series is not necessarily cyclical.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Other buildings
Other buildings are buildings that are not
dwellings, industrial buildings, commercial
buildings, educational buildings and health
buildings. They comprise public, religious,
amusement, sport, recreational and community
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
557
buildings, non-residential farm buildings, etc
Source: SNA 1.9 and 12.1
Source: Bulletin of Housing and Building Statistics
for Europe and North America, UNECE, Geneva,
2000, Annex II, Definitions and General Terms,
page 83
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Other buildings and structures - SNA
Other changes in
stock levels
The entry of the SEEA asset account which covers
those changes in stock level which cannot be
attributed to the interaction between the economy
and the environment, as well as one which is
simply related to the change in ownership from
one economic unit to another; it covers
catastrophic losses, uncompensated seizures,
degradation of produced assets, nominal holding
gains and losses and changes in classification for
that part which corresponds to the change of
ownership.
Other buildings and
structures
Autres bâtiments et
ouvrages de génie
civil - SCN
The other buildings and structures category of
non- financial, produced, tangible fixed assets
consists of non-residential buildings and other
structures, such as civil engineering works
Source: SNA (AN.1112) – Annex to chapter XIII
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.112
See also: Other buildings
Other capital
The term other capital covers the borrowing or
lending of funds between direct investors and
subsidiaries, branches, and associates - including
debt securities, suppliers‘ credit, and
nonparticipating, preferred shares (which are
treated as debt securities)
Other changes in the
Compte des autres
volume of assets
changements de
account
volume d‟actifs
The other changes in the volume of assets account
records the changes in assets, liabilities, and net
worth between opening and closing balance sheets
that are due neither to transactions between
institutional units, as recorded in the capital and
financial accounts, nor to holding gains and losses
Source: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms, OECD, 2001 – not published
Other capital taxes
Autres impôts en
n.e.c.
capital n.c.a.
Other capital taxes n.e.c. consist of capital taxes
other than those classified as capital levies or as
taxes on capital transfers
Source: SNA 12.4 [1.9, 3.58 - 3.61]
Source: SNA 10.136
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Other construction
See Construction, other
Other capital transfers Autres transferts en
capital
Other capital transfers consist of all capital
transfers except capital taxes and investment
grants; they include, among others, cancellation of
debt by mutual agreement between the creditor
and debtor
See also: Construction, other
Other current taxes
Autres impôts
courants
Other current taxes consist of current taxes on
capital plus miscellaneous current taxes
Source: SNA 10.139
Source: SNA 8.53 and 8.54 [OECD 4100, 4200,
4600, 5200, 5217, 6000]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Other changes in
Compte des autres
assets account
changements d‟actifs
The other changes in assets account consists of
two sub-accounts: the other changes in volume of
assets account and the revaluation account; it
records changes in the values of assets, liabilities,
and net worth between opening and closing
balance sheets that result from other flows, i.e.
flows that are not transactions
Other current taxes
Autres impôts
n.e.c.
courants n.c.a.
Other current taxes n.e.c. comprise any current
taxes other than taxes on income, current taxes on
capital and miscellaneous current taxes
558
corporations, other than ―deposit money
corporations‖ which have liabilities in the form of
deposits that may not be readily transferable or in
the form of financial instruments such as shortterm certificates of deposit which are close
substitutes for deposits and included in measures
of money broadly defined.
Source: SNA 8.53 and 8.54
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Other current
Autres transferts
transfers Ŕ BPM
courants - MBP
Other sectors or other current transfers, in cash or
in kind, between resident and non-resident entities
include those (such as food, clothing, other
consumer goods, medical supplies, etc.) for
distribution to relieve hardships caused by famine,
other natural disasters, war, etc. and regular
contributions to charitable, religious and cultural
organizations.
They may include corporations described as
savings banks (including trustee savings banks and
savings banks and loan associations), credit cooperatives and mortgage banks or building
societies.
Source: SNA 4.94
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Also covered are gifts, dowries, and inheritances;
alimony and other support remittances; tickets
sold by and prizes won from lotteries; and
payments form unfunded pension plans by nongovernmental organizations
Other deposits
Autres dépôts
In the financial accounts, the item other deposits
includes all claims, other than transferable
deposits, on the central bank, other depository
institutions, government units and, in some cases,
other institutional units that are represented by
evidence of deposit
Source: BPM para. 303
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Source: SNA 11.72, (AF.29) – Annex to chapter
XIII
See also: Other current transfers – SNA
Other current
Autres transferts
transfers Ŕ SNA
courants - SCN
Other current transfers consist of net premiums
and claims for non-life insurance, current transfers
between different kinds of government units,
usually at different levels of government and also
between general government and foreign
governments, and current transfers such as those
between different households
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Other environmental
products
They correspond to connected and adapted
products.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.83
Source: SNA 8.9 and 8.10
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Other current transfers – BPM
Other depository
Autres institutions de
corporations
dépôts
The other depository corporations sub-sector
consists of all resident financial corporations and
quasi-corporations, except the central bank, whose
principal activity is financial intermediation and
which have liabilities in the form of deposits or
financial instruments such as short-term
certificates of deposit which are close substitutes
for deposits in mobilising financial resources and
which are included in measures of money broadly
defined
Other equities (and
Actions et autres
shares)
participations
Shares and other equities are financial assets that
are instruments and records acknowledging, after
the claims of all creditors have been met, claims to
the residual value of incorporated enterprises
Source: (AF.5) – Annex to chapter XIII [11.86]
Other financial
intermediaries except
insurance
corporations and
pension funds
Autres intermédiaires
financiers, à
l‟exception des
sociétés d‟assurance
et des fonds de
pension
The other financial intermediaries except insurance
corporations and pension funds sub- sector
consists of all resident corporations and quasicorporations primarily engaged in financial
Source: SNA 4.88
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Other depository
Autres institutions de
corporations Ŕ other
dépôts - autres
The ―other‖ other depository corporations consist
of all resident depository corporations and quasi-
559
intermediation except depository corporations,
insurance corporations and pension funds
commercial purposes, communal grazing land, land
surrounding dwellings in excess of those yards and
gardens deemed an integral part of farm and nonfarm dwellings and associated surface water
Source: SNA 4.95
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: (AN.2119) – Annex to chapter XIII
Other machinery and Autres machines et
equipment
équipements
The other machinery and equipment category of
non- financial, produced, tangible fixed assets
consists of machinery and equipment assets not
classified as ―transport equipment‖
Other flows
Autres flux
Other flows are changes in the value of assets and
liabilities that do not take place in transactions.
These entries are of two broad kinds - the first
kind consists of changes due to factors such as
discoveries or depletion of subsoil resources, or
destruction by war or other political events or by
natural catastrophes while the second kind consists
of changes in the value of assets, liabilities, and
net worth due to changes in the level and structure
of prices, which are reflected in holding gains and
losses
Source: (AN.11132) – Annex to chapter XIII
Other non-market
Autres établissements
establishments
Other non-market establishments supply most of
the goods and services they produce without
charge or at prices which are not economically
significant; they are one of three broad types of
producer, with the others being market producers
and producers for own final use
Source: SNA 3.57
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 2.46
Other intangible fixed Autres actifs fixes
assets
incorporels
Other intangible fixed assets are new information,
specialised knowledge, etc, not elsewhere
classified, whose use in production is restricted to
the units that have established ownership rights
over them or to other units licensed by the latter
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Other non-market
output Ŕ ESA
Other non-market output covers output that is
provided free, or at prices that are not
economically significant, to other units
Source: (AN.1129) – Annex to chapter XIII
Source: ESA [3.23]
Other intangible nonproduced assets
Autres actifs
incorporels non
produits
Other intangible non-produced assets are
intangible non-produced assets not elsewhere
classified
See also: Other non-market output – SNA
Other non-market
Autre production non
output Ŕ SNA
marchande - SCN
Other non-market output consists of goods and
individual or collective services produced by nonprofit institutions serving households (NPISHs) or
government that are supplied free, or at prices
that are not economically significant, to other
institutional units or the community as a whole.
Source: (AN.229) – Annex to chapter XIII
Other land (SEEA)
All land not previously allocated to one of the other
headings in SEEA land classification.
Such output is one of three broad categories of
output in the System of National Accounts (SNA),
with the others being market output and output
produced for own final use
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.72, EA.25
Source: SNA 6.49
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Other non-market output – ESA
Other non-market
Autres producteurs
producers Ŕ ESA
non marchands Ŕ SEC
Other non-market producers are local kind-ofactivity units (KAUs) or institutional units whose
major part of output is provided free or at not
economically significant prices
Other land and
Autres terrains et
associated surface
plans d‟eau associés
water
Other land and associated surface water consist of
land not elsewhere classified, including private
gardens and plots not cultivated for subsistence or
560
Source: ESA [3.26]
made by social security funds to households
See also: Other non-market producers – SNA
Source: SNA 8.103
Other non-market
Autres producteurs
producers Ŕ SNA
non marchands Ŕ SCN
Other non-market producers consist of
establishments owned by government units or
NPISHs that supply goods or services free, or at
prices that are not economically significant, to
households or the community as a whole; these
producers may also have some sales of secondary
market output whose prices are intended to cover
their costs or earn a surplus
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Other structures
Autres ouvrages de
génie civil
The other structures category of non-financial,
produced, tangible fixed assets consists of
structures other than buildings, including the cost
of the streets, sewers and site clearance and
preparation other than for residential or nonresidential buildings; also included are historic
monuments for which identification as dwellings or
non-residential buildings is not possible and shafts,
tunnels and other structures associated with
mining subsoil assets
Source: SNA 6.52
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Other non-market producers – ESA
Source: (AN.11122) – Annex to chapter XIII
Other official flows
(OOFs)
Transactions by the official sector with countries on
the List of Aid Recipients which do not meet the
conditions for eligibility as Official Development
Assistance or Official Aid, either because they are
not primarily aimed at development, or because
they have a Grant Element of less than 25 per
cent.
Other subsidies on
Autres subventions
production
sur la production
Other subsidies on production consist of subsidies,
except subsidies on products, which resident
enterprises may receive as a consequence of
engaging in production (e.g. subsidies on payroll or
workforce or subsidies to reduce pollution)
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
Source: SNA 7.79
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
Other subsidies on
Autres subventions
products
sur les produits
Other subsidies on products (other than export or
import subsidies) consist of subsidies on goods or
services produced as the outputs of resident
enterprises that become payable as a result of the
production, sale, transfer, leasing or delivery of
those goods or services, or as a result of their use
for own consumption or own capital formation.
See also: Official debt
Other preference
shares
These will have the rights of standard preference
shares but may also be:
- cumulative (i.e., income arrears are carried
forward to the next payment date),
- convertible (into ordinary shares),
- redeemable (at a fixed date or contingent on a
special event), or
- permanent (not redeemable except at issuer‘s
option). (Issued in registered form.)
There are three broad categories:
(a) subsidies on products used domestically,
(b) losses of government trading organisations,
and
(c) subsidies to public corporations and quasicorporations.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Source: SNA 7.78
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Other taxes on income Autres impôts sur le
n.e.c.
revenu n.c.a.
Other taxes on income n.e.c. consist of any income
taxes other than taxes on individual or household
income, taxes on the income of corporations, taxes
on capital gains, and taxes on winnings from
lotteries or gambling
Other social security
benefits in kind
Autres prestations de
sécurité sociale en
nature
Other social security benefits in kind consist of
social transfers in kind, except reimbursements,
561
Source: SNA 8.52 [OECD 1110, 1120, 1130, 1210]
mechanisms, including continuing work at the
international level, together with business, industry
and user representatives.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Context: In the Declaration, Ministers declared
their intention to:
Other taxes on
Autres impôts sur la
production
production
Other taxes on production consist of taxes other
than those incurred directly as a result of engaging
in production; they mainly consist of current taxes
on the labour or capital employed in the
enterprise, such as payroll taxes or current taxes
on vehicles or buildings
- Take a non-discriminatory approach to electronic
authentication from other countries.
- Encourage efforts to develop authentication
technologies and mechanisms, and facilitate the
use of those technologies and mechanisms for
electronic commerce.
- Amend, where appropriate, technology or mediaspecific requirements in current laws or policies
that may impede the use of information and
communication technologies and electronic
authentication mechanisms, giving favourable
consideration to the relevant provisions of the
Model Law on Electronic Commerce adopted by the
United Nations Commission on International Trade
Law (UNCITRAL) in 1996.
Source: SNA 6.229
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Other valuables
Autres objets de
valeur
The other valuables category of non-financial,
tangible, non-produced fixed assets consists of
valuables not elsewhere classified, such as
collections and jewellery of significant value
fashioned out of precious stones and metals
- Proceed with the application of electronic
authentication technologies to enhance the
delivery of government services and programmes
to the public.
Source: (AN.139) – Annex to chapter XIII
- Continue work at international level, together
with business, industry and user representatives,
on authentication technologies and mechanisms to
facilitate global electronic commerce.
Other wooded land
Land with a tree crown cover (or equivalent
stocking level) of either 5-10 per cent of trees able
to reach a height at least 5 metres at maturity in
situ or a crown cover of more than 10 per cent of
trees not able to reach a height of 5 metres at
maturity in situ (for example, dwarf or stunted
trees) and shrub or brush cover. Areas having
tree, shrub or bush cover that are less than 0.5
hectares in size and less than 20 metres in width
are excluded and classified as ―other land‖.
Source: OECD, 2002, OECD Information
Technology Outlook, OECD, Paris, p. 244
Ottawa Group
See City groups
See also: City groups
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.154
Outbound tourism
Outbound tourism is the tourism of resident
visitors outside the economic territory of the
country of reference
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, para 2.61
See also: Other land (SEEA)
Outbound tourism
consumption
Outbound tourism consumption comprises the
consumption of resident visitors outside the
economic territory of the country of reference and
provided by non-residents. It does not include
goods and services acquired for or after the trip
within the country of reference.
Other work-inStocks des autres
progress Ŕ inventories travaux en cours
See Inventories of other work-in-progress
See also: Inventories of other work-in-progress
Ottawa Declaration on
Authentication for
Electronic Commerce
The Ottawa Declaration on Authentication for
Electronic Commerce adopted by Ministers at the
Ottawa Ministerial Conference on 7-9 October 1998
recognised the importance of authentication for
electronic commerce. It outlined a number of
actions to promote the development and use of
electronic authentication technologies and
Context: Note that this definition is narrower than
the common understanding of the term ―outbound‖
within tourism statistics (involving residents of the
country of reference travelling to another country),
and as defined here outbound tourism
consumption excludes what was traditionally
identified as the domestic portion of outbound
562
tourism consumption.
Statisticians Methodological material, Geneva,
2000
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, paras. 2.61, 2.64
Hyperlink: http://amrads.jrc.cec.eu.int/kbase/glossary/glossALL.htm
See also: Inlier
Outcomes
Refer to what is ultimately achieved by an activity,
as distinct from its outputs which relate to more
direct or immediate objectives. Thus, the outcome
of a random breath-testing campaign conducted by
the police may be a decline in the incidence of
drink-related motor vehicle accidents, whilst one of
the outputs could be the number of drivers
charged with exceeding the legal alcohol limit. It is
often difficult to measure outcomes.
Out-of-pocket
expenditure by
households on health
Household out-of-pocket expenditure on health
comprise cost-sharing, self-medication and other
expenditure paid directly by private households,
irrespective of whether the contact with the health
care system was established on referral or on the
patient‘s own initiative.
Context: The former relates to provisions of health
insurance or third-party payers for beneficiaries to
cover part of the medical cost via a fixed amount
per service (co-payment) or a set share of the
price tagged to services (co-insurance, also labeled
in some countries 'ticket modérateur') or a fixed
amount to be born before the third-party gets
involved (deductible). Self-medication includes
informal payments extracted by medical care
providers above the conventional fees, to over-thecounter prescriptions and to medical services not
included in a third-party payer formulary or
nomenclature of re-imbursable services.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Outfall sewer
Emissaire
d‟évacuation
An outfall sewer is any pipe or conduit used to
carry either raw sewage or treated effluent to a
final point of discharge into a body of water
Note: This item corresponds to HF.2.3 in the ICHAHF classification of health care financing (see SHA,
chapters 6 and 11)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Outlet
A shop, market, service establishment, internet
site, mail order service or other place from where
goods and/or services can be purchased and from
where the purchasers‘ or list prices of the products
sold can be obtained.
Out-of-scope units
Out-of-scope units are units that should not be
included in the sampling frame because they do
not belong to the target population in the
reference period. If enumerated, they cause overcoverage.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Context: Units that are dead, merged, etc, during
the reference period are not considered as out-ofscope units.
Source: Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
October 2003
Outlier
An outlier is a data value that lies in the tail of the
statistical distribution of a set of data values.
See also: Over-coverage, Scope (universe)
Context: The intuition is that outliers in the
distribution of uncorrected (raw) data are more
likely to be incorrect.
Output
Production
Output consists of those goods or services that are
produced within an establishment that become
available for use outside that establishment, plus
any goods and services produced for own final use
Examples are data values that lie in the tails of the
distributions of ratios of two fields (ratio edits),
weighted sums of fields (linear inequality edits),
and Mahalanobis distributions (multivariate
normal) or outlying points to point clouds of
graphs.
Context: Such output may be:
- sold;
- entered into the producer‘s inventories prior to
sale, barter, etc;
- supplied to other establishments belonging to the
same enterprise for use as intermediate inputs;
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Glossary of Terms on
Statistical Data Editing", Conference of European
563
- retained by their owners for own final
consumption or own gross fixed capital formation;
- supplied free, or sold at prices that are not
economically significant to other institutional units.
- provided to their employees as compensation in
kind or used for other payments in kind;
- bartered in exchange for other goods, services or
assets.
Output producer price
indices
A measure of the change in the prices of goods
and services sold as output by domestic producers.
Covers both output sold on the domestic market
and output sold as exports. Valuation is at basic
prices.
Context: Output producer prices are the basic
prices received by the producer exclusive of taxes
on products, separately invoiced transport charges,
and retail and wholesale margins.
Source: SNA 6.38
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
The output price index measures the average price
change of all covered goods and services resulting
from an activity and sold on the domestic market
and also on export markets. In constructing a
family of output PPIs, export prices are usually
collected from a separate source to produce a
separate export price index. (Draft Producer Price
Index Manual, The Technical Expert Groups on the
Producer Price Index, Part 1 - The Theory and
Concepts of PPI Measurement, Chapter 2. The
Purpose and Uses of Producer Price Indices, paras.
2,3,5,6.)
See also: Gross output, Production – SNA
Output decay
Output decay is the loss in the physical efficiency
of an asset because, over time, it produces a
smaller quantity of capital services for a given
input of labour or materials
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Output editing
The process of comparing the price levels and price
movements of similar products among different
respondents and querying any outliers.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
See also: Input producer prices, Producer price
index
Outputs
Refer to what is produced directly or immediately
by an activity. Depending on their nature, outputs
may, or may not be straightforward to measure.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Thus, the number of hospital cases treated by a
doctor is likely to be easier to measure than the
advice on a policy issue submitted by a health
administrator to his chief executive or minister,
which can only be evaluated in a qualitative and
essentially subjective way.
Output gap
An output gap refers to the difference between
actual and potential gross domestic product (GDP)
as a per cent of potential GDP
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Output produced for
Production pour usage
own final use
final propre
Output produced for own final use consists of
goods or services that are retained for their own
final use by the owners of the enterprises in which
they are produced
Outputs and outcomes
In performance assessment in government,
outputs are defined as the goods or services
produced by government agencies (e.g., teaching
hours delivered, welfare benefits assessed and
paid); outcomes are defined as the impacts on
social, economic, or other indicators arising from
the delivery of outputs (e.g., student learning,
social equity).
Source: SNA 6.46
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
564
contract with that enterprise, but; whose place of
work is not within any of the establishments which
make up that enterprise.
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Context: These workers may be classified as being
in paid employment or in self-employment
according to the specific terms of their contract.
They may also be classified as employers if they
engage other workers on terms described in the
definition of employers
Outsourcing
Delegating (part of) activities to an outside
contractor.
Context: The term ―offshoring‖ is sometimes used
synonymously with the term ―outsourcing‖.
However, outsourcing means acquiring services
from an outside (unaffiliated) company or an
offshore supplier. In contrast, a company can
source offshore services from either an unaffiliated
foreign company (offshore outsourcing) or by
investing in a foreign affiliate (offshore in-house
sourcing).
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning International Classification
of Status in Employment Adopted by the 15th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians,
January 1993, para. 14(h)
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
United States Government Accountability Office,
September 2004, International Trade – Current
Government Data Provide Limited Insight into
Offshoring of Services, Appendix II, Washington
DC
See also: Outworkers – SNA
Outworkers Ŕ SNA
Travailleur à domicile
- SCN
An outworker is a person who agrees to work for a
particular enterprise or to supply a certain quantity
of goods or services to a particular enterprise, by
prior arrangement or contract with that enterprise,
but whose place of work is not within any of the
establishments which make up that enterprise; the
enterprise does not control the time spent at work
by an outworker and does not assume
responsibility for the conditions in which that work
is carried out
www.gao.gov/new.items/d04932.pdf
Source: Adapting new technologies to census
operations, Arij Dekker, Symposium on Global
Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing
Censuses: Mid-Decade Assessment and Future
Prospects, Statistics Division, Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations
Secretariat New York, 7-10 August 2001, Glossary
Source: SNA 7.26
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/docs/sym
posium_06.htm#_Toc8547016
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Offshoring
See also: Homeworkers on the payroll
(establishment surveys), Outworkers – ILO
Outward Foreign
Affiliates Trade in
Services (FATS)
See Foreign Affiliates Trade in Services (FATS)
Over Thirty Months
Scheme (OTMS)
The purpose of the Scheme is to provide cattle
producers with an alternative market for cattle
aged over thirty months which have come to the
end of their productive lives and can no longer be
entered into the human or animal food chain as a
result of the Over Thirty Month Rule. The OTM Rule
bans meat from most cattle aged over 30 months
at slaughter from being sold for human
consumption. This is to remove older animals
which are more likely to have developed a
significant amount of BSE agent in any tissue, from
the human food chain. It applies equally to homeproduced and imported meat.
See also: Foreign Affiliates Trade in Services
(FATS)
Outward investment
Refers to direct investments made abroad.
Source: Report on the Survey of Implementation
of Implementation of Methodological Standards for
Direct Investment – IMF, OECD, March 2000 –
Appendix II: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/bopage/pdf/mar2000.
pdf
Source: OECD, 2004, OECD Agricultural Outlook:
2004-2013, OECD, Paris, Glossary
Overall estimate
A vague but convenient term used to denote an
estimate for a whole population, as distinct, for
example, from one for a stratum or other subsection of it. The expression is also used for an
estimate derived from the whole of a sample
instead of only from a part of it.
Outworkers Ŕ ILO
Travailleur à domicile
- BIT
Outworkers are workers who hold explicit or
implicit contracts of employment under which they
agree to work for a particular enterprise, or to
supply a certain quantity of goods or services to a
particular enterprise, by prior arrangement or
565
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Overall sampling
fraction
It is sometimes necessary to qualify the term
―sampling fraction‖ when more than one act of
sample selection is involved. Thus, in a three stage
sampling scheme if the (sub-) sample within a
given first stage sample unit is self-weighting for
the estimation of the first stage unit total then the
reciprocal of the corresponding raising-factor is
called the overall sampling fraction for the
specified first stage unit. Overall sampling ratio (or
rate) is also used.
Overemployment
See Inadequate employment related to excessive
hours
See also: Inadequate employment related to
excessive hours
Over-exploitation (of Surexploitation
fish stock)
Over-exploitation is the rate of exploitation where
the resource stock is drawn below the size that, on
average, would support the long term maximum
potential yield of the fishery
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
See also: Sampling fraction
Overfunding
Surcapitalisation
The situation when the value of a plan‘s assets are
more than its liabilities, thereby having an
actuarial surplus.
Over-capitalisation (in Sucapitalisation
a fishery)
Over-capitalisation occurs where the amount of
harvesting capacity in a fishery exceeds the
amount needed to harvest the desired amount of
fish at least cost
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
See also: Actuarial surplus, Funding level (pension
plan), Underfunding
Overgrazing
Surpâturage
Overgrazing is grazing by livestock or wildlife to
the point where the grass cover is depleted,
leaving bare, unprotected patches of soil. As a
result, water and wind cause erosion, especially on
clay soils, and the growth of poisonous plants and
thorny shrubs may increase
Over-coverage
Errors which occur due to the inclusion in the
sample of elements that do not belong there.
Context: Over-coverage arises from the presence
in the frame of units not belonging to the target
population and of units belonging to the target
population that appear in the frame more than
once (Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
October 2003).
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: United States Federal Committee on
Statistical Methodology, "Statistical Policy Working
Paper 4 - Glossary of Non-sampling Error Terms:
An Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics",
1978
Overlap products
Products that appear on the product lists of two or
more separate groups of countries for the purpose
of combining the groups in a single multilateral
comparison.
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Context: The use of overlap products is an
alternative to linking groups of countries through
bridge countries.
See also: Out-of-scope units, Under-coverage
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Overediting
Overediting refers to the editing of data beyond a
certain point after which as many errors are
introduced as are corrected.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
Overnight money
566
A loan with a maturity of one business day. Also
called day-to-day money.
than strictly necessary to maintain confidentiality.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: A glossary of terms used in payments and
settlement systems, July 2001, Committee on
Payment and Settlement Systems, Bank for
International Settlements
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/cpss00b.pdf
Over-the-counter
medicines
Over-the-counter medicines (OTC medicines) are
classified as private households' pharmaceutical
expenditure of non-prescription medicines. Note:
This item corresponds to HC.5.1.2 in the ICHA-HC
functional classification
Overpanamax / post
Overpanamax / post
panamax
panamax
Ship with at least one dimension greater than
Panamax.
Source: Terminology on combined transport,
UNECE/ECMT/EC, UNITED NATIONS, New York and
Geneva, 2001
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
See also: Panamax
Overtime - Eurostat
The Eurostat definition of overtime includes extra
hours regardless of whether they were paid or not.
Only hours that cannot be recuperated at long
terms (shift work or flexible hours) should be
considered
Overpopulation
Surpopulation
Overpopulation refers to the exceeding of certain
threshold limits of population density when
environmental resources fail to meet the
requirements of individual organisms regarding
shelter, nutrition and so forth. It gives rise to high
rates of mortality and morbidity
Source: Labour Force Survey - Methods and
Definitions 1998, Eurostat, p.67
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Overtime - ILO
Overtime - ILO
Overtime is time worked in addition to hours
worked during normal periods of work, and which
are generally paid at higher than normal rates
Overpumping
Surpompage
Overpumping refers to the extraction of
groundwater in excess of supply to a basin or
aquifer, resulting in depletion of water resources.
Overpumping of a well can lead to the intrusion of
saline water if the well is near the sea coast
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning Consumer Price Indices
Adopted by the 10th International Conference of
Labour Statisticians, October 1962, para. 5
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Over-quota tariff
An over-quota tariff is the tariff applied on imports
in excess of the tariff-rate quota volume. The overquota tariff is greater than the in-quota tariff.
See also: Overtime - Eurostat
Under the Uruguay Round Agreement on
Agriculture, most countries have agreed to
progressive reductions in the over-quota tariff
rates. Some countries have also agreed to lower
the in-quota tariff rates, raise the tariff-rate quota
level, or both
Overtime pay
Payment at premium rates (e.g., time and onehalf, double time) for work defined as overtime.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Hyperlink:
http://stats.bls.gov/ocs/sp/ncbl0062.pdf
Source: Glossary of Compensation Terms – United
States Bureau of Labor Statistics, August 1998
Own offices
Different offices of the same entity, including head
offices, branch offices, and subsidiaries. Also
sometimes called ―related offices.‖
Oversuppression
A situation that may occur during the application of
the technique of cell suppression. This denotes the
fact that more information has been suppressed
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
567
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Own-account workers are self-employed persons
without paid employees
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: SNA 7.25
Own resources
EU own resources refer to customs duties and
agricultural duties (traditional own resources), the
resource based on VAT, and a complementary
resource based on GNP.
See also: Own-account workers – ILO, Ownermanagers
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Owner occupied
housing
Dwellings owned by the households that live in
them. The dwellings are fixed assets that their
owners use to produce housing services for their
own consumption, these services being usually
included within the scope of the CPI. The rents
may be imputed by the rents payable on the
market for equivalent accommodation or by user
costs.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Context: The imputed rents of these housing
services should be valued at the estimated rent
that a tenant pays for a dwelling of the same size
and quality in a comparable location with similar
neighbourhood amenities.
Own-account
Producteurs pour
producers
compte propre
Own-account producers consist of establishments
engaged in gross fixed capital formation for the
enterprises of which they form part, or
unincorporated enterprises owned by households
all or most of whose output is intended for final
consumption or gross fixed capital formation by
those households
When markets for rented accommodation are
virtually non-existent or unrepresentative, the
value of imputed rents has to be derived by some
other objective procedure such as the user-cost
method.
Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Source: SNA 6.52
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Own-account workers Travailleurs pour leur
Ŕ ILO
propre compte Ŕ BIT
Own-account workers are those workers who,
working on their own account or with one or more
partners, hold the type of job defined as a selfemployed job, and have not engaged on a
continuous basis any employees to work for them
during the reference period.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
See also: Rental equivalence, User cost
Owner-managers
Owner-managers of incorporated enterprises are
workers who hold a job in an incorporated
enterprise, in which they:
It should be noted that during the reference period
the members of this group may have engaged
employees, provided that this is on a noncontinuous basis. The partners may or may not be
members of the same family or household
a) alone, or together with other members of their
families or one or a few partners, hold controlling
ownership of the enterprise; and
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning International Classification
of Status in Employment Adopted by the 15th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians,
January 1993, para. 10
b) have the authority to act on its behalf as
regards contracts with other organisations and the
hiring and dismissal of persons in the ―paid
employment‖ of the same organisation.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
For labour force analysis they are normally best
classified as self-employed, either as own-account
workers or, most often, employers. However, for
taxation purposes they are generally counted as
employees, and this is also the classification in the
System of National Accounts (SNA)
See also: Own-account workers – SNA, Ownermanagers
Own-account workers Travailleurs pour leur
Ŕ SNA
propre compte Ŕ SCN
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, June 2000,
568
OECD, page 191
Ozone (03) is a pungent, colourless, toxic gas that
contains three atoms of oxygen in each molecule.
It occurs naturally at a concentration of about 0.01
parts per million (p.p.m.) of air. Levels of 0.1
p.p.m. are considered to be toxic.
See also: Own-account workers – ILO
Owner-managers of
incorporated
enterprises
Owner-managers of incorporated enterprises are
workers who hold a job in an incorporated
enterprise, in which they:
Context: In the stratosphere, ozone provides a
protective layer shielding the earth from the
harmful effects of ultraviolet radiation on human
beings and other biota. In the troposphere, it is a
major component of photochemical smog, which
seriously affects the human respiratory system.
(a) alone, or together with other members of their
families or one or a few partners, hold controlling
ownership of the enterprise; and
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
(b) have the authority to act on its behalf as
regards contracts with other organizations and the
hiring and dismissal of persons ―in paid
employment‖ with the same organization, subject
only to national legislation regulating such matters
and the rules established by the elected or
appointed board of the organization.
Ozone depleting
potential
The aggregate measure of the ozone layer
depleting potential of some substances, calculated
through the conversion factor of halogenated
hydrocarbons that contribute to the depletion of
the ozone layer into CFC -11 equivalent.
Context: Different users of labour market,
economic and social statistics may have different
views on whether these workers are best classified
as in ―paid employment‖ or as in ―selfemployment‖ , because these workers receive part
of their remuneration in a way similar to persons in
paid employment while their authority in and
responsibility for the enterprise corresponds more
to persons in ―self-employment‖, and in particular
to "employers".
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.28
Note, for example, that to classify them as
―employees‖ will be consistent with their
classification in the ―System of National Accounts‖,
while they may be best classified as ―employers‖ or
―own-account workers‖ for labour market analysis.
Ozone depletion
Raréfaction de l‟ozone
Ozone depletion is the destruction of ozone in the
stratosphere, where it shields the earth from
harmful ultraviolet radiation. Its destruction is
caused by chemical reactions in which oxides of
hydrogen, nitrogen, chlorine and bromine act as
catalysts
Countries should, therefore, according to the needs
of users of their statistics and their data collection
possibilities, endeavour to identify this group
separately. This will also facilitate international
comparisons.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: ILO: 15th International Conference of
Labour Statisticians, Report of the Conference.
CLS/15/1D.6 (Rev. 1) (Geneva, International
Labour Office, 1993)
See also: Ozonosphere
Ozone hole
Brèche dans la couche
d‟ozone
The ozone hole is the seasonal decrease in the
total ozone column, 15—20 kilometres above the
Antarctic
Owner-occupied living
quarters
Living quarters are defined as owner-occupied if
used wholly or partly for own occupation by the
owner
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.371
See also: Ozonosphere
Ozone layer
See Ozonosphere
Ownership
concentration
See Concentration
See also: Ozonosphere
Ozone layer
protection
See also: Concentration
Ozone
Couche d‟ozone
Ozone
569
Protection de la
couche d‟ozone
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
See Protection of climate and the ozone layer
See also: Protection of climate and the ozone layer
Ozonosphere
Ozonoshpère
The ozonosphere is the lower region of the
stratosphere, 15—25 kilometres above the earth‘s
surface, in which there is an appreciable ozone
concentration. It is also termed the ozone layer
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
See also: Laspeyres price index, Paasche volume
index, Time reversal test
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Paasche type PPP
A PPP for a basic heading or an aggregate between
two countries, country B and country A, where the
reference country is country A and the weights are
those of country B.
See also: Climate protection, Ozone depletion,
Ozone hole, Ozone layer protection
p,q rule
It is assumed that out of publicly available
information the contribution of one individual to
the cell total can be estimated to within q per cent
(q=error before publication); after the publication
of the statistic the value can be estimated to within
p percent (p=error after publication). In the (p,q)
rule the ratio p/q represents the information gain
through publication. If the information gain is
unacceptable the cell is declared as confidential.
The parameter values p and q are determined by
the statistical authority and thus define the
acceptable level of information gain. In some NSIs
the values of p and q are confidential.
Context: At the basic heading level, the PPP is
defined as a quasi-weighted geometric average of
the price relatives between country B and country
A for the products representative of country B. At
an aggregate level, the PPP is defined as the
weighted harmonic average of the PPPs between
country B and country A for the basic headings
covered by the aggregate with the expenditure
shares of country B being used as weights.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
See also: Laspeyres type PPP
Paasche volume index Indice de volume de
Paasche
A Paasche volume index is the harmonic average
of volume relatives using the values of the later
period as weights
Paasche and
Laspeyres bounding
test
A test that may be used under the axiomatic
approach and that requires the price index to lie
between the Laspeyres price index and the
Paasche price index.
Source: SNA 16.17
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Laspeyres volume index, Paasche volume
index, Time reversal test
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Paasche-Laspeyresspread (PLS)
The ratio of an index using the weights of the
partner country to an index using the weights of
the base country in a binary comparison. The ratio
of the Paasche type index to the Laspeyres type
index in a binary comparison.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Paasche price index
Indice de prix de
Paasche
A price index defined as a fixed weight, or fixed
basket, index which uses the basket of goods and
services of the current period. The current period
serves as the weight reference period and the base
period as the price reference period. It is identical
with a weighted harmonic average of the current
to base period price relatives using the value
shares of the current period as weights.
Pacific beef market
Marché Pacifique du
boeuf
The Pacific beef market refers to beef trade
between countries in the Pacific Rim where foot
and mouth disease is not endemic
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Also called a ―current weighted index‖.
570
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Package tie-in
See Bundling
See also: Bundling
See also: Self-employment jobs
Package tours
Package tours are complex products offered to the
visitors, combining a variety of elementary tourism
products, such as transport, accommodation, food
services and recreation
Palgrave price index
A price index defined as the weighted arithmetic
average of the current to base period price
relatives using current period value shares as
weights.
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, para 2.74
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Packet-switched data
transmission
A data communications service in which a data
stream is divided into units called packets that are
separately routed to a destination where the
original message is then reconstituted.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: Telecommunications services: Glossary of
terms – World Trade Organisation
Pallet
Raised platform, intended to facilitate the lifting
and stacking of goods.
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/tratop_e/serv_e/t
elecom_e/tel12_e.htm
Context: Pallets are usually made of wood, and of
standard dimensions: 1000mm X 1200mm (ISO)
and 800mm X 1200mm (CEN).
Paging service
A service that allows transmitting a signal, usually
only an alarm tone, via radio from any telephone
in the public-switched network to a personal,
portable receiving device in a defined operating
area. More sophisticated systems provide audible
or visual display messages.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Telecommunications services: Glossary of
terms – World Trade Organisation
Panamax
Panamax
Ship with dimensions that allow it to pass through
the Panama canal: maximum length 295 m,
maximum beam overall 32.25 m, maximum
draught 13.50 m.
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/tratop_e/serv_e/t
elecom_e/tel12_e.htm
Paid employment
See Employed persons
Source: Terminology on combined transport,
UNECE/ECMT/EC, UNITED NATIONS, New York and
Geneva, 2001
Emploi salarié
See also: Employed persons
Pandemic disease
A pandemic disease is a disease that is widely
spread throughout an area, a nation or the world
Paid employment jobs
Paid employment jobs are those jobs where the
incumbents hold explicit (written or oral) or implicit
employment contracts which give them a basic
remuneration which is not directly dependent upon
the revenue of the unit for which they work. This
unit can be a corporation, a non-profit institution,
a government unit or a household. ..... Persons in
paid employment jobs are typically remunerated
by wages and salaries, but may be paid by
commission from sales, from piece- rates, bonuses
or in-kind payments such as food
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Panel data
See Longitudinal data
See also: Longitudinal data
Panel surveys
In the customary multi-phase survey, the followup phases generally occur shortly after the first
phase, in order to reduce the problem of household
mobility, on the other hand, entail successive
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning International Classification
of Status in Employment Adopted by the 15th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians,
January 1993, para. 6
571
surveys of the same sample units, which are
deliberately spaced over time (say, monthly,
quarterly or annually), because one of the
objectives is to measure changes in the units
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 1.36
Parent
A Parent is a company which owns or operates a
number of other companies, known as subsidiaries.
A parent firm can be a holding company but it
loses that status if it actively operates its
subsidiaries.
PANORAMA
A Eurostat reference database - includes profiles
and analysis of over 25 major industrial sectors,
the current market forces affecting them,
environmental and regulatory considerations and
trends for the future.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: Eurostat CODED Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Paraffin waxes
Saturated aliphatic hydrocarbons. These waxes are
residues extracted when dewaxing lubricant oils,
and they have a crystalline structure with carbon
number greater than 12. Their main characteristics
are that they are colourless, odourless and
translucent, with a melting point above 45 degrees
C.
Parent corporation Ŕ
Eurostat
The concept of a parent corporation is symmetrical
to the concept of subsidiary corporation.
Corporation A is the parent corporation of
corporation B (which is then a subsidiary of A):
either if A holds the legal power to control B, i.e., if
A holds the majority of the shareholders' or
associates voting rights of B (including cases
where A holds a majority of voting rights pursuant
to an agreement with other shareholders), or if A
has the right to appoint or remove a majority of
the board members of B, or if A has the right to
exercise a dominant influence pursuant to a
contract or a provision in the articles of association
(German law provides for such contracts or
clauses), or
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Parallel imports
When a product made legally (i.e. not pirated)
abroad is imported without the permission of the
intellectual property right-holder (e.g. the
trademark or patent owner). Some countries allow
this, others do not.
if nobody holds the legal power to control B, but A
has effective control over B, i.e., there is a
presumption of a participating interest of A in B
through the ownership by A of 20 % or more of the
capital of B, and A actually exercises a dominant
influence over B, or B is managed on a unified
basis by A
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
See also: Exhaustion
Source: Eurostat and the Seventh Council Directive
83/349/EEC of 13 June 1983
Parameter
Parameters are functions of the study variable
values. They are unknown, quantitative measures
(e.g., total revenue, mean revenue, total yield,
number of unemployed) for the entire population
or for specified domains which are of interest to
the investigator.
See also: Parent corporation – SNA
Parent corporation Ŕ
Société mère - SCN
SNA
A parent corporation is one which controls more
than half of the shareholders‘ voting power in
another corporation or is a shareholder in another
corporation, with the right to appoint or remove a
majority of the directors of that corporation
Source: Model Assisted Survey Sampling, C.-E.
Sarndal, B. Swensson and J. Wretman, SpringerVerlag 1992, p. 5.
Source: SNA 4.32 and 4.33
Parametric hypothesis Hypothèse
paramétrique
A hypothesis concerning the parameter(s) of a
distribution.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Parent corporation – Eurostat
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Parental leave
572
Parental leave is long-term leave available to
parents to allow them to take care of an infant or
young child a period of time. This is usually
granted in addition to maternity/paternity leave.
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Paris Convention
Treaty, administered by the World Intellectual
Property Organization (WIPO), for the protection of
industrial intellectual property, i.e. patents, utility
models, industrial designs, etc.
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, July 1995,
Chapter 5, Long-term leave for parents in OECD
countries, page 174
Pareto efficiency
Pareto efficiency, also referred to as allocative
efficiency, occurs when resources are so allocated
that it is not possible to make anyone better off
without making someone else worse off.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Context: When referring to a situation as Pareto
efficient, it is usually assumed that products are
being produced in the most efficient (least-cost)
way. Pareto optimality is sometimes used
interchangeably with Pareto efficiency. Sometimes
Pareto optimality is reserved for cases when both
production and allocative efficiency are obtained.
Paris Group
See City groups
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Partial correlation
(1) The correlation between two variates in a
conditional distribution for which one or more other
variates are held fixed. Specifically, the product
moment correlation coefficient in the conditional
distribution.
See also: City groups
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
(2) The correlation between the deviations of the
values of a variate from their least square
estimates by a regression function linear in terms
of an external set of variates, with the
corresponding deviations of another variate from
its own regression function linear in the same
external set.
Pareto optimality
See Pareto efficiency
See also: Pareto efficiency
Ordinarily, the product moment correlation
coefficient is used. The second definition is
applicable to samples in the usual cases, while
ordinarily the first is not. The two definitions are
equivalent for multivariate Normal distributions.
Paris Club
Club de Paris
The Paris Club is a forum of official creditors for
negotiating debt restructuring. It is an informal
intergovernmental group convened to renegotiate
debts to official creditors.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Context: An informal group of creditor
governments that has met regularly in Paris since
1956 to reschedule bilateral debts; the French
Treasury provides the secretariat. Creditors meet
with a debtor country to reschedule its debts as
part of the international support provided to a
country that is experiencing debt servicing
difficulties and is pursuing an adjustment program
supported by the IMF.
Partial disclosure
Synonym of approximate disclosure.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
The Paris Club does not have a fixed membership,
and its meetings are open to all official creditors
that accept its practices and procedures. The core
creditors are mainly OECD Member countries, but
other creditors attend as relevant for a debtor
country. Russia became a member in September
1997. (IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC. Available from
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm)
See also: Approximate disclosure
Partial replacement
See Sampling with replacement
See also: Sampling with replacement
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Partially untied aid
Partially untied aid is Official Development
Assistance (or official aid) for which the associated
573
distribution of the economically active population
within a country (Key Indicators of the Labour
Market (KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 16).
goods and services must be procured in the donor
country or among a restricted group of other
countries, which must however include
substantially all developing countries (substantially
all Central and Eastern European Countries
(CEECs) and new independent states (NIS) in the
case of official aid). Partially untied aid is subject
to the same disciplines as Tied Aid Credits and
Associated Financing
Source: Resolution Concerning Statistics of the
Economically active Population, Employment,
Unemployment and Underemployment, adopted by
the 13th International Conference of Labour
Statisticians, October 1982
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
See also: Inactivity rate
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
Participant
See Fund member
Particulate loadings
Particulate loadings is a mass of particles per unit
volume of air or water
Participant
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Fund member
Participating
preference share
These preference shares have further rights that
are normally linked to the relevant company‘s
profits or dividend payment on ordinary shares.
Particulate removal
Extraction des
particules
Particulate removal refers to the removal of
particulate air pollutants from their gaseous media,
using gravitational, centrifugal, electrostatic and
magnetic forces, thermal diffusion or other
techniques
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Particulates
Matières particulaires
Particulates are fine liquid or solid particles, such
as dust, smoke, mist, fumes or smog, found in air
or emissions
Participating
preferred stock
Participating preferred stock allows its holders to
receive dividends in addition to the fixed amount in
years in which the common stock dividend exceeds
a specified level.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
See also: Suspended particulate matter (SPM)
Partitioning
Scinder une opération
(transactions)
Partitioning records a transaction that is a single
transaction from the perspective of the parties
involved as two or more differently classified
transactions (e.g. the single rental payment
actually made by a lessee under a financial lease
can be partitioned into a repayment of principal
and a payment of interest)
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Participation rate
Taux d‟activité
The labour force participation rate is defined as the
ratio of the labour force to the working age
population, expressed in percentages
Source: SNA 3.28
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Context: The labour force participation rate is a
measure of the extent of an economy‘s workingage population that is economically active.
Partnerships
Associations de
personnes
Partnerships are separate legal entities which
behave like corporations but whose members
enjoy limited liability; in effect, the partners are at
It provides an indication of the relative size of the
supply of labour available for the production of
goods and services. The breakdown of the labour
force by sex and age group gives a profile of the
574
the same time both shareholders and managers
- a classification based on the worker‘s perception
of his/her employment situation;
- a cut-of (generally 30 or 35 hours per week)
based on usual working hours with persons usually
working fewer hours being considered as parttimers;
- a comparable cut-off based on actual hours
worked during the reference week.
Source: SNA 4.46
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Part-time employees,
number of (Eurostat)
Part-time employees are persons whose usual
hours of work are less than the normal working
hours. This definition encompasses all forms of
part-time work (half-day work, work for one, two
or three days a week, etc.). This number may be
established at the national, regional, industrial or
unit level.
The OECD has decided to define part-time working
in terms of usual working hours under 30 per week
in statistics on the incidence of part-time working
presented in the Statistical Annex of the OECD
annual Employment Outlook publication.
However, this approach dos not apply to the
information on preferences for part-time working.
The available statistics on preferences always
leave it to the individuals concerned to make their
own assessment of their work status and their
attitudes to it. [OECD Employment Outlook, June
1999, Chapter 1, recent Labour Market
Developments and Prospects, page 22]
Context: The number of part-time employees is
calculated by reference to the number of hours
worked per week for which they are paid. The
number of hours is considered in relation to the
length of what is considered to be a full-time
working week in the Member State or the sector of
the unit or the unit itself.
Source: The Definition of Part-time Work for the
Purpose of International Comparisons, A.
Bastelaer, G. Lemaitre, P. Marianna, Labour Market
and Social Policy Occasional Papers – No. 22,
OECD, 1997, page 12
It should be noted that whereas the "full-time
employee" category is relatively homogeneous, the
same cannot be said of the "part-time employee"
category since this can cover anything between
20% or even less and 80% or more of the normal
working hours of the employing unit.
See also: Part-time employees, number of Eurostat, Part-time work, involuntary
It is impossible to establish an exact distinction
between part-time and full-time work due to
variation in working practices between Member
States and industries
Part-time primary /
secondary level
student
See Full-time primary/secondary level student
Source: Definitions of Structural Business Statistics
Regulation (Commission Regulation (EC) No.
2700/98 of 17 December 1998) variables (16 13
1)
See also: Full-time primary/secondary level
student
Part-time student
Élève / étudiant à
temps partiel
Students enrolled in primary and secondary-level
educational programmes are considered to
participate part-time if they attend school for less
than 75 per cent of the school day or week (as
locally defined) and would normally be expected to
be in the programme for the entire academic year.
At the tertiary level, an individual is considered
part-time if he or she is taking a course load or
educational programme that requires less than 75
per cent of a full-time commitment of time and
resources.
See also: Part-time employment/work, Part-time
work, involuntary
Part-time employment
/ work
There is no universally accepted definition of parttime work/employment. A definition proposed by
the ILO defined part-time work as ―regular
employment in which working time is substantially
less than normal‖ (Population active, emploi,
chomage et sous-emploi: un manual du BIT surles
methodes et concepts, Hussmans, Merhan et
Verma, ILO, Geneva, page 87).
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
This is the definition used for administrative
purposes in some countries. However, such
definitions are inconvenient for use in household
surveys. These tend to ask employees if they
consider themselves as part-time, or base the
distinction between full- and part-time working on
an hours cut-off considered most suitable for the
country concerned.
See also: Full-time equivalent student, Full-time
student, Mode of study, Student, Study load
Part-time teacher
A teacher employed for less than 90 per cent of
the normal or statutory number of hours of work
for a full-time teacher over a complete school year
is classified as a part-time teacher.
Context: The definition of part-time work varies
considerably across OECD Member countries.
Essentially three main approaches can be
distinguished:
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
575
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: Educational personnel, Full-time
equivalent teacher, Full-time teacher, Instructional
personnel - OECD, Ratio of students to teaching
staff, Teaching time, Working time in school
Part-time tertiary
level student
See Full-time tertiary level student
Passenger road
vehicle
A road vehicle designed, exclusively or primarily,
to carry one or more persons.
See also: Full-time tertiary level student
Passenger car
A passenger car is a road motor vehicle, other than
a motor cycle, intended for the carriage of
passengers and designed to seat no more than
nine persons (including the driver).
Context: Vehicles designed for the transport of
both passengers and goods should be classified
either among the passenger road vehicles or
among the goods road vehicles, depending on their
primary purpose, as determined either by their
technical characteristics or by their category for
tax purposes.
The term "passenger car" therefore covers
microcars (need no permit to be driven), taxis and
hired passenger cars, provided that they have
fewer than ten seats. This category may also
include pick-ups.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: Motor cars, Motor vehicles, Passenger
car
Hyperlink:
http://www1.oecd.org/cem/online/glossaries/index
.htm
Passenger ship
Ship designed specifically to carry more than 12
fare-paying passengers whether berthed or
unberthed.
Passenger railway
vehicle
Railway vehicle for the conveyance of passengers,
even if it comprises one or more compartments or
spaces specially reserved for luggage, parcels,
mail, etc.
Context: A ship designed with one or more decks
specifically for the carriage of passengers, and
where there is either no cabin accommodation for
the passengers (un-berthed) or not all of the
passengers are accommodated in cabins where
cabins are provided, is sometimes referred to as a
"ferry".
Context: These vehicles include special vehicles
such as sleeping cars, saloon cars, dining cars and
ambulance cars. Each separate vehicle of an
indivisible set for the conveyance of passengers is
counted as a passenger railway vehicle.
Ro-Ro passenger ships are excluded.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Passenger-kilometre
(for sea transport)
Unit of measure representing the transport of one
sea passenger over one kilometre.
Passenger road motor
vehicle
A road motor vehicle, exclusively designed or
primarily, to carry one or more persons.
Context: The distance to be taken into
consideration is the distance actually travelled by
the passenger.
Context: Vehicles designed for the transport of
both passengers and goods should be classified
either among the passenger road vehicles or
among the goods road vehicles, depending on their
primary purpose, as determined either by their
technical characteristics or by their category for
tax purposes.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
Passenger-kilometre
576
offered (for sea
transport)
Unit of measure representing the movement of one
authorized passenger carrying capacity in a
seagoing vessel over one kilometre.
Pass-through
mortgage-backed
security
A security representing an ownership interest in an
underlying pool of mortgages. The cash flow from
the underlying mortgages is ―passed through‖ to
the security holder as monthly payments of
principal, interest, and prepayments.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Pass-through securities have been guaranteed and
issued by the Government National Mortgage
Association (GNMA), the Federal National Mortgage
Association (FNMA or ―Fannie Mae‖), and the
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC
or ―Freddie Mac‖), as well as private institutions.
Passive bribery
Passive bribery is the offence committed by the
official receiving the bribe.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Context: Of course, in a number of situations, the
recipient may induce or coerce the briber, and in
that sense, is the active party.
Source: OECD, 2007, Bribery in Public
Procurement: Methods, Actors and CounterMeasures, OECD, Paris
Pasture
Pasture refers to grasses, legumes and/or other
herbage used or suitable for the grazing of
animals. The term also includes the land covered
by such herbage, being used or suitable for grazing
See also: Active corruption
Passive confidentiality
For foreign trade statistics, EU countries generally
apply the principle of ―passive confidentiality‖, that
is they take appropriate measures only at the
request of importers or exporters who feel that
their interests would be harmed by the
dissemination of data.
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Patent
A patent is a right granted by a government to an
inventor in exchange for the publication of the
invention; it entitles the inventor to prevent any
third party from using the invention in any way, for
an agreed period.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Context: Patent data cover applications and grants
classified by field of technology.
Passive
metainformation
system
A passive metainformation system contains only
references to data, not the data themselves
International applications series distinguish four
subcategories: a) patents taken out by residents of
a country in that country; b) patents taken out in a
country by non-residents of that country; c) total
patents registered in the country or naming it; d)
patents taken out outside a country by its
residents. Data on patents granted only distinguish
between patents awarded to residents and to nonresidents
Source: Guidelines for the Modelling of Statistical
Data and Metadata, UNECE and UNSC, Conference
of European Statisticians Methodological Material,
1995 – page 1.
Source: OECD Frascati Manual, Fifth edition, 1993,
Annex 2, paras. 4-5, page 112
Passive or income
maintenance
programmes (labour
market programmes)
Passive or income maintenance programmes in the
context of labour market programmes consist of
unemployment compensation programmes and
programmes for early retirement for labour market
reasons
Hyperlink: http://www1.oecd.org/dsti/sti/statana/prod/eas_fras.htm
Patent fuel
Patent fuel is a composition fuel manufactured
from hard coal fines with the addition of a binding
agent.
Source: Definitions of the Standardised categories
and Sub-categories of Labour Market Programmes,
OECD, 2001
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
See also: Active labour market programmes
577
government in such areas as bills due from
suppliers, due salaries or transfers, or due debt
repayment or service.
Patented entities
Brevets
Patented entities are inventions in categories of
technical novelty that, by law or by judicial
decision, can be afforded patent protection
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Source: (AN.221) – Annex to chapter XIII
Paternity leave
Paternity leave is leave granted only to fathers for
a limited period around the time of childbirth (not
necessarily immediately after birth, but within a
short period thereafter).
Payments by
households to obtain
certain licences
Paiements effectués
par les ménages pour
obtenir certaines
autorisations
Payments by households to obtain certain licences
are payments by persons or households for
licences to own or use vehicles, boats or aircraft
and for licences to hunt, shoot or fish; they are
part of ―miscellaneous current taxes‖ but it should
be noted that some other licence fees are treated
as purchases of services rendered by government
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, July 1995,
Chapter 5, Long-term leave for parents in OECD
countries, page 174
Pathogen
Pathogène
A pathogen is a micro-organism that can cause
disease in other organisms. It may be present in
sewage, run—off from animal farms, swimming
pools, contaminated shellfish and so forth
Source: SNA 8.54 [OECD 5200]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Payments in kind
Payments in kind are goods and services furnished
to employees free of charge or at markedly
reduced cost that are clearly and primarily of
benefit to the employee as consumers. They
comprise food, drink, fuel and other payments in
kind; and cost, other than capital cost, of workers‘
housing borne by employers (cost for employer
owned dwellings, cost of dwellings not employer
owned, other housing costs)
Patients undergoing
dialysis
Patients undergoing dialysis refers to the number
of patients with dialysis treatments includes
Hospital/Centre and Home
Haemodialysis/Haemoinfiltration, Intermittent
Peritoneal Dialysis, Continuous Ambulatory
Peritoneal Dialysis (CAPD), and Continuous Cyclical
Peritoneal Dialysis (CCPD) on December 31st of
each year
Context: The definition refers only to payments
made to employees, which are defined in the SNA
as "remuneration in kind" (SNA para. 3.38). SNA
para. 3.39 refers to "payments in kind other than
remuneration in kind", indicating that the term
"payments in kind" needs to be broad enough to
include both payments to employees and other
payments in the form of goods and services.
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Source: International Recommendations for
Industrial Statistics, United Nations, New York,
1983, Statistical Papers Series M, No. 48, Rev. 1,
para. 126
Pay as you go (PAYG) Régime par
plan
répartition
See Funded pension plan, Unfunded pension plan
See also: Funded pension plan, Unfunded pension
plan
See also: Payments in kind other than
remuneration in kind, Remuneration in kind,
Wages and salaries in kind
Paying rail passenger
Passenger holding a ticket which has been paid for.
Payments in kind
other than
remuneration in kind
Paiements en nature
autres que les
rémunérations en
nature
Payments in kind other than remuneration in kind
occur when any of a wide variety of payments are
made in the form of goods and services rather
than money, excluding payments in kind to
employees
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Payment arrears
Amounts that have not been paid by the date
specified in a contract or within a normal
commercial period for similar transactions.
Payment arrears may arise from nonpayment by
Context: For example, a doctor may except
payment in wine instead of money, or in the case
of agriculture, the "rent" may be paid by handing
over part of the crops produced to the landlord,
i.e. share cropping.
578
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Source: SNA 3.39
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Peak
An observation in an ordered series is said to be a
―peak‖ if its value is greater than the value of its
two neighbouring observations.
See also: Payments in kind, Remuneration in kind
Payments of
Paiements
compensation
d‟indemnités
Payments of compensation consist of current
transfers paid by institutional units to other
institutional units in compensation for injury to
persons or damage to property caused by the
former, but excluding payments of non-life
insurance claims.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Peat
Combustible soft, porous or compressed, fossil
sedimentary deposit of plant origin with high water
content (up to 90 per cent in the raw state), easily
cut, of light to dark brown colour.
They can be either compulsory payments awarded
by courts of law, or ex gratia payments agreed out
of court but they include only compensation for
injuries or damages caused by other institutional
units, or ex gratia payments made by government
units or NPISHs in compensation for injuries or
damages caused by natural disasters
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Source: SNA 8.98
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Pedagogical support
for students
Pedagogical Support (International Standard
Classification for Education (ISCED) 0-4) includes
professional staff who providing services to
students to support their instructional program. In
many cases these personnel were licensed
originally as teachers but then moved into other
professional positions in education systems. This
staff classification includes the following types of
personnel: guidance counsellors, librarians,
educational media specialists, and attendance
officers
Payroll taxes
Impôts sur les
salaires ou la maind‟œuvre
Payroll taxes consist of taxes payable by
enterprises assessed either as a proportion of the
wages and salaries paid or as a fixed amount per
person employed
Source: SNA 7.70 [OECD 3000]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 46
PCBs
PCB
See Polychlorinated biphenyls
Peer-to-peer
Peer-to-peer is a communication structure in which
individuals interact directly, without going through
a centralized system or hierarchy.
See also: Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs)
PCT
Patent Co-operation Treaty
Context: It is an example of network power and
commercial exploitation through decentralized
information exchange as opposed to centralized
information control. With peer-to-peer technology,
users may share information, contribute to shared
projects or transfer files. Examples of peer-to-peer
include file transfer, data caching, database
generation, distributed computing and grid
technology.
PDF
Adobe Acrobat's Portable Document Format
Peace clause
Provision in Article 13 of the Agriculture Agreement
says agricultural subsidies committed under the
agreement cannot be challenged under other WTO
agreements, in particular the Subsidies Agreement
and GATT. Expires at the end of 2003.
Source: OECD, 2002, OECD Information
Technology Outlook, OECD, Paris, p. 232
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Pension
See Benefit (pension)
Hyperlink:
Pension
See also: Benefit (pension)
579
Pension annuity
See Annuity
- OCDE
The pool of assets forming an independent legal
entity that are bought with the contributions to a
pension plan for the exclusive purpose of financing
pension plan benefits.
Rente de retraite
See also: Annuity
Pension assets
Actifs du plan de
pension
All forms of investment with a value associated to
a pension plan.
The plan/fund members have a legal or beneficial
right or some other contractual claim against the
assets of the pension fund.
Pension funds take the form of either a special
purpose entity with legal personality (such as a
trust, foundation, or corporate entity) or a legally
separated fund without legal personality managed
by a dedicated provider (pension fund
management company) or other financial
institution on behalf of the plan/fund members.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Liabilities (of a pension fund)
Pension benefit
Prestation de pension
See Benefit (Pension), Retirement benefit
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Benefit (pension), Retirement benefit
Pension contribution
See Contribution
See also: Pension funds - SNA
Pension funds - SNA
Fonds de pension
Pension funds are established for purposes of
providing benefits on retirement for specific groups
of employees.
See also: Contribution (to a pension plan)
Pension fund
Administrateur du
administrator
fonds de pension
The individual(s) ultimately responsible for the
operation and oversight of the pension fund.
Context: They have their own assets and liabilities
and they engage in financial transactions in the
market on their own account. These funds are
organised, and directed, by individual employers
and their employees; and the employees and/or
employers make regular contributions.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Governing body (of the pension fund)
They do not cover pension arrangements for the
employees of private or government entities which
do not include a separately organised fund or an
arrangement organised by a non-government
employer in which the reserves of the fund are
simply added to that employer‘s own reserves or
invested in securities issued by that employer.
Pension fund
Gouvernance du fonds
governance
de pension
The operation and oversight of a pension fund. The
governing body is responsible for administration,
but may employ other specialists, such as
actuaries, custodians, consultants, asset managers
and advisers to carry out specific operational tasks
or to advise the plan administration or governing
body.
Source: SNA 4.98
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Pension fund - OECD
Pension insurance
Contrats d'assurance
contracts
pension
Insurance contracts that specify pension plans
contributions to an insurance undertaking in
exchange for which the pension plan benefits will
be paid when the members reach a specified
retirement age or on earlier exit of members from
the plan.
Pension fund
Société gérante du
managing company
fonds de pension
A type of administrator in the form of a company
whose exclusive activity is the administration of
pension funds.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Most countries limit the integration of pension
plans only into pension funds, as the financial
vehicle of the pension plan. Other countries also
consider the pension insurance contract as the
financial vehicle for pension plans.
Pension fund member Membre du fonds de
pension
See Fund member
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Fund member
Pension funds - OECD
See also: Pension funds - OECD
Cotisation de pension
580
See also: Plan sponsor
Pension or capital
income recipients
Pension or capital income recipients are persons of
either sex, not classified as usually economically
active, who receive income from property or
investments, interests, rents, royalties or pensions
from former activities, and who cannot be
classified as students or homemakers
Pension regulator
Instance de
réglementation
A governmental authority with competence over
the regulation of pension systems.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.202
See also: Pension supervisor
Pension scheme
Régime de retraite
See Pension funds, Pension plan, Retirement plan
Pension plan
Plan de retraite
A legally binding contract having an explicit
retirement objective (or in order to satisfy taxrelated conditions or contract provisions the
benefits can not be paid at all or without a
significant penalty unless the beneficiary is older
than a legally defined retirement age).
See also: Pension fund - OECD, Pension plan,
Retirement plan
Pension supervisor
Instance de
surveillance
A governmental authority with competence over
the supervision of pension systems.
Context: This contract may be part of a broader
employment contract, it may be set forth in the
plan rules or documents, or it may be required by
law. In addition to having an explicit retirement
objective, pension plans may offer additional
benefits, such as disability, sickness, and survivors‘
benefits.
Context: Identical term, "Pension regulator"
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Pensionable age
Âge ouvrant droit aux
prestations
See Normal retirement age
See also: Pension fund - OECD, Pension scheme
See also: Normal retirement age
Pension plan
Administrateur du
administrator
plan de retraite
The individual(s) ultimately responsible for the
operation and oversight of the pension plan.
Pensionable service
Services ouvrant droit
à prestations
See Service period
Context: Identical term, "Administrator"
See also: Service period
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris.
Per capita
Par habitant
Per capita is defined as data for each person
Pension plan
beneficiary
See Beneficiary
Source: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Current
English, Seventh Edition, Oxford University Press,
1982, London
Bénéficiaire du plan
de retraite
Per diem allowance
Daily add-on to pay for workers in travel status.
Usually covers lodging, meals, and miscellaneous
expenses related to travel.
See also: Beneficiary
Pension plan member
Adhérent à un plan de
retraite
See Fund member
Source: Glossary of Compensation Terms – United
States Bureau of Labor Statistics, August 1998
See also: Fund member, Pension plan member
Hyperlink:
http://stats.bls.gov/ocs/sp/ncbl0062.pdf
Pension plan sponsor
Promoteur du plan de
retraite
An institution (e.g. company, industry/employment
association) that designs, negotiates, and normally
helps to administer an occupational pension plan
for its employees or members.
Per se illegal
See Rule of reason
See also: Rule of reason
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Per unit resource rent
581
The resource rent divided by the number of
physical units extracted.
Support Estimate
See Consumer Support Estimate (CSE)
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.218
See also: Consumer Support Estimate (CSE)
Percentage diagram
A diagram which exhibits a simple analysis of
statistical data in terms of percentages. The actual
form of the diagram can vary; examples are the
bar chart and the pie chart.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Perceived health
status
Perceived health status refers to the percentage of
the population, aged 15 or more years who report
their health to be 'good' or better.
Percentage
distribution
A frequency distribution with the total frequency
equated to one hundred and the individual class
frequencies expressed in proportion to that figure.
Context: There is not yet a full standardization in
the measurement of perceived health status across
OECD countries. A standard health interview
survey instrument has been recommended to
measure this variable. The recommendation is
described in detail in the publication: "Health
Interview Surveys: Towards International
Harmonization of Methods and Instruments," WHO
Regional Office for Europe, 1996, and is as follows:
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
How is your health in general?
*
*
*
*
*
Very good
Good
Fair
Bad
Very bad
Percentage frequency
Is derived by multiplying each of the relative
frequency values by 100.
Source: Statistics Canada, Educational Resources,
Glossary of Statistical Terms
Source: OECD Health Data 2007: Statistics and
Indicators for 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2007,
Data sources, definitions and methods
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca/english/edu/prototype/glos
sary/gloss.htm
Percentage
A percentage is a special type of proportion where
the ratio is multiplied by a constant, 100, so that
the ratio is expressed per 100.
Percentage point
A level of significance expressed in percentage
form.
Source: Palmore, James A., Gardner, Robert W.,
1994, Measuring mortality, fertility and natural
increase: a self-teaching guide to elementary
measures, Rev. ed., East-West Centre, Honolulu,
Hawaii
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Percentage change
The change in an index [or other] series from one
period to another expressed as a percentage of its
value in the first of the two periods.
Percentiles
The set of partition values which divide the total
frequency into one hundred equal parts. This
particular set of values is most used in education
and psychology.
Source: Producer and International Trade Price
Indexes, Glossary of terms – Australian Bureau of
Statistics
Some writers prefer to use the term ―centile‖
rather ―percentile‖.
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs%40.nsf/66f3
06f503e529a5ca25697e0017661f/f2b7a9d7152e50
18ca25697e0018fc77!OpenDocument
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Percentage Consumer
See also: Quantiles
582
Perennial
Plante vivace
A perennial is a plant that lives from year to year,
becoming dormant after one growing season and
sending up new shoots for the next growing
season
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Performance
assessment
Assessment against a set of predetermined criteria
of the economy, efficiency and effectiveness with
which an organisation carries out a particular
activity or range of activities. Organisations may
be set regular targets on particular aspects of their
performance—financial returns, efficiency, quality
of services supplied, etc.—against which their
performance is monitored and evaluated.
Perfect competition
Perfect competition is defined by four conditions
(in a well-defined market):
a) There is such a large number of buyers and
sellers that none can individually effect the market
price. This means that the demand curve facing an
individual firm is perfectly elastic.
b) In the long run, resources must be freely
mobile, meaning that there are no barriers to entry
and exit.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
c) All market participants (buyers and sellers)
must have full access to the knowledge relevant to
their production and consumption decisions.
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
d) The product should be homogenous.
When these conditions are fulfilled in any welldefined market, the market is perfectly
competitive; when they are fulfilled in all markets,
the economy is perfectly competitive.
Performance audit
Audit covering economy, efficiency and
effectiveness aspects of social programmes (or any
other activity).
Context: It is this definition of perfect competition
which underlies the conclusion that a perfectly
competitive economy is Pareto efficient. Under
these conditions, the price of the goods produced
equals marginal cost and all goods will be
produced in the least costly way. It is evident that
this notion of competition can be highly restrictive
in terms of policy-making. Some economists have
therefore argued that the goal of competition
policy should not be perfect competition, but a
more realistic target such as workable competition.
Another drawback to the use of perfect competition
as a policy goal is that it is not clear that perfect
competition is desirable unless it can be achieved
in all markets.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
See also: Ex poste control
Performance-based
standard
An environmental policy measure which sets a
minimum level of performance or maximum level
of emissions (e.g. g/km for vehicle emission).
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: OECD, 2007, Business and the
Environment: Policy Incentives and Corporate
Responses, OECD, Paris
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Perinatal mortality
The ratio of deaths of children within one week of
birth (early neonatal deaths) plus foetal deaths of
minimum gestation period 28 weeks or minimum
foetal weight of 1000g, expressed per 1,000 births.
See also: Elasticity of demand (price), Second
best, theory of
Performance appraisal
Assessment against a set of predetermined criteria
of the efficiency and effectiveness with which an
individual fulfils an agreed set of tasks. Such
appraisals are frequently used in assessing
whether managers should qualify for pay increases
or promotion.
Context: Note that some variations exist in the
definitions for some countries, particularly with
regard to foetal deaths, and as such, care should
be exercised when making comparisons between
countries.
583
Source: OECD Health Data 2007: Statistics and
Indicators for 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2007,
Data sources, definitions and methods
The periodicity of a particular data category is
determined by several factors, including the ease
of observation or compilation and the needs of
analysis.
Period (interval)
The time interval of single repetition of a varying
quantity of a motion or phenomenon which repeats
itself regularly.
Periodicity is usually expressed in terms of
divisions of the calendar (e.g. monthly, quarterly).
Periodicity of original data refers to the frequency
of compilation of data by the source agency, i.e.
the national agency or international organisation
that provided the information. This agency may or
may not be the agency responsible for the original
collection of the data from respondent or
administrative sources.
Context: The period is the reciprocal of the
frequency. More loosely, the expression is used to
denote the time interval or average interval
between identifiable points of recurrence, e.g.
between peaks or troughs of the series (month,
quarter, year).
Source: International Monetary Fund (IMF), "Guide
to the Data Dissemination Standards, Module 1:
The Special Data Dissemination Standard",
Washington, May 1996
In GESMES/TS, a period is a time reference.
(GESMES/TS User Guide", Release 3)
Source: McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Science and
Technology
Hyperlink:
http://dsbb.imf.org/Applications/web/gdds/gddsgui
delangs
See also: Data collection, GESMES TS,
Observation, Period (time), Reference period, Time
series
See also: Data, Frequency, Release calendar,
Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS),
Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange (SDMX),
Time series
Period (time)
A period is length of time
Source: Dictionary of Banking and Finance, Second
Edition, P.H. Collin, 1991, Peter Collin Publishing
Periodicity MetaStore
Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types refers to
the time distance between observations (whether
stock or flow).
Period average
The arithmetic mean of observations at regular
intervals of time.
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
Source: Sir Maurice G. Kendall and William R.
Buckland for the International Statistical Institute.
A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, Fourth Edition.
London, Longman Group, 1982
See also: Periodicity - IMF, Source periodicity MetaStore
Permanent crops
Cultures vivaces
Permanent crops are crops that, after each
harvest, do not have to be planted for several
years
Period average
exchange rate
Period average exchange rates are the arithmetic
average of the reported monthly exchange rates
during a given period
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Permanent interest
bearing shares (PIBs)
These are deferred shares issued by mutual
societies, which rank beneath ordinary shares
(which are more akin to deposits than equity in
mutual societies) and all other liabilities (including
subordinated debt) in the event of a dissolution of
the society. They provide ―permanent‖ capital.
See also: End-of-period exchange rate
Periodicity - IMF
Periodicity refers to the frequency of compilation of
the data.
Context: In SDMX, "Periodicity" is closely
associated with "Frequency" to form a single
entity, named "Frequency and Periodicity". While
frequency refers to the time interval between the
observations of a time series, periodicity refers to
the frequency of compilation of the data (e.g., a
time series could be available at annual frequency
but the underlying data are compiled monthly,
thus have a monthly periodicity).
Context: In the United Kingdom these instruments
are non-profit participating by regulatory
requirement; rather, predetermined (but not
necessarily fixed) interest costs are payable, with
the amounts to be paid not linked to the issuer‘s
profits; interest costs are not to be paid if this
would result in the society breaching capital
adequacy guidelines and are non-cumulative; but
584
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
more PIBS can be issued in lieu of a cash dividend.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Perpetual bond
Bonds that are due for redemption only in the case
of the borrower‘s liquidation. Usually the terms and
conditions provide a call option at a premium. The
interest rate can be fixed for the whole maturity or
only for an initial period (e.g., 10 years). For each
subsequent period the interest is reset as provided
in the terms and conditions.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Permissible value
An expression of a value meaning allowed in a
specific value domain.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Context: Permissible value meaning is the
relationship of a Value meaning from an
Enumerated conceptual domain with a Permissible
value from an Enumerated value domain.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Permissible value set is the set of Permissible
values for an Enumerated value domain.
Perpetual floating rate
notes
A debt security whose coupon is refixed
periodically on a refix date by reference to an
independent interest rate index such as threemonth LIBOR. Generally, these instruments are
issued by financial institutions, particularly banks,
and are perpetual so as to replicate equity and
qualify as tier-two capital under the Basel capital
adequacy requirements. Investor demand for
perpetual floating-rate notes has been weak in
recent years.
Attributes of Permissible value:
- Permissible value begin date is the date this
value became / becomes allowed in the Value
domain. A Registration authority may determine
whether this date is the date the value becomes
valid in a registry or the date the value becomes
part of the source domain or some other date.
- Permissible value end date is the date this value
became / becomes no longer allowed in the Value
domain. A Registration authority may determine
whether this date is the date the value becomes no
longer valid in a registry or the date the value
becomes no longer part of the source domain or
some other date.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179-3 Information technology - Metadata registries
(MDR) - Part 3: Registry metamodel and basic
attributes", February 2003
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Conceptual domain, ISO / IEC 11179,
Permitted value, Registration authority, Value
domain
Perpetual inventory
method (PIM) Ŕ
Capital stock
Méthode de
l‟inventaire
permanent (MIP Ŕ
PIM, en anglais)
The perpetual inventory method (PIM) produces an
estimate of the stock of fixed assets in existence
and in the hands of producers by estimating how
many of the fixed assets installed as a result of
gross fixed capital formation undertaken in
previous years have survived to the current period
Permitted value
The use of a value as a Permissible Value in an
Enumerated Value Domain.
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179-3 Information technology - Metadata registries
(MDR) - Part 3: Registry metamodel and basic
attributes", February 2003
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
See also: ISO / IEC 11179, Permissible value,
Value domain
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
Peroxyacetyl nitrate
Nitrate de
(PAN)
peroxyacétyle
Peroxyacetyl nitrate (PAN) is a component of
photochemical smog, injurious to plants at a
concentration of more than 0.05 parts per million
(p.p.m)
See also: Perpetual inventory method (PIM) – SNA
Perpetual inventory
method (PIM) Ŕ SNA
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
585
Méthode de
l‟inventaire
permanent (MIP Ŕ
PIM, en anglais) - SCN
The perpetual inventory method (PIM) is a method
of constructing estimates of capital stock and
consumption of fixed capital from time series of
gross fixed capital formation.
Source: Cellular Mobile Pricing Structures and
Trends, Working Party on Telecommunication and
Information Services Policies – November 1999,
page 9, Select Glossary of Mobile Terms
It allows an estimate to be made of the stock of
fixed assets in existence and in the hands of
producers which is generally based on estimating
how many of the fixed assets installed as a result
of gross fixed capital formation undertaken in
previous years have survived to the current period.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/54/42/2538118.pdf
Personal
communications
systems or services
A service that enables access to
telecommunications services by allowing personal
mobility. It enables each user to participate in a
user-defined set of subscribed services as well as
to initiate and receive calls on the basis of a
unique, personal, network-independent number. It
can be used across multiple networks at any fixed,
movable, or mobile terminal regardless of
geographical location.
A PIM approach is also commonly used in valuing
changes in inventories
Source: SNA 6.189 [6.58]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Perpetual inventory method (PIM) –
Capital stock
Persistence
Rémanence
Persistence is the length of time that a compound
is able to remain in the environment after being
introduced into it. Some compounds may persist
indefinitely
Source: Telecommunications services: Glossary of
terms – World Trade Organisation
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/tratop_e/serv_e/t
elecom_e/tel12_e.htm
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Personal computer
Computer designed to be operated by a single user
at a time.
Person
For census purposes the term person denotes each
individual falling within the scope of a census. A
person can be identified as belonging to the
household population (that is to say, the
population living in households) or to the
institutional population (that is to say, the
population living in institutions, as a subset of
collective living quarters)
Source: International Telecommunication Union,
Yearbook of Statistics, Telecommunication
Services. Geneva, annual.
Personal data
Any information relating to an identified or
identifiable natural person (‘data subject‘). An
identifiable person is one who can be identified,
directly or indirectly. Where an individual is not
identifiable, data are said to be anonymous.
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 1.323
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Person with a
disability
A person with a disability is a person who is limited
in the kind or amount of activities that he or she
can do because of on-going difficulties due to a
long-term physical condition, mental condition or
health problem. Short-term disabilities due to
temporary conditions such as broken legs and
illnesses are excluded. Only disabilities lasting for
more than six months should be included
Personal pension
Plans de retraite
plans
individuels
Access to these plans does not have to be linked to
an employment relationship. The plans are
established and administered directly by a pension
fund or a financial institution acting as pension
provider without any intervention of employers.
Individuals independently purchase and select
material aspects of the arrangements. The
employer may nonetheless make contributions to
personal pension plans. Some personal plans may
have restricted membership.
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.262
Personal
communications
services (PCS)
A two-way, 1900 MHz digital voice, messaging and
data service designed as the second generation of
cellular.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
586
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Perturbation-based
methods
Perturbation-based methods falsify the data before
publication by introducing an element of error
purposely for confidentiality reasons. This error can
be inserted in the cell values after the table is
created, which means the error is introduced to the
output of the data and will therefore be referred to
as output perturbation, or the error can be inserted
in the original data on the microdata level, which is
the input of the tables one wants to create; the
method with then be referred to as data
perturbation - input perturbation being the better
but uncommonly used expression.
See also: Mandatory personal pension plan,
Voluntary personal plan
Personal services
See Services, personal
See also: Services, personal
Personnel costs
Personnel costs are defined as the total
remuneration, in cash or in kind, payable by an
employer to an employee in return for work done
by the latter during the reference period. Personnel
costs also include taxes and employees‘ social
security contributions retained by the unit as well
as the employer‘s compulsory and voluntary social
contributions
Possible methods are:
- rounding;
- random perturbation;
- disclosure control methods for microstatistics
applied to macrostatistics.
Source: Statistics in focus: Industry, trade and
services; Theme 4 – 7/2001 - Distributive trades
statistics, Eurostat, Methodological Notes, page 7
Source: Eurostat, 1996, "Manual on disclosure
control methods", Office for Official Publications of
the European Communities, Luxembourg, p. 15
Persons not in labour
force
See Not currently active population
Pervasive computing
The omnipresence of computer power and
associated sensors and controls in daily life.
See also: Not currently active population
Source: Adapting new technologies to census
operations, Arij Dekker, Symposium on Global
Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing
Censuses: Mid-Decade Assessment and Future
Prospects, Statistics Division, Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations
Secretariat New York, 7-10 August 2001, Glossary
Perturbation based
disclosure control
methods
Techniques for the release of data that change the
data before the dissemination in such a way that
the disclosure risk for the confidential data is
decreased but the information content is retained
as far as possible.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/docs/sym
posium_06.htm#_Toc8547016
Context: Perturbation based methods falsify the
data before publication by introducing an element
of error purposely for confidentiality reasons. For
example, an error can be inserted in the cell values
after a table is created, which means that the error
is introduced to the output of the data and will
therefore be referred to as output perturbation.
PES
See Post-enumeration survey
See also: Post-enumeration survey (PES) of a
census
The error can also be inserted in the original data
on the microdata level, which is the input of the
tables one wants to create; the method will then
be referred to as data perturbation - input
perturbation being the better but uncommonly
used expression.
PESCA Community
Initiative
Initiative
communautaire
PESCA
The PESCA Community Initiative is an initiative of
the European Commission that seeks to generate
clearly focused projects to help the fishing sector
of the EU to adapt, and coastal areas to diversify,
their economic activities.
Possible perturbation methods are:
- rounding;
- perturbation, for example, by the addition of
random noise or by the Post Randomisation
Method;
- disclosure control methods for microdata applied
to tabular data.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Pest
A pest is a species, viruses, bacteria and other
micro—organisms considered harmful to the health
of human beings, crops and other living organisms
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
587
viscosity. It also includes lease condensate
(separator liquids) which are recovered from
gaseous hydrocarbons in lease separation facilities
(Energy Statistics of OECD Countries: 1999-2000,
2002 Edition, International Energy Agency, Paris).
Pesticide
Pesticide
A pesticide is any substance or mixture of
substances that is used to prevent, destroy or
control pests — including vectors of human or
animal disease, and unwanted species of plants or
animals. Pesticides may cause harm during, or
otherwise interfere with, the production,
processing, storage, transport or marketing of
food, agricultural commodities, wood and wood
products or animal feedstuffs — or that may be
administered to animals so as to control insects,
arachnids or other pests in or on their bodies
Source: Central Product Classification (CPC).
Version 1.0. United Nations, New York, 1998,
Series M, No. 77, Ver. 1.0
PHARE
Action plan for coordinated aid to Poland and
Hungary (subsequently extended to the remainder
of the Central and East European countries). It
comprises programmes financed by the EU since
1990 to assist with economic restructuring in the
Central and East European countries.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Petroleum coke
Petroleum coke is defined as a black solid residue,
obtained mainly by cracking and carbonising of
petroleum derived feedstocks, vacuum bottoms,
tar and pitches in processes such as delayed
coking or fluid coking. It consists mainly of carbon
(90 to 95 per cent) and has a low ash content.
Phase
The interval between the turning points of a series
which is ordered in time or space is termed a
phase. The distribution of phase lengths provides
one test of random order.
It is used as a feedstock in coke ovens for the steel
industry, for heating purposes, for electrode
manufacture and for production of chemicals.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Context: The two most important qualities are
―green coke‖ and ―calcinated coke‖. This category
also includes ―catalyst coke‖ deposited on the
catalyst during refining processes: this coke is not
recoverable and is usually burned as refinery fuel.
Phased retirement
Retraite progressive
A situation when an individual is allowed to retire
and receive retirement benefits while continuing to
work (usually part-time) and contributing towards
the retirement scheme.
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris.
Petroleum products
Petroleum products are any oil-based products
which can be obtained by distillation and are
normally used outside the refining industry. The
exceptions to this are those finished products
which are classified to refinery feedstocks.
Photochemical air
pollution
Pollution
photochimique de
l‟atmoshpère
Photochemical air pollution is pollution caused by
the reaction of unsaturated and saturated
hydrocarbons, aromatics and aldehydes (emitted
owing to the incomplete combustion of fuels) with
light. It causes eye irritation
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Petroleum, crude
petroleum
Petroleum, crude petroleum comprises:
See also: Smog
- petroleum oils and oils obtained from bituminous
materials, other than crude; preparations n.e.c.
containing by weight 70 per cent or more of these
oils, such oils being the basic constituents of the
preparations (Central Product Classification (CPC)
Group 333).;
Photochemical smog
Brouillard
photochimique
See Photochemical air pollution and Smog
See also: Photochemical air pollution, Smog
- petroleum oils and oils obtained from bituminous
minerals, crude (CPC Class 1201)
Photosynthesis
Photosynthèse
Photosynthesis is a chemical process carried on by
green plants through which light energy is used to
produce glucose from carbon dioxide and water,
and oxygen is released as a by—product
Context: Crude oil is a mineral oil consisting of a
mixture of hydrocarbons of natural origin, being
yellow up to black in colour, of variable density and
588
into products by one means or another. All
physical products eventually return to the
environment as residuals. It is the process in
between, when products circulate within the
economy which is of interest for economic
accounting since this is the point in the cycle when
monetary values can be associated with the flows.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Physical accounting
Comptabilité matières
Physical accounting refers to the natural resource
and environmental accounting of stocks and
changes in stocks in physical (non—monetary)
units, for example, weight, area or number.
Qualitative measures, expressed in terms of
quality classes, types of uses or ecosystem
characteristics, may supplement quantitative
measures. The combined changes in asset quality
and quantity are called volume changes
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 4.7
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Physical input output
tables (PIOT)
A symmetric table that shows physical flows (for all
materials or a subset of materials) from the
environment or rest of the world to the economy,
within the economy and from the economy to the
rest of the world.
See also: Environmental accounting, Natural
resource accounting
Physical accounts
(SEEA)
Accounts expressed in physical units. They may
employ any linear, volumetric, area or mass units
used in the International system of Units (for
example metres, litres, hectares, kilograms).
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.210
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 1.40
Physical pollution
Pollution physique
Physical pollution is pollution caused by colour
(change), suspended solids, foaming, temperature
conditions or radioactivity
Physical deterioration
(of assets)
Physical deterioration is the loss in the physical
efficiency of an asset as it ages. Efficiency in this
context refers to the asset's ability to produce a
quantity of capital services for a given amount of
inputs. It is a synonym for ―wear and tear‖ or ―
decay‖.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Physical supply and
use tables
Supply and use tables are accounts in physical
units in the form of matrices that record the flows
of natural resources, residuals, products and ecosystems inputs according to origins (supply) and
destinations (uses).
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.96
See also: Decay, Wear and tear
Physical flow
accounts
The physical flow accounts presented in [SEEA] are
based around the distinction between natural
resources, ecosystem inputs, products and
residuals. Natural resources and ecosystem inputs
enter the economy; residuals eventually leave it.
Physical Trade
Balance (PTB)
This indicator measures the physical trade surplus
or deficit of an economy. PTB equals imports minus
exports. Physical trade balances may also be
defined including hidden flows associated with
Economic activity itself is concerned with the
production and consumption of goods and services
(products). All natural resources and ecosystem
inputs absorbed by the economy are converted
589
imports and exports (for example on the basis of
TMC accounts).
the total of 360 is allocated proportionally to the
total of each part.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.209
Source: Statistics Canada, Educational Resources,
Glossary of Statistical Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca/english/edu/prototype/glos
sary/gloss.htm
Piece rate
Predetermined amount paid per unit of output to
worker under a piecework incentive plan.
Phytosanitary
regulations
Phytosanitary regulations are government
regulations that restrict or prohibit the importation
and marketing of certain plant species, or products
of these plants, so as to prevent the introduction
or spread of plant pests or pathogens that these
plants may be carrying
Source: Glossary of Compensation Terms – United
States Bureau of Labor Statistics, August 1998
Hyperlink:
http://stats.bls.gov/ocs/sp/ncbl0062.pdf
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Piecework
Method of wage payment based on the number of
units produced, or any work for which piece rates
are paid.
See also: Sanitary regulations, Uruguay Round
Agreement on Agriculture (URAA)
Source: Glossary of Compensation Terms – United
States Bureau of Labor Statistics, August 1998
Pictogram
Graphic symbol that represents an object via
graphic-visual similarity in order to convey either
its meaning or the sound of its name.
Hyperlink:
http://stats.bls.gov/ocs/sp/ncbl0062.pdf
Context: A method of visual presentation of
statistical quantities by means of drawings or
pictures of the subject matter under discussion.
The method is restricted to the presentation of
simple relationships and in order to overcome the
unsatisfactory nature of crude comparisons by the
eye of objects of different size it is now customary
to represent a unit value of the data by a standard
symbol and present the appropriate number of
repetitions of this standard symbol to depict the
magnitude under discussion.
Pigouvian tax
Taxe de Pigouvian
A Pigouvian tax is a tax levied on an agent causing
an environmental externality (environmental
damage) as an incentive to avert or mitigate such
damage
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
This virtually changes the style of the diagram to a
pictorial bar chart. The system has become known
as the Isotype method. (A Dictionary of Statistical
Terms, 5th edition, prepared for the International
Statistical Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published
for the International Statistical Institute by
Longman Scientific and Technical)
Pilot survey
Enquête pilote
A survey, usually on a small scale, carried out prior
to the main survey, primarily to gain information
to improve the efficiency of the main survey. For
example, it may be used to test a questionnaire, to
ascertain the time taken by field procedure or to
determine the most effective size of sampling unit.
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
The term ―exploratory survey‖ is also used, but in
the rather more special circumstance when little is
known about the material or domain under inquiry.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Picture element
See Pixel
PIM
See Perpetual inventory method (PIM) - SNA
See also: Pixel
See also: Perpetual inventory method (PIM) – SNA
Pie chart
A chart in which some figure is broken down into
its constituent parts. A number of degrees out of
Piracy
590
Unauthorized copying of materials protected by
intellectual property rights (such as copyright,
trademarks, patents, geographical indications, etc)
for commercial purposes and unauthorized
commercial dealing in copied materials.
PISA index of
disciplinary climate
The Programme for International Student
Assessment (PISA) index of disciplinary climate
summarises students‘ reports on the frequency
with which, in their : the teacher has to wait a long
time for students to ; students cannot work well;
students don‘t listen to what the teacher says;
students don‘t start working for a long time after
the lesson begins; there is noise and disorder;
and, at the start of class, more than five minutes
are spent doing nothing. A four-point scale with
the response categories ‗never‘, ‗some lessons‘,
‗most lessons‘ and ‗every lesson‘ was used.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
PISA
See Programme for International Student
Assessment
This index was inverted so that low values indicate
a poor disciplinary climate.
See also: Programme for International Student
Assessment (PISA)
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
PISA index of
achievement press
The Programme for International Student
Assessment (PISA) index of achievement press
was derived from students‘ reports on the
frequency with which, in their : the teacher wants
students to work hard; the teacher tells students
that they can do better; the teacher does not like it
when students deliver work; and, students have to
learn a lot. A four-point scale with the response
categories ‗never‘, ‗some lessons‘, ‗most lessons‘
and ‗every lesson‘ was used.
PISA index of
economic, social and
cultural status (ESCS)
The Programme for International Student
Assessment (PISA) index of economic, social and
cultural status was created on the basis of the
following variables: the International SocioEconomic Index of Occupational Status (ISEI); the
highest level of education of the student‘s parents,
converted into years of schooling; the PISA index
of family wealth; the PISA index of home
educational resources; and the PISA index of
possessions related to ―classical‖ culture in the
family home.
The indices were derived using the WARM
estimator with ‗never‘ coded as 1 and all other
response categories coded as 0.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
PISA index of comfort
with and perceived
ability to use
computers
The Programme for International Student
Assessment (PISA) index of comfort with and
perceived ability to use computers was derived
from students‘ responses to the following
questions: How comfortable are you with using a
computer?; How comfortable are you with using a
computer to write a paper?; How comfortable are
you with taking a test on a computer?; and, If you
compare yourself with other 15-year-olds, how
would you rate your ability to use a computer? For
the first three questions, a four-point scale was
used with the response categories ‗very
comfortable‘, ‗comfortable‘, ‗somewhat
comfortable‘ and ‗not at all comfortable‘. For the
last questions, a four-point scale was used with the
response categories ‗excellent‘, ‗good‘, ‗fair‘ and
‗poor‘.
PISA index of interest
in computers
The Programme for International Student
Assessment (PISA) index of interest in computers
was derived from the students‘ responses to the
following statements: it is very important to me to
work with a computer; to play or work with a
computer is really fun; I use a computer because I
am very interested in this; and, I forget the time,
when I am working with the computer. A two-point
scale with the response categories ‗yes‘ and ‗no‘
was used. The indices were derived using the
WARM estimator.
The indices were derived using the WARM
estimator. For information on the conceptual
underpinning of the index see Eignor et al. (1998).
PISA index of teacher
support
The Programme for International Student
Assessment (PISA) index of teacher support was
derived from students‘ reports on the frequency
with which: the teacher shows an interest in every
For information on the conceptual underpinning of
the index see Eignor et al. (1998).
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
591
student‘s learning; the teacher gives students an
opportunity to express opinions; the teacher helps
students with their work; the teacher continues
teaching until the students understand; the
teacher does a lot to help students; and, the
teacher helps students with their learning. A fourpoint scale with the response categories ‗never‘,
‗some lessons‘, ‗most lessons‘ and ‗every lesson‘
was used.
countries was set at 500 and the standard
deviation at 100, with the data weighted so that
each OECD country contributed equally.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
PISA population
The Programme for International Student
Assessment (PISA) population refer to 15-year-old
students, or students who were from 15 years and
3 (completed) months to 16 years and 2
(completed) months at the beginning of the testing
period, and who were enrolled in an educational
institution, regardless of the grade level or type of
institution in which they were enrolled and of
whether they participated in school full-time or
part-time.
The index was derived using the WARM estimator
(Warm, 1985).
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
PISA index of the use
of school resources
The Programme for International Student
Assessment (PISA) index of the use of school
resources was derived from the frequency with
which students reported using the following
resources in their school: the school library;
calculators; the Internet; and laboratories.
Students responded on a five-point scale with the
following categories: ‗never or hardly ever‘, ‗a few
times a year‘, ‗about once a month‘, ‗several times
a month‘ and ‗several times a week‘.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
PIT
Partners in transition (Hungary, Poland, Czech
Republic, Slovak Republic)
The index was derived using the WARM estimator.
Pixel
Acronym for ―picture element‖; the unit of storage
and display in raster mode.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
PISA International
Socio-Economic Index
of Occupational Status
(ISEI)
The Programme for International Student
Assessment (PISA) International Socio-Economic
Index of Occupational Status (ISEI) was derived
from students‘ responses on parental occupation.
The index captures the attributes of occupations
that convert parents‘ education into income. The
index was derived by the optimal scaling of
occupation groups to maximise the indirect effect
of education on income through occupation and to
minimise the direct effect of education on income,
net of occupation (both effects being net of age).
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Place of
disembarkation
The place taken into account is the place in which
a railway passenger leaves the rail vehicle after
being conveyed by it.
Context: A transfer from one rail vehicle to another
is not regarded as embarkation/ disembarkation
even if the passenger changes trains during a
journey. However, if during the transfer another
mode of transport is used, this is to be regarded as
disembarkation from a rail vehicle followed by a
subsequent embarkation on a rail vehicle.
For more information on the methodology, see
Ganzeboom et al. (1992).
The PISA International Socio-Economic Index of
Occupational Status is based on either the father
or mother‘s occupations, whichever is the higher.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
PISA mean score
To facilitate the interpretation of the scores
assigned to students in the Programme for
International Student Assessment (PISA), the PISA
mean score for combined reading, mathematical
and scientific literacy performance across OECD
Place of
disembarkation (from
inland waterways
transport)
592
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
The place taken into account is the place where the
passenger disembarked from an inland waterways
transport (IWT) vessel after having been conveyed
by it.
Context: A transfer from one IWT vessel to
another is regarded as disembarkation before reembarkation.
Place of embarkation
(for road transport)
The place taken into account is the place where the
passenger boarded a road vehicle to be conveyed
by it.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: A transfer from one road vehicle to
another is regarded as embarkation after
disembarkation.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Place of
disembarkation (from
road transport)
The place taken into account is the place where the
passenger alighted from a road vehicle after
having been conveyed by it.
Context: A transfer from one road vehicle to
another is regarded as disembarkation before reembarkation.
Place of loading (for
inland waterways
transport)
The place taken into account is the place where the
goods were loaded on an inland waterways
transport (IWT) freight vessel or where pusher
tugs and tugs have been changed.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Place of embarkation
The place taken into account is the place in which
a railway passenger takes seat in the railway
vehicle to be conveyed by it.
Place of loading (for
rail transport)
The place taken into account is the place in which
the goods are loaded on a rail vehicle to be
transported by it.
Context: A transfer from one rail vehicle directly to
another is not regarded as
disembarkation/embarkation even if the passenger
changes trains during a journey. However, if
during the transfer another mode of transport is
used, this is to be regarded as disembarkation
from a rail vehicle followed by a subsequent
embarkation on a rail vehicle.
Context: Transhipments from one rail vehicle
directly to another and change of tractive vehicle
are not regarded as unloading/loading. However, if
the goods are unloaded from a rail vehicle, loaded
on another mode of transport and, again loaded on
another rail vehicle, this is considered as unloading
from the first rail vehicle followed by loading on
the second rail vehicle.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Place of embarkation
(for inland waterways
transport)
The place taken into account is the place where the
passenger boarded an inland waterways transport
(IWT) vessel to be conveyed by it.
Place of loading (for
road transport)
The place taken into account for loading is the
place where the goods were loaded on a goods
road motor vehicle or where the road tractor has
been changed.
Context: A transfer from one IWT vessel to
another is regarded as embarkation after
disembarkation.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
593
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Place of unloading
(from road transport)
The place taken into account is the place where the
goods were unloaded from a goods road motor
vehicle or where the road tractor has been
changed.
Place of occurrence
The place of occurrence refers to the civil
subdivision of a country (district, county,
municipality and province, department, state) in
which a live birth or death, foetal death, marriage
or divorce takes place
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Place of usual
residence
The place of usual residence is the geographical
place where the enumerated person usually
resides. This may be the same as, or different
from, the place where he or she was present at the
time of the census or his or her legal residence
Place of residence
The place of residence refers to the civil
subdivision of a country (district, county,
municipality, province, department, state) in which
the individual resides
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.20
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Place of work
The place of work is the location in which a
currently employed person performs his or her job,
and where a usually employed person performs the
primary job used to determine his/her other
economic characteristics such as occupation,
industry, and status in employment
Place of unloading
(from inland
waterways transport)
The place taken into account is the place where the
goods were unloaded from an inland waterways
transport (IWT) freight vessel or where pusher
tugs and tugs have been changed.
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.245
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Plan member
See Fund member
Adhérent à un plan
See also: Fund member
Plan sponsor
Promoteur du plan
See Pension plan sponsor
Place of unloading
(from rail transport)
The place taken into account is the place in which
the goods are unloaded from a rail vehicle after
being transported by it.
See also: Pension plan sponsor
Context: Transhipments from one rail vehicle
directly to another and change of tractive vehicle
are not regarded as unloading/loading. However, if
the goods are unloaded from a rail vehicle, loaded
on another mode of transport and, again loaded on
another rail vehicle, this is considered as unloading
from the first rail vehicle followed by loading on
the second rail vehicle.
Plant specific
economies of scale
Plant specific economies of scale are associated
with the total output (frequently encompassing
many products) of an entire plant or plant
complex. Economies of scope may be embodied as
part of plant economies as the costs of common
overheads, e.g., head office administration and
accounting costs, are spread across multiple
products.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
Context: Economies of multi-plant operations are
associated with operating more than one plant and
may arise for such reasons as minimizing
transportation costs of raw materials and/or
594
finished products, to better serve different
geographic markets, economies of scope,
specialization, etc.
Payment and Settlement Systems, Bank for
International Settlements
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/cpss00b.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Point sampling
A method of sampling a geographical area by
selecting points in it, especially by choosing points
at random on a map or aerial photograph.
See also: Economies of scale, Product specific
economies of scale
Plantations
Forests for intensive fuel or industrial wood
production planted or artificially regenerated and
made up of exotic (non-indigenous) species and/or
mono-cultures.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.158
Point source of
Source ponctuelle de
pollution
pollution
The point source of pollution is the anthropogenic
source of emissions that is located at an
identifiable point in space. The term covers
stationary sources such as sewage treatment
plants, power plants, other industrial
establishments, and similar buildings and premises
of small spatial extension
POETRY
Processing of Electronic Translation Request
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Point estimation
One of the two principal bases of estimation in
statistical analysis. Point estimation endeavours to
give the best single estimated value of a
parameter, as compared with interval estimation,
which proceeds by specifying a range of values.
Since the point estimate is surrounded by a band
of error, the distinction between two methods is
sometimes blurred and in interpretation they often
amount to the same thing.
Point-in-time prices
Transaction prices prevailing on a particular day of
the month.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
See also: Estimation
Point-to-point
communication
Electronic data communication by direct
connection, not using the Internet.
Point of
Interconnection (POI)
The geographical location where two networks
interconnect and exchange traffic.
Source: Adapting new technologies to census
operations, Arij Dekker, Symposium on Global
Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing
Censuses: Mid-Decade Assessment and Future
Prospects, Statistics Division, Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations
Secretariat New York, 7-10 August 2001, Glossary
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Point of sale
This term refers to the use of payment cards at a
retail location (point of sale). The payment
information is captured either by paper vouchers
or by electronic terminals, which in some cases are
designed also to transmit the information. Where
this is so, the arrangement may be referred to as
―electronic funds transfer at the point of sale‖
(EFTPOS).
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/docs/sym
posium_06.htm#_Toc8547016
Poison
Substance toxique
A poison is a substance that can cause
disturbances of structure or function, leading to
injury or death when absorbed in relatively small
amounts by human beings, plants or animals
Source: A glossary of terms used in payments and
settlement systems, July 2001, Committee on
595
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Pollutant
Polluant
A pollutant is a substance that is present in
concentrations that may harm organisms (humans,
plants and animals) or exceed an environmental
quality standard. The term is frequently used
synonymously with contaminant
Policy reform
A process in which changes are made to the formal
―rules of the game‖ – including laws, regulations
and institutions – to address a problem or achieve
a goal such as economic growth, environmental
protection or poverty alleviation.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Contaminant
Context: Usually involves a complex political
process, particularly when it is perceived that the
reform redistributes economic, political, or social
power.
Polluter-paysPrincipe du pollueurprinciple
payeur
The polluter-pays principle is the principle
according to which the polluter should bear the
cost of measures to reduce pollution according to
the extent of either the damage done to society or
the exceeding of an acceptable level (standard) of
pollution
Source: OECD, 2006, DAC Guidelines and
Reference Series Applying Strategic Environmental
Assessment: Good Practice Guidance for
Development Co-operation, OECD, Paris
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Policy-based fora
See Discussion fora
See also: User-pays principle
Political corruption
The misuse by government or political officials of
their governmental powers and resources for
illegitimate, usually secret, private gain.
Pollution
Pollution
1. presence of substances and heat in
environmental media (air, water, land) whose
nature, location, or quantity produces undesirable
environmental effects;
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
2. activity that generates pollutants
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Political risk
The risk of nonpayment on an export contract or
project due to action taken by the importer‘s host
government. Such action may include intervention
to prevent transfer of payments, cancellation of a
license, or events such as war, civil strife,
revolution, and other disturbances that prevent the
exporter from performing under the supply
contract or the buyer from making payment.
Sometimes physical disasters such as cyclones,
floods, and earthquakes come under this heading.
Pollution abatement
Lutte antipollution
Pollution abatement refers to technology applied or
measure taken to reduce pollution and/or its
impacts on the environment. The most commonly
used technologies are scrubbers, noise mufflers,
filters, incinerators, waste—water treatment
facilities and composting of wastes
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Pollution damage to
human health
The value of the damage to human health due to
the degradation of the environment. This value,
related to pollution-linked morbidity and excess
mortality, is generally calculated combining the
dose-response technique and various valuation
methods.
Poll taxes
Impôts de capitation
Poll taxes are taxes levied as specific amounts of
money per adult person, or per household,
independently of actual or presumed income or
wealth; they are part of ―miscellaneous current
taxes"
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
Source: SNA 8.54 [OECD 6000]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
596
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 10.155
Population at risk
The population at risk is the population that is
exposed to the occurrence of a vital event, for
example, the total population in the case of
deaths, the legally married population in the case
of divorces and so on
Pollution management
group (of
environment industry)
The pollution management group comprises goods
and services which are clearly supplied for an
environmental purpose, which have a significant
impact in reducing polluting emissions and which
are easily identifiable statistically. In practice this
covers environmental protection services and those
clean products used specifically for environmental
purposes; for example, as fixed capital formation
for producers of environmental protection services.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Population census
A population census is the total process of
collecting, compiling, evaluating, analysing and
publishing or otherwise disseminating
demographic, economic and social data pertaining,
at a specified time, to all persons in a country or in
a well delimited part of a country
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.90
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 1.1
Pollution of poverty
Pollution par la misère
Pollution of poverty refers to environmental
problems that result from the lack of development
rather than from the development process itself.
These problems include poor water quality,
inadequate housing and sanitation, malnutrition
and disease
Population change
Accroissement de la
population
The difference between the size of the population
at the end and the beginning of a period. It is
equal to the algebraic sum of natural increase and
net migration (including corrections). There is
negative change when both of these components
are negative or when one is negative and has a
higher absolute value than the other.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Eurostat Glossary on Demographic
Statistics, 2000 Edition
Pollution prevention
The use of materials, processes, or practices to
reduce, minimise, or eliminate the creation of
pollutants or wastes. It includes practices that
reduce the use of toxic or hazardous materials,
energy, water, and/or other resources.
Population coverage MetaStore
Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types refers to
the population covered by the data.
Source: OECD, 2007, Business and the
Environment: Policy Incentives and Corporate
Responses, OECD, Paris
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
Polychlorinated
Biphényles
biphenyls (PCBs)
polychlorés (PCB)
Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) is a group of
organic compounds used in the manufacture of
plastics, as lubricants, and dielectric fluids in
transformers, in protective coating for wood, metal
and concrete, and in adhesives, wire coating and
so forth.
Population density Ŕ
Eurostat
Densité
démographique Ŕ
Eurostat
Population density is the ratio between (total)
population and surface (land) area. This ratio can
be calculated for any territorial unit for any point in
time, depending on the source of the population
data. In the domain DEMO-R in New Cronos the
population density is calculated using the average
(mid-year) population.
They are highly toxic to aquatic life and persist in
the environment for long periods of time. They can
accumulate in food chains and may produce
harmful side—effects at high concentrations
Context: Given the extensive use made of the
variable population density, it is important that the
definitions of the surface area are consistent
between the member states to ensure
comparability
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
597
local accounts results in a record of population and
population movement at the national level
Source: Recommendations for a harmonised
definition of calculation of surface area of territorial
units, 1999 Edition, p.13 - Eurostat Glossary on
Demographic Statistics, 2000 Edition
Source: International Migration Statistics for OECD
Countries: Sources and Comparability of Migration
Statistics, OECD, page 4
See also: Population density -UN
Population density Densité
UN
démographique Ŕ NU
The population density is the number of population
per unit of total land area of a country
Population unique
A record within a dataset which is unique within
the population on a given key.
Source: Readings in International Environment
Statistics, ECE Standard Statistical Classification of
Land Use, UNECE, Geneva, Conference of
European Statisticians
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
See also: Population density – Eurostat
Population equivalent Equivalent population
(in waste-water
(dans la surveillance
monitoring and
et le traitement des
treatment)
eaux usées)
Population equivalent (in waste-water monitoring
and treatment) refers to the amount of oxygen—
demanding substances whose oxygen consumption
during biodegradation equals the average oxygen
demand of the waste water produced by one
person. For practical calculations, it is assumed
that one unit equals 54 grams of BOD per 24 hours
Population
Analyse de la
vulnerability analysis vulnérabilité d'une
(PVA)
population (AVP)
A Population Vulnerability Analysis (PVA) is an
assessment of the probability of extinction of a
population or species
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Port
Place having facilities for merchant ships to moor
and to load or discharge goods or passengers to or
from seagoing vessels.
Population or
universe (of
household surveys)
The population or universe represents the entire
group of units which is the focus of the study.
Thus, the population could consist of all the
persons in the country, or those in a particular
geographical location, or a special ethnic or
economic group, depending on the purpose and
coverage of the study. A population could also
consist on non-human units such as farms, houses
or business establishments
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Port of
disembarkation (from
sea transport)
The port taken into account is the port where the
passenger disembarked from a seagoing vessel
after having been conveyed by it.
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 4.5
Context: A transfer from one seagoing vessel to
another is regarded as disembarkation before reembarkation.
See also: Population (target, survey)
Population projections
Population projections are estimates of total size or
composition of populations in the future
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 9.148
Population registers
Population registers are accounts of residents
within a country. They are typically maintained via
the legal requirement that both nationals and
foreigners residing in the country must register
with the local authorities. Aggregation of these
Port of embarkation
(for sea transport)
The port taken into account is the port where the
passenger boarded a seagoing vessel to be
conveyed by it.
598
Compilers and Users (Draft), IMF, Washington DC,
March 2000, Appendix III, Glossary of Terms
Context: A transfer from one seagoing vessel to
another is regarded as embarkation after
disembarkation.
Positive externality
See Externalities
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: Externalities - OECD
Positivity
The property whereby the price index and its
constituent vectors of prices and quantities are
positive.
Port of loading
The port taken into account is the port where the
goods were loaded on a seagoing vessel to be
transported by it.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Context: Transshipments from one seagoing vessel
to another are regarded as loading after unloading.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Possible reserves
Reserves where there is considerable doubt over
the technical and or financial viability of extraction.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.25
Port of unloading
The port taken into account is the port where the
goods were unloaded from a seagoing vessel after
having been transported by it.
Context: Transshipments from one seagoing vessel
to another are regarded as unloading before reloading.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Post Randomisation
Method (PRAM)
Protection method for microdata in which the
scores of a categorical variable are changed with
certain probabilities into other scores. It is thus
intentional misclassification with known
misclassification probabilities.
Portal
A portal is the term given to that part of a Website
which acts as a gateway, or launch point, through
which users navigate the World Wide Web.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Internet Infrastructure Indicators, OECD
Working Party on Telecommunication and
Information Services policies, September 1998,
page 25
Post-audit
The process of applying more extensive methods
of measurement to a subsample after the
scheduled conduct of a survey in order to
determine the effect of nonsampling errors.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/11/25/2091083.pdf
Portfolio investment
Investissement de
portefeuille
Portfolio investment is the category of international
investment that covers investment in equity and
debt securities, excluding any such instruments
that are classified as direct investment or reserve
assets
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Source: External Debt Statistics: Guide for
599
Post-cutoff date debt
See Cutoff date
lost
Potential years of life lost (PYLL) is a summary
measure of premature mortality which provides an
explicit way of weighting deaths occurring at
younger ages, which are, a priori, preventable.
See also: Cut-off date
Post-enumeration
survey (PES) of a
census
The post-enumeration survey (PES) of a census is
a special kind of survey designed to measure
census coverage and/or content error
The calculation for PYLL involve adding up deaths
occurring at each age and multiplying this with the
number of remaining years to live until a selected
age limit. The limit of 70 years has been chosen for
the calculations in OECD Health Data
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 1.270
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Postponed retirement
See Deferred retirement
Potentially fertile
See Fertility rate - ISI
Context: Identical term, "Late retirement"
Poverty gap index,
percentage
The mean distance below the poverty line as a
proportion of the poverty line where the mean is
taken over the whole population, counting the nonpoor as having zero poverty gap. That is the mean
shortfall from the poverty line (counting the non
poor as having zero shortfall), expressed as a
percentage of the poverty line.
See also: Deferred retirement
Post-secondary nontertiary level of
education (ISCED 4)
Post-secondary non-tertiary education straddles
the boundary between upper secondary and postsecondary education from an international point of
view, even though it might clearly be considered
upper secondary or post-secondary programmes in
a national context. Although their content may not
be significantly more advanced than upper
secondary programmes, they serve to broaden the
knowledge of participants who have already gained
an upper secondary qualification. The students
tend to be older than those enrolled at the upper
secondary level.
Source: World Bank. World Development
Indicators. Washington, D.C., annual. (table 2.6)
Poverty line
An income level that is considered minimally
sufficient to sustain a family in terms of food,
housing, clothing, medical needs, and so on.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: Jae K. Shim, Joel G. Siegel. Dictionary of
Economics. Business Dictionary Series. New York,
John Wiley & Sons, 1995.
See also: International Standard Classification of
Education (ISCED).
Poverty reduction and
growth facility (PRGF)
An IMF facility known until November 1999 as the
Enhanced Structural Adjustment Facility (ESAF).
The PRGF is available to those countries that are
facing protracted balance of payments problems
and are eligible to borrow on concessional terms
under the International Development Association
(IDA).
Potential gross
domestic product
(GDP)
Potential gross domestic product (GDP) is defined
in the OECD‘s Economic Outlook publication as the
level of output that an economy can produce at a
constant inflation rate. Although an economy can
temporarily produce more than its potential level
of output, that comes at the cost of rising inflation.
Potential output depends on the capital stock, the
potential labour force (which depends on
demographic factors and on participation rates),
the non-accelerating inflation rate of
unemployment (NAIRU), and the level of labour
efficiency
Context: The PRGF supports programs that are
consistent with strategies elaborated by the
borrowing country in a Poverty Reduction Strategy
Paper (PRSP). The PRSP is a comprehensive,
nationally owned strategy that is prepared by the
borrowing country and endorsed in their respective
areas of responsibility by the Boards of the IMF
and World Bank. Funds are provided at an annual
interest rate of 0.5 percent. They are repayable
over 10 years, including a grace period of 5!/2
years.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Potential years of life
600
See Probability proportional to size or Purchasing
power standard
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Probability proportional to size,
Purchasing power standard
See also: Structural adjustment facility (SAF)
Practising nurses
Practising nurses refers to the total number of
nurses certified/registered and actively practicing
in public and private hospitals, clinics and other
health facilities, including self-employed. Nursing
assistants and midwives should be included. Data
should exclude nurses who are working abroad,
working in administrative, research and industry
positions. Data should be calculated to represent
full-time equivalents (FTEs)
Power (kW)
Mechanical force developed by the motive power
installation in a vessel.
Context: This power should be measured in
effective kilowatts (power transmitted to the
propeller) :1 kW=1.36 h.p.; 1 h.p.= 0.735 kW.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Practising
pharmacists
Practising pharmacists refers to the number of
pharmacists (self-employed or employed by
others). The data exclude full-time salaried
pharmacists working in hospitals and in
pharmaceutical manufacturing corporations as well
as pharmacists working abroad. They include
foreign pharmacists licensed to practise. Numbers
should be converted to full-time equivalents (FTEs)
Power code MetaStore
Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types refers to
the power of 10 by which the reported statistics
should be multiplied, e.g. ―6‖ indicating millions of
USD.
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
P-percent rule
A (p,q) rule where q is 100 %, meaning that from
general knowledge any respondent can estimate
the contribution of another respondent to within
100 % (i.e., knows the value to be nonnegative
and less than a certain value which can be up to
twice the actual value).
Practising physicians,
practising general
practitioners,
practising specialists
Practising physicians, practising general
practitioners, practising specialists refers to the
number of physicians, general practitioners and
specialists (including self-employed) who are
actively practicing medicine in public and private
institutions. The data should exclude dentists,
stomatologists, qualified physicians who are
working abroad, working in administration,
research and industry positions. Data should
include foreign physicians licensed to practice and
actively practicing medicine in the country. Data
should be calculated to represent full-time
equivalents
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
PPI
See Producer price index
See also: Producer price index
PPP
PPA (parité de
pouvoir d‟achat)
See Purchasing power parity or Public-private
partnership
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
See also: Public-private partnership (PPP),
Purchasing power parities (PPPs) – OECD
Pre-break observation
See Pre-break value
PPP similarity index
See Price similarity index
See also: Pre-break value
Pre-break value
The pre-break value is the observation, at a time
series break period, that was calculated using the
―old‖ methodology, with the ―observation‖ being
calculated following the ―new‖ methodology.
See also: Price similarity index
PPS
601
Context: SDMX allows for a pre-break value in the
case of a series break (where one would use the
observation value to show the post-break value).
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Predatory pricing
Predatory pricing is a deliberate strategy, usually
by a dominant firm, of driving competitors out of
the market by setting very low prices or selling
below the firm‘s incremental costs of producing the
output (often equated for practical purposes with
average variable costs). Once the predator has
successfully driven out existing competitors and
deterred entry of new firms, it can raise prices and
earn higher profits.
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
See also: GESMES TS, Observation, Time series,
Time series breaks
Precautionary
principles
Principles according which:
Context: The economic literature on the rationality
and effectiveness of predatory pricing is in a state
of flux. Many economists have questioned the
rationality of predatory pricing on grounds that: it
can be at least as costly to the predator as to the
victim; targets of predation are not easily driven
out, assuming relatively efficient capital markets;
and entry or re-entry of firms in the absence of
barriers reduces the predator‘s chances of
recouping losses incurred during the period of
predation.
- Renewable resources should not be used in
excess of their natural regeneration.
- Non-renewable resources should be used
prudently and efficiently with care that the same
function is available to future generations, say by
technological development or shift to use of
renewable resources.
- Sink functions should not be used beyond their
assimilative capacities.
However, other economists have suggested that
price predation might be feasible if it is undertaken
to "soften" up rivals for future acquisition, or if
potential targets of predation or their sources of
capital have less information about costs and
market demand than the predator.
- Activities which cause deterioration in service
functions should be avoided or at least minimised.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 1.32
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Precision
Précision
The property of the set of measurements of being
very reproducible or of an estimate of having small
random error of estimation.
Prediction
Prédiction
In general, prediction is the process of determining
the magnitude of statistical variates at some future
point of time. In statistical contexts the word may
also occur in slightly different meanings; e.g. in a
regression equation expressing a dependent
variate y in terms of dependent x‘s, the value
given for y by specified values of x‘s is called the
―predicted‖ value even when no temporal element
is involved.
Context: Precision is to be contrasted with
accuracy, which is the property of being close to
some target or true value.
Precision is a quality associated with a class of
measurements and refers to the way in which
repeated observations conform to themselves; and
in a somewhat narrower sense refers to the
dispersion of the observations, or some measure of
it, whether or not the mean value around which
the dispersion is measured approximates the
―true‖ value.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003.
See also: Forecasting
See also: Accuracy, Estimation
Pre-emption of
facilities
See Barriers to entry, Anti-competitive practices
Precision farming
Precision farming is a farm management at a level
that allows inputs to be tailored to variable
conditions across short distances in a single field
See also: Anticompetitive practices, Barriers to
entry
602
préliminaire
Preliminary treatment refers to the removal of
large solids, oils, fat and other material from
sewage so as to protect waste-water treatment
facilities engaged in further treatment
Preference share
Part of the share capital of a company that ranks
after secured creditors but before ordinary
shareholders in the event of liquidation. Preference
rights are defined in the articles of association of
the relevant company but may relate to dividend,
voting rights, or distribution of surplus assets.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Premium
In the context of export credits, the amount paid,
usually in advance, by the party to an export
agency for its facilities. Cover will often not be fully
effective until the premium has been paid.
Premiums are normally calculated on the basis of
the exposure, length of credit, and the riskiness of
transacting with the importing country. Premium
income, an important source of revenue for export
credit agencies, is intended to cover the risk of
nonpayment of the credit.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Preferred definition
Preferred definition is an indicator that the
definition text is a preferred definition for an
Administered Item within a language.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179-3 Information technology - Metadata registries
(MDR) - Part 3: Registry metamodel and basic
attributes", February 2003
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: ISO / IEC 11179
Preferred stock
Stock that pays a stipulated dividend to the holder.
Preferred stock has a claim prior to that of
common stock upon the earnings of a corporation
and upon the assets of the corporation in the event
of its liquidation. Frequently without voting rights.
Premium supplements Suppléments de
primes
The value of the premium or contribution
supplements paid by the policyholders or
beneficiaries is equal in total to the entirety of the
income earned by the insurance corporations or
pension funds by investing their technical or
pension reserves.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Although the income earned by the insurance
corporation may not all have been earned as
property income, when attributed to policyholders
the whole amount is so regarded and appears as
the item ―property income attributed to
policyholders"
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Preliminary data /
Provisional data
Some statistical agencies use the term
―Preliminary data‖ to describe the first released
version of a series and ―Provisional data‖ to
describe subsequent versions prior to final
amendment. However, the two terms are often
used interchangeably though users in general
should have no great problem in understanding
that data labelled either ―preliminary‖ or
―provisional‖ are subject to revision provided this is
clearly highlighted by the agency in the release.
Source: SNA 22, Annex IV
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Pre-paid
A system allowing subscribers to pay in advance
for wireless service.
Source: Cellular Mobile Pricing Structures and
Trends, Working Party on Telecommunication and
Information Services Policies – November 1999,
page 9, Select Glossary of Mobile Terms
Clearly informing the use that the data is subject
to revision is more important than the precise term
used to describe such data.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/54/42/2538118.pdf
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
6.1: Data revisions
Prepayment
The partial or full repayment by the borrower,
perhaps at a discount, of an outstanding debt
Preliminary treatment Traitement
603
obligation in advance of the maturity date. The
prepayment may be at a discount from the current
outstanding principal amount.
Note: This item corresponds to HC.5.1.1 in the
ICHA-HC functional classification
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Prescriptive policy
measures
Environmental policy measures which significantly
constrain the regulated agent‘s flexibility with
respect to the choice of abatement strategy to
adopt.
Pre-primary education
(ISCED 0)
Pre-primary education (ISCED 0) is defined as the
initial stage of organised instruction, designed
primarily to introduce very young children to a
school-type environment, that is, to provide a
bridge between home and a school-based
atmosphere. ISCED level 0 programmes should be
centre or school-based, be designed to meet the
educational and developmental needs of children
at least three years of age, and have staff that are
adequately trained (i.e., qualified) to provide an
educational programme for the children.
Source: OECD, 2007, Business and the
Environment: Policy Incentives and Corporate
Responses, OECD, Paris
Present value
The present value is the discounted sum of all
future debt service at a given rate of interest. If
the rate of interest is the contractual rate of the
debt, by construction, the present value equals the
nominal value, whereas if the rate of interest is the
market interest rate, then the present value equals
the market value of the debt.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Context: In debt-reorganization discussions, the
present value concept is used to measure, in a
consistent manner, the burden sharing of debt
reduction among creditors.
See also: International Standard Classification of
Education (ISCED).
Prerequisites of
quality
Prerequisites of quality refer to overarching
institutional conditions for the pursuit of data
quality.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Context: These elements and indicators are
identified to reinforce the idea that data users, who
often cannot replicate or otherwise verify data,
must place their trust in the institutions that
produce statistics and the people who staff them.
Present value of debtto-exports ratio
(PV/X)
Present value (PV) of debt as a percentage of
exports (usually of goods and services) (X). In the
context of the Paris Club and HIPC Initiative,
sometimes present value is mis-described as net
present value (NPV). In this context NPV/X has the
same meaning as PV/X.
Typically, these pointers refer to the larger
institution (called the "umbrella institution" in the
DQAF) of which the compiling unit, such as a
national accounts division or a balance of
payments department, is a part. Further, these
prerequisites typically influence more than one of
the five dimensions in the DQAF.
The DQAF groups the indicators of this kind into
three elements: legal and institutional
environment, resources, and quality awareness.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: International Monetary Found, "Data
Quality Assessment Framework (DQAF) Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Quality – IMF
Prescription
medicines
Prescription medicines are medicines exclusively
sold to customers with a medical voucher,
irrespective of whether it is covered by public or
private funding and include branded and generic
products. In the SHA, this includes the full price
with a breakdown for cost-sharing.
Preshipment
inspection (PSI)
The practice of employing specialized private
companies to check shipment details of goods
ordered overseas — i.e. price, quantity, quality,
etc.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
604
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Source: A System of Health Accounts, OECD,
2000, chapter 3 and chapter 9, HC.6, page 121
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Previously
rescheduled debt
Debt that has been rescheduled on a prior
occasion. This type of debt was generally excluded
from further rescheduling in both the Paris and
London Clubs until 1983. Since then, however,
previously rescheduled debt has frequently been
rescheduled again for countries facing acute
payment difficulties.
Press release
See Statistical press release
See also: Statistical press release
Pressure-stateSchéma pressionresponse framework
réaction
A pressure—state—response framework is a
framework proposed for environmental indicators
and indicators of sustainable development.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Pre-survey
The preparatory survey carried out by participating
countries prior to a price survey. Countries visit
outlets, including those that will be visited during
the actual price collection, to ascertain the
availability, the comparability and the
representativity of the products specified in a presurvey questionnaire. Their responses to the presurvey questionnaire are used to draw up the
product list for the price survey.
Pre-vocational
programmes
Pre-vocational education is mainly designed to
introduce participants to the world of work and to
prepare them for entry into further vocational or
technical programmes. Successful completion of
such programmes does not lead to a labourmarket relevant vocational or technical
qualification.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Price Ŕ ESA
Prix Ŕ SEC
Price is defined as the value of one unit of a
product, for which the quantities are perfectly
homogeneous not only in a physical sense but also
in respect of a number of other characteristics
Prevalence (of illness)
The number of illnesses, accidents or sick persons
in a given population and time, without distinction
between new and old cases.
Source: S.W.A. Gunn. Multilingual Dictionary of
Disaster Medicine and International Relief, English,
Français, Español, Arabic. Boston, Kluwer
Academic Publishers, 1990. (p. 61)
Source: ESA [10.13]
See also: Price – SNA
Price Ŕ SNA
Prix Ŕ SCN
The price of a good or service is the value of one
unit of that good or service
Prevention and public
health services
Prevention and public health services comprise
services designed to enhance the health status of
the population as distinct from the curative
services which repair health dysfunction. Typical
services are vaccination campaigns and
programmes. (Function HC.6 in the ICHA).
Source: SNA 16.9
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Price – ESA
Context: Note that prevention and public health
functions included in the OECD Health Data do not
cover all fields of public health in the broadest
sense of a cross-functional common concern for
health matters in all political and public actions.
Price cap
A system for regulating the prices of a bundle of
services of a regulated firm under which the
individual price for each service is not controlled
but there is a ceiling on the weighted average of all
the prices in the bundle.
Some of these broadly defined public health
functions (such as emergency plans and
environmental protection) are not part of
expenditure on health
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
605
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Price cartel
See Cartel
See also: Cartel
Price deflators
Factors that, when applied to a related time series
of values allows a valid comparison of the true
underlying change free from the influence of price
movements.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Elasticity of demand (price)
Price earnings ratio
The price of a company's stock divided by its
previous year's earnings
Source: Statistics New Zealand, Glossary of
Common Terms
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink:
http://www.stats.govt.nz/domino/external/omni/o
mni.nsf/wwwglsry?openview&count=500
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Price devaluation
See Gross domestic product (GDP) - constant
prices
Price fixing
agreement
A Price fixing agreement is an agreement between
sellers to raise or fix prices in order to restrict
inter-firm competition and earn higher profits.
Price fixing agreements are formed by firms in an
attempt to collectively behave as a monopoly.
See also: Gross domestic product (GDP) – constant
prices
Price discovery
The process of establishing a market price at which
demand and supply for an item are matched. By
bringing buyers and sellers together and making
the process transparent, financial markets facilitate
price discovery.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Price discrimination
Price discrimination occurs when customers in
different market segments are charged different
prices for the same good or service, for reasons
unrelated to costs. Price discrimination is effective
only if customers cannot profitably re-sell the
goods or services to other customers.
Price index
Indice de prix
A price index reflects an average of the
proportionate changes in the prices of a specified
set of goods and services between two periods of
time.
Context: Usually a price index is assigned a value
of 100 in some selected base period and the values
of the index for other periods are intended to
indicate the average percentage change in prices
compared with the base period.
Context: Price discrimination can take many forms,
including setting different prices for different age
groups, different geographical locations, and
different types of users (such as residential vs.
commercial users of electricity).
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Monetary Fund, Washington
DC
Where sub-markets can be identified and
segmented then it can be shown that firms will find
it profitable to set higher prices in markets where
demand is less elastic. This can result in higher
total output, a pro-competitive effect.
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Price discrimination can also have anti-competitive
consequences. For example, dominant firms may
lower prices in particular markets in order to
eliminate vigorous local competitors. However,
there is considerable debate as to whether price
discrimination is really a means of restricting
competition. Price discrimination is also relevant in
regulated industries where it is common to charge
different prices at different time periods (peak load
pricing) or to charge lower prices for high volume
users (block pricing).
Source: SNA 16.14
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Price indexation (of
Indexation sur les
pension benefits)
prix
The method with which pension benefits are
adjusted taking into account changes in prices.
606
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Price reference period
The prices of a period with which prices the prices
in the current-period are compared. The period
whose prices appear in the denominators of the
price relatives.
See also: Wage indexation (for pension benefits)
Price leadership
Price leadership refers to a situation where prices
and price changes established by a dominant firm,
or a firm are accepted by others as the leader, and
which other firms in the industry adopt and follow.
When price leadership is adopted to facilitate
collusion, the price leader will generally tend to set
a price high enough that the least efficient firm in
the market may earn some return above the
competitive level.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
See also: Base period
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Price regulation
Price regulation refers to the policy of setting
prices by a government agency, legal statute or
regulatory authority. Under this policy, minimum
and/or maximum prices may be set.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Context: Price regulation also encompasses
"guidelines" which specify the magnitude by which
prices can increase as in the case of rent controls.
The bases on which regulated prices are set vary.
These may be on costs, return on investment,
markups, etc.
Price levels
Actual money values in a particular period of time.
Source: A Guide to the Consumer Price Index 13th Series, Glossary, Australian Bureau of
Statistics
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/0/9171
F5CDC94489A9CA25697E0018FD59?Open&Highlig
ht=0,glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Price movements
Changes in price levels between two or more
periods. Movements can be expressed in money
values, as price relatives or as percentage
changes.
Price relative
Ratio de prix
A price relative is the ratio of the price of a specific
product in one period to the price of the same
product in some other period.
Source: A Guide to the Consumer Price Index 13th Series, Glossary, Australian Bureau of
Statistics
In purchasing power parity (PPP) comparisons a
price relative refers to the ratios of the same
product in two countries.
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/0/9171
F5CDC94489A9CA25697E0018FD59?Open&Highlig
ht=0,glossary
Context: The ratio of the price of a commodity in
the given period to the price of the same
commodity in the base period; such ratios enter
into price index numbers of the Laspeyres or
Paasche form.
A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th edition,
prepared for the International Statistical Institute
by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the International
Statistical Institute by Longman Scientific and
Technical
Price observation
The price collected or reported for a sampled
product or item.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
It shows how many units of currency A need to be
spent in country A to obtain the same quantity and
quality – that is, the same volume - of the product
that X units of currency B purchases in country B.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
607
Source: SNA 16.15 and 16.81
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
See also: Quantity relative
Price reversal test
A test that may be used under the axiomatic
approach which requires that the quantity index
remains unchanged after the price vectors for the
two periods being compared are interchanged.
See also: HICP
Price tableau
A matrix of prices for a detailed category in which
the rows represent different items and the columns
the various countries.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Price similarity index
The similarity of the structure of prices between
any pair of countries is measured by the
correlation coefficient that is obtained by
regressing the internal price structure of one
country against the corresponding internal price
structure of the other country. Internal price
structures can be expressed as a vector of the
ratios of product prices to the price of a reference
product.
Price undertaking
Undertaking by an exporter to raise the export
price of the product to avoid the possibility of an
anti-dumping duty.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
In practice, the correlation coefficient is obtained
by regressing the basic heading PPPs of the first
country against the corresponding basic heading
PPPs of the second country. The basic heading
PPPs are interpreted as notional prices.
Price updating
A procedure whereby the quantities in the weight
reference period are revalued at the prices of a
later period that serves as the price reference
period, typically the period preceding the current
period. In other words, revaluing the weights in
order to ensure that they are effectively based on
the underlying quantities or volumes of the price
reference period.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Price stability (as ECB
objective)
The maintenance of price stability is the primary
objective of the European Central Bank (ECB).
The revaluing is achieved by multiplying the
expenditure on each product in the weight
reference period by the cumulative price change
for that product between the weight reference
period and the price reference period.
The Governing Council has published a quantitative
definition of price stability in order to give clear
guidance to expectations of future price
developments. The Governing Council defines price
stability as a year-on-year increase in the
Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) for
the euro area of below 2%.
Also known as ―value updating‖.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Reflecting the need for monetary policy to have a
forward-looking, medium-term orientation, price
stability according to this definition is to be
maintained over the medium term.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Context: The definition delineates an upper
boundary for the rate of measured inflation and, at
the same time, the use of the word ―increase‖
signals that deflation, i.e. prolonged declines in the
level of the HICP, would not be deemed consistent
with price stability.
Price-slope
adjustments
Adjustment of prices to a common specification on
the basis of the price determining effects of the
608
key characteristics of the item. Similar to hedonic
price estimation, except that adjustment factors
are based on technical information, not on
parameters estimated from a regression equation
using sample price information.
Primary
confidentiality
It concerns tabular cell data, whose dissemination
would permit attribute disclosure. The two main
reasons for declaring data to be primary
confidential are:
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
- too few units in a cell;
- dominance of one or two units in a cell.
The limits of what constitutes "too few" or
"dominance" vary between statistical domains.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Pricing point
The point in the production or distribution process
to which the price refers. For an output PPI, the
pricing point is generally where the product leaves
its place of production - hence, farm gate or
factory gate price.
Primary data
The most important inputs from among the
universe of institutional, administrative, sample
survey and/or census based information used in
compiling statistical aggregates.
For an input PPI, the pricing point is generally
where the product enters the production process,
which is when it is delivered to the customer hence, purchaser‘s price.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
See also: Basic statistical data, Data source, types
of, Secondary source (of statistical data), Special
Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS)
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Primary education
(ISCED 1)
Primary education (ISCED 1) usually begins at
ages five, six or seven and lasts for four to six
years (the mode of the OECD countries being six
years). Programmes at the primary level generally
require no previous formal education, although it is
becoming increasingly common for children to
have attended a pre-primary programme before
entering primary education.
Pricing to constant
quality
See Specification pricing
See also: Specification pricing
Primary balance
Government net borrowing or net lending
excluding interest payments on consolidated
government liabilities.
The boundary between pre-primary and primary
education is typically the beginning of systematic
studies characteristic of primary education, e.g.,
reading, writing and mathematics. It is common,
however, for children to begin learning basic
literacy and numeracy skills at the pre-primary
level.
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Primary commodities
Food and live animals, beverages and tobacco,
excluding manufactured goods; crude materials,
inedible, excluding fuels, synthetic fibres, waste
and scrap; mineral fuels, lubricants and related
materials, excluding petroleum products; animal
and vegetable oils, fats and waxes.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: International Standard Classification of
Education (ISCED).
Primary energy
Consommation
consumption
d‟énergie primaire
Primary energy consumption refers to the direct
use at the source, or supply to users without
transformation, of crude energy, that is, energy
that has not been subjected to any conversion or
transformation process
Source: United Nations, Commission of the
European Communities, International Monetary
Fund, Organisation for Economic Cooperation and
Development and World Bank. System of National
Accounts 1993 (SNA 1993). Series F, No. 2, Rev. 4
(United Nations publication Sales No. E.94.XVII.4).
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
609
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
criterion
In order to be included in environmental
protection, an activity, a product or a transaction
must have the environmental protection as its
primary purpose.
Primary incomes
Revenus primaires
Primary incomes are incomes that accrue to
institutional units as a consequence of their
involvement in processes of production or
ownership of assets that may be needed for
purposes of production
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.30
Source: SNA 7.2
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Primary source of
statistical data
The organisation or individual responsible for the
collection and aggregation of data from their initial
source.
Primary inputs
Primary inputs are those factors of production that
are treated as exogenous in the framework of
production analysis. In a static framework such as
the one underlying this manual, primary inputs
comprise capital and labour
Context: For information derived from surveys or
censuses such data comprises unit record
information about individual entities. For
administrative data the primary source is the
agency responsible for the compilation of data
from individual persons or organisations to meet
administrative or regulatory requirements.
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry- Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Primary key
One or more fields in an attribute table that
uniquely identify a specific instance, row or record.
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
See also: Data source, Secondary source (of
statistical data)
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Primary suppression
This technique can be characterized as withholding
all disclosive cells from publication, which means
that their value is not shown in the table, but
replaced by a symbol such as ‗ב to indicate the
suppression. According to the definition of
disclosive cells, in frequency count tables all cells
containing small counts and in tables of
magnitudes all cells containing small counts or
representing cases of dominance have to be
primary suppressed.
Primary market
A primary market is a market where new issues
(initial public offerings) of stocks and bonds are
sold, and where the proceeds go to the issuer
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Primary protection
Protection using disclosure control methods for all
cells containing small counts or cases of
dominance.
Primary unit
This term is used in at least two senses.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
The first concerns a statistical unit of record which
is basic in the sense that it does not depend upon
any derived calculations, for example: persons,
miles, tons, gallons, thousands of an article.
The second usage of this term arises in sample
surveys. Where a population consists of a number
of units which may be grouped into larger
aggregates but are not subdivided the units are
Primary purpose
610
called primary. For example, if a town is divided
into districts, each of which is divided into blocks,
each block comprising a number of houses; and if
a sample of houses is desired, the house would be
the primary unit.
used for own consumption or own capital
formation)
Source: SNA 15.16
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Principal activity – Eurostat, Principal
activity – ISIC Rev. 3, Secondary activity – SNA
Principal exchange
rates
See Exchange rates
See also: Multi-stage sampling
Principal
The provision of economic value by the creditor, or
the creation of debt liabilities through other
means, establishes a principal liability for the
debtor, which, until extinguished, may change in
value over time. For debt instruments alone, for
the use of the principal, interest can, and usually
does, accrue on the principal amount, increasing
its value.
See also: Exchange rates
Principal migrant
The principal migrant within a family group is the
person who is considered by immigration
authorities to be the head of the family and upon
whose admission depends that of the other
members of the family
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Principal party (to a
Partie principale
transaction)
(dans une opération)
When a unit carries out a transaction on behalf of
another unit, the transaction is recorded
exclusively in the accounts of the principal party,
although some service output may be recognised
with the intermediary; for example, purchases a
commercial agent makes under the orders of, and
at the expense of, another party are directly
attributed to the latter while the accounts of the
agent only show the fee charged to the principal
for intermediation services rendered
Principal activity Ŕ
Activité principale Ŕ
Eurostat
Eurostat
The principal (or main) activity is identified as the
activity which contributes most to the total value
added of a unit under consideration. The principal
activity so identified does not necessarily account
for 50% or more of the unit's total value added.
The classification of principal activity is determined
by reference to NACE Rev. 1, first at the highest
level of classification and then at more detailed
levels ("top-down" method)
Source: SNA 3.31 and 3.32
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: NACE Rev. 1
See also: Principal activity – ISIC Rev. 3, Principal
activity – SNA
Principal railway
enterprise
Comprises a list of national railway enterprises that
for the purposes of the European Conference of
Ministers of Transport (ECMT) Glossary are
considered as principal enterprises.
Principal activity Ŕ
Activité principale Ŕ
ISIC Rev. 3
CITI Rév. 3
The principal activity of a producer unit is the
activity that contributes most to the value added of
the entity, or the activity the value added of which
exceeds that of an other activity of the entity
Context: These comprise:
Source: ISIC Rev. 3, para 34
Armenia:
Austria: Austrian Federal Railways (OBB)
Azerbaijan:
Belarus: Belarus Railways (BC)
Belgium: Belgian National Railway Company
(SNCB/NMBS)
Bosnia and
Herzegovina: Bosnian Railways (ZBH)
Bulgaria: Bulgarian State Railways (BDZ)
Canada: Canadian Pacific (CP)
Croatia: Croatian Railways (HZ)
Czech Republic: Ceske Drahy (CD)
Denmark: Danish State Railways (DSB)
See also: Principal activity – Eurostat, Principal
activity – SNA, Secondary activity – ISIC Rev. 3
Principal activity Ŕ
Activité principale SNA
SCN
The principal activity of a producer unit is the
activity whose value added exceeds that of any
other activity carried out within the same unit (the
output of the principal activity must consist of
goods or services that are capable of being
delivered to other units even though they may be
611
Estonia:
Finland: Finnish State Railways (VR)
France: French National Railway Company (SNCF)
Georgia:
Germany: German Federal Railway, German State
Railway (DB)
Greece: Hellenic Railways Organisation (CH)
Hungary: Hungarian State Railways (GYSEV/ROEE)
Ireland: Irish Transport Company (CIE)
Israel:
Italy: Italian State Railways (FS)
Kazakstan :
Kyrgyzstan:
Latvia: Latvian State Railways (LDZ)
Lithuania: Lithuanian Railways (LG)
Luxembourg: Luxembourg National Railway
Company (CFL)
Netherlands: Netherlands Railways (NS)
Norway: Norwegian State Railways (NSB)
Poland: Polish State Railways (PKP)
Portugal: Portuguese Railways (CP)
Republic of Moldova:
Romania: Rumanian Railways (CFR)
Russian Federation: Ministry of the Railways of the
Russian Federation
Slovak Republic: Zeleznice Slovenskej Republiky
(ZSR)
Slovenia: Slovenian Railways (SZ)
Spain: Spanish National Railway System (RENFE)
Sweden: Swedish State Railways (SJ); Swedish
National Rail Administration (BV)
Switzerland: Swiss Federal Railways (CFF)
Tajikistan:
The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia:
Turkey: Turkish Republic State Railways (TCDD)
Turkmenistan:
Ukraine: Ukrainian Railways (UZ)
United Kingdom: British Railways (BR), Northern
Ireland Railways (NIR)
USA: Association of American Railroads (AAR); All
class I line-haul railway enterprises*
Uzbekistan:
FR Yugoslavia: Jugoslav Railways (JZ)
The repayment schedule of principal by due date
and instalment amount.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Principal unit of
enumeration of a
population census
The principal unit of enumeration of a population
census are sets of living quarters
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 1.332
See also: Living quarters
Principle of
additionality
Additionality means that the funds of the European
Community should not replace, but be an addition
to national regional policy funds.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Principles and
practices for
international statistics
Principle 1: Official statistics provide an
indispensable element in the information system of
a democratic society, serving the Government, the
economy and the public with data about the
economic, demographic, social and environmental
situation. To this end, official statistics that meet
the test of practical utility are to be compiled and
made available on an impartial basis by official
statistical agencies to honour citizens‘ entitlement
to public information.
* Class I line-haul railways account for some 83
per cent of total route miles and 97 per cent of
freight carryings. The statistics should also take
account of the operation and traffic of the National
Railroad Passenger Corporation (AMTRAK) and the
Auto-Train Corporation. The former is responsible
for the greater part of inter-city train service on US
railways, while the sole function of the later is to
carry passengers and their motor-cars on a nonstop service between Washington D.C. and
Sanford, Florida
Principle 2: To retain trust in official statistics, the
statistical agencies need to decide according to
strictly professional considerations, including
scientific principles and professional ethics, on the
methods and procedures for the collection,
processing, storage and presentation of statistical
data.
Urban services operated by principal railway
enterprises are included.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Principle 3: To facilitate a correct interpretation of
the data, the statistical agencies are to present
information according to scientific standards on the
sources, methods and procedures of the statistics.
Principle 4: The statistical agencies are entitled to
comment on erroneous interpretation and misuse
of statistics.
Principal repayment
schedule
612
Principle 5: Data for statistical purposes may be
drawn from all types of sources, be they statistical
surveys or administrative records. Statistical
agencies are to choose the source with regard to
quality, timeliness, costs and the burden on
respondents.
Prior breakdown
methods
(construction price
indices)
The starting point for prior breakdown methods
used in the compilation of construction price
indices is a list of carefully specified factors or
components, from which the total input or output
costs of a building or construction project are built
up.
Principle 6: Individual data collected by statistical
agencies for statistical compilation, whether they
refer to natural or legal persons, are to be strictly
confidential and used exclusively for statistical
purposes.
There are a range of prior breakdown methods.
These comprise:
Principle 7: The laws, regulations and measures
under which the statistical systems operate are to
be made public.
- standard factors; and the
- component cost method
Principle 8: Coordination among statistical
agencies within countries is essential to achieve
consistency and efficiency in the statistical system.
Source: Sources and Methods: Construction Price
Indices, OECD, Eurostat, 1997, page 19
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/document/4/0,2340,en_2649
_34247_2367940_1_1_1_1,00.html
Principle 9: The use by statistical agencies in each
country of international concepts, classifications
and methods promotes the consistency and
efficiency of statistical systems at all official levels.
See also: Construction price indices
Principle 10: Bilateral and multilateral cooperation
in statistics contributes to the improvement of
systems of official statistics in all countries.
Prior preferred stock
A class of preferred stock that has senior rights
over other classes of preferred stock.
Context: At its Sixth meeting in Rome, from 12 to
14 September 2005, the Committee for the
Coordination of Statistical Activities (CCSA)
endorsed the ―Principles and Practices for
International Statistics‖. This set of 10 principles
and related practices complement the Fundamental
Principles of Official Statistics (adopted by the
United Nations Statistical Commission (UNSC) at
its Special Session of 11-15 April 1994, and the
Declaration of Good Practices in Technical
Cooperation in Statistics, adopted by the UNSC at
its 30th Session of 1-5 March 1999) and are
intended to serve as a professional guide to
statisticians in international and supranational
agencies in the conduct of their statistical
activities.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Prior-posterior rule
Synonym of the (p,q) rule.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
The Principles and Practices of International
Statistics target the use of transparent,
professional and scientific methods by professional
statisticians of international agencies in their work
as well as the precedence that should be given to
statistical considerations in their use of data. They
emphasize the public's right to information about
the mandates of member agencies and the
involvement of countries and others in the
development of international standards. The
confidentiality of individual data records and
promoting the correct use and interpretation of
statistics are also stressed. Coordination and
cooperation between agencies are recognized as
the means to improving professional growth and
strengthening the quality, coherence and
governance of international statistics.
See also: p,q rule
Privacy
Privacy is a concept that applies to data subjects
while confidentiality applies to data.
The concept is defined as follows: "It is the status
accorded to data which has been agreed upon
between the person or organisation furnishing the
data and the organisation receiving it and which
describes the degree of protection which will be
provided."
Context: There is a definite relationship between
confidentiality and privacy. Breach of
confidentiality can result in disclosure of data
which harms the individual. This is an attack on
privacy because it is an intrusion into a person‘s
self-determination on the way his or her personal
data are used. Informational privacy encompasses
Source: OECD, 2005, The Statistics Newsletter,
November 2005, Edition No. 29, OECD, Paris
See also: Fundamental Principles of Official
Statistics
613
an individual‘s freedom from excessive intrusion in
the quest for information and an individual‘s ability
to choose the extent and circumstances under
which his or her beliefs, behaviours, opinions and
attitudes will be shared with or withheld from
others.
business enterprise), or if its Governing Board
consists mostly of members not selected by a
public agency
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 49
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
See also: Educational institution, Government
dependent / independent education institution,
Independent private institution, Public education
institution
Privacy statement /
policy
This ensures that users understand how the
personal information they enter online will be used
and who will have access to it.
Private expenditure
on prevention and
public health
Private expenditure on prevention and public
health refers to privately funded part of
expenditure on prevention and public health. It
includes privately funded occupational health care;
prevention and public health services provided by
charities, other non-Governmental organisations,
voluntary organisations
Source: OECD, 2004, Promise and Problems of EDemocracy: Challenges of Online Citizen
Engagement, OECD, Paris, Annex 1: Commonly
used E-Engagement Terms
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Private conduits
See Private pay-through security
See also: Public expenditure on health
Private flows
Consist of flows at market terms financed out of
private sector resources (i.e. changes in holdings
of private long term assets held by residents of the
reporting country) and private grants (i.e. grants
by non government organisations, net of subsidies
received from the official sector).
See also: Private pay-through security
Private creditors
Creditors that are neither governments nor public
sector agencies. These include private
bondholders, private banks, other private financial
institutions, and manufacturers, exporters, and
other suppliers of goods that have a financial
claim.
Context: In presentations focusing on the receipts
of recipient countries, flows at market terms are
shown as follows:
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
(a) Direct investment: Investment made to acquire
or add to a lasting interest in an enterprise in a
country on the Development Assistance Committee
(DAC) List of Aid Recipients. In practice it is
recorded as the change in the net worth of a
subsidiary in a recipient country to the parent
company, as shown in the books of the latter.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Private debt
Private debt is debt from a loan by a private entity,
such as a bank or an exporter. It may be
guaranteed by the official sector. If it is
rescheduled by the official sector it is reclassified
as other official flow (OOF) debt
(b) International Bank Lending: Net lending to
countries on the List of Aid Recipients by
commercial banks in the Bank of International
Settlements reporting area, i.e. most OECD
countries and most offshore financial centres,
(Bahamas, Bahrain, Cayman Islands, Hong Kong,
Netherlands, Antilles and Singapore), net of
lending to banks in the same offshore financial
centres. Loans from central monetary authorities
are excluded. Guaranteed bank Loans and bonds
are included under other private or bond lending in
these presentations.
Source: Development Assistance Committee (DCA)
International Development Statistics – Handbook
for Reporting Debt Reorganisation on the DAC
Questionnaire
Hyperlink:
http://interdev.oecd.org/dac/pdf/debtreng.pdf
(c) Bond Lending: Net completed international
bonds issued by countries on the DAC List of Aid
Recipients.
Private education
institution
An education institution is classified as private if it
is controlled and managed by a non- governmental
organisation (e.g. a Church, Trade Union or
(d) Other private: Mainly reported holdings of
equities issued by aid recipient countries, and bank
Loans which in this context are included with
guaranteed export credits.
614
The service of providing permanent transmission
connection between two customer premises for the
exclusive use by a customer. This service may be
provided over facilities owned or operated by an
operator or over transmission capacity sold or
leased by a non-facilities-based
telecommunications provider, or reseller, and may
use terrestrial or satellite facilities. It generally
does not involve central office switching
operations.
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
Also called a private leased line.
Private funded social
insurance benefits
Prestations
d‟assurance sociale de
régimes privés
Private funded social insurance benefits are social
insurance benefits payable to households by
insurance enterprises or other institutional units
administering private funded social insurance
schemes
Source: Telecommunications services: Glossary of
terms – World Trade Organisation
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/tratop_e/serv_e/t
elecom_e/tel12_e.htm
Source: SNA 8.79
Private leased line
See Private leased circuit service
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Private leased circuit service
Private pay-through
security
These securities are secured by mortgage collateral
and are issued by private financial entities
(sometimes called ―private conduits‖) with no
guarantees by any government or governmentsponsored agency. Some securities are issued by
public offering (registered with the Securities and
Exchange Commission, SEC), and others are
marketed through private placement.
Private in-patient care
beds
Private in-patient care beds are beds not owned by
central or local Government or social security
establishments
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Private internal rate
of return
The private internal rate of return is equal to the
discount rate that equalises the real costs of
education during the period of study to the real
gains from education thereafter. In its most
comprehensive form, the costs equal tuition fees,
foregone earnings net of taxes adjusted for the
probability of being in employment minus the
resources made available to students in the form
of grants and loans.
Private pension funds
Organisme de retraite
privé
A pension fund that is regulated under private
sector law.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: Public pension plan
See also: Social internal rate of return
Private pension plans
Plans de retraite
privés
A pension plan administered by an institution other
than general government.
Private investment on
health
Private investment on health comprises private
gross capital formation in health care provider
industries (excluding retail sale of medical goods.)
It excludes capital transfers received from the
public sector
Private pension plans may be administered directly
by a private sector employer acting as the plan
sponsor, a private pension fund or a private sector
provider.
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Private pension plans may complement or
substitute for public pension plans. In some
countries, these may include plans for public sector
workers.
Private leased circuit
service
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
615
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Pension plan, Public pension plan
Private sector
The private sector comprises private corporations,
households and non-profit institutions serving
households (NPISHs)
Privatisation
Privatisation refers to transfer of ownership and
control of government or state assets, firms and
operations to private investors.
Source: SNA 19.43
Context: This transfer takes the form of issue and
sale or outright distribution of shares to the
general public. Broadly used, the term privatization
includes other policies such as "contracting out"
that is, the process by which activities, while
publicly organized and financed, are carried out by
private sector companies, e.g., street cleaning,
garbage collection, housing, education.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Non-profit institutions serving
households (NPISHs), Private corporations (nonfinancial and financial), Public sector
Private siding
(railway)
Track or set of tracks which do not belong to the
railway enterprise but are linked up with the track
of a railway enterprise so that an industrial,
commercial or port, etc. establishment or group of
establishments can be served by rail without transshipment.
The policy of privatization has been extensively
implemented in the United Kingdom and since
adopted in several countries around the world.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Probability
A basic concept which may be taken either as
indefinable, expressing in some way a ―degree of
belief‖, or as the limiting frequency in an infinite
random series. Both approaches have their
difficulties and the most convenient axiomatisation
of probability theory is a matter of personal taste.
Fortunately, both lead to much the same calculus
of probabilities.
Private storage
The private storage measure, which aims to
stabilise the market, requires the establishment of
a storage contract, concluded with the intervention
board of the EU member State concerned.
The amount of payment takes into account the
storage costs and the foreseeable trend in prices of
the product in question.
Context: A probability is similar to a rate, the
difference being that the denominator comprises
all those objects in a given population at the
beginning of the period of observation.
It applies to cereals, sugar, milk and dairy
products, isoglucose, wine, sheepmeat, goatmeat,
pigmeat, textile plants and silkworms.
For example: If 10 people die in one year out of a
population of 1 000 at the start of a year, the
probability of dying during that year was 10/1 000,
or 0.01000.
In the beef and veal sector after 1 July 2002 the
decision to grant such aid may be made when the
average price on the EU market is likely to remain
less than 103% of the basic price.
Palmore, James A., Gardner, Robert W., 1994,
Measuring mortality, fertility and natural increase:
a self-teaching guide to elementary measures,
Rev. ed., East-West Centre, Honolulu, Hawaii
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Privately-owned
wagon
Private owners‘ wagons, i.e. not belonging to the
principal railway enterprise, but registered on and
authorized to run on it under specified conditions,
together with wagons hired out by the railway
enterprise to third parties (private persons), and
being operated as private owners‘ wagons.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Probability based
disclosures
Sometimes although a fact is not disclosed with
certainty, the published data can be used to make
a statement that has a high probability of being
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
616
correct.
tm
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Non-probability sampling, Probability
sample
Probability
proportional to size
A sampling procedure whereby each unit in the
universe has a probability of selection proportional
to the size of some known relevant variable. In the
case of establishments, size is usually defined in
terms of employment or output.
Probable reserves
Reserves which are known to exist but where some
doubt exists over whether they are technically or
economically viable.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.25
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Probalistic checking
rule
A probalistic checking rule is a checking rule
causing, with some small probability, incorrect
qualification of data (i.e., it may identify actually
correct data as incorrect and identify incorrect data
as correct).
Probability sample
A probability sample is a sample selected by a
method based on the theory of probability (random
process), that is, by a method involving knowledge
of the likelihood of any unit being selected
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: United Nations Statistics Division,
"Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects", Studies in Methods, Series F,
No. 35, United Nations, New York, 1991
See also: Non-probability sample, Probability
sampling, Sample
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Probability sampling
Sondage probabiliste
Any method of selection of a sample based on the
theory of probability; at any stage of the operation
of selection the probability of any set of units being
selected must be known. It is the only general
method known which can provide a measure of
precision of the estimate. Sometimes the term
random sampling is used in the sense of
probability sampling.
Probalistic imputation
Probalistic imputation is an imputation rule that is
in part a function of a randomization process
exogenous to the experimental observations.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Context: The random selection of a sample of
producers and products from a universe of
industrial activity in which each producer and
product has a known non-zero probability of
selection. It ensures that the items to be priced are
selected in an impartial and objective fashion and
permits the measurement of the quality of survey
results through estimates of the variance or
sampling error.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
PROCAMPO
Programme de
soutien direct aux
zones rurales
(PROCAMPO)
PROCAMPO is a programme of direct support to
farmers in Mexico. It provides for direct payments
per hectare on a historical basis
Also known as ―random sampling‖.
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Monetary Fund, Washington
DC
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
617
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Source: Ireland Central Statistics Office, Freedom
of Information – Appendix 5: Glossary of CSO
Terminology
Process innovation
A process innovation is the implementation of a
new or significantly improved production or
delivery method. This includes significant changes
in techniques, equipment and/or software.
Hyperlink:
http://www.cso.ie/text/foi/append5.html
Produced assets
Actifs produits
Produced assets are non-financial assets that have
come into existence as outputs from processes
that fall within the production boundary of the
SNA; produced assets consist of fixed assets,
inventories and valuables
Context: Process innovations can be intended to
decrease unit costs of production or delivery, to
increase quality, or to produce or deliver new or
significantly improved products.
Source: OECD, 2005, ―The Measurement of
Scientific and Technological Activities: Guidelines
for Collecting and Interpreting Innovation Data:
Oslo Manual, Third Edition‖ prepared by the
Working Party of National Experts on Scientific and
Technology Indicators, OECD, Paris, para. 163
Source: SNA 10.6 and 10.7 [13.14, (AN.1) –
Annex to chapter XIII]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Non-produced assets
Process weight
Poids des matières
destinées à la
transformation
The process weight is the total weight of all
materials, including fuels, introduced into a
manufacturing process. It is used to calculate the
allowable rate of emission of pollutant matter from
the process
Producer Nominal
Assistance Coefficient (NACp)
The Producer Nominal Assistance Co-efficient
(NACp) is an indicator of the nominal rate of
assistance to producers measuring the ratio
between the value of gross farm receipts including
support and gross farm receipts valued at world
market prices without support
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Processing errors
A processing error is the error in final survey
results arising from the faulty implementation of
correctly planned implementation methods.
See also: Producer Nominal Protection Co-efficient
(NPC)
Producer Nominal
Protection Co-efficient
(NPC)
The Producer Nominal Protection Co-efficient (NPC)
is an indicator of the nominal rate of protection for
producers measuring the ratio between the
average price received by producers (at farm
gate), including payments per tonne of current
output, and the border price (measured at farm
gate level)
Context: Processing errors include all postcollection operations, as well as the printing of
questionnaires. Most processing errors occur in
data for individual units, although errors can also
be introduced in the implementation of systems
and estimates.
In survey data, for example, processing errors may
include errors of transcription, errors of coding,
errors of data entry and errors of arithmetic in
tabulation (The International Statistical Institute,
―The Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited
by Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003).
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
See also: Consumer Nominal Protection Coefficient (NACc), Producer Nominal Assistance Coefficient (NACp)
Source: United States Federal Committee on
Statistical Methodology, "Statistical Policy Working
Paper 15: Quality in Establishment Surveys",
Washington D.C., July 1988, page 79
Producer price
Prix au producteur
(agricultural
commodities)
A producer price is the average price or unit value
received by farmers in the domestic market for a
specific agricultural commodity produced within a
specified 12-month period. This price is measured
at the farm gate — that is, at the point where the
commodity leaves the farm — and therefore does
not incorporate the costs of transport and
processing
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/wp15.html
See also: Data processing (DP), Survey
PRODCOM
The EU-wide harmonised classification of products
produced by the industrial sector (directly linked to
the external trade commodity classification)
specified in Council Regulation No. 3294/91.
618
The Producer Support Estimate (PSE) is an
indicator of the annual monetary value of gross
transfers from consumers and taxpayers to
support agricultural producers, measured at farm
gate level, arising from policy measures,
regardless of their nature, objectives or impacts on
farm production or income.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Producer price index
Indice des prix à la
production (IPP)
A measure of the change in the prices of goods
and services either as they leave their place of
production or as they enter the production process.
A measure of the change in the prices received by
domestic producers for their outputs or of the
change in the prices paid by domestic producers
for their intermediate inputs.
Context: The PSE measures support arising from
policies targeted to agriculture relative to a
situation without such policies — i.e., when
producers are subject only to general policies
(including economic, social, environmental and tax
policies) of the country.
The PSE is a gross notion implying that any costs
associated with those policies and incurred by
individual producers are not deducted. It is also a
nominal assistance notion meaning that increased
costs associated with import duties on inputs are
not deducted. But it is an indicator net of producer
contributions to help finance the policy measure
(e.g. producer levies) providing a given transfer to
producers. The PSE includes implicit and explicit
transfers.
Context: The producer price index does not
attempt to measure the actual level of prices, but
is limited to the measurement of the average
change in prices from one period to another. The
producer price index does not measure the value
of production or cost of production, but it can be
used to measure either the change in output prices
due to changes in the basic prices received by
producers or, alternatively, the change in prices
paid by producers for inputs of goods and services
used in the production of output.
The percentage PSE is the ratio of the PSE to the
value of total gross farm receipts, measured by the
value of total farm production (at farm gate
prices), plus budgetary support.
In general terms a PPI can be described as an
index designed to measure either the average
change in the price of goods and services as they
leave the place of production or as they enter the
production process. Thus, producer price indices
fall into two clear categories input prices (i.e.
purchase prices) and output prices (i.e., basic
prices).
The nomenclature and definitions of this indicator
replaced the former Producer Subsidy Equivalent in
1999
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
The 1993 SNA (paragraph 6.205) defines a
producer (output) price as: ―The amount
receivable by the producer from the purchaser for
a unit of a good or service produced as output
minus any VAT or similar deductible tax, invoiced
to the purchaser. It excludes any transport charges
invoiced separately by the producer‖. (Draft
Producer Price Index Manual, The Technical Expert
Groups on the Producer Price Index, Part 1 - The
Theory and Concepts of PPI Measurement, Chapter
2. The Purpose and Uses of Producer Price Indices,
paras. 2,3,5,6)
See also: Aggregate measurement of support
(AMS), Consumer Support Estimate (CSE)
Producer‟s price
Prix du producteur
The producer‘s price is the amount receivable by
the producer from the purchaser for a unit of a
good or service produced as output minus any
VAT, or similar deductible tax, invoiced to the
purchaser; it excludes any transport charges
invoiced separately by the producer.
Context: It also excludes supplier‘s retail and
wholesale margins and separately invoiced
transport and insurance charges. (A producer‘s
price for a product is the basic price plus any nondeductible tax on products paid by the producer
less any subsidies on products received by the
producer.)
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
See also: Consumer price index, Input producer
prices, Output producer prices, Wholesale prices
index
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Monetary Fund, Washington
DC
Producer services
See Services, producer
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
See also: Services, producer
Source: SNA 6.205, 15.28 [3.82]
Producer Support
Estimate (PSE)
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Estimation du soutien
aux producteurs
(ESP)
619
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
See also: Purchaser‘s price – SNA
Producers for own
Producteurs pour
final use
usage final propre
Producers for own final use produce mostly goods
and services for final consumption or fixed capital
formation by the owners of the enterprises in
which they are produced
Product innovation
A product innovation is the introduction of a good
or service that is new or significantly improved
with respect to its characteristics or intended uses.
This includes significant improvements in technical
specifications, components and materials,
incorporated software, user friendliness or other
functional characteristics.
Source: SNA 2.46
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: OECD, 2005, ―The Measurement of
Scientific and Technological Activities: Guidelines
for Collecting and Interpreting Innovation Data:
Oslo Manual, Third Edition‖ prepared by the
Working Party of National Experts on Scientific and
Technology Indicators, OECD, Paris, para. 156
Producer's index
An index constructed from price data supplied by
producers.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Product line
A group or class of products that are relatively
homogeneous in use and in price behaviour.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Producers' surplus
See Deadweight welfare loss
See also: Deadweight welfare loss
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Product (commodity) Technologie unique
technology
par produit
assumption
Product (commodity) technology assumption is one
of two types of technology assumptions used in
converting supply and use tables into symmetric
input-output tables; it assumes that a product has
the same input structure in whichever industry it is
produced
Product line
specification
A statement of the characteristics of the range of
products included in a product line. Its purpose is
to provide the frame within which individual
products may be selected as part of the sample for
pricing. It may also describe the products included
in a sub-index.
Source: SNA 15.144
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Product / process
innovative firm
A product / process innovative firm is one that has
implemented a new or significantly improved
product or process during the period under review.
Product list
See Basket
Source: OECD, 2005, ―The Measurement of
Scientific and Technological Activities: Guidelines
for Collecting and Interpreting Innovation Data:
Oslo Manual, Third Edition‖ prepared by the
Working Party of National Experts on Scientific and
Technology Indicators, OECD, Paris, para. 154
See also: Basket
Product mandating
Requirement that the investor export to certain
countries or region.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Product coverage MetaStore
Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types refers to
the range of products covered by the data.
Hyperlink:
620
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Production Ŕ ESA
Production is an activity resulting in a product. It is
used with reference to the whole range of
economic activities. The term is not reserved for
the agricultural, mining or manufacturing sectors.
It is also used in relation to the service sector.
More specific terms may be used to denote
production: provision of services, processing,
manufacturing, etc., depending on the branch of
activity. Production may be measured in various
ways either in physical terms or according to value
Product specific
economies of scale
Product specific economies of scale are associated
with the volume of output of any single product
made and sold. In a multi-product firm or plant,
product specific economies are often realized by
specializing in the manufacture of one or a few
products over a larger scale of output.
Source: European System of Accounts (ESA) 1995,
[3.07] and NACE Rev. 1, Introduction, P. 21
Such economies generally arise by avoiding the
costs of interrupting production and re-tooling that
is required in order to produce different products
with the same machinery and equipment. Product
specific economies are often the basis for
specialization agreements.
See also: Production – SNA
Production Ŕ SNA
Production - SCN
Production is an activity carried out under the
control and responsibility of an institutional unit
that uses inputs of labour, capital, and goods and
services to produce outputs of goods or services.
There must be an institutional unit that assumes
responsibility for the process and owns any goods
produced as outputs or is entitled to be paid, or
otherwise compensated, for the services provided.
A purely natural process without any human
involvement or direction is not production in an
economic sense
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Economies of scale, Plant specific
economies of scale
Context: Production indices are normally compiled
at monthly or quarterly frequency to measure
increases and decreases in production output.
Indices of industrial production that are compiled
in all OECD Member countries which are used as a
main short-term economic indicator in their own
right because of the impact that fluctuations in the
level of industrial activity have on the remainder of
the economy. The availability of such indices on a
monthly basis and the strong relationship between
changes in the level of industrial production and
economic cyclical behaviour facilitates the use of
production indices as a reference series in the
compilation of cyclical or leading indicators in a
number of countries and by the OECD.
Product specification
A detailed list of the characteristics that identify an
individual sampled product. Its purpose is to
ensure that a consistent price is collected from
period to period relating to a consistent product
with the same terms of sale in each period. Hence,
the characteristics listed cover both the product
(name, serial number, description, etc.) and the
transaction (class of customer, size of shipment,
discounts, payment terms, delivery details, etc.).
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
The Eurostat Manual of Business Statistics
identifies two possible meanings for the concept of
―production‖ in the context of manufacturing, the:
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
- activity of manufacturing, i.e. the transforming of
goods; or
Product test
See Factor reversal test
- result of this activity, i.e. the output of
manufactured goods in a fixed period.
See also: Factor reversal test
The sub-aggregates indices of industrial production
compiled by the OECD reflect these dual meanings.
Most countries compile their sub-aggregate indices
both on an activity basis (e.g. manufacturing,
mining, electricity gas and water) or by type of
end-use of the output (e.g. finished investment
goods, finished consumer durable goods, finished
consumer non-durable goods, finished
intermediate goods). The problem of identifying
the ―outputs‖ for many service activities has
resulted in the adoption of turnover as a proxy
measure of output for services.
Product-by-product
Tableau produit x
table
produit
A product-by-product table is a symmetric inputoutput table with products as the dimension of
both rows and columns; as a result it shows which
products are used in the production of which other
products
Source: SNA 15.150
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
621
Source: SNA (SNA 6.15 [1.20 5.4, 6.6]
to domestic producers. The measure does not
capture the efficiency costs, and thus the loss in
economic welfare attributable to such measures
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
See also: Output, Production – ESA/NACE,
Turnover
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Production account
Compte de production
The production account records the activity of
producing goods and services as defined within the
SNA; its balancing item, gross value added, is a
measure of the contribution to GDP made by an
individual producer, industry or sector
Production workers
Production workers (also referred to as manual
workers or blue-collar workers) generally include
those employees who are engaged in fabrication,
assembly and related activities, material handling,
warehousing and shipping, maintenance and
repair, janitorial and guard services, auxiliary
production (such as power plants), and other
services closely related to the above activities.
Working supervisors are generally included, while
apprentices and other trainees are generally
excluded.
Source: SNA 1.6
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Production boundary
Domaine de la
production
The production boundary includes:
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 608
(a) the production of all individual or collective
goods or services that are supplied to units other
than their producers, or intended to be so
supplied, including the production of goods or
services used up in the process of producing such
goods or services;
See also: White-collar workers
Productive capital
stock
Productive capital stock is the stock of a particular,
homogenous, asset expressed in ‗efficiency‘ units.
The importance of the productive stock derives
from the fact that it offers a practical tool to
estimate capital services. Typically, the latter are
assumed to be proportional to the former
(b) the own-account production of all goods that
are retained by their producers for their own final
consumption or gross capital formation;
(c) the own-account production of housing services
by owner-occupiers and of domestic and personal
services produced by employing paid domestic
staff.
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Source: SNA 6.18 [1.20 and 1.22]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
Production function
Production function is the maximum set of
output(s) that can be produced with a given set of
inputs. Use of a production function implies
technical efficiency. Synonym for production
frontier, the technically efficiency part of a feasible
production set, the set of all input- output
combinations that are feasible (but not necessarily
efficient)
Productivity
Productivity is commonly defined as a ratio of a
volume measure of output to a volume measure of
input use. While there is no disagreement on this
general notion, a look at the productivity literature
and its various applications reveals very quickly
that there is neither a unique purpose for nor a
single measure
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
page 9
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
Production weighted
tariff rate
The production weighted tariff rate is, in concept,
similar to producer support estimates. A measure
of the value of transfers from domestic consumers
Productivity
adjustment
An adjustment made to the prices paid by nonmarket producers for labour, capital and
intermediate inputs so that they correspond to a
622
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 2.31
common level of multi-factor productivity.
Context: In practice, it is an adjustment made to
the prices (compensation of employees) paid by
non-market producers for labour so that they
represent the same level of labour productivity.
Productivity adjustments are not made in EurostatOECD comparisons.
Source: SNA 2.49
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
See also: Items / Products, Products - SDMX
Professional support
for students
Professional support for students includes two subcategories. The first is Pedagogical support at
International Standard Classification of Education
(ISCED) 0-4 and Academic support at ISCED 5-6;
the second is Health and social support at ISCED
0-6.
Productivity change
Productivity change refers conceptually, the
combined effects of changes in technical efficiency,
allocative efficiency, disembodied technical change,
and economies of scale. When measured
residually, additional factors bear on the residual,
in particular the rate of capacity utilisation and
measurement errors
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 46
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Professionalism
The standard, skill and ability suitable for
producing statistics of good quality.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
Context: In SDMX, "Professionalism and Ethical
Standards" describes the elements providing
assurances that statistics are produced on an
impartial basis; elements providing assurances
that the choices of sources and statistical
techniques as well as decisions about
dissemination are informed solely by statistical
considerations; elements providing assurances that
the recruitment and promotion of staff based are
based on relevant aptitude; elements providing
assurances that the statistical entity is entitled to
comment on erroneous interpretation and misuse
of statistics, guidelines for staff behaviour and
procedures used to make these guidelines known
to staff; other practices that provide assurances of
the independence, integrity, and accountability of
the statistical agency.
Products - SDMX
The representative groups of goods and/or services
- and the varieties within them - used to compile
the basic statistical data from which an index is
derived.
Context: Under the SDDS, this point should include
information on the approach used to select items,
replace them when they become permanently
unavailable, and introduce new products in the
item structure prior to the next official weight
update.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
See also: Products - SNA, Special Data
Dissemination Standard (SDDS)
See also: Quality - ISO, Statistical Data and
Metadata Exchange (SDMX)
Products - SNA
Produits
Products, also called ―goods and services‖, are the
result of production; they are exchanged and used
for various purposes: as inputs in the production of
other goods and services, as final consumption or
for investment.
Profit
In economic theory, profit is the surplus earned
above the normal return on capital. Profits emerge
as the excess of total revenue over the opportunity
cost of producing the good. Thus, a firm earning
zero economic profits is still earning a normal or
competitive return. Positive economic profits
therefore indicate that a firm is earning more than
the competitive norm.
Context: Products are goods and services produced
within the economic sphere and used within it,
including flows of goods and services between the
national economy and the rest of the world.
Context: Economic profits are not the same as
accounting profits. In accounting, profits are
simply the excess of revenues over the explicit
costs of obtaining the revenues. Costs are not
calculated as opportunity costs and do not include
a normal return on capital. Moreover, accountants
United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
623
calculate different categories of profits which may
differ from country to country.
The question of whether any of these measures
can be employed to measure economic profits (see
profit) has been widely debated. Moreover, even if
it can be determined that they do, there is
considerable controversy as to whether higher
levels of profitability reflect the exercise of market
power or the returns to superior efficiency and
skills.
For purposes of competition policy, the problem is
that positive economic profits may (but not
necessarily) indicate the existence of monopoly
power. However, economic profits are not
observable and use must be made of accounting
profits. Positive accounting profits may reflect
nothing other than a normal or competitive return.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Profitability
Profits of export
Profits des monopoles
monopolies
d‟exportation
The profits of export monopolies consist of the
profits transferred to governments of export
marketing boards, or other public enterprises
exercising a monopoly over the exports of some
good or service
Profit sharing
Profit sharing refers to definite arrangements
under which workers regularly receive, in addition
to their wages and salaries, a share on some
predetermined basis, in the profits of the
undertaking, the sum allocated to workers varying
with the level of profits. (Adopted at an
International Congress on Profit Sharing held in
Paris in 1889 (Workers Investments in Industry,
T.W. Cynog-Jones, OECD, 1956))
Source: SNA 7.68 [OECD 5124]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, July 1995,
Chapter 4, Profit-sharing in OECD countries, page
141
Profits of fiscal
Profits des monopoles
monopolies
fiscaux
The profits of fiscal monopolies consist of the
profits of fiscal monopolies which are transferred to
government.
Profitability
Measures of profitability figure prominently in both
the empirical literature in industrial organization
and in the resolution of anti-trust cases. At issue is
the extent to which observed (accounting)
measures of profitability can indicate the presence
of monopoly power.
Fiscal monopolies are public corporations, public
quasi-corporations, or government-owned
unincorporated enterprises that have been granted
a legal monopoly over the production or
distribution of a particular kind of good or service
in order to raise revenue; the products involved
are those which are often subjected to excise
taxes, such as tobacco, alcoholic beverages, fuels,
etc.
Context: A variety of measures of profitability have
been employed. Rates of return on equity or assets
are defined as accounting profits divided by either
equity or assets. Profits may be calculated beforeor after-tax and may or may not include interest
payments. Normally, interest payments are
excluded when calculating the rate of return on
equity, but are included when calculating the rate
of return on assets. The rate of return on assets
reflects operating results and, if interest rates are
included, should not reflect financing decisions.
Source: SNA 7.69 [OECD 5122]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Profits of import
Profits des monopoles
monopolies
d‟importation
The profits of import monopolies consist of the
profits transferred to governments of import
marketing boards, or other public enterprises
exercising a monopoly over the import of some
good or service
Many empirical studies have employed the pricecost margin, defined as revenues less variable
costs divided by revenues. This measure typically
excludes various capital costs, but is defended on
the grounds that it is related to the Lerner Index.
Finally, some use has been made of Tobin‘s "q",
defined as the market value of a firm divided by
the replacement costs of its tangible assets. The
market value of a firm is determined in stock
markets. To the extent that stock markets capture
the long-run profitability of a firm, then higher "q"
values reflect greater profitability.
Source: SNA [7.68, 7.69, OECD 5127]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
624
Program budgeting /
program classification
Program budgeting attempts to apply cost-benefit
analysis to the allocation decision, allocate
expenditures by program, and assess results of
programs in relation to objectives.
of objectives or criteria. This may include an
assessment of programme outcomes. Programme
evaluations may be conducted on a regular basis.
They may be internal evaluations, or may be
carried out by a third party such as the Ministry of
Finance, the supreme audit institution (SAI), or an
external consultant.
Context: ―Programs‖ are groupings of government
activities in relation to specific government
objectives. Program classification applies this
principle across all government activities.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
A full system of program budgeting (or subsequent
proposals such as zero-based budgeting) has not
been successfully realized in any country, in large
part because of the high information and complex
management requirements of such systems.
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Programme for
International Student
Assessment (PISA)
The OECD's Programm for International Student
Assessment (PISA) is a collaborative effort among
the Member countries of the OECD to measure how
well young adults, at age 15 and therefore
approaching the end of compulsory schooling, are
prepared to meet the challenges of today's
knowledge societies. The assessment is forward
looking, focusing on young people's ability to use
their knowledge and skills to meet real-life
challenges, rather than the extent to which they
have mastered a specific school curriculum.
Programme crop
(United States)
A programme crop is a crop covered by the federal
loan rate programme. These crops are wheat, corn
(maize), barley, grain sorghum, oats, rye, extralong staple and upland cotton, rice, soybeans,
tobacco, peanuts (groundnuts) and sugar
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
PISA is the most comprehensive and international
effort to date to assess student performance and
to collect data on the student, family and
institutional factors that can help to explain
differences in performance.
Programme
destination
Programme destination, which is defined according
to International Standard Classification of
Education (ISCED), refers to the destination for
which programmes have been designed to prepare
students, such as tertiary education, the labour
market or other programmes at the same or other
levels of education.
Source: Knowledge and Skills for Life: First Results
from PISA 2000, OECD - An overview of PISA,
page 14
Hyperlink: http://pisa.oecd.org/
• "A" programmes are designed to prepare
students for direct access to the next level of
education;
Programme
orientation
Programme orientation, which is defined according
to International Standard Classification of
Education (ISCED), refers to the degree to which a
programme is specifically oriented towards a
certain class of occupations or trades and leads to
a labour-market relevant qualification.
• "B" programmes are designed to prepare
students for access to certain types of but not all
programmes at the next level of education; and
• "C" programmes are designed to prepare
students for direct access to the labour market or
other programmes at the same level of education.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: General (education) programmes, Prevocational programmes, Vocational programmes
Projected benefit
obligation (PBO)
Obligations au titre
des prestations
prévisibles
The actuarial present value of vested and nonvested benefits attributed to the plan through the
pension benefit formula for service rendered to
that date based on employees‘ future salary levels.
Programme duration
See Duration of programme
See also: Duration of programme
Programme
evaluation
The process whereby the activities undertaken by
ministries and agencies are assessed against a set
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
625
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
simple metadata concepts, such as URL, to be
specified for a metadata attribute, within the
context of a metadata structure definition.
See also: Accumulated benefit obligation (ABO)
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
Projection
This term is used in two connected senses.
(1) In relation to a time series it means a future
value calculated according to predetermined
changes in the assumptions of the environment.
See also: ISO / IEC 11179, Object, Object class
Property income
Revenu de la
propriété
Property income is the income receivable by the
owner of a financial asset or a tangible nonproduced asset in return for providing funds to or
putting the tangible non-produced asset at the
disposal of, another institutional unit; it consists of
interest, the distributed income of corporations
(i.e. dividends and withdrawals from income of
quasi-corporations), reinvested earnings on direct
foreign investment, property income attributed to
insurance policy holders, and rent
(2) More recently, it has been used in probability
theory to denote the conditional expectation of a
variate.
Since a regression equation gives the expectation
of the dependent variate conditional upon values of
the predicted (―independent‖) variates and such
equations are used for forecasting or prediction,
the usages are connected.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: SNA 7.88 and 7.89 [7.2]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Investment income
Project-tied migrant
workers
Project-tied migrant workers are migrant workers
admitted by the country of employment for defined
period to work solely on a specific project carried
out in that country by the migrant workers‘
employer
Property income
attributed to
insurance
policyholders
The property income attributed to insurance
policyholders is the investment income receivable
by insurance enterprises on insurance technical
reserves; it is shown in the accounts as being paid
by the insurance enterprises to the insurance
policyholders because the technical reserves are
assets of the policyholders
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Source: SNA 7.124
Promissory note
An unconditional promise to pay a certain sum on
demand on a specified due date. Promissory notes
are widely used in international trade as a secure
means of payment. They are drawn up (issued) by
an importer in favour of the exporter. When the
latter endorses the note, provided the importer is
creditworthy, a promissory note is traded.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Property rights
An intangible non-produced asset which entitles its
owner to use a specific asset for a productive
activity during more than one year.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 6.45
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Property
A characteristic common to all members of an
object class.
Property term
A property term is a component of the data
element name which expresses a property of an
object class. (A component of the name of a data
element which expresses the category to which the
data element belongs.)
Context: A property qualifier is a qualifier of the
element concept property. Property administration
record is the Administration record for a property.
Within SDMX, an ―attribute property‖ allows ad hoc
626
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Unprotected pension plan
Protected preferred
stock
Protected stock has its dividend guaranteed in the
event that the corporation does not earn a profit in
a certain year. A special fund established from
previous corporate earnings pays the dividend
when it is due.
Proportion
Proportion
A proportion is a special type of ratio in which the
denominator includes the numerator.
An example is the proportion of deaths that
occurred to males which would be deaths to males
divided by deaths to males plus deaths to females
(i.e. the total population).
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Context: More common usage of the term
―proportion‖ is in the context of a portion or part in
its relation to the whole.
OED (The Oxford English Dictionary), 1989, eds.
Simpson, J.A & Weiner, E.S.C., Volume 1,
Clarendon Press, Oxford
Protection of ambient Protection de l‟air
air
ambiant
Protection of ambient air refers to environmental
protection activity involving the construction,
maintenance and operation of facilities for the
reduction of emissions into ambient air, or of
concentrations in the air, of air pollutants through
the use of particulate emission collectors, gaseous
emission control devices or other technical means
Source: Palmore, James A., Gardner, Robert W.,
1994, Measuring mortality, fertility and natural
increase: a self-teaching guide to elementary
measures, Rev. ed., East-West Centre, Honolulu,
Hawaii
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Proportion of youths
in education
The proportion of youths in education is defined as
the proportion of youths in each country's labour
force survey who indicated that they were
following a school or university course either
during the reference week of the survey or within
the four weeks preceding the survey.
See also: Air pollution control
Protection of ambient Protection des eaux
water
ambiantes
Protection of ambient water refers to
environmental protection activity including the
construction, maintenance and operation of
sewerage systems, and waste—water and sewage
sludge treatment plants, as well as the restoration
of polluted surface waters and similar efforts
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, September
1988, Chapter 2, Longer-run Labour Market
Issues, page 55
Proportional
frequency
See Frequency
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Frequency
Protection of climate
and the ozone layer
Protection du climat
et de la couche
d‟ozone
Protection of climate and the ozone layer are
measures to control the emissions of greenhouse
gases and gases that adversely affect the
stratospheric ozone layer (carbon dioxide,
methane, nitrous oxide, chloro—fluorocarbons and
halons)
Protected area
Zone protégée
A protected area refers to legally established land
or water area under either public or private
ownership that is regulated and managed to
achieve specific conservation objectives
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Protected pension
Plan de retraite
plan
garanti
A plan (personal pension plan or occupational
defined contribution pension plan) other than an
unprotected pension plan. The guarantees or
promises may be offered by the pension plan/fund
itself or the plan provider (e.g. deferred annuity,
guaranteed rate of return).
See also: Ozone layer
Protection of soil and Protection des sols et
groundwater
des eaux souterraines
Protection of soil and groundwater refers to
environmental protection activity involving the
construction, maintenance and operation of
installations for the decontamination of polluted
soils, the cleansing of groundwater and the
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
627
protection against the infiltration of pollutants
to GATS)
Additional agreements attached to the General
Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS). The
Second Protocol deals with the 1995 commitments
on financial services. The Third Protocol deals with
movement of natural persons.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Groundwater protection
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Protection of species
and habitats
Protection des
espèces et des
habitats
Protection of species and habitats refers to
environmental protection activity comprising the
conservation of threatened species of fauna and
flora and the protection of ecosystems/habitats
that are essential to the well—being of significant
species of fauna and flora
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Prototype
A prototype is an original model constructed to
include all the technical characteristics and
performances of the new product. For example, if a
pump for corrosive liquids is being developed,
several prototypes are needed for accelerated life
tests with different chemicals. A feedback loop
exists so that if the prototype tests are not
successful, the results can be used for further
development of the pump
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Protein engineering
The selective, deliberate (re)designing and
synthesis of proteins.
Source: OECD Frascati Manual, Sixth edition,
2002, para. 114, page 42
Context: This is done in order to cause the
resultant proteins to carry out desired (new)
functions. Protein engineering is accomplished by
changing or interchanging individual amino acids in
a normal protein. This may be done via chemical
synthesis or recombinant DNA technology (i.e.
genetic engineering). ―Protein engineers‖ (actually
genetic engineers) use recombinant DNA
technology to alter a particular nucleotide in the
triplet codon of the DNA of a cell. In this way it is
hoped that the resulting DNA codes for the
different (new) amino acid in the desired location
in the protein produced by that cell.
Hyperlink: http://www1.oecd.org/dsti/sti/statana/prod/eas_fras.htm
Proven reserves
Réserves reconnues
Proven reserves are such estimated quantities of
mineral deposits, at a specific date, as analysis of
geologic engineering data demonstrates with
reasonable certainty to be recoverable in the
future under the same economic and operational
conditions.
Source: OECD, 2005, A Framework for
Biotechnology Statistics, OECD, Paris, Annex 1:
Glossary of Terms Used in the List-Based Definition
Context: Reserves where it is known that it is both
technically feasible and economically viable to
extract the oil.
United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.25
Proteomics
Analysis of the expression, functions and
interactions of all proteins of an organism.
Source: OECD, 2005, A Framework for
Biotechnology Statistics, OECD, Paris, Annex 1:
Glossary of Terms Used in the List-Based Definition
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Protocol
A set of conventions that determine the treatment,
exchange and formatting of data in an electronic
communications system. Similar to a data standard
but applied to procedures.
Provider load
The effort, in terms of time and cost, required for
respondents to provide satisfactory answers to a
survey.
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Context: This burden can lead to providers
experiencing annoyance, anger, frustration, etc.,
at being requested to participate, with escalation
of these feelings generated by the complexity,
length and/or frequency of surveys. The terms
―respondent burden‖ and ―respondent load‖ are
also used to describe provider load.
Protocols
(agreements attached
628
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics, Service
Industries Statistics, "Glossary of Terms";
unpublished on paper.
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/CA25670D007E9EA1/0/DB
35F160E9383A1FCA256B650006C3D0?Open&Highl
ight=0,Glossary
PSTN
Public Switched Telephone Network
Psychiatric care beds
Psychiatric care beds are beds accommodating inpatients for mental health (including substance
abuse therapy), but excluding beds for patients
who are mentally handicapped if the principal
clinical intent is not of a medical nature
Provincial government Administration
provinciale
See State government
See also: State government
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Provision agreement
Arrangement within which the provider supplies
data or metadata.
Context: The agreement may define the scope of
the data or metadata that can be provided.
Public corporations
A legal entity that is owned or controlled by the
government and that produces goods or services
for sale in the market at economically significant
prices. All corporations are members of the nonfinancial corporations sector or financial
corporations sector.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
See also: Data source
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Provisional data
See Preliminary data
See also: Preliminary data / Provisional data
Public debt
Public debt are the external obligations of the
government and public sector agencies
Provisioning
Funds set aside in an entity‘s account for potential
losses arising from financial claims that are not
serviced by the debtor, and/or from claims on the
entity arising out of insurance cover and/or
guarantees given. In many export credit agencies‘
accounts, provisions are divided into general and
specific provisions. General provisions apply to the
overall business, while specific provisions are on a
case-by case basis. Banks make provisions.
Source: External Debt Statistics: Guide for
Compilers and Users (Draft), IMF, Washington DC,
March 2000, Appendix III, Glossary of Terms
Public disclosure
Public disclosure refers to the act of making
information or data readily accessible and available
to all interested individuals and institutions. Some
examples of the different forms that public
disclosure may take include: verbal or written
statements released to a public forum, to the news
media, or to the general public; publication in an
official bulletin, gazette, report, or stand-alone
document; and information posted on a website.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: "Code of Good Practices on Transparency
in Monetary and Financial Policies", Part 1Introduction; approved by the IMF Executive Board
on July 24, 2000
PSE
See Producer Support Estimate
See also: Producer Support Estimate (PSE)
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/mae/mft/sup/part
1.htm#appendix_III
Pseudo-superlative
index
An index which approximates any superlative index
to the second order around an equal price and
quantity point.
See also: Data dissemination
Public education
institution
An education institution is classified as public if it
is:
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
(1) controlled and managed directly by a public
629
education authority or agency; or
methods
(2) is controlled and managed either by a
government agency directly or by a governing
body (Council, Committee etc.), most of whose
members are appointed by a public authority or
elected by public franchise.
See also: Private corporations (non-financial and
financial), Public corporations (non-financial and
financial)
Public exchanges and
securities markets
Public exchanges and securities markets are
organized exchanges and entities such as security
depository companies, accounting and clearing
offices, and other companies providing exchangerelated services.
Context: The extent to which an institution
receives its funding from public or private sources
does not determine the classification status of the
institution. It is possible, for example, for a
privately managed school to obtain all of its
funding from public sources and for a publicly
controlled institution to derive most of its funds
from tuition fees paid by households. Likewise, the
issue of whether or not a public or private body
owns the buildings and site of a school is not
crucial to the classification status.
Depositories and electronic clearing systems
operated by financial corporations fall into this
subsector, as do national self-regulatory
organizations that regulate or supervise exchanges
and related units
Source: Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual,
IMF, Washington, 2000, para. 101
The term ―ownership‖ may refer to the ownership
of school buildings and site, or alternatively
ownership of the institution in the sense of
ultimate management control. Only in the latter
sense is ownership a relevant concept in classifying
institutions
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/mfs/manual/i
ndex.htm
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 49
Public expenditure on
education
Public expenditure refers to spending of public
authorities at all levels. Expenditure that is not
directly related to education (e.g., culture, sports,
youth activities, etc.) is, in principle, not included.
Expenditure on education by other ministries or
equivalent institutions, for example Health and
Agriculture, is included.
See also: Educational institution, Private education
institution, Public education institution
Public employment
services and
administration (of
labour market
programmes)
Public employment services and administration of
labour market programmes include: placement,
counselling and vocational guidance; job-search
courses and related forms of intensified counselling
for persons with difficulties in finding employment;
support of geographic mobility and similar costs in
connection with job search and placement.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Public expenditure on
health
Public expenditure on health refers to expenditure
on health care incurred by public funds. Public
funds are state, regional and local Government
bodies and social security schemes. Public capital
formation on health includes publicly-financed
investment in health facilities plus capital transfers
to the private sector for hospital construction and
equipment. Public funds correspond to HF.1 in the
ICHA-HF classification of health care financing
In addition, all administration costs of labour
market agencies (at central and decentralise
levels), including unemployment benefit agencies
(even if these are separate institutions) as well as
administrative costs of other labour market
programmes are included
Source: Definitions of the Standardised categories
and Sub-categories of Labour Market Programmes,
OECD, 2001
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Public enterprises
Government enterprises and public corporations
are in either case organisations which are entirely,
or mainly, owned and/or controlled by the public
authorities consisting of establishments which by
virtue of their kind of activities, technology and
mode of operation are classed as industries
See also: Private expenditure on prevention and
public health
Public external debt
The external debt obligations of the public sector.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink:
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-and-
630
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Pension funds - OECD, Private pension
funds
Public pension plans
Plans de retraite
publics
Social security and similar statutory programmes
administered by the general government (that is
central, state, and local governments, as well as
other public sector bodies such as social security
institutions).
Public inland
waterways transport
(IWT) enterprise
IWT enterprise which is principally owned (more
than 50 per cent of the capital) by the State or
public authorities and their enterprises.
Public pension plans have been traditionally PAYG
financed, but some OECD countries have partial
funding of public pension liabilities or have
replaced these plans by private pension plans.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Public network
A country's telephone system, including local
loops, exchanges, trunks, and international links
for providing telephone service to the general
public.
See also: Pension plan, Private pension plan
Public road passenger
enterprise
Road transport enterprise which is principally
owned (greater than 50% of the capital) by the
State or public authorities and their enterprises.
Source: Telecommunications services: Glossary of
terms – World Trade Organisation
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/tratop_e/serv_e/t
elecom_e/tel12_e.htm
Public officials
These include people who hold a legislative,
administrative or judicial office (either appointed or
elected); any person exercising a public function,
including for a public agency or a public enterprises
(e.g. a state owned enterprise); any official or
agent of a public international organisation.
Public sea transport
enterprise
Sea transport enterprise which is principally owned
(more than 50 per cent of the capital) by the State
or public authorities and their enterprises.
Source: OECD, 2006, Annual Report on the OECD
Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises:
Conducting Business in Weak Governance Zones,
OECD, Paris
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Public oil pipeline
transport enterprise
Oil pipeline enterprise which is principally owned
(more than 50 per cent of the capital) by the State
or public authorities and their enterprises.
Public sector
The public sector comprises the general
government sector plus all public corporations
including the central bank
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: The scope of the public sector can be
defined in a variety of ways. One option is to
reason in terms of the status of employees. This
criterion is satisfactory in some countries, in which
the vast majority of government workers are civil
servants. But this is not the most widespread case
- quite the contrary, since the trend in many OECD
countries is to recruit staff on fixed-term (i.e. noncivil service) contracts. Even so, civil servants or
not, a distinction can be made between personnel
subject to public law and those subject to private
law, and especially those covered by industry- or
company-wide collective agreements. But the farreaching changes that have affected public
services since the late 1980s will probably make
that distinction inoperative in more and more
Public pension funds
Organisme de retraite
Pension funds that are regulated under public
sector law.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
631
countries. This is already the case in New Zealand,
for example, where all salaried workers in both the
public and private sectors are subject to the same
labour legislation (the Employment Contracts Act
1991).
Source: Energy Statistics Yearbook, 1997, United
Nations, New York, 2000, Definitions, page xviii
Publication (of data)
Publication involves the action of making (data)
public, in printed form or through the internet.
To define the scope of the public sector on the
basis of the employer‘s identity would seem more
satisfactory than the previous criterion. Moreover,
the employer‘s identity is the criterion used by the
OECD Public Management Service in its work on
Public Sector Pay Trends. As part of that activity,
wage bill trends are analysed in parallel with
trends in the ―corresponding‖ employment (i.e.
personnel paid directly by the public authorities).
This approach, which is warranted for strict
analysis of pay bill trends, shows its limitations as
soon as there is any intention of comparing the
volume of public employment from one country to
another. The first difficulty stems from the diverse
ways of financing public expenditure between the
central government, regions, provinces and
municipalities, and, in some cases, between a
federal government and states. Accordingly, if the
chosen criteria is ―who pays?‖, then, in the case of
the National Health Service (NHS) in the United
Kingdom, employees of NHS Trusts - health service
provider units that have opted to change their
status, and which now operate with independent
financing arrangements -should not be counted.
The difficulty is then compounded by the fact that
NHS Trust employees hired before their employer‘s
change of status can opt to retain their previous
contract of employment. In that case, their
conditions of employment and compensation are
set at the national level by Pay Review Bodies and
not locally by their employer.
Context: Publication extends beyond the notion of
hard-copy publication to include CD-ROMS, tapes,
audiocassettes, radio and television broadcasts,
and any other media that can meet the same
objectives.
Source: Handbook of Statistical Organisation, Third
Edition: The Operation and Organisation of a
Statistical Agency, United Nations Statistics
Division, Final draft, February 2002, page 128
See also: Data dissemination
Publicly disclosed
Public disclosure refers to the act of making
information or data readily accessible and available
to all interested individuals and institutions. Some
examples of the different forms that public
disclosure may take include: verbal or written
statements released to a public forum, to the news
media, or to the general public; publication in an
official bulletin, gazette, report, or stand-alone
document; and information posted on a website.
Source: Code of Good Practices on Transparency in
Monetary and Financial Policies, Part 1—
Introduction, Approved by the IMF Executive Board
on July 24, 2000.
(OECD, 1997, Measuring Public Employment in
OECD Countries: Sources, Methods and Results,
OECD, Paris)
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/mae/mft/sup/part
1.htm#appendix_III
Public-private
partnership (PPP)
Arrangements whereby the private sector provides
infrastructure assets and services that traditionally
have been provided by government, such as
hospitals, schools, prisons, roads, bridges, tunnels,
railways, and water and sanitation plants.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
See also: Private sector
Context: Cases where the private operator has
some responsibility for asset maintenance and
improvement are also described as concessions.
While there is no clear agreement on what does or
does not constitute a PPP, they should involve the
transfer of risk from the government to the private
sector.
Public sector balance
The overall balance of the public sector. It is
distinct from public sector borrowing requirement,
which is the overall balance of general government
plus the net borrowing requirements of nonfinancial public corporations.
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Public utilities
Public utilities comprise the undertakings whose
essential purpose is the production, transmission
and distribution of electric energy, primarily for use
by the public. These may be private companies,
co-operative organisations, local or regional
authorities, nationalised undertakings or
governmental organisations
Pumping-in place
The place taken into account is the place at which
the goods were pumped into an oil pipeline.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
632
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Pumping-out place
The place taken into account is the place at which
the goods were pumped out of an oil pipeline.
Purchaser‟s prices Ŕ
Prix d‟acquisition ESA
SEC
At the time of purchase, the purchaser's price is
the price the purchaser actually pays for the
products; including any taxes less subsidies on the
products (but excluding deductible taxes like VAT
on the products); including any transport charges
paid separately by the purchaser to take delivery
at the required time and place; after deductions for
any discounts for bulk or off-peak- purchasers
from standard prices or charges; excluding interest
or services charges added under credit
arrangements; excluding any extra charges
incurred as a result of failing to pay within the
period stated at the time the purchases were made
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Punctuality
Punctuality refers to the possible time lag existing
between the actual delivery date of data and the
target date when it should have been delivered, for
instance, with reference to dates announced in
some official release calendar or previously agreed
among partners.
Source: ESA [3.06]
See also: Purchaser‘s price – SNA
Context: In SDMX, "Timeliness and Punctuality" is
a single entity. While timeliness refers to the lapse
of time between the end of a reference period (or a
reference date) and dissemination of the data,
punctuality refers to the possible time lag existing
between the actual delivery date of data and the
target date when it should have been delivered, for
instance, with reference to dates announced in
some official release calendar or previously agreed
among partners.
Purchaser‟s prices Ŕ
Prix d‟acquisition SNA
SCN
The purchaser‘s price is the amount paid by the
purchaser, excluding any deductible VAT or similar
deductible tax, in order to take delivery of a unit of
a good or service at the time and place required by
the purchaser; the purchaser‘s price of a good
includes any transport charges paid separately by
the purchaser to take delivery at the required time
and place
Source: Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
October 2003
Context: The amount paid by the purchaser in
order to take delivery of a unit of a good or service
at the time and place required by the purchaser. It
excludes any VAT (or similar deductible tax on
products) which the purchaser can deduct from his
or her own VAT liability invoiced to customers. It
includes supplier‘s retail and wholesale margins,
separately invoiced transport and insurance
charges and any VAT (or similar deductible tax on
products) that the purchaser cannot deduct from
his or her own VAT liability.
See also: Quality – Eurostat, Quality - ISO,
Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange (SDMX),
Timeliness - IMF
Purchased goodwill
Fonds commerciaux
Purchased goodwill is the difference between the
value paid for an enterprise as a going concern and
the sum of its assets less the sum of its liabilities,
each item of which has been separately identified
and valued.
A purchaser‘s price for a product is the producer‘s
price plus supplier‘s retail and wholesale margins,
separately invoiced transport and insurance
charges and nondeductible taxes on products
payable by the purchaser.
The value of goodwill includes anything of longterm benefit to the business that has not been
separately identified as an asset, as well as the
value of the fact that the group of assets is used
jointly and is not simply a collection of separable
assets
Purchasers‘ prices are the prices most relevant for
decision-making by buyers.
Source: (AN.223) – Annex to chapter XIII [12.22]
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Monetary Fund, Washington
DC
Purchaser‟s index
An index constructed from price data supplied by
purchasers.
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: SNA 6.215, 15.28 [2.73, 3.83]
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Producer‘s price, Purchaser‘s prices –
ESA
Hyperlink:
633
country A
Purchasing power
parities (PPPs) Ŕ
OECD
Purchasing power parities (PPPs) are the rates of
currency conversion that equalise the purchasing
power of different currencies by eliminating the
differences in price levels between countries. In
their simplest form, PPPs are simply price relatives
which show the ratio of the prices in national
currencies of the same good or service in different
countries
Source: SNA 16.82
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Purchasing power parities (PPPs) – OECD
Purchasing power
standard
The purchasing power standard (PPS) is the name
given by Eurostat to the artificial currency unit in
which the PPPs and real final expenditures for the
EU 25 are expressed – namely, euros based on the
EU 25.
Context: PPPs are calculated in three stages:
- first for individual products,
Context: Euros based on the EU 25 are euros that
have the same purchasing power over the whole of
the EU 25. Their purchasing power is a weighted
average of the purchasing power of the national
currencies of EU Member States. As such they
reflect the average price level in the EU 25 or,
more precisely, the weighted average of the price
levels of Member States.
- then for groups of products or basic headings
and,
- finally, for groups of basic headings or
aggregates.
The PPPs for basic headings are unweighted
averages of the PPPs for individual products. The
PPPs for aggregates are weighted averages of the
PPPs for basic headings.
PPS are defined by equating the total real final
expenditure of the EU 25 on a specific basic
heading, aggregate or analytical category to the
total nominal final expenditure of the EU 25 on the
same basic heading, aggregate or analytical
category.
The weights used are the expenditures on the
basic headings. PPPs at all stages are price
relatives. They show how many units of currency A
need to be spent in country A to obtain the same
volume of a product or a basic heading or an
aggregate that X units of currency B purchases in
country B.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
In the case of a single product, the ―same volume‖
means ―identical volume‖. But in the case of the
complex assortment of goods and services that
make up an aggregate such as GDP, the ―same
volume‖ does not mean an ―identical basket of
goods and services‖.
Pure basic research
Pure basic research is research carried out for the
advancement of knowledge, without working for
long-term economic or social benefits and with no
positive efforts being made to apply the results to
practical problems or to transfer the results to
sectors responsible for its application
The composition of the basket will vary between
countries according to their economic, social and
cultural differences, but each basket will provide
equivalent satisfaction or utility.
Source: OECD Frascati Manual, Fifth edition, 1993,
para. 227, page 50
Also referred to as ―parity‖ or ―parities‖.
Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Hyperlink: http://www1.oecd.org/dsti/sti/statana/prod/eas_fras.htm
See also: Applied research, Basic research,
Oriented basic research
Source: OECD National accounts, Purchasing
Power Parities, Questions about PPPs website
Pure economic rent
See Rent - OECD
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/faq/0,2583,en_2649_34357_
1799281_1_1_1_1,00.html
See also: Rent - UN
Pure price change
The change in the price of a good or service whose
characteristics do not change over time. When
some characteristics do change, that is a change in
quality occurs, the ―pure‖ price change is the price
change remaining after eliminating the contribution
of the change in quality to the observed price
change.
See also: Purchasing power parity (PPP) – SNA
Purchasing power
Parité de pouvoir
parity (PPPs) Ŕ SNA
d‟achat (PPA)
A purchasing power parity (PPP) is a price relative
which measures the number of units of country B‘s
currency that are needed in country B to purchase
the same quantity of an individual good or service
as 1 unit of country A‘s currency will purchase in
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
634
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
See also: Pure price movement
Purpose
Emplois
The concept of purpose, or function, relates to the
type of need a transaction or group of transactions
aims to satisfy or the kind of objective it pursues
Pure price index
A price index that is based on pricing a constant
representative basket of products at the prices of
the base period and at the prices of the current
period. Because the products and their weights
remain constant, any change in the index is due to
price changes only. An index that measures ―pure‖
price change.
Source: SNA 2.50
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Also called ―unequivocal price index‖.
Purpose of a sea
passenger voyage
The reasons for undertaking a voyage are:
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
-----
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Work and education (Commuting)
Business
Holidays
Other (shopping, leisure, family)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: Fixed basket or fixed weight price index
Pure price movement
Price movement that is not attributable to changes
in either the quantity or the quality of a given good
or service.
Purpose of aid
The Development Assistance Committee (DAC)
statistics on the purpose of aid cover three
dimensions: the sector of destination, the form or
type of aid, and the policy objective(s) of aid. Data
are collected on individual commitments in the
Creditor Reporting System (CRS), and in the form
of annual commitment aggregates in the DAC
Questionnaire
Source: Your Guide to the Consumer Price index,
Prices Division, Statistics Canada, Glossary of
Terms.
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca/english/freepub/62-557XIB/free.htm
Pure purpose criterion
For identifying environmental expenditure, a
variant of the purpose criterion where the activities
and expenditure are classified under environmental
protection in so far their only objective is
protecting the environment for example end-ofpipe capital expenditure.
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.30 A
Purpose of inland
waterways passenger
journeys
The reasons for undertaking the journeys are:
-----
Pure random process
The simplest example of a stationary process
where, in discrete time, all the random variables z,
are mutually independent. In continuous time the
process is sometimes referred to as ―white noise‖,
relating to the energy characteristics of certain
physical phenomena.
Work and education (Commuting)
Business
Holidays
Other (shopping, leisure, family).
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
635
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Satellite Account: Recommended Methodological
Framework, the purpose classification is not used
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, para 2.22
Purpose of rail
passenger journey
The reasons for undertaking the journey are:
-----
Work and education (Commuting)
Business
Holidays (vacation)
Other (Shopping, leisure, family)
Purposive sample
A sample in which the individual units are selected
by some purposive method. It is therefore subject
to biases of personal selection and for this reason
is now rarely advocated in its crude form.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Judgment sample, Non-probability
sampling, Quota sample
Purpose of road
passenger journeys
The reasons for undertaking the journey are:
-----
Push technology
Using the Internet to deliver specific but
unrequested information to selected e-mail
addresses.
Work and education (Commuting)
Business
Holidays (vacation)
Other (Shopping, leisure, family)
Source: Adapting new technologies to census
operations, Arij Dekker, Symposium on Global
Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing
Censuses:
Mid-Decade Assessment and Future Prospects,
Statistics Division, Department of Economic and
Social Affairs, United Nations Secretariat
New York, 7-10 August 2001, Glossary
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/docs/sym
posium_06.htm#_Toc8547016
Purpose of visit
Tourists are individuals who travel for leisure,
recreation and holidays.
Pushed barge
IWT freight vessel which is designed to be pushed
and does not have its own means of mechanical
propulsion.
Context: Nevertheless, the definitions of visitors
and tourists used within the Tourism Satellite
Accounts is much broader, and includes all
individuals who travel or visit a place for a purpose
other than "the exercise of an activity remunerated
from within the place visited" (Recommendations
on Tourism Statistics, Part One, para. 20). This
qualification follows the concept of usual
environment as indicating the area where a person
usually lives and works. As a consequence, a
business or commercial traveller may or may not
be a tourist, according to the place from where
he/she is paid and how he/she undertakes his/her
activity.
Context: The fact that a pushed barge is fitted with
an auxiliary engine does not change its nature.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Based on the main purpose of their visit, tourists
and same-day visitors may be classified in the
following categories (Recommendations on
Tourism Statistics, Part One, para. 44):
-
Pushed tanker barge
Pushed barge for the bulk transport of liquids or
gases.
Context: Tankers for the transport in bulk of
powdered products such as cement, flour, plaster,
etc., are to be excluded and are to be counted
among pushed barges
Leisure, recreation and holidays;
Visiting friends and relatives;
Business and professional;
Health treatment;
Religion, pilgrimages;
Other.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
However, in the tables proposed in the Tourism
636
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
PVA
See Population vulnerability analysis
See also: Population vulnerability analysis (PVA)
Pushed-towed barge
Inland waterways transport (IWT) freight vessel
which is designed to be either pushed or towed
and does not have its own means of mechanical
propulsion.
Qualifier
A qualifier is a term that helps define and render a
concept unique
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Context: The fact that a pushed-towed barge is
fitted with an auxiliary engine does not change its
nature.
Qualifier term
A qualifier term is a word or words which help
define and differentiate a name within the
database
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Pushed-towed tanker
barge
Pushed-towed barge for the bulk transport of
liquids or gases.
Qualifying period
Délai d'accès au
régime
See Waiting period
See also: Waiting period
Context: Tankers for the transport in bulk of
powdered products such as cement, flour, plaster
etc., are to be excluded and are to be counted
among pushed-towed barges.
Qualitative
competition
Qualitative competition covers the case where
changes in the type of species or substances cause
changes to other possible uses such as
physiological functioning and habitat for other
species.
Source:
Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared by the
Intersecretariat Working Group on Transport
Statistics – Eurostat, European Conference of
Ministers of Transport (ECMT), United Nations
Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE)
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.33
Pusher tug
Powered vessel developing not less than 37 kW
and designed or fitted for the towing of dumb
barges, pushed-towed barges, or rafts, and for the
pushing of pushed and pushed-towed barges, but
not for the carriage of goods.
Qualitative data
Qualitative data is data describing the attributes or
properties that an object possesses. The properties
are categorized into classes that may be assigned
numeric values. However, there is no significance
to the data values themselves, they simply
represent attributes of the object concerned.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Glossary of Terms on
Statistical Data Editing", Conference of European
Statisticians Methodological material, Geneva,
2000
Pusher vessel
Powered vessel developing not less than 37 kW
and designed or fitted for the pushing of pushed or
pushed-towed barges but not for the carriage of
goods.
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/editingglo
ssary.pdf
Context: Port pusher vessels are excluded.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: Quantitative data
Qualitative errors
Qualitative errors refer to non-sampling errors
such as errors arising from ignorance or
forgetfulness of the facts, refusal to reply to a
637
question, failure to understand a question or
failure of the interviewer to put the question
clearly or to record its answers properly
-
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
methodological soundness;
accuracy and reliability;
serviceability;
accessibility.
There are a number of prerequisites for quality.
These comprise:
- legal and institutional environment;
- resources;
- quality awareness.
Quality Ŕ Eurostat
Eurostat defines the quality of statistics with
reference to six criteria:
Context: Under the SDDS, "quality" is the fourth of
the four dimensions that comprise the standard
(i.e., data, access, integrity, and quality) for which
evidence of a subscribing member's observance
can be judged through monitorable proxies (the
dissemination of documentation on the
methodology and sources used and the
dissemination of data that supports statistical
cross-checks)
1. Relevance: an inquiry is relevant if it meets
users' needs. The identification of users and their
expectations is therefore necessary. In the
European context, domains for which statistics are
available should reflect the needs and priorities
expressed by the users of the European Statistical
System (completeness).
Source: International Monetary Fund, "Data
Quality Assessment Framework (DQAF) Glossary"
2. Accuracy: accuracy is defined as the closeness
between the estimated value and the (unknown)
true value.
Hyperlink: http://dsbb.imf.org/glossary.pdf
See also: Accessibility, Accuracy, Consistency,
Data dissemination standards, Data Quality
Reference Site (DQRS), Integrity, Methodological
soundness, Quality, Quality – Eurostat, Quality National, Quality - OECD, Quality, prerequisites of,
Relevance, Reliability, Serviceability
3. Timeliness and punctuality in disseminating
results: most users want up-to-date figures which
are published frequently and on time at preestablished dates.
4. Accessibility and clarity of the information:
statistical data have most value when they are
easily accessible by users, are available in the
forms users desire and are adequately
documented.
Quality - ISO
The totality of features and characteristics of a
product or service that bear on its ability to satisfy
stated or implied needs.
5. Comparability: statistics for a given
characteristic have the greatest usefulness when
they enable reliable comparisons of values taken
by the characteristic across space and time. The
comparability component stresses the comparison
of the same statistics between countries in order to
evaluate the meaning of aggregated statistics at
the European level.
Context: Several statistical organisations have
developed complementary definitions of quality,
outlining the various dimensions of quality (e.g.
accuracy, timeliness, etc) and the quality of
statistical processes.
In SDMX, "Quality Management" refers to
processes in place to focus on quality, to monitor
the quality of the statistical programs, to deal with
quality considerations in planning the statistical
programs. It also includes how well the resources
meet the requirements of the program, and
measures to ensure efficient use of resources
(staffing, facilities, computing resources, and
financing of statistical programs).
6. Coherence: when originating from a single
source, statistics are coherent in that elementary
concepts can be combined reliably in more
complex ways. When originating from different
sources, and in particular from statistical surveys
of different frequencies, statistics are coherent in
so far as they are based on common definitions,
classifications and methodological standards.
Source: Eurostat, "Assessment of quality in
statistics - Definition of Quality in Statistics",
Working Group, Luxembourg, October 2003
Source: ISO 8402:1994 Quality management and
quality assurance Vocabulary, withdrawn and
revised by ISO 9000:2000 Quality management
systems -- Fundamentals and vocabulary, March
2004
See also: Accessibility, Accuracy, Clarity,
Coherence, Comparability, Completeness,
Punctuality, Quality, Quality – IMF, Quality National, Quality - OECD, Relevance, Timeliness IMF
See also: Quality – Eurostat, Quality – IMF, Quality
- National, Quality - OECD, Quality differences,
Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange (SDMX)
Quality - National
Data quality relates to information about sampling
and non-sampling errors, as well as associated
statistical reporting and adjustments intended to
quantify and account for these errors ….. There are
both direct and indirect measures of data quality.
Quality Ŕ IMF
The dimensions of the IMF definition of "data
quality" are:
- integrity;
638
Direct measures deal with the survey itself, while
indirect measures are the result of process
evaluations or comparative studies
2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Source: Survey Design and Statistical Methodology
Metadata, Software and Standards Management
Branch, Systems Support Division, United States
Bureau of the Census, Washington D.C., August
1998, Section 3.3.6, page 8
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
See also: Quality – Eurostat, Quality – IMF, Quality
- OECD
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Quality - OECD
Quality is viewed as a multi-faceted concept. The
quality characteristics of most importance depend
on user perspectives, needs and priorities, which
vary across groups of users. Given the work
already done in the area of quality by several
organisations, notably, Eurostat, IMF and Statistics
Canada, the OECD was able to draw on their work
and adapt it to the OECD. Thus quality is viewed in
terms of seven dimensions, namely:
-
Quality assurance
A planned and systematic pattern of all the actions
necessary to provide adequate confidence that a
product will conform to established requirements.
Source: Adapting new technologies to census
operations, Arij Dekker, Symposium on Global
Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing
Censuses:
Mid-Decade Assessment and Future Prospects,
Statistics Division, Department of Economic and
Social Affairs, United Nations Secretariat
New York, 7-10 August 2001, Glossary
relevance
accuracy
credibility
timeliness
accessibility
interpretability
coherence
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/docs/sym
posium_06.htm#_Toc8547016
Source: Organisation for Economic Co-operation
and Development (OECD), "Quality Framework for
OECD Statistics", Paris, June 2002
Quality check
An intensive study of a small sample (relative to
the size of the survey) where every effort is made
to attain the highest level of accuracy possible.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/document/43/0,2340,en_264
9_34257_21571947_119820_1_1_1,00.html
See also: Cost efficiency, statistical, Quality –
Eurostat, Quality – IMF, Quality - ISO, Quality National
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Quality adjustment
The process - or the result of the process - of
estimating what the market price of a replacement
product would be if it had the characteristics of the
product it replaces and with whose price its price is
to be compared.
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Quality circles
Structured employee involvement groups operating
in designated work areas that meet regularly to
identify work related problems and to suggest
solutions or improvements to management.
The process requires estimating the market value
of any differences in the price-determining
characteristics of the two products and adjusting by addition, subtraction or multiplication by a
coefficient - the observed price of the replacement
product.
Source: Glossary of Compensation Terms – United
States Bureau of Labor Statistics, August 1998
The adjustment is made in order that the price
comparison between the two products reflects
―pure‖ price change only.
Hyperlink:
http://stats.bls.gov/ocs/sp/ncbl0062.pdf
Context: In a CPI context, the adjustment is
needed when the price of a replacement product
has to be compared with the price of the product it
replaces. In practice, the required adjustment can
only be estimated. Different methods of
estimation, including hedonic methods, may be
used in different circumstances.
Quality control National
(a) Observation and procedure used in any
operation of a survey in order to prevent or reduce
the effect of nonsampling errors.
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
(b) A method of controlling the quality of a
639
manufactured product which is produced in large
numbers. It aims at tracing and eliminating
systematic variations in quality, or reducing them
to an acceptable level, leaving the remaining
variation to chance. The process is then said to be
statistically under control.
all available quality indicators.
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Quality of life
Qualité de la vie
Quality of life is the notion of human welfare (wellbeing) measured by social indicators rather than
by ―quantitative‖ measures of income and
production.
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
October 2003
See also: Quality control - UN
Quality control - UN
- Quality Control of the data collection process
assures that the underlying statistical assumptions
of a survey are not violated, i.e. the meaning of
the principal statistical measures and the
assumptions which condition their use is
maintained.
Quantiles
Quantiles
The class (n-1) partition values of a variate which
divide the total frequency of a population or a
sample into a given number n of equal proportions.
For example, if n=4 the n-1 values are the
quartiles although the central variate value is
generally termed the median.
- Quality Control in data review process measures
the impact of data adjustment on the data.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
See also: Decile, Octiles, Percentiles, Quintiles
Quantitative (or
cover) limits
A ceiling on the amount of insurance or credit that
an export credit agency will provide under certain
circumstances. Limits can apply to individual
buyers or to total exposure on buying countries or
to maximum contract sizes.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Quality control - National
Quality control survey
A replicated survey carried out on a small scale by
very experienced staff in order to obtain some
―zero-default‖ results with which the actual results
of the survey can be compared.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
October 2003.
Quantitative
competition
Quantitative competition covers such natural
resources as oil, copper or groundwater which may
become quantitatively insufficient in the future.
Quality differences
Differences in the various dimensions of data
quality promulgated by international organisations
and national agencies. Comparisons of these
dimensions may be made for data between
countries, for the same series over time or
between the same series compiled by different
agencies in the same country.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.33
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
See also: Quality - ISO
Quantitative data
Quantitative data is data expressing a certain
quantity, amount or range. Usually, there are
Quality index
A one-dimension synthetical information on
quality, possibly calculated as a weighted mean of
640
measurement units associated with the data, e.g.
metres, in the case of the height of a person. It
makes sense to set boundary limits to such data,
and it is also meaningful to apply arithmetic
operations to the data.
Quantity
A physical measure not adjusted for quality
differences.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 4.24
Context: Strictly, this term, as contrasted with
qualitative data, should relate to data in the form
of numerical quantities such as measurements or
counts. It is sometimes, less exactly, used to
describe material in which the variables concerned
are quantities, e.g. height, weight, price as distinct
from data deriving from qualitative attributes, e.g.
sex, nationality or commodity.
Quantity approach
See Direct volume comparison
This usage is to be avoided in favour of such
expressions as ―data concerning quantitative
(qualitative) variables‖ or ―data concerning
numerical variables (attributes)‖. (A Dictionary of
Statistical Terms, 5th edition, prepared for the
International Statistical Institute by F.H.C.
Marriott. Published for the International Statistical
Institute by Longman Scientific and Technical)
See also: Direct volume comparison
Quantity index
Indice de quantité
A measure reflecting the average of the
proportionate changes in the quantities of a
specified set of goods and services between two
periods of time. Usually a quantity index is
assigned a value of 100 in some selected base
period and the values of the index for other
periods are intended to indicate the average
percentage change in quantities compared with the
base period.
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Glossary of Terms on
Statistical Data Editing", Conference of European
Statisticians Methodological material, Geneva,
2000
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/editingglo
ssary.pdf
Context: A quantity index is built up from
information on quantities such as the number or
total weight of goods or the number of services;
the quantity index has no meaning from an
economic point of view if it involves adding
quantities that are not commensurate, although it
is often used as a proxy for a volume index. (SNA
[16.12 and 16.13]. Available at
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp)
See also: Flag, Qualitative data
Quantitative response
A reaction, by an experimental unit to a given
stimulus, which may be measured on a variate
scale. For example, the response may be
measured in terms of weight, size or reaction time:
in particular the survival time.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
See also: Volume index
Quantitative
restrictions (QRs)
Specific limits on the quantity or value of goods
that can be imported (or exported) during a
specific time period.
Quantity ratio
The quantity of a particular commodity in one
country as a proportion of the quantity of the same
commodity in another country.
Context: An example is an import quota, where a
quantitative restriction on the level of imports is
imposed by a country.
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries: Glossary,
February 1998.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Quantity relative
Ratio de quantité
A quantity relative is the ratio of the quantity of a
specific product in one period to the quantity of the
same product in some other period
641
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Source: SNA 16.15
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
See also: Price relative
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC.
Quantity revaluation
See Gross domestic product (GDP) - constant
prices
See also: Gross domestic product (GDP) – constant
prices
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Quantity reversal test
A test that may be used under the axiomatic
approach which requires that the price index
remains unchanged after the quantity vectors for
the two periods being compared are interchanged.
See also: Weights
Quantum index
Indice de quantités
A quantum index is an index based on quantity
units of goods such as number or weight
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC.
Context: An index number which purports to show
the changes in quantity, usually of goods or
services produced, purchased or sold,
independently of changes in prices or money
values. One such index is of the Laspeyres type
obtained by weighting the quantities in the given
and base period by prices in the base period.
Quantum index numbers do not necessarily
measure changes in volume or weight. (A
Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th edition,
prepared for the International Statistical Institute
by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the International
Statistical Institute by Longman Scientific and
Technical)
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Quantity similarity
index
The similarity of the structure of quantities
between any pair of countries is measured by the
correlation coefficient that is obtained by
regressing the internal quantity structure of one
country against the corresponding internal quantity
structure of the other country.
Source: International Merchandise Trade Statistics
-- Concepts and Definitions, United Nations, 1998,
Series F, No. 52, Rev. 2, 34, chapter V; 42,
chapter XVI
Context: Internal quantity structures can be
expressed as a vector of the ratios of product
quantities to the quantity of a reference product.
See also: Index number, Laspeyres
Quaranta editing
procedure
The inter-country validation procedure used by
Eurostat and the OECD to edit the average survey
prices reported by participating countries for a
basic heading. For each basic heading covered by a
price survey, the procedure screens the average
survey prices for possible errors and evaluates the
reliability of the price ratios they provide.
In practice, the correlation coefficient is obtained
by regressing the basic heading volumes (real final
expenditures) of the first country against the
corresponding basic heading volumes (real final
expenditures) of the second country. The basic
heading volumes (real final expenditures) are
interpreted as notional quantities.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Context: It does this by comparing the average
survey prices for the same product across
countries (the average survey prices having been
expressed in the same currency unit for this
purpose) and by analysing the dispersion of the
price ratios across countries and across products
(the price ratios having been standardised for this
purpose). It is thus both an editing tool and an
analytical tool.
Quantity weights
Weights defined in terms of physical quantities
such as the number or total weight of goods or the
number of services. Quantity weights are only
feasible at the detailed product level because
meaningful aggregation of product weights
requires of them to be commensurate.
As an editing tool it identifies outliers among the
average survey prices that need to be returned to
participating countries for verification. As an
analytical tool it provides a range of variation
coefficients that can be used to assess the
reliability of completed price surveys and assist the
planning of future price surveys.
Context: A term sometimes used to describe the
quantities in the basket. However, expenditures
rather than quantities act as weights for price
relatives.
642
produce goods and services in an economy other
than their own, but do not establish separate legal
corporations in the host country. Quasicorporations that are in a direct investment
relationship with the parent enterprise are deemed
to exist if:
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
• Production is maintained for one year or more.
• A separate set of accounts is maintained for the
local activities.
• Income tax is paid in the host country.
Quarter-on-previousquarter changes
Quarter-on-previous-quarter changes are changes
in levels expressed with respect to the previous
quarter.
Quasi-corporations are often involved in
construction or the operation of mobile equipment
in another economy.
Context: Also often referred to as Quarter-toquarter (Period-to-period) changes, or Quarterover-quarter changes.
The fifth edition of the IMF Balance of Payments
Manual (BPM5)recommends that quasicorporations be included in the direct investment
data.
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
3: Guidelines for the reporting of different types of
data
OECD & IMF, 2004, Glossary of Foreign Direct
Investment Terms and Definitions, Paris and
Washington DC
Quarter-on-previousquarter growth rates
Quarter-on-previous-quarter growth rates are
rates of change expressed with respect to the
previous quarter.
Source: SNA 4.49
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Context: Also often referred to as Quarter-toquarter (Period-to-period) growth rates, Quarterover-quarter growth rates, 1-quarter growth rates,
or Rate of change on the previous quarter.
See also: Non-financial quasi-corporations
Quasi-identifier
Variable values or combinations of variable values
within a dataset that are not structural uniques but
might be empirically unique and therefore in
principle uniquely identify a population unit.
For some phenomena, quarter-on-previous quarter
growth rates may be further differentiated by the
nature or pattern of the incremental difference
between each successive period and whether or
not the absolute values of these increments over a
given period are themselves constant or changing.
The most commonly used patterns of growth are:
arithmetic, geometric and exponential.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
3: Guidelines for the reporting of different types of
data
Quasi-random
sampling
Under certain conditions, largely governed by the
method of compiling the sampling frame or list, a
systematic sample of every nth entry from a list
will be equivalent for most practical purposes to a
random sample. This method of sampling is
sometimes referred to as quasi-random sampling.
Quartile
Quartiles
There are three variate values which separate the
total frequency of a distribution into four equal
parts. The central value is called the median and
the other two the upper and lower quartiles
respectively. They are a particular set of quantiles.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Quasi-rents
See Rent
Quasi-corporations
Quasi-sociétés
Quasi-corporations are unincorporated enterprises
that function as if they were corporations, and
which have complete sets of accounts, including
balance sheets.
See also: Rent
Query edit
A query edit points to suspicious data items that
may be in error. An example could be a value that,
compared to historical data, seems suspiciously
Context: Quasi-corporations are enterprises that
643
high. Contrast query edit to fatal edit where data
item is known with certainty to be in error.
The set of four variate values which divide the total
frequency into five equal parts.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Quantiles
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Quota sample
A sample, usually of human beings, in which each
investigator is instructed to collect information
from an assigned number of individuals (the
quota) but the individuals are left to his personal
choice. In practice this choice is severely limited by
―controls‖, e.g. he is instructed to secure certain
numbers in assigned age groups, equal numbers of
the two sexes, certain numbers in particular social
classes and so forth.
See also: Fatal edit
Query errors
Query errors are errors identified by query edits.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Subject to these controls, which are designed to
make the sample as representative as possible, he
is not restricted to the contacting of assigned
individuals as in most forms of probability
sampling.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Question
A question is a request for information
See also: Judgment sample, Purposive sample
Source: Survey Design and Statistical Methodology
Metadata, Software and Standards Management
Branch, Systems Support Division, United States
Bureau of the Census, Washington D.C., August
1998, Section 3.3.32, page 31
Quoted prices method
(construction price
indices)
In this method used for the compilation of
construction price indices the problem of
comparability of components between construction
projects is overcome by having respondents quote
prices for a standard construction output product
(house, apartment, bridge, school, etc.) whose
specifications are kept constant from one period to
the next.
Questionnaire
A group or sequence of questions designed to elicit
information upon a subject, or sequence of
subjects, from an informant.
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003
Context: For example, the detailed specifications
for a house (of specific type, style, size, etc.) are
distributed to a sample of building firms. Bids or
quotes are then collected for the entire building as
specified, as well as the electrical work in the
specifications, the brick work, etc. Respondents are
asked to bid as though they were tendering for real
work, taking account of prevailing market
conditions and costs. The bids for each component
are averaged and weighted up to an overall price,
and a price index is computed.
See also: Questionnaire design, Schedule, Survey
Questionnaire design
Questionnaire design refers to the design (text,
order, and conditions for skipping) of the questions
used to obtain the data needed for the survey
Source: United States Bureau of the Census,
Software and Standards Management Branch,
Systems Support Division, "Survey Design and
Statistical Methodology Metadata", Washington
D.C., August 1998, Section 3.3.17, page 26.
The standard construction (house, apartment,
bridge, school, etc.) is updated periodically to
reflect changes in materials, styles, etc. to ensure
that it is typical of those being constructed at the
time.
Hyperlink:
http://www.census.gov/srd/www/metadata/metad
a18.pdf
A major problem with this method is that it is
difficult for firms to take the process seriously.
They are not bidding for real work and there is no
bargaining involved.
See also: Questionnaire, Survey design
Quintiles
Quintiles
644
Source: Sources and Methods: Construction Price
Indices, OECD, Eurostat, 1997, page 20
Rail passenger
disembarked
A passenger alighting from a rail vehicle after
having been conveyed by it.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/document/4/0,2340,en_2649
_34247_2367940_1_1_1_1,00.html
Context: A transfer from one rail vehicle to another
is not regarded as disembarkment even if the
passenger changes trains during a journey.
See also: Construction price indices, Subsequent
breakdown methods (construction price indices)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Radiation therapy
equipment
Machines used for treatment with x-rays or
radionuclide. They include:
- linear accelerators,
- Cobalt-60 units,
- Caesium-137 therapy units,
- low to orthovoltage x-ray units,
- high dose and low dose rate brachytherapy units,
and - conventional brachytherapy units.
Rail passenger
embarked
Passenger who boards a rail vehicle to be
conveyed by it.
Source: OECD Health Data 2007: Statistics and
Indicators for 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2007,
Data sources, definitions and methods
Context: A transfer from one rail vehicle to another
is not regarded as embarkment even if the
passenger changes trains during a journey.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Radioactive waste
Déchet radioactif
Radioactive waste is material that contains or is
contaminated with radionuclides at concentrations
greater than those established as ―exempt‖ by the
competent authorities. To avoid persistent harmful
effects, long—term storage is necessary, for which
purpose so-called ―isotope cemeteries‖ and
abandoned quarries are used
Rail passenger
journey
The combination between the place of embarkment
and the place of disembarkment of the passengers
conveyed by rail whichever itinerary is followed.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: Places are defined by using international
classification systems such as NUTS (Nomenclature
of Territorial Units for Statistics - EUROSTAT).
Rail loading gauge
The profile above the rail tracks through which a
rail vehicle must pass.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: The main categories are : A, B, B+ and C.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Rail passengerkilometre
Unit of measure representing the transport of one
rail passenger by rail over a distance of one
kilometre.
Rail passenger
Any person, excluding members of train crew, who
makes a journey by railway vehicle.
Context: The distance to be taken into
consideration should be the distance actually run
by the passenger on the concerned network. If it is
not available, then the distance charged or
estimated should be taken into account.
Context: Passenger making a journey by railway
operated ferry or bus services are excluded.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
645
A railway is a line of communication made up by
rail exclusively for the use of railway vehicles.
Rail transit
Rail transport in the same railway vehicle through
a country between two places (a place of loading
and a place of unloading) both located in another
country or in other countries.
Context: Line of communication is part of space
equipped for the execution of transport.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Wagons loaded/unloaded at the frontier
of that country onto/from another mode of
transport are included.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Railway journey
Any movement of a railway vehicle from a
specified point of origin to a specified point of
destination.
Rail transport
Any movement of goods and/or passengers using a
railway vehicle on a given railway network.
Context: A journey can be divided into a number of
sections or stages.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: When a railway vehicle is being carried on
another rail vehicle only the movement of the
carrying vehicle (active mode) is being considered.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Railway network
All railways in a given area.
Railcar
Railway vehicle with motor constructed for the
conveyance of passengers or goods by rail. The
definition of the various categories of locomotives
(electric, diesel) apply, mutatis mutandis, to
railcars.
Context: This does not include stretches of road or
water even if rolling stock should be conveyed over
such routes, e.g. by wagon-carrying trailers or
ferries. Lines solely used for tourism purposes
during the season are excluded as are railways
constructed solely to serve mines, forests or other
industrial or agricultural undertakings and which
are not open to public traffic.
Context:
In motor vehicle statistics, each railcar in an
indivisible set is counted separately; in statistics of
passenger vehicles and goods vehicles, each body
fitted to carry passengers or goods is counted
as a unit.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Railway traffic
Any movement of a railway vehicle on lines
operated.
Context: When a railway vehicle is been carried on
another vehicle only the movement of the carrying
vehicle (active mode) is considered.
Railcar trailer
Passenger railway vehicle coupled to one or more
railcars.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Railway traffic on
national territory
Any movement of railway vehicles within a national
territory irrespective of the country in which these
Railway
646
vehicles are registered.
of a linear function of the values of the sample
units used to estimate population, stratum, or
higher stage unit totals are called raising,
multiplying, weighting or inflation factors of the
corresponding sample units.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
If the raising factors of all the sample units are
equal, the common raising factor is called the
raising factor of the sample, and the sample itself
is called self-weighting.
Railway vehicle
Mobile equipment running exclusively on rails,
moving either under its own power (locomotives
and railcars) or hauled by another vehicle
(coaches, railcar trailers, vans and wagons).
It should be noted that the raising factors depend
not only on the sampling plan but also on the
method of estimation.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Context: The following vehicles are included in the
statistics for a principal railway enterprise:
a) All railway vehicles belonging to the principal
railway enterprise and hired by it and actually at
its disposal, including those under or waiting for
repair, or stored in working or non working-order,
and foreign vehicles at the disposal of the system
and vehicles of the enterprise temporarily engaged
in the normal course of running abroad, or upon
secondary railway enterprises network.
RAM
See Random access memory
See also: Random access memory (RAM)
RAMON
Eurostat‘s Classifications Server which aims at
making available as much information as possible
relating to the main international statistical
classifications in various fields: economic analysis,
environment, education, occupations, national
accounts, etc.
b) Private owners‘ wagons, i.e. those not belonging
to the principal railway enterprise but registered on
it and authorized to run on it under specified
conditions, together with wagons hired out by the
railway enterprise to private persons and being
operated as private owners‘ wagons.
b) Vehicles which are on hire to, or otherwise at
the disposal of, or other railway enterprises.
Context: Whenever available, the information
covers the following aspects: general description;
structure of the classifications (i.e. codes and
headings); explanatory notes; correspondence
tables between classifications; methodological
documents; other general information relating
(closely or less closely) to classifications.
Whenever available, the information is presented
in all European Union official languages.
c) Vehicles reserved exclusively for service
transport, or intended for sale, breaking up or
condemning.
The objective is to build a central reference place
for people looking for any kind of information on
international statistical classifications.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: RAMON website
Statistics for a principal railway enterprise exclude
vehicles not at its disposal, i.e.
a) Foreign or secondary railway enterprise vehicles
temporarily on railway lines of the principal railway
enterprise in the normal course of running.
Hyperlink:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/eurostat/Public/datash
op/printcatalogue/EN?catalogue=Eurostat&collection=05Methodologies-Nomenclatures&product=ramon-EN
Rainforest
Forêt ombrophile
Rainforest refers to luxuriant forest, generally
composed of tall, broad—leafed evergreen trees,
found in regions where annual rainfall exceeds
1,800 millimetres
Random
The word is used in senses ranging from ―nondeterministic‖ (as in random process) to ―purely by
chance, independently of other events‖ ( as in
―test of randomness‖).
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Raising factor
Apart from its ordinary significance this term is
used in the following special sense. The coefficients
647
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Random access
memory (RAM)
A computer's primary working memory in which
each element of information has its own address
(location) and from which any element can be
easily and conveniently retrieved by using that
address.
Random perturbation
This is a disclosure control method according to
which a noise, in the form of a random value is
added to the true value or, in the case of
categorical variables, where another value is
randomly substituted for the true value.
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Random component
If a magnitude consists of a number of parts
compounded in some way, e.g. by addition or
multiplication, any such part as is a variate is a
random component of the magnitude.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Random process
In a general sense the term is synonymous with
the more usual and preferable ―stochastic‖
process.
Random distribution
This expression is sometimes wrongly used for a
probability distribution.
It is sometimes employed to denote a process in
which the movement from one state to the next is
determined by a variate which is independent of
the initial and final state. It is better to denote
such as process as a pure random process.
It is also sometimes employed to denote a
distribution of probability which is uniform in the
range concerned, i.e. a rectangular distribution. It
seems better to avoid the term altogether, or, in
such expressions as ―points randomly distributed
over an area‖ to specify clearly the law of
distribution involved.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Stochastic process, Stochastic process
Random rounding
In order to reduce the amount of data loss that
occurs with suppression, alternative methods have
been investigated to protect sensitive cells in
tables of frequencies. Perturbation methods such
as random rounding and controlled rounding are
examples of such alternatives. In random rounding
cell values are rounded, but instead of using
standard rounding conventions a random decision
is made as to whether they will be rounded up or
down. The rounding mechanism can be set up to
produce unbiased rounded results.
Random error
An error, that is to say, a deviation of an observed
from a true value, which behaves like a variate in
the sense that any particular value occurs as
though chosen at random from a probability
distribution of such errors.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Random event
An event with a probability of occurrence
determined by some probability distribution.
Random sample
Échantillon aléatoire
A sample which has been selected by a method of
random selection.
The term is used somewhat loosely to denote
either an event which may or may not happen at a
given trial, such as the throwing of a 6 with an
ordinary die, or an event which may or may not
happen at any given moment of time such as an
industrial accident to an individual.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
648
Randomized response is a technique used to collect
sensitive information from individuals in such a
way that survey interviewers and those who
process the data do not know which of two
alternative questions the respondent has
answered.
Random sampling
Sondage aléatoire
See Probability sampling
See also: Probability sampling
Random sampling
error
A sampling error in cases where the sample has
been selected by a random method. It is common
practice to refer to random sampling error simply
as ―sampling error‖ where the random nature of
the selective process is understood or assumed.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Range
The largest minus the smallest of a set of variate
values. The range is of itself an elementary
measure of dispersion but, in terms of the mean
range in repeated sampling, it may afford a
reasonable estimate of the population standard
deviation.
Random sampling
numbers
Sets of numbers used for the drawing of random
samples. They are usually compiled by a process
involving a chance element and in their simplest
form consist of a series of digits 0 to 9 occurring
(so far as can be ascertained) at random with
equal probability.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Range check
See Fitting
See also: Fitting
Range checking
See Data review
Random selection
Sélection aléatoire
A sample selected from a finite population is said
to be random if every possible sample has equal
probability of selection. This applies to sampling
without replacement; a random sample with
replacement is such that each item is
independently selected with equal probability (and
so each possible ordered sample is chosen with
equal probability).
See also: Data review
Range management
Range management is the use of grazing land to
ensure consistent livestock production and, at the
same time, conserve range resources
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Rank
The term occurs in statistical work in at least three
contexts:
Random start
In selecting a systematic sample at interval of n
from an ordered population, it is sometimes
desirable to select the first sample unit by a
random drawing from the first n units of that
population. The sample is then said to have a
random start.
(a) In the theory of order relations, the rank of a
single observation among a set is its ordinal
number when the set is ordered according to some
criterion such as values of a variate borne by the
individuals.
(b) In matrix theory the term occurs in its usual
mathematical sense, being the greatest number r
of linearly independent rows or columns which can
be found in it.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
(c) Derived from the previous usage, the rank of
multivariate distribution is the rank of its
dispersion matrix, and is thus the number of
variates which are independent in the sense of not
being connected by linear equations.
Randomized response
649
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Gardner (1994) recommend that when calculating
a rate to proceed without the use of a constant
until the final answer is derived and then use the
constant to express the rate per 100, 1 000 or
whatever is the usual constant for that type of
rate.
Rank swapping
Rank swapping provides a way of using continuous
variables to define pairs of records for swapping.
Instead of insisting that variables match (agree
exactly), they are defined to be close based on
their proximity to each other on a list sorted on the
continuous variable. Records which are close in
rank on the sorted variable are designated as pairs
for swapping. Frequently in rank swapping the
variable used in the sort is the one that will be
swapped.
Palmore, James A., Gardner, Robert W., 1994,
Measuring mortality, fertility and natural increase:
a self-teaching guide to elementary measures,
Rev. ed., East-West Centre, Honolulu, Hawaii
Source: Everitt, B.S., 1989, The Cambridge
Dictionary of Statistics, Cambridge University
Press, Cambridge, UK
Rate of natural
increase
The rate of natural increase refers to the difference
between the number of live births and the number
of deaths occurring in a year, divided by the midyear population of that year, multiplied by a factor
(usually 1,000).
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
It is equal to the difference between the crude
birth rate and the crude death rate. This measure
of the population change excludes the effects of
migration
Rare species
Espèces rares
Rare species ate taxa with small world populations
that, though not at present endangered or
vulnerable, are at risk. These taxa are localized
within restricted geographical areas or habitats or
thinly scattered over a more extensive range
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Rate of return - OECD
Taux de rendement OCDE
The income earned by holding an asset over a
specified period.
Raster mode
In a computer, storage and display of data on a
dense grid of pixels arranged in columns and rows.
Example: Satellite images are normally stored in
raster mode.
Context: The rate of return is the income
generated by an asset expressed as a percentage
of the value of that asset. The rate of return may
be measured ex ante (the return expected when
the investment was made) or ex post (the return
that was actually earned).
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Rate
A rate refers to the occurrence of events over a
specific interval in time.
See also: Gross rate of return, Net rate of return,
Rate of return - SEEA
Similarly, a rate refers to the measure of the
frequency of some phenomenon of interest.
Rate of return - SEEA
Measures the ―profitability‖ of an asset. Often
calculated by dividing the operating surplus by the
capital stock.
Context: Caution must be used with the term
―rate‖ as it is sometimes applied to ordinary
percentage changes such as a ―literacy rate‖ which
is the percentage of a population that is literate.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
Different constants (commonly 100, 1 000, 100
000) are used in the presentation of different rates
(e.g. crude death rates and crude birth rates are
usually expressed per 1 000). Palmore and
650
estimated by the sample equally as well (or poorly)
as the population total for the auxiliary variable is
estimated by the sample.
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.191 and box 7.2
See also: Rate of return - OECD(2)
Ratio estimation can be more accurate than
number-raised estimation if the auxiliary variable
is highly correlated with the variable of interest.
However it is slightly biased, with the bias
increasing for smaller sample sizes and where
there is lower correlation between the auxiliary
variable and the variable of interest.
Rates of change
Taux de variation
Rates of change are ratios of total change in a
specified time reference period to values at the
beginning of the period or at a specified earlier
time reference. When changes over a period of
more than one calendar year are studied, the
mean annual rate of change may be computed
Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics, Statistical
Concepts Library, "Labour Statistics: Concepts,
Sources and Methods", Chapter 16 - Overview of
Survey Methods, Canberra, 2001
Source: Adapted from Multilingual Demographic
Dictionary, English Section, United Nations, 1958,
Department of Economic and Social Affairs,
Population Studies, No. 29
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/abs%40.nsf/78
84593a92027766ca2568b5007b8617/93a0165bdf5
98509ca256aa000036c90!OpenDocument
Ratio
A ratio is a number that expresses the relative size
of two other numbers.
See also: Estimation, Ratio estimator
The result of dividing a number X by another
number Y is the ratio of X to Y.
Ratio estimator
An estimator which involves the ratio of two
variates, i.e. a ratio whose numerator and
denominator are both subject to sampling errors.
The term occurs particularly in sample survey
theory.
Source: Palmore, James A., Gardner, Robert W.,
1994, Measuring mortality, fertility and natural
increase: a self-teaching guide to elementary
measures, Rev. ed., East-West Centre, Honolulu,
Hawaii
If the members of a population each bear the
values of two characteristics, x and y, and the total
of x, say X, is known for the population, the
corresponding total of y, say Y, can be estimated
by multiplying X by a sample ratio consisting of the
sample total of y divided by the total of x.
Ratio edit
A ratio edit is an edit in which the value of a ratio
of two fields lies between specified bounds. The
bounds must be determined through a priori
analyses (possibly involving data sets in which
truth data are available) or via exploratory data
analysis methods.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
See also: Ratio estimation
Ratio of harmonic
means price index
See Harmonic means price index
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Harmonic means price index
Ratio of students to
Nombre d‟élèves par
computers
ordinateur
In the Programme for International Student
Assessment (PISA), the ratio of students per
computer was calculated by dividing the total
number of computers in each school by the total
number of students enrolled in each school.
Ratio estimation
Ratio estimation involves the use of known
population totals for auxiliary variables to improve
the weighting from sample values to population
estimates. It operates by comparing the survey
sample estimate for an auxiliary variable with the
known population total for the same variable on
the frame. The ratio of the sample estimate of the
auxiliary variable to its population total on the
frame is used to adjust the sample estimate for the
variable of interest.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Ratio of students to
teaching staff
The ratio of students to teaching staff is calculated
as the total number of full-time equivalent
students divided by the total number of full-time
equivalent educational personnel.
Context: The ratio weights are given by X/x
(where X is the known population total for the
auxiliary variable, and x is the corresponding
estimate of the total based on all responding units
in the sample). These weights assume that the
population total for the variable of interest will be
651
(ROM)
A computer memory from which data can only be
retrieved; no data can be written to it.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Ratio to trend
The trend is eliminated from the series by dividing
the original series by the trend to give a ratio-totrend since the underlying structure of most series
used is multiplicative. For series whose underlying
structure is additive, a difference-from-trend series
is calculated
Real effective
Taux de change
exchange rates
effectifs réels
Real effective exchange rates take account of price
level differences between trading partners.
Movements in real effective exchange rates
provide an indication of the evolution of a country‘s
aggregate external price competitiveness
Source: OECD Leading Indicator Website,
Glossary, 2001
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_34
349_1965941_1_1_1_1,00.html
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Rationalisation
agreement
A Rationalization agreement is an agreement
(generally approved or authorized by government)
between firms in an industry to close down
inefficient plants, reduce excess capacity and
realign production in order to increase overall
industry efficiency and performance.
See also: Exchange rates, Nominal effective
exchange rate
Real final
expenditures
National final expenditures on GDP that have been
converted to a common currency and valued at a
uniform price level with PPPs. Expenditures so
converted reflect only volume differences between
countries.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Context: Also referred to as ―real values‖.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Raw sewerage
Eaux d‟égout brutes
Raw sewage is untreated domestic or commercial
waste water
Real gross domestic
Gains et pertes
income (real GDI)
d‟échange
Real gross domestic income (real GDI) measures
the purchasing power of the total incomes
generated by domestic production (including the
impact on those incomes of changes in the terms
of trade); it is equal to gross domestic product at
constant prices plus the trading gain (or less the
trading loss) resulting from changes in the terms
of trade
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
RDBMS
See Relational database management system
Source: SNA 16.152
See also: relational database management system
(RDBMS)
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Reading literacy
Reading literacy is defined in PISA as the ability to
understand, use and reflect on written texts in
order to achieve one‘s goals, to develop one‘s
knowledge and potential, and to participate
effectively in society.
Real holding gain
Gain réel de détention
A real holding gain is the value of the additional
command over real resources accruing to the
holder of an asset as a result of a change in its
price relatively to the prices of goods and services
in general in the economy
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: SNA 12.64
See also: Mathematical literacy, Scientific literacy
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Read-only-memory
652
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 510
See also: Holding gains
Real holding gains /
Gains/pertes réels de
losses (nondétention (non
residents)
résidents)
The real holding gain/loss (non-residents) is that
value - expressed in national currency - of the
asset resulting from the difference between the
nominal and the neutral gain/loss
See also: Nominal wage index, Nominal wages
(annual averages of hourly, daily, weekly or
monthly wages)
Real wages
Real wages are defined as the goods and services
which can be purchased with wages or are
provided as wages.
Source: SNA 14.145
Context: Statistics of real wages are not primary
statistics. They result from the combination of two
types of primary statistics – wages and prices. The
information required for the computation of real
wages includes:
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Holding gains
Real income
Revenu réel
Real income is obtained by deflating any income
flow by a price index in order to measure the
purchasing power of the item in question over a
designated numeraire set of goods and services
(a) a wage measure expressed in monetary terms;
(b) a series of prices of goods and services
commonly purchased by the employees; and
Source: SNA 16.148
(c) information on the consumption pattern of
employees (Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 483).
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Resolution concerning the international
comparison of real wages, adopted by the 8th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians,
Geneva, 1954
Real interest
Intérêt réel
Real interest is the difference between nominal
interest and an amount equal to the loss of
purchasing power on the monetary value of the
principal during the accounting period
See also: Nominal wages (annual averages of
hourly, daily, weekly or monthly wages)
Source: SNA 7.110
Real-time gross
settlement system
(RTGS)
A real-time gross settlement system (RTGS) is a
settlement system in which processing and
settlement take place on an order-by-order basis
(without netting) in real time (continuously)
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Real product or real
quantity
The final product or quantity in two or more
countries that is valued at common prices and,
therefore, valued in comparable terms
internationally.
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
See also: TARGET
Reappraisals
A change in the estimation of the quantity of
(recoverable) subsoil resources due either to new
information or technology or price changes.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.32
Real values
See Real final expenditures
See also: Real final expenditures
Real wage index
Nominal wages index corrected for changes in
purchasing power measured by the consumer price
index (100*nominal wage index/consumer price
index)
Rebase
653
See Rebasing
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
See also: Rebasing
Rebasing
Changement de base
Rebasing may have different meanings in different
contexts. It may mean:
Recall lapse
A recall lapse is the failure to remember in
reporting events or characteristics in response to
retrospective questions
- changing the weights in an index,
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
- changing the price reference period of an index
number series, or
- changing the index reference period of an index
number series.
The weights, the price reference period, and the
index reference period may be changed at the
same time, but not necessarily so.
Receiving Party Pays
(RPP)
The convention under which the party receiving a
communication pays all or most of the end-to-end
cost of the communication. In particular, in the
mobile sector, this is used to refer to the case
where the receiving party pays the "airtime
charge" for termination on the mobile handset. In
this case the originating or calling party may still
pay for a local call. Compare with CPP.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Rebate
A discount paid to the customer after the
transaction has occurred.
See also: Calling Party Pays (CPP)
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC.
Reciprocity
Reciprocity is a form of bilateral (or multilateral)
arrangement between firms to bestow favourable
terms on, or buy and sell from, each other to the
exclusion of others. This may have the effect of
limiting competition and/or preventing the entry of
firms into certain markets.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Recall
A method of obtaining information by means of an
interview in which the respondent is required to
remember past events. A common application is
the recall of consumer expenditures.
Context: Concern about reciprocal arrangements
has been particularly raised in the context of
conglomerates. It is argued that subsidiary firms
are likely to encounter each other frequently as
buyers or sellers in different markets. Reciprocity
may benefit firms by ensuring contract fulfilment
or by facilitating secret price-cutting.
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Recall errors
Many questions in surveys refer to happenings or
conditions in the past, and there is a problem in
both remembering the event and of associating it
with the correct time period.
Reclassification due to
changes in functions
The entry of the SEEA asset accounts that record
the change in classification of assets due to change
in function e.g. agricultural land which becomes
land under building.
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
654
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.105
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Recommended uses of
data
The recommended use(s) of statistical data refers
to text that is intended to provide users with
explicit information on the appropriate use(s) of
the statistics within the limitations imposed by the
definition of main concepts, scope and coverage,
collection methodology, etc.
Reclassification due to
quality change
The entry of the SEEA asset accounts that record
the change in classification of assets due to quality
e.g. remedied land which becomes useable in
production.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.105
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Recommended uses of
data
The recommended use(s) of statistical data refers
to text that is intended to provide users with
explicit information on the appropriate use(s) of
the statistics within the limitations imposed by the
definition of main concepts, scope and coverage,
collection methodology, etc.
Recognition
Recognition refers to a judicial statement
authorising the civil registrar to enter in the
register the last name of the father, given to a
child born out of wedlock whose birth record has
been made previously
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Record check
A study in which data on individual units obtained
by one method of data collection are checked
against data for the same units from available
records obtained by a different method of data
collection (for example, comparison of ages as
reported in censuses with information on ages
from birth certificates).
Recombinant bovine
Somatotropine bovine
somatotropin (rBST)
recombinée (STBr)
Recombinant bovine somatotropin (rBST) is a
genetically engineered version of a naturally
occurring hormone that stimulates milk production
Source: Lessler, J.T. and Kalsbeek, W.D. (1992),
"Non Sampling Error in Survey", New York: John
Wiley or US department of Commerce (1978),
"Glossary of Non Sampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics",
Statistical Policy Working Paper 4, Office of Federal
Statistical Policy Standards.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Recommended price
In several industries, suppliers may recommend or
suggest the price at which a product may be
resold. In certain cases the supplier may indicate
the "maximum" price for the product in order to
discourage retailers from raising prices to increase
their own margins and thus reduce total sales.
Record linkage
Record linkage refers to a merging that brings
together information from two or more sources of
data with the object of consolidating facts
concerning an individual or an event that are not
available in any separate record
Context: Such practices may be adopted in order
to avoid violating laws against resale price
maintenance.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
The specification and attempted enforcement of
"minimum" prices for products is illegal in many
countries.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Record linkage
process
Process attempting to classify pairs of matches in a
product space A×B from two files A and B into M,
the set of true links, and U, the set of non-true
links.
655
processors to assist them in the management of
dairy product inventories
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Recoveries
Repayments made to an export credit agency by a
borrowing country after the agency has paid out on
claims by exporters or banks.
Record swapping
A special case of data swapping, where the
geographical codes of records are swapped.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Recorded data
element
A recorded data element is a submitted data
element which contains all mandatory attributes
and has been recorded but the contents may not
meet the quality requirements specified in other
parts of ISO/IEC 11179
Recreational fishers /
fishing
Pêcheurs
amateurs/pêche de
loisir
Recreational fishers/fishing, in general, refers to
fishing for sport or pleasure. However, legal
definitions differ from country-to-country. In some
countries, recreational fishers may use capital
intensive techniques and may sell their catch. In
other countries catch may not be sold and only
certain, non-capital intensive, fishing methods
used
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Recording of
transactions
The recording of transactions pertains to a broad
range of processes and standards employed in
calculating statistical aggregates. The conventions
include types of valuation, prices, conversion rates,
the accounting basis, units of measurement used
in data collection, etc.
Recreational land
Aire de loisirs
Recreational land is land used for purposes of
recreation, for example, sports fields,
gymnasiums, playgrounds, public parks and green
areas, public beaches and swimming pools, and
camping sites
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
See also: Accounting basis, Special Data
Dissemination Standard (SDDS)
Recreational land and Terrains de loisirs et
associated surface
plans d‟eau associés
water
Recreational land and associated surface water
consist of land that is used as privately owned
amenity land, parklands and pleasure grounds and
publicly owned parks and recreational areas,
together with associated surface water
Record-keeping error
An error which arises from inaccuracy in the
records used for responses.
Source: Lessler, J.T. and Kalsbeek, W.D. (1992),
"Non Sampling Error in Survey", New York: John
Wiley or US department of Commerce (1978),
"Glossary of Non Sampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics",
Statistical Policy Working Paper 4, Office of Federal
Statistical Policy Standards, 1978
Source: (AN.2113) – Annex to chapter XIII
Recurrent losses
Pertes courantes (sur
(from inventories)
stocks)
Recurrent losses (from inventories) are those
losses incurred on goods held in inventories due to
normal rates of wastage, theft and accidental
damage which reduce the value of the total change
in inventories, and hence output
Recourse Loan
Programme de prêt
Programme
avec garantie
The Recourse Loan Programme is a programme to
be implemented under the US FAIR Act of 1996 for
butter, non-fat dry milk and cheese after 1999 in
which loans must be repaid with interest to
Source: SNA 6.62
656
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Rediscount credit
Rediscount credit is the credit which a central bank
grants financial institutions against the purchase of
bills of exchange
Recurrent taxes on
land, buildings or
other structures
Impôts périodiques
sur les terrains, les
bâtiments et les
autres constructions
Recurrent taxes on land, buildings or other
structures consist of taxes payable regularly,
usually each year, in respect of the use or
ownership of land, buildings or other structures
utilised by enterprises in production, whether the
enterprises own or rent such assets
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: SNA 7.70 [OECD 4100]
Redistribution of
Compte de
income in kind
redistribution du
account
revenu en nature
The redistribution of income in kind account shows
how the disposable incomes of households, nonprofit institutions serving households (NPISHs) and
government units are transformed into their
adjusted disposable income by the receipt and
payment of social transfers in kind
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Recycling
Recyclage
Recycling is the processing and use of wastes in
production and consumption processes, for
example, melting of scrap iron so that it can be
converted into new iron products.
Source: SNA 8.2
Context: The re-introduction of residual materials
into production processes so that they may be
reformulated into new products.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.51
Red-tape
See Administrative regulations
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: Administrative regulations
Reefer ship
General cargo ship with 80 per cent or more
insulated cargo space.
Red Book
The Red Book is a publication on payment
systems, produced by the BIS‘s Committee on
Payment and Settlement Systems. Its objective is
to provide a comprehensive description of a
country's payment systems. The Red Book is
revised periodically.
Re-entrants to a level
of education
Re-entrants to a level of education are students
who were not included in the enrolment statistics
at that level in the previous reference year, but
had been included during some year prior to the
preceding reference year
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 38
Red list of threatened
animals
Liste rouge des
espèces animales
menacées
Red list of threatened animals is a listing of
animals threatened with extinction. The 1994
International Union for Conservation of Nature
(IUCN) Red List, compiled by the World
Conservation Monitoring Centre, includes more
than 6,000 animal species known to be at risk
Re-exports
Re-exports are foreign goods exported in the same
state as previously imported, from the free
circulation area, premises for inward processing or
industrial free zones, directly to the rest of the
world and from premises for customs warehousing
or commercial free zones, to the rest of the world
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
657
Source: United Nations (1998c). International
Merchandise Trade Statistics – Concepts and
Definitions. Statistics Division, Series F, No. 52,
Rev. 2, para. 78
See also: Documentation, ISO / IEC 11179,
Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS)
Reference document
language
The identifier of the natural or special language
used in the reference document.
Reference (border)
price
The reference (border) price is the import (c.i.f.) or
export (f.o.b.) price of a commodity used for
calculating the market price support price gap,
measured at the farm gate level. An implicit border
price may be calculated as, for example, the unit
value of imports or exports
Context: The national language in which an
information item is available.
Source: ISO/ICE FCD 11179-3, Registry
Metamodel, Final Committee Draft, 2001
Reference
Interconnection Offer
(RIO)
Under the existing EC directives, a firm which is
designated as having SMP must regularly produce
a document the terms and conditions at which it
will provide access to specified services. This
document must be approved by the regulator.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Reference chronology
See Reference series (for composite leading
indicators)
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
See also: Reference series (for composite leading
indicators)
Reference country
The country, or group of countries such as the
European Union or the OECD, for which the value
of the PPP is set at 1.00 and the value of the
comparative price level index and of the volume
index is set at 100.
See also: Significant Market Power (SMP)
Reference metadata
Metadata describing the contents and the quality of
the statistical data.
Context: Preferably, reference metadata should
include all of the following: a) "conceptual"
metadata, describing the concepts used and their
practical implementation, allowing users to
understand what the statistics are measuring and,
thus, their fitness for use; b) "methodological"
metadata, describing methods used for the
generation of the data (e.g. sampling, collection
methods, editing processes); c) "quality"
metadata, describing the different quality
dimensions of the resulting statistics (e.g.
timeliness, accuracy).
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Reference document
A reference document is a document that provides
pertinent details for consultation about a subject.
Context: Attributes of Reference document:
- Reference document identifier is an identifier for
the Reference document.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
- Reference document language identifier is the
identifier of the natural or special language used in
the Reference document.
See also: Metadata structure definition, Statistical
metadata, Structural metadata
- Reference document title is the title of the
Reference document.
Reference period MetaStore
Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types refers to
the period of time the data refer to.
- Reference document type description is a
description of the type of Reference document.
Context: For business tendency or consumer
opinion surveys this field could also refer to the
forecasting horizon.
Reference documents can be publications
(hardcopy, electronic), other databases (internal,
external), Internet (Internet addresses),
methodological references (for instance to
summary metadata, detailed metadata,
information on major changes).
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
Source: ISO/IEC 11179-3 "Information
technology-Metadata registries (MDR)-Part 3:
Registry metamodel and basic attributes",
February 2003
See also: Reference period
Reference population
(for a price index)
658
The set of households included within the scope of
the index.
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_34
349_1965941_1_1_1_1,00.html
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Reference year (in
context of PPPs)
A calendar year to which the annual results refer.
The year for which the comparison is made.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Reference PPPs
PPPs that are use for basic headings for which no
prices are collected. They are based on prices
collected for other basic headings. Reference PPPs
serve as proxies for the PPPs that would have been
calculated had prices been collected for the basic
headings for which no prices were collected.
Refinancing
Refinancing refers to the extension of a new loan
to enable the repayment of all or part of the
amounts outstanding on earlier borrowing, possibly
including amounts not yet due
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Reference rate of
Taux (d‟intérêt) de
interest
référence
The reference rate of interest (to be used in
allocating financial intermediation services
indirectly measured (FISIM)) is the pure cost of
borrowing funds (i.e. a rate from which the risk
premium has been eliminated to the greatest
extent possible and which does not include any
intermediation services
Refinery feedstocks
A refinery feedstock is product or a combination of
products derived from crude oil and destined for
further processing other than blending in the
refining industry. It is transformed into one or
more components and/or finished products.
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Source: SNA 6.128
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Refinery gas (not
liquefied)
Refinery gas is defined as non-condensable gas
obtained during distillation of crude oil or
treatment of oil products (e.g. cracking) in
refineries. It consists mainly of hydrogen,
methane, ethane and olefins. It includes gases
which are returned from the petrochemical
industry.
Reference series (for Serié de référence
composite leading
indicators)
Cyclical indicator systems are constructed around a
"reference chronology". The reference series is the
economic variable whose cyclical movements it is
intended to predict. In the OECD system, the index
of total industrial production is used as the
reference series.
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Context: Ideally, Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
would be used as the reference series, but for
many countries, there is often a substantial time
lag in the publication of GDP estimates and they
are usually available only on an annual or quarterly
basis.
Reforestation
Reboisement
Reforestation is artificial or natural re—
establishment of forest in an area that was
previously under forest cover
Industrial production constitutes the more cyclical
part of the aggregate economy and the cyclical
profiles of industrial production and GDP have been
found to be closely related, so that cyclical
indicators identified against industrial production
serve well as indicators for the GDP cycles
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Reform process /
programme
The Uruguay Round Agriculture Agreement starts a
reform process. It sets out a first step, in the
process, i.e. a programme for reducing subsidies
Source: OECD Leading Indicator Website,
Glossary, 2001
Hyperlink:
659
and protection and other reforms. Current
negotiations launched under Article 20 are for
continuing the reform process.
Refusal rate
In the sampling of human populations, the
proportion of individuals who, though successfully
contacted, refuse to give the information sought.
The proportion is usually and preferably calculated
by dividing the number of refusals by the total
number of the sample which was originally desired
to achieve.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003.
Refrigerated wagon
Insulated wagon using a source of cold (natural
ice, with or without the addition of salt; eutectic
plates; dry ice, with or without sublimation control;
liquefied gases, with or without evaporation
control; etc.) other than a mechanical or
"absorption" unit.
See also: Item response rate, Non-response, Nonresponse rate
Refusal to deal / sell
The practice of refusing or denying supply of a
product to a purchaser, usually a retailer or
wholesaler. The practice may be adopted in order
to force a retailer to engage in resale price
maintenance (RPM), i.e., not to discount the
product in question, or to support an exclusive
dealing arrangement with other purchasers or to
sell the product only to a specific class of
customers or geographic region.
Context: Such a wagon is capable, with a mean
outside temperature of + 30 o C, of lowering the
temperature inside the empty body to, and
thereafter maintaining it :
- at + 7 degrees C maximum in the case of class
A;
- at -10 degrees C maximum in the case of class
B;
- at -20 degrees C maximum in the case of class
C; and
- at 0 degrees C maximum in the case of class D,
Refusal to deal/sell may also arise if the purchaser
is a bad credit risk, does not carry sufficient
inventory or provide adequate sales service,
product advertising and display, etc. The
competitive effects of refusal to deal/sell generally
have to be weighed on a case-by-case basis.
with the aid of appropriate refrigerants and
fittings.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Refugees
Refugees are foreign persons granted refugee
status either at the time of admission or before
admission. This category therefore includes foreign
persons granted refugee status while abroad and
entering to be resettled in the receiving country as
well as persons granted refugee status on a group
basis upon arrival in the receiving country.
Refuse (waste)
See Solid waste
See also: Solid waste
Refuse reclamation
Refuse reclamation is the conversion of solid
wastes into useful products, for example,
composting organic waste to make soil
conditioners, and separating aluminium and other
metals for melting and recycling
Context: In some cases, refugee status may be
granted when the persons involved are still in their
country of origin through ―in- country processing‖
of requests for asylum. Refugee status may be
granted on the basis of the 1951 Convention
relating to the Status of Refugees and its 1967
Protocol or pertinent regional instruments.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Regimen
The selected goods and services priced for the
purpose of compiling a price index.
Source: A Guide to the Consumer Price Index 13th Series, Glossary, Australian Bureau of
Statistics
See also: Asylum-seekers, Foreigners admitted for
humanitarian reasons (other than asylum proper or
temporary protection), Foreigners granted
temporary protected status, Foreigners seeking
asylum
Hyperlink:
660
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/0/9171
F5CDC94489A9CA25697E0018FD59?Open&Highlig
ht=0,glossary
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
Regional central bank Banque centrale
Ŕ BPM
régionale Ŕ MBP
A Regional Central Bank is an international
financial institution that acts as a common central
bank for a group of Member countries.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Context: Such a bank has headquarters in one
country and maintains national offices in each
member country. Each national office acts as the
central bank for that country and must be treated
as an institutional unit that is separate from the
headquarters institution. Each national office is a
resident unit of the country where is located.
Register
A set of files (paper, electronic, or a combination)
containing the assigned data elements and the
associated information.
Source: BPM para. 90
Context: A register is a written and complete
record containing regular entries of items and
details on particular set of objects (Economic
Commission for Europe of the United Nations
(UNECE), "Terminology on Statistical Metadata",
Conference of European Statisticians Statistical
Standards and Studies, No. 53, Geneva, 2000,
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf).
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179,
Part 1, Framework for the specification and
standardization of data elements, 1999
See also: Regional central bank – SNA
See also: Data element dictionary, ISO / IEC
11179, Registration authority
The financial assets and liabilities of a regional
central bank should be allocated among the
national offices. The allocation should be made in
proportion to the claims that such offices have
over the bank‘s collective assets
Regional central bank Banque centrale
Ŕ SNA
régionale Ŕ SCN
A regional central bank is an international financial
institution which acts as a common central bank
for a group of member countries
Registrar
A representative of a Registration authority.
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
Source: SNA 14.34
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: ISO / IEC 11179, Registration authority
Registration
The relationship between an administered item and
the registration authority.
See also: Regional central bank – BPM
Regional trading
arrangement
A regional trading arrangement is an agreement
among governments to liberalise trade and
possibly to co-ordinate other trade related
activities. There are four principal types of regional
trading arrangements a:
-
Context: Registration is the assignment of an
unambiguous identifier to a data element in a way
that makes the metadata about those data
elements available to interested parties.
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
free trade area;
customs union;
common market;
economic union.
See also: Administered item, ISO / IEC 11179,
Registration authority
Registration applicant
A registration applicant is an organization,
individual, etc, which requests the assignment of
an identifier from a registration authority
Source: Glossary of Insurance Policy Terms, OECD,
Centre for Co-operation with Non-Members, 1999
See also: Common market, Customs union,
Economic union, Free trade area
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Regionalization
The practice of building up world International
Comparison Project (ICP) comparisons on the basis
of comparisons carried out in various country
groupings such as EU or ESCAP.
Registration authority
A registration authority is an organization
authorized to register data elements or other
661
objects
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
See also: Metadata item, Metadata registry,
Registration
Registration method
Registration method refers to continuous,
permanent, compulsory recording of the
occurrence of vital events together with certain
identifying or descriptive characteristics concerning
them, as provided through the civil code, laws or
regulations of each country.
Registry item
Registry item is a metadata item recorded in a
Metadata Registry.
Source: ISO/IEC 11179-3 "Information
technology-Metadata registries (MDR)-Part 3:
Registry metamodel and basic attributes",
February 2003
The vital events may be live births, foetal deaths,
deaths, marriages, divorces, judicial separations,
annulments of marriage, adoptions, recognitions
(acknowledgements of natural children),
legitimations
See also: Administered item, ISO / IEC 11179,
Metadata item, Metadata registry
Registry metamodel
Registry metamodel is a metamodel specifying a
metadata registry.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
Registration status
Registration status is a designation of the position
in the registration life-cycle of a data element
See also: ISO / IEC 11179, Metadata registry,
Metamodel
Regular employees
See Employees
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
See also: Employees – ILO
Registry
An application which stores metadata for querying,
and which can be used by any other application in
the network with sufficient access privileges.
Regulation
Regulation is broadly defined as imposition of rules
by government, backed by the use of penalties
that are intended specifically to modify the
economic behaviour of individuals and firms in the
private sector. Various regulatory instruments or
targets exist. Prices, output, rate of return (in the
form of profits, margins or commissions),
disclosure of information, standards and ownership
ceilings are among those frequently used.
Context: A registry can be understood as the index
of a database or metadata repository which is
made up of all the data providers‘ data sets and
reference metadata sets within a statistical
community, distributed across the Internet or
similar network. Note that the registry services are
not concerned with the storage of data. The
registry services concern themselves with
providing visibility of the data and reference
metadata, and information needed to access the
data and reference metadata.
Context: Different rationales for economic
regulation have been put forward. One is to curb
potential market power and increase efficiency or
avoid duplication of facilities in cases of natural
monopoly. Another is to protect consumers and
maintain quality and other standards including
ethical standards in the case of professional
services provided by doctors, lawyers, etc.
Regulations may also be enacted to prevent
excessive competition and protect suppliers from
unstable output and low price conditions, to
promote employment and more equitable
distribution of income.
Querying: The registry has interfaces for querying
the metadata it contains, so that applications and
users can discover the existence of data sets and
reference metadata sets, structural metadata, the
providers/agencies associated with those objects,
and the provider agreements which describe how
the data and metadata are made available, and
how they are categorized.
Excessive competition, sometimes also called
ruinous competition, is a controversial term
without precise meaning in economics. It usually
refers to a condition of excess capacity and/or
declining demand in an industry, which causes
prices to fall to the level of average variable costs,
discouraging new investment and causing some
incumbents to leave the industry until capacity is
reduced to the point where supply once again
intersects with demand at a price sufficient to
Subscription/Notification: It is possible to subscribe
to specific objects in the registry, so that a
notification will be sent to all subscribers whenever
the registry objects are updated.
Registration (structural metadata submission): A
registry service which allows users to inform the
registry that data sets, reference metadata sets,
structural metadata, or data provisioning
information.
662
cover all costs. When regulatory authorities
interfere with this process by setting minimum
price levels, excess capacity and its attendant
resource misallocation will tend to persist in the
industry. Many economists use this as an example
of the use of regulation to promote the private
interests of producers at the expense of the public
interest.
Regulatory reform
Regulatory reform is used in the OECD work to
refer to changes that improve regulatory quality,
that is, enhance the performance, costeffectiveness, or legal quality of regulations and
related government formalities.
Reform can mean revision of a single regulation,
the scrapping and rebuilding of an entire
regulatory regime and its institutions, or
improvement of processes for making regulations
and managing reform.
Not all forms of regulation have to be mandated or
imposed by government. Many professions adopt
self-regulation, i.e., develop and self-enforce rules
commonly arrived at for the mutual benefit of
members. Self-regulation may be adopted in order
to maintain professional reputation, education and
ethical standards. They may also act as a vehicle
to set prices, restrict entry and ban certain
practices (e.g., advertising in order to restrict
competition).
Source: Regulatory Reform: A Synthesis, OECD,
Paris, 1997, page 11
See also: Administrative regulations, Economic
regulations, Social regulations
Reimbursements,
Prestations de
social security
sécurité sociale Ŕ
benefits
remboursements
Reimbursements (social security benefits) are
repayments (partial or complete) by social security
funds of approved expenditures made by
households on specified goods or services
Deregulation refers to the relaxation or removal of
regulatory constraints on firms or individuals.
Deregulation has become increasingly equated
with promoting competition and market-oriented
approaches toward pricing, output, entry and other
related economic decisions.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: SNA 8.101
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Reimportation of
goods in the same
state
This term "means the customs procedure under
which goods which were exported and were in free
circulation or were compensating products may be
taken into home use free of import duties and
taxes, provided that they have not undergone any
manufacturing, processing or repairs abroad"
(Kyoto Convention, annex B.3, definition (a)).
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Regulatory authority
Autorité
réglementaire
See Pension regulator, Supervisory authority
See also: Pension regulator, Supervisory authority
Regulatory bodies
Organismes de
réglementation
Regulatory bodies are bodies which regulate or
supervise financial corporations; they may be
classified as financial or non-financial according to
their status
Source: United Nations, 2004, International
Merchandise Trade Statistics: Compilers Manual,
New York, Annex B, para. 6, p. 101
Reinsurance by export
credit agencies
Export credit agencies may reinsure amounts
originally insured by a private sector insurer or
commercial bank (some large official agencies are
also providing reinsurance for smaller official
agencies). For example, a private insurer might
keep the commercial risk of a loan on its own
books, but seek reinsurance against specific
political risks. Also, some export credit agencies
may receive reinsurance from their governments
or purchase it in the private reinsurance market.
Source: SNA 4.101
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Regulatory capital
Refers to a specific definition of capital developed
by the BCBS and used as the numerator in the
BCBS‘s capital adequacy ratio. The definition
includes, beyond the traditional capital and reserve
account items, several specified types of
subordinated debt instruments that need not be
repaid if the funds are needed to maintain
minimum capital levels.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
663
greater scrutiny of transactions between related
companies.
Reinvested earnings
and undistributed
branch profits
Reinvested earnings and undistributed branch
profits comprise direct investors‘ shares in
proportion to equity held of earnings that foreign
subsidiaries and associated enterprises do not
distribute as dividends, and earnings that branches
and other unincorporated enterprises do not remit
to direct investors
Source: OECD, 2006, Annual Report on the OECD
Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises:
Conducting Business in Weak Governance Zones,
OECD, Paris
See also: Arm‘s length principle
Related data
reference
A related data reference is a reference between a
data element and any related data.
Source: Report on the Survey of Implementation
of Implementation of Methodological Standards for
Direct Investment – IMF, OECD, March 2000 –
Appendix II: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms.
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179,
Part 1, Framework for the specification and
standardization of data elements, 1999
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/bopage/pdf/mar2000.
pdf
See also: Data element, ISO / IEC 11179
Related diversification
Related diversification occurs when the firm
expands into similar product lines. For example, an
automobile manufacturer may engage in
production of passenger vehicles and light trucks.
Reinvested earnings
Bénéfices réinvestis
on direct foreign
d‟investissement
investment
direct étranger
Reinvested earnings on direct foreign investment
consist of the retained earnings of a direct foreign
investment enterprise which are treated as if they
were distributed and remitted to foreign direct
investors in proportion to their ownership of the
equity of the enterprise and then reinvested by
them in the enterprise
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: SNA 7.120
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Diversification, Unrelated diversification
Related enterprises
Related enterprises are those where there exists a
direct investment relationship. BPM5 defines the
direct investment relationship as ownership, by a
direct investor resident in one economy, of 10
percent or more of the ordinary shares or voting
power (for an incorporated enterprise) or the
equivalent (for an
unincorporated enterprise) of an enterprise
resident of another economy. Further, direct
investment enterprises comprise those entities that
are either directly or indirectly owned by the direct
investor.
Rejection rule
A rejection rule is a logical condition or a
restriction to the value of a data item or a data
group which must not be met if the data is to be
considered correct. In various connections other
terms are used, e.g. Y-rule.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Manual on Statistics of International Trade
in Services, Eurostat, IMF, OECD, UN, UNCTAD,
WTO, 2002, Annex II, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/32/45/2404428.pdf
See also: Conflict rule
Related companies
Related companies are companies that do not have
an arm‘s-length relationship (e.g., a relationship
involving independent, competing interests). This
could be due to both companies being part of the
same business group or could stem from family or
personal ties between officials of two companies.
Related member fund
Fonds entre membres
liés public
Pension funds that comprises the assets of a
limited number of related members who are all in
the governing body of the pension fund.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Context: Accounting for transactions between
related companies is particularly difficult (see
Arm‘s length principle). For this reason managerial,
regulatory and tax arrangements often provide for
664
See also: Group pension fund, Individual pension
fund
Context: In ISO/IEC International Standard 111793 "Information technology - Metadata registries Part 3: Registry metamodel and basic attributes",
February 2003, a relationship is either an
association or a generalization. [ISO/IEC 195011:2001, 2.5.2.36]
Related metadata
reference
Related metadata reference is a reference from
one metadata item to another.
Source: ISO/IEC 11179-3 "Information
technology-Metadata registries (MDR)-Part 3:
Registry metamodel and basic attributes",
February 2003
Association is a semantic relationship between two
classes. [ISO/IEC 19501-1:2001, 2.5.2.3]
Generalization is a relationship between a more
general class (the parent) and a more specific class
(the child) that is fully consistent with the first
class (i.e. it has all of its attributes and
relationships) and that adds additional information.
[ISO/IEC 19501-1:2001, 2.5.2.24]
See also: ISO / IEC 11179, Metadata item
Relational database
A method for organizing files in a database that
specifically prohibits linking one file to another.
A relationship between a Data element example
and its Data element is called an exemplification.
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
See also: ISO / IEC 11179
Relative frequency
See Frequency
Relational database
management system
(RDBMS)
A database management system that allows the
temporary or permanent joining of data tables
based on a common field (a primary and foreign
key). Each row, record or instance in a database
has a fixed set of attributes or fields. Each table
has a primary key that uniquely identifies each
record. The table may also contain a foreign key,
which is identical to a primary key in an external
table. A relational join is achieved by matching the
values of the foreign key to the corresponding
values in the primary key of the external table.
Fréquence relative
See also: Frequency
Relative precision
A term which is frequently used to denote the ratio
of the error variances of two sample designs which
are different but which are based upon the same
sampling unit and the same size of sample. The
usage is not universal, however, since some
writers use the term relative efficiency for this
concept.
The relative efficiency and relative precision are
equal in the case of simple random sampling for
the mean of a large population, but not necessarily
otherwise.
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Relational storage
model
Currently the most popular data model for generalpurpose database systems; theoretical foundation
formulated by E.F. Codd.
Relative price levels
These are defined as the ratios of specific PPPs to
the corresponding overall PPP for GDP. They
indicate whether the price level for a given basic
heading or aggregate is higher or lower relative to
the general price level in the country. They
facilitate the comparison of price structures across
countries.
Source: Adapting new technologies to census
operations, Arij Dekker, Symposium on Global
Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing
Censuses: Mid-Decade Assessment and Future
Prospects, Statistics Division, Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations
Secretariat New York, 7-10 August 2001, Glossary
Context: Strictly speaking, relative price levels
should be based on PPPs that have been calculated
using an aggregation method that is additive.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/docs/sym
posium_06.htm#_Toc8547016
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Relationship
A connection among model elements. [ISO/IEC
19501-1:2001,2.5.2.36]
665
See also: Coefficient of variation
In assessing relevance, one approach is to gauge
relevance directly, by polling users about the data.
Indirect evidence of relevance may be found by
ascertaining where there are processes in place to
determine the uses of data and the views of their
users or to use the data in-house for research and
other analysis. The uses and users of a given
dataset may change over time, and new needs
may arise that require new data; thus, the best
processes have a dynamic nature( International
Monetary Found, "Data Quality Assessment
Framework (DQAF) Glossary").
Release calendar
A statement on the schedule of release of data in
terms of periodicity and timeliness.
Source: Statistics Canada, "Statistics Canada
Quality Guidelines", 4th edition, October 2003,
page 64
Context: An advance release calendar provides a
general statement on the schedule of release of
data, which is publicly disseminated so as to
provide prior notice of the precise release dates on
which a national statistical agency, other national
agency, or international organization undertakes to
release specified statistical information to the
public. Such information may be provided for
statistical releases in the coming week, month,
quarter or year.
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca:8096/bsolc/english/bsolc?c
atno=12-539-X&CHROPG=1
Relative standard
deviation
See Coefficient of variation
See also: Coefficient of variation
Relative standard
error
See Coefficient of variation
See also: Quality – Eurostat, Quality – IMF, Quality
- OECD, Serviceability, Statistical Data and
Metadata Exchange (SDMX)
Reliability
Reliability refers to the closeness of the initial
estimated value(s) to the subsequent estimated
values.
In SDMX, "Release Calendar" describes the policy
regarding the release of statistics according to a
preannounced schedule and its availability. It also
contains the release calendar information.
Context: The third element of the IMF's definition
of quality is "accuracy and reliability".
Source: International Monetary Found, "Data
Quality Assessment Framework (DQAF) Glossary"
Advance release calendar information is one of the
requirements of the IMF's Special Data
Dissemination Standards (SDDS). Such
information is disseminated on the Internet on the
IMF`s Data Standards Bulletin Board (DSBB) or on
national websites.
See also: Accuracy, Estimate, Quality – IMF
Religion
For census purposes religion may be defined as
either:
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
(a) religious or spiritual belief of preference,
regardless of whether or not this belief is
represented by an organised group; or
See also: Periodicity - IMF, Simultaneous release,
Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange (SDMX),
Timeliness
(b) affiliation with an organised group having
specific religious or spiritual tenets
Relevance
The degree to which statistical information meets
the real needs of clients.
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.109
Context: In SDMX, "Relevance" refers to the
processes for monitoring the relevance and
practical utility of existing statistics in meeting
users‘ needs and how these processes inform the
development of statistical programs.
Remaining (residual)
maturity
The period of time until debt payments fall due. In
the Guide, it is recommended that short-term
remaining maturity of outstanding external debt be
measured by adding the value of outstanding
short-term external debt (original maturity) to the
value of outstanding long-term external debt
(original maturity) due to be paid in one year or
less.
Relevance is concerned with whether the available
information sheds light on the issues that are
important to users. Assessing relevance is
subjective and depends upon the varying needs of
users.
The Agency‘s challenge is to weigh and balance the
conflicting needs of current and potential users to
produce a program that goes as far as possible in
satisfying the most important needs within given
resource constraints (Statistics Canada, "Statistics
Canada Quality Guidelines).
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
666
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
images to obtain information needed for
inventories of natural resources, assessments of
natural disasters, preparation of maps, and so
forth. (Glossary of Environment Statistics, Studies
in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United Nations, New
York, 1997)
Remote access
On-line access to protected microdata.
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Remuneration in kind
Rémunération en
nature
Remuneration in kind occurs when an employee
accepts payment in the form of goods and services
instead of money
Remote data
laboratory
A virtual environment providing remote execution
facilities.
Source: SNA 3.38
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Payments in kind, Payments in kind
other than remuneration in kind
Renewable natural
resources
Renewable natural resources are natural resources
that, after exploitation, can return to their previous
stock levels by natural processes of growth or
replenishment. Conditionally renewable resources
are those whose exploitation eventually reaches a
level beyond which regeneration will become
impossible. Such is the case with the clear—cutting
of tropical forests
Remote electronic
voting
Voting that takes place by electronic means from
any location.
Source: OECD, 2004, Promise and Problems of EDemocracy: Challenges of Online Citizen
Engagement, OECD, Paris, Annex 1: Commonly
used E-Engagement Terms
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Remote execution
Submitting scripts on-line for execution on
disclosive microdata stored within an institute‘s
protected network. If the results are regarded as
safe data, they are sent to the submitter of the
script. Otherwise, the submitter is informed that
the request cannot be acquiesced. Remote
execution may either work through submitting
scripts for a particular statistical package such as
SAS, SPSS or STATA which runs on the remote
server or via a tailor made client system which sits
on the user‘s desk top.
See also: Natural resources, Non-renewable
natural resources
Rent - OECD
In modern economics, rent refers to the earnings
of factors of production (land, labour, capital)
which are fixed in supply. Thus, raising the price of
such factors will not cause an increase in
availability but will increase the return to the
factor. This differs from the more common usage
of the term, whereby rent refers to payments for
the use of a resource.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Context: Economists use the term economic rent
to denote the payment to factors which are
permanently in fixed supply and quasi-rent to
denote payments for factors which are temporarily
in fixed supply. The presence of economic rents
implies that the factor can neither be destroyed
nor augmented. Quasi-rents exist when factors can
be augmented over time, or when their supply can
be reduced over time through depreciation. Factors
which earn economic or quasi-rents typically are
paid an amount in excess of their opportunity
costs.
Remote sensing
Télédétection
The process of acquiring information about an
object from a distance; i.e. without physical
contact. Remote sensing usually refers to image
acquisition by means of satellite sensors or aerial
photography.
Context: Remote sensing is the recording of
images of the Earth‘s surface from aircraft and
satellites and processing and analysing of these
In the case of economic rents the supplier receives
a payment in excess of the amount required to
667
induce the supplier to supply the factor. Quasirents, on the other hand, are returns in excess of
that required to keep the factor active, but may
not be sufficient to have induced the supplier to
enter in the first place. When the availability of a
good is artificially restricted (for example by laws
limiting entry), then the increased earnings of the
remaining suppliers are termed monopoly rents.
The potential existence of monopoly rents provides
an incentive for firms to pay for the right to earn
these rents.
to economists Tullock and Krueger, who both
assumed that the potential for monopoly rents
would induce firms to compete for the right to earn
such rents. The outcome would then be that
resources equal to the monopoly rents would be
expended on securing the monopoly. This, they
suggested, was a social loss equivalent to the
amount of monopoly rents (or profits), since the
resources could have been better employed in
other activities. Hence it is argued that the social
costs of monopoly power should include at least
some portion of monopoly profits.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Rent - SNA, Rent - UN, Rent (household)
See also: Deadweight welfare loss, Rent
Rent - SNA
Loyer
Rent is the sum of rents on land and rents on
subsoil assets
Rental equivalence
The estimation of the imputed rents payable by
owner occupiers for the housing services they
produce and consume on the basis of the rents
payable on the market for accommodation of the
same type.
Source: SNA 7.128 and 7.132
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Rent - OECD, Rent - UN, Rent
(household)
Context: When the markets for rented
accommodation are very thin, or even nonexistent, for particular types of accommodation,
the rents may be estimated by the user costs.
Rent - UN
Rent is the net return on a production factor whose
supply is perfectly inelastic (available only as a
fixed amount) such as land. It is also called pure
economic rent
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Owner occupied housing, User cost
See also: Hoteling rent, Rent - OECD, Rent - SNA,
Rent (household)
Rental on fixed assets Loyer des actifs fixes
Rental on fixed assets is the amount payable by
the user of a fixed asset to its owner, under an
operating lease or similar contract, for the right to
use that asset in production for a specified period
of time
Rent (household)
Household rent is the amount paid periodically
(weekly, monthly and so forth) for the space
occupied by a household
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.413
Source: SNA 6.181
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Rent seeking
The opportunity to capture monopoly rents
provides firms with an incentive to use scarce
resources to secure the right to become a
monopolist. Such activity is referred to as rentseeking. Rent-seeking is normally associated with
expenditures designed to persuade governments to
impose regulations which create monopolies.
Examples are entry restrictions and import
controls. However, rent-seeking may also refer to
expenditures to create private monopolies.
Rental price
See User cost of capital
See also: User cost of capital
Rents on land
Loyers des terrains
Rents on land are a form of property income; they
consist of the amounts paid to a landowner by a
tenant for the use of the land
Source: SNA 7.128
Context: The notion of rent-seeking may be traced
668
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Non-repayable margins
Rents on subsoil
Loyers des gisements
assets
Rents on subsoil assets are a form of property
income; they consist of the payments made to the
owners of the subsoil assets by institutional units
permitting them to extract the subsoil deposits
over a specified period
Repayment period
The period during which the debt obligation is to
be repaid.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: SNA [7.133]
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Repairs and
maintenance
Repairs and maintenance covers all construction
work not included under new construction. Such
repairs may be broken down into capital repairs
and current repairs and maintenance
Repeatability
Repeatability is the concept that survey procedures
should be repeatable from survey to survey and
from location to location; the same data processed
twice should yield the same results. (Also called
reproducibility.)
Source: International Recommendations for
Construction Statistics, Statistical Papers, Series
M, No. 47, Rev. 1, United Nations, New York,
1997, para. 73
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
See also: Capital repairs, Current repairs and
maintenance
Repatriating asylumseekers
Repatriating asylum-seekers is the process of
citizens returning after having attempted to seek
asylum abroad. In principle, this category includes
persons who return after their asylum cases have
been decided negatively as well as persons who
may not have been able to apply for asylum but
who stayed abroad under temporary protection for
some time
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Repeated survey
A sample survey which is performed more than
once with essentially the same questionnaire or
schedule but not necessarily with the same sample
units.
See also: Asylum-seekers
Repatriating refugees
Repatriating refugees are citizens returning after
having enjoyed asylum abroad. Both refugees
returning under internationally assisted
repatriation programmes and those returning
spontaneously are included in this category
Rephasing
A revision of the terms of repayment of a debt
obligation.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Repayable margins
Marges à rembourser
Repayable margins consist of deposits or other
collateral deposited to protect a counter party
against default risk, but which remain under the
ownership of the unit that placed the margins
Replacement
See Sampling with replacement
See also: Sampling with replacement
Source: SNA 11.43
669
Replacement cost
Comptabilité au coût
accounting
de remplacement
See Current cost accounting
In Bank for International Settlements (BIS)
terminology, all those deposit-taking institutions
(plus some non-deposit-taking financial
institutions) that submit data to be included in the
BIS International Banking Statistics.
See also: Current cost accounting
Replacement process
A sequential control process for which, at various
points, the system can be returned to some initial
state.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Reporting unit
A reporting unit is a unit that supplies the data for
a given survey instance
Replacement product
The product chosen to replace a sampled product
either because it has disappeared completely from
the market or because its market share has fallen
either in a specific establishment or in the market
as a whole.
Context: The reporting unit is the unit about which
data are reported. When, for a specific survey, the
book keeping office completes questionnaires for
each of the locations of a business, these locations
are the reporting units (Reference manual on
Design and Implementation of Business Surveys,
Statistics Netherlands, March 1995, page 16).
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC.
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva, 2000
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
Replacement rate
Taux de
remplacement
The ratio of an individual's (or a given population's
(average) pension in a given time period and the
(average) income in a given time period.
See also: Analytical Unit - Eurostat, Observation
unit - ISIC Rev. 3, Statistical units – ISIC, Survey
Repos
See Repurchase agreements - SNA
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Repurchase agreements (repos)– SNA
Representation
Representation is the combination of a value
domain, datatype, and, if necessary, a unit of
measure or a character set
See also: Income replacement rate
Replicated sampling
See Duplicate sample
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 1, Framework for the
specification and standardization of data elements,
1998
See also: Duplicate sample
Report on errors
A report on errors is a report which usually
contains the record identification, violated
conditions, items that are probably erroneous, etc.
Representation
category
A representation category is the type of symbol,
character, or other designation used to represent a
data element
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Representation term
A representation term is a component of a data
element name which describes the form of
representation of the data element
Reporting banks
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
670
Data Elements (draft)
A concept that relates to individual products within
the same basic heading and to the product list for
a basic heading.
See also: Form of representation
Representative item
A product [or item] selected for pricing within an
elementary aggregate because purchases of the
product account for a significant proportion of the
total purchases of all products within the
aggregate and/or because the price change for the
product is close to the average for all products
within the aggregate.
Context: Representativity of a product within a
basic heading is defined in terms of a specific
country. A product is either representative or
unrepresentative of the price level in country A for
a given basic heading irrespective of the relative
importance of the basic heading with respect to
other basic headings.
It is representative if, in country A, the price level
of the product is close to the average for all
products within the basic heading. Usually, though
not necessarily, the purchases of the product will
account for a significant proportion of the total
purchases of all products covered by the basic
heading. If not, the product will at least be sold in
sufficient quantities for its price level to be typical
for the basic heading.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Representativity of the product list for a basic
heading is defined in terms of all countries
participating in the comparison. The product list
should be equally representative – or equirepresentative - of all participating countries. In
general, representative products have lower price
levels than unrepresentative products. Therefore, if
the product list for the basic heading is not equally
representative of all participating countries, the
price levels for the basic heading will be
overestimated for countries pricing a smaller
number of representative products and
underestimated for countries pricing a larger
number of representative products.
Representative
product
See Representativity
See also: Representativity
Representative
sample
In the widest sense, a sample which is
representative of a population. Some confusion
arises according to whether ―representative‖ is
regarded as meaning ―selected by some process
which gives all samples an equal chance of
appearing to represent the population‖; or,
alternatively, whether it means ―typical in respect
of certain characteristics, however chosen.
This does not mean that all countries should have
the same number of representative products for
each basic heading providing this is taken into
account when calculating PPPs for the basic
heading. But it does mean that each country
should be able to price that number of
representative products which is commensurate
with the heterogeneity of products covered by the
basic heading and its expenditure on the basic
heading.
Context: On the whole, it seems best to confine
the word ―representative‖ to samples which turn
out to be so, however chosen, rather than apply it
to those chosen with the object of being
representative.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
See also: Equi-representativity
Representativeness
A term used to describe how characteristic a
particular item is of the types of goods and
services included in a basic heading.
Representativity bias
Bias in a basket index that results from the use of
quantities that are not representative of the two
periods compared; that is, that systematically
diverge from the average quantities consumed in
the two periods. For example, representativity bias
may result from the use of an old, out-of-date
basket which deviates systematically from the
baskets in both the periods compared. In practice,
representativity bias tends to be similar to
substitution bias, as it is attributable to the same
economic factors.
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Representativity
671
Statistics, Bank for International Settlements,
Basel, Switzerland, 2000, Part III – Glossary of
Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/meth07.pdf
See also: Repurchase agreements (repos)– SNA
Representativity
indicators
Indicators, given by each country, marking those
items that have been selected as representative
items.
Repurchase
Accords de réméré agreements (repos)Ŕ SCN
SNA
Repurchase agreements are arrangements
whereby an institutional unit sells securities at a
specified price to another unit; the sale is made
under a commitment to repurchase the same or
similar securities at a fixed price on a specified
future date (usually very short-term, e.g.
overnight or one day) or at a date subject to the
discretion of the purchaser
Countries are expected to price their
representative products and a selection of
unrepresentative products - that is, products
representative of other countries. When reporting
prices, countries are required to identify which of
the products they have priced are representative.
They do this by assigning representativity
indicators.
Source: SNA 11.32
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Repurchase agreements (repos) – BIS
See also: Asterisk product
Rerouting
Réorientation d‟une
(transactions)
opération
Rerouting (transactions) records a transaction as
taking place in channels that differ from the actual
ones or as taking place in an economic sense when
it actually does not, such as a direct transaction
between unit A and unit C being recorded as taking
place indirectly through a third unit B, usually,
however, with some change in the transaction
category
Reproducibility
See Repeatability
See also: Repeatability
Repudiation of debt
A unilateral disclaiming of a debt instrument
obligation by a debtor.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: SNA 3.24
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Resale price
maintenance (RPM)
Resale Price Maintenance (RPM) exists with a
supplier specifying the minimum (or maximum)
price at which the product must be re-sold to
customers.
Repurchase (repo)
rate
Repurchase (repo) rate is the interest rate paid at
the time of the repurchase of the securities in a
repurchase agreement
Context: From a competition policy viewpoint,
specifying the minimum price is of concern. It has
been argued that through price maintenance, a
supplier can exercise some control over the
product market. This form of vertical price fixing
may prevent the margin from retail and wholesale
prices from being reduced by competition.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
However, an alternative argument is that the
supplier may wish to protect the reputation or
image of the product and prevent it from being
used by retailers as a loss leader to attract
customers. Also, by maintaining profit margins
through RPM, the retailer may be provided with
incentives to spend greater outlays on service,
invest in inventories, advertise and engage in
other efforts to expand product demand to the
mutual benefit of both the supplier and the
retailer.
Repurchase
agreements (repos) Ŕ
BIS
Repurchase agreements (repos) are money market
operations based upon arrangements involving the
sale of (financial) assets at a specified price with a
commitment to repurchase the same or similar
assets at a fixed price on a specified future date
(usually short-term) or on a date subject to the
discretion of the purchaser
Source: Guide to the International Banking
672
RPM may also be used to prevent free riding by
retailers on the efforts of other competing retailers
who instead of offering lower prices expend time,
money and effort promoting and explaining the
technical complexities or attributes of the product.
For example, one retailer may not reduce price but
explain and demonstrate to customers the use of a
complex product such as a computer. The
customer may after acquiring this information
choose to buy the computer from a retailer that
sells it at a lower price and does not explain or
demonstrate its uses.
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
In many countries, RPM is per se illegal with few
exceptions or exempt products. Many economists
now advocate adopting a less stringent approach in
competition law towards RPM and other vertical
restraints.
Hyperlink: http://www1.oecd.org/dsti/sti/statana/prod/eas_fras.htm
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Research and
development Ŕ SNA
Research and
development - OECD
Research and development is a term covering
three activities: basic research, applied research,
and experimental development
Source: OECD Frascati Manual, Fifth edition, 1993,
para. 58, page 13
See also: Research and development – SNA,
Research and development – UNESCO
Activités de
recherchedéveloppement - SCN
Research and development by a market producer
is an activity undertaken for the purpose of
discovering or developing new products, including
improved versions or qualities of existing products,
or discovering or developing new or more efficient
processes of production
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Resale-based service
supplier
The subsequent sale or lease on a commercial
basis, with or without adding value, of a service
provided by a facilities-based telecommunications
operator.
Source: SNA 6.142 [6.163]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Research and development - OECD,
Research and development – UNESCO
A resale service supplier or reseller is a company
that leases bulk-rated plant (e.g. transmission)
capacity from facilities-based carriers and uses
that capacity to provide services to individual
customers or groups of customers at prices high
enough to make a profit yet sufficiently below the
equivalent rates of the facilities-based carriers to
attract customers.
Research and
Activités de
development Ŕ
rechercheUNESCO
développement
Research and development services in natural
sciences and engineering; social sciences and
humanities and interdisciplinary.
Source: Telecommunications services: Glossary of
terms – World Trade Organisation
Any creative systematic activity undertaken in
order to increase the stock of knowledge, including
knowledge of man, culture and society, and the
use of this knowledge to devise new applications.
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/tratop_e/serv_e/t
elecom_e/tel12_e.htm
Includes fundamental research, applied research in
such fields as agriculture, medicine, industrial
chemistry, and experimental development work
leading to new devices, products or processes
Rescheduling
See Debt rescheduling
Source: UNESCO Statistical Yearbook, UNESCO,
Paris, 68 and 65, Chap. 5
See also: Debt rescheduling
See also: Research and development - OECD,
Research and development – SNA
Rescheduling
agreement
An agreement between a creditor, or a group of
creditors, and a debtor to reschedule debt. This
term is sometimes used loosely to apply to a debtreorganization/restructuring agreement, one
element of which is rescheduling.
Research and
development and
scientific and
technological
innovation
Scientific and technological innovation may be
considered as the transformation of an idea into a
new or improved product introduced on the
market, into a new or improved operational
process used in industry and commerce, or into a
new approach to a social service.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
673
costly large-scale surveys of researchers and/or
higher education institutions
The word ―innovation‖ can have different meanings
in different contexts and the one chosen will
depend on the particular objectives of
measurement or analysis
Source: OECD Frascati Manual, Fifth edition, 1993,
Annex 2, para. 35, page 117
Source: OECD Frascati Manual, Fifth edition, 1993,
para. 20, page 5
Hyperlink: http://www1.oecd.org/dsti/sti/statana/prod/eas_fras.htm
Hyperlink: http://www1.oecd.org/dsti/sti/statana/prod/eas_fras.htm
Researchers
Researchers are professionals engaged in the
conception or creation of new knowledge, products
processes, methods, and systems, and in the
management of the projects concerned.
Research and
development
expenditure
Research and development expenditure is the
money spent on creative work undertaken on a
systematic basis to increase the stock of
knowledge and the use of this knowledge to devise
new applications.
Researchers are all persons in the International
Standard Classification of Occupations-88 (ISCO88) Major Group 2 ―Professional Occupations‖ plus
―Research and Development Department
Managers‖ (ISCO- 88 1237). By convention, any
members of the Armed Forces with similar skills
performing R&D should also be included in this
category.
Context: Expenditure on Research and
Development (R&D) refers to all expenditure on
research performed at universities and at other
institutions of tertiary education, regardless of
whether the research is funded from general
institutional funds or through separate grants or
contracts from public or private sponsors. This
includes all research institutes and experimental
stations operating under the direct control of, or
administered by, or associated with, higher
education institutions.
(Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary)
Source: OECD Frascati Manual, Sixth edition,
2002, paras. 301-302, page 93
Hyperlink: http://www1.oecd.org/dsti/sti/statana/prod/eas_fras.htm
Reserve base
The sum of the eligible balance sheet items (in
particular liabilities) that constitute the basis for
calculating the reserve requirement of a credit
institution.
Source: Measuring the ICT Sector: Information
Society, OECD, 2000, Data Item Definitions, Data
Sources and Methodologies, page 152
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Research and
development
personnel
Research and development personnel includes all
persons employed directly on research and
development [activities] , as well as those
providing direct services such as research and
development managers, administrators and clerical
staff.
Reserve ratio
The ratio defined by the central bank for each
category of eligible balance sheet items included in
the reserve base. The ratio is used to calculate
reserve requirements.
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Those providing an indirect service, such as
canteen and security staff, should be excluded,
even though their wages and salaries are included
as an overhead cost when measuring expenditure.
Reserve requirements Réserves obligatoires
Reserve requirements are the minimum reserves
required for depository institutions. They are set
by the central bank within limits specified by laws
for depository institutions. A change in the
minimum reserve ratio affects the amount of its
deposit base a financial institution can lend out.
Reserve requirements are an instrument of
monetary policy
Source: OECD Frascati Manual, Sixth edition,
2002, paras. 294-295, page 92
Hyperlink: http://www1.oecd.org/dsti/sti/statana/prod/eas_fras.htm
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Research co-efficients
Research coefficients are fractions or proportions
applied to statistics describing the total resources
of the higher education sector. They are derived in
a number of ways, ranging from informed guesses
to sophisticated models. Whatever the method
used, they are a useful alternative to the more
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Reserves, total
674
international
Residence
See Reserve assets, international
themselves or their parents and who subsequently
enrol in a tertiary level programme (―resident
foreign students‖) (e.g. children or parents of
families with work visas or permits or with
diplomatic appointments, refugees, immigrants
with permanent residence status, etc.), and those
who come to the country expressly for the purpose
of pursuing their education (―non-resident foreign
students‖).
See also: Reserve assets, international
Resident Ŕ BPM
Résident(e) - MBP
An institutional unit has a centre of economic
interest within a country when there exists some
location - dwelling, place of production, or other
premises - within the economic territory of the
country on, or from, which the unit engages and
intends to continue engaging, either indefinitely or
over a finite but long period of time, in economic
activities and transactions on a significant scale.
The location needs not to be fixed so long as it
remains within the economic territory
Context: The terms ―resident‖ and ―non-resident‖
here are intended merely to convey this distinction
and not to suggest that the distinction necessarily
be made on the basis of some form of ―official‖
residence status in the country.
- a ―non-resident‖ foreign student could be a
student who holds a student visa or permit;
Source: BPM para. 62
- a ―non-resident‖ foreign student could be a
foreign student who has completed his secondary
education in another country.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
In cases where a student has more than one
residence authorisation, the classification selected
should be the primary or first immigration
document
See also: Non-resident, Resident – SNA, Resident
– UN
Resident Ŕ SNA
Résident(e) Ŕ SCN
An institutional unit is resident in a country when it
has a centre of economic interest in the economic
territory of that country
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 59
Context: Individuals and institutional units
changing countries are normally only considered
resident in the new country after one year,
although the one year guideline may be
interpreted flexibly.
Source: SNA 4.15 [1.28, 14.8]
Residential building
Bâtiment résidentiel
A building should be regarded as residential
building when more than half of the floor area is
used for dwelling purposes. Other buildings should
be regarded as non-residential.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Two types of residential buildings can be
distinguished:
See also: Resident – BPM, Resident – UN
- houses (ground-oriented residential buildings):
comprising all types of houses (detached, semidetached, terraced houses, houses built in a row,
etc.) each dwelling of which has its own entrance
directly from the ground surface;
Resident Ŕ UN
Résident(e) - NU
The Draft Manual on Statistics of International
Trade in Services states that individuals and
institutional units changing countries are normally
only considered resident in the new country after
one year, although the one year guideline may be
interpreted flexibly
- other residential buildings: comprising all
residential buildings other than ground-oriented
residential buildings as defined above
Source: Manual on Statistics of International Trade
in Services, Eurostat, IMF, OECD, UN, UNCTAD,
WTO, 2002 – Annex II, Glossary
Source: International Recommendations for
Construction Statistics, Statistical Papers, Series
M, No. 47, Rev. 1, United Nations, New York,
1997, para. 73 and Bulletin of Housing and
Building Statistics for Europe and North America,
UNECE, Geneva, 2000, Annex II, Definitions and
General Terms, page 83
Hyperlink:
http://www1.oecd.org/std/TIS_Dec2000_Meeting/
DOCS/SERV2000_2e.pdf
See also: Resident – BPM, Resident – SNA
See also: Building - UN, Non-residential buildings –
UN
Resident and nonresident non-national
tertiary level student
At the university tertiary level of education a
distinction is made between resident and nonresident foreign students. The aim is to distinguish
between foreign students who are resident in the
country as a result of a prior migration by
Residential building
classification
The United Nations recommendations the following
classification of residential buildings:
Buildings co-existent with a single housing unit: detached - attached
675
Buildings containing more than one housing unit; up to two floors; - from 3 to 10 floors; - eleven
floors or more
See also: Stability (of ecosystem)
Resistance
Résistance
Resistance is the ability of plants and animals to
withstand poor environmental conditions and/or
attacks by chemicals or disease
Buildings for persons living in institutions
All others
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.299
See also: Homeostasis
Residual disclosure
Disclosure that occurs by combining released
information with previously released or publicly
available information. For example, tables for
nonoverlapping areas can be subtracted from a
larger region, leaving confidential residual
information for small areas.
Resource functions of
the natural capital
The capacity of natural capital to provide natural
resources which can be drawn into the economy to
be converted into goods and services for the
benefit of mankind. Examples are mineral deposits,
timber from natural forests, and deep sea fish.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 1.23
Residual maturity
Residual maturity is the remaining time until the
expiration or the repayment of the instrument
Resource
management group
(of environment
industry)
The resource management group comprises goods
and services which are particular for natural
resource management. Although environmental
protection is excluded from the coverage of
resource management, inevitably some products
may be included which are associated with
environmental protection although their prime
purpose is not environmental protection (for
example, those used for energy saving and
management, renewable energy, etc.). The
collection of data for this group is still in the
developmental stage.
Source: Glossary of Government Debt Terms,
OECD, unpublished, 2001
Residuals
(environmental)
A residual is the amount of a pollutant that
remains in the environment after a natural or
technological process has taken place.
Context: The generic term for all unwanted waste
materials in solid, liquid and gaseous form
resulting from economic activity.
United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 2.26
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.90
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Resource rent
Rente de ressources
The economic rent of a natural resource equals the
value of capital services flows rendered by the
natural resources, or their share in the gross
operating surplus; its value is given by the value of
extraction. Resource rent may be divided between
depletion and return to natural capital.
Resilience
Résilience
Resilience refers to the capacity of a natural
system to recover from disturbance
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source:
United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
676
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.167
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
Respondent burden
See Provider load
See also: Provider load
Resource rent derived
from capital service
flow calculation
The resource rent is calculated as the difference
between the gross operating surplus and the value
of the capital services flows rendered by the stock
of capital.
Respondent load
See Provider load
See also: Provider load
Response
The reaction of an individual unit to some form of
stimulus. It may be to a drug, as in bioassay, or
the reaction to a request for information, as in
sample surveys of human beings.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.178
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Non-response
Resource rent derived
from the perpetual
inventory method
calculation
The resource rent is calculated as gross operating
surplus less the value of the consumption of fixed
capital less return to fixed capital.
Response bias
The difference between the average of the
averages of the responses over a large number of
independent repetitions of the census and the
unknown average that could be measured if the
census were accomplished under ideal conditions
and without error.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.175
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Resources
Ressources
Resources refers to the side of the current
accounts where transactions which add to the
amount of economic value of a unit or a sector
appear (for example, wages and salaries are a
resource for the unit or sector receiving them); by
convention, resources are put on the right side of
the account
Response errors (in
household surveys)
Response errors [in household surveys] may be
defined as those arising from the interviewing
process. Such errors can result from a number of
circumstances, such as the following:
-
Source: SNA 2.54
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
inadequate concepts or questions;
inadequate training;
interviewer failures;
respondent failures
Context: Response errors may result from the
failure of the respondent to report the correct
value (respondent error), the failure of the
interviewer to record the value reported correctly
(interviewer error), or the failure of the instrument
to measure the value correctly (instrument error).
(Statistical Policy Working Paper 15: Quality in
Establishment Surveys, Office of Management and
Budget, Washington D.C., July 1988, page 57)
Respondent
Respondents are businesses, authorities, individual
persons, etc, from whom data and associated
information are collected for use in compiling
statistics.
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary.
Source: Statistical Office of the United Nations,
"Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
677
Edition", (para. 8.6), Studies in Methods, Series F,
No. 31, United Nations, New York, 1984
total economy and the rest of the world (i.e.
between residents and non-residents)
Source: SNA 14.3 [1.14]
Response rate
The number of respondents who complete a
questionnaire compared to the number assigned,
usually expressed as a percentage. The response
rate can also apply to individual questions.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Restoration costs
Côut de la
régénération
The cost for restoring environmental quality. These
costs may be ―actual‖ or ―hypothetical‖.
Hypothetical restoration costs are only used in
cost-based estimates if they are the ―least-cost
option‖. The hypothetical costs of restoring the
environment to defined standards are important
outside the national accounting framework. The
hypothetical costs include the mitigation /
abatement of accumulated damage required to
return to this standard.
Source: Australian Government Initiative,
Statistical Clearing House , "Glossary''
Hyperlink:
http://www.sch.abs.gov.au/SCH/A1610103.NSF/Gl
ossary?OpenView
See also: Item response rate, Non-response rate,
Refusal rate
Responsible
organisation
A responsible organization is the organization or
unit within an organization that is responsible for
the contents of the mandatory attributes by which
the data element is specified.
Context: Restoration costs are the actual and
imputed expenditures for activities aiming at the
restoration of depleted or degraded natural
systems, partly or completely counteracting
(accumulated) environmental impacts of economic
activities.
Source: ISO/IEC FCD 11179-6 Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 6:
Registration, January 2004
Glossary of Environment Statistics, Studies in
Methods, Series F, No. 67, United Nations, New
York, 1997.
See also: ISO / IEC 11179, Organisation
Rest of the world Ŕ
Reste du monde - SEC
ESA
The rest of the world is a grouping of units without
any characteristic functions and resources; it
consists of non-resident units insofar as they are
engaged in transactions with resident institutional
units, or have other economic links with resident
units. Its accounts provide an overall view of the
economic relationships linking the national
economy with the rest of the world
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
paras. 9.50-9.51 & 10.168
Source: ESA [2.89]
Restorative crops
Cultures régénérantes
Restorative crops are crops that help in
maintaining the fertility of the soil, for example,
pulses and legumes
See also: Environmental restoration
See also: Rest of the world – SNA
Rest of the world Ŕ
Reste du monde - SCN
SNA
The rest of the world refers to all non-resident
institutional units that enter into transactions with
resident units, or have other economic links with
resident units. Included are certain institutional
units that may be physically located within the
geographic boundary of a country, for example,
foreign enclaves such as embassies, consulates or
military bases, and also international organizations
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Restricted access
Imposing conditions on access to the microdata.
Users can either have access to the whole range of
raw protected data and process individually the
information they are interested in - which is the
ideal situation for them - or their access to the
protected data is restricted and they can only have
a certain number of outputs (e.g. tables) or maybe
only outputs of a certain structure. Restricted
access is sometimes necessary to ensure that
linkage between tables cannot happen.
Source: SNA para. 4.163
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Rest of the world – ESA
Rest of the world
Compte du reste du
account
monde
The rest of the world account comprises those
categories of accounts necessary to capture the full
range of transactions that take place between the
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
678
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Restricted data
Synonym of safe data.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
See also: Export cartel
Restriction on
importation
Restriction on importation refers to measures,
normally adopted by governments, which restrict
the ability of firms to enter foreign markets via
imports.
See also: Safe data
The most common restrictions are tariffs, quotas
and voluntary export restraints. Tariffs serve to tax
imports, thus making them expensive relative to
domestic goods.
Restriction based
disclosure control
method
Method for the release of tabular data, which
consists in reducing access to the data provided to
the external user. This method reduces the content
of information provided to the user of the tabular
data. This is implemented by not publishing all the
figures derived from the collected data or by not
publishing the information in as detailed a form as
would be possible.
Quotas affect imports directly by restricting the
number of units which can come from abroad.
Voluntary export restraints, largely confined to the
U.S., are similar to quotas in that they restrict
quantities. They differ from quotas in that they are
not imposed unilaterally by the importing country.
Rather, they are agreed to by the exporting
country or countries, usually to forestall the
imposition of tariffs and/or quotas.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Restriction of entry to
the market
See Barriers to entry, Limit pricing
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Barriers to entry, Limit pricing
Retail trade Ŕ ISIC
Commerce de detail Ŕ
Rev. 3
CITI Rev. 3
Retail trade is defined in the International
Standard Industrial Classification (ISIC) as the resale (sale without transformation) of new and used
goods to the general public, for personal or
household consumption or utilisation.
Restriction of
technology
See Licensing
See also: Licensing
Restriction on
exportation
Restriction on exportation refers to restrictions
placed on the ability of firms to export. Such
restrictions may come from governments, normally
to protect or conserve non-renewable resources or
cultural treasures. They may also come from
agreements among firms to limit exports as part of
a cartel arrangement.
Retail trade includes the following ISIC Rev. 3
Groups in Division 52 (except repair of personal
and household goods).
- non-specialised retail trade in stores;
- retail sale of food, beverages and tobacco in
specialised stores;
- other Retail trade of new goods in specialised
stores;
- retail sale of second-hand goods in stores;
- retail trade not in stores
These restrictions may also arise from agreements
negotiated by the importing country such as the
case of "voluntary" export restrictions (VER's) of
Japanese automobiles to the United States.
Context: The International Standard Industrial
Classification (ISIC), Revision 3, states that goods
sold in the retail trade sector are limited to so
called consumer goods. Thus, retail trade data
record details of transactions in consumer goods
between customers and sellers. This sector
generates a large part of total employment and
private final consumption expenditure, which
represents around 60% of total GDP of OECD
Finally export restrictions may be part of licensing
arrangements whereby the firm granted the
license is not allowed to export the good in
competition with other licensees, or the firm selling
the license.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
679
Member countries. Therefore, retail trade statistics
are a very useful indicator of short-term
developments for the whole economy.
the end-user or retail prices of the corresponding
final services. The discount off retail prices is
usually set as a fixed percentage of the retail price.
Guidelines for the compilation of statistics for retail
trade are included in the United Nations
publication, "International Recommendations on
Statistics of the Distributive Trades and Services".
A second UN document, "Organisation and Conduct
of Distributive-Trade Surveys", provides a guide to
the planning and management of censuses and
surveys for the sector.
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Retirement age
Âge de la retraite
See Normal retirement age, Normal pension age
See also: Normal pension age, Normal retirement
age
For European Union member countries, Eurostat is
currently implementing regulations for the
compilation of retail trade statistics within the
context of the Council Regulation Concerning
Short-term Statistics. This Regulation specifies that
the scope of retail trade indicators should include
the activities listed in Division 52 of NACE Rev. 1,
the equivalent European Union classification of
ISIC Rev. 3.
Retirement benefit
See Benefit
Prestation de retraite
See also: Benefit (pension)
Retirement
expenditure
Retirement expenditure is the cost incurred
currently, exclusive of any contribution by
employees, in providing future retirement benefits
for persons currently employed in education. This
cost can be measured by actual or imputed
employers (or third party) contributions to
retirement systems.
Source: ISIC Rev. 3
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
See also: Retail trade – NACE
The reason for not counting employee‘s
contributions is that they are already counted in
the gross salary component of total compensation.
Retail trade Ŕ NACE
Commerce de detail Ŕ
NACE
Retail trade is a form of trade in which goods are
mainly purchased and resold to the consumer or
end- user, generally in small quantities and in the
state in which they were purchased (or following
minor transformations). This corresponds to the
NACE Rev. 1 Division retail trade, except of motor
vehicles and motorcycles; repair of personal and
household goods.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Retirement plan
Plan de retraite
See Pension plan, Pension scheme
See also: Pension plan, Pension scheme
It includes the following Groups:
Retirements
Retirements occur when capital assets are
withdrawn from the capital stock at the end of
their service lives. Retirements are synonymous
with ―discards‖ and ―scrapping"
— retail sale in non-specialised stores;
— retail sale of food, beverages and tobacco in
specialised stores;
— retail sale of pharmaceutical and medical goods,
cosmetic and toilet articles;
— other retail sale of new goods in specialised
stores;
— retail sale of second-hand goods in stores;
— retail sale not in stores;
— repair of personal and household goods
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
Source: Eurostat and NACE Rev. 1
See also: Discards, Scrapping
Hyperlink:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/eurostat/ramon/cgi/Si
mWW
WFrame.SimResetBottomFrame?nID=NACE_REV1
&lId=&pId=
&test=&frameType=4&association=&property=DE
SCRIPTI ON&language=EN
Retractable bond
Issue carrying the option (for both the issuer and
the investor) for early redemption at one or
several fixed dates.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
See also: NACE, Retail trade – ISIC Rev. 3
Retail-Minus
An approach to setting access prices under which
the access prices are explicitly set on the basis of
Retrospective
680
demographic survey
A retrospective demographic survey is a type of
demographic survey containing questions, related
to the occurrence of vital events during a specified
period proceeding the date of interview
Context: The re-introduction of a residual material
into a production (or consumption) process so that
it is used as an input in its original form.
United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.51
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Return to capital
Return to capital is what is left from gross
operating surplus when consumption of fixed
capital and depletion are deducted. Alternatively it
is the value of capital services flows less
consumption of fixed capital.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Revaluation account
Compte de
réévaluation
The revaluation account records the positive or
negative holding gains accruing during the
accounting period to the owners of financial and
non-financial assets and liabilities
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.161
Source: SNA 12.63 [1.9]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Returning citizens
See Returning migrants
Revealed preference
pricing methods
Techniques that derive the values of environmental
goods and services form market prices. They
comprise market valuation of economic losses,
hedonic pricing methods and travel costs methods.
See also: Returning migrants
Returning migrants
Returning migrants are persons returning to their
country of citizenship after having been
international migrants (whether short-term or
long- term) in another country and who are
intending to stay in their own country for at least a
year
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 9.75
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Returns to scale
Returns to scale refers to the rate by which output
changes if all inputs are changed by the same
factor. Constant returns to scale: a k-fold change
in all inputs leads to a k-fold change in output.
Under increasing returns to scale, the change in
output is more than k-fold, under decreasing
returns to scale; it is less than k- fold
Revenues
Revenus
Revenues (or total revenue) refer to the value of
output sold, that is the number of units times the
price per unit. Average revenue is revenue per
unit, that is total revenue divided by the amount of
output sold. Average revenue is therefore equal to
price per unit.
Marginal revenue is the increment in total revenue
resulting from the sale of an additional unit.
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
The term "revenue" is often used interchangeably
with "sales" and "turnover".
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
Context: Marginal revenue may or may not equal
average revenue. A firm operating under perfect
competition has no control over price. It must sell
all units at the same price. Hence marginal
revenue equals price (which is average revenue)
and these are constant.
Re-use
Réemploi
Reuse is the use of materials or products more
than once, for example, refilling of bottles
A firm with market power, on the other hand, faces
681
a downward sloping demand curve. In order to sell
more, it must reduce price. Thus average revenue
(price) is declining. Moreover, it can be shown that
marginal revenue is not only declining, but is less
than average revenue. The profit maximizing firm
sets marginal cost (see costs) equal to marginal
revenue.
Amounts expressed in monetary units which are
entered in the accounts as credit to the road
transport enterprise.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
For the perfectly competitive firm, the result is that
price equals marginal cost, the condition for Pareto
efficiency. For a monopolist, price exceeds
marginal cost and is therefore higher than that of
the perfectly competitive firm.
Revenues (of sea
transport enterprises)
Amounts expressed in monetary units which are
entered in the accounts as credit to the sea
transport enterprise.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Monopoly, Perfect competition
Revenues (for railway
enterprises)
Amounts expressed in monetary units which are
entered in the accounts as credit to the railway
enterprise.
Reverse convertible
bond obligation
Convertible bond that may be redeemed at the
issuer‘s discretion against existing shares of an
underlying company that has no economic relation
with the issuer or the guarantor of the bonds.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Revenues (of inland
waterways transport
enterprises)
Amounts expressed in monetary units which are
entered in the accounts as credit to the inland
waterways transport (IWT) enterprise.
Reverse investment
Reverse investment refers to the acquisition by a
direct investment enterprise of a financial claim on
its direct investor.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Because direct investment is recorded on a
directional basis, capital invested by the direct
investment enterprise in its direct investor (reverse
investment) is regarded as an offset to capital
invested in the direct investment enterprises by a
direct investor and its related enterprises, except
in instances when the equity participations are at
least 10 percent in both directions.
Revenues (of oil
pipeline enterprises)
Amounts expressed in monetary units which are
entered in the accounts as credit to the oil pipeline
transport enterprise.
Context: Such reverse investment transactions are
recorded based on the direction of the direct
investment relationship.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
When the claims are not sufficient to establish a
second, separate direct investment relationship,
the reverse investment transactions should be
recorded according to the directional principle of
the direct investment relationship as follows:
- As direct investment in the reporting economy,
claims on direct investors in the data for the
economy in which the direct investment
enterprises is resident.
Revenues (of road
transport enterprises)
682
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/qna/2000/tex
tbook
- As direct investment abroad, liabilities to
affiliated enterprises in the data for the economy in
which the direct investor is resident.
See also: Compilation practices, Data source,
types of, Integrity, Internal access, Ministerial
commentary, Statistical Data and Metadata
Exchange (SDMX), Time series breaks
When the equity participation‘s are at least 10% in
both directions, two direct investment relationships
are established. In these circumstances, equity
and other capital transactions between enterprises
are recorded as direct investment claims and
liabilities in both directions, as follows:
Revolutionary goods
Goods that are significantly different from existing
goods. They are generally produced on entirely
new production lines using production inputs and
processes that are considerably newer than those
used to produce existing
goods.
- As direct investment abroad for transactions on
assets.
- As direct investment in the reporting economy for
transactions on liabilities.
It is virtually impossible, both in theory and in
practice, to adjust for any quality differences
between a revolutionary good and any existing
good.
Source: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms, OECD, 2001 – not published
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Reverse transaction
An operation whereby the central bank buys or
sells assets under a repurchase agreement or
conducts credit operations against collateral.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Revolving credit
Revolving credit refers to credit with a clause for
automatic renewal (under certain conditions)
Revision policy
A policy or set of policies, aimed at ensuring the
transparency of disseminated data whereby
preliminary data are compiled that are later
revised when more and better source data become
available.
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Context: In SDMX, "Revision Policy and Practice"
describes the data revision policy, the policy and
practice for identifying the revision status of
available data, as well as the availability of revision
studies and analyses.
Revolving
underwriting facility
(RUF)
A medium- to long-term finance instrument that
allows the borrower, by issuing short-term paper,
to benefit from cheaper short-term funds. An RUF
consists of the following:
Providing users with documentation regarding the
source data used and the way they are adjusted
gives compilers the possibility to incorporate new
and more accurate information into estimates, thus
improving their accuracy without introducing
breaks in the time series.
- Euronotes;
Data may also be subject to ad hoc revisions as a
result of the introduction of new classifications,
compilation frameworks and methodologies which
result in the compilation of historical data that
replaces previously released data. Whether or not
such changes constitute an actual "revision" or the
compilation of a "new" series is a matter of
judgment on the part of the statistical agency.
- the borrower issues short-term paper for periods
of less than one year through different
mechanisms (CDs, in the case of banks);
- underwriting banks‘ contingent liability (backup
line);
- a group of underwriting banks, whose obligation
consists of purchasing any of the above-mentioned
unsold short-term notes at previously arranged
rates or, alternatively, who provide funds through
separate lending arrangements that offer the
issuer the certainty that the requested amount will
be available.
Under the requirements of the Special Data
Dissemination Standard (SDDS), an organisation's
revision policy for specific statistics is disseminated
on the Internet on the IMF`s Dissemination
Standards Bulletin Board (DSBB).
Source: International Monetary Fund (IMF),"
Quarterly National Accounts Manual", Washington
D.C., 2001
The instruments that RUFs most closely resemble
are floating-rate notes and syndicated loans. An
RUF, however, includes the special feature of
683
staggered maturities.
enforcing of emission standards
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Rio Declaration on
Déclaration de Rio sur
Environment and
lénvironnement et le
Development
developpement
See United Nations Conference on Environment
and Development
Reweighting
Introducing a new set of weights into the index.
See also: United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC.
Rio Group
See City groups
See also: City groups
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Risk analysis
Analyse des risques
(environmental)
Risk analysis is the method of evaluating the
probability of the adverse effects of a substance,
industrial process, technology or natural process
Rice crop year
Campagne (riz)
Rice crop year refers to the crop marketing year
beginning 1 April for Japan, Australia, 1 August for
the United States, 1 September for the European
Union, 1 October for Mexico, 1 November for Korea
and 1 January for other countries
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Risk analysis /
assessment
A systematic process for assessing and integrating
professional judgements about probable adverse
conditions and/or events. The risk assessment
process should provide means of organising and
integrating professional judgements for
development of the work schedule
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Rights accumulation
program
An IMF program of assistance established in 1990
whereby a member country with long overdue
obligations to the IMF, while still in arrears, may
accumulate ―rights‖ toward a future disbursement
from the IMF on the basis of a sustained
performance under an IMF-monitored adjustment
program. Countries incurring arrears to the IMF
after end-1989 are not eligible for assistance under
this program.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Context: Rights Accumulation Programs adhere to
the macroeconomic and structural policy standards
associated with programs supported by the
Extended Fund Facility (EFF) and the Poverty
Reduction and Growth Facility (PRGF), and
performance is monitored, and rights accrue,
quarterly.
Risk assessment (of
Evaluation des risques
pollution)
(de pollution)
Risk assessment (of pollution) refers to the
quantitative and qualitative evaluation of the risk
posed to human health and/or the environment by
the actual or potential presence of and exposure to
particular pollutants
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Risk exposures
In terms of financial stability analysis, among the
types of risk exposures faced by a deposit-taker
that require monitoring are included credit risk,
market risk, liquidity risk, foreign exchange risk,
large exposures risk, equity price risk, and real
Ringelmann Chart
A Ringelmann Chart is the series of shaded
illustrations used to measure the opacity of air
pollution emissions. The chart shades range from
light grey to black and serve in the setting and
684
estate price risk.
information. To determine whether a statistical unit
is identifiable, account shall be taken of all the
means that might reasonably be used by a third
party to identify the said statistical unit.
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Risk indicator
A risk indicator is an indicator that estimates the
potential for some form of resource degradation
using mathematical formulas or models
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Road
Line of communication (travelled way) using a
stabilized base other than rails or air strips open to
public traffic, primarily for the use of road motor
vehicles running on their own wheels.
Risk management
Gestion des risques
Risk management is the process of evaluating
alternative regulatory and non—regulatory
responses to risk and selecting among them. The
selection process necessarily requires the
consideration of legal, economic and social factors
Context: Included are bridges, tunnels, supporting
structures, junctions, crossings and interchanges.
Toll roads are also included. Excluded are
dedicated cycle paths.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Risk-free interest rate
Risk-free interest rate is the return on a security
whose pay-off is certain.
Road cabotage
transport
National road transport performed by a motor
vehicle registered in another country.
Source: OECD Economic Outlook Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/28/54/1890650.ht
m
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Risk-weighted assets
Risk-weighted assets refer to a concept developed
by the BCBS for the capital adequacy ratio. Assets
are weighted by factors representing their riskiness
and potential for default.
Road goods transport
enterprise
Road transport enterprise offering and performing
services in the transport of goods, whose main
activity in the field of road transport, according to
value-added, is road goods transport.
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Risky cells
The cells of a table which are nonpublishable due
to the risk of statistical disclosure are referred to
as risky cells. By definition there are three types of
risky cells: small counts, dominance and
complementary suppression cells.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Road journey
A movement of a road vehicle from a specified
point of origin to a specified point of destination.
Risky data
Data are considered to be disclosive when they
allow statistical units to be identified, either
directly or indirectly, thereby disclosing individual
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Context: A journey can be divided into a number of
sections or stages.
685
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
The combination of the place of embarkment and
the place of disembarkment of the passengers
conveyed by road whichever itinerary is followed.
Context: Places are defined by using international
classification systems such as NUTS (Nomenclature
of Territorial Units for Statistics - EUROSTAT).
Road motor vehicle
A road vehicle fitted with an engine whence it
derives its sole means of propulsion, which is
normally used for carrying persons or goods or for
drawing, on the road, vehicles used for the
carriage of persons or goods.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: The statistics exclude motor vehicles
running on rails.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Road passengerkilometre
Unit of measure representing the transport of one
passenger by road over one kilometre.
Context: The distance to be taken into
consideration is the distance actually travelled by
the passenger.
Road network
All roads in a given area.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Road passengers
disembarked
A passenger alighting from a road vehicle after
having been conveyed by it.
Road passenger
Any person who makes a journey by a road
vehicle. Drivers of passenger cars, excluding taxi
drivers, are counted as passengers. Service staff
assigned to buses, motor coaches, trolleybuses,
trams and goods road vehicles are not included as
passengers.
Context: A transfer from one road vehicle to
another is regarded as disembarkment before reembarkment.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Road passenger
transport enterprise
Road transport enterprise offering and performing
services in the transport of one or more persons
(passengers), not including the driver, and whose
main activities in the field of road transport,
according to value-added, is road passenger
transport.
Road passengers
embarked
Passenger who boards a road vehicle to be
conveyed by it.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Road passenger
transport link
Road tractor
Road motor vehicle designed, exclusively or
primarily, to haul other road vehicles which are not
Context: A transfer from one road vehicle to
another is regarded as embarkment after
disembarkment.
686
power-driven (mainly semi-trailers).
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Agricultural tractors are excluded.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Road transport
Any movements of goods and/or passengers using
a road vehicle on a given road network.
Context: When a road vehicle is being carried on
another vehicle, only the movement of the carrying
vehicle (active mode) is considered.
Road traffic
Any movement of a road vehicle on a given
network.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: When a road vehicle is being carried on
another vehicle, only the movement of the carrying
vehicle (active mode) is considered.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Road transport
enterprise
Enterprise carrying out in one or more places
activities for the production of road transport
services using road vehicles and whose main
activities according to the value added is road
transport.
Road traffic on
national territory
Any movement of road vehicles within a national
territory irrespective of the country in which these
vehicles are registered.
In terms of activity classifications the following
classes are involved:
-- ISIC/Rev.3:
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Division 60, Group 602 - Other land transport;
Class 6021 - Other scheduled passenger land
transport,
Class 6022 - Other non-scheduled passenger land
transport;
Class 6023 - Freight transport by road;
-- NACE/Rev.1
Road train
Goods road motor vehicle coupled to a trailer
Division 60, Group 602; Urban and road transport
Class 60.21- Scheduled passenger transport;
Class 60.22 - Taxi operation;
Class 60.23 - Other road passenger transport;
Class 60.24 - Freight transport by road.
Context: Articulated vehicle with a further trailer
attached is included.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Even those enterprises without salaried
employees are taken into account. Only units,
which actually carry out an activity during the
reference period should be considered. "Dormant"
units or those not yet having begun their activity
are excluded.
Road transit
Road transport through a country between two
places (a place of loading and a place of unloading)
both located in another country or in other
countries provided that the total journey within the
country is by road and that there is no loading and
unloading in that country.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Road motor vehicles loaded/unloaded at
the frontier of that country onto/from another
mode of transport are included.
Road vehicle
A vehicle running on wheels and intended for use
on roads.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
687
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
ROM
See Read-only-memory
See also: Read-only-memory (ROM)
Rome Convention
Treaty, administered by World Intellectual Property
Organization (WIPO), UNESCO and ILO, for the
protection of the works of performers,
broadcasting organizations and producers of
phonograms.
Roaming
(1) A service offered by mobile communications
network operators which allows a subscriber to use
his/her radio or phone while in the service area of
another carrier. Roaming requires an agreement
between operators of technologically compatible
systems in individual markets to permit customers
of either operator to access the other‘s systems.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
(2) Travelling outside a carrier‘s local area.
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Source: Cellular Mobile Pricing Structures and
Trends, Working Party on Telecommunication and
Information Services Policies – November 1999,
page 9, Select Glossary of Mobile Terms
Room - Eurostat
The precise definition of a room may vary from
country to country and often depends on the
source used. However, in principle, corridors,
verandas, utility rooms, lobbies, bathrooms, toilets
and kitchens are excluded
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/54/42/2538118.pdf
Rolling benchmark
approach
The approach that allows PPPs and real final
expenditures to be calculated annually when price
collection is spread over a number of years (three
in the case of Eurostat-OECD comparisons).
Source: Population, Households and Dwellings in
Europe - Main Results of the 1990/1991 Censuses,
1996 Edition, Eurostat
See also: Floor area, Room – UN, Volume of
buildings
Context: The starting point is the complete matrix
of basic heading PPPs by participating country for
the reference year, t. In the subsequent year, t+1,
some of the basic heading PPPs are replaced by
new PPPs calculated using prices collected during
t+1, while the basic heading PPPs that have not
been replaced are advanced to t+1 with price
indices specific to these basic headings. All the
basic heading PPPs in the matrix now refer to t+1.
Room Ŕ UN
A room is a space in a housing unit or other living
quarters enclosed by walls reaching from the floor
to the ceiling or roof covering, or to a height of at
least two metres, of an area large enough to hold a
bed for an adult, that is, at least four square
metres.
The total number of types of rooms therefore
includes bedrooms, dining rooms, kitchens, living
rooms, studies, habitable attics, servants‘ rooms,
rooms used for professional or business purposes,
and other separate spaces used or intended for
dwelling purposes, so long as they meet the
criteria concerning walls and floor space.
Aggregating the matrix with expenditure weights
for t+1 gives PPPs and real final expenditures for
each level of aggregation up to the level of GDP
with which a comparison can be made for the new
reference year, t+1.
By continuing the cycle of replacement,
extrapolation and aggregation through t+2, t+3,
t+4, etc., comparisons can be made for the
reference years t+2, t+3, t+4, etc.
Passageways, verandas, lobbies, bathrooms and
toilet rooms should not be counted as rooms, even
if they meet the criteria
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.375
See also: Floor area, Room (Eurostat), Volume of
buildings
Rollover (credit)
Rollover refers to the renewal of an existing credit
(or credits)
Root mean square
error (RMSE)
A measure of total error defined as the square root
of the sum of the variance and the square of the
bias.
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
688
Washington DC.
Ro-Ro unit
Wheeled equipment for carrying goods, such as a
lorry, trailer or semi-trailer, which can be driven or
towed onto a vessel or train.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Context: Port or vessels‘ trailers are included in
this definition.
Ro-Ro (Roll-on Rolloff)
Loading/unloading by the vessel‘s doors/ramps by
a wheeled means of conveyance.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Rotation bias
A type of bias that occurs in panel surveys which
consist of repeated interviews on the same units.
Although these surveys are designed so that the
estimates of a characteristic are expected to be
nearly the same for each panel in the survey, this
expectation has not been realized. For example, an
estimate from a panel that is in the survey for the
first time may differ significantly from estimates
from the panels that have been in the survey
longer.
Ro-Ro cargo ship
Ro-Ro ship with facilities for the carriage of goods
only.
Context: Ro-Ro container ships are included.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Ro-Ro passenger ship
Ro-Ro ship with facilities for the carriage of both
passengers and goods.
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Context: Commercial factors have led to increased
complexities of ship design and many ships are
designed for a combination of purposes. The main
combinations are Ro-Ro passenger ship and
general cargo/passenger ship.
Rounding
The process of approximating to a number by
omitting certain of the end digits, replacing by
zeros if necessary, and adjusting the last digit
retained so that the resulting approximation is as
near as possible to the original number. If the digit
is increased by unity the number is said to be
rounded up; if left unchanged it is rounded down.
When both are under consideration the process is
said to be one of rounding off.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Rounding belongs to the group of
disclosure control methods based on output
perturbation. It is used to protect small counts in
tabular data against disclosure.
Ro-Ro ship
Ship arranged for Ro-Ro loading/unloading.
The basic idea behind this disclosure control
method is to round each count up or down either
deterministically or probabilistically to the nearest
integer multiple of a rounding base. The additive
nature of the table is generally destroyed by this
process. Rounding can also serve as a recoding
method for microdata.
Context: Ro-Ro is a way of loading/unloading a
vessel by the vessel‘s doors/ramps by a wheeled
means of conveyance. Ro-Ro passenger ship and
Ro-Ro container ship are included. Specialized
vehicle carriers are excluded from this group but
are included under specialised carriers.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada, Germany
FSO, University of Manchester, 2005, Glossary of
Statistical Disclosure Control, incorporated in paper
presented at Joint UNECE/Eurostat work session on
statistical data confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11
October 2005.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
689
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See Real-time gross settlement system
See also: Real-time gross settlement system
(RTGS)
R-U map
A graphical representation of the trade off between
disclosure risk and data utility.
Roundtable on
Business Survey
Frames
The purpose is to provide a forum for the exchange
of views and experience and the conduct of joint
experiments related to the development,
maintenance and use of business registers to
support survey sampling and other statistical
activities related to the production of business
statistics. The Round Table is an informal body and
participation is on a voluntary basis. Participants,
however, are required to contribute to the
programme of the annual meeting. Although its
mandate does not emanate from a formal body,
the Round Table could, on the basis of its
discussions and/or experiments, make
recommendations to a formal body (e.g., the
Statistical Commission) regarding the
consideration and/or adoption of certain practices
or standards.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Ruinous competition
See Cut-throat competition
See also: Cut-throat competition
Rule of reason
The Rule of reason is a legal approach by
competition authorities or the courts where an
attempt is made to evaluate the pro-competitive
features of a restrictive business practice against
its anticompetitive effects in order to decide
whether or not the practice should be prohibited.
Source: United Nations Statistical Division website
Hyperlink:
http://www.un.org/depts/unsd/citygrp/citygrp.htm
Context: Some market restrictions which prima
facie give rise to competition issues may on further
examination be found to have valid efficiencyenhancing benefits. For example, a manufacturer
may restrict supply of a product in different
geographic markets only to existing retailers so
that they earn higher profits and have an incentive
to advertise the product and provide better service
to customers. This may have the effect of
expanding the demand for the manufacturer's
product more than the increase in quantity
demanded at a lower price. The opposite of the
rule of reason approach is to declare certain
business practices per se illegal, that is, always
illegal are per se illegal.
Royalties
Redevances
―Royalties‖ is the term often used to describe
either the regular payments made by the lessees
of subsoil assets to the owners of the assets (these
payments are treated as rents in the System of
National Accounts (SNA)) or the payments made
by units using processes or producing products
covered by patents (these are treated as
purchases of services produced by the owners of
the patents in the SNA)
Source: SNA 7.87 and 7.92
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
RPI
Retail Price Index
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
RPI-X
An approach to regulating prices under which the
regulated firm is allowed to adjust its own prices
subject to the weighted average of prices not
exceeding a cap. In the RPI-X price cap system
this cap is allowed to increase at the rate of
inflation (RPI) less some "X factor" to account for
productivity gains or to reduce the regulated firm's
rents.
Rules of origin
Laws, regulations and administrative procedures
which determine a product‘s country of origin. A
decision by a customs authority on origin can
determine whether a shipment falls within a quota
limitation, qualifies for a tariff preference or is
affected by an anti-dumping duty. These rules can
vary from country to country.
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
RTGS
690
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Running track
A track providing end-to-end line continuity and
used for trains between stations or places indicated
in tariffs as independent points of departure or
arrival for the conveyance of passengers or goods.
Safety interval
The minimal calculated interval that is required for
the value of a cell that does not satisfy the primary
suppression rule.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Runoff
Ruissellement
Runoff is the portion of precipitation not
immediately absorbed into or detained on soil and
which thus becomes surface water flow
Salaries (of
educational
personnel)
Salaries means the gross salaries of educational
personnel, before deduction of taxes, contributions
for retirement or health care plans, and other
contributions or premiums for social insurance or
other purposes.
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
SA
Seasonally adjusted
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
SACU
Southern African Customs Union comprising
Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia, South Africa and
Swaziland.
Sales
Sales measures gross operating revenues less
rebates, discounts, and returns. Sales should be
measured exclusive of consumption and sales
taxes on consumers, as well as value added taxes.
Safe data
Microdata or macrodata that have been protected
by suitable Statistical Disclosure Control methods.
Source: Manual on Statistics of International Trade
in Services, Eurostat, IMF, OECD, UN, UNCTAD,
WTO, 2002, Annex II, Glossary.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/32/45/2404428.pdf
See also: Turnover
Salinity
Salinité
Salinity refers to the salt content of environmental
media
Safe setting
An environment such as a microdata lab whereby
access to a disclosive dataset can be controlled.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Salinization
Salinisation
Salinization refers to the increase in salt
concentration in an environmental medium,
notably soil. It is also known as salination
Safeguard measures
Action taken to protect a specific industry from an
unexpected build-up of imports — governed by
Article XIX of the General Agreement on Tariffs
and Trade (GATT) 1994.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Salt water intrusion
Intrusion d‟eau salée
Salt water intrusion is the mixing of saltwater with
freshwater. It can occur in either surface- water or
groundwater bodies
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
691
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Sample description
space
See Sample space
SAM
MCS (matrice de
comptabilité sociale Ŕ
SAM en anglais)
See Social accounting matrix
See also: Sample space
Sample design
Plan de sondage
The sample design provides information on the
target and final sample sizes, strata definitions and
the sample selection methodology.
See also: Social accounting matrix (SAM)
Same-day visitors
See Excursionists and Foreign excursionists
See also: Excursionists, Foreign excursionists (also
called ―same-day visitors‖)
Context: The usage is not uniform as regards the
precise meaning of this and similar terms such as
"sample plan", "survey design", "sampling plan" or
"sampling design". These cover one or more parts
constituting the entire planning of a sample survey
inclusive of processing, etc.
Sample
A sample is a subset of a frame where elements
are selected based on a randomised process with a
known probability of selection.
The term "sampling plan" may be restricted to
mean all steps taken in selecting the sample; the
term "sample design" cover in addition the method
of estimation; and "survey design" may cover also
other aspects of the survey, e.g. choice and
training of interviewers, tabulation plans, etc.
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva, 2000
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
"Sample design" is sometimes used in a clearly
defined sense, with reference to a given frame, as
the set of rules or specifications for the drawing of
a sample in an unequivocal manner (The
International Statistical Institute, "The Oxford
Dictionary of Statistical Terms", edited by Yadolah
Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003)
See also: Co-ordination of samples, Sample
design, Sample size, Sample survey, Sampling,
Sampling fraction, Sampling frame, Sampling
technique, Sampling unit, Schedule, Stratification
Source: Eurostat, "Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary", Working Group, Luxembourg,
May 2002
Sample augmentation
Maintaining and adding to the sample of
establishments in the survey panel to ensure it
continues to be representative of the population of
establishments [or outlets].
See also: Sample, Survey design
Sample rotation
Limiting the length of time that establishments
stay on the survey panel by dropping a proportion
of them after a certain period of time and replacing
them with a new sample of establishments.
Generally only done with the smaller respondents,
for whom it is felt that responding to surveys
imposes a significant burden.
A fixed sample of establishments [or outlets] tends
to become depleted as establishments [outlets]
cease producing [trading] or stop responding.
Recruiting new establishments [outlets] also
facilitates the inclusion of new products in the PPI
[CPI].
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC.
Rotation is designed to keep the sample up to
date. It also helps to alleviate the problems caused
by sample depletion.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC.
Sample census
If ―census‖ is taken to mean the examination of
each member of a population this term is selfcontradictory. If, however, census refers to the
kind of material collected then it is possible to use
a sample.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Sample size
Taille d'échantillon
The number of sampling units which are to be
included in the sample. In the case of a multistage sample this number refers to the number of
units at the final stage in the sampling.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
692
The price collected for a sampled product,
sometimes described as a price quote.
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
See also: Sample, Sample size, Sampling - UN,
Sampling fraction, Sampling unit
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Sample space
The set of sample points corresponding to all
possible samples. The permissible domain of
variation of a sample point. Sometimes referred to
as sample description space or event space.
Sampled product
An individual product that is included in the sample
selected for pricing within an elementary
aggregate.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Sample statistic
An expression, better avoided as redundant, which
is synonymous with ―statistic‖.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Sampling - MetaStore
Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types refers to
information on sample size, sample frame, sample
updating, sample (other)
See also: Statistics
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
Sample survey
Enquête par sondage
A sample survey is a survey which is carried out
using a sampling method, i.e. in which a portion
only, and not the whole population is surveyed
See also: Sampling - UN
Sampling - UN
Sampling is the process of selecting a number of
cases from all the cases in a particular group or
universe.
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003.
See also: Sample, Survey
Context: Sampling is the research strategy of
collecting data from a part of a population with a
view to drawing inferences about the whole. The
―population‖ in this sense is often termed the
―universe". (Survey Design and Statistical
Methodology Metadata, Software and Standards
Management Branch, Systems Support Division,
United States Bureau of the Census, Washington
D.C., August 1998, Section 3.3.17, page 28)
Sample unique
A record within a dataset which is unique within
that dataset on a given key.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: United Nations Statistics Division,
"Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects", Studies in Methods, Series F,
No. 35, United Nations, New York, 1991
Sample unit
This term is often synonymous with sampling unit
but would be better confined to the denotation of
any of the units constituting a specified sample.
See also: Area sampling, Sample, Sample size,
Sampling - MetaStore
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Sampling (in context
of data
confidentiality)
In the context of disclosure control, this refers to
releasing only a proportion of the original data
records on a microdata file.
See also: Sampling unit
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
Sampled price
693
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Context: The proportion of the population
contained within a data release. With simple
random sampling, the sample fraction represents
the proportion of population units that are selected
in the sample. With more complex sampling
methods, this is usually the ratio of the number of
units in the sample to the number of units in the
population from which the sample is selected.
Sampling bias
That part of the difference between the expected
value of the sample estimator and the true value
of the characteristic which results from the
sampling procedure, the estimating procedure, or
their combination.
Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada, Germany
FSO, University of Manchester, 2005, Glossary of
Statistical Disclosure Control, incorporated in paper
presented at Joint UNECE/Eurostat work session on
statistical data confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11
October 2005
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Source: Statistics Canada Quality Guidelines, 3rd
edition, October 1998, page 22
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca/english/freepub/12-539XIE/12-539-XIE.pdf
Sampling distribution Loi d'échantillon
The distribution of a statistic or set of statistics in
all possible samples which can be chosen according
to a specified sampling scheme. The expression
almost always relates to a sampling scheme
involving random selection, and most unusually
concerns the distribution of a function of a fixed
number n of independent variates.
See also: Sample, Sample size
Sampling frame
A list of all members of a population used as a
basis for sampling.
Context: Without such a frame, or its equivalent,
methods of sampling with assured properties such
unbiasedness are not available. The frame in effect
defines the study population.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003.
See also: Frame, Sample
Sampling error
Erreur de sondage
That part of the difference between a population
value and an estimate thereof, derived from a
random sample, which is due to the fact that only
a sample of values is observed; as distinct from
errors due to imperfect selection, bias in response
or estimation, errors of observation and recording,
etc.
Sampling technique
A sampling technique is the name or other
identification of the specific process by which the
entities of the sample have been selected.
Source: United States Bureau of the Census,
Software and Standards Management Branch,
Systems Support Division, "Survey Design and
Statistical Methodology Metadata", Washington
D.C., August 1998, Section 3.3.23, page 32.
The totality of sampling errors in all possible
samples of the same size generates the sampling
distribution of the statistic which is being used to
estimate the parent value.
Hyperlink:
http://www.census.gov/srd/www/metadata/metad
a18.pdf
Context: Sampling errors arise from the fact that
not all units of the targeted population are
enumerated, but only a sample of them. Therefore,
the information collected on the units in the
sample may not perfectly reflect the information
which could have been collected on the whole
population. The difference is the sampling error
(Eurostat, Quality Glossary).
See also: Sample
Sampling unit
Unité de sondage
A sampling unit is one of the units into which an
aggregate is divided for the purpose of sampling,
each unit being regarded as individual and
indivisible when the selection is made.
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003.
Context: The definition of unit may be made on
some natural basis, e.g., household, persons, units
of product, tickets, etc., or upon some arbitrary
basis, e.g., areas defined by grid co-ordinates on a
map.
See also: Non-sampling error
Sampling fraction
Fraction sondée
The sampling fraction is the ratio of the sample
size to the population size.
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
694
(c) x—mesosaprobic: polluted with not very high
DO content,
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003.
See also: Sample, Sample size, Ultimate sampling
unit
(d) polysaprobic: strongly polluted, with negligible
DO content, and
Sampling variance
The variance of a sampling distribution. The word
―sampling‖ can usually be omitted, as being
defined by the context or otherwise understood.
The sampling variance of a statistic is the square
of its standard error.
(e) antisaprobic: so polluted that no living
organism is capable of living in the water
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Water quality clauses
SARS
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome is an atypical
pneumonia caused by SARS coronavirus (SARSCoV). First cases were reported in February 2003,
and the subsequent four month epidemic was
considered a health threat of global proportions,
because of limited knowledge concerning the
transmission of the virus.
Sampling with
replacement
When a sampling unit is drawn from a finite
population and is returned to that population, after
its characteristic(s) have been recorded, before the
next unit is drawn, the sampling is said to be ―with
replacement‖. In the contrary case the sampling is
―without replacement‖.
Source: OECD, 2004, OECD Agricultural Outlook:
2004-2013, OECD, Paris, Glossary
Satellite accounts
Comptes satellites
Satellite accounts provide a framework linked to
the central accounts and which enables attention
to be focussed on a certain field or aspect of
economic and social life in the context of national
accounts; common examples are satellite accounts
for the environment, or tourism, or unpaid
household work
Context: A different usage occurs in sample
surveys when samples are taken on successive
occasions. If the same members are used for
successive samples there is said to be no
replacement; but if some members are retained
and others are replaced by new individuals there is
said to be ―partial replacement‖.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: SNA 2.246 [21.4]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Sanitary regulations
Sanitary regulations are government regulations
that restrict or prohibit the importation and
marketing of certain animal species, or products
thereof, to prevent the introduction or spread of
pests or diseases that these animals may be
carrying
Satellite telephony
Telephone communication through geo-stationary
satellites, no land-based relay stations.
Source: Adapting new technologies to census
operations, Arij Dekker, Symposium on Global
Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing
Censuses: Mid-Decade Assessment and Future
Prospects, Statistics Division, Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations
Secretariat New York, 7-10 August 2001, Glossary
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
See also: Phytosanitary regulations, Uruguay
Round Agreement on Agriculture (URAA)
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/docs/sym
posium_06.htm#_Toc8547016
Saprobic water
classification
Classification
saprophytique des
eaux
A Saprobic water classification is a biological
classification of water quality according to five
categories:
Sauerbeck price index
A price index defined as the weighted arithmetic
average of the current to previous period price
relatives using the values of the base period as
weights. The price reference-period is the previous
period (that is the period immediately before the
current period) and the weight reference-period is
some other fixed period prior to the previous
period. A time-series index is derived by chaining
which, because the weight reference-period
remains fixed, can result in a serious upward drift
(a) oligosaprobic: clear, with no or only slight
pollution and high dissolved oxygen (DO) content,
(b) p—mesosaprobic: moderately polluted with still
high DO content,
695
in the index when price changes are large and
erratic.
points exhibits the relationship between x and y.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
SCCTAS
Steering Committee to Co-ordinate Technical
Assistance in Statistics to Countries of the Former
Soviet Union
Saving
Épargne
Saving is disposable income less final consumption
expenditure (or adjusted disposable income less
actual final consumption), in both cases after
taking account of an adjustment for pension funds;
saving is an important aggregate which can be
calculated for each institutional sector or for the
whole economy
Scenario
Scénario
A scenario is a model-generated set of market
projections based on alternative assumptions than
those used in the baseline. Used to provide
quantitative information on the impact of changes
in assumptions on the outlook
Source: SNA 9.17 [1.10, 9.2, 9.19]
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Scenario analysis
A set of pseudocriminological methods for
analysing and classifying the plausible risk
channels for a data intrusion. The methods are
based around first delineating the means, motives
and opportunity that an intruder may have for
conducting the attack. The output of such an
analysis is a specification of a set of keys likely to
be held by data intruders.
Scanner data
Detailed data on sales of consumer goods obtained
by ‗scanning‘ the bar codes for individual products
at electronic points of sale in retail outlets. The
data can provide detailed information about
quantities, characteristics and values of goods sold
as well as their prices.
Context: Scanner data constitute a rapidly
expanding source of data with considerable
potential for CPI purposes. They are also being
used increasingly for purposes of hedonic analysis.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Schedule
In the theory of sample surveys, schedule is
synonymous with questionnaire.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Context: A schedule occurs in the specialized sense
of a group, or sequence, of questions designed to
elicit information upon a subject. Usually, it is
completed by an investigator on the basis of
information supplied by the particular member of
the population chosen for inclusion in the sample,
but sometimes it is completed by that member
him- or herself, as in postal enquiries.
Scanning
A data capture technique in which information on
hard-copy documents (e.g. paper or mylar) is
captured and converted into a digital image by
means of a light-sensitive optical device.
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Source: The International Statistical Institute, "The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms", edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003
See also: Questionnaire, Sample, Survey
Scatter diagram
A diagram showing the joint variation of two
variates x and y. each member is represented by a
point whose coordinates on ordinary rectangular
axes are the values of the variates which it bears.
A set of n observations thus provides n points on
the diagram and the scatter or clustering of the
Schedule of prices
method (construction
price indices)
This method used for the compilation of
construction price indices entails the selection of a
representative sample of construction projects
either taking place, or completed, in a given
696
geographic area, over a specified period of time.
The cost of each technical component (derived
from blueprints, work specifications, etc.) of a
given construction in the sample is priced as at the
base reference date. This involves the use of a
schedule of prices containing the price of each
component of the construction at the base period
date.
School expectancy
School expectancy is the average duration of
formal education in which a five-year-old child can
expect to enrol over his or her lifetime. It is
calculated by adding the net enrolment
percentages for each single year of age from the
age of five onwards.
Examples of this method are the construction price
indices for residential buildings compiled in France,
and several output price indices compiled in the
United Kingdom.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Context: By aggregating the prices for all the
components a theoretical average price of the
entire construction is obtained as though it had
been undertaken at the base reference date. The
general weighting is obtained from statistics on
current construction. A price index is then obtained
by calculating the ratio of the current actual price
of the sampled construction to the recalculated
price at the base reference period (derived from
the sum of its components compiled from the
schedule of prices).
School level
administrative
personnel
School level administrative personnel includes all
personnel who support the administration and
management of the school. This staff includes
receptionists, secretaries, typists and word
processors, bookkeepers and clerks, photocopying
assistants, etc
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 46
The role of the schedule of prices is to define a
price structure, not the average level of each
component. The composition of the schedule of
prices may not necessarily reflect the average
prices for the base period. Obtaining such an
average would require a very large sample.
However, the relative structure of the prices on the
schedule reflects market conditions at the time
period in question.
School level
management
School level management includes professional
personnel who are responsible for school
management / administration. It includes
principals, assistant principals, headmasters,
assistant headmasters, and other management
staff with similar responsibilities. It does not
include however receptionists, secretaries, clerks,
and other staff who support the administrative
activities of the school
Source: Sources and Methods: Construction Price
Indices, OECD, Eurostat, 1997, page 21
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/document/4/0,2340,en_2649
_34247_2367940_1_1_1_1,00.html
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 46
See also: Construction price indices, Subsequent
breakdown methods (construction price indices)
Schema
In computer programming, a schema is the
organization or structure of a database. The
activity of data modelling leads to a schema. The
term is sometimes used to refer to a visualization
of a structure and sometimes to a formal textoriented description.
School location
In PISA, school location refers to the community in
which the school is located, such as a village,
hamlet or rural area (fewer than 3 000 people), a
small town (3 000 to about 15 000 people), a town
(15 000 to about 100 000 people), a city (100 000
to about 1 000 000 people), close to the centre of
a city with over 1 000 000 people or elsewhere in a
city with over 1 000 000 people.
Source: Government of Canada, Thesauri and
Controlled Vocabularies, Definitions, website
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
School attendance
School attendance is attendance at any regular
accredited educational institution or programme,
public or private, for organised learning at any
level of education at the time of the census or, if
the census is taken during the vacation period at
the end of the school year, during the last school
year
School-based
programmes
In school-based (vocational and technical)
programmes, instruction takes place (either partly
or exclusively) in educational institutions. This
includes special training centres for vocational
education run by public or private authorities or
enterprise-based special training centres if these
qualify as educational institutions. These
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.150
697
programmes can have an on-the-job training
component, i.e., a component of some practical
experience in the workplace.
is with internationally accepted standards,
guidelines, or good practices. The scope/coverage
includes a description of target population, and
geographic, sector, institutional, item, population,
product, and other coverage.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: "United Nations Glossary of Classification
Terms" prepared by the Expert Group on
International Economic and Social Classifications;
unpublished on paper
Scientific and
technological
innovation
See Research and development and scientific and
technological innovation
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/class/family/glossary_s
hort.htm
See also: Coverage, Out-of-scope units,
Population, statistical, Scope (of a price index),
Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS),
Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange (SDMX)
See also: Research and development and scientific
and technological innovation
Scientific literacy
Culture scientifique
The Programme for International Student
Assessment (PISA) defines scientific literacy as the
capacity to use scientific knowledge, to identify
questions, and to draw evidence-based conclusions
in order to understand and help make decisions
about the natural world and the changes made to
it through human activity.
Scope (of a price
index)
The domain of price transactions that the PPI aims
to measure. The conceptual boundaries of the PPI
in terms of the products, transactions,
geographical areas, and producers to which it
refers.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Context: The set of products for which the index is
intended to measure the price changes. The scope
of a CPI will generally be defined in terms of a
designated set of consumption goods and services
purchased by a designated set of households. In
practice, certain goods and services or households
may have to be excluded because it is too difficult,
time-consuming or costly to collect the relevant
data on expenditures or prices: for example, illegal
expenditures. The coverage of an index denotes
the actual set of products included, as distinct from
the intended scope of the index.
See also: Mathematical literacy, Reading literacy
Scope (general
definition)
The scope is the coverage or sphere of what is to
be observed. It is the total membership or
population of a defined set of people, object or
events.
Context: In SDMX, "Scope/Coverage" describes the
coverage of the statistics and how consistent this
is with internationally accepted standards,
guidelines, or good practices. The scope/coverage
includes a description of target population, and
geographic, sector, institutional, item, population,
product, and other coverage.
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Source: "United Nations Glossary of Classification
Terms" prepared by the Expert Group on
International Economic and Social Classifications;
unpublished on paper
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/class/family/glossary_s
hort.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
See also: Coverage, Out-of-scope units,
Population, statistical, Scope (of a price index),
Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS),
Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange (SDMX)
See also: Scope (general definition)
Score function
A score function is a numerical indicator used to
prioritize micro data review in selective editing.
Scope (general
definition)
The scope is the coverage or sphere of what is to
be observed. It is the total membership or
population of a defined set of people, object or
events.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Context: In SDMX, "Scope/Coverage" describes the
coverage of the statistics and how consistent this
Hyperlink:
698
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
See also: Selective editing
See also: Metadata registry, Reference metadata,
Registration, Statistical Data and Metadata
Exchange (SDMX), Structural metadata
Scrap
Scrap are discarded or rejected materials that
result from manufacturing or fabricating operations
and are suitable for reprocessing
SDMX-EDI
EDIFACT format for exchange of SDMX-structured
data and metadata.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: The SDMX-EDI format is drawn from the
GESMES/TS version 3.0 implementation guide, as
published as a standard of the SDMX initiative.
(source, p. 10)
Scrapping
Scrapping occurs when capital assets are
withdrawn from the capital stock at the end of
their service lives. Scrapping is synonymous with
―discards‖ and ―retirements"
SDMX-EDI is a message designed for the exchange
of statistical information between organisations in
a platform independent manner. The message
implements a data exchange model (SDMX
Information Model) which provides for the
exchange of time series identified through a multidimensional key and a variety of associated
metadata.
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
It employs an appropriate GESMES profile and
EDIFACT syntax. Though GESMES is a generic
statistical data model which affords sufficient
flexibility to describe syntactically virtually any
statistical data model, SDMX-EDI has a fixed
syntax. This allows partner institutions to design
and to build the applications needed to "read" and
"write" SDMX-EDI messages, avoiding
intermediate files and special translators; the
design of the read/write applications is further
simplified by eliminating genericity which is not
needed when exchanging time series data.
See also: Discards, Retirements
SDMX Registry
An application which stores metadata for querying,
and which can be used by any other application in
the network with sufficient access privileges.
Context: The SDMX model of statistical exchange
is based on a set of registry services which are not
concerned with the storage of data or reference
metadata, under the assumption that data and
metadata live on the sites of data providers.
Due to the fixed syntax, in most cases, the rules
used in SDMX-EDI are stronger and more
restrictive than those in generic GESMES.
However, the current design allows the possibility
of future enhancements and progressive
generalisation, if this is needed, upon agreement
of the parties involved.
A registry can be understood as an index of data or
metadata repositories of all the data providers
within a statistical community, distributed across
the Internet or similar networks. The registry
services concern themselves with providing
visibility to the data and reference metadata, and
information needed for the access.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
The SDMX registry provides the following services:
See also: EDIFACT, SDMX-ML, Statistical Data and
Metadata Exchange (SDMX)
Querying: The registry has interfaces for querying
the metadata it contains, so that applications and
users can discover the existence of data sets and
reference metadata sets, structural metadata, the
providers/agencies associated with those objects,
and the provider agreements which describe how
the data and metadata are made available, and
how they are categorized.
SDMX-ML
XML format for the exchange of SDMX-structured
data and metadata.
Context: The SDMX package contains normative
sections describing the use of the XML syntax in
SDMX messages, and is accompanied by a set of
XML schemas and sample XML document
instances.
Subscription/Notification: It is possible to subscribe
to specific objects in the registry, so that a
notification will be sent to all subscribers whenever
the registry objects are updated.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Registration (structural metadata submission): A
registry service which allows users to inform the
registry that data sets, reference metadata sets,
structural metadata, or data provisioning
information.
See also: SDMX-EDI, Statistical Data and Metadata
Exchange (SDMX)
699
SDRs (Special
Drawing Rights) Ŕ
BPM
SDRs are international reserve assets created by
international Monetary Fund to supplement other
reserve assets that periodically have been
allocated to IMF members in proportion to their
respective quotas. SDRs are not considered
liabilities of the Fund, and IMF members to whom
SDRs are allocated do not incur actual
(unconditional) liabilities to repay SDR allocations.
Context: Port tugs are included.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Sea going vessel
Floating marine structure with one or more surface
displacement hulls.
The fund determines the value of SDRs daily by
summing, in USA dollars, the values of a weighted
basket of currencies. The weight and baskets are
subject to revision from time to time. SDRs can be
used to acquire other member‘s currencies (foreign
exchange), to settle financial obligations, and to
extend loans
Context: Hydrofoil, air cushion vehicles
(hovercraft) and barges are included. Vessels
under repair are included. Vessels suitable for
inland navigation but which are authorised to
navigate at seas (mixed seagoing and inland
waterways vessels) are excluded.
Source: BPM para. 440
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: SDRs (Special Drawing Rights) - SNA
SDRs (Special
DTS (les droits de
Drawing Rights) - SNA tirage spéciaux) - SCN
SDRs (Special Drawing Rights) are international
reserve assets created by the International
Monetary Fund and allocated to its members to
supplement existing reserve assets
Sea going vessel
under foreign flag
Sea going which is registered at a given date in a
country other than the reporting country.
Source: SNA 11.67, (AF.1) – Annex to chapter XIII
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: SDRs (Special Drawing Rights) – IMF
Sea going barge
Vessel designed as non self-propelled unit for the
carriage of goods by sea in holds, in tanks or on a
weather deck space only.
Sea going vessel
under national flag
Sea going vessel which is registered at a given
date in the reporting country.
Context: Barges are considered as vessels
designed as non self-propelled units, and may be
goods carrying or specially out-fitted for a specific
activity. The units are towed/pushed by ship, or
may be moored for the purpose of storing goods or
whilst they perform their specific activity.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
The definitions of the various types of barges are
virtually identical to their self-propelled
counterparts. (Some barges may have a propulsion
system for limited manoeuvring only – their main
method of movement is by way of ship).
Sea passenger
Any person who makes a voyage on a seagoing
vessel. Service staff assigned to seagoing vessels
are not regarded as passengers.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Sea going tug
Ship designed for the towing and/or pushing of
ships or other floating structures.
700
Sea passenger
disembarked
A passenger disembarking from a seagoing vessel
after having been conveyed by it.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: A transfer from one seagoing vessel to
another is regarded as disembarkment before reembarkment.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Sea transport
Any movement of goods and/or passengers using
seagoing vessels on voyages which are undertaken
wholly or partly at sea.
Context: One port transport (movements of goods
shipped to offshore installations, or for dumping at
sea, or reclaimed from the sea bed and unloaded
in ports) is included. Bunkers and stores supplied
to vessels are excluded. Fluvio-maritime
movements of goods by seagoing vessels are
included. Movements of goods on inland waterways
vessels between sea ports and inland waterway
ports are excluded. (They are included in inland
waterway transport). Movements of goods carried
internally between different basins or docks of the
same port are excluded.
Sea passenger
embarked
Passenger who boards a seagoing vessel to be
conveyed by it.
Context: A transfer from one seagoing vessel to
another is regarded as embarkment after
disembarkment.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Sea passenger
transport link
Combination of the port of embarkment and the
port of disembarkment of the passenger conveyed
by sea whatever itinerary is followed.
Sea transport
enterprise
Enterprise carrying out in one or more places
activities for the production of sea transport
services and whose main activities according to the
value added is sea transport.
Context: Those ports are maritime ports (except
for fluvio-maritime transports for which it may be
inland waterway ports), coded with international
classification systems such as UN-LOCODE
(codification for ports and other places). Those
ports can be grouped according to their
geographical location by using international
classification systems such as NUTS (Nomenclature
for Territorial Units for Statistics - EUROSTAT).
Context: In terms of activity classifications the
following classes are involved :
-- ISIC/Rev.3:
6110 - Sea and coastal water transport
-- NACE/Rev.1
2
: 61.10 - Sea and coastal water transport
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Even those enterprises without salaried employees
are taken into account. Only units that actually
carry out an activity during the reference period
should be included. "Dormant" units or those that
have not as yet begun their activity are excluded.
Ports, and other units providing supporting and
auxiliary transport services are excluded.
Sea traffic
Any movement of a sea going vessel at sea.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: One port traffic (movements of sea going
vessels to offshore installations, or for dumping at
sea, or traffic from the sea bed to ports) is
included. Fluvio-maritime movements of sea going
vessels are included. Movements on inland
waterways between sea ports and inland waterway
ports are excluded and are included in inland
waterway traffic. Movements of sea going vessels
internally, between different basins or docks of the
same port, are excluded.
Sea voyage
701
Sea traffic from a specified point of origin to a
specified point of destination.
seasonal adjustment is conducted on four
components of final expenditures (after annual
balancing) and then aggregated to total GDP), and
on consumer and producer price indexes.
Context: A voyage can be divided into a number of
stages or sections. Sea voyages are sometimes
referred to as sea journeys.
Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics, "An
Analytical Framework for Price Indexes in
Australia: Glossary and References", Canberra,
1997
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs%40.nsf/66f3
06f503e529a5ca25697e0017661f/ff4de83064a2e4
25ca25697e0018fd44!OpenDocument
See also: Compilation practices, Not seasonally
adjusted, Seasonal adjustment programs, Special
Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS), Trend
estimates
Search engine
A search engine is a set of computer programs that
finds web pages. There are general search engines
that search large portions of the Web and
specialized content search engines that target
selected areas of the Web, such as the
Government of Canada‘s search engine searches
only federal government Web sites.
Seasonal adjustment
metadata - MetaStore
Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types refers to
information to enable users to make an
assessment of the validity of the seasonal
adjustment applied. Such information would
comprise: a short description of the method
(software) used; the main parameters of the
adjustment (e.g. additive v. multiplicative
decomposition) and some of the derived
information (e.g. trading-day weights).
Context: An alternative to using search engines is
to browse structured directories of topics. Web
portal sites offer both the search engine and
directory approaches to finding information.
Source: Government of Canada, Thesauri and
Controlled Vocabularies, Definitions, website
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
Seasonal adjustment
Correction des
variations
saisonnières
Seasonal adjustment is a statistical technique to
remove the effects of seasonal calendar influences
operating on a series. Seasonal effects usually
reflect the influence of the seasons themselves
either directly or through production series related
to them, or social conventions.
See also: Seasonal adjustment
Seasonal adjustment
programs
Seasonal adjustment is normally done using offthe- shelf programs—most commonly worldwide by
one of the programs in the X-11 family. Other
programs in common use include the TRAMOSEATS package developed by Bank of Spain and
promoted by Eurostat and the German BV4
program.
Other types of calendar variation occur as a result
of influences such as number of days in the
calendar period, the accounting or recording
practices adopted or the incidence of moving
holidays (such as Easter)
The original X-11 program was developed in the
1960s by the U.S. Bureau of the Census. It has
subsequently been updated and improved through
the development of X-11-ARIMA by Statistics
Canada and X-12-ARIMA by the U.S. Bureau of the
Census, which was released in the second half of
the 1990s.
Context: Series are adjusted for seasonal
variations and in some cases for calendar working
days variations.
Seasonal adjustment is normally done using offthe-shelf programs -most commonly worldwide by
one of the programs in the X-11 family. Other
programs in common use include the TRAMOSEATS package developed by Bank of Spain and
promoted by Eurostat and the German BV4
program (International Monetary Fund (IMF),"
Quarterly National Accounts Manual", Washington
D.C., 2001, para. 8.13).
The core of X-11-ARIMA and X-12-ARIMA is the
same basic filtering procedure as in the original X11.
Source: Quarterly National Accounts Manual –
Concepts, Data Sources and Compilation, IMF,
2001, para. 8.13
Under the SDDS this entails the availability,
publication, and level at which seasonal
adjustment takes place, the methods used and an
indication regarding which data series the methods
are applied to (e.g. aggregate series derived from
lower-level seasonally-adjusted series versus
independently adjusted; adjusted at 1-digit SITC
level using X-11 method and aggregated to totals;
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/qna/2000/Te
xtbook/ch8.pdf
See also: Seasonal adjustment, Trend estimates
Seasonal average by
702
months
See Monthly average
In time series, that part of the movement which is
assigned to the effect of the seasons on the year,
e.g. seasonal variation in rainfall.
See also: Monthly average
Sometimes the term is used in a wider sense
relating to oscillations generated by periodic
external influences, e.g. daily variations in
temperature might be regarded as ―seasonal‖.
Seasonal component
of a time series
The seasonal component is that part of the
variations in a time series representing intra-year
fluctuations that are more or less stable year after
year with respect to timing, direction and
magnitude.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Context: The seasonal component is also referred
to as the seasonality of a time series.
The seasonal component reflect ―normal‖
variations that recur every year to the same
extent, e.g. weather fluctuations that are
representative of the season, length of months,
Christmas effect.
The seasonal component may also include calendar
related systematic effects that are not regular in
their annual timing or are caused by variations in
the calendar from year to year.
Seasonally adjusted
component of a time
series
The seasonally adjusted component is the result of
the extraction of the seasonal component
(including the calendar effects component) from a
time series. If neither seasonal nor calendar
influences are present in the original data, the
seasonally adjusted series is given by the original
data.
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
4: Guidelines for the reporting of different forms of
data
For series with no identifiable seasonal variations
but with identifiable calendar variations, the
seasonally adjusted series is given by the calendar
adjusted series.
Context: Trading / working day corrections are
alternative ways to normalise the time series.
Seasonal employment
See Workers in seasonal employment.
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
4: Guidelines for the reporting of different forms of
data
See also: Workers in seasonal employment
Seasonal migrant
workers
Seasonal migrant workers are persons employed
by a country other than their own for only part of a
year because the work they perform depends on
seasonal conditions. They are a subcategory of
foreign migrant workers
Seasonally adjusted
time series
Seasonally adjusted time series are series that
have been adjusted for seasonal variations,
including trading-day (working-day) effects and
other regular calendar variations if present.
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
4: Guidelines for the reporting of different forms of
data
See also: Foreign migrant workers
Seasonal products
Products that are either not available on the
market during certain seasons or periods of the
year or are available throughout the year but with
regular fluctuations in their quantities and prices
that are linked to the season or time of the year.
Seat- / Standing
place-kilometre
offered
Unit of measure representing the movement of one
seat/authorized standing place available in a road
vehicle when performing the service for which it is
primarily intended over one kilometre.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC.
Context: The distance to be considered is the
distance actually run.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Seasonal variation
703
See also: Principal activity – SNA, Secondary
activity – ISIC Rev. 3
Seat-kilometre
offered (for inland
waterways transport)
Unit of measure representing the movement over
one kilometre of one seat available in an inland
waterways transport (IWT) passenger vessel when
performing the services for which it is primarily
intended over one kilometre.
Secondary air
pollution
Pollution
atmospherique
secondaire
Secondary air pollution is pollution caused by
reactions in air already polluted by primary
emissions (from factories, automobiles and so
forth). An example of secondary air pollution is
photochemical smog
Context: The distance to be considered is the
distance actually run.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Secondary data
intrusion
After an attempt to match between identification
and target datasets an intruder may discriminate
between non-unique matches by further direct
investigations using additional variables.
Seat-kilometre
offered (rail
transport)
Unit of measure representing the movement of one
seat available in a passenger railway vehicle when
performing the services for which it is primarily
intended over one kilometre.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Context: The distance to be considered is that
actually run. Shunting and other similar
movements are excluded.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Secondary disclosure
risk
Concerns data which is not primary disclosive, but
whose dissemination, when combined with other
data permits the identification of a microdata unit
or the disclosure of a unit‘s attribute.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Second hand asset
See Used asset
See also: Used asset
Secondary activity Ŕ
Activité secondaire Ŕ
ISIC Rev. 3
CITI Rév. 3
A secondary activity is a separate activity that
produces products eventually for third parties and
that is not a principal activity of the entity in
question. The outputs of secondary activities are
necessarily secondary products
Secondary
Compte de
distribution of income distribution
account
secondaire du revenu
The secondary distribution of income account
shows how the balance of primary incomes of an
institutional unit or sector is transformed into its
disposable income by the receipt and payment of
current transfers excluding social transfers in kind
Source: ISIC Rev. 3, para. 35
See also: Principal activity – ISIC Rev. 3,
Secondary activity – SNA
Source: SNA 8.1
Secondary activity Ŕ
Activité secondaire Ŕ
SNA
SCN
A secondary activity is an activity carried out
within a single producer unit in addition to the
principal activity and whose output, like that of the
principal activity, must be suitable for delivery
outside the producer unit
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Secondary education
(ISCED 23)
See Lower secondary education and Upper
secondary education
Source: SNA 5.8 [15.16]
See also: Lower secondary education (ISCED 2),
Upper secondary education (ISCED 3)
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
704
Secondary effects of
action due to labour
disputes
The secondary effects of action due to labour
disputes are the effects on other establishments
where workers are prevented from working or their
work is disrupted, or the effects on other groups of
self-employed workers who are prevented from
working or whose work is disrupted.
Secondary railway
enterprise
Railway enterprise other than principal which
carries out transport operations for the public.
Context: Lines solely used for tourism purposes
during the season are excluded as are railways
constructed solely to serve mines, forests or other
industrial or agricultural undertakings. Urban
services operated by secondary railway enterprises
are included.
Source: International Labour Organisation (ILO)
Resolution Concerning Statistics of Strikes,
Lockouts and other Action Due to Labour Disputes
(January 1993), page 2-3
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Secondary effects of
action due to labour
disputes
The secondary effects of action due to labour
disputes are the effects on other establishments
where workers are prevented from working or their
work is disrupted, or the effects on other groups of
self-employed workers who are prevented from
working or whose work is disrupted.
Secondary source of
statistical data
The organisation or individual other than those
responsible for the collection and aggregation of
data from their initial source. Secondary sources
may redistribute information received from the
primary source either in their initial form or after
some transformation including further aggregation,
reclassification or other manipulation such as
seasonal adjustment.
Source: International Labour Organisation (ILO)
Resolution Concerning Statistics of Strikes,
Lockouts and other Action Due to Labour Disputes
(January 1993), page 2-3
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
Secondary exchange
rates
See Exchange rates
Secondary
suppression
To reach the desired protection for risky cells, it is
necessary to suppress additional non-risky cells,
which is called secondary suppression or
complementary suppression. The pattern of
complementary suppressed cells has to be
carefully chosen to provide the desired level of
ambiguity for the disclosive cells at the highest
level of information contained in the released
statistics.
See also: Data provider, Data source, Primary
data, Primary source (of statistical data)
See also: Exchange rates
Secondary market
Secondary market refers to the purchase or sale of
securities between the time of their initial issuance
and before they mature. Many money market
instruments are sold and bought several times by
different investors before they mature
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
See also: Suppression
Secondary radiation
Rayonnement
secondaire
Secondary radiation refers to radiation originating
from the absorption of previous radiation in
matter. It may be in the form either of
electromagnetic waves or of moving particles
Secondary treatment Traitement secondaire
Secondary treatment is the second step in most
waste treatment systems during which bacteria
consume the organic parts of the wastes. This is
accomplished by bringing the sewage, bacteria and
oxygen together in trickling filters or within an
activated sludge process.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Secondary treatment removes all floating and
705
settleable solids and about 90 per cent of the
oxygen—demanding substances and suspended
solids. Disinfection by chlorination is the final stage
of the secondary treatment process
contributions are not targeted to a specific sector,
e.g. balance-of-payments support, debt relief,
emergency aid and development education in the
donor country. These are called ―non sector
allocable aid‖.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: OECD, 2004, Development Co-operation
Directorate (DAC), Glossary - CRS aid activity
database, OECD, Paris
See also: Tertiary treatment
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_14718511_1_1_1_1,00.html
Sector
A general term used to describe a group of
establishments engage in similar kinds of economic
activity. A sector can be a subgroup of an
economic activity - as in ―coal mining sector‖ - or a
group of economic activities - as in ―service sector‖
- or a cross-section of a group of economic
activities - as in ―informal sector‖.
Sector wide approach
All significant donor funding support a single,
comprehensive sector policy and independent
programme, consistent with a sound macroeconomic framework, under government
leadership.
Context: Also a specific term used by in the SNA to
denote one of the five mutually exclusive
institutional sectors that group together
institutional units on the basis of their principal
functions, behaviour and objectives, namely:
nonfinancial corporations, financial corporations,
general government, non-profit institutions serving
households and households.
Donor support for a SWAp can take any form –
project aid, technical assistance or budget support
– although there should be a commitment to
progressive reliance on government procedures to
disburse and account for all funds as these
procedures are strengthened.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC.
Source: OECD, 2006, DAC Guidelines and
Reference Series Applying Strategic Environmental
Assessment: Good Practice Guidance for
Development Co-operation, OECD, Paris
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Sectoral output
Sectoral output refers to the output of an industry
at a given level of aggregation that only reflects
deliveries outside of the industry. Sector output is
the output of an integrated industry
Sector classification
In the 1993 SNA and the IMF Balance of Payments
Manual, Version 5, (BPM5), institutional sectors are
formed by the grouping of similar kinds of
institutional units according to their economic
objectives and functions.
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Sectoral strategy
A policy framework, for the long- and/ or mediumterm, which has been adopted by a government as
a plan of action for a particular area of the
economy or society.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Sector coverage MetaStore
Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types refers to
the range of sectors covered by the data.
Source: OECD, 2006, DAC Guidelines and
Reference Series Applying Strategic Environmental
Assessment: Good Practice Guidance for
Development Co-operation, OECD, Paris
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
Securities and
Exchange Commission
The Securities and Exchange Commission is a
United States Federal agency that regulates and
supervises the selling of securities to prevent fraud
and unfair practices and to maintain fair and
orderly markets
Sector of destination
(of aid)
The sector of the recipient‘s economy that the aid
activity is designed to assist. It does not refer to
the type of goods or services provided. Some
706
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Securities settlement
system (SSS)
A system which permits the holding and transfer of
securities, either free of payment or against
payment (delivery versus payment) or against
another asset (delivery versus delivery). It
comprises all the institutional and technical
arrangements required for the settlement of
securities trades and the safekeeping of securities.
The system can operate on a real-time gross
settlement, gross settlement or net settlement
basis. A settlement system allows for the
calculation (clearing) of the obligations of
participants.
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Securities dealers
Securities dealers include individuals or firms that
specialize in security market transactions by (1)
assisting firms in issuing new securities through
the underwriting and market placement of new
security issues, and (2) trading in new or
outstanding securities on their own account. Only
underwriters and dealers that act as financial
intermediaries are classified within this category.
Security brokers and other units that arrange
trades between security buyers and sellers but do
not purchase and hold securities on their own
account are classified as financial auxiliaries.
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Securities
underwriters and
dealers
Securities underwriters and dealers include
individuals or firms that specialize in security
market transactions by:
Context: By their nature, securities dealers
facilitate both primary and secondary market
activity in securities. In particular, these
institutions can help provide liquidity to markets,
both by encouraging borrower and investor
activity, not least through the provision of
information on market conditions and through their
own trading activity.
(1) assisting firms in issuing new securities
through the underwriting and market placement of
new security issues; and
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
(2) trading in new or outstanding securities on
their own account. Only underwriters and dealers
that act as financial intermediaries are classified in
this category.
Securities lending
Securities lending refers to an arrangement
whereby a security holder transfers securities to a
―borrower,‖ subject to the stipulation that the
same (or similar) securities be returned on a
specified date or on demand.
Security brokers and other units that arrange
trades between security buyers and sellers but do
not purchase and hold securities on their own
account are classified as financial auxiliaries
―Full, unfettered ownership‖ is transferred to the
―borrower,‖ but the risks and benefits of ownership
remain with the original owner. The practice is
undertaken by owners of securities to raise the
return on the securities and/or to reduce the cost
of custody
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/mfs/manual/i
ndex.htm
Source: Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual,
IMF, Washington, 2000, para. 100
Securitisation
Titrisation
Securitisation is the process of issuing new
negotiable securities backed by existing assets
such as loans, mortgages, credit card debt, or
other assets (including accounts receivable)
Source: Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual,
IMF, Washington, 2000, para. 149
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/mfs/manual/i
ndex.htm
Source: SNA 11.75
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Securities other than Titres autres
shares
qu‟actions
Securities other than shares consist of bills, bonds,
certificates of deposit, commercial paper,
debentures, and similar instruments normally
traded in the financial markets
Security
An efficient disclosure control method provides
protection against exact disclosure or unwanted
narrow estimation of the attributes of an individual
entity, in other words, a useful technique prevents
exact or partial disclosure. The security level is
accordingly high. In the case of disclosure control
methods for the release of microdata this
protection is ensured if the identification of a
respondent is not possible, because the
Source: SNA 11.74 [(AF.3) – Annex to chapter
XIII]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
707
identification is the prerequisite for disclosure.
of the unit. Generally, this probability has
reference to each drawing separately when sample
units are selected one by one.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Thus, the procedure known commonly as sampling
with probability proportional to size, with
replacement, ensures such a probability of any
particular drawing, but considered in its entirety,
the series of drawings does not make the
probability of inclusion in the sample of any
specified unit proportional to its size unless the
units are all of the same size.
Sediment
Sediment is material of varying size, both mineral
and organic that is being, or has been, moved from
its site of origin by the action of wind, water,
gravity, or ice, and comes to rest elsewhere on the
earth‘s surface
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Selective cutting
Coupe sélective
Selective cutting is the cutting down of selected
trees in a forest so that growth of other trees is
not affected. This is done according to criteria
regarding minimum tree size for harvesting,
specifications of the number, spacing and size
classes of residual trees per area, and allowable
cut
Sedimentation
Sédimentation
Sedimentation is the settling of matter to the
bottom of a liquid or water body, notably a
reservoir
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Silt
See also: Creaming
SEEA
SCEE
See System of Integrated Environmental and
Economic Accounting
Selective editing
Selective editing is a procedure which targets only
some of the micro data items or records for review
by prioritizing the manual work and establishing
appropriate and efficient process and edit
boundaries.
See also: System of integrated environmental and
economic accounting (SEEA)
SEEA prices Ŕ
unadjusted (derived
from hybrid accounts)
Prices per physical quantity obtained by dividing
the monetary flow by the physical quantity.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 4.24
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Macro-edit, Micro-editing, Score function
Self-directed work
teams
Self-directed work teams are small groups of
workers whose members have the authority to
handle a wide range of issues relating to the team
as they see fit in order to fulfil its objectives.
Segregation
Ségrégation
Segregation is a system whereby crops are
separated for marketing purposes according to a
specific characteristic
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, June 1999,
Chapter 4, New Enterprise Work Practices and their
Labour Market Implications, page 187
Selection with
probability
proportional to size
A sampling procedure under which the probability
of a unit being selected is proportional to the size
Self-employed
workers Ŕ Eurostat
708
Travailleurs
indépendants Ŕ
Eurostat
If self-employed persons are classified as being
absent from work, then they are regarded as in
employment only if they can be said to have a
business, farm or professional practice.
themselves
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Context: This is the case if one or more of the
following conditions are met:
(I) Machinery or equipment of significant value, in
which the person has invested money, is used by
him or his employees in conducting his business.
Self-propelled barge
Inland waterways transport (IWT) freight vessel
having its own means of mechanical propulsion.
(ii) An office, store, farm or other place of business
is maintained.
Context: Towed barges, pushed barges and
pushed-towed barges which have an auxiliary
engine only must be regarded as towed barges,
pushed barges or pushed-towed barges as the
case may be. The fact that a self-propelled barge
can be used for towing does not change its nature.
(iii) There has been some advertisement of the
business or profession by listing the business in
the telephone book, displaying a sign, distributing
cards or leaflets, etc. If none of these conditions is
met, then the person is regarded as not being in
employment.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Labour Force Survey – Methods and
Definitions, 1998, Eurostat, p.64
See also: Self-employed workers - SNA
Self-employed
Travailleurs
workers - SNA
indépendants Ŕ SCN
Self-employed workers are persons who are the
sole owners, or joint owners, of the unincorporated
enterprises in which they work, excluding those
unincorporated enterprises that are classified as
quasi-corporations
Self-propelled pusher
barge
Self-propelled barge designed or fitted to push
pushed or pushed-towed barges.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: SNA 7.24
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Self-employed workers –Eurostat
Self-propelled pusher
tanker barge
Self-propelled pusher barge for the bulk transport
of liquids or gases.
Self-employment jobs
Self-employment jobs re those jobs where the
remuneration is directly dependent upon the
profits (or the potential for profits) derived from
the goods or services produced (where own
consumption is considered to be part of profits).
The incumbents make the operational decisions
affecting the enterprise, or delegates such
decisions while retaining responsibility for the
welfare of the enterprise.
Context: Tankers for the transport in bulk of
powdered products such as cement, flour, plaster,
etc., are to be excluded and are to be counted
among self-propelled pusher barges.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
In this context ―enterprise‖ includes one-person
operations
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning International Classification
of Status in Employment Adopted by the 15th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians,
January 1993, para. 7
Self-propelled tanker
barge
Self-propelled barge intended for the bulk
transport of liquids or gases.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Context: Tankers for the transport in bulk of
powdered products such as cement, flour, plaster,
etc., are to be excluded and are to be counted
among self-propelled barges.
See also: Paid employment jobs
Self-enumeration
Self-enumeration refers to the completion of
census survey questionnaires by the respondents
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
709
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
sometimes fixed in such a manner that the sample
becomes self-weighting.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Self-propelled vessel
for river-sea
navigation
Inland waterways transport (IWT) freight vessel
having a carrying capacity of at least 20 tonnes
also designed for the transport of goods by sea
and equipped with their own means of propulsion
developing at least 37 kW.
Seller concentration
See Concentration
See also: Concentration
Selling below cost
Selling below cost is a practice whereby a firm sells
products at less than costs of manufacture or
purchase in order to drive out competitors and/or
to increase market share. This practice may arise
partly because of deep pockets or crosssubsidization using profits derived from sale of
other products.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: A number of measurement issues arise as
to what constitutes costs but generally the practice
would arise if price is below marginal cost or
average variable cost. A question also arises as to
whether selling a product below costs is
economically feasible over a long period of time
since the firm may incur high costs in the form of
loss of potential profits.
Self-regulation
See Regulation
See also: Regulation
Self-sufficiency
Self-sufficiency reflects the extent of participation
in the economy and society and how well
individuals are able to get through daily life on
their own.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Context: It is measured in terms of the overall
employment rate, the proportion of the population
in households where nobody has a job, the
average number of years of schooling, and the
average school performance of children at age 15.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
All these factors affect or will affect the ability of
individuals to earn a decent living. GDP per capita
correlates significantly with employment rates but
not with measures of how employment
opportunities (and thus joblessness) are shared
within the population. Likewise, in richer countries
the average adult has completed more years of
education, but the average 15-year-old student
does not necessarily perform better. There is only
a weak correlation between changes in these selfsufficiency measures and GDP per capita.
See also: Loss-leader selling, Predatory pricing
Semantics
Semantics is the branch of linguistic science which
deals with the meaning of words.
Source: ISO/IEC CD 11179-5 "Information
technology - Metadata registries (MDR) - Part 5 :
Naming and identification principles", January 2003
See also: ISO / IEC 11179, Syntax
Source: OECD, 2007, Society at a Glance: OECD
Social Indicators, 2006 edition, OECD, Paris
Semi-durable good
A goods that differs from a non-durable good in
that it can be used repeatedly or continuously over
a period longer than a year and that differs from a
durable good in that its expected lifetime of use,
though longer than a year, is often significantly
shorter and that its purchasers‘ price is
substantially less.
Self-weighting sample
If the raising factors of the sample units are all
equal the sample is self-weighting, of course with
respect to the particular linear estimator under
consideration; but it may not be a self-weighting
sample for another estimator. A self-weighting
sample, usually in respect of the total of the entire
population, is generally incorporated in a sampledesign to simplify tabulation work, because the
population total is easily estimated from the
sample total.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Semi-natural
managed forests
In two stage (multi-stage) sampling the number or
proportion of second stage sample units are
710
Forests in which management has substantially
altered the structure and ecological processes but
in which growth is still mainly a natural process
with no regular and continuous human
intervention.
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.158
Sensitivity analysis
A ―what-if‖ type of analysis to determine the
sensitivity of the outcomes to changes in
parameters. If a small change in a parameter
results in relatively large changes in the outcomes,
the outcomes are said to be sensitive to that
parameter.
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Semi-trailer
Goods road vehicle with no front axle designed in
such way that part of the vehicle and a substantial
part of its loaded weight rests on the road tractor.
Separability
Separability is the mathematical property of a
(production) function. In productivity analysis, it is
sometimes assumed that production functions are
weakly separable between primary and
intermediate inputs.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
This means that the marginal rate of substitution
between any pair of primary inputs is independent
of the amount of intermediate inputs used. In
other words, the demand for any two primary
inputs depends only on the price ratio of primary
inputs, and is independent from prices of
intermediate inputs
Sensitive cell
Cell for which knowledge of the value would permit
an unduly accurate estimate of the contribution of
an individual respondent. Sensitive cells are
identified by the application of a dominance rule
such as the (n,k) rule or the (p,q) rule to their
microdata.
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
Separate accounts
Comptes distincts
A pension fund that is legally segregated from both
the plan sponsor and a financial institution that
acts as the manager of the fund on behalf of the
plan member.
Sensitive variables
Variables contained in a data record apart from the
key variables, that belong to the private domain of
respondents who would not like them to be
disclosed.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Context: There is no exact definition given for
what a ‗sensitive variable‘ is and therefore, the
division into key and sensitive variables is
somehow arbitrary. Some data are clearly sensitive
such as the possession of a criminal record, one‘s
medical condition or credit record, but there are
other cases where the distinction depends on the
circumstances, e.g. the income of a person might
be regarded as a sensitive variable in some
countries and as quasi-identifier in others, or in
some societies the religion of an individual might
count as a key and a sensitive variable at the same
time.
See also: Pension funds - OECD, Plan member,
Plan sponsor
Separator
A separator is a symbol or space enclosing or
separating components within a name; a delimiter
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Sequential correction
A sequential correction is a correction where the
items intended for the correction are corrected
sequentially.
All variables that contain one or more sensitive
categories, i.e. categories that contain sensitive
information about an individual or enterprise, are
called sensitive variables.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
711
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
asset)
The service life of an asset is the total period
during which it remains in use, or ready to be
used, in a productive process. During its service
life an asset may have more than one owner
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
See also: Simultaneous correction
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
Sequential imputation
See Sequential correction
Service period
Période de service
The length of time an individual has earned rights
to a pension benefits.
See also: Sequential correction
SERIEE
SERIEE
See European System for the Collection of
Economic Information on the Environment
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: European System for the Collection of
Economic Information on the Environment
(SERIEE)
See also: Pensionable service
SERT
Business Statistics and Telematics Networks
Serviceability
Serviceability refers to the practical aspects of how
well the available data meet users‘ needs.
Server
A computer that has been set up to provide certain
services to other computers (clients), for instance,
a Web server is a central repository of data,
software or client for the World Wide Web.
Context: Serviceability is a term that captures the
practical aspects of usability of data. The emphasis
on "use" thus assumes that data are available.
Thus, key aspects of usability are relevance,
timeliness and frequency, consistency, and
revisions policy and practices.
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Source: International Monetary Found (IMF), "Data
Quality Assessment Framework (DQAF) Glossary"
See also: Consistency, Quality – IMF, Relevance
Services Ŕ BPM
Services - MBP
Services is the second major category of the
current account. Services covers traditional items,
such as travel and transportation and items, such
as communications, financial and computer
services, royalties and license fees, and many
types of other business services, that are
becoming increasingly important in international
transactions.
Service functions of
the natural capital
The capacity of the environment to provide the
habitat for all living beings including mankind.
Context: Some aspects of habitat are essential,
such as air to breathe and water to drink. These
are called survival functions. If the quantity and
quality of survival functions are diminished,
biodiversity of species is threatened, not excluding
the human species. Some service functions are not
essential in the same way but improve the quality
of life, for example by providing a pleasing
landscape for leisure pursuits. These are called
amenity functions and affect mankind only (or at
least are the only ones measurable to us in human
terms).
Context: Both the production of, and international
trade in, services differ from production and trade
related to goods. International trade in goods is
conducted separately from production. For
example goods may be produced in one economy
and subsequently delivered to residents, who may
or may not be known when production occurs, of
another economy. In contrast the production of a
service is linked to an arrangement made, between
a particular producer in one economy and a
particular consumer or group of consumers in
another, prior to the time this production occurs.
Thus, international trade in services is closely
linked with international production of services, as
the production element, and vice versa
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 1.23
Source: BPM para. 185
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Service life (of an
712
&test=&frameType=4&association=&property=DE
SCRIPTI ON&language=EN
See also: Services – ISIC Rev. 2, Services – ISIC
Rev. 3, Services – NACE, Services – SNA
See also: NACE, Services – BPM, Services – ISIC
Rev. 2, Services – ISIC Rev. 3, Services – SNA
Services Ŕ ISIC Rev. 2 Services Ŕ CITI Rév. 2
In the International Standard Industrial
Classification (ISIC) Rev. 2 services are defined as
all activities in major Divisions 6 through 9
described as follows:
Services Ŕ SNA
Services Ŕ SCN
Services are outputs produced to order and which
cannot be traded separately from their production.
Services are not separate entities over which
ownership rights can be established. They cannot
be traded separately from their production.
Services are heterogeneous outputs produced to
order and typically consist of changes in the
conditions of the consuming units realized by the
activities of producers at the demand of the
consumers. By the time their production is
completed they must have been provided to the
consumers.
6 – Wholesale and retail trade and restaurants and
hotels
7- Transport, storage and communication
8 – Financial, insurance, real estate and business
services
9 – Community, social and personal services
Source: ISIC Rev. 2
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
Context: However, as an exception to this rule,
there is a group of industries, generally classified
as service industries, some of whose outputs have
characteristics of goods. These are the industries
concerned with the provision, storage,
communication, and dissemination of information,
advice, and entertainment in the broadest sense of
those terms. The products of these industries,
where ownership rights can be established, may be
classified either as goods or services depending on
the medium by which these outputs are supplied.
See also: Services – BPM, Services – ISIC Rev. 3,
Services – NACE, Services – SNA
Services Ŕ ISIC Rev. 3 Services Ŕ CITI Rév. 3
In terms of International Standard Industrial
Classification (ISIC) Rev. 3 services are defined
loosely in terms of the following Tabulation
Categories:
- wholesale and retail trade, repair of motor
vehicles, motorcycles and personal and household
goods (G);
- hotels and restaurants (H);
- transport, storage and communications (I);
- financial intermediation (J);
- real estate, renting and business activities (K);
- public administration and defence, compulsory
social security (L);
- education (M);
- health and social work (N);
- other community, social and personal activities
(O);
- private households with employed persons (P);
- extra-territorial organisations and bodies (Q)
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Monetary Fund, Washington
DC.
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
The production of services must be confined to
activities that are capable of being carried out by
one unit for the benefit of another. Otherwise,
service industries could not develop and there
could be no markets for services. It is also possible
for a unit to produce a service for its own
consumption provided that the type of activity is
such that it could have been carried out by another
unit.
Source: ISIC Rev. 3
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
The service sector covers both market and nonmarket services.
Source: SNA paras. 6.8-6.9
See also: Services – BPM, Services – ISIC Rev. 2,
Services – NACE, Services – SNA
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Services Ŕ NACE
The terms service industry(ies), service sector(s)
or simply service(s) are generally used to refer to
economic activities covered by Sections G to K and
M to O of NACE Rev. 1, and the units that carry out
those activities
See also: Market services – ISIC, Non-market
services – OECD, Services – BPM, Services – ISIC
Rev. 2, Services – ISIC Rev. 3, Services – NACE
Services for the
elderly and disabled
people, social
expenditure
Social expenditure on services for the elderly and
disabled people encompasses services such as
day- care and rehabilitation services, home-help
services and other benefits in kind. It also includes
expenditure on the provision of residential care in
Source: NACE Rev. 1
Hyperlink:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/eurostat/ramon/cgi/Si
mWW
WFrame.SimResetBottomFrame?nID=NACE_REV1
&lId=&pId=
713
an institution (e.g., the cost of operating homes for
the elderly)
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, June 2000,
OECD, Paris. page 83
Source: An Interpretative Guide to the OECD
Social Expenditure Database (SOCX), OECD, page
15
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
Services provided by
the environment
See Environmental services
Services, social
Social (and collective) services provide final
consumption for households and are distinctive for
their non-market character in most OECD
countries. Collective consumption decisions and
public financing are common, as is production by
governments, non-profit organisations and
subsidised private organisations.
See also: Environmental services
Services, distributive
Distributive services move commodities,
information and people. Some of these services
are final consumption in their own right (e.g.
vacation travel) but most are ancillary to final
consumption (e.g retailing) or production (e.g.
materials transport).
Social services comprise the following International
Standard Industrial Classification (ISIC) Rev. 3
sub-groups:
-
Distributive services comprise the following
International Standard Industrial Classification
(ISIC) Rev. 3 sub-groups: - retail trade; wholesale trade; - transport services; communications
government proper (civil or military);
health services;
educational services;
miscellaneous social services
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, June 2000,
OECD, Paris. page 83
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, June 2000,
OECD, Paris, page 83
Set-aside Programme
Programme de gel des
terres
The Set-aside Programme is a European Union
programme for cereal, oilseed and protein crops
that both requires and allows producers to setaside a portion of their historical base acreage
from current production. Mandatory set-aside rates
for commercial producers is set at 10% until 2006
Services, personal
Personal services provide final consumption for
households and are characterised by direct contact
between the consumer and the service provider.
Self-servicing is often a viable alternative to
market purchases and market provision
predominates.
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
Personal services comprise the following
International Standard Industrial Classification
(ISIC) Rev. 3 sub-groups:
-
Settlement
See Migrants for settlement
hotels, bars and restaurants;
recreation, amusements and cultural services;
domestic services;
other personal services
See also: Migrants for settlement
Settlement risk
A general term used to designate the risk that
settlement in a transfer system will not take place
as expected. This risk may comprise both credit
and liquidity risk.
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, June 2000,
OECD, Paris. page 83
Services, producer
Producer services are intermediate inputs to
further production activities that are sold to other
firms, although households are also important
consumers in some cases. They typically have a
high information content and often reflect a
―contracting out‖ of support services that could be
provided in-house.
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Settlers
See Migrants for settlement
See also: Migrants for settlement
Producer services comprise the following
International Standard Industrial Classification
(ISIC) Rev. 3 sub-groups:
-
Sewerage
Eaux usées
Sewage is organic waste and waste water
produced by residential and commercial
establishments
business and professional services;
financial services;
insurance services;
real estate services
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
714
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
variable capital (SICAV). Certain companies issue
capitalization and distribution shares.
Sewerage effluent
standards
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Normes applicables
aux effluents d‟eaux
usées
Sewage effluent standards are standards
prescribed at sewage works that provide
information on biochemical oxygen demand (BOD),
suspended solids and ammoniacal nitrogen with a
view to obtaining the desired quality of effluents
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Share prices index
Prices of common shares of companies traded on
national or foreign stock exchanges.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: International Monetary Fund, International
Financial Statistics Yearbook. Washington, D.C.,
annual. (Introduction, sect. 6)
Sex ratio
The ratio of the number of one sex to that of the
other.
Source: United Nations. Multilingual Demographic
Dictionary, English Section. Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Population Studies,
No. 29 (United Nations publication, Sales No.
E.58.XIII.4).
Shareable data
Shareable data is data that has precise identifiers,
meaning, structures, and values.
Source: ISO/IEC FCD 11179-3, Registry
Metamodel, Final Committee Draft 2001
Sex ratio at birth
The sex ratio at birth refers to the number of boys
born alive per 100 girls born alive
Shared or joint
monopoly
Shared or Joint monopoly refers to anticompetitive
behaviour by firms, normally an oligopoly, in order
to secure monopoly profits for the firms as a
group. Essentially, shared monopoly requires some
form of collusion but stops short of being a formal
cartel. It is therefore similar to tacit collusion. In a
shared monopoly firms may not compete for the
same customers and have instead local
monopolies.
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Shadow economy
See Underground economy
Context: Since in theory industry profits under a
non-coordinated oligopoly will be less than those
under monopoly, there is some incentive for firms
in an oligopoly to attempt to coordinate their
actions so as to achieve profits nearer the
monopoly solution.
See also: Underground economy
Share Action d‟une
Société
d‟Investissement à
Capital Fixe (SICAF)
Share representing one part of ownership in a
fixed capital investment company.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Shareholders
Actionnaires
Shareholders are the collective owners of a
corporation
Share Action d‟une
Société
d‟Investissement à
Capital Variable
(SICAV)
Share representing one part of ownership in an
open-ended investment company (OEIC) with a
Source: SNA 7.112
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
715
Shares and other
Actions et autres
equities Ŕ ESA
participations Ŕ SEC
The category shares and other equity (F.5)
consists of all transactions in shares and other
equity (AF.5) that is financial assets which
represent property rights on corporations or quasicorporations. These financial assets generally
entitle the holders to a share in the profits of the
corporations or quasi-corporations and to a share
in their net assets in the event of liquidation.
Context: There are many different types of shiftworking, and its incidence varies by sector, size
and type of production process. It tends to be
more common in larger firms and in those with a
higher degree of capital intensity.
Context: Shares offered for sale but not taken up
on issue are not recorded in the system. Shares
and other equity are redeemed when purchased by
the issuing corporation or when exchanged for the
net assets of a corporation in the event of its
liquidation. Category F.5 is divided into two subcategories of financial transactions:
Ship
Seagoing self-propelled surface-displacement
vessel.
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, June 1998,
Chapter 5, Working Hours: Latest Trends and
Policy Initiatives, page 161
a) shares and other equity, excluding mutual funds
shares (F.51);
b) mutual funds shares (F.52).
Context: Hydrofoil, air cushion vehicles
(hovercraft), submersible, submarine are excluded.
A seagoing ship actually goes to sea, that is,
outside the boundary within which inland waterway
technical safety regulations apply, and outside
which the ship‘s operators must satisfy the
seagoing regulations.
Shares and other equity are financial assets which
represent property rights on corporations or quasicorporations. These financial assets generally
entitle the holders to a share in the profits of the
corporations or quasi-corporations and to a share
in their net assets in the event of liquidation.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: ESA 1995, par. 5.86-5.87, [Annex 7.1]
Ship-kilometre
Unit of measurement representing the movement
of a ship over one kilometre.
See also: Shares and other equities – SNA
Shares and other
Actions et autres
equities Ŕ SNA
participations Ŕ SCN
Shares and other equities are financial assets that
are instruments and records acknowledging, after
the claims of all creditors have been met, claims to
the residual value of incorporated enterprises
Context: The distance taken into account is the
distance actually travelled. Movements of unladen
vessels are included. Movements of hydrofoils and
hovercrafts are included.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: (AF.5) – Annex to chapter XIII [11.86]
See also: Shares and other equities – ESA
Shifting agriculture
Agriculture itinérante
Shifting agriculture is a system of cultivation in
which a plot of land is cleared and cultivated for a
short period of time, then abandoned and allowed
to revert to producing its normal vegetation while
the cultivator moves on to another plot
Shipment price
The price at the time the order is delivered to the
purchaser.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Slash-and-burn agriculture
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Shifting cultivation
Culture itinérante
See Shifting agriculture and Slash—and—burn
agriculture
Shipping conferences
Shipping conferences refers to shipping companies
that have formed an association to agree on and
set freight rates and passenger fares over different
shipping routes. There are different shipping
conferences for different regions of the world.
Shipping conferences, aside from setting rates,
adopt a wide number of policies such as allocation
See also: Shifting agriculture, Slash-and-burn
agriculture
Shift-working
Shift-working may be defined as a situation where
one wage earner replaces another at the same
task within a 24 hour period.
716
of customers, loyalty contracts, open pricing
contracts, etc. Historically, eastern bloc country
shipping lines have not joined these conferences.
Short-term debt
Debt that has maturity of one year or less.
Maturity can be defined either on an original or
remaining basis.
Context: In many jurisdictions, shipping
conferences are exempt from the application of
competition laws but this position is being
increasingly changed in order to promote greater
competition and choice for shippers (exporters).
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Original maturity of an instrument,
Remaining (residual) maturity
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Short-term economic
statistics
See Main Economic Indicators, OECD (MEI)
Shogun or Geisha
bond
Non-yen-denominated issue in the Japanese
domestic market by a non-Japanese borrower.
See also: Main Economic Indicators, OECD (MEI)
Short-term
employment
See Workers in short-term employment.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
See also: Workers in short-term employment
Short-term
instruments
Short-term instruments are instruments with a
maturity of up to one year
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Source: Glossary of Government Debt Terms,
OECD, unpublished, 2001
Short Messaging
Service (SMS)
A wireless messaging service that involves the
transmission of a short text message and its
receipt by a wireless terminal.
Short-term interest
rates
Short-term interest rates are the rates at which
short-term borrowings are effected between
financial institutions or the rate at which shortterm government paper is issued or traded in the
market. Typical standardized names are money
market rate and treasury bill rate.
Source: Cellular Mobile Pricing Structures and
Trends, Working Party on Telecommunication and
Information Services Policies – November 1999,
page 9, Select Glossary of Mobile Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/54/42/2538118.pdf
Source: International Financial Statistics Yearbook,
IMF, Washington D.C, 2000, Introduction, page
xvii
Short-term
commitments or
credits
In the context of export credits, short-term
commitments are those that provide for repayment
within a short period, usually six months (although
some export credit agencies define short-term
credits as those with repayment terms of up to one
or two years). Short-term business represents the
bulk of that of most export credit agencies and
normally includes transactions in raw materials,
commodities, and consumer goods.
Short-term loans DAC
Used for Loans with a maturity of one year or less.
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
See also: Long-term loans - DAC, Short-term loans
- SNA
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Short-term loans SNA
717
Crédits à court terme
Short-term loans are loans that have an original
maturity normally of one year or less, but with a
maximum of two years or less to accommodate
variations in practice between countries
inferences about the missing counts.
The Shuttle algorithm constructs a specific subset
of the many possible dependencies and recursively
iterates through them in order to find bounds on
missing counts. As many dependencies will involve
unknown counts, the dependencies need to be
expressed in terms of inequalities involving lower
and upper bounds, rather than simple equalities.
The algorithm ends when a complete iteration fails
to tighten the bounds on any cell counts.
Source: (AF.41) – Annex to chapter XIII
See also: Short-term loans - DAC
Short-term migrant
A short-term migrant is a person who moves to a
country other than that of his or her usual
residence for a period of at least three months but
less than a year (12 months) except in cases
where the movement to that country is for
purposes of recreation, holiday, visits to friends or
relatives, business, medical treatment or religious
pilgrimage.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
For purposes of international migration statistics,
the country of usual residence of short-term
migrants is considered to be the country of
destination during the period they spend in it
Shuttle trade
Shuttle trade refers to the activity in which
individual entrepreneurs buy goods abroad and
import them for resale in street markets or small
shops. Often the goods are imported without full
declaration in order to avoid import duties
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary.
Short-term securities
other than shares
Titres autres
qu‟actions à court
terme
Short-term securities other than shares consist of
securities other than shares that have an original
maturity of one year or less but with a maximum
of two years or less to accommodate variations in
practice between countries
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
Sibling group
A set of time series whose keys differ only in the
value taken by the frequency dimension.
Source: (AF.31) – Annex to chapter XIII
Context: Within an ETS (exchanged time series), a
sibling group is uniquely identified by a data set
identifier combined with the sibling group key.
Shot noise
See Noise (statistical)
Source: European Central Bank (ECB), Bank for
International Settlement (BIS), Eurostat,
International Monetary Fund (IMF), Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD), "GESMES/TS User Guide", Release 3.00,
February, 2003; unpublished on paper
See also: Noise (Statistical)
Shunting
Operation of moving a rail vehicle or set of rail
vehicles inside a railway station or other railway
installations (depot, workshop, marshalling yard,
etc.)
Hyperlink:
http://www.sdmx.org/Data/GesmesTS_rel3.pdf
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: Data exchange, Data set, Dimension
(dimensionality), Frequency, GESMES TS, Key
(time series or sibling group), Time series
SICTA
Standard International Classification of Tourism
Activities
Shuttle algorithm
A method for finding lower and upper cell bounds
by iterating through dependencies between cell
counts.
Sidings (railway)
Tracks branching off running tracks.
Context: There exist many dependencies between
individual counts and aggregations of counts in
contingency tables. Where not all individual counts
are known, but some aggregated counts are
known, the dependencies can be used to make
Context: The length of sidings is included in the
length of tracks if the sidings belong to the railway
system concerned, private sidings being excluded.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
718
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Silviculture is the management of forest land for
timber
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Sienna Group
See City groups
SIMONE
Replaced by RAMON - Eurostat's Classifications
Server
See also: City groups
Significance
Significativité
An effect is said to be significant if the value of the
statistic used to test it lies outside acceptable
limits, that is to say, if the hypothesis that the
effect is not present is rejected. A test of
significance is one which, by use of a test statistic,
purports to provide a test of the hypothesis that
the effect is absent. By extension the critical
values of the statistics are themselves called
significant.
See also: RAMON
Simple random
sampling
Sampling in which every member of the population
has an equal chance of being chosen and
successive drawings are independent as, for
example, in sampling with replacement.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Simple sample
A random sample is said to be simple when the
probabilities of selection of members are all equal
and are constant throughout the drawing.
Significant Market
Power (SMP)
Under the current EC Directives, an operator
designated as having SMP is subject to specific
obligations such as the requirement to produce an
RIO and the obligation to have cost-oriented tariffs
(except for mobile operators). An operator is
presumed to have SMP if it has more than 25% of
a telecommunications market in the geographic
area in which it is allowed to operate.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Simultaneous
correction
A simultaneous correction is a correction in which
all the data in a record intended for correction is
corrected at the same time (e.g., by using the
record from a hot deck or cold deck).
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
See also: Reference Interconnection Offer (RIO)
Silo wagon
Wagons for the transport in bulk of powdered
products such as cement, flower, plaster etc.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Silt
Limon
Silt is fine particles of sand and rock that can be
picked up by the air or by water and deposited as
sediments
See also: Sequential correction
Simultaneous
imputation
See Simultaneous correction
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Simultaneous correction
See also: Sedimentation
Silviculture
Simultaneous release
The dissemination of statistical data to all
interested parties at the same time.
Sylviculture
719
Context: In SDMX, "Simultaneous Release"
describes the policy for release of the data to the
public, how the public is informed that the data are
being released, and whether the policy provides for
the dissemination of statistical data to all
interested parties at the same time. It also
describes the policy for briefing the press in
advance of the release of the data.
See also: Double deflation
Single round surveys
Single round surveys are surveys where the
respondent is interviewed only once
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 9.81
Simultaneous release (to all interested parties) is
an element of the principle of ready and equal
access to official statistics by the public that
strengthens transparency in data dissemination
practices.
See also: Dual records system, Multi-round survey
Single-employer
bargaining
See Collective bargaining
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
See also: Collective bargaining
Single-factor
productivity
Single-factor productivity is a synonym for partial
productivity measure. It relates output to one
particular type of input
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
See also: Accessibility, Data dissemination,
Release calendar, Special Data Dissemination
Standard (SDDS), Statistical Data and Metadata
Exchange (SDMX)
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry- Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Single employer
Fonds de pension à
pension funds
employeur unique
Funds that pool the assets of pension plans
established by a single sponsor.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Multi-factor productivity (MFP)
Sink functions of the
natural capital
The capacity of the environment to absorb the
unwanted by-products of production and
consumption; exhaust gases from combustion or
chemical processing, water used to clean products
or people, discarded packaging and goods no
longer wanted.
See also: Group pension funds, Individual pension
funds, Industry pension funds, Multi-employer
pension funds, Related member fund
Single Farm Payment
With the 2003 CAP reform, the EU introduced a
farm-based payment largely independent of
current production decisions and market
developments, but based on the level of former
payments received by farmers. To facilitate land
transfers, entitlements are calculated by dividing
the reference amount of payment by the number
of eligible hectares (including forage area) in the
reference year. Farmers receiving the new SFP are
obliged to keep their land in good agricultural and
environmental condition and have the flexibility to
produce any commodity on their land except fruits,
vegetables and table potatoes.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 1.23
Sinking fund
Payments made by the borrower on a regular basis
to a special account to set aside the necessary
funds for the redemption of its long-term debt. In
the Euromarket, borrowers can meet their
requirements through purchases in the open
market or through drawings by lot.
Source: OECD, 2004, OECD Agricultural Outlook:
2004-2013, OECD, Paris, Glossary
Single indicator
Méthode de déflation
method of deflation
à indicateur unique
A single indicator method of deflation is a means of
estimating the volume movements of value added
directly using only one time series as an indicator
(e.g. deflated output or deflated value added)
instead of double deflation
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Source: SNA 16.68
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
720
SITC
See Standard International Trade Classification
Containers sizes classified under a) to c) are
referred to as large containers.
See also: Standard International Trade
Classification (SITC)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Site preparation
Site preparation involves the demolition or
wrecking of buildings and other structures, clearing
of building sites and sale of materials from
demolished structures. Site preparation also entails
blasting, test drilling, landfill, levelling, earthmoving, excavating, land drainage and other land
preparation. Also included are tunnelling,
overburden removal and other development and
preparation of mineral properties and sites, except
oil and gas sites
Skewness
Asymétrie
An older term for asymmetry, in relation to a
frequency distribution; a measure of that
asymmetry. The concept of asymmetry is easily
defined, a measure of that asymmetry less easily
so.
Source: International Standard Industrial
Classification of all Economic Activities, Rev. 3,
United Nations, New York, 1990, Statistical Papers
Series M, No. 4 Rev. 3, ISIC class 4510
If a unimodal distribution has a longer tail
extending towards lower values of the variate it is
said to have negative skewness; in the contrary
case, positive skewness.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Situation of the stock
of finished goods
The term situation of the stock of finished goods is
used in business tendency surveys where the
respondent is asked for a judgment on the level of
stocks, e.g. whether ―excessive‖, ―normal‖,
―insufficient"
Slash-and-burn
agriculture
Slash-and—burn agriculture is a method of
cultivation whereby areas of the forest are burnt
and cleared for planting. When soil fertility
declines, cultivation shifts to a new plot
Source: Main Economic Indicators, OECD, Paris,
monthly
Six month rate of
change (OECD CLIs)
The annualised 6-month rate of change of OECD
composite leading indicators (CLIs) is calculated by
dividing the figure for a given month m by the 12month moving average centred on m-6.5.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Shifting agriculture
It is easier for users to interpret the annualised 6month rate of change since the volatility in the CLI
has been smoothed out. At the same time, the
annualised 6-month rate of change provides earlier
signals for the turning points
SLIM
Simpler Legislation in the Internal Market - a
European Council initiative
Small and mediumsized enterprises
(SMEs)
Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) are
non-subsidiary, independent firms which employ
fewer than a given number of employees. This
number varies across countries. The most frequent
upper limit designating an SME is 250 employees,
as in the European Union. However, some
countries set the limit at 200 employees, while the
United States considers SMEs to include firms with
fewer than 500 employees.
Source: OECD Leading Indicator Website,
Glossary, 2001
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_34
349_1965941_1_1_1_1,00.html
See also: Rate of change, twelve month – OECD
CLIs
Sizes of containers
The main sizes of containers are:
Small firms are generally those with fewer than 50
employees, while micro-enterprises have at most
10, or in some cases 5, workers.
a) 20 Foot ISO container (length of 20 feet and
width of 8 feet);
b) 40 Foot ISO container (length of 40 feet and
width of 8 feet);
c) Super high cube container (Oversize container);
and
d) Air container (Container conforming to
standards laid down for air transportation).
Financial assets are also used to define SMEs. In
the European Union, a new definition came into
force on 1 January 2005 applying to all Community
acts and funding programmes as well as in the
field of State aid where SMEs can be granted
721
higher intensity of national and regional aid than
large companies. The new definition provides for
an increase in the financial ceilings: the turnover of
medium-sized enterprises (50-249 employees)
should not exceed EUR 50 million; that of small
enterprises (10-49 employees) should not exceed
EUR 10 million while that of micro firms (less than
10 employees) should not exceed EUR 2 million.
Alternatively, balance sheets for medium, small
and micro enterprises should not exceed EUR 43
million, EUR 10 million and EUR 2 million,
respectively.
A plastic card containing important data about a
person‘s identity to allow access to a network or
premises. Also, a card containing subscriber
information, often inserted into GSM phones for
roaming to different countries.
Source: Cellular Mobile Pricing Structures and
Trends, Working Party on Telecommunication and
Information Services Policies – November 1999,
page 9, Select Glossary of Mobile Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/54/42/2538118.pdf
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD SME and
Entrepreneurship Outlook: 2005, OECD Paris, page
17
SMEs
PMEs
See Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs)
Small enterprises
See Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs)
See also: Small and medium-sized enterprises
(SMEs)
See also: Small and medium-sized enterprises
(SMEs)
Smog
Smog
Smog is a combination of smoke and fog in which
products of combustion such as hydrocarbons,
particulate matter and oxides of sulphur and
nitrogen occur in concentrations that are harmful
to human beings and other organisms
Small firms
See Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs)
See also: Small and medium-sized enterprises
(SMEs)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Small island
developing states
(SIDS)
List of small island developing states: Africa: Cape
Verde, Comoros, Guinea Bissau, Mauritius, Sao
Tome and Principe, Seychelles; Asia and the
Pacific: Bahrain, Cook Islands, Fiji, Kiribati,
Maldives, Marshall Islands, Federated States of
Micronesia, Nauru, Niue, Palau, Papua New Guinea,
Samoa, Singapore, Solomon Islands, Tokelau,
Tonga, Tuvalu, Vanuatu; Europe: Cyprus, Malta;
Latin America and the Caribbean: Antigua and
Barbuda, Aruba, The Bahamas, Barbados, Belize,
Cuba, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Grenada,
Guyana, Haiti, Jamaica, Netherlands Antilles, St.
Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the
Grenadines, Suriname, Trinidad and Tobago, US
Virgin Islands.
Smoothing
Lissage
The process of removing fluctuations in an ordered
series so that the result shall be ―smooth‖ in the
sense that the first differences are regular and
higher order differences small.
Although smoothing can be carried out by freehand
methods, it is usual to make use of moving
averages or the fitting of curves by least squares
procedures. In fact, the concept is closely tied to
that of trend fitting.
Context: Component series of the OECD composite
leading indicator (CLI) are smoothed according to
their MCD (months for cyclical dominance) values
to reduce irregularity.
Source: United Nations. Office of the High
Representative for the Least Developed Countries,
Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island
Developing States (OHRLLS). United Nations
Internet site www.un.org/specialrep/ohrlls/ohrlls/default.htm
Refer OECD website
http://www.oecd.org/std/cli/cligloss.htm
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Small-scale producers Petits producteurs
Small-scale producers are producers operating at a
small scale, used to distinguish from industrialised
producers. The line separating small- and largescale producers is arbitrary. What is considered
small-scale in one country or region may be
considered large-scale in another
SNA (System of
National Accounts)
SCN (Système de
comptabilité
nationale)
See System of National Accounts (SNA)
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
See also: System of National Accounts (SNA)
Social accounting
matrix (SAM)
Smart card
722
Matrice de
comptabilité sociale
(MCSŔ Social
accounting matrices -
SAM en anglais)
A social accounting matrix (SAM) is a means of
presenting the SNA accounts in a matrix which
elaborates the linkages between a supply and use
table and institutional sector accounts.
arise from certain events or circumstances, for
example, sickness, unemployment, retirement,
housing, education or family circumstances
A typical focus of a SAM on the role of people in
the economy may be reflected by, among other
things, extra breakdowns of the household sector
and a disaggregated representation of labour
markets (i.e., distinguishing various categories of
employed persons)
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 8.7
Social benefits in kind Prestations sociales
en nature
Social benefits in kind consist of (a) social security
benefits, reimbursements, (b) other social security
benefits in kind, (c) social assistance benefits in
kind; in other words they are equal to social
transfers in kind excluding transfers of individual
non-market goods and services
Source: SNA 20.4
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Social assistance
Prestations
benefits
d‟assistance sociale
Social assistance benefits are transfers made by
government units or NPIs to households intended
to meet the same kinds of needs as social
insurance benefits but are provided outside of an
organised social insurance scheme and are not
conditional on previous payments of contributions
Source: SNA 8.22 [8.99 - 8.106]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Social benefits other
than social transfers
in kind
Prestations sociales
autres que les
transferts sociaux en
nature
Social benefits other than social transfers in kind
consist of all social benefits except social transfers
in kind.
Source: SNA 8.7 [8.75]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
In other words, they consist of:
Social assistance
benefits in cash
Prestations
d‟assistance sociale
en espèces
Social assistance benefits in cash consist of current
transfers payable in cash to households by
government units or non-profit institutions serving
households (NPISHs) to meet the same needs as
social insurance benefits but which are not made
under a social insurance scheme incorporating
social contributions and social insurance benefits
(a) all social benefits in cash - both social
insurance and social assistance benefits - provided
by government units, including social security
funds, and NPISHs; and
(b) all social insurance benefits provided under
private funded and unfunded social insurance
schemes, whether in cash or in kind.
Source: SNA 8.77
Source: SNA 8.81
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Social capital
Social capital is defined as the norms and social
relations embedded in the social structures of
societies that enable people to co-ordinate action
to achieve desired goals. [Social Capital: the
Missing Link?, Social Capital Initiative, C.
Grootaert, Working Paper No. 3, World Bank,
1998]
Social assistance
benefits in kind
Prestations
d‟assistance sociale
en nature
Social assistance benefits in kind consist of
transfers in kind provided to households by
government units or non-profit institutions serving
households (NPISHs) that are similar in nature to
social security benefits in kind but are not provided
in the context of a social insurance scheme
Context: The term social capital has found its way
into economic analysis only recently, although
various elements of the concept have been present
under different names for a long time in
institutional economics as well as in the political,
sociological and anthropological literature.
Economists have added the focus on the
contribution of social capital to economic growth.
Source: SNA 8.104
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Social benefits
Prestations sociales
Social benefits are current transfers received by
households intended to provide for the needs that
There is still no consensus, however, on which
aspects of interaction and organisation merit the
label of social capital, nor on how to measure it
723
and how to determine empirically its contribution
to economic growth and development.
individual contract or transfer.
Such benefits can be cash transfers, or can be the
direct (―in-kind‖) provision of goods and services.
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, June 2000,
Chapter 2, Disparities in Regional Labour Markets,
page 43
Context: Thus, social expenditure can be provided
by both public and private institutions, but
transfers between households are not within the
scope of social expenditure. Social expenditure is
―unrequited‖: it does not include ―market
transactions‖, i.e. payments in return for the
simultaneous provision of services of equivalent
value
Social context
Social context refers to variables that, while not
usually the direct target of policy, are crucial for
understanding the context within which social
policy is developed.
Source: An Interpretative Guide to the OECD
Social Expenditure Database (SOCX), OECD, page
10
Context: For example, the proportion of elderly
people in the total population is not the direct
target of policy but it shapes how specific policies
impact on the living standards of the elderly and
on their costs.
Social expenditure
programme
A social expenditure programme is defined as a
body of rules, supported by one or more
institutions, governing the provision of social
expenditure benefits for a particular contingency
Unlike other indicators, social context indicators
cannot be unambiguously interpreted as ―good‖ or
―bad‖. For example, cross-country differences in
the number of lone-parent families may reflect
cultural factors, although in all countries social
policy makers are called upon to confront its
consequences.
Source: An Interpretative Guide to the OECD
Social Expenditure Database (SOCX), OECD, page
11
Source: OECD, 2007, Society at a Glance: OECD
Social Indicators, 2006 edition, OECD, Paris
Social health
insurance scheme
A social health insurance scheme is one where the
policy-holder is obliged or encouraged to insure by
the intervention of a third party.
Social contributions
Cotisations sociales
Social contributions are actual or imputed
payments to social insurance schemes to make
provision for social insurance benefits to be paid
Source: SNA 8.8
For example, government may oblige all
employees to participate in a social security
programme; employers may make it a condition of
employment that employees participate in an
insurance programme specified by the employer;
an employer may encourage employees to join a
programme by making contributions on behalf of
the employee; or a trade union may arrange
advantageous insurance cover available only to the
members of the trade union.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Social contributions
by self-employed and
non- employed
persons
Cotisations sociales
des travailleurs
indépendants et des
personnes n‟occupant
pas d‟emploi
Social contributions by self-employed and nonemployed persons are social contributions payable
for their own benefit by persons who are not
employees - i.e. self-employed persons (employers
or own-account workers), or non-employed
persons
Contributions to social insurance programmes are
usually paid on behalf of employees, though under
certain conditions non-employed or self-employed
persons may also be covered
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Source: SNA 8.70
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Social indicators
See Quality of life
Indicateurs sociaux
See also: Quality of life
Social expenditure
Social expenditure is the provision by public (and
private) institutions of benefits to, and financial
contributions targeted at, households and
individuals in order to provide support during
circumstances which adversely affect their welfare,
provided that the provision of the benefits and
financial contributions constitutes neither a direct
payment for a particular good or service nor an
Social insurance
Prestations
benefits
d‟assurance sociale
Social insurance benefits are transfers provided
under organised social insurance schemes; social
insurance benefits may be provided under general
social security schemes, under private funded
social insurance schemes or by unfunded schemes
managed by employers for the benefit of their
724
existing or former employees without involving
third parties in the form of insurance enterprises or
pension funds
unfunded.
Those schemes established by government units to
cover their own employees only are not counted as
social security schemes in the general government
sector. For example, the financial assets of pension
funds for government employees are not included
as financial assets of the government sector, but
rather belong in the insurance sector.
Source: SNA 8.7
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Social insurance
Régimes d‟assurance
schemes
sociale
Social insurance schemes are schemes in which
social contributions are paid by employees or
others, or by employers on behalf of their
employees, in order to secure entitlement to social
insurance benefits, in the current or subsequent
periods, for the employees or other contributors,
their dependants or survivors
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Social security
benefits in cash
Prestations de
sécurité sociale en
espèces
Social security benefits in cash are social insurance
benefits payable in cash to households by social
security funds; they may take the form of sickness
and invalidity benefits, maternity allowances,
children‘s or family allowances, other dependants‘
allowances, unemployment benefits, retirement
and survivors‘ pensions, death benefits or other
allowances or benefits
Source: SNA 8.55
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Social internal rate of
return
The social internal rate of return refers to the costs
and benefits to society of investment in education,
which includes the opportunity cost of having
people not participating in the production of output
and the full cost of the provision of education
rather than only the cost borne by the individual.
The social benefit includes the increased
productivity associated with the investment in
education and a host of possible non-economic
benefits, such as lower crime, better health, more
social cohesion and more informed and effective
citizens.
Source: SNA 8.78
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Social security
Remboursements benefits,
prestations de
reimbursements
sécurité sociale
Reimbursements (social security benefits) are
repayments (partial or complete) by social security
funds of approved expenditures made by
households on specified goods or services
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: SNA 8.101
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Social regulations
Social regulations protect public interests such as
health, safety, the environment, and social
cohesion. The economic effects of social
regulations may be secondary concerns or even
unexpected, but can be substantial.
Social security funds - Administrations de
SNA
sécurité sociale Ŕ SCN
Social security funds are separately organised from
the other activities of government units and hold
their assets and liabilities separately from the
latter; they are separate institutional units because
they are autonomous funds, they have their own
assets and liabilities and engage in financial
transactions on their own account
Reform aims to verify that regulation is needed,
and to design regulatory and other instruments,
such as market incentives and goal-based
approaches, that are more flexible, simpler, and
more effective at lower cost.
Source: Regulatory Reform: A Synthesis, OECD,
Paris, 1997, page 11
Source: SNA 4.112 [4.130]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Social security
Security sociale
Social security refers to all social security funds at
all levels of government.
See also: Social security funds- OECD
Social security fundsOECD
Social security funds are social insurance
programmes covering the community as a whole
or large sections of the community that are
Context: Social security funds are defined as social
insurance schemes covering the community as a
whole. These schemes may be either funded or
725
imposed and controlled by a government unit.
Social transfers in
Transferts sociaux en
kind
nature
Social transfers in kind consist of individual goods
and services provided as transfers in kind to
individual households by government units
(including social security funds) and non-profit
institutions serving households (NPISHs), whether
purchased on the market or produced as nonmarket output by government units or NPISHs.
They generally involve compulsory contributions by
employees or employers or both, and the terms on
which benefits are paid to recipients are
determined by a government unit.
Context: Social security funds have to be
distinguished from other social insurance
programmes which are determined by mutual
agreement between individual employers and their
employees.
The items included are:
Note: This item corresponds to HF.1.2 in the ICHAHF classification of health care financing (see SHA,
chapters 6 and 11)
(a) social security benefits, reimbursements,
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
(c) social assistance benefits in kind, and
(b) other social security benefits in kind,
(d) transfers of individual non-market goods or
services
See also: Social security funds - SNA
Source: SNA 8.99
Social security
Régimes de sécurité
schemes
sociale
Social security schemes are schemes imposed and
controlled by government units for the purpose of
providing social benefits to members of the
community as a whole, or of particular sections of
the community
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Societal response
indicators
Societal response indicators provide information
about the scale and nature of social policy
interventions, i.e. what society is doing to affect
social status.
Context: They generally involve compulsory
contributions by employees or employers or both,
and the terms on which benefits are paid to
recipients are determined by a government unit.
Social security funds have to be distinguished from
other social insurance programmes which are
determined by mutual agreement between
individual employers and their employees.
Context: They include indicators of the stance of
government policies, but also of the activities of
the private sector and non-governmental
organisations. Indicators of the development of
private pensions, and of the actions taken by
individuals and families to care for the elderly and
children, fall in this category.
OECD Health Data 2007: Statistics and Indicators
for 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2007, Data sources,
definitions and methods
By comparing indicators of societal response with
indicators of social status, one can get a first-order
indication of policy effectiveness.
Source: SNA 8.64
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: OECD, 2007, Society at a Glance: OECD
Social Indicators, 2006 edition, OECD, Paris
Social services
See Services, social
SOCX
The OECD Social Expenditure database (SOCX) has
been developed to provide a tool for monitoring
trends in social expenditure at the aggregate level
and to analyse changes in the composition of social
expenditures. It is intended to serve as an
accounting system for the OECD area
See also: Services, social
Social status
indicators
Social status indicators describe those social
outcomes that policies try to influence.
Source: An Interpretative Guide to the OECD
Social Expenditure Database (SOCX), OECD, page
9
Context: Ideally, the indicators chosen are such
that they can be easily and unambiguously
interpreted – all countries would rather have low
poverty rates than high ones, for example.
Software
Programs, procedures and data associated with the
operation of a computer system.
These indicators describe the general social
conditions of the population or one particular
dimension that social policy tries to influence.
Context: There are two types of software—system
software which controls the operation of the
computer, (i.e., Windows, DOS,) and application
Source: OECD, 2007, Society at a Glance: OECD
Social Indicators, 2006 edition, OECD, Paris
726
software (i.e., Word, EXCEL, MS ACCESS, Lotus).
(Statistics Canada, Educational Resources,
Glossary of Statistical Terms)
Soil organic matter is carbon-containing material in
the soil that derives from living organisms
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Soil quality
Soil quality encompasses two distinct, but related
parts: inherent quality, the innate properties of
soils such as those that lead to soil formation; and
dynamic quality, covering the main degradation
processes (physical, chemical and biological) and
farm management practices
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
See also: Hardware
Soil
Sol
Soil is the loose and unconsolidated outer layer of
the earth‘s crust, made up of small particles of
different sizes
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Soil resources (SEEA)
Soil found on agricultural land as well as that found
elsewhere within the national territory.
Soil conditioner
Amendement
A soil conditioner is organic material such as
humus or compost that facilitates the passage of
water through soil and the distribution of fertilizer
material and also provides a better medium for the
growth of soil bacteria
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.44, E.A. 12
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Soil surface nitrogen
balance indicator
The OECD soil surface nitrogen balance indicator
measures the difference between the nitrogen
available to an agricultural system (inputs, mainly
from livestock manure and chemical fertilisers) and
the uptake of nitrogen by agriculture (outputs,
largely crops and forage). A persistent surplus
indicates potential environmental pollution, while a
persistent deficit indicates potential agricultural
sustainability problems
Soil conservation
Conservation des sols
Soil conservation is the protection of soil from
erosion and other types of deterioration, so as to
maintain soil fertility and productivity. It generally
includes watershed management and water use
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Groundwater protection, Protection of
soil and groundwater
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture:
Methods and Results, Executive Summary, OECD,
2000, page 22
Soil cover
Soil cover refers to vegetation, including crops,
and crop residues on the surface of the soil
See also: Efficiency of nitrogen use in agriculture
indicator
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
Solar energy
Solar radiation exploited for hot water production
and electricity generation by:
Soil degradation
Soil degradation refers to the process(es) by which
soil declines in quality and is thus made less fit for
a specific purpose, such as crop production
- flat plate collectors, mainly of the thermosyphon
type, for domestic hot water or for the seasonal
heating of swimming pools;
- photovoltaic cells;
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
- solar thermal-electric plants.
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Soil organic matter
727
recycled
Solas for missing data
analysis
Solas for missing data analysis is a processing
system that was developed by Statistical Solutions
Ltd, Ireland. Solas is designed for the imputation
of missing data, primarily in biostatistical research.
It supports both numeric and ordered categorical
variables.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Solid waste
Gestion des déchets
management
solides
Solid waste management refers to the supervised
handling of waste material from generation at the
source through the recovery processes to disposal
Its main feature is the multiple imputation, and it
can perform simple donor imputations and
imputations with historical data
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source
A source is the organisational unit responsible for
implementing an administrative decision or a
statistical law.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Context: Sources can be distinguished, according
to the modality of data collection, in: a)
administrative (for data coming from
administrative records); b) survey (for data
coming from surveys for a specific sector or
institutional unit).
Solid biomass
Biomass is defined as any plant matter used
directly as fuel or converted into other forms
before combustion. Included are wood, vegetal
waste (including wood waste and crops used for
energy production), animal materials/wastes,
sulphite lyes, also known as ―black liquor‖ (an
alkaline spent liquor from the digesters in the
production of sulphate or soda pulp during the
manufacture of paper where the energy content
derives from the lignin removed from the wood
pulp) and other solid biomass.
Source: SDMX Vocabulary
See also: Administrative data, Data collection,
administrative, Data source
Source data
Data collected on a regular basis (by survey from
respondents, or from administrative sources) by
survey statisticians in the national statistical
system to be edited, imputed, aggregated and/or
used in the compilation and production of official
statistics.
Context: Charcoal produced from solid biomass is
also included here. Since charcoal is a secondary
product, its treatment is slightly different than that
of the other primary biomass. Production of
charcoal (an output in the transformation process)
is offset by the inputs of primary biomass into the
charcoal production process.
Context: In SDMX, "Source Data" refers to a
description of the data collection programs and
their adequacy for the production of statistics,
including meeting the requirements for
methodological frameworks, scope, classifications
systems, and basis for recording.
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
In the context of the SDDS, "nature of the basic
data" includes whether data are compiled from
administrative records (e.g., monetary and
government data), surveys, censuses, or any
combination of these. It should also briefly
describe the means of data collection. In cases
where sampling techniques are used, the sampling
procedures should be briefly described.
Solid waste
Résidues solides
Solid waste is useless and sometimes hazardous
material with low liquid content. Solid wastes
include municipal garbage, industrial and
commercial waste, sewage sludge, wastes
resulting from agricultural and animal husbandry
operations and other connected activities,
demolition wastes and mining residues
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Data collection, Primary data, Scope
(general definition), Special Data Dissemination
Standard (SDDS), Statistical Data and Metadata
Exchange (SDMX)
See also: Waste
Solid waste disposal
Elimination des
déchets solides
Solid waste disposal is the ultimate disposition or
placement of refuse that is not salvaged or
Source metadata MetaStore
728
Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types refers to
a reference or link to metadata from source.
space for ecosystems.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.33
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
Source periodicity MetaStore
Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types refers to
the time distance between observations in source
(whether stock or flow).
Spatial data
Spatial data is any data with a direct or indirect
reference to a specific location or geographical
area.
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
Source: World Meteorological Organisation, 2004,
Report of CBS Expert Team on Integrated Data
Management, Fourth Meeting, Geneva, 1-3
September 2004
See also: Periodicity - MetaStore
South Pacific Forum
South Pacific Fisheries
Fisheries Agency
Agency (FFA)
(FFA)
The South Pacific Forum Fisheries Agency (FFA) is
a consultative body established as a consequence
of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the
Sea (UNCLOS) and the extension of jurisdiction to
the 200 mile exclusive economic zone.
Spatial labour
markets
See Functional labour markets
See also: Functional labour markets
The majority of the 16 FFA members consist of
small Pacific island fishing nations who realise that
their interests in fisheries exploitation and
management are best served through regional coordination and co-operation.
Spatial price indexes
Indexes which measure the difference in prices
between localities at a particular point in time.
Source: Producer and International Trade Price
Indexes, Glossary of terms – Australian Bureau of
Statistics
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs%40.nsf/66f3
06f503e529a5ca25697e0017661f/f2b7a9d7152e50
18ca25697e0018fc77!OpenDocument
Spam
Electronic ‗junk mail‘ or junk newsgroup postings
mostly commonly associated with the Internet.
Source: Cellular Mobile Pricing Structures and
Trends, Working Party on Telecommunication and
Information Services Policies – November 1999,
page 9, Select Glossary of Mobile Terms
SPC
CPS
See Statistical Programme Committee
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/54/42/2538118.pdf
Special Accession
Programme for
Agriculture and Rural
Development
(SAPARD)
The Special Accession Programme for Agriculture
and Rural Development (SAPARD) is a programme
created by the European Union (EU) to support the
efforts of the Central and Eastern European
candidate countries to prepare for participation in
the common agricultural policy and the single
market in the pre-accession period.
See also: Statistical Programme Committee (SPC)
Spatial adjustment
factors
Factors used to adjust average prices obtained
from one or more pricing locations within the
economic territory of a Member State to national
average prices.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Context: The programme involves delegating the
responsibility for managing EU funds for rural
development and decentralised programmes to the
candidate countries.
Spatial competition
Spatial competition occurs when the amount of
space available is inadequate to satisfy existing or
expected future wants. For example space for
transport or agriculture may be at the expense of
The Regulation on SAPARD implementation,
adopted by the Commission in 1999, sets out the
conditions and areas for assistance, including
investment in agricultural holdings and processing
and marketing of products.
729
The Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS)
was established by the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) to guide members that have, or that
might seek, access to international capital markets
in the provision of their economic and financial
data to the public. Subscription to the SDDS was
opened in early April 1996.
The Programme is co-financed by the EU and the
candidate countries. The annual EU budget during
the programme's seven-year run (2000- 06) is
euro 520 million.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Context: The SDDS identifies four dimensions of
data dissemination:
a) The data: coverage, periodicity, and timeliness;
Special accounts
In the context of the Paris Club, deposits into
special accounts were first introduced in 1983 for
debtor countries that had a history of running into
arrears. After signing the Agreed Minute, the
debtor makes monthly deposits into an earmarked
account at the central bank of one of the creditor
countries. The deposit amounts are roughly equal
to the moratorium interest that is expected to fall
due on the rescheduled debt owed to all Paris Club
creditors combined, and any other payments
falling due during the consolidation period. The
debtor then draws on the deposited funds to make
payments as soon as the bilateral agreements with
the individual Paris Club creditors are signed and
as other payments fall due.
b) Access by the public;
c) Integrity of the disseminated data; and
d) Quality of the disseminated data.
The SDDS prescribes that subscribing members
provide a summary description of methodology for
each data category, including statements of major
differences from international guidelines. The term
"methodology" is used in the SDDS in a broad
sense to cover the aspects of analytical framework,
concepts, definitions, classifications, accounting
conventions, sources of data, and compilation
practices.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: International Monetary Fund (IMF), "Guide
to the Data Dissemination Standards, Module 1:
The Special Data Dissemination Standard",
Washington, May 1996
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Hyperlink: http://dsbb.imf.org/sddsindex.htm
See also: Data dissemination standards, IMF,
General Data Dissemination System (GDDS),
Metadata dimension (SDDS)
Special Agricultural
Safeguard (SSG)
The Special Agricultural Safeguard (SSG) is a
provision of the Uruguay Round Agreement on
Agriculture that may be invoked by a World Trade
Organisation (WTO) Member for a product subject
to tariffication and for which application of the
special safeguard is designated in the Member‘s
Schedule.
Special Drawing Right
(SDR) bond
The SDR bond is issued in the currency of the IMF.
The SDR is a composite currency unit based on a
standard basket system of valuation. SDR bonds
are traded only in U.S. dollars.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
It allows WTO Members to impose additional tariffs
on agricultural products if their import volume
exceeds defined trigger levels or if prices fall below
specified trigger level.
It is designed to prevent disruption on domestic
markets due to import surges or abnormally low
import prices, and can apply only to imports that
exceed tariff-quota volumes.
Special drawing rights Les droits de tirage
(SDRs)
spéciaux (DTS)
See SDRs (Special drawing rights) - IMF
See also: SDRs (Special Drawing Rights) – IMF
The special agricultural safeguard clause is an
alternative to the general safeguard provisions in
the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT), and is much easier to invoke because it
does not require a test of injury.
Special language
Special language is a language used in a subject
field and characterized by the use of specific
linguistic means of expression.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Context: The specific linguistic means of
expression always include subject-specific
terminology and phraseology and also may cover
stylistic or syntactic features. [ISO 1087-1:2000,
3.1.3]
Special Data
Dissemination
Standard (SDDS)
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
730
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
company, regional headquarters), or their purpose
(e.g., sale and regional administration,
management of foreign exchange risk, facilitation
of financing of investment).
See also: ISO / IEC 11179, Langage - ISO, Subject
field, Terminology
SPEs should be treated as direct investment
enterprises if they meet the 10 percent criterion.
SPEs are an integral part of direct investment
networks as are, for the most part, SPE
transactions with other members of the group.
Special needs
education
The definition of special needs education refers to
those with special educational needs are defined
by the additional public and/or private resources
provided to support their education.
Context: For SPEs that have the sole purpose of
serving as financial intermediaries:
The use of this definition in a consistent manner
calls for agreement about the term "additional"
and an appreciation of the various kinds of possible
"resources provided" which should be considered.
- All transactions except those with affiliated banks
and affiliated financial intermediaries, should be
recorded in the direct investment data.
Context: Thus, "additional resources" are those
made available over and above the resources
generally available to students where no
consideration is given to needs of students likely to
have particular difficulties in accessing the regular
curriculum.
- Transactions with affiliated banks and affiliated
financial intermediaries should be excluded from
the direct investment data, except transactions in
equity capital and permanent debt
(Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment Terms,
OECD, 2001 – not published)
Resources can be of many different kinds.
Examples are:
Source: Report on the Survey of Implementation
of Implementation of Methodological Standards for
Direct Investment – IMF, OECD, March 2000 –
Appendix II: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms.
- Personnel resources. These include a more
favourable teacher/student ratio than in a regular
classroom where no allowance is being made for
students with special needs; additional teachers,
assistants or any other personnel (for some or all
of the time); training programmes for teachers and
others which equip them for work in special needs
education.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/bopage/pdf/mar2000.
pdf
- Material resources. These include aids or
supports of various types (e.g. hearing aid);
modifications or adaptations to classroom;
specialised teaching materials.
Special purpose road
vehicle
Road vehicle designed for purposes other than the
carriage of passengers or goods.
- Financial resources. These include funding
formulae which are more favourable to those with
special needs (including classes where it is known
or assumed that there are students with special
needs); systems where money is set aside for
special educational needs within the regular budget
allocation; payments made in support of special
needs education; and the costs of personnel and
material resources.
Context: This category includes e.g. fire brigade
vehicles, ambulances, mobile cranes, self-propelled
rollers, bulldozers with metallic wheels or track,
vehicles for recording film, radio and TV
programmes, mobile library vehicles, towing
vehicles for vehicles in need of repair, and other
road vehicles not specified elsewhere.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: OECD, CERI, 2005, Students with
Disabilities, Learning Difficulties and
Disadvantages: Statistics and Indicators, OECD,
Paris
Special purpose
entities (SPEs)
Special purpose entities (SPEs) are:
Special trade Ŕ
Eurostat
The results of Community statistics refer to special
trade, which covers:
(1) generally organised or established in
economies other than those in which the parent
companies are resident; and
(a) immediate imports and exports from
warehouses for free circulation, imports for inward
processing and imports after outward processing
(customs procedures);
(2) engaged primarily in international transactions
but in few or no local operations.
(b) exports of Community goods after inward
processing and exports for outward processing
(customs procedures).
SPEs are defined either by their structure (e.g.,
financing subsidiary, holding company, base
731
Specialisation ratio
Specialisation ratios measure the extent to which
observations contained within a category are
representatives of the population of those
observations as a whole (e.g. in industry statistics,
the specialisation ratio is the output by an industry
of goods and services characteristic to that
industry in proportion to its total output
Goods in transit and warehouse traffic are not
included in Community statistics
Source: External Trade and Balance of Payments,
Glossarium, 1993, Eurostat, p. 33
See also: Special trade system – UN, Trade
systems
Source: United Nations Glossary of Classification
Terms. Prepared by the Expert Group on
International Economic and Social Classifications
and ISIC Rev. 3, para. 155
Special trade Ŕ UN
The special trade system is in use when the
statistical territory comprises only a particular part
of the economic territory
Hyperlink:
http://www.un.org/Depts/unsd/class/glossary_sho
rt.htm
Source: International Merchandise Trade Statistics,
Concepts and Definitions, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Studies in Methods, Series M, No. 52,
Rev. 2, page 9, para. 67
See also: Coverage ratio, Homogeneity ratios
See also: Economic territory (of a country) –
SNA/UN, General trade system, Special trade –
Eurostat, Statistical territory (of a country) – UN
Specialised carrier
Ship specially designed for the carriage of
particular cargoes.
Special uniques
analysis
A method of analysing the per-record risk of
microdata.
Context: This category includes vehicle carrier,
livestock carrier, irradiated fuel carrier, barge
carrier.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Specialised financial
intermediaries
Specialised financial intermediaries include holding
corporations, companies that provide short- term
financing for corporate mergers and takeovers,
export/import finance firms, factors or factoring
companies, venture capital and development
capital firms, and pawnshops that predominantly
engage in lending rather than retailing
Specialisation
agreements
Specialization agreements is a provision permitting
firms to form an agreement to specialize in the
production of a narrow or specific range of product
lines in order to realize "product specific
economies". In several industries, firms may be
manufacturing at sub-optimal scales, multiple and
duplicate products.
Source: Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual,
IMF, Washington, 2000, para. 100
Context: Specialization agreements are aimed
towards facilitating re-alignment of production in
order to achieve longer production runs of specific
products and realize efficiencies. A formal provision
for these agreements and exemption from the
application of competition laws may be necessary
in order to assure firms they will not be viewed as
forming an illegal combination. Specialization
agreements are particularly relevant in the context
of small economies where the market may not be
large enough for firms to exploit potential product
specific economies of scale.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/mfs/manual/i
ndex.htm
Specialised surveys
Specialised surveys are those concerned with a
single subject or issue. Specialised surveys may be
ad hoc or they may be implemented as part of an
on-going national survey programme but
conducted with separate samples because of
subject-matter or other considerations. They may
be conducted periodically, irregularly or only once
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 1.29
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Species
Espèces
Species are all the individuals and populations of a
particular kind of organism, maintained by
See also: Economies of scale
732
biological mechanisms that result in their breeding
only with their own kind
Specification pricing
The pricing methodology whereby a manageable
sample of precisely specified products is selected,
in consultation with each reporting establishment,
for repeat pricing. Products are fully defined in
terms of all characteristics which influence their
transaction prices.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Specific taxes
In the environmental protection expenditure
account ―specific taxes‖ designate a sub-set of
taxes that contribute to the financing of
environmental protection. The revenue from
specific taxes is regarded as being earmarked for
environmental protection.
The objective is to price to constant quality in
order to produce an index showing ―pure‖ price
change.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 6.23
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Specifications
generator
A specifications generator is a module in an editing
system from which files for paper questionnaires,
data entry modules, editing software, CATI, CAPI,
and summary software are generated.
Specification
A description or list of the characteristics that can
be used to identify an individual sampled product
to be priced. A tight specification is a fairly precise
description of an item intended to narrow the
range of items from which a price collector might
choose, possibly reducing it to a unique item, such
as a particular brand of television set identified by
a specific code number.
The specifications generator is the unifying feature
in Integrated Survey Processing software. In the
Blaise system, the Blaise Questionnaire can be
considered to be a specifications generator.
The specifications generator contains information
relating to the data to be collected as well as to the
edits and routes to be applied to the data.
A loose specification is a generic description of a
range of items that allows the price collector some
discretion as to which particular item or model to
select for pricing, such as colour television sets of
a particular size.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Specification errors
Errors at the planning stage because:
Specific-rate tariff
A tariff that is levied at a specific rate per physical
unit of the particular item (e.g., $100 per tonne).
Contrast with Ad valorem tariff
(i) data specification is inadequate and inconsistent
with respect to the objectives of the survey,
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
(ii) omission or duplication of units, incomplete
units or faulty enumeration methods; and
See also: Ad valorem tariff
(iii) inaccurate or inappropriate methods of
interview.
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Speculative reserves
(of oil)
Estimates of oil which have not been positively
identified but which, based on previous geological
experience, it is reasonable to expect to discover in
the future.
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
733
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.25
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Spending on
educational services
other than instruction
Spending on educational services other than
instruction includes public spending on ancillary
services such as meals, transport to schools, or
housing on the campus; private spending on fees
for ancillary services; subsidised private spending
on student living costs or reduced prices for
transport; and private spending on student living
costs or transport.
Spot price
The spot price is the selling price of a commodity
(oil, soy beans, currency, etc.) for immediate
rather than forward delivery
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Spot rate
A spot rate is the exchange rate of one currency
for another for immediate delivery. Also called the
Cash rate
Splicing
In an index number it may become necessary at
certain times to make provision for the appearance
of new items or the disappearance of items
previously in use, e.g. in price index numbers,
when commodities go off the market. The method
of affecting the change is known as splicing.
Source: The Dictionary of International Business
Terms, J.K. Shim, J.G. Siegel, M.H. Levine,
Glenlake Publishing Co. Ltd, 1998
Context: A technique used to introduce new items
or respondents into the index calculations so that
the level of the index is not affected (A Guide to
the Consumer Price Index - 13th Series, Glossary,
Australian Bureau of Statistics. Available at
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/0/9171
F5CDC94489A9CA25697E0018FD59?)Open&Highli
ght=0,glossary).
SPPY
Same Period Previous Year
Spread
Spread is the difference in yield between two
financial instruments, e.g. in a swap of different
securities. Swaps are agreements between at least
two counter-parties to exchange cash flows in the
future according to a pre-specified formula. They
can therefore be regarded as portfolios of forward
contracts. The most common one is an agreement
on the exchange of a fixed rate for a floating rate
contract
The introduction of a replacement item and
attributing any price change between the
replacement item in the period it is introduced and
the replaced item in the period prior to the
introduction to the change in quality.
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Monetary Fund, Washington
DC.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
SPS Agreement
Accord sur
l‟application des
measures sanitaires
et phytosanitaires
The SPS Agreement is a World Trade Organisation
(WTO) Agreement on Sanitary and Phyto-sanitary
measures, including standards used to protect
human, animal or plant life and health
Spot market pricing
A generic term referring to any short-term sales
agreement. Generally it refers to single shipment
orders with delivery expected in less than one
month. Goods sold on this basis are usually offthe-shelf and not subject to customization. Spot
market prices are subject to discounting and
directly reflect current market conditions.
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
See also: Phytosanitary regulations
734
Context: More specifically, budgetary positions
close to balance or in surplus are required as the
medium-term objective for Member States, which
would allow them to deal with normal cyclical
fluctuations while keeping the government deficit
below the reference value of 3% of GDP.
SQL
See Structured Query Language
See also: Structured Query Language (SQL)
Stabilisation funds
Fonds de stabilisation
(Canada)
(Canada)
Stabilisation funds are commodity-specific or
multi-commodity funds into which producers and
federal and, for some programmes, provincial
governments pay premiums for the various
Canadian stabilisation programmes and from which
payments are made. If one of these funds runs a
deficit, the Ministry of Finance may lend money at
market interest rates to cover the deficit
In accordance with the Stability and Growth Pact,
countries participating in EMU will report stability
programmes, while non-participating countries will
continue to provide convergence programmes.
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Stability programmes,
European
Stability programmes refer to medium-term
government plans and assumptions provided by
participating Member States regarding the
development of key economic variables towards
the achievement of the medium-term objective of
a budgetary position close to balance or in surplus
as referred to in the Stability and Growth Pact.
Stabilisation payment
A stabilisation payment is a budgetary payment
made to compensate farmers for falling farm prices
incomes, or both.
Stabilisation programmes include insurance or
safety nets or underwriting schemes intended to
compensate farmers for decreases in price, income
or cash flow due to disturbances to yields (from
drought, for example) or instability in factor and
commodity markets
Regarding budgetary positions, measures to
consolidate fiscal balances as well as underlying
economic scenarios are highlighted.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Context: Stability programmes must be updated
annually. They are examined by the European
Commission and the Economic and Financial
Committee. Their reports serve as the basis for an
assessment by the ECOFIN Council, focusing, in
particular, on whether the medium-term budgetary
objective in the programme provides for an
adequate safety margin to ensure the avoidance of
an excessive deficit. Countries not participating in
the euro area must submit annual convergence
programmes, in accordance with the Stability and
Growth Pact
Stability (of
Stabilité (d'un
ecosystem)
écosystème)
Stability (of ecosystem) refers to the capability of a
natural system to apply self—regulating
mechanisms so as to return to a steady state after
an outside disturbance
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
See also: Resilience
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
Stability and Growth
Pact
The Stability and Growth Pact consists of two
European Union Council Regulations on the
strengthening of the surveillance of budgetary
positions and the surveillance and co-ordination of
economic policies and on speeding up and
clarifying the implementation of the excessive
deficit procedure, and of a European Council
Resolution on the Stability and Growth Pact
adopted at the Amsterdam summit on 17 June
1997.
STADIUM
Statistical Data Interchange Universal Monitor
Staff compensation
Expenditure on staff compensation includes gross
salaries plus non-salary compensation (fringe
benefits).
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
It is intended to serve as a means of safeguarding
sound government finances in Stage Three of
Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) in order to
strengthen the conditions for price stability and for
strong sustainable growth conducive to
employment creation.
See also: Non-salary compensation, Salaries (of
educational personnel)
Stage of processing
The classification of goods and services according
to their position in the chain of production.
735
However, unlike the classification by stage of
production, a product is allocated only to one stage
even though it may occur in several stages. Goods
and services are classified either as primary
products, intermediate products, or finished
products.
collection, source, point of time, etc.
Context: In the international context, standard
classifications include ISIC Rev. 3, ISCO, CPC,
NACE Rev 1, etc. Many national statistical systems
also have their own versions of standard
classifications, which in the main are consistent
with international standard classifications, though
modified to meet national circumstances. Many of
the international and national standard
classifications are listed in the RAMON database of
classifications, available at
http://europa.eu.int/comm/eurostat/ramon
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
In the SDDS context, the criteria used to classify
major economic transactions, industrial activities,
commodities and services, consumption, data
components, international transactions or the
sectorization of accounts for collection and/or
dissemination and whether these criteria are
consistent with relevant international or regional
standard classifications and/or guidelines and at
what level. (e.g. revenue consists of tax and
nontax revenue classified according to the GFSM;
Expenditure by function is classified according to
the SNA classification of the functions of
government (COFOG), consumption of products
classified according to CPC and aggregation by
COICOP or other standard system, etc.
See also: Stage of production
Stage of production
The classification of goods and services according
to their position in the chain of production, but
allowing for the multi-function nature of products.
Unlike the classification by stage of processing, a
product is allocated to each stage to which it
contributes and not assigned solely to one stage.
Goods and services are classified as primary
products and/or intermediate products and/or
finished products.
Source: "United Nations Glossary of Classification
Terms" prepared by the Expert Group on
International Economic and Social Classifications,
unpublished on paper.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/class/family/glossary_s
hort.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
See also: Classification, RAMON, Special Data
Dissemination Standard (SDDS)
See also: Stage of processing
Standard deviation
The most widely used measure of dispersion of a
frequency distribution introduced by K. Pearson
(1893). It is equal to the positive square root of
the variance. The standard deviation should not be
confused with the root mean square deviation.
Stamp taxes
Droits de timbre
The category stamp taxes consists of those stamp
taxes which do not fall on particular classes of
transactions elsewhere identified, particularly in
paragraphs 7.69 and 7.70 of the System of
National Accounts (e.g. stamps on legal documents
or cheques, which are treated as taxes on the
production of business or financial services
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: SNA 7.70 [OECD 6200]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Standard Economic
Processing System
(StEPS)
A Standard Economic Processing System (StEPS) is
a processing system that was developed by the
U.S. Census Bureau to provide integrated tools for
the processing of survey steps. In addition to its
editing and imputation functions, it includes a
module to control the collection of information, a
data review and on-line correction module, an
estimation and variance calculation module, and a
tabulation and disclosure module.
Standard
Norme
See Environmental quality standard and Emission
standard
See also: Emission standard, Environmental quality
standard
Standard
classifications
Standard classifications are those that follow
prescribed rules and are generally recommended
and accepted. They aim to ensure that information
is classified consistently regardless of the
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
736
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Sources and Methods: Construction Price
Indices, OECD, Eurostat, 1997, page 19
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/document/4/0,2340,en_2649
_34247_2367940_1_1_1_1,00.html
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
See also: Construction price indices, Prior
breakdown methods (construction price indices)
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Standard
Classification type
International Trade
pour le commerce
Classification (SITC)
international (CTCT)
SITC is the Standard International Trade
Classification which is a statistical classification of
the commodities entering external trade. It is
designed to provide the commodity aggregates
requited for purposes of economic analysis and to
facilitate the international comparison of trade-bycommodity data.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
The hierarchical structure of the classification
comprises:
Standard efficiency
units
A stock of a particular type of asset is converted to
standard efficiency units by adjusting the older
assets in the stock to account for their reduced
efficiency in producing capital services
-
Standard error
The positive square root of the variance of the
sampling distribution of a statistic.
Context: It includes the precision with which the
statistics estimates the relevant parameter as
contrasted with the standard deviation that
describes the variability of primary observations.
Sections – one-digit code;
Divisions – two-digit codes;
Groups – three-digit codes;
Subgroups – four digit codes;
Items – five-digit codes.
The current international standard is the SITC,
Revision 3
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003.
Source: Commodity Indexes for the Standard
International Trade Classification, Revision 3,
United Nations, New York, Statistical Papers,
Series M, No. 38/Rev. 2, Vol. 1 page v
See also: Standard error, relative
Standard error,
relative
See Co-efficient of variation
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
See also: Coefficient of variation
Standard factors
method (construction
price indices)
This method is mainly used for the compilation of
input construction price indices.
Standard statistical
units
See Statistical units - ISIC
For any given year a representative construction
(or small number of projects) is selected and the
quantities of each factor used to build it (e.g.
materials, labour, transport, machinery, etc.)
evaluated.
Standard tax reliefs
Reliefs unrelated to the actual expenses incurred
by taxpayers and automatically available to all
taxpayers who satisfy the eligibility rules specified
in the legislation are counted as standard reliefs,
including also deductions for compulsory social
security contributions.
See also: Statistical units – ISIC
Changes in the costs of construction are
determined by monitoring the cost of each factor.
The representative building or construction chosen
initially is used only to establish the weights.
Source: OECD, 2007, Taxing Wages - 2005/2006,
2006 Edition, OECD, Paris
See also: Tax reliefs
This methodology, which yields a construction cost
index rather than a construction price index, is
used by several OECD and European Union
Member countries.
Standardised data
element
A standardized data element is a certified data
element within the data element registry that is
preferred for use
Context: There is considerable variation in the
range of items included by each country.
737
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Standardised
Taux de chômage
unemployment rates
standardisés
Standardised unemployment rates (SURs) are
unemployment rates measured as far as possible
across countries according to International Labour
Organisation (ILO) definitions of unemployment
and labour force
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Stand-by agreement
An IMF lending facility established in 1952 through
which a member country can use IMF financing up
to a specified amount to overcome short-term or
cyclical balance of payments difficulties.
Instalments are normally phased on a quarterly
basis, with their release conditional upon the
member‘s meeting performance criteria, such as
monetary and budgetary targets. These criteria
allow both the member and the IMF to assess the
member‘s progress in policy implementation and
may signal the need for further corrective policies.
Source: Quarterly Labour Force Statistics, OECD,
refer Technical Notes
See also: Comparable unemployment rates (CURs)
Standards
Standards refers to defining and establishing
uniform specifications and characteristics for
products and/or services.
Context: Stand-By Arrangements typically cover a
period of one to two years (although they can
extend up to three years). Repayments are to be
made over a period of three and a quarter to 5
years. The expected repayment period is
shortened to two and a quarter to 4 years if the
country‘s external position allows it to repay
earlier.
Context: In the case of manufactured products,
the standard may relate to physical measurements
and dimensions, materials and performance
attributes. For example, a standard bath tub may
be established as measuring 162 cm by 74 cm,
being made of either enamelled metal or fibreglass
and having performance capability of carrying
human body and water weight of minimum 180 kg.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
A distinction is usually made between technical and
performance standards. The specifications that the
bath tub should be of certain dimensions and made
of enamelled metal or fibreglass are considered as
technical standards. The weight and capacity
capabilities are the performance standards. A
distinction is also made between "voluntary" and
"mandatory" standards; the former are generally
developed by industry associations and member
firms may voluntarily adopt them. Mandatory
standards are usually those developed by
government agencies or regulation and are
compulsory.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Standby credit
Standby credit is a commitment to lend up to a
specified amount for a specific period, to be used
only in a certain contingency
Source: External Debt: Definition, Statistical
Coverage and Methodology, A Report by an
International Working Group on External Debt
Statistics of the World Bank, IMF, BIS, OECD,
OECD, Paris, 1988, Glossary
Standardization of products often promotes
economies of scale in production,
interchangeability between products of different
manufacture, higher quality, complementarity
between different products, and diffusion of
technology. Standards may also reduce product
heterogeneity and facilitate collusion and/or act as
a non-tariff barrier to trade. Standards may also
be used by incumbent firms in favour of their own
products and processes and raise barriers to entry.
Standing facility
A central bank facility available to counterparties
on their own initiative. The Eurosystem offers two
overnight standing facilities: the marginal lending
facility and the deposit facility.
In the case of services, many professions and
trades ranging from medical doctors to carpenters
set minimum standards for granting licenses to
practice. While these licenses are likely to raise the
average quality of the service, they also have the
effect of restricting supply and increasing prices. If
standards are to enhance economic welfare, the
standard setting and certification procedures must
be transparent and subject to checks and balances
such that the influence of any one particular
interest group does not dominate. Also, standards
should be reviewed periodically and updated.
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Standing volume
The volume of standing trees, living or dead,
above stump measured over bark to the top.
Includes all trees regardless of diameter, tops of
stems, large branches and dead trees lying on the
ground which can still be used for fibre or fuel.
Excludes small branches, twigs and foliage.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
738
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.179
based on direct field measurement
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
State trading
enterprise (or body)
A state trading enterprise (or body) is an
enterprise authorised to engage in trade that is
owned, sanctioned, or otherwise supported by the
government. Many STEs enjoy monopoly control
over imports or exports
Standstill
This is an interim agreement between a debtor
country and its commercial banking creditors that
defers principal repayments of medium- and longterm debt and rolls over short-term obligations,
pending agreement on debt reorganization. The
objective is to give the debtor continuing access to
a minimum amount of trade-related financing while
negotiations take place and to prevent some banks
from abruptly withdrawing their facilities at the
expense of others.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Stated preference
pricing methods
A set of pricing methods where people are asked
how much they would agree to pay for avoiding a
degradation of the environment or, alternatively,
how much they would ask as a compensation for
the degradation.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Alternatively, people can be asked to make tradeoffs among different alternatives, from which their
willingness to pay can be estimated. These
methods include contingent valuation which is a
direct method and conjoint analysis approaches
(contingent ranking, rating, etc.) which are
indirect. Both generate welfare estimates of
environmental benefits/damages based on stated
willingness to pay.
State Agricultural
Intervention Fund Ŕ
Czech Republic (SAIF)
The State Agricultural Intervention Fund (SAIF)
was created in the Czech Republic in 2000 to
replace the State Fund for Market Regulation
(SFMR), which had operated since 1992. In
addition to regulating markets (through direct
intervention in the domestic market and export
refunds), the new legislation gives SAIF the power
to introduce production quotas, set-aside schemes
and to provide direct payments to producers
Context: The methods are referred to as ―stated
preference‖ methods, because they ask people to
directly state their values, rather than inferring
values from actual choices, as the ―revealed
preference‖ methods do.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 9.90
State government
Administrations
d‟États fédérés
State governments are institutional units
exercising some of the functions of government at
a level below that of central government and
above that of the governmental institutional units
existing at a local level; they are institutional units
whose fiscal, legislative and executive authority
extends only over the individual ―states‖ (often
referred to as ―provinces‖) into which the country
as a whole may be divided
See also: Revealed preference pricing methods
Stateless persons
Stateless persons are persons who are not
recognised as citizens of any state
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Source: SNA 4.124
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Central government
Statistical
characteristics
A numeric value (such as turnover, average
income) defined by a statistical measure that is
used to summarise the values for a specific
quantitative variable (such as turnover, disposable
State indicator
A state indicator in the context of environmental
indicators for agriculture is an indicator that
expresses an actual resource condition, usually
739
income) for all statistical units in a specific group.
efficiency
The cost-efficiency with which a [statistical]
product is produced is a measure of the costs and
provider burden relative to the output. Provider
burden is a cost that happens to be born by the
provider, but is a cost nevertheless.
Source: Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
May 2002.
See also: Statistical concept, Unit, statistical –
ISIC
Context: Whilst the OECD does not regard costefficiency as a dimension of quality it is evidently a
factor that must be taken into account in any
analysis of quality as it can affect quality in all
dimensions. If a product can be produced more
efficiently with the same quality, then the
resources released can be used to improve the
quality of that or other products.
Statistical concept
A statistical concept is a statistical characteristic of
a time series or an observation.
Context: In SDMX, "Concepts and Definitions" refer
to the internationally accepted statistical
standards, guidelines, or good practices on which
the concepts and definitions that are used for
compiling the statistics are based. It also refers to
the description of deviations of the concepts and
definitions from accepted statistical standards,
guidelines, or good practices, when relevant. This
should define the statistical concept under
measure and the organisation of data, i.e. the type
of variables included in the domain of study
In the OECD context, respondent burden is usually
placed on national statistical agencies and other
government agencies providing the data as the
OECD rarely if ever collects data directly from
enterprises or households and it only infrequently
requests data that the national statistical agency
or other government agency has not already
collected for its own purposes.
Each statistical concept is either coded or uncoded.
A coded statistical concept takes values from a
code list of valid values. For example, a coded
statistical concept called "reporting country" might
be created, taking its values from the ISO list of
country codes. A code list may supply the values of
more than one statistical concept. An uncoded
statistical concept takes its values as free form
text (e.g. time series title).
Source: The OECD Quality Framework, OECD, June
2002
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/document/56/0,2340,en_264
9_33715_2754104_1_1_1_1,00.html
See also: Quality - OECD
Statistical data
Statistical data refers to data from a survey or
administrative source used to produce statistics
Source: European Central Bank (ECB), Bank for
International Settlement (BIS), Eurostat,
International Monetary Fund (IMF), Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD), "GESMES/TS User Guide", Release 3.00,
February, 2003; unpublished on paper.
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary.
Hyperlink:
http://www.sdmx.org/General/Projects.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
See also: Attribute, Characteristic, Code list,
Concept, Dimension, GESMES TS, International
statistical standard, Key family, Key structure,
Observation, Statistical Data and Metadata
Exchange (SDMX), Structural definition, Time
series
See also: Statistical products
Statistical Data and
Metadata Exchange
(SDMX)
Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange (SDMX) is
an initiative sponsored by BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IMF,
OECD, UN and World Bank to address
standardization of the exchange of statistical
information.
Statistical
confidentiality
The protection of data that relate to single
statistical units and are obtained directly for
statistical purposes or indirectly from
administrative or other sources against any breach
of the right to confidentiality. It implies the
prevention of unlawful disclosure.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) – BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF and OECD
– Metadata Common Vocabulary, Release 1,
December 2003.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
Statistical data
collection
Statistical data collection is the operation of
statistical data processing aimed at gathering of
statistical data and producing the input object data
See also: Confidential data
Statistical cost
740
of a statistical survey
See Ecological statistics
Source: Terminology on Statistical Metadata,
Conference of European Statisticians Statistical
Standards and Studies, No. 53, UNECE, Geneva
2000
See also: Ecological statistics
Statistical edit
A statistical edit is a set of checks based on
statistical analysis of respondent data, e.g., the
ratio of two fields lies between limits determined
by a statistical analysis of that ratio for presumed
valid reporters.
Statistical Data
Protection (SDP)
Statistical Data Protection is a more general
concept which takes into account all steps of
production. SDP is multidisciplinary and draws on
computer science (data security), statistics and
operations research.
A statistical edit may incorporate cross-record
checks, e.g., the comparison of the value of an
item in one record against a frequency distribution
for that item for all records. A statistical edit may
also use historical data on a firm-by-firm basis in a
time series modeling procedure.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Statistical disclosure
Statistical disclosure is said to take place, if the
dissemination of a statistics enables the external
user of the data to obtain a better estimate for a
confidential piece of information than would be
possible without it.
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Statistical equilibrium Équilibre
In queuing theory, systems in ―statistical
equilibrium‖ are those in which the number of
customers or items waiting in the queue oscillates
in such a way that mean and distribution remain
constant over a long period.
Source: Eurostat, "Manual on disclosure control
methods", Office for Official Publications of the
European Communities, Luxembourg, 1996, p. 7
Statistical Disclosure
Control (SDC)
Statistical Disclosure Control techniques can be
defined as the set of methods to reduce the risk of
disclosing information on individuals, businesses or
other organisations. Such methods are only related
to the dissemination step and are usually based on
restricting the amount of or modifying the data
released.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Statistical error
A statistical error is the (unknown) difference
between the retained value and the true value.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Context: It is immediately associated with
accuracy since accuracy is used to mean "the
inverse of the total error, including bias and
variance" (Kish, Survey Sampling, 1965). The
larger the error, the lower the accuracy.
Source: Eurostat, "Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary", Working Group, Luxembourg,
October 2003
Statistical Disclosure
Limitation (SDL)
Synonym of Statistical Disclosure Control.
See also: Accuracy
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Statistical hypothesis
A statistical hypothesis is a hypothesis concerning
the parameters or from of the probability
distribution for a designated population or
populations, or, more generally, of a probabilistic
mechanism which is supposed to generate the
observations.
See also: Statistical Disclosure Control (SDC)
Statistical ecology
Ecologie statistique
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
741
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
October 2003.
Statistical indicator
A statistical indicator is a data element that
represents statistical data for a specified time,
place, and other characteristics
See also: Domain of study, statistical - UN, Unit,
statistical – ISIC
Statistical message
A Statistical message is a message carrying
statistical data.
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva, 2000
Context: In the context of GESMES/TS, a statistical
message is a predefined and agreed way of
representing syntactically sets of statistical data,
attributes and structural definitions which need to
be exchanged between partners (European Central
Bank (ECB), Bank for International Settlement
(BIS), Eurostat, International Monetary Fund
(IMF), Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD), "GESMES/TS User Guide",
Release 3.00, February, 2003; unpublished on
paper, available at
http://www.sdmx.org/Data/GesmesTS_rel3.pdf).
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
Statistical information
system
A statistical information system is an information
system oriented towards the collection, storage,
transformation and distribution of statistical
information
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva, 2000
Source: Terminology on Statistical Metadata,
Conference of European Statisticians Statistical
Standards and Studies, No. 53, UNECE, Geneva
2000
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
See also: Information system
See also: Data exchange, GESMES
Statistical macrodata
An observation data gained by a purposeful
aggregation of statistical microdata conforming to
statistical methodology.
Statistical metadata
Statistical metadata are data about statistical data.
Context: Metadata comprises data and other
documentation that describes objects in a
formalised way (Economic Commission for Europe
of the United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva, 2000,
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf)
Context: Macrodata is data derived from microdata
by statistics on groups or aggregates, such as
counts, means, or frequencies. (Survey Design and
Statistical Methodology Metadata, Software and
Standards Management Branch, Systems Support
Division, United States Bureau of the Census,
Washington D.C., August 1998, Section 3.4.4,
page 39)
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva, 2000
Metadata provide information on data and about
processes of producing and using data. Metadata
describe statistical data and - to some extent processes and tools involved in the production and
usage of statistical data (UNECE, "Guidelines for
the Modelling of Statistical Data and Metadata",
1995).
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
Source: United Nations Statistical Commission and
Economic Commission for Europe of the United
Nations (UNECE), "Guidelines for the Modelling of
Statistical Data and Metadata", Conference of
European Statisticians, Methodological material,
United Nations, Geneva, 1995
See also: Microdata, statistical, Tabular data
Statistical match
See Editing match
See also: Editing match
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/metadata
modeling.pdf
Statistical measure
A summary (means, mode, total, index, etc.) of
the individual quantitative variable values for the
statistical units in a specific group (study
domains).
See also: Definition, structural, Documentation,
Metadata, Metadata layer, Metadata registry,
Metadata system, statistical, Metadata, structural,
742
Metainformation system, statistical,
Metainformation, statistical, Reference metadata,
Statistical metadata system, Statistical
metainformation, Structural metadata
Knowledge of objects described by statistical
metadata.
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva, 2000
Statistical metadata
repository
A statistical metadata repository (MDR) is a
logically central statistical metadata repository that
allows for the query, editing, and managing of
metadata. Such a system provides a mechanism
for looking up information about statistical
products as well as their design, development, and
analysis.
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
See also: Metadata layer, Metadata system,
statistical, Metadata, statistical, Metainformation
system, statistical
Context: Too often metadata is scattered,
incomplete or missing. Many times the only source
for some information is from subject matter
experts. The effective and efficient management of
statistical metadata greatly increases the
usefulness of statistical data. Since metadata is
data, it can be stored and retrieved in a repository
just as the data it describes is stored and retrieved
in a database.
Statistical
metainformation
system
A statistical metainformation system is a system
which uses and produces statistical metadata,
informing about statistical data, and which fulfils
its tasks by means of functions like "statistical
metadata collection", "statistical metadata
processing", "statistical metadata storage", and
"statistical metadata dissemination".
The are many functions for which statistical
metadata repositories are designed. Primarily, it is
a standard tool for researchers and analysts to
locate data and descriptions of surveys. Data
dictionaries, record layouts, questionnaires, sample
designs, and standard errors are the types of
information that are directly available in such a
repository. Less obviously, users can compare
designs of different surveys and find common
information collected by different surveys.
Context: An alternative definition of a statistical
metainformation system is an information system
for which the object is the statistical information
system (Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva, 2000,
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf).
(Survey Design and Statistical Methodology
Metadata, Software and Standards Management
Branch, Systems Support Division, United States
Bureau of the Census, Washington D.C., August
1998, Section 3.4.5, pages 53, 54).
A metainformation system may be active or
passive. An active metainformation system is
physically integrated with the information system
containing the data that the metadata in the
metainformation system informs about. A passive
metainformation system contains only references
to data, not the data themselves (United Nations
Economic Commission for Europe/United Nation
Statistical Commission (UNECE/UNSC), "Guidelines
for the Modelling of Statistical Data and Metadata",
Conference of European Statisticians
Methodological Material, Geneva, 1995, p. 4).
Source: Survey Design and Statistical Methodology
Metadata, Software and Standards Management
Branch, Systems Support Division, United States
Bureau of the Census, Washington D.C., August
1998, Section 3.4.5, page 40
Statistical metadata
system
A statistical metadata system is a data processing
system that uses, stores and produces statistical
metadata.
Source: United Nations Statistical Commission and
Economic Commission for Europe of the United
Nations (UNECE), "Guidelines for the Modelling of
Statistical Data and Metadata", Conference of
European Statisticians, Methodological material,
United Nations, Geneva, 1995
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva, 2000
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/metadata
modeling.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
See also: Metadata, statistical, Metainformation,
statistical
See also: Definition, structural, Metadata,
Metadata layer, Metadata, statistical, Metadata,
structural, Statistical metainformation
Statistical
methodology
Theory and methods of data collection, processing
and analysis.
Statistical
metainformation
743
Source: Statistics Canada, Integrated Metadata
Base, "Glossary", unpublished on paper
threshold, Scope, Stratification, Target population,
True value
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca/english/edu/power/toc/cont
ents.htm
Statistical population
Population is the total membership or population or
―universe‖ of a defined class of people, objects or
events.
See also: Methodology
Context: There are two types of population, viz,
target population and survey population.
Statistical microdata
An observation data collected on an individual
object - statistical unit.
A target population is the population outlined in
the survey objects about which information is to be
sought and a survey population is the population
from which information can be obtained in the
survey.
Context: Microdata is data on the characteristics of
units of a population, such as individuals,
households, or establishments, collected by a
census, survey, or experiment. (Survey Design and
Statistical Methodology Metadata, Software and
Standards Management Branch, Systems Support
Division, United States Bureau of the Census,
Washington D.C., August 1998, Section 3.4.4,
page 39)
The target population is also known as the scope of
the survey and the survey population is also known
as the coverage of the survey. For administrative
records the corresponding populations are: the
―target‖ population as defined by the relevant
legislation and regulations, and the actual ―client
population". ("United Nations Glossary of
Classification Terms" prepared by the Expert Group
on International Economic and Social
Classifications).
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva, 2000
Source: "United "United Nations Glossary of
Classification Terms" prepared by the Expert Group
on International Economic and Social
Classifications; unpublished on paper
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
See also: Macrodata, statistical, Tabular data
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/class/family/glossary_s
hort.htm
Statistical population
Population is the total membership or population or
―universe‖ of a defined class of people, objects or
events.
See also: Census, Coverage errors, Cut-off
threshold, Scope, Stratification, Target population,
True value
Context: There are two types of population, viz,
target population and survey population.
Statistical press
release
Is an announcement to media of statistical product
release that contains the title, subject matter,
release date, and Internet address of, and other
availability information about, the statistical
product, and may include any executive summary
information or key findings section as shown in the
statistical product.
A target population is the population outlined in
the survey objects about which information is to be
sought and a survey population is the population
from which information can be obtained in the
survey.
The target population is also known as the scope of
the survey and the survey population is also known
as the coverage of the survey. For administrative
records the corresponding populations are: the
―target‖ population as defined by the relevant
legislation and regulations, and the actual ―client
population". ("United Nations Glossary of
Classification Terms" prepared by the Expert Group
on International Economic and Social
Classifications).
Source: United States Office of Management and
Budget, 2007, Statistical Policy Directive: Release
and Dissemination of Statistical Products Produced
by Federal Statistical Agencies, published in the
Federal Register, 1 August 2007, United States
National Archives and Records Administration,
Washington DC
See also: Statistical products
Source: "United "United Nations Glossary of
Classification Terms" prepared by the Expert Group
on International Economic and Social
Classifications; unpublished on paper
Statistical processing
The processes for manipulating or classifying
statistical data into various categories with the
object of producing statistics.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/class/family/glossary_s
hort.htm
Context: In SDMX, "Statistical Processing" refers to
a description of the data compilation and other
statistical procedures to deal with intermediate
data and statistical outputs (e.g., data adjustments
and transformation, and statistical analysis).
See also: Census, Coverage errors, Cut-off
744
Terminology
The items covered include, inter alia, weighting
schemes, methods for imputing missing values or
source data, statistical adjustment, and
balancing/cross-checking techniques and relevant
characteristics of the specific approach/approaches
applied.
Hyperlink:
http://www.cso.ie/text/foi/append5.html
Statistical reporting
Statistical reporting refers to the transmission of
statistical reports on vital events to the agency
responsible for compilation of statistics on these
events
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
See also: Aggregation, Computation of lowest level
indices, Consolidation (in national accounts), Data
collection, Data processing (DP), Data
reconciliation, Estimation, Index number,
Reference period, Revision policy, Seasonal
adjustment, Special Data Dissemination Standard
(SDDS), Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX), Verification
Statistical standard
A statistical standard provides a comprehensive set
of guidelines for surveys and administrative
sources collecting information on a particular topic.
Statistical production Production statistique
Statistical production refers to the activity that is
carried out within statistical information system
and aimed at producing statistics.
Components of a standard include:
-
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva, 2000
definition(s)
statistical units
classification(s)
coding process(es)
questionnaire module(s)
output categories
Context: The use of statistical standards permits
the repeated collection of statistics on a consistent
basis. They also enable the integration of data over
time and across different data sources, allowing
the use of data beyond the immediate purpose for
which it was produced. Standards also reduce the
resource requirements associated with many
aspects of survey development and maintenance.
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
Statistical products
Statistical products are, generally, information
dissemination products that are published or
otherwise made available for public use that
describe, estimate, forecast, or analyse the
characteristics of groups, customarily without
identifying the persons, organisations, or individual
data observations that comprise such groups.
Source: Statistics New Zealand," Classifications
and Standards"; unpublished on paper
Hyperlink:
http://www.stats.govt.nz/domino/external/web/pr
od_serv.nsf/092edeb76ed5aa6bcc256afe0081d84e
/35b11e7066c13db1cc256ca5006f44e4?OpenDocu
ment
Context: Statistical products include generalpurpose tabulations, analyses, projections,
forecasts, or other statistical reports.
See also: Statistical standards, international
Source: United States Office of Management and
Budget, 2007, Statistical Policy Directive: Release
and Dissemination of Statistical Products Produced
by Federal Statistical Agencies, published in the
Federal Register, 1 August 2007, United States
National Archives and Records Administration,
Washington DC
Statistical subject
matter domain
A statistical activity that has common
characteristics with respect to concepts and
methodologies for data collection, manipulation
and transformation.
See also: Statistical data
Context: Within SDMX, the list of Statistical
Subject-Matter Domains (aligned to the UN/CES
Classification of International Statistical Activities)
is a standard reference list against which the
categorisation schemes of various participants in
exchange arrangements can be mapped to
facilitate data and metadata exchange. This allows
the identification of subject matter domain groups
involved in the development of guidelines and
recommendations relevant to one or more
statistical domains. Each of these groups could
Statistical Programme
Committee (SPC)
Statistical Programme Committee comprises the
Director Generals of EU national statistical services
and EUROSTAT established by Council Decision
89/387.
Source: Ireland Central Statistics Office, Freedom
of Information – Appendix 5: Glossary of CSO
745
define domain-specific data structure definitions,
concepts, etc.
— the Local Unit;
— the Local Kind-of-Activity Unit (local KAU);
— the Local Unit of Homogeneous Production (local
UHP).
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Context: Statistical units are defined on the basis
of three criteria:
See also: Characteristic, Concept, Domain groups,
Domain of study, statistical - UN, Methodology
— Legal, accounting or organisational criteria;
— Geographical criteria;
— Activity criteria.
Statistical territory Ŕ
UN
In international merchandise trade statistics, the
objective is to record goods entering and leaving
the economic territory of a country. In practice,
what is recorded is goods that enter or leave the
statistical territory, which is the territory with
respect to which data are being collected. The
statistical territory may coincide with the economic
territory of a country or with some part of it.
The relationship between different types of
statistical units can be summarised in the following
way:
— Units with one or more activities and one or
more locations
Enterprise, Institutional unit;
— Units with one or more activities and a single
location Local unit;
It follows that when the statistical territory of a
country and its economic territory differ,
international merchandise trade statistics do not
provide a complete record of inward and outward
flows of goods
— Units with one single activity and one or more
locations KAU, UHP;
— Units with one single activity and one single
location Local KAU, Local UHP
Source: International Merchandise Trade Statistics,
Concepts and Definitions, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Studies in Methods, Series M, No. 52,
Rev. 2, page 9, para. 64
Source: Council Regulation (EEC), No. 696/93,
Section I-IV of 15.03.1993 on the statistical units
for the observation and analysis of the production
system in the Community
See also: Economic territory (of a country) –
SNA/UN, Statistical territory –Eurostat, Trade
systems
See also: Statistical units – ISIC, Unit, statistical UN
Statistical territory of
the European Union Ŕ
Eurostat
The statistical territory of the European Union (and
its Member States) corresponds to its customs
territory. However, the French overseas
departments and the Canary Islands were
regarded as non-member countries until 31
December 1996. As from October 1990 the foreign
trade figures of the Federal Republic of Germany,
the other Member States and of aggregates for the
European Union concern the Federal Republic of
Germany as constituted from 3 October 1990
Statistical unit Ŕ ISIC
Statistical units are the entities for which
information is sought and for which statistics are
ultimately compiled. These units can, in turn, be
divided into observation units and analytical units.
The statistical units in the International Standard
Industrial Classification (ISIC) Rev. 3 comprise
the:
-
Source: Statistics on the Trading of Goods, User
Guide, Eurostat 1998, p. 8 and External Trade and
Balance of Payments, Glossarium,1993, Eurostat,
p. 33
Context: The statistical unit is the entity for which
the required items of data are compiled. The
central problem is how to define the unit. Many
enterprises make more than one product. In
manufacturing industry, for example, the total
output of manufactured goods often includes nonprincipal production of other manufactured
products. It is also not uncommon for
manufacturing enterprises to produce goods or
provide services that are not manufactured
products. These could include, for example,
construction output or transport services. So, a
basic choice has to be made as to whether one is
measuring the output of the entire enterprise, or
only of its main product. In OECD Member
countries, it is often assumed that the output of
the main product is representative of the output of
See also: Statistical territory (of a country) – UN,
Trade systems
Statistical unit Ŕ
Eurostat
The Council Regulation ((EEC), No. 696/93 of 15
March 1993) on statistical units for the observation
and analysis of the production system in the
Community lays down a list of eight (types of)
statistical units:
—
—
—
—
—
the
the
the
the
the
enterprise;
enterprise group;
kind-of-activity unit (KAU);
local unit;
establishment;
homogeneous unit of production
Enterprise;
Institutional Unit;
Enterprise Group;
Kind-of-activity Unit (KAU);
Unit of Homogeneous Production (UHP);
746
the entire enterprise.
- Geographical criteria;
- Activity criteria
The SNA recommends use of the United Nations
ISIC system. ISIC recognises that whilst it is
theoretically desirable to define units on the basis
of a single activity, in practice the heterogeneous
nature of activities conducted by many units
makes this difficult. Under the United Nations
classification system, non-principal production and
non-manufacturing activities may still be included
in the unit classified to manufacturing.
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva, 2000
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
(Main Economic Indicators - Comparative
Methodological Analysis: Industry, Retail and
Construction Indicators. Available at:
http://www.oecd.org/oecd/pages/home/displaygen
eral/0,3380,EN-document-notheme-15-no-no18317-0,00.html)
See also: Classification, Statistical characteristics,
Unit, analytical - Eurostat, Unit, observation, Unit,
statistical – Eurostat, Unit, statistical – ISIC
Statistical units model
The statistical units model for a national statistical
system comprises the set of standard statistical
units defined and used in that system. This may or
may not include the full set of standard statistical
units defined in the 1993 SNA.
The benefits of internationally comparable
statistics cannot be realised unless standardisation
is applied to both definitions and classifications of
transactors as well as transactions. If two or more
statistical collections cover the same industrial
sector, comparisons between data cannot be made
unless the object of the comparison applies to the
same units.
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary.
In order to obtain useful statistics, the units on
which data are collected or compiled should
themselves be as homogeneous as possible with
regard to the processes described in the statistics
in question. This homogeneity has two aspects,
namely in respect of economic activity and in
respect of location sometimes extended to region
(ISIC Rev. 3 paras. 52 and 54).
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
Statistics
Statistiques
Numerical data relating to an aggregate of
individuals; the science of collecting, analysing and
interpreting such data.
Source: ISIC Rev. 3, paras. 63, 76
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Analytical Unit - Eurostat, Observation
unit - ISIC Rev. 3, Reporting unit, Statistical units
– Eurostat, Unit, statistical - UN
Statistical unit - UN
An object of statistical survey and the bearer of
statistical characteristics. The statistical unit is the
basic unit of statistical observation within a
statistical survey.
Statutory teacher's
salaries
See Teacher's salaries
Context: Statistical units are the entities for which
information is sought and for which statistics are
ultimately compiled. These units can, in turn, be
divided into observation units and analytical units.
The statistical units in ISIC Rev. 3 comprise the:
See also: Teacher‘s salaries
Steam coal
Defined as all other hard coal not classified as
coking coal. Also included are recovered slurries,
middlings and other low grade coal products not
further classified by type. Coal of this quality is
also commonly known as thermal coal.
- enterprise;
- enterprise group;
- kind-of-activity unit (KAU);
- local unit;
- establishment;
- homogeneous unit of production.
(Statistical Office of the United Nations,
"International Standard Industrial Classification of
all Economic Activities, Third Revision", Statistical
Papers Series M No. 4, Rev. 3, United Nations,
New York, 1990, para. 63, 76).
Source: Electricity information 2001, International
Energy Agency, Paris – Part II
Steam locomotive
Locomotive, whether cylinder or turbine driven, in
which the source of power is steam irrespective of
the type of fuel used.
Statistical units are defined on the basis of three
criteria:
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
- Legal, accounting or organisational criteria;
747
Washington DC.
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
StEPS
See Standard Economic Processing System
See also: Standard Economic Processing System
(StEPS)
Stochastic edit
A stochastic edit is an edit which if violated points
to an error in the data with probability less than
one. Contrast with deterministic edit. Compare to
query edit.
Step-up or step-down
bond (or note)
Rate will go up or down as indicated in the terms
and conditions of the notes.
Example: 80 < Yield < 120.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Stewardship (of
metadata)
Stewardship (of metadata) is the responsibility for
the maintenance of Administration Records
applicable to one or more Administered Items.
See also: Deterministic edit
Stochastic imputation
See Probabilistic imputation
Context: The responsibility for the registration of
metadata may be different from the responsibility
for stewardship of metadata.
See also: Probabalistic imputation
Stewardship contact is the contact information
associated with a Stewardship.
Stochastic process
See Stochastic
Source: ISO/IEC 11179-3 "Information technology
- Metadata registries - Part 3: Registry metamodel
and basic attributes", February 2003
See also: Stochastic
Stochastic variation
See Stochastic
See also: Administered item, Contact, ISO / IEC
11179, Organisation
See also: Stochastic
Stock (of fish)
Stock (de poissons)
A stock (of fish) refers to a species, subspecies,
geographical grouping, or other category of fish
capable of being managed as a unit
Stochastic
The adjective ―stochastic‖ implies the presence of a
random variable; e.g. stochastic variation is
variation in which at least one of the elements is a
variate and a stochastic process is one wherein the
system incorporates an element of randomness as
opposed to a deterministic system.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Stock of an asset
The level of the resource available. Can be
measured in both physical and monetary units.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
SEEA Box 7.2
Stochastic approach
The approach to index number theory that treats
each price relative as an estimate of a common
price change. Hence, the expected value of the
common price change can be derived by the
appropriate averaging of a random sample of price
relatives drawn from a defined universe.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Stock of road vehicles
Number of road vehicles registered at a given date
in a country and licensed to use roads open to
748
public traffic.
assets and liabilities and for non-financial assets,
both produced and non-produced. However, the
coverage is limited to those assets that are used in
economic activity and that are subject to
ownership rights. Thus, stocks are not recorded for
assets such as human capital and natural
resources that are not owned.
Context: This includes road vehicles exempted
from annual taxes or license fees; it also includes
imported second-hand vehicles and other road
vehicles according to national practices. The
statistics should exclude military vehicles.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: ESA [1.47]
See also: Stocks – SNA
Stocks Ŕ SNA
Stocks are a position in, or holdings of, assets and
liabilities at a point in time and the SNA records
stocks in accounts, usually referred to as balance
sheets, and tables at the beginning and end of the
accounting period; stocks result from the
accumulation of prior transactions and other flows,
and they are changed by transactions and other
flows in the period (note that stocks of goods are
referred to as ―inventories‖ in the SNA
Stock series / data
Statistical data presented as stock series/data are
measured at the end of the reference period, for
example, money supply data which can refer to an
observation on the last working day of the
reference period.
Source: SNA 3.66
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Flow series/data, Levels (monthly,
quarterly, annual)
See also: Inventories, Stocks – ESA
Stockholm Declaration Déclaration de
Stockholm
See Declaration on the Human Environment
Stocks (distributive
trades), value
The value of stocks of goods intended for sale and
of materials, fuels and supplies for use by the units
should be that at the beginning and end of the
enquiry period for goods intended for sale,
irrespective of where held, and of materials for use
by the unit, that are owned by the establishment if
it is part of a single-unit enterprise or that are
controlled by the establishment and owned by its
parent enterprise if it is part of a multi-unit
enterprise.
See also: Declaration on the Human Environment
Stock-of-debt
operation
In the context of the Paris Club, restructuring of
the eligible stock of debt outstanding. These
restructuring operations were granted to Egypt and
Poland in 1991 and, partially, for Russia and Peru
in 1996 and are being implemented for low-income
countries under Naples, Lyon, and Cologne terms
(see Concessional Restructuring), provided that
certain conditions are met: the debtor country has
implemented earlier flow rescheduling agreements
for at least three years and has an appropriate
arrangement with the IMF.
Goods for which the establishment has transferred
has transferred the effective right to use to others
with a view to ultimate purchase by them are
excluded. Goods for which effective right to use
has been transferred to the establishment with a
view to ultimate purchase by it are included
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: International Recommendations on
Statistics of the Distributive Trades and Services,
United Nations, New York, 1975, Statistical Papers,
Series M, No. 57, para. 144
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Stocks (industry), value
Stocks (industry),
value
The value of stocks (industry) comprises the value
of all stocks owned by the parent enterprise and
held by, or under the control of, the establishment,
either at the establishment or elsewhere.
See also: Concessional restructuring
Stocks Ŕ ESA
Stocks are holdings of assets and liabilities at a
point in time. Stocks are recorded at the beginning
and end of each accounting period. The accounts
that show stocks are called balance sheets.
Stocks held at ancillary units, in bonded stores or
public warehouses on consignment , in transit and
materials being manufactured, processed or
assembled on commission by others should be
included. Materials owned by others but held by
the establishment for processing should be
excluded
Stocks are also recorded for population and
employment. However, these stocks are recorded
as mean values over the accounting period.
Context: Stocks are recorded for all assets within
the system‘s boundaries; that is, for financial
749
Source: International Recommendations for
Industrial Statistics, United Nations, New York,
1983, Series M, No. 48, Rev. 1, para. 189
Source: International Recommendations for
Industrial Statistics, United Nations, New York,
1983, Series M, No. 48, Rev. 1, para. 179
See also: Inventories of goods for resale
See also: Inventories, Stocks (distributive trades),
value
Stocks of materials,
fuels and supplies
(industry)
Stocks of materials, fuels and supplies (industry)
comprises all materials, components and the like
that enter into the product, fuels, and repair,
maintenance, office and other consumable
supplies.
Stocks of finished
goods (industry)
Stocks of finished goods include all goods made by
the establishment that are ready for shipment as
of the reference date.
Finished goods held by another establishment that
were processed by that establishment from
materials owned by the respondent establishment
should also be included. Finished goods held by the
respondent establishment that were made from
materials owned by others should be excluded
The value of any stocks of materials and supplies
for use in own-account fixed asset work should be
included. Whenever possible, it is desirable to
show the value of stocks of fuels separately
Source: International Recommendations for
Industrial Statistics, United Nations, New York,
1983, Series M, No. 48, Rev. 1, para. 182
Source: International Recommendations for
Industrial Statistics, United Nations, New York,
1983, Series M, No. 48, Rev. 1, para. 186
Stocks of work in
progress (industry)
Stocks of work in progress refers to the value of all
materials that have been partially processed by the
establishment but that are not usually sold,
shipped or turned over to other establishments
without further processing.
Stocks of finished
goods manufactured
by the unit (industry)
Stocks of finished goods manufactured by the unit
(industry) includes all goods made by the
establishment that are ready for shipment at the
reference date.
Generally, it should include all work in progress for
the account of others, irrespective of the
arrangements for financing the work. However,
that part of the work in progress on long-term
contracts for which progress payments have been
included under shipments should be excluded.
Finished goods held by another establishment that
were processed by that establishment from raw
materials controlled by the respondent
establishment should be included. Finished goods
held elsewhere - at ancillary units, in bonded or
public warehouses, on consignment, in transit, and
so on, should also be included. Finished goods held
by the respondent establishment that were made
from materials owned by others should be
excluded
Work in progress on own-account production of
machinery and equipment should be included, but
partially completed construction work should be
excluded. The latter should be treated as part of
fixed capital formation
Source: International Recommendations for
Industrial Statistics, United Nations, New York,
1983, Series M, No. 48, Rev. 1, para. 186
Source: International Recommendations for
Industrial Statistics, United Nations, New York,
1983, Series M, No. 48, Rev. 1, para. 184
Stocks of finished
goods to be shipped in
the same condition as
received (industry)
Stocks of finished goods to be shipped in the same
condition as received (industry) covers the value of
any stocks of goods that the establishment has
bought with the intention of reselling in the same
form, that is, without further processing or
manufacturing.
Straight bond
Bond without clauses granting conversion or
warrant privileges.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Although the goods have not been processed
internally, they should be valued in the same
manner as the finished products manufactured by
the establishment, that is, in producers‘ prices. The
book values may also be used.
Straight-line
Amortissement
depreciation
linéaire
Straight-line depreciation is a depreciation profile
based on a constant annual amount of capital
consumption over the life of the asset
Stocks of goods to be resold without processing or
transformation and not expressly purchased for
that purpose may also be included.
Source: SNA 6.193
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
750
division of the population for which a separate
estimate is desired, i.e. in the sense of a domain of
study. It is also used sometimes to denote any
division of the population for which neither
separate estimates nor actual separate sample
selection is made. (The International Statistical
Institute, "The Oxford Dictionary of Statistical
Terms", edited by Yadolah Dodge, Oxford
University Press, 2003).
Straight-through
processing (STP)
The automated end-to-end processing of
trades/payment transfers including the automated
completion of generation, confirmation, clearing
and settlement of instructions.
Source: European Central Bank, 2003, Annual
Report: 2003, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Source: Statistics Canada, "Statistics Canada
Quality Guidelines", 4th edition, October 2003,
page 21
Strategic behaviour
Strategic behaviour is the general term for actions
taken by firms which are intended to influence the
market environment in which they compete.
Strategic behaviour includes actions to influence
rivals to act cooperatively so as to raise joint
profits, as well as noncooperative actions to raise
the firm's profits at the expense of rivals.
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca:8096/bsolc/english/bsolc?c
atno=12-539-X&CHROPG=1http
See also: Domain of study, statistical - UN,
Sample, Statistical population
Stratification after
selection
It sometimes happens that the proportional
numbers lying in certain strata are known but that
it is impossible to identify in advance the stratum
to which a chosen member belongs. The sample
selection then has to be made without reference to
the strata, e.g. by simple random sampling. The
resulting sample may, however, be stratified after
selection and treated as an ordinary stratified
sample.
Context: Various types of collusion are examples of
cooperative strategic behaviour. Examples of
noncooperative strategic behaviour include preemption of facilities, price and non-price predation
and creation of artificial barriers to entry. Strategic
behaviour is more likely to occur in industries with
small numbers of buyers and sellers.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
The procedure is almost as efficient as sampling
with a uniform sampling fraction.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Strategic conflict
assessment
A process to systematically assess the risk of
conflict from different factors and to shape
development in post-conflict states.
Stratified sample
Échantillon stratifié
A sample selected from a population which has
been stratified, part of the sample coming from
each stratum.
Source: OECD, 2006, DAC Guidelines and
Reference Series Applying Strategic Environmental
Assessment: Good Practice Guidance for
Development Co-operation, OECD, Paris
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Stratification
Stratification
Stratification consists of dividing the population
into subsets (called strata) within each of which an
independent sample is selected.
Stratopause
Stratopause
The stratopause is the boundary between the
stratosphere and mesosphere at a height of about
50 kilometres above the earth‘s surface
Context: The division of a population into parts is
known as strata, especially for the purpose of
drawing a sample, an assigned proportion of the
sample then being selected from each stratum.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
The process of stratification may be undertaken on
a geographical basis, e.g. by dividing up the
sampled area into sub-areas on a map; or by
reference to some other quality of the population,
e.g. by dividing the persons in a town into strata
according to gender or into three strata according
to whether they belong to upper, middle or lower
income groups.
Stratosphere
Stratosphère
The stratosphere is the upper layer of the
atmosphere (above the troposphere), between
approximately 10 to 50 kilometres above the
earth‘s surface
The term stratum is sometimes used to denote any
751
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
A Stripped bond is a form of zero coupon bond,
created by a "stripper" (usually an investment
bank who purchases a large block of securities).
The bank strips the coupon payments of a
conventional bond or note from its principal capital
sum and repackages both the coupon payments
and the principal as a series of zero coupon bonds.
Street-car
See Tram
Context: The range of maturities match the coupon
payment dates and the redemption date of the
original bond. The short term strips are bought by
money managers as government bill or note
substitutes; intermediate maturity strips will be
used if investors believe that the yield curve will
become more positive; demand is strongest for the
longer maturities because these instruments have
longer "duration" than the original bonds (see the
group "bonds with enhanced duration" for a
definition of "duration") and are leveraged
investments.
See also: Tram
Stress test
A stress test is a ―what if‖ scenario that takes the
world as given but assumes a major change in one
or more variables in order to see what effect this
would have on various indicators. For instance, for
an economy, the impact on growth, inflation, and
external debt of a huge change in oil prices could
be considered. Stress tests are particularly useful
for financial institutions: for instance, an individual
entity might consider the impact on net worth of a
sharp movement in financial market prices, in
order to help determine the appropriate level of
capital to hold.
Stripping can be "official" or "unofficial". Official
strips are where an underlying issue is designated
by the issuer as eligible for stripping and appoints
strip dealers. Unofficial strips are issued from a
trust, without the authorisation of the issuer. In
the latter case evidence of ownership is in the form
of a certificate issued by the trust. Unofficial strips
are seen as less secure investments because the
certificates are not the primary obligation of the
original issuer; there is some default risk from the
trust (the intermediary)
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: Financial Terminology Database, Bank of
England
Stress-response
Statistique des stress
environmental
et réactions
statistical system
écologiques
The Stress—response environmental statistical
system is a statistical system, developed by
Statistics Canada, distinguishing among measures
that exert stress on the environment (stress and
stressor statistics), measures of the effects on the
environment (environmental response) and
measures of policy response (collective and
individual responses)
See also: Zero-coupon bonds
Stripped securities
Stripped securities are securities that have been
transformed from a principal amount with periodic
interest coupons into a series of zero-coupon
bonds, with the range of maturities matching the
coupon payment dates and the redemption date of
the principal amount.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: Strips can be created in two ways. Either
the owner of the original security can ask the
settlement or clearing house in which the security
is registered to ―create‖ strips from the original
security, in which case the strips replace the
original security and remain the direct obligation of
the issuer of the security; or the owner of the
original security can issue strips in its own name,
―backed‖ by the original security, in which case the
strips represent new liabilities and are not the
direct obligation of the issuer of the original
security. Usually, short-term strips are bought by
money managers as government bill or note
substitutes; intermediate maturity strips will be
purchased by investors who believe that the yield
curve might become more positive. Whereas
demand is strongest for the longer maturities
because these instruments have longer duration
than the original bonds and are leveraged
investments, a relatively small up-front payment
gives the investor exposure to a larger nominal
amount.
See also: Framework for the development of
environment statistics (FDES)
Strike
A strike is a temporary work stoppage effected by
one or more groups of workers with a view to
enforcing or resisting demands or expressing
grievances, or supporting other workers in their
demands or grievances.
Source: International Labour Organisation (ILO)
Resolution Concerning Statistics of Strikes,
Lockouts and other Action Due to Labour Disputes
(January 1993), page 2-3
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Stripped bond
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
752
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
facility (SAF)
The SAF was established by the IMF in 1986 and is
no longer operational. The ESAF was established
by the IMF in 1987 and was made a permanent,
rather than a temporary, facility in September
1996. It was renamed the Poverty Reduction and
Growth Facility in November 1999.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility
Strong sustainability
All forms of capital must be maintained intact
independent of one another. The implicit
assumption is that different forms of capital are
mainly complementary; that is, all forms are
generally necessary for any form to be of value.
Produced capital used in harvesting and processing
timber, for example, is of no value in the absence
of stocks of timber to harvest. Only by maintaining
both natural and produced capital stocks intact can
non-declining income be assured.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
See also: Poverty reduction and growth facility
(PRGF)
Structural Adjustment
Programmes
A World Bank instrument prevalent in the 1980s
that focused on correcting the major
macroeconomic distortions hindering development.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 1.27
Context: Replaced by Development Policy Lending
in 2004.
Source: OECD, 2006, DAC Guidelines and
Reference Series Applying Strategic Environmental
Assessment: Good Practice Guidance for
Development Co-operation, OECD, Paris
Structural adjustment
A process of market-oriented economic reform
aimed at restoring a sustainable balance of
payments, reducing inflation, and creating the
conditions for sustainable growth in per capita
income.
See also: Development Policy Lending
Structural budget
balance
The structural budget balance represents what
government revenues and expenditure would be if
output were at its potential level
Source: Alexander, P., Baden, S., 2000, Glossary
on macroeconomics from a gender perspective,
Institute of Development Studies, University of
Sussex
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/52/56/31594934.p
df
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Structural adjustment
costs
They cover the costs associated with the reduction
of activities or complete abstention and the
changes in production and consumption patterns.
In some cases this may be a very cost effective
way to make considerable savings on
environmental pollution with little direct impact on
GDP. These costs can normally only be estimated
by modelling or by assumption.
Structural
decomposition
analysis
An analytical technique allowing to identify and
quantify the factors of the changes in emissions
over time.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 4.136
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 9.36
Structural definition
Structural definitions are the statistical concepts,
key families and code lists defined by a centre
institution (usually for the exchange of statistical
Structural adjustment
753
information with its partners).
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Such an institution acts as a "structural definition
maintenance agency".
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Context: Structural definitions maintenance agency
is an institution that devises key families.
Structure
It provides the means for identifying relationships,
usually hierarchical, between categories.
Source: European Central Bank (ECB), Bank for
International Settlement (BIS), Eurostat,
International Monetary Fund (IMF), Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD), "GESMES/TS User Guide", Release 3.00,
February, 2003; unpublished on paper.
Context: A hierarchical classification is based on a
tree structure where each set of its detailed
categories are subsets of categories at the level
about the one in which they contained.
Hyperlink:
http://www.sdmx.org/General/Projects.htm
Source: United Nations Glossary of Classification
Terms; prepared by the Expert Group on
International Economic and Social Classifications,
unpublished on paper
See also: Code list, Concept, GESMES TS, Key
family, Maintenance agency, Statistical concept,
Structural metadata
See also: Category, Hierarchy, Metadata structure
definition
Structural funds
Structural funds are funds intended to facilitate
structural adjustment of specific sectors, regions,
or combinations of both, in the European Union.
They include the European Regional Development
Fund (ERDF), the European Social Fund (ESF), the
Guidance Section of European Agricultural
Guidance and Guarantee Fund (EAGGF) and the
Financial Instrument for Fisheries Guidance (FIFG).
Structure error
A structure error reports the absence or presence
of a data record not following the hierarchical order
into which the data file is organized.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Assistance is concentrated on three priority
objectives, two regional and a horizontal objective
for human resources.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Structural metadata
Structural metadata refers to metadata that act as
identifiers and descriptors of the data.
Structure set
A structure set is a method of placing objects in
context, revealing relationships to other objects.
Examples include entity-relationship models,
taxonomies, and ontologies
Context: Structural metadata are needed to
identify, use, and process data matrixes and data
cubes, e.g. names of columns or dimensions of
statistical cubes. Structural metadata must be
associated with the statistical data, otherwise it
becomes impossible to identify, retrieve and
navigate the data.
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 1, Framework for the
specification and standardization of data elements,
1998
Structured bonds
Structured bonds have characteristics that are
designed to attract a certain type of investor
and/or take advantage of particular market
circumstances. However, structuring securities to
appeal to a particular type of investor risks the
possibility of a loss of liquidity if the market moves
in such a way as to make the structured features
of the issue no longer attractive. Typically the
structured features are achieved through the use
of derivatives—for instance, a credit-linked note is
a bond with an embedded credit derivative.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
See also: Metadata, Metadata layer, Metadata
registry, Metadata system, statistical, Metadata,
statistical, Reference metadata
Structural
unemployment
Structural unemployment is the rate of
unemployment consistent with constant wage
inflation (non-accelerating wage rate of
unemployment (NAWRU)), or constant price
inflation (non-accelerating inflation rate of
unemployment (NAIRU)), given current economic
conditions
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
754
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
In sample surveys a certain sub-group of a
population may be of particular interest. Such a
sub-group of interest is called a ―domain‖.
Domains frequently cut across the strata and the
various stage units of a sample. Formulae for
domains cutting across strata have been devised.
Structured floating
rate notes
The structured floating-rate note is a variation of a
standard variable-rate bond (that is, a long-dated
debt security whose coupon payment is reset
periodically by reference to an independent
interest rate index such as six-month LIBOR).
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Context: The structured issue includes a derivative
that allows the coupon calculation to be tailored to
meet investors‘ interest rate expectations. For
instance, there may be an interest rate collar or
band—the interest rate cannot increase above an
upper specified rate or fall below a lower specified
rate. The issue of structured floating rate notes has
grown as borrowers have used financial derivatives
to tailor financing products to investor demands
while meeting their own funding needs.
See also: Domain of study - UN
Study domain - UN
A study domain is a major segment of the
population for which separate statistics are
needed.
A domain could consist of a geographical area such
as a region or major population centre. It could
also comprise a specified population category, such
as a major national or ethnic group. The number of
domains has an important bearing on the size and
distribution of the sample.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Context: Normally, statistics are presented for
different sub-groups of the population, so called
study domains. These study domains can be
geographical as well as non-geographical. Often
these sub-groups are according to some
classification (e.g. territorial units, economic
activity etc.) (Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
October 2003).
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Structured Query
Language (SQL)
Standardized language that retrieves and updates
data in relational tables and data bases.
In the course of tabulation, data may actually be
provided for many population segments; however,
a study domain would be a segment identified in
the overall statistical plan as one for which a
certain level of detail and certain data reliability
were required. The study domains chosen may coincide with the strata adopted for stratified
sampling or may cut across them.
Source: United States Bureau of Census, Glossary
of Selected Abbreviations and Acronyms
Hyperlink: http://eire.census.gov/cgibin/ssd/Glossary
Student
Élève / étudiant
A student is a person of either sex, not classified
as usually economically active, who attends any
regular educational institution, public or private,
for systematic instruction at any level of education
Source: Statistical Office of the United Nations,
"Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition", (paras. 4.6, 4.7), Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 31, United Nations, New York, 1984
See also: Domain groups, Domain of study - ISI
Context: In OECD's PISA a student is defined as
any individual participating in educational services
covered by the data collection. The number of
students enrolled refers to the number of
individuals (head count) who are enrolled within
the reference period and not necessarily to the
number of registrations. Each student enrolled is
counted only once. (Education at a Glance, OECD,
Paris, 2002, Glossary)
Study load
There are two basic measures of study load: time
in the classroom and progress towards a
qualification.
Time in classroom attempts to measure the
amount of instruction time that a student receives
and can be counted as hours of instruction per day
or year, counts of the number of courses taken, or
a combination of the two.
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.202
These measures are based on characteristics of the
course or on patterns of attendance, not on the
programme in which the student is enrolled.
Because of this, such measures of study load will
be useful when there is no programme structure or
when programme structures are not comparable.
See also: Foreign students, Full-time equivalent
student, Full-time student, Part-time student,
PISA, Study load
Study domain - ISI
755
The second measure of study load is the unit used
to measure progress towards a qualification. Such
measures focus less on the amount of instruction
and more on the ―academic value‖ of that
instruction. It is conceivable, therefore, those
courses with the same quantity of instruction may
have different academic values and they would
only be the same if measures of academic progress
were made in amounts of instruction.
Sub-bituminous coal
Defined as non-agglomerating coals with a gross
calorific value between 4 165 kcal/kg (17.4 GJ/t)
and 5 700 kcal/kg (23.9 GJ/t).
Source: Electricity information 2001, International
Energy Agency, Paris – Part II
Subcontractor
A person or firm being contracted by a main
contractor or employer to carry out work or deliver
services, labour or materials as part of a larger
project.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: Full-time equivalent student, Full-time
student, Part-time student
Source: Employment-Intensive Investment
Programme (EIIP), International Labour
Organisation
Stumpage price
The price paid by the feller to the owner of the
forest for standing timber.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/employment/rec
on/eiip/index.htm
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.253
Subject based edit
A subject based edit checks incorporating realworld structures which are neither statistical nor
structural.
Example: wages paid/hours worked $ minimum
wage.
Stumpage value
method (for standing
timber valuation)
A simplified net present value method where the
value of the stock is obtained by multiplying the
current volume of standing timber by its stumpage
price, assuming the rate of discount is equal to the
natural growth rate.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.260
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Subject field
A subject field is a branch of human knowledge. A
subject field is comprised of a set of related
concepts, or concept system. A set designations
make up a special language, which is used in a
subject field.
Subadditivity
One of the properties of the (n,k) rule or (p,q) rule
that assists in the search for complementary cells.
The property means that the sensitivity of a union
of disjoint cells cannot be greater than the sum of
the cells‘ individual sensitivities (triangle
inequality).
Source: ISO/IEC FCD FCD 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registers-Part 1:
Framework", May 2003
See also: Concept, Special language
Context: Subadditivity is an important property
because it means that aggregates of cells that are
not sensitive are not sensitive either and do not
need to be tested.
Subject matter
statistician
Statistician concerned with processing, analysis or
dissemination of data within a particular subject
area, for example, labour, manufacturing or
health.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary.
756
sample, but need not be so.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Submission
Submission (of an administered Item) is the
relationship of an Administered item, a Contact,
and an Organization involved in a submission of
metadata.
See also: Multi-phase sampling
Subsampling
This term is used in two different senses; one
related to multi-stage sampling and the other to
multi-phase sampling.
Context: Submission contact is the contact
information associated with a submission.
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179-3 Information technology - Metadata registries
(MDR) - Part 3: Registry metamodel and basic
attributes", February 2003
In multi-stage sampling the process of selecting
sample units, say, at the second stage from any
selected first stage unit is called subsampling of
the first stage unit.
See also: Administered item, Contact, ISO / IEC
11179, Stewardship (of metadata), Submitting
organisation
In multi-phase sampling that part, say, of the firstphase sample which is taken up for the second
phase inquiry is said to constitute a subsample of
the first phase sample, and the process of
selection at the second phase may be called
subsampling.
Submitting
organisation
The submitting organization is responsible for
requesting that a new metadata item be registered
in the registry.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
See also: ISO / IEC 11179, Metadata registry,
Submission
Subscriber identity
module (SIM)
Synonymous with smart card.
Subordinated bond
Subordinated debt (sometimes called mezzanine
finance) has many of the characteristics of both
debt and equity. A subordinated creditor agrees to
rank after senior creditors but before ordinary
shareholders in a liquidation. For regulatory
purposes certain forms of subordinated debt issued
by financial institutions may be treated, like equity,
as ―primary capital.‖
Source: Cellular Mobile Pricing Structures and
Trends, Working Party on Telecommunication and
Information Services Policies – November 1999,
page 9, Select Glossary of Mobile Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/54/42/2538118.pdf
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
See also: Smart card
Subsequent
breakdown methods
(construction price
indices)
Subsequent breakdown methods used in the
compilation of construction price indices involve
the use of samples of either actually completed, or
fictitious construction projects. They entail the
collection of prices effectively charged (or what
would be charged) by the builder and incorporate
changes in productivity and profit margins.
Subordination
strategy
The policy of Paris Club creditors is that loans
extended after the cutoff date are not subject to
rescheduling; therefore, pre-cutoff date loans are
effectively subordinated to post-cutoff loans.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
These methods start from the ―completed‖ building
or project which are then broken down into
component parts.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
These methods are used primarily for the
compilation of output price indices. The hedonic
and matched model methods are also used by
Member countries to compile seller‘s price indices.
See also: Cut-off date
Subsample
A sample of a sample. It may be selected by the
same method as was used in selecting the original
Subsequent breakdown methods comprise:
757
-
quoted prices
schedule of prices
matched models
building volume or area
hedonic method
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Subsidiary corporation – ESA
Subsidies
Subventions
Subsidies are current unrequited payments that
government units, including non-resident
government units, make to enterprises on the
basis of the levels of their production activities or
the quantities or values of the goods or services
which they produce, sell or import
Source: Sources and Methods: Construction Price
Indices, OECD, Eurostat, 1997, page 20
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/document/4/0,2340,en_2649
_34247_2367940_1_1_1_1,00.html
Source: SNA 7.71 [15.52]
See also: Construction price indices, Prior
breakdown methods (construction price indices)
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Subsidiary
A Subsidiary is a company controlled by another
company. Control occurs when the controlling
company owns more than 50 per cent of the
common shares.
Subsidies (on losses
of government trading
organisations)
Losses of government trading organisations consist
of the losses incurred by government trading
organisations whose function is to buy and sell the
products of resident enterprises; when such
organisations incur losses as a matter of deliberate
government economic or social policy by selling at
lower prices than those at which they purchased
the goods, the difference between the purchase
and the selling prices should be treated as a
subsidy
When the parent owns 100 per cent of the
common shares, the subsidiary is said to be
wholly-owned. When the subsidiary operates in a
different country, it is called a foreign subsidiary.
The controlling company is called a holding
company or parent. A subsidiary is a corporation
with its own charter and is not a division of the
controlling company.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: SNA 7.78
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Subsidies on payroll
or workforce
Subventions sur les
salaires ou la maind‟œuvre
Subsidies on payroll or workforce consist of
subsidies payable on the total wage or salary bill,
or total workforce, or on the employment of
particular types of persons such as physically
handicapped persons or persons who have been
unemployed for long periods
Subsidiary
Société filiale Ŕ SEC
corporation Ŕ ESA
Corporation C is said to be a subsidiary of
corporation B when:
(a) Either corporation B controls more than half of
the shareholders' voting power in corporation C; or
(b) Corporation B is a shareholder in corporation C
with the right to appoint or remove a majority of
the directors of corporation C.
Source: SNA 7.79
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: ESA [2.26]
See also: Subsidiary corporation – SNA
Subsidies on
Subventions sur la
production, other
production Ŕautres
Other subsidies on production consist of subsidies,
except subsidies on products, which resident
enterprises may receive as a consequence of
engaging in production (e.g. subsidies on payroll or
workforce or subsidies to reduce pollution)
Subsidiary
Société filiale Ŕ SCN
corporation Ŕ SNA
Corporation B is said to be a subsidiary of
corporation A when either:
(a) corporation A controls more than half of the
shareholders‘ voting power in corporation B; or
Source: SNA 7.79
(b) corporation A is a shareholder in corporation B
with the right to appoint or remove a majority of
the directors of corporation B.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 4.32
Subsidies on products Subventions sur les
758
used domestically
produits utilisés
intérieurement
Subsidies on products used domestically consist of
subsidies payable to resident enterprises in respect
of their outputs which are used or consumed within
the economic territory
Subsidies to regular
employment in the
private sector
Subsidies to regular employment in the private
sector are wage subsidies for the recruitment of
targeted workers or, in some cases, for continued
employment of persons whose jobs are at risk.
Grants aiming primarily to cover enterprises‘
capital costs are not included, nor are general
employment subsidies or subsidies paid for all
workers in certain regions
Source: SNA 7.78
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Definitions of the Standardised categories
and Sub-categories of Labour Market Programmes,
OECD, 2001
Subsidies on products, Subventions sur les
other
produits-autres
Other subsidies on products (other than export or
import subsidies) consist of subsidies on goods or
services produced as the outputs of resident
enterprises that become payable as a result of the
production, sale, transfer, leasing or delivery of
those goods or services, or as a result of their use
for own consumption or own capital formation.
Subsidised
employment
Subsidised employment are targeted measures to
promote or provide employment for unemployed
persons and other groups specified as labour
market priorities (other than youth or the disabled)
There are three broad categories:
Source: Definitions of the Standardised categories
and Sub-categories of Labour Market Programmes,
OECD, 2001
(a) subsidies on products used domestically,
(b) losses of government trading organisations,
and
(c) subsidies to public corporations and quasicorporations.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Subsidised prices
Prices that differ from market prices in that some
significant portion of variable and /or fixed costs
are covered by a revenue source other than the
selling price.
Subsidies to public
corporations and
quasi- corporations
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC.
Source: SNA 7.78
Subventions à des
sociétés et à des
quasi- sociétés
publiques
Subsidies to public corporations and quasicorporations consist of regular transfers paid to
public corporations and quasi-corporations which
are intended to compensate for persistent losses i.e. negative operating surpluses - which they incur
on their productive activities as a result of charging
prices which are lower than their average costs of
production as a matter of deliberate government
economic and social policy; by convention, these
subsidies are treated as subsidies on products
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Subsidy on a product
Subvention sur un
produit
A subsidy on a product is a subsidy payable per
unit of a good or service produced, either as a
specific amount of money per unit of quantity of a
good or service or as a specified percentage of the
price per unit; it may also be calculated as the
difference between a specified target price and the
market price actually paid by a buyer
Source: SNA 7.78
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 15.53
Subsidies to reduce
Subventions destinées
pollution
à réduire la pollution
Subsidies to reduce pollution consist of subsidies
intended to cover some or all of the costs of
additional processing undertaken to reduce or
eliminate the discharge of pollutants into the
environment
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Subsistence fishing
Pêche de subsistance
Subsistence fishing is fishing for personal
consumption or traditional/ceremonial purposes
Source: SNA 7.79
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
759
Subsistence workers
Subsistence workers are workers who hold a selfemployment job and in this capacity produce
goods or services which are predominantly
consumed by their own household and constitute
an important basis for its livelihood
Substantial lessening
of competition
See Market power
See also: Market power
Substitute
A product whose characteristics are similar to
those of another product and that can be used to
meet the same kinds of consumer needs or wants.
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning International Classification
of Status in Employment Adopted by the 15th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians,
January 1993, para. 14(s)
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/
index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Subsoil assets Ŕ SNA
Gisements - SCN
Subsoil assets are proven reserves of mineral
deposits located on or below the earth‘s surface
that are economically exploitable, given current
technology and relative prices
Substituting
In sampling inquiries it is sometimes difficult to
make contact with, or obtain information from, a
particular member of the sample. In such cases it
is sometimes the practice to substitute a more
conveniently examined member of the population
in order to maintain the size of the sample. Any
such substitution should, however, be carried out
upon a strictly controlled plan in order to avoid
bias.
Source: (AN.212) - Annex to chapter XIII, 13.59
[12.15]
See also: Subsoil assets – UN
Subsoil assets Ŕ UN
Ressources du soussol Ŕ NU
Subsoil assets are developed and undeveloped
reserves of mineral deposits located on or below
the earth‘s surface
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Substitution
Substitution
The replacement of products by substitutes,
typically in response to changes in relative prices.
Rational utility-maximizing consumers, as price
takers, typically react to changes in relative prices
by reducing, at least marginally, their consumption
of goods and services that have become relatively
dearer and increasing their consumption of
substitutes that have become relatively cheaper.
Substitution results in a negative correlation
between the quantity and price relatives.
See also: Subsoil assets – SNA
Substantial edit
A substantial edit is an edit rule proceeding from
knowledge of the substance of the subject matter.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Substantial
Équivalent en
equivalence
substance
Substantial equivalence is a concept, first
described in an OECD publication in 1993, which
stresses than an assessment of a novel food, in
particular one that is genetically modified, should
demonstrate that the food is as safe as its
traditional counterpart
Substitution bias
The bias that arises when the index number
formula used for an output PPI systematically
understates average price increases because it
does not take into account that producers seeking
to maximize revenue from a given technology and
inputs may shift production to items with above
average relative price increases.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Or, the bias that arises when the index number
760
formula used for an input PPI systematically
overstate average price increases because it does
not take into account that producers seeking to
minimize costs with a given technology and output
may shift purchases of inputs to items with below
average relative price increases.
specific number of teaching hours has been
accumulated (although completion of some or all of
the course hours may also involve examinations)
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 39
Context: This is generally understood to be the
bias that results when a basket index is used to
estimate a cost of living index, because a basket
index cannot take account of the effects on the
cost of living of the substitutions made by
consumers in response to changes in relative
prices. In general, the earlier the period of which
the basket is used, the greater the upward bias in
the index.
SUDA
A software system for conducting analyses on
population uniques and special sample uniques.
The special uniques analysis method implemented
in SUDA for measuring and assessing disclosure
risk is based on resampling methods and used by
the UK Office for National Statistics (ONS).
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC.
Suggested price
See Recommended price
See also: Recommended price
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Sulphur dioxide
Sulphur dioxide (S02) is a heavy, pungent,
colourless gas formed primarily by the combustion
of fossil fuels. It is harmful to human beings and
vegetation, and contributes to the acidity in
precipitation
Substitution effect
The effect of substitution on the value of an index.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Sum check
A sum check verifies whether the sum of the
values of the given data group equals the value of
the corresponding data item which should
represent their total.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Subtraction
The principle whereby an intruder may attack a
table of population counts by removing known
individuals from the table. If this leads to the
presence of certain zeroes in the table then that
table is vulnerable to attribute disclosure.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Sum-of-the-years
digits depreciation
Sum-of-the-years-digits depreciation is a
depreciation profile based on an amount of annual
capital consumption that declines linearly over the
life of the asset. The amount in any year is
calculated as the number of years that the asset is
expected to remain in the capital stock divided by
the sum-of-the-digits of the service life of the
asset when new
Successful completion
Successful completion is defined according to the
graduation requirements established by each
country: in some countries, completion occurs as a
result of passing a final, curriculum-based
examination or series of examinations.
In other countries, completion occurs after a
761
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
Sunk costs
Sunk costs are costs which, once committed,
cannot be recovered. Sunk costs arise because
some activities require specialized assets that
cannot readily be diverted to other uses. Secondhand markets for such assets are therefore limited.
Supervisory authority
Autorité de
surveillance
See Pension supervisor, Regulatory authority
See also: Pension supervisor, Regulatory authority
Supervisory board
Organe de
surveillance
The individual(s) responsible for monitoring the
governing body of a pension entity.
Sunk costs are always fixed costs, but not all fixed
costs are sunk.
Examples of sunk costs are investments in
equipment which can only produce a specific
product, the development of products for specific
customers, advertising expenditures and R&D
expenditures. In general, these are firm-specific
assets.
Context: Identical term, "Oversight committee"
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Context: The absence of sunk costs is critical for
the existence of contestable markets. When sunk
costs are present, firms face a barrier to exit. Free
and costless exit is necessary for contestability.
Sunk costs also lead to barriers to entry. Their
existence increases an incumbents‘ commitment to
the market and may signal a willingness to
respond aggressively to entry.
Supplementary data
See Data dissemination
See also: Data dissemination
Supplementary
information
In sample survey design, information about the
sampling units which is supplementary to the
characteristics under investigation in the survey.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Such information may be used for stratification, for
the determination of the probabilities of selection,
or in estimation.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Superannuation
See Benefit
When used in estimation it provides the basis for
estimators based on ratios or regression. For
example, in a survey of business firms,
supplementary information on, say, gross turnover
provided by a previous census may be used either
in the sample design or to improve the efficiency of
sample estimates.
Superannuation
See also: Benefit (pension)
Superlative indices
Superlative indices are price or quantity indices
that are ‗exact‘ for a flexible aggregator. A flexible
aggregator is a second-order approximation to an
arbitrary production, cost, utility or distance
function. Exactness implies that a particular index
number can be directly derived from a specific
flexible aggregator.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Supplier's credit
A financing arrangement under which an exporter
extends credit to the buyer.
Context: The Fisher price index, the Törnqvist price
index and the Walsh price index are superlative
indices. A basic characteristic of these indices is
that they are symmetric indices.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Monetary Fund, Washington
DC.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
762
Supply and use table
for environmental
protection
A supply and use table for environmental
protection activities and products.
Supply control
Any among a wide range of measures designed to
affect the level of production or supply, including
measures that restrict output directly (such as milk
quotas) and those that restrict the use of an input
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 5.95
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
See also: Buy-out schemes, Land set-aside, or
land diversion
Supply quotas
Supply quotas are limits on acreage, production or
marketed quantities of a particular commodity in
the context of a supply control programme. Limits
on acreage, production or marketed quantities of a
particular commodity in the context of a supply
control programme
Supply and use table
for natural resources
A matrix that describes the supply of natural
resources (by the environment) and the uses for
production, final consumption and rest of the
world.
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
paras. 2.38 and 3.109
See also: Milk quota scheme
Support
Aide
Support refers to transfers, in monetary form,
from the government or consumers to an activity
or sector. Support can include transfers from
governments the form of direct payments (e.g.,
grants), cost-reducing transfers (e.g., loan
concessions) and general services (e.g.,
government funded marketing or research).
Supply and use table
for residuals
A matrix that describes the supply (origin) of
residuals from national or rest of the world
economic activities or from the rest of the world
environment (cross border environmental inflows)
and their use (destination) by (to) the national
economy, national or rest of the world
environment (cross border environmental
outflows).
Transfers from consumers to an activity or sector
is primarily made up of market price support
normally arising from tariffs and quantitative
restrictions.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.121
Support price
See Administered price
See also: Administered price
Support services
Entities providing support services to other
educational institutions include institutions that
provide educational support and materials as well
as operation and maintenance services for
buildings. These are commonly part of the generalpurpose units of public authorities.
Supply and use tables Tableaux des
ressources et des
emplois
Supply and use tables are in the form of matrices
that record how supplies of different kinds of goods
and services originate from domestic industries
and imports and how those supplies are allocated
between various intermediate or final uses,
including exports
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Suppression
One of the most commonly used ways of
protecting sensitive cells in a table is via
suppression. It is obvious that in a row or column
with a suppressed sensitive cell, at least one
additional cell must be suppressed, or the value in
the sensitive cell could be calculated exactly by
Source: SNA 1.16 [15.1]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
763
subtraction from the marginal total. For this
reason, certain other cells must also be
suppressed. These are referred to as secondary
suppressions.
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Context: While it is possible to select cells for
secondary suppression manually, it is difficult to
guarantee that the result provides adequate
protection.
Surgical in-patients
Surgical in-patients are patients who are given
invasive surgical treatment, whether on an
emergency or elective basis, and who stay over at
least one night in an in-patient institution
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Surgical procedure
Surgical procedures (International Classification of
Disease (ICD) 9-CM and case mix) refer to all
invasive therapies performed as in-patient surgery,
where in-patient surgery is defined as a surgical
operation or procedure which is performed with an
overnight stay in an in-patient institution.
See also: Secondary suppression
Supreme audit
institution (SAI)
Refers to any organisation which sets standards for
audit work. The organisation itself will depend on
the particular scope of the audit.
Selected surgical procedures are listed and
presented in two chapters according to the
classification, either ICD-9-CM or DRG. Data
collected is the number of in-patient procedures.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Surplus
See Actuarial surplus
Surcharge
An addition to the list price of a good or a service.
Generally of short duration reflecting unusual cost
pressures affecting the producer. For example a
fuel surcharge for transport operators.
Excédent
See also: Actuarial surplus
SURs
See Standardised Unemployment Rates (SURs)
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
See also: Standardised unemployment rates
Surveillance
Surveillance is the supervision of an oversight
body, such as a central bank or a separate
surveillance body of the operation of the payments
system and the prudential behaviour of financial
institutions. Such activity also includes ensuring
that adequate levels of competition exist in the
financial sector
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Surface water
Eaux superficielles
Surface water is all water naturally open to the
atmosphere, including rivers, lakes, reservoirs,
streams, impoundment‘s, seas, estuaries and so
on. The term also covers springs, wells or other
collectors of water that are directly influenced by
surface waters
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Surveillance system,
Système de
environmental
surveillance
A surveillance system is a system for monitoring
environmental quality in order to detect areas of
pollution concentration in time for remedial
measures
Surgical day cases
Surgical day cases refers to patients who are given
invasive surgical treatment (elective surgeries
only) which are carried out in a dedicated surgical
unit or part of a hospital and which lead to
discharge on the day of the operation
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
764
Quality Guidelines", 4th edition, October 2003,
page 8
Survey
A survey is an investigation about the
characteristics of a given population by means of
collecting data from a sample of that population
and estimating their characteristics through the
systematic use of statistical methodology.
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca:8096/bsolc/english/bsolc?c
atno=12-539-X&CHROPG=1
See also: Questionnaire design, Sample design,
Survey
Context: The term survey covers any activity that
collects or acquires statistical data. Included are
censuses, sample surveys, the collection of data
from administrative records and derived statistical
activities (Statistics Canada, "Statistics Canada
Quality Guidelines", 3rd edition, October 1998,
page 7).
Survey management
Survey management is the processes used to
monitor, administer and control the survey. Survey
Management includes preparing mailing labels and
calling lists, making enumerator assignments and
tracking the status of each questionnaire through
the data editing processes (data collection, data
capture and review/correction). Survey
Management also includes monitoring the status
and quality of the data editing processes.
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva, 2000
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
See also: Cut-off survey, Data collection, Nonresponse, Processing errors, Questionnaire,
Reporting unit, Sample survey, Schedule, Survey
design
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Survey data collection
An activity of the survey life cycle for gathering
data from respondents and recording it for further
processing.
Survey population
See Population (survey, target)
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva, 2000
See also: Population (target, survey)
Survey statistician
Person involved in design, collection, processing,
analysis and dissemination of basic statistical data;
includes survey statistician and methodologist;
excludes national accountants.
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
Source: Measuring the Non-Observed Economy: A
Handbook, OECD, IMF, ILO, Interstate Statistical
Committee of the Commonwealth of Independent
States, 2002, Annex 2, Glossary.
See also: Data collection, Data source
Survey design
Survey design covers the definition of all aspects of
a survey from the establishment of a need for data
to the production of final outputs (the microdata
file, statistical series, and analysis)
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/20/1963116.pdf
Survey types (for
collecting
demographic
information)
For the purpose of collecting demographic
information, in general there are three types of
surveys which have been used in many countries.
These are:
Context: The survey design addresses the
following issues: what statistics are produced, for
which population, when, and with what accuracy;
what data are to be collected for which units of the
population of interest, and what are the methods
by which those data are to be collected and
processed to produce the required statistics.
Operational, organisational and administrative
issues are usually addressed (Lessler, J.T. and
Kalsbeek, W.D. (1992), "Non Sampling Error in
Survey", New York: John Wiley or US department
of Commerce (1978), "Glossary of Non Sampling
Error Terms: An Illustration of a Semantic Problem
in Statistics", Statistical Policy Working Paper 4,
Office of Federal Statistical Policy Standards).
- single-round surveys;
- multi-Round surveys, and
- dual record systems
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 9.80
Source: Statistics Canada, "Statistics Canada
765
See also: Dual records system, Multi-round survey,
Single round surveys
sustainability is intended to be achieved; whether
sustainability should relate only to localised effects
on the environment or also to effects on the
environment caused by the production of farm
inputs; and whether the environment in this
context should be defined only to include the
physical environment (soil, water, plants and
animals) or also the environment created by
agriculture, such as landscape amenities
Survey units
For the purpose of sample selection, the population
should be divisible into a finite number of distinct,
non-overlapping and identifiable units, so that
each member of the population belongs to only
one sampling unit.
Source: Statistics Canada, Educational Resources,
Glossary of Statistical Terms
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca/english/edu/prototype/glos
sary/gloss.htm
See also: Sustainable development
Sustainable catch
Number (weight) of fish in a stock that can be
taken by fishing without reducing the stock
biomass from year to year, assuming that
environmental conditions remain the same.
Different levels of sustainable catch exist for
different stock sizes. Maximum sustainable catch is
defined in reference to the size and composition of
a stock that make the natural growth of the stock
equal to this maximum.
Survival rates
Survival rate at the tertiary level is defined as the
proportion of new entrants to the specified level of
education who successfully complete a first
qualification. It is calculated as the ratio of the
number of students who are awarded an initial
degree to the number of new entrants to the level
n years before, n being the number of years of fulltime study required to complete the degree.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.279
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: Dropouts
Suspended particulate Particules en
matter (SPM)
suspension
Suspended particulate matter (SPM) are finely
divided solids or liquids that may be dispersed
through the air from combustion processes,
industrial activities or natural sources
Sustainable
Développement viable
development
Sustainable development refers to development
that meets the needs of the present without
compromising the ability of future generations to
meet their own needs (World Commission on
Environment and Development, (Brundtland
Commission), 1987, Our Common Future, Oxford
University Press, Oxford, United Kingdom).
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Particulates
Sustainability
Sustainability refers to:
Pérennité
It assumes the conservation of natural assets for
future growth and development
(a) use of the biosphere by present generations
while maintaining its potential yield (benefit) for
future generations; and/or
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
(b) non—declining trends of economic growth and
development that might be impaired by natural
resource depletion and environmental degradation.
See also: Human development, Sustainability
Sustainable
Indicateurs d‟un
development indicator développement
durable
A statistical measure that gives an indication on
the sustainability of social, environmental and
economic development.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Sustainable development
Context: Sustainable development indicators are
indicators that measure progress made in
sustainable growth and development.
Sustainable
agriculture
Sustainable agriculture is agricultural production
that is economically viable and does not degrade
the environment over the long run.
Glossary of Environment Statistics, Studies in
Methods, Series F, No. 67, United Nations, New
York, 1997
Definitions differ as to the period over which
766
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 11.180
sustainable. During transitional periods (for
example, after afforestation) the sustainable yield
will differ from natural growth. The same may
apply during transition from a previously virgin
forest to a regularly managed forest.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.184
Sustainable economic Croissance
growth
économique durable
Sustainable economic growth in operational terms
is the upward trend in environmentally adjusted
net domestic product (EDP) under certain
conditions and assumptions (Bartelmus, 1994)
Swap body
Carrying unit strong enough for repeated use, but
not enough to be top-lifted or stackable when
loaded, designed for intermodal transport of which
one leg is road.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Sustainable monopoly
See Contestability
See also: Contestability
Sustainable national
income
The maximum income for a given year that can be
sustained with the technology of that year, given a
specified standard for environmental sustainability,
without assuming technological development
except in respect of non-renewable resources.
Swap, foreign
Echanges de devises
exchange
See Foreign exchange swap
See also: Foreign exchange swap
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 10.203
Swapping (or
switching)
Swapping (or switching) involves selecting a
sample of the records, finding a match in the data
base on a set of predetermined variables and
swapping all or some of the other variables
between the matched records. Swapping (or
switching) was illustrated as part of the
confidentiality edit for tables of frequency data.
Sustainable yield
The sustainable yield of renewable natural
resources is traditionally defined as the extraction
level of the resource which does not exceed the
growth.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Context: However, this definition is too restrictive
in many cases. For a given stock of a biological
resource, many sustainable yields can be defined
in principle. Forests have several functions besides
logging (such as, habitat protection, recreation and
biodiversity) and the sustainable yield has to be
defined on the basis of a particular objective.
Ideally, the sustainable yield should be determined
by forest experts on the basis of modelling, but if
no such information is available natural growth can
be used as a proxy. With respect to timber, the
sustainable yield refers to fellings which are not
more than growth of timber during the accounting
period (i.e. net growth is positive or zero).
Swaps
A forward-type financial derivative contract in
which two counterparties agree to exchange cash
flows determined with reference to prices of, say,
currencies or interest rates, according to
predetermined rules. At inception, this instrument
typically has zero market value, but as market
prices change the swap acquires value.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
The sustainable yield refers to total fellings and not
only to timber removed for own consumption and
use. Another way of putting this is to say that if
the closing stock is at least as high as the opening
stock the yield for the accounting period is
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
767
Symmetric (input-output) tables are tables in
which the same classifications or units (i.e. the
same groups of products or industries) are used in
both rows and columns
See also: Foreign exchange swap, Interest rate
swap – SNA, Swaps – cross-currency interest rate
Swaps, cross-currency Swaps croisés de
interest rate
devises et de taux
Cross-currency interest rate swaps (sometimes
known as ―currency swaps‖) involve an exchange
of cash flows related to interest payments and an
exchange of principal amounts at an agreed
exchange rate at the end of the contract; there
might also be an exchange of principal at the
beginning of the contract and, in these
circumstances, there may be subsequent
repayments, which include both interest and
principal, over time according to the
predetermined rules
Source: SNA 15.2
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Symmetric oligopoly
See Oligopoly
See also: Oligopoly
Symmetric treatment
of defensive
expenditure
A reclassification of defensive expenditure in order
to achieve a symmetric treatment of environmental
protection expenditure by government and
industry, preserving the closed character of the
accounting system.
Source: SNA 11.38
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Foreign exchange swap, Interest rate
swap – SNA
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 10.115
Swaps, interest rate
See Interest rate swap - SNA
See also: Interest rate swap – SNA
Swiss indexation
See Mixed indexation
Indexation suisse
See also: Mixed indexation (of pension benefits)
Synonymous name
A synonymous name is a single or multi-word
designation that differs from the given name, but
represents the same data element concept
Symmetric index
An index that treats the two periods being
compared symmetrically by giving equal weight, or
importance, to the price and value data in both
periods. The price and value data for both periods
enter into the index number formula in a
symmetric or balanced way.
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Context: An index that treats the two countries
being compared symmetrically by giving equal
importance to the price and expenditure data of
both countries.
Syntax
Syntax is the relationship among characters or
groups of characters, independent of their
meanings or the manner of their interpretation and
use; the structure of expressions in a language,
and the rules governing the structure of a
language.
The price and expenditure data for both countries
enter into the index number formula in a balanced
or symmetric way.
Source: ISO/IEC CD 11179-5 "Information
technology - Metadata registries (MDR) - Part 5 :
Naming and identification principles", January 2003
Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
See also: ISO / IEC 11179, Semantics
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC.
Synthetic data
An approach to confidentiality where instead of
disseminating real data, synthetic data that have
been generated from one or more population
models are released.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Symmetric inputoutput tables
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Tableaux symétriques
768
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 1.35 sq.
Synthetic substitution
See Controlled Tabular Adjustment
See also: Controlled Tabular Adjustment (CTA)
System dependency
ratio
Rapport de
dépendance
économique au sein
du régime
Typically defined as the ratio of those receiving
pension benefits to those accruing pension rights.
See also: Environmental accounting
System of National
Accounts (SNA)
Système de
comptabilité nationale
(SCN)
The System of National Accounts (SNA) consists of
a coherent, consistent and integrated set of
macroeconomic accounts, balance sheets and
tables based on a set of internationally agreed
concepts, definitions, classifications and accounting
rules. (SNA 1.1)
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Dependency ratio
The System of National Accounts 1993 (SNA) has
been prepared under the joint responsibility of the
United Nations, the International Monetary Fund,
the Commission of the European Communities, the
OECD and the World Bank.
System of Health
Accounts
See Health Accounts, System of
See also: Health Accounts, System of
Context: The SNA is a comprehensive, consistent
and flexible set of macroeconomic accounts
intended to meet the needs of government and
private-sector analysts, policy makers and decision
takers. It is designed for use in countries with
market economies, whatever their stage of
economic development, and also in countries in
transition to market economies.
System of integrated
environmental and
economic accounting
(SEEA)
Système de
comptabilité
économique et
environnementale
intégrée
The System for integrated Environmental and
Economic Accounting is a satellite system of the
SNA that comprises 4 categories of accounts.
The system has been welcomed and unanimously
approved by the Statistical Commission of the
United Nations. should be used as the international
standard for the compilation of national accounts
statistics in order to promote the integration of
economic and related statistics
The first considers purely physical data relating to
flows of materials and energy and marshals them
as far as possible according to the accounting
structure of the SNA. The accounts in this category
also show how flow data in physical and monetary
terms can be combined to produce so-called
―hybrid‖ flow accounts. Emissions accounts for
greenhouse gases are an example of the type
included in this category.
Source: SNA 1993, Foreword
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
The second category of accounts takes those
elements of the existing SNA which are relevant to
the good management of the environment and
shows how the environment-related transactions
can be made more explicit. An account of
expenditures made by businesses, governments
and households to protect the environment is an
example of the accounts included in this category.
See also: National accounts
Systematic
This word is frequently used in statistics in contrast
to ―random‖ or ―stochastic‖. Thus, a variate y
consisting of a constant m plus a variate x with
zero mean is sometimes said to have a systematic
component m and a stochastic component x,
although it might equally well be regarded as a
stochastic component y with mean m. Similarly, an
error variate is said to be systematic error if it has
a non-zero mean; and a sampling process is
―systematic‖ if it is not random.
The third category of accounts in the SEEA
comprises accounts for environmental assets
measured in physical and monetary terms. Timber
stock accounts showing opening and closing timber
balances and the related changes over the course
of an accounting period are an example.
Context: The usage is convenient but occasionally
gives rise to difficulty. Many processes embody
both ―systematic‖ and ―stochastic‖ elements and
should not properly be described by either
adjective alone; e.g. the so-called systematic
sampling of a list may begin from a randomly
chosen point, and a random sample may be
chosen from systematically determined strata.
The final category of SEEA accounts considers how
the existing SNA might be adjusted to account for
the impact of the economy on the environment.
Three sorts of adjustments are considered; those
relating to depletion, those concerning so-called
defensive expenditures and those relating to
degradation.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
The basic difficulty is that even a random event
may be the outcome of a systematic procedure
769
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
and it is not to be resolved by substituting some
other word for ―systematic‖.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Systematic variation
A term used in two slightly different senses:
(1) to denote variation which is deterministic, as
opposed to stochastic, and which can therefore be
represented by a deterministic mathematical
expression; and
Systematic design
An experimental design laid out without any
randomisation. The term is difficult to define
exactly because in one sense every design is
systematic; it usually refers to a situation where
experimental observations are taken at regular
intervals in time or space.
(2) to denote variation in observations resulting
from experimental or other situations as a result of
factors which are not under statistical control.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Systematic
Systemic risk
The risk that the inability of one institution to meet
its obligations when due will cause other
institutions to be unable to meet their obligations
when due. Such a failure may cause significant
liquidity or credit problems and, as a result, could
threaten the stability of or confidence in markets.
Systematic errors
Systematic errors are errors reported consistently
over time and/or between responding units
(generally undetectable by editing).
A phenomenon caused either by the consistent
misunderstanding of a question on the survey
questionnaire during the collection of data or by
consistent misinterpretation of certain answers in
the course of coding. The systematic error does
not lead necessarily to validity or consistency
errors but always seriously compromises statistical
results.
Source: European Central Bank, 2004, Annual
Report: 2004, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Table server
A form of remote data laboratory designed to
release safe tables.
Context: As opposed to a random error, an error
which is in some sense biased, that is to say, has a
distribution with mean, or some equally acceptable
measure of location, not at zero. (A Dictionary of
Statistical Terms, 5th edition, prepared for the
International Statistical Institute by F.H.C.
Marriott. Published for the International Statistical
Institute by Longman Scientific and Technical)
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Tables of frequency
(count) data
These tables present the number of units of
analysis in a cell. When data are from a sample,
the cells may contain weighted counts, where
weights are used to bring sample results to the
population levels. Frequencies may also be
represented as percentages.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Systematic sample
A sample which is obtained by some systematic
method, as opposed to random choice; for
example, sampling from a list by taking individuals
at equally spaced intervals, called the sampling
intervals, or sampling from an area by determining
a pattern of points on a map.
Tables of magnitude
data
Tables of magnitude data present the aggregate of
a ―quantity of interest‖ over all units of analysis in
the cell. When data are from a sample, the cells
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
770
may contain weighted aggregates, where
quantities are multiplied by units‘ weights to bring
sample results up to population levels. The data
may be presented as averages by dividing the
aggregates by the number of units in their cells.
from a take-over implies that the companies could
maximize joint profits, which can be a source of
concern to competition authorities.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Acquisition, Market for corporate control
Tabular data
Aggregate information on entities presented in
tables.
Tangible assets
Biens tangibles
Tangible assets are assets including human-made
(produced) non-financial assets and non—produced
natural assets, and excluding intangible (non—
produced) assets such as patents or goodwill
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Macrodata, statistical, Microdata,
statistical
See also: Natural assets, Tangible fixed assets –
SNA
Tabulation errors
Errors occurring during the tabulation stage of
survey procedures.
Tangible fixed assets Actifs fixes corporels
Tangible fixed assets are non-financial produced
assets that consist of dwellings, other buildings
and structures, machinery and equipment and
cultivated assets
Source: Statistical Policy Working Paper 4 Glossary of Nonsampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics,
United States Federal Committee on Statistical
Methodology, 1978
Source: (AN.111) – Annex to chapter XIII
Tangible investment
(by road transport
enterprises)
The outlay (purchases and own account
production) of road transport enterprises on
additions of new and used capital goods
(commodities) to their stocks of fixed capital
assets less their net sales of similar second-hand
and scrapped goods.
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
TACIS
Technical Assistance to the Commonwealth of
Independent States
Context: The contribution of all road transport
enterprises to the gross fixed capital formation of a
country is equal to the total of their tangible
investment less the balance between the purchase
and sale of land.
Tacit collusion
See Collusion, Conscious parallelism
See also: Collusion, Conscious parallelism
Take-over
A Take-over is the acquisition of control of one
company by another or occasionally by an
individual or group of investors.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Take-overs are usually instituted by purchasing
shares at a "premium" over existing prices and
may be financed in a variety of ways including
cash payment and/or with shares of the acquiring
company.
Context: While the terms mergers, acquisitions
and take-over are often used interchangeably,
there are subtle differences between them. A takeover may be complete or partial and may not
necessarily involve merging the operations of the
acquired and acquiring firms.
Tangible investment
(for railway
enterprises)
The outlay (purchases and own account
production) of railway enterprises on additions of
new and used capital goods (commodities) to their
stocks of fixed capital assets less their net sales of
similar second-hand and scrapped goods.
The fact that joint ownership and control may arise
Context: The contribution of all railway enterprises
771
to the gross fixed capital formation of a country is
equal to the total of their tangible investments less
the balance between the purchase and sale of
land.
Context: The contribution of all sea transport
enterprises to the gross fixed capital formation of
that country is equal to the total of their tangible
investment less the balance between the purchase
and sale of land.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Tangible investment
(of inland waterways
transport enterprises)
The outlay (purchases and own account
production) of IWT enterprises on additions of new
and used capital goods (commodities) added to
their stocks of fixed capital assets minus their net
sales of similar second-hand and scrapped goods.
Tangible nonActifs corporels non
produced assets
produits
Tangible non-produced assets are natural assets land, subsoil assets, non-cultivated biological
resources and water resources - over which
ownership may be established and transferred
Source: SNA 13.18 [13.53, (AN.21) – Annex to
chapter XIII]
Context: The contribution of all IWT enterprises to
the gross fixed capital formation of a country is
equal to the total of their tangible investment less
the balance between the purchase and sale of
land.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Tank wagon
Wagon designed for the bulk transport of liquids or
gases.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Tangible investment
(of oil pipeline
enterprises)
The outlay (purchases and own account
production) of oil pipeline transport enterprises on
additions of new and used capital goods
(commodities) to their stocks of fixed capital
assets less their net sales of similar second-hand
and scrapped goods.
Tanker
Ship designed with a single deck and an
arrangement of integral or independent tanks
specifically for the bulk carriage of liquid cargo.
Ship designed with a single deck and an
arrangement of integral or independent tanks
specifically for the bulk carriage of liquid cargo.
Context: The contribution of all oil pipeline
transport enterprises to the gross fixed capital
formation of a country is equal to the total of their
tangible investment less the balance between the
purchase and sale of land.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
TARGET
TARGET (Trans-European Automated Real-time
Gross settlement Express Transfer system) is a
payment system composed of one RTGS system in
each of the 15 European Union Member States and
the European Central Bank (ECB) payment
mechanism.
Tangible investment
(of sea transport
enterprises)
The outlay (purchases and own account
production) of sea transport enterprises on
additions of new and used capital goods
(commodities) added to their stocks of fixed capital
assets minus their net sales of similar second-hand
and scrapped goods.
The domestic RTGS systems and the ECB payment
mechanism are interconnected according to
common procedures (Interlinking mechanism) to
allow cross-border transfers throughout the
772
European Union to move from one system to
another
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Source: European Central Bank Annual Report,
2000, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.ecb.int/pub/pdf/ar2000en.pdf
Tariff
Tarif
A tariff is a tax imposed on a good imported into a
country. A tariff may be specific, when it is levied
as a fixed sum per unit of the imported good, or ad
valorem, when it is applied at a percentage rate
with reference to the value of the import
See also: Real-time gross settlement system
(RTGS)
Target characteristics
Target characteristics refer to estimates of the
statistical characteristics.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Source: Quality Glossary, Eurostat.
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Target dataset
An anonymised dataset in which an intruder
attempts to identify particular population units.
Tariff / Unbundled
tariff
Tariffs are the schedule of rates and regulations
governing the provision of telecommunications
services. Unbundling of tariffs is where each
component of a communications service or product
is priced separately, so that customers may select
only those components needed and be charged
accordingly.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Telecommunications services: Glossary of
terms – World Trade Organisation
Target interest rate
A target interest rate refers to a given level of an
interest rate - e.g. overnight lending rate, repo
rate, etc. - with which the central bank seeks to
influence short term interest rates, as part of its
monetary policy strategy
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/tratop_e/serv_e/t
elecom_e/tel12_e.htm
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Tariff binding
Commitment not to increase a rate of duty beyond
an agreed level. Once a rate of duty is bound, it
may not be raised without compensating the
affected parties.
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Target population
The set of elements about which information is
wanted and estimates are required. Practical
considerations may dictate that some units are
excluded (e.g., institutionalized individuals, the
homeless, or those that are not possible to access
without incurring excessive cost).
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Tariff escalation
Higher import duties on semi-processed products
than on raw materials, and higher still on finished
products.
Source: Statistics Canada, "Statistics Canada
Quality Guidelines", 4th edition, October 2003,
page 17
Hyperlink:
http://www.statcan.ca:8096/bsolc/english/bsolc?c
atno=12-539-X&CHROPG=1
This practice protects domestic processing
industries and discourages the development of
processing activity in the countries where raw
materials originate.
See also: Cut-off threshold, Population (target,
survey), Under-coverage
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Target price (for milk)
In the European Union, a target price is fixed
annually by the Council of Ministers for products of
standard quality. It is not a guaranteed price but
rather serves as a policy guideline. In Switzerland,
a non-binding target price is set annually for milk
to provide market guidance
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
773
Tariff peaks
Relatively high tariffs, usually on ―sensitive‖
products, amidst generally low tariff levels. For
industrialized countries, tariffs of 15% and above
are generally recognized as ―tariff peaks‖.
Source: Ireland Central Statistics Office, Freedom
of Information – Appendix 5: Glossary of CSO
Terminology
Hyperlink:
http://www.cso.ie/text/foi/append5.html
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Tax allowances
Amounts deducted from gross earnings to arrive at
taxable income.
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Source: OECD, 2007, Taxing Wages - 2005/2006,
2006 Edition, OECD, Paris
Tariff quota
Contingent tarifaire
A tariff quota is a quantitative threshold (quota) on
imports above which a higher tariff is applied. The
lower tariff rate applies to imports within the quota
Tax arrears
Taxes due to government but not paid. Other
arrears in receipts could arise from non-payment
of loans by government or nonpayment of bills for
government services.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
See also: Tariff-rate quota (TRQ)
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Tariff spikes
A measure of the degree of tariff rate dispersion. It
is typically defined as those tariff rates that exceed
a certain threshold value usually taken to be three
times the overall simple bound rate, or above 15
per cent.
Tax credits
Amounts which a taxpayer may subtract from his
tax liability. They are described as payable if they
can exceed tax liability (sometimes the terms
―refundable‖ and ―non-wastable‖ are used).
Source: OECD, June 2004, Glossary, OECD
Economic Outlook, Paris, France
Source: OECD, 2007, Taxing Wages - 2005/2006,
2006 Edition, OECD, Paris
Tariff-rate quota
Contingent tarifaire
(TRQ)
The tariff-rate quota resulted from the Uruguay
Round Agreement on Agriculture. Certain countries
agreed to provide minimum import opportunities
for products previously protected by non-tariff
barriers.
Tax on a product
Impôt sur un produit
A tax on a product is a tax that is payable per unit
of some good or service, either as a specified
amount of money per unit of quantity or as a
specified percentage of the price per unit or value
of the good or service transacted
This import system established a quota and a twotier tariff regime for affected commodities. Imports
within the quota enter at a lower (in-quota) tariff
rate while a higher (out- of-quota) tariff rate is
used for imports above the concessionary access
level
Source: SNA 15.47 [7.62]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Tax reliefs
A generic term to cover all the means of giving
favourable income tax treatment to employees,
married couples and parents.
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
See also: Tariff quota
Tarification
Tarification refers to the replacement of
quantitative restrictions on imports with their
estimated tariff equivalent
Source: OECD, 2007, Taxing Wages - 2005/2006,
2006 Edition, OECD, Paris
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Tax wedge
Sum of personal income tax and employee plus
employer social security contributions together
with any payroll tax less cash transfers, expressed
as a percentage of labour costs.
See also: Standard tax reliefs
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: OECD, 2007, Taxing Wages - 2005/2006,
2006 Edition, OECD, Paris
Taskforce
A group established to consider an urgent issue or
implement an operation in a short span of time.
Taxes
774
Impôts
Taxes are compulsory, unrequited payments, in
cash or in kind, made by institutional units to
government units; they are described as
unrequited because the government provides
nothing in return to the individual unit making the
payment, although governments may use the
funds raised in taxes to provide goods or services
to other units, either individually or collectively, or
to the community as a whole
Source: SNA 10.136
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Taxes on
Impôts sur le
entertainment
divertissement
Taxes on entertainment consist of any taxes which
are levied specifically on the entertainment itself
(such as on an entry ticket) and which are not part
of some broader tax such as a value added tax
Source: SNA 7.48 [8.43]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 7.69, OECD 5126
Taxes (recurrent) on
land, buildings or
other structures
Impôts (périodiques)
sur les terrains, les
bâtiments et les
autres constructions
Taxes (recurrent) on land, buildings or other
structures consist of taxes payable regularly,
usually each year, in respect of the use or
ownership of land, buildings or other structures
utilised by enterprises in production, whether the
enterprises own or rent such assets
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Taxes on financial and Impôts sur les
capital transactions
opérations mobilières
et immobilières
Taxes on financial and capital transactions consist
of taxes payable on the purchase or sale of nonfinancial and financial assets including foreign
exchange
Source: SNA 7.70 [OECD 4100]
Source: SNA 7.69 [OECD 4400]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Taxes and duties on
Impôts et droits sur
imports
les importations
Taxes and duties on imports, excluding value
added tax, consist of taxes on goods and services
that become payable at the moment when the
goods cross the national or customs frontiers of
the economic territory or when the services are
delivered by non-resident producers to resident
institutional units
Taxes on income
Impôts sur le revenu
Taxes on income consist of taxes on incomes,
profits and capital gains; they are assessed on the
actual or presumed incomes of individuals,
households, non-profit institutions or corporations
Source: SNA 8.52 [OECD 1110, 1120, 1130, 1210]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 15.47 [7.49, 7.64]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Taxes on individual or Impôts sur le revenu
household income
des individus ou des
ménages
Taxes on individual or household income consist of
personal income taxes, including those deducted
by employers (pay-as-you-earn taxes), and
surtaxes
Taxes on capital gains Impôts sur les gains
en capital
Taxes on capital gains consist of taxes on the
capital gains (described as holding gains in the
System of National Accounts terminology) of
persons or corporations which become due for
payment during the current accounting period,
irrespective of the periods over which the gains
have accrued
Source: SNA 8.52 [OECD 1110]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 8.52 [OECD 1120, 1220]
Taxes on international Impôts sur les
transactions
opérations
internationales
Taxes on international transactions consist of taxes
on travel abroad, foreign remittances, foreign
investments, etc except those payable by
producers (such taxes payable by producers are
part of taxes on production while those payable by
non-producers are part of other current taxes);
they are part of ―miscellaneous current taxes"
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Holding gains
Taxes on capital
Impôts sur les
transfers
transferts de capital
Taxes on capital transfers consist of taxes on the
values of assets transferred between institutional
units
775
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 7.70 and 8.54 [OECD 5127]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Taxes on specific
Impôts sur des
services
services spécifiques
Taxes on specific services consist of all taxes
assessed on the payment for specific services such
as taxes on transportation, communications,
insurance, advertising, hotels or lodging,
restaurants, entertainments, gambling and
lotteries, sporting events, etc
Taxes on lotteries,
Impôts sur les
gambling and betting loteries, jeux et paris
Taxes on lotteries, gambling and betting consist of
any taxes, other than taxes on winnings, which are
levied on these types of operations; they are
typically levied as a percentage of the operator‘s
turnover
Source: SNA 7.69 and OECD 5126
Source: SNA 7.69, OECD 5126
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Taxes on the income
Impôts sur le revenu
of corporations
des sociétés
Taxes on the income of corporations consist of
corporate income taxes, corporate profits taxes,
corporate surtaxes, etc
Taxes on pollution
Impôts sur la
pollution
Taxes on pollution consist of taxes levied on the
emission or discharge into the environment of
noxious gases, liquids or other harmful
substances; they do not include payments made
for the collection and disposal of waste or noxious
substances by public authorities
Source: SNA 8.52 [OECD 1210]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 7.70 [OECD 5200]
Taxes on the use of
fixed assets
Impôts sur
l‟utilisation d‟actifs
fixes
Taxes on the use of fixed assets include taxes
levied periodically on the use of vehicles, ships,
aircraft or other machinery or equipment used by
enterprises for purposes of production, whether
such assets are owned or rented
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Taxes on production
and imports
Impôts sur la
production et les
importations
Taxes on production and imports consist of taxes
payable on goods and services when they are
produced, delivered, sold, transferred or otherwise
disposed of by their producers plus taxes and
duties on imports that become payable when
goods enter the economic territory by crossing the
frontier or when services are delivered to resident
units by non-resident units; they also include other
taxes on production, which consist mainly of taxes
on the ownership or use of land, buildings or other
assets used in production or on the labour
employed, or compensation of employees paid
Source: SNA 7.70 [OECD 5200]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Taxes on winnings
Impôts sur les gains
from lotteries or
provenant des loteries
gambling
ou des jeux
Taxes on winnings from lotteries or gambling are
taxes payable on the amounts received by winners
Source: SNA 7.49
Source: SNA 8.52 [OECD 1130]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Taxes on products
Taxes paid to obtain
business and
professional licences
Impôts sur les
produits
Taxes on products, excluding value added tax,
import and export taxes, consist of taxes on goods
and services that become payable as a result of
the production, sale, transfer, leasing or delivery of
those goods or services, or as a result of their use
for own consumption or own capital formation
Impôts sur les
autorisations
commerciales et
professionnelles
Taxes paid to obtain business and professional
licences consist of those taxes paid by enterprises
in order to obtain a licence to carry on a particular
kind of business or profession; in some
circumstances when the payments are not
unrequited they should be treated as payments for
services rendered
Source: SNA 7.69, 15.47 [OECD 5110 - 5113,
5121, 5122, 5126, 4400]
776
Source: SNA 7.70 [OECD 5210]
include student teachers or other personnel who do
not get paid for their employment
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 45
Taxes resulting from
Impôts résultant de
multiple exchange
taux de change
rates
multiples
Taxes resulting from multiple exchange rates
consist of implicit taxes resulting from the
operation of an official system of multiple
exchange rates by the central bank or other official
agency
Teacher‟s salaries
Teacher‘s salaries are expressed as statutory
salaries, which are scheduled salaries according to
official pay scales. The salaries reported are
defined as gross salaries (total sum of money that
is paid by the employer for the labour supplied)
minus the employer‘s contribution to social
security and pension (according to existing salary
scales).
Source: SNA 7.67
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
• Starting salaries refer to the average scheduled
gross salary per year for a full-time teacher with
the minimum training necessary to be fully
qualified at the beginning of his or her teaching
career.
Taxon
Taxon
Taxon (plural, taxa) is a unit (group) of organisms
used in taxonomy
• Salaries after 15 years of experience refer to the
scheduled annual salary of a full-time classroom
teacher with the minimum training necessary to be
fully qualified and with 15 years‘ experience.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
• Maximum salaries reported refer to the
scheduled maximum annual salary (top of the
salary scale) of a full-time classroom teacher with
the minimum training to be fully qualified for his or
her job.
Taxonomy - ISO
Taxinomie
Taxonomy refers to classification according to
presumed natural relationships among types and
their subtypes.
Salaries are ―before tax‖, i.e., before deductions
for income taxes.
Context: Within SDMX, a ―reporting taxonomy‖ is a
scheme which defines the composition structure of
a data report where each component is described
by an independent data flow definition
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179,
Part 1, Framework for the specification and
standardization of data elements, 1999
Teacher‟s working
time
Teacher‘s working time refers to the normal
working hours of a full-time teacher.
See also: Classification, ISO / IEC 11179,
Ontology, Taxonomy – UN
Taxonomy Ŕ UN
Taxinomie - NU
Taxonomy is the classification of fossil and living
organisms according to their evolutionary
relationships.
According to the formal policy in a given country,
working time can refer only to the time directly
associated with teaching (and other curricular
activities for students such as assignments and
tests, but excluding annual examinations); or to
time directly associated with teaching and to hours
devoted to other activities related to teaching,
such as lesson preparation, counselling of
students, correction of assignments and tests,
professional development, meetings with parents,
staff meetings and general school tasks.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Taxonomy - ISO
T-bills
See Treasury bills
Working time does not include paid overtime.
See also: Treasury bills
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Teacher aides
Teacher aides (International Standard
Classification for Education (ISCED) 0-4) includes
non- professional personnel who support teachers
in providing instruction to students. The category
includes teachers‘ aides and other paraprofessional
personnel who are employed on a full-time or parttime basis by an education system. It does not
Teaching / Research
assistants
Teaching / Research assistants (International
Standard Classification for Education (ISCED) 5-6)
777
includes all students employed on a part-time
basis for the primary purpose of assisting in
classroom or laboratory instruction or in the
conduct of research.
Teaching weeks
The number of teaching weeks is defined as the
number of weeks of instruction not counting
holiday weeks.
Personnel in these positions are typically graduate
students who hold such titles as teaching assistant,
teaching associate, teaching fellow, research
assistant, or equivalent personnel with other titles
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: 2001 Data Collection on Education
Systems: Definitions, Explanations and
Instructions, UNESCO, OECD, Eurostat, page 45
See also: Teaching days, Teaching time, Working
time in school
Technical barriers to
trade
Technical barriers to trade refer to technical
regulations, minimum standards and certification
systems for health, safety and environmental
protection and to enhance the availability of
information about products, which may result in
the erection of technical barriers to trade (TBTs).
Teaching days
The number of teaching days is the number of
teaching weeks minus the days when the school is
closed for festivities.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Context: TBTs are mainly caused by differential
application of technical regulations, standards and
certification systems between domestic and foreign
suppliers, although the fact that such regulations,
standards and certification systems differ across
countries may in itself be a barrier to trade.
See also: Teaching time, Teaching weeks, Working
time in school
Teaching staff
Teaching staff refer to professional personnel
directly involved in teaching students, including
classroom teachers; special education teachers;
and other teachers who work with students as a
whole class in a classroom, in small groups in a
resource room, or in one-to-one teaching inside or
outside a regular classroom. Teaching staff also
includes chairpersons of departments whose duties
include some amount of teaching, but it does not
include non-professional personnel who support
teachers in providing instruction to students, such
as teachers‘ aides and other paraprofessional
personnel.
In practice it is difficult to evaluate the extent to
which standards are applied or enforced
differentially.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Technical change,
disembodied
Disembodied technical change is the shift in the
production function (production frontier) over time.
Disembodied technical change is not incorporated
in a specific factor of production
Teaching time
Teaching time is defined as the net contact hours
of teaching.
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
It is calculated on the basis of the annual number
of weeks of instruction multiplied by the
minimum/maximum number of periods, which a
teacher is supposed to spend teaching a class or a
group, multiplied by the length of a period in
minutes and divided by 60.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
See also: Technical change, embodied
Technical change,
embodied
Embodied technical change refers to improvements
in the design or quality of new capital goods or
intermediate inputs
Periods of time formally allowed for breaks
between lessons or groups of lessons, and days
when schools are closed for public holidays and
festivities, are excluded. In primary education,
however, short breaks that teachers spend with
the class are typically included.
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
See also: Teaching days, Teaching weeks, Working
time in school
778
supervision of researchers in the social sciences
and humanities.
See also: Technical change, disembodied
Technical cooperation
Includes both
Context: Technicians and equivalent staff are
persons in ISCO-88 Major Group 3 ―Technicians
and Associate Professionals‖, notably in Sub-major
31 ―Physical and Engineering Science Associate
Professionals‖ and 32 ―Life Science and Health
Associate Professionals‖ plus ―Statistical,
Mathematical and Related Associate Professionals‖
(ISCO-88, 3434). Any members of the Armed
Forces working on similar tasks should be included
in this category
(a) grants to nationals of aid recipient countries
receiving education or training at home or abroad,
and
(b) payments to consultants, advisers and similar
personnel as well as teachers and administrators
serving in recipient countries, (including the cost of
associated equipment).
Source: OECD Frascati Manual, Sixth edition,
2002, para. 306, page 94
Assistance of this kind provided specifically to
facilitate the implementation of a capital project is
included indistinguishably among bilateral project
and programme expenditures, and not separately
identified as technical co-operation in statistics of
aggregate flows.
Hyperlink: http://www1.oecd.org/dsti/sti/statana/prod/eas_fras.htm
Technological balance
of payments
Technological balance of payments corresponds to
cross-border technological receipts minus
technological payments.
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
Source: OECD, 2005, Measuring Globalisation:
OECD Handbook on Economic Globalisation
Indicators, OECD, Paris - Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
Technological
innovations
Technological innovations comprise new products
and processes and significant technological
changes of products and processes. An innovation
has been implemented if it has been introduced on
the market (product innovation)
Technical cooperation grants
There are two basic types of technical cooperation:
(1) free-standing technical cooperation (FTC),
which is the provision of resources aimed at the
transfer of technical and managerial skills or of
technology for the purpose of building up general
national capacity without reference to the
implementation of any specific investment
projects; and (2) investment-related technical
cooperation (IRTC), which denotes the provision of
technical services required for the implementation
of specific investment projects.
Source: OECD Frascati Manual, Fifth edition, 1993,
Annex 2, para. 29, page 116
Hyperlink: http://www1.oecd.org/dsti/sti/statana/prod/eas_fras.htm
See also: Major product innovation
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Technological
payments and
receipts
Technological payments and receipts correspond to
four types of transactions between countries:
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
1. Technology transfers (patents, unpatented
inventions, licences linked to patents, know-how).
Technicians and
equivalent staff (for
R&D)
Technicians and equivalent staff are persons whose
main tasks require technical knowledge and
experience in one or more fields of engineering,
physical and life sciences, or social sciences and
humanities.
2. Transfers of design (sales, licences, franchises),
trademarks and patterns.
3. Provision of technical services (technical and
engineering studies, and technical assistance).
4. Provision of industrial R&D.
They participate in research and development
(R&D) by performing scientific and technical tasks
involving the application of concepts and
operational methods, normally under the
supervision of researchers. Equivalent staff
perform the corresponding R&D tasks under the
Source: OECD, 2005, Measuring Globalisation:
OECD Handbook on Economic Globalisation
Indicators, OECD, Paris - Glossary
Technology
779
Technology refers to the state of knowledge
concerning ways of converting resources into
outputs
A two-way telecommunications service that allows
live video images and speech of participants in a
conference to be transmitted between two or more
locations. Videoconferencing services generally
require digital transmission.
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Source: Telecommunications services: Glossary of
terms – World Trade Organisation
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/tratop_e/serv_e/t
elecom_e/tel12_e.htm
Technology balance of
payments (TBP)
The technology balance of payments (TBP)
registers the commercial transactions related to
international technology and know-how transfers.
It consists of money paid or received for the use of
patents, licences, know-how, trademarks,
patterns, designs, technical services (including
technical assistance) and for industrial research
and development (R&D) carried out abroad, etc.
The coverage may vary from country to country
and the TBP data should be considered as only
partial measures of international technology flows
Telephone lines (main
telephone lines)
The number of telephone lines connecting the
subscriber's terminal equipment to the public
switched network and which have a dedicated port
in the telephone exchange equipment.
Source: International Telecommunication Union,
Yearbook of Statistics, Telecommunication
Services. Geneva, annual. (Item 112)
Temporal adjustment
factors
Factors used to adjust average prices obtained at
the time of survey to annual average prices.
Source: Basic Science and Technology Statistics,
OECD, December 2000, Introduction
Technology-based
standards
An environmental policy measure which prescribes
the technologies which are authorized for use (e.g.
catalytic converters).
Context: Also the factors applied in the rolling
benchmark approach to move basic heading PPPs
calculated for t to t+1 and t+2.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Source: OECD, 2007, Business and the
Environment: Policy Incentives and Corporate
Responses, OECD, Paris
Temporal price
indexes
Indexes which measure differences in prices over
time in a particular locality.
TEE system
Régime TEE
A form of taxation of pension plans whereby
contributions are taxed, investment income and
capital gains of the pension fund are exempt and
benefits are also exempt from personal income
taxation.
Source: Producer and International Trade Price
Indexes, Glossary of terms – Australian Bureau of
Statistics
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs%40.nsf/66f3
06f503e529a5ca25697e0017661f/f2b7a9d7152e50
18ca25697e0018fc77!OpenDocument
See also: EET system, ETE system
Telecommuting
Work at satellite offices or at home using a
computer and related equipment that links the
telecommuter to the employer‘s main office. The
telecommuter may be required to spend some time
(e.g., 1 or 2 days each week) in the main office.
Temporary admission
(of goods) for inward
processing
Refers to the customs procedure under which
certain goods can be brought into a customs
territory conditionally relieved from payment of
import duties and taxes; such goods must be
intended for re-exportation within a specific period
after having undergone manufacturing, processing
or repair...'compensating products' means the
products obtained during or as a result of the
manufacturing, processing or repair of the goods
temporarily admitted for inward processing...[they]
need not be obtained solely from goods
Source: Glossary of Compensation Terms – United
States Bureau of Labor Statistics, August 1998
Hyperlink:
http://stats.bls.gov/ocs/sp/ncbl0062.pdf
Tele-conferencing
780
Merchandise Trade Statistics: Compilers Manual,
New York, Annex B, para. 6, p. 101
temporarily admitted for inward processing; it may
be necessary to use goods of national origin or
previously imported...Operations allowed under the
temporary admission for inward processing
procedure may be carried out in premises
designated as warehouses for inward processing"..
compensating products [may be exported to a]
free port or free zone [placed]...in a customs
warehouse with a view to subsequent exportation
or other authorized disposal...or [declared] for
home use. (Kyoto Convention, annex E.6,
definitions (a) and (c); standard (2), note 5; and
standards 34, 36 and 37).
Temporary housing
unit
A temporary housing unit refers to a structure
that, by the way that it has been built, is not
expected to maintain its durability for as long a
period of time as, but has some of the facilities of,
a conventional dwelling
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.339
Source: United Nations, 2004, International
Merchandise Trade Statistics: Compilers Manual,
New York, Annex B, para. 6, p. 101
Tendency
The term tendency is used in business tendency
surveys where the respondent is asked for a
judgment on the direction of changes (e.g.
up/down/same)
Temporary admission
(of goods) subject to
re-exportation in the
same state
"'Temporary admission' means the customs
procedure under which certain goods can be
brought into a customs territory conditionally
relieved from payment of import duties and taxes;
such goods must be imported for a specific
purpose and must be intended for re-exportation
within a specified period and without having
undergone any change except normal depreciation
due to the use made of the goods" (Kyoto
Convention, annex E.5, definition (a)). The
Convention on Temporary Admission, a which was
agreed at Istanbul in June 1990, provides a
detailed description of this procedure and identifies
goods allowed for temporary admission.
Source: Main Economic Indicators, OECD, Paris,
monthly
Term - ISO
A term is a designation of a defined concept in a
special language by a linguistic expression
Context: A term is a word or phrase used to
designate a concept (Terminology on Statistical
Metadata, Conference of European Statisticians
Statistical Standards and Studies, No. 53, UNECE,
Geneva 2000,
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf).
Source: United Nations, 2004, International
Merchandise Trade Statistics: Compilers Manual,
New York, Annex B, para. 6, p. 101
Source: ISO International Standard 1087-1:2000
Terminology work -- Vocabulary -- Part 1: Theory
and application, November 2004
Temporary
employment
See Employment, temporary
See also: Term - UN, Terminology, Thesaurus
Term - UN
A term is a word or phrase used to designate a
concept
See also: Employment, temporary
Temporary
exportation (of
goods) for outward
processing
The temporary exportation [of goods] for outward
processing is a "customs procedure under which
goods which are in free circulation in a customs
territory may be temporarily exported for
manufacturing, processing or repair abroad and
then reimported with total or partial exemption
from import duties and taxes...'compensating
products' means the products obtained abroad
during or as a result of the manufacturing,
processing or repair of the goods temporarily
exported for outward processing". The
compensating products may be "placed in a
customs warehouse or a free zone before being
declared for home use" (Kyoto Convention, annex
E.8, definitions (a) and (d) and recommended
practice 25).
Source: Terminology on Statistical Metadata,
Conference of European Statisticians Statistical
Standards and Studies, No. 53, UNECE, Geneva
2000
See also: Term - ISO
Terminal costs
Costs incurred to prevent environmental problems
when production ceases (decommissioning of
nuclear power plants, final storage of nuclear
waste, sealing of landfills …). These costs should
be anticipated during the production periods prior
to closure and provision made for them to be met
during the life of the asset.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
Source: United Nations, 2004, International
781
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 6.59
Termination
See Winding up
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Clôture
Terms of repayment
(of aid)
The terms of repayment [of aid] may be the
following:
See also: Winding-up
Termination charges
Fees that wireless telephone companies pay to
complete calls on wireline phone networks or vice
versa.
- Equal principal payments (EPP) - denotes a fixed
schedule of equal instalments of principal adding
up to the face value of the loan. Interest is
charged on outstanding principal and the amount
of individual service payments decreases with each
payment of principal.
Source: Cellular Mobile Pricing Structures and
Trends, Working Party on Telecommunication and
Information Services Policies – November 1999,
page 9, Select Glossary of Mobile Terms
- In the annuity method, each service payment is
established as an equal amount, within which the
interest component declines with time while the
principal component increases.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/54/42/2538118.pdf
- Lump sum means the loan is repaid in a single
amount (principal and interest) at maturity. If
interest is paid at various earlier dates, then the
repayment schedule is a particular case of equal
principal payments and is reported under that
category.
Terminological entry
An entry containing information on terminological
units for a specific Administered item within a
Context (subject field).
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179-3 Information technology - Metadata registries
(MDR) - Part 3: Registry metamodel and basic
attributes", February 2003
Source: OECD, 2004, Development Co-operation
Directorate (DAC), Glossary - CRS aid activity
database, OECD, Paris
See also: ISO / IEC 11179
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_14718511_1_1_1_1,00.html
Terminological system
A concept system with designations for each
concept.
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
Terms of trade
Termes de l‟echange
Terms of trade is the ratio of export and import
prices
See also: Concept, ISO / IEC 11179
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Terminology
Terminology is a set of terms
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: Economic Commission for Europe of the
United Nations (UNECE), "Terminology on
Statistical Metadata", Conference of European
Statisticians Statistical Standards and Studies, No.
53, Geneva, 2000
Terracing
Terracing refers to step-like surface that breaks
the continuity of a slope
Hyperlink:
http://www.unece.org/stats/publications/53metad
aterminology.pdf
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture –
Vol. 3: Methods and Results, OECD, 2001,
glossary, pages 389-391
See also: Special language, Term - ISO
Tertiary education
(ISCED 56)
See Tertiary-type A education (ISCED 5A and
Tertiary-type B education (ISCED 5B)
Terms of reference
rescheduling
Paris Club rescheduling involving only a small
number of creditors. Typically this does not require
a rescheduling meeting between the debtor
country and its creditors, with the agreement
being reached through an exchange of letters.
See also: Tertiary-type A education (ISCED 5A),
Tertiary-type B education (ISCED 5B)
Tertiary exchange
rates
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
782
See Exchange rates
Education (ISCED)., Tertiary-type A education
(ISCED 5A)
See also: Exchange rates
Test approach
See Axiomatic approach
Tertiary treatment
Traitement tertiare
Tertiary treatment is the advanced treatment
process, following secondary treatment of waste
water, that produces high—quality water. Tertiary
treatment includes removal of nutrients such as
phosphorus and nitrogen and practically all
suspended and organic matter from waste water
See also: Axiomatic approach
TEU-kilometre
Unit of measure of container transport which
represents the transport of one twenty-foot
equivalent unit (TEU) over one kilometre.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: The distance taken into account is the
distance actually travelled.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: Secondary treatment
Tertiary-type A
education (ISCED 5A)
Tertiary-type A programmes (ISCED 5A) are
largely theory-based and are designed to provide
sufficient qualifications for entry to advanced
research programmes and professions with high
skill requirements, such as medicine, dentistry or
architecture.
TEU-kilometre offered
Unit of measure representing the movement of one
twenty-foot equivalent unit (TEU) of capacity in a
container ship over one kilometre.
Tertiary-type A programmes have a minimum
cumulative theoretical duration (at tertiary level)
of three years‘ full-time equivalent, although they
typically last four or more years.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
These programmes are not exclusively offered at
universities.
Context: Conversely, not all programmes
nationally recognised as university programmes
fulfil the criteria to be classified as tertiary-type A.
Tertiary-type A programmes include second degree
programmes like the American Master.
Theoretical age
Theoretical ages refer to the ages as established
by law and regulation for the entry and ending of a
cycle of education. Note that the theoretical ages
may differ significantly from the typical ages.
First and second programmes are sub-classified by
the cumulative duration of the programmes, i.e.,
the total study time needed at the tertiary level to
complete the degree.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Theory of second best
The theory of the second best suggests that when
two or more markets are not perfectly competitive,
then efforts to correct only one of the distortions
may in fact drive the economy further away from
Pareto efficiency.
See also: International Standard Classification of
Education (ISCED)., Tertiary-type B education
(ISCED 5B)
Tertiary-type B
education (ISCED 5B)
Tertiary-type B programmes (ISCED 5B) are
typically shorter than those of tertiary-type A and
focus on practical, technical or occupational skills
for direct entry into the labour market, although
some theoretical foundations may be covered in
the respective programmes. They have a minimum
duration of two years full-time equivalent at the
tertiary level.
Context: Thus, for example, if there is one industry
which can never satisfy all the conditions for
perfect competition, it is no longer clear that the
optimal policy is to move the remaining industries
towards perfect competition. Moreover, the
conditions under which Pareto efficiency can be
achieved under these circumstances are complex
and not likely to be implementable.
Thus, the defence of competition policy often
requires giving weight to more than Pareto
efficiency. For example, competition policy may be
defended on the grounds of equity, democracy and
incentives. However, achievement towards Pareto
efficiency is generally given more weight in the
application of competition policy.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: International Standard Classification of
783
Source: OECD, 2004, Promise and Problems of EDemocracy: Challenges of Online Citizen
Engagement, OECD, Paris, Annex 1: Commonly
used E-Engagement Terms
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Three pillar approach
to sustainable
development
All of the economic, social and environmental
systems must be simultaneously sustainable in and
of themselves. Satisfying any one of these three
sustainability systems without also satisfying the
others is deemed insufficient.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Thermal coal
See Steam coal
See also: Steam coal
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 1.11
Thermal pollution
Pollution thermique
Thermal pollution is the discharge of heated
effluents from industrial processes such as electric
power generation, atomic power stations and other
factories at temperatures that can affect the life
process of aquatic organisms
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Threshold model
Any model involving a change at some threshold
value of a regressor variable, particularly models
for the effects of drugs that imply zero effect below
a critical level.
Thesaurus
A thesaurus is a tool that associates related terms,
and thesaurus terms assist in locating an existing
data element.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: ISO/IEC FDIS 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registries - Part 1:
Framework", March 2004
See also: Data element, ISO / IEC 11179, Term ISO
Threshold rule
Usually, with the threshold rule, a cell in a table of
frequencies is defined to be sensitive if the number
of respondents is less than some specified number.
Some agencies require at least five respondents in
a cell, others require three. When thresholds are
not respected, an agency may restructure tables
and combine categories or use cell suppression,
rounding or the confidentiality edit, or provide
other additional protection in order to satisfy the
rule.
Third International
Mathematics and
Science Study
(TIMSS)
The Third International Mathematics and Science
Study, conducted by the IEA, measured the
mathematics and science achievement of fourth
and eighth-grade students in 1995, 1999 and
2003.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Third party
Tiers administrateur
administrator (TPA)
An entity other than a plan sponsor, that is
responsible for administering an occupational
pension plan.
Tide / wave / ocean
energy
Mechanical energy derived from tidal movement or
wave motion and exploited for electricity
generation.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Thread
A series of messages that have been posted as
replies to each other in a discussion forum.
Tied aid credits
784
Tied aid credits are official or officially supported
Loans, credits or Associated Financing packages
where procurement of the goods or services
involved is limited to the donor country or to a
group of countries which does not include
substantially all developing countries (or Central
and Eastern European Countries (CEECs)/New
Independent States (NIS) in transition).
increasing number of economists suggest adopting
a rule of reason approach to tied selling.
Context: Tied aid credits are subject to certain
disciplines concerning their concessionality levels,
the countries to which they may be directed, and
their developmental relevance so as to avoid using
aid funds on projects that would be commercially
viable with private finance, and to ensure that
recipient countries receive good value.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Tiering
Addressing issues and impacts at appropriate
decision-making levels (e.g. from the policy to
project levels).
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
Development Assistance Committee".
Source: OECD, 2006, DAC Guidelines and
Reference Series Applying Strategic Environmental
Assessment: Good Practice Guidance for
Development Co-operation, OECD, Paris
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
Time coverage
The length of time, e.g. years, for which data are
collected.
Tied aid loans
Bilateral loans that are linked to purchases of
goods and services by the debtor country from the
creditor country.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Time lag
The difference in time by which one observation
lags behind or is later than another.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Tied selling
Tied selling refers to situations where the sale of
one good is conditioned on the purchase of another
good. One variant is full-line forcing in which a
seller presses (or forces) a complete line of
products on a buyer who is predominantly
interested in only a specific product.
See also: Lag
Time of acquisition
Moment de
l‟acquisition
The time at which goods and services are acquired
is when the change of ownership occurs or the
delivery of the services is completed
Context: Tied selling is sometimes a means of
price discrimination. Competition concerns have
been expressed that tying may foreclose
opportunities for other firms to sell related
products or may increase barriers to entry for
those that do not offer a full line of products.
Source: SNA 9.34
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
An opposite view is that these practices are
efficiency driven i.e., used to reduce costs of
producing and distributing the line of products and
ensuring that like quality products are used to
complement the product being sold.
Time of recording IMF
The time of recording for transactions and, hence,
for holdings is governed by the principle of accrual
accounting. For financial claims and liabilities,
changes of ownership are considered to have taken
place at (or be proxied by) the time that the
parties to the transactions record them in their
books or accounts.
For example, a computer manufacturer may
require purchase of disks in order to prevent
damage to or poor performance of his equipment
by the use of substitute lower quality disks.
There is increasing recognition that depending on
different market situations, tied selling
arrangements may have a valid business rationale.
In the administration of competition policy, an
If no precise date can be fixed, the reporter may
use the date on which the creditor received
payment or the date on which some other financial
785
claim was satisfied.
job (or jobs) with increased hours of work; to
increase the hours of work in any of their current
jobs; or a combination of the above.
For direct investment income data, dividends
should be recorded as the date they are payable
and income on debt as it is accrued
In order to show how "willingness to work
additional hours" is expressed in terms of action
which is meaningful under national circumstances,
those who have actively sought to work additional
hours should be distinguished from those who
have not.
Source: Report on the Survey of Implementation
of Implementation of Methodological Standards for
Direct Investment – IMF, OECD, March 2000 –
Appendix II: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms.
Actively seeking to work additional hours is to be
defined according to the criteria used in the
definition of job search used for the measurement
of the economically active population, also taking
into account activities needed to increase the
hours of work in the current job;
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/bopage/pdf/mar2000.
pdf
Time of recording SDMX
Time of recording refers to the date the
administered item was recorded in a dissemination
medium. This may be the date the item was first
recorded or the date an existing item was
amended.
(b) "available to work additional hours", i.e. are
ready, within a specified subsequent period, to
work additional hours, given opportunities for
additional work. The subsequent period to be
specified when determining workers' availability to
work additional hours should be chosen in light of
national circumstances and comprise the period
generally required for workers to leave one job in
order to start another;
Context: In National Accounts, time of recording
pertains to the issues involved in deciding whether
to record a transaction with regard to when the
claim arises (accrual) or when it is to be paid
(cash). See: United Nations, "System of National
Accounts (SNA) 1993" and International Monetary
Found, "Balance of Payments Manual (BPM)",
Washington D.C., 1993.
(c) "worked less than a threshold relating to
working time", i.e. persons whose "hours actually
worked" in all jobs during the reference period, as
defined in current international guidelines
regarding working time statistics, were below a
threshold, to be chosen according to national
circumstances.
The time of recording for a transaction is governed
by the principle of accrual accounting.
This threshold may be determined by e.g. the
boundary between full-time and part-time
employment, median values, averages, or norms
for hours of work as specified in relevant
legislation, collective agreements, agreements on
working time arrangements or labour practices in
countries.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) – BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF and OECD
– Metadata Common Vocabulary, Release 1,
December 2003
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
Context: The primary objective of measuring
underemployment and inadequate employment
situations is to improve the analysis of
employment problems and contribute towards
formulating and evaluating short-term and longterm policies and measures designed to promote
full, productive and freely chosen employment as
specified in the International Labour Organisation
Employment Policy Convention (No. 122) and
Recommendations (Nos. 122 and 169) adopted by
the International Labour Conference in 1964 and
1984.
See also: Accounting basis, Date of last change,
Time of recording - IMF
Time period
See Period (interval)
See also: Period (interval)
Time related
underemployment
Time-related underemployment exists when the
hours of work of an employed person are
insufficient in relation to an alternative
employment situation in which the person is willing
and available to engage.
In this context, statistics on underemployment and
indicators of inadequate employment situations
should be used to complement statistics on
employment, unemployment and inactivity and the
circumstances of the economically active
population in a country.
Persons in time-related underemployment
comprise all persons in employment, as defined in
current international guidelines regarding
employment statistics, who satisfy the following
three criteria during the reference period used to
define employment:
The measurement of underemployment is an
integral part of the framework for measuring the
labour force established in current international
guidelines regarding statistics of the economically
active population; and the indicators of inadequate
employment situations should as far as possible be
consistent with this framework.
(a) "willing to work additional hours", i.e. wanted
another job (or jobs) in addition to their current
job (or jobs) to increase their total hours of work;
to replace any of their current jobs with another
786
magnitude.
Underemployment reflects underutilization of the
productive capacity of the employed population,
including those which arise from a deficient
national or local economic system.
In GESMES/TS, a time series is a time-ordered
vector of observations. A time series is uniquely
defined within a data set by its key. (European
Central Bank (ECB), Bank for International
Settlement (BIS), Eurostat, International Monetary
Fund (IMF), Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), "GESMES/TS
User Guide", Release 3.00, February, 2003;
unpublished on paper available at
http://www.sdmx.org/Data/GesmesTS_rel3.pdf)
Source: International Labour Organisation (ILO)
Resolution Concerning the measurement of
underemployment and inadequate employment
situations adopted by the 16th International
Conference of Labour Statisticians (October 1998),
para. 7
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
In the context of sub-annual [infra-annual]
statistics, a time series (TS) can be decomposed
into unobservable components. In the most
complete case, these components are the trend
(T), the cyclical ( C), the seasonal (S) and the
irregular (I) components.
See also: Invisible underemployment,
Underemployment, Visible underemployment
Time reversal test
Test de réversibilité
dans le temps
A test that may be used under the axiomatic
approach which requires that if the prices and
quantities in the two periods being compared are
interchanged the resulting price index is the
reciprocal of the original price index.
The four components of the time series may each
be independent of all the others, in which case the
behaviour of the time series is simply the sum of
the components which are additively related (i.e.
TS = T+C+S+I). However, most analysts believe
that it is unlikely that the time series components
are perfectly independent of each other, and are
therefore more likely to be multiplicatively related
(i.e. TS=T*C*S*I).
When an index satisfies this test, the same result
is obtained whether the direction of change is
measured forwards in time from the first to the
second period or backwards from the second to the
first period.
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
4: Guidelines for the reporting of different forms of
data
Context: The time reversal test requires that the
index for the later period based on the earlier
period should be the reciprocal of that for the
earlier period based on the later period; one of the
desirable features of the ―Fisher Ideal‖ price and
volume indexes is that they satisfy this test (unlike
either the Paasche or Laspeyres indexes) (SNA
16.24. Available at
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp)
Hyperlink:
http://www.sdmx.org/Data/GesmesTS_rel3.pdf
See also: Characteristic, Data provider, Data set,
Dimension, Frequency, GESMES / CB, GESMES TS,
Key (time series or sibling group), Observation,
Pre-break value, Sibling group, Time series breaks,
Trend
Time series breaks
Breaks in statistical time series occur when there is
a change in the standards for defining and
observing a variable over time. Such changes may
the result of a single change or the combination of
multiple changes at any one point in time of
observation of the variable.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Context: The specific causes of breaks in a
statistical time series include changes in:
classifications used, definitions of the variable,
coverage, etc.
See also: Fisher‘s Ideal Index (price), Fisher‘s
Ideal Index (volume), Laspeyres price index,
Laspeyres volume index, Paasche price index,
Paasche volume index
Statistical agencies and users of time series data
for economic research to analyse and interpret
economic and social events and conditions attach
very high importance to the continuity and
consistency of data over time. However, it should
be emphasised that the occurrence of time series
break may not necessarily jeopardise the reliability
of a time series. Statistical agencies frequently
apply a number of techniques to ensure the
continuity of a time series.
Time series
Série temporelle
A time series is a set of regular time-ordered
observations of a quantitative characteristic of an
individual or collective phenomenon taken at
successive, in most cases equidistant, periods /
points of time.
Context: The essential quality of the series is the
order of the observations according to the time
variable, as distinct from those which are not
ordered at all, e.g. in a random sample chosen
simultaneously or are ordered to their internal
properties, e.g. a set arranged in order of
Finally, the impact of a time series break is often a
matter of judgement on the part of the user and
depends on the use(s) to which the data are put.
787
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Bretton-Woods system of exchange rates. Recent
interpretations of the proposal, while described as
a "Tobin tax" have been at variance with the
original idea, a point made by Tobin himself.
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
Source: OECD Economic Outlook Glossary
See also: GESMES TS, Observation, pre-break,
Pre-break value, Revision policy, Time series
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/28/54/1890650.ht
m
Timeliness
Speed of dissemination of the data - i.e., the lapse
of time between the end of a reference period (or a
reference date) and dissemination of the data.
Toilet
A toilet may be defined as an installation for the
disposal of human excreta. A flush toilet is an
installation provided with piped water that permits
humans to discharge their wastes and from which
the wastes are flushed by water
Context: In SDMX, "Timeliness and Punctuality" is
a single entity. Timeliness refers to the speed of
dissemination of the data - i.e., the lapse of time
between the end of a reference period (or a
reference date) and dissemination of the data. It
reflects many factors, including some that are
related to institutional arrangements, such as the
preparation of accompanying commentary and
printing.
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.384
Tolerance
(Environmental)
Tolerance is the:
Punctuality refers to the possible time lag existing
between the actual delivery date of data and the
target date when it should have been delivered, for
instance, with reference to dates announced in
some official release calendar or previously agreed
among partners.
Tolérance
1. ability of an organism to endure unfavourable
environmental conditions;
2. amount of a chemical in food considered safe for
humans or animals
Source: International Monetary Fund (IMF), "Guide
to the Data Dissemination Standards, Module 1:
The Special Data Dissemination Standard",
Washington, May 1996
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/bopage/pdf/mar2000.
pdf
Tolerance (Statistical)
In computing stepwise regression, the tolerance of
a regressor variable is the proportion of its sum of
squares about the mean not accounted for by
other variables already included in the regression
equation.
See also: Data, Punctuality, Quality – Eurostat,
Quality – IMF, Release calendar, Statistical Data
and Metadata Exchange (SDMX)
Tissue engineering
Refers to the technologies used to induce:
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
- (Injected) liver, cartilage, etc., cells to grow
(within a recipient organism's body) and form
replacement [integral] tissues.
- (Extant) cells within the body encouraged to
grow and form desired tissues, via precise injection
of relevant compounds (e.g. certain growth
factors, growth hormones, stem cells, etc.).
Tolerance distribution
The distribution among a number of individuals of
the critical level of intensity at which a stimulus
will just produce a reaction in each individual.
Although the distribution of these tolerances may
be skew, it is often possible to make it
approximately Normal by a simple transformation
such as the logarithmic.
- Laboratory grown tissue or organs to replace or
support the function of defective or injured body
parts (an example is skin tissue culture for grafts).
Source: OECD, 2005, A Framework for
Biotechnology Statistics, OECD, Paris, Annex 1:
Glossary of Terms Used in the List-Based Definition
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Tobin tax
Tobin tax is the header commonly given to the
proposal for levying all foreign exchange
transactions. James Tobin first laid out such a
proposal in the wake of the breakdown of the
Tolerance limits
788
In quality control, the limiting values between
which measurements must lie if an article is to be
acceptable, as distinct from confidence limits.
Tonne-kilometre by
inland waterway
Unit of measure of goods transport which
represents the transport of one tonne by inland
waterways over one kilometre.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Context: The distance taken into account is the
distance actually run.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Tonne kilometre
offered (for rail
transport)
Unit of measure representing the movement of one
tonne available in a wagon when performing
services for which it is primarily intended over one
kilometre.
Tonne-kilometre by oil
pipeline
Unit of measure of transport which represents
transport of one tonne of goods by oil pipeline over
one kilometre.
Context: The distance to be considered is that
actually run. Shunting and other similar
movements are excluded.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: The distance taken into account is the
distance actually run.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Tonne of oil
equivalent (TOE)
Unit of measurement of energy consumption : 1
TOE = 0.041868 TJ.
Tonne-kilometre by
rail
Unit of measure of goods transport which
represents the transport of one tonne of goods by
rail over a distance of one kilometre.
Conversion factors adopted by the International
Energy Agency (IEA) for 1991 are the following:
-----
Motor gasoline 1.070
Gas/diesel oil 1.035
Liquefied petroleum gas 1.130
Natural gas 0.917
Context: The distance to be covered is the distance
actually run on the considered network.
The conversion factor used by the IEA for
electricity is: 1 TWh = 0.086 Mtoe.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Tonne-kilometre by
road
Unit of measure of goods transport which
represents the transport of one tonne by road over
one kilometre.
Tonne-kilometre (for
sea transport)
Unit of measure of goods transport which
represents the transport of one tonne by sea over
one kilometre.
Context: The distance to be taken into
consideration is the distance actually run.
Context: The distance taken into account is the
distance actually travelled .
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Tonne-kilometre
789
offered (for inland
waterways transport)
Unit of measure representing the movement of one
tonne available in an inland waterways transport
(IWT) freight vessel when performing the services
for which it is primarily intended over one
kilometre.
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Top and bottom
coding
It consists in setting top-codes or bottom-codes on
quantitative variables. A top-code for a variable is
an upper limit on all published values of that
variable. Any value greater than this upper limit is
replaced by the upper limit or is not published on
the microdata file at all. Similarly, a bottom-code is
a lower limit on all published values for a variable.
Different limits may be used for different
quantitative variables, or for different
subpopulations.
Context: The distance to be considered is the
distance actually run.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Tonne-kilometre
offered (for road
transport)
Unit of measure representing the movement of one
tonne available in a road goods vehicle when
performing services for which it is primarily
intended over one kilometre.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Context: The distance to be considered is the
distance actually run.
Törnqvist price index
Indice de prix de
Tornqvist
A Törnqvist price index is a weighted geometric
average of the price relatives using arithmetic
averages of the value shares in the two periods as
weights.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: It is a symmetric index and a superlative
index. Also known as the ―Törnqvist-Theil price
index.‖
Tonne-kilometre
offered (for sea
transport)
Unit of measure representing the movement of one
tonne of carrying capacity in a seagoing vessel
over one kilometre.
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Monetary Fund, Washington
DC.
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Context: The distance to be considered is the
distance actually travelled. In practice, carrying
capacity will be measured in deadweight tonnes
(DWT). The DWT includes the weight of all cargo,
fuel, water, ballast, stores, crew etc., which a
seagoing vessel can carry. The deadweight is
expressed in tons (2240 lbs) or tonnes (metric ton
of 1000 kilograms).
Source: SNA 16.27
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Törnqvist volume index
Törnqvist volume
Indice de volume de
index
Tornqvist
A Törnqvist volume index is a weighted geometric
average of the quantity relatives using arithmetic
averages of the value shares in the two periods as
weights
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: SNA 16.27
Tonne-kilometre
offered (for transport
by oil pipeline)
Unit of measure representing the transport
capacity of oil pipeline measured by the movement
over one kilometre of a tonne of goods that can be
transported by oil pipeline during the given period.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Törnqvist price index
Toronto terms
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
790
See Concessional restructuring
See also: Concessional restructuring
Total coverage is the registration of all vital events
occurring in each geographical area and among all
population groups of the country
Total (domestic)
Material input
Direct Material Input plus unused domestic
extraction (in economy – wide material flow
accounting).
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.200
Total Domestic Output
(TDO)
The sum of Direct Material Output and disposal of
unused domestic extraction. This indicator
represents the total quantity of material outputs to
the environment released on the national territory
by economic activity (in economy-wide material
flow accounting).
Total actual
renewable water
resources
The sum of the internal renewable water resources
and natural incoming flow originating outside the
country, taking into account the quantity of flow
reserved to upstream and downstream countries
through formal or informal agreements.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.203
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.116
Total economy
Économie
The total economy consists of all the institutional
units which are resident in the economic territory
of a country
Source: SNA 2.22
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Total allowable catch Total admissible de
(TAC)
capture (TAC)
The total allowable catch (TAC) is a catch limit set
for a particular fishery, generally for a year or a
fishing season. TACs are usually expressed in
tonnes of live-weight equivalent, but are
sometimes set in terms of numbers of fish
Total element long
run incremental cost
(TELRIC)
The long-run incremental cost of providing a given
network element.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Total correlation
The zero order correlation between two variates,
i.e. the correlation between the original data rather
than between residuals after some common
variation has been abstracted.
Total expenditure on
health
Total (or national) expenditure on health is based
on the following identity and functional boundaries
of medical care :
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
HC.1-4 - Personal health care services
HC.5 - Medical goods dispensed to out-patients
TPHE - Total personal expenditure on health (HC.1
+...+ HC.5)
HC.6 - Services of prevention and public health
HC.7 - Health administration and health insurance
HC.6 + HC.7 - Total expenditure on collective
services.
TCHE - Total current expenditure on health (HC.1
+...+ HC.7) Invest - Investment into medical
facilities
THE - Total expenditure on health (TCHE + Invest
Total costs
See Costs
See also: Costs
Total coverage
791
)
Total hospital beds
Total hospital beds are all hospital beds which are
regularly maintained and staffed and immediately
available for the care of admitted patients.
Context: For more detailed definitions see A
System of Health Accounts, OECD, 2000, chapter 3
and chapter 9, and the definitions of individual
items in the hypertext.
Context: Inclusions:
Source: OECD International Classification for
Health Accounts, OECD
- Beds in all hospitals, including general hospitals,
mental health and substance abuse hospitals, and
other specialty hospitals
- Occupied and unoccupied beds
Total factor
productivity
Total factor productivity is a synonym for Multifactor productivity (MFP). The OECD productivity
manual uses the MFP acronym to signal a certain
modesty with respect to the capacity of capturing
all factors‘ contribution to output growth.
Exclusions:
- Surgical tables, recovery trolleys, emergency
stretchers, beds for same-day care, cots for
healthy infants
- Beds in wards which were closed for any reason
- Provisional and temporary beds
- Beds in nursing and residential care facilities.
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Source: OECD Health Data 2007: Statistics and
Indicators for 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2007,
Data sources, definitions and methods
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
Total hospital
employment
Number of persons employed (head counts), and
number of full-time equivalent (FTE) persons
employed in general and specialty hospitals. Selfemployed are included.
See also: Multi-factor productivity (MFP)
Total final
Consommation finale
consumption
totale
Total final consumption is the total value of all
expenditures on individual and collective
consumption goods and services incurred by
resident households, resident NPISHs and general
government units; it may also be defined in terms
of actual final consumption as the value of all the
individual goods and services acquired by resident
households plus the value of the collective services
provided by general government to the community
or large sections of the community
Source: OECD Health Data 2007: Statistics and
Indicators for 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2007,
Data sources, definitions and methods
Total hours worked
Total des heures
travaillées
See Hours worked, total
Source: SNA 9.98
See also: Hours worked – total
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Total labour force
Population active
totale
The total labour force, or currently active
population, comprises all persons who fulfil the
requirements for inclusion among the employed or
the unemployed during a specified brief reference
period.
Total health
employment
Number of persons (head counts) and number of
full-time equivalent (FTE) persons, employed
(including self-employed) in health services,
including 'contracted out' staff and excluding
pharmaceutical and medical equipment
manufacturing employees.
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning Economically Active
Population, Employment, Unemployment and
Underemployment Adopted by the 13th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians,
October 1982, para. 8
Context: Administrative staff, private for-profit and
non-profit medical benefit insurers are included.
Health professionals working outside health
services are excluded (e.g. physicians employed in
industry). Full-time equivalent conversions vary
across countries but are taken, unless otherwise
noted, to be weighted on the basis of the standard
or normal working time.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/
index.htm
See also: Civilian labour force, Employed persons,
Not currently active population, Unemployed – ILO
Source: OECD Health Data 2007: Statistics and
Indicators for 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2007,
Data sources, definitions and methods
Total material
consumption (TMC)
This indicator measures the total primary material
requirement associated with domestic consumption
activities. TMC equals Total Material Requirement
792
minus exports and their hidden flows (in economywide material flow accounting).
Total nonŔrenewable
water
The volume of water which is not renewable by
endogenous processes during the hydrological
cycle. It includes fossil groundwater generated in
geological times as well as a large part of water in
lakes whose replenishment rate is very small.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.207
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.116
Total Material Output
(TMO)
The sum of Total Domestic Output plus exports. It
therefore measures the total of material that
leaves the economy (in economy-wide material
flow accounting).
Total official flows
(Gross or net)
The sum of official development assistance (ODA)
and other official flows (OOF). Represents the total
(gross or net) disbursements by the official sector
of the creditor country to the recipient country.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.205
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Total material
requirement (TMR)
This indicator includes, in addition to Domestic
Material Input, the upstream hidden material flows
which are associated with imports and
predominantly burden the environment in other
countries. It measures the total ―material base‖ of
an economy; that is, the total primary resource
requirements of the production activities. Adding
these upstream flows converts imports into their
―primary resource extraction equivalent‖ (in
economy-wide material flow accounting).
Total population
For census purposes, the total population of the
country consists of all persons falling within the
scope of the census. In the broadest sense, the
total may comprise either all usual residents of the
country or all persons present in the country at the
time of the census.
The total of all usual residents is generally referred
to as the de jure population and the total of all
persons present as the de facto population
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.201
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1.
United Nations, New York, 1998, Series M, No. 67,
Rev. 1, para. 2.42
See also: De facto population, De jure population
Total quality
management
approach to editing
The aim of total quality management approach to
editing is to prevent errors rather then correct
them and to learn from past (editing) experiences
in order to improve the data collection process.
Total natural
renewable water
The sum of the average annual flow of rivers and
recharge of ground water generated from
endogenous precipitation and the natural flow
originating outside the country.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.116
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
793
(budget revenues).
Total regression
A regression coefficient of zero order, i.e. a
coefficient which involves only one dependent and
one independent variate. The expression is
probably better avoided.
The percentage TSE is the ratio of the TSE to the
GDP.
The nomenclature and definitions of this indicator
replaced the former Total Transfers as from 1999.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Total suspended
Paticules totales en
particulate matter
suspension
(TSPM)
See Suspended particulate matter
Total return swap
A credit derivative that swaps the total return on a
financial instrument, cash flows and capital gains
and losses, for a guaranteed interest rate, such as
an interbank rate, plus a margin.
See also: Suspended particulate matter (SPM)
Total suspended
solids (TSS)
A measure of the suspended solids in waste water,
effluent, or water bodies, determined by tests for
"total suspended non-filterable solids‖.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: OECD, 2007, Business and the
Environment: Policy Incentives and Corporate
Responses, OECD, Paris
Total service long run
incremental cost
(TSLRIC)
The long-run incremental cost of providing a given
end-user service (which may use several different
network elements).
Total trade credits
Total trade credits refers to all official and officially
supported trade credits. In addition to the nonbank trade credits it includes financial or buyer
credits extended by banks which are guaranteed or
insured by an official export credit guarantee
agency in an OECD reporting country. These
guaranteed bank credits are also included in the
amounts shown in Bank loans, Liabilities to banks,
Total liabilities to banks - locational, Total liabilities
to banks - consolidated.
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Total Support
Estimate (TSE)
The Total Support Estimate (TSE) is an indicator of
the annual monetary value of all gross transfers
from taxpayers and consumers arising from policy
measures which support agriculture, net of the
associated budgetary receipts, regardless of their
objectives and impact on farm production and
income, or consumption of farm products.
These data only cover trade credits which have
been guaranteed or insured by the official sector in
the creditor country. They include credits extended
to both the public and private sector in the
borrowing country
Source: Joint BIS-IMF-OECD-World Bank statistics
on external debt, metadata
Hyperlink:
http://www1.oecd.org/dac/debt/htm/metadata.ht
m#Line%20A
Context: The TSE is the sum of the explicit and
implicit gross transfers from consumers of
agricultural commodities to agricultural producers
net of producer financial contributions (in MPS and
CSE); the gross transfers from taxpayers to
agricultural producers (in PSE); the gross transfers
from taxpayers to general services provided to
agriculture (GSSE); and the gross transfers from
taxpayers to consumers of agricultural
commodities (in CSE). As the transfers from
consumers to producers are included in the MPS,
the TSE is also the sum of the PSE, the GSSE, and
the transfers from taxpayers to consumers (in
CSE).
Tour operators
Tour operators are businesses that combine two or
more travel services (e.g., transport,
accommodation, meals, entertainment,
sightseeing) and sell them through travel agencies
or directly to final consumers as a single product
(called a package tour) for a global price.
The components of a package tour might be preestablished or can result from an ―a la carte‖
procedure, in which the visitor decides the
combination of services he/she wishes to acquire
The TSE measures the overall transfers associated
with agricultural support, financed by consumers
(transfers from consumers) and taxpayers
(transfers from taxpayers) net of import receipts
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
794
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, para 3.46
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, para Annex II.B
Tourism
Tourism is defined as the activities of persons
travelling to and staying in places outside their
usual environment for not more than one
consecutive year for leisure, business and other
purposes not related to the exercise of an activity
remunerated from within the place visited.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
Context: The use of this broad concept makes it
possible to identify tourism between countries as
well as tourism within a country. "Tourism" refers
to all activities of visitors, including both "tourists
(overnight visitors)" and "same-day visitors".
Tourism characteristic
industry
Tourism Satellite Accounts defines a tourism
characteristic industry as a group of
establishments whose principal productive activity
is a tourism characteristic activity. Tourism
industries are the group of all tourism
characteristic industries.
The term ―activity of persons‖ takes its general
meaning as a specified individual pursuit and not
as an abbreviated term for ―productive economic
activity‖, as it is used, for instance, in ISIC, Rev.3.
In tourism, the ―activities of persons" refer to the
pursuits of those individuals who qualify as
―visitors"
Context: Within the functional perspective, the
1993 System of National Accounts (SNA) defines
industries as ―groups of establishments engaged in
the same kind of productive activities (1993 SNA,
para. 15.13). The set of tourism characteristic
activities does not comprise a unique industry
conforming to this definition. But this set does
cover a number of ―industries‖ in the International
Standard Industrial Classification (ISIC) sense.
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, paras 1.1and 2.1
Tourism characteristic
activities
Tourism characteristic activities can be identified
as those productive activities whose principal
output is characteristic of tourism.
The analysis of tourism from a supply point of view
focuses on producing units of the same kind as
those used in the supply and use tables of SNA93,
namely establishments. Within the functional
perspective, SNA93 defines an "industry" as "a
group of establishments engaged in the same kind
of productive activities".
As the set of these activities does not comprise a
single industry conforming to 1993 System of
National Accounts definition, the Tourism Satellite
Accounts defines tourism industries as all
establishments whose principal productive activity
is a tourism characteristic activity.
The set of characteristic tourism activities does not
comprise a single industry conforming to this
definition but this set does include a number of
classes of "industries" in the traditional sense.
Consequently, the TSA defines the "tourism
industries" as all establishments whose principal
productive activity is a tourism characteristic
productive activity. Special issues as travel
agencies and tour operators are also considered.
International Standard Industrial Classification
(ISIC) Rev. 3 activities relevant to tourism listed in
Annex II.B of Tourism Satellite Account:
Recommended Methodological Framework
comprise:
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, para 3.54
- Hotels and similar – ISIC 5510;
- Second home ownership (imputed) - part of ISIC
7010;
- Restaurants and similar – ISIC 5520;
- Railway passenger transport services – part of
ISIC 6010;
- Road passenger Transport services - part of ISIC
6021 and 6022;
- Water passenger transport services - part of each
of ISIC 6110 and 6120;
- Air passenger transport services - part of each of
ISIC 6210 and 6220;
- Transport supporting services - part of ISIC
6303;
- Transport equipment rental - part of each of ISIC
7111, 7112 and 7113;
- Travel agencies and similar – ISIC 6304;
- Cultural services – ISIC 9232, 9233;
- Sporting and other recreational services – part of
each of the following ISIC 9214, 9241, 9219, 9249
Tourism characteristic
products
Tourism characteristic products are products
which, in the absence of visitors, in most countries
would probably cease to exist in meaningful
quantity or for which the level of consumption
would be significantly reduced and for which it
seems possible to obtain statistical information
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, para 3.17
Tourism industries
795
Context: The list of tourism characteristic products
provided in Annex II of the Tourism Satellite
Account: Recommended Methodological
Framework is provisional and corresponds to
products considered characteristic for purposes of
the international comparability of results.
Consequently, it is meant to serve as a proposal of
how, in the future, the various international
organizations could present, in a comparable way,
the results of countries that have developed a TSA.
The main groupings in the list comprise:
See Tourism characteristic industry
See also: Tourism characteristic industry
Tourism Satellite
Account (TSA):
Recommended
Methodological
Framework
The Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework takes the form of a
basic system of concepts, classifications,
definitions, tables and aggregates linked to the
standard tables of the 1993 System of National
Accounts from a functional perspective. This
system has been developed to measure tourism
economic impacts in a national economy on an
annual basis
- accommodation services
- food and beverage serving services
- passenger transport services
- travel agency, tour operator and tourist guide
services
- cultural services
- recreation and other entertainment services
- miscellaneous services
Context: It is worth noting that the design of
functionally oriented satellite accounts might
provide for an extension of the production
boundary of SNA93, a reclassification of
transactions and transactors, or both. However, in
designing the TSA, a decision was made to focus,
for the time being, on reclassification within the
production boundary of SNA93, in order to come
up with aggregate measurements for tourism
comparable with other aggregate measurements
compiled within the SNA93 conceptual framework.
(Basic References on Tourism Statistics, World
Tourism Organisation).
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, UNSD, 2001, para 3.17
and Annex II
Tourism-specific
products (related to
visitor consumption)
Tourism-specific products (related to visitor
consumption) are the sum of the following two
categories:
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, para 1.19
- tourism characteristic products, and
- tourism-connected products.
The Tourism Satellite Accounts contains a list of
tourism-specific products primarily derived from
the Central Product Classification, Version 1.0, and
expanded, where required, for the analysis of
tourism.
Tourism value added
Value added is a measurement that is related to a
production process taken as a whole, that is, a
combination of inputs, capital goods, labour and
technology, in order to obtain a combination of
outputs.
Other classifications have also been considered,
such as the Classification of Individual
Consumption by Purpose (COICOP), the Statistical
Classification of Products by Activity (CPA) of the
European Union, the classification proposed by
OECD for the analysis of tourism and also some
lists established by national entities for the same
purpose.
Two alternative views of value added as it relates
to tourism can be identified:
- Most simply, the value added of the tourism
industries can be estimated as the sum of the
value added of each tourism characteristic
industry.
The list is provided in Annex 1 of Tourism Satellite
Account: Recommended Methodological
Framework
- Alternatively, a direct link between the demand
for tourism goods and services and their supply
can be determined, and value added for a certain
level of visitor consumption can be estimated.
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, para 3.17 and Annex 1
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, para 3.58
See also: Tourism characteristic products,
Tourism-connected products
Tourists
Tourists are persons who do not reside in the
country of arrival and are admitted to that country
under tourist visas (if required) for purposes of
leisure, recreation, holiday, visits to friends or
relatives, health or medical treatment, or religious
pilgrimage. They must spend at least a night in a
collective or private accommodation in the
receiving country and their duration of stay must
Tourism-connected
products
―Tourism-connected products‖ is a residual
category, including those that have been identified
as tourism-specific in a given country but for which
this attribute has not been acknowledged on a
worldwide basis.
796
not surpass 12 months
Standard gauge: 1.435 m
Large gauge: 1.524 m (VR, SZR) 1.600 m (CIE,
NIR)
1.668 m (RENFE, CP)
Narrow gauge: 0.60 m, 0.70 m, 0.75 m, 0.76 m,
0.785 m, 0.90 m, 1.00 m.
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Toxic pollutants
Polluants toxiques
Toxic pollutants are materials contaminating the
environment that cause death, disease and/or
birth defects in the organisms that ingest or absorb
them. The quantities and length of exposure
necessary to cause these effects can vary widely
Tractive vehicle
A vehicle equipped with prime mover and motor,
or with motor only, intended solely for hauling
other vehicles (a "locomotive") or for both hauling
other vehicles and for the carriage of passengers
and/or goods (a "railcar").
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Toxicity
Toxicité
Toxicity is the ability of a substance to cause
poisonous effects resulting in severe biological
harm or death after exposure to, or contamination
with, that substance
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Tractive vehiclekilometre
Unit of measure representing any movement of a
tractive vehicle over a distance of one kilometre.
TPP
Technological product and process
Context: Tractive vehicles running light and
shunting are included.
TQM
Total Quality Management
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Trace elements
Oligo-éléments
Trace elements are elements that occur in very
small quantities in living organisms. These
elements include lead, silver, iron, zinc, nickel,
cobalt and manganese. Some trace elements are
essential for life processes, while others are
detrimental. Even beneficial elements may be toxic
at higher levels
Tradable pollution
Autorisation de
permits
pollution négociable
Tradable pollution permits are rights to sell and
buy actual or potential pollution in artificially
created markets
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Track (railway)
A pair of rails over which railway vehicles can run.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Trade
See Exports of goods and services and Imports of
goods and services.
See also: Exports of goods and services –
merchandise trade – UN, Imports of goods and
services – merchandise trade – UN
Track gauge
Distance between a pair of rails measured between
the inside edges of the rail heads.
Trade balance
The trade balance is the difference between
exports and imports of goods and services.
The following track gauges are in use:
Source: SNA 2.166; Table 2.3, page 42
797
Trade mark
Trade mark refers to words, symbols or other
marks which are used by firms to distinguish their
products or services from those offered by others.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Context: A trade mark may be registered under
the Patent Act or the Trademark Act or other such
intellectual property legislation as may be
applicable. A trade mark may often become
equated with the product itself and may be a
source of competitive advantage. For example,
"kleenex" as a trade mark name is used to refer to
"tissue "handkerchiefs"; "Xerox" in place of
"photocopying"; "Coke" instead of a "cola drink".
Trade classification,
goods
Encompasses all commodities of international
trade.
Context: Of these, 720 are further divided into
2,805 items either to permit additional detail or to
permit correspondence with CCCN and other
economic classifications. Thus, there are 3,118
basic headings in SITC Revision 3. Any of these
may be further subdivided, if desired for national
use. The subgroups are arranged into 261 groups
which are designed to distinguish those
commodities in respect of which data are normally
sought in international trade returns. These
groups, in turn, are assembled into 67 divisions
which are designed to summarize the groups
according to their broader characteristics. The
divisions are finally consolidated into 10 sections
which serve to subdivide the trade aggregate
according to broad economic categories.
Trade marks may communicate information about
the quality of a good or service to consumers.
Firms which license their trade marks to retailers
may thus require conditions in the licensing
contract assuring uniform quality.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
For convenience in obtaining aggregates at each
level by automatic data processing equipment, the
code number of each commodity in SITC Revision
3 is so designed that the first digit determines the
section, the first two digits determine the division,
the first three digits determine the group, the first
four digits determine the subgroups and, if the
subgroup is divided, the five digits determine the
resulting items. (29, p. x)
See also: Intellectual property rights, Licensing
Trade restrictiveness
index (TRI)
The trade restrictiveness index (TRI) is an indicator
of welfare losses caused by commercial policy
instruments.
Source: United Nations. International Merchandise
Trade Statistics -- Concepts and Definitions. Series
F, No. 52, Rev. 2 (United Nations publication, Sales
No. E.98.XVII.16). paragraphs 91-110
The TRI weights trade policy measures by their
associated welfare losses to compile a single
synthetic measure. Implementing this technique is
demanding in terms of data requirements
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Trade credits and
Crédits commerciaux
advances
et avances
Trade credits and advances are trade credit for
goods and services extended directly to
corporations, to government, to non-profit
institutions, to households and to the rest of the
world and also advances for work that is in
progress (if classified as such under inventories) or
is to be undertaken
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Trade systems
There are two trade systems in common use by
which international merchandise trade statistics
are compiled the:
Source: (AF.71) - Annex to chapter XIII
- general trade system, and the
- special trade system
Trade margin
Marge (commerciale)
A trade margin is the difference between the actual
or imputed price realised on a good purchased for
resale (either wholesale or retail) and the price
that would have to be paid by the distributor to
replace the good at the time it is sold or otherwise
disposed of
Source: International Merchandise Trade Statistics,
Concepts and Definitions, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Studies in Methods, Series M, No. 52,
Rev. 2, page 9, para. 65
See also: Economic territory (of a country) –
SNA/UN, General trade system, Special trade
system – UN, Statistical territory (of a country) –
UN
Source: SNA 6.110
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Trade-balancing
measures
798
Requirement that the investor use earnings from
exports to pay for imports.
Trailer
Goods road vehicle designed to be hauled by a
road motor vehicle.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Context: This category exclude agricultural trailers
and caravans.
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Trading gains and
Revenu intérieur brut
losses
réel (RIB réel)
Trading gains and losses arise from changes in a
country‘s terms of trade; for example, if the prices
of a country‘s exports rise faster (or fall more
slowly) than the prices of its imports (i.e. if its
terms of trade improve) then an increased volume
of imports of goods and services can be purchased
by residents out of the receipts generated by a
given level of exports
Train
One or more railway vehicles hauled by one or
more locomotives or railcars, or by one railcar
alone, running under a given number or specific
designation from an initial fixed point to a terminal
fixed point.
Context: A light engine, i.e. a locomotive travelling
on its own, is not considered to be a train.
Source: SNA 16.152
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Trading partner
countries
Countries of origin and purchase in international
merchandise trade transactions.
Trainees
See Foreign trainees
Source: United Nations. International Merchandise
Trade Statistics -- Concepts and Definitions. Series
F, No. 52, Rev. 2 (United Nations publication, Sales
No. E.98.XVII.16). (para. 127)
See also: Foreign trainees
Plans à prestations
définies traditionnels
A defined benefits (DB) plan where benefits are
linked through a formula to the members' wages
or salaries, length of employment, or other factors.
Training for
unemployed adults
Training for unemployed adults is training
supported for reasons of labour market policy
other than the need to help the unemployed and
those at risk. Most frequently, grants to
enterprises for staff training in general
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: Definitions of the Standardised categories
and Sub-categories of Labour Market Programmes,
OECD, 2001
Traditional DB plan
See also: Defined benefit (DB) occupational
pension plans, Defined contribution (DC)
occupational pension plans, Hybrid DB plan, Mixed
DB plans
Training for
unemployed adults
and those at risk
Training for unemployed adults and those at risk
are programmes aimed mainly, though not always
exclusively, at the unemployed and those at risk of
losing their jobs, or other disadvantaged groups
such as the poor (especially in the United States).
Mostly in training centres, but also often in
enterprises
Traditional own
resources
EU traditional own resources refer to customs
duties and agricultural duties.
Source: Effects of European Union Accession, Part
1: Budgeting and Financial Control, OECD SIGMA
Paper No. 19, March 1998, Appendix 3: List of
Useful Terms
Source: Definitions of the Standardised categories
and Sub-categories of Labour Market Programmes,
OECD, 2001
Hyperlink:
http://appli1.oecd.org/olis/1997doc.nsf/LinkTo/OC
DE-GD(97)163
Train-kilometre
Unit of measure representing the movement of a
train over one kilometre.
799
franchising.
Context: The distance to be covered is the distance
actually run.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Tram
Passenger road vehicle designed to seat more than
nine persons (including the driver), which is
connected to electric conductors or powered by
diesel engine and which is rail-borne.
Transaction equality
The index number property that makes the relative
importance of each transaction involving the
purchase of a final product dependent solely on its
magnitude and not on the size of the country in
which it occurred.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
Tramway
Line of communication made up by a pair of rails
designed for use by trams (street cars).
Context: This includes both tramway laid down on
the road used by other road motor vehicles as well
as tramway running separately from the road.
Transaction price
See Market price
See also: Market prices – SNA
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Transaction prices
The prices actually paid by consumers to acquire
goods or services.
Source: A Guide to the Consumer Price Index 13th Series, Glossary, Australian Bureau of
Statistics
Tranches
See Collaterised mortgage obligation (CMO)
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/0/9171
F5CDC94489A9CA25697E0018FD59?Open&Highlig
ht=0,glossary
See also: Collaterised mortgage obligation (CMO)
Transaction
The buying and selling of a product on terms
mutually agreed by the buyer and seller.
See also: Market prices – SNA
Transaction tax
Transaction tax is a tax levied on the transaction of
securities.
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
Source: OECD, June 2004, Glossary, OECD
Economic Outlook, Paris, France
Transaction costs
Transaction costs refer to the costs involved in
market exchange. These include the costs of
discovering market prices and the costs of writing
and enforcing contracts.
Transactions Ŕ BPM
Opérations - MBP
Transactions, for the most part between residents
and non residents, consist of those involving
goods, services and income; those involving
financial claims on and liabilities to the rest of the
world; and those classified as transfers, which
involve offsetting entries to balance – in an
accounting sense- one side transaction.
Transaction cost economics, as developed primarily
by economists Coase and Williamson, suggests
that economic organizations emerge from costminimizing behaviour (including transaction costs)
in a world of limited information and opportunism.
Transaction-cost analysis has been used to explain
vertical integration, multinational enterprises, and
A transaction itself is defined as an economic flow
that reflects the creation, transformation
exchange, transfer or extinction of economic value
and involves changes in ownership of goods and/or
800
financial assets, the provision of services, or the
provision of labour and capital
A transfer is a transaction in which one institutional
unit provides a good, service or asset to another
unit without receiving from the latter any good,
service or asset in return as counterpart
Source: BPM para. 13
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
Source: SNA 8.3, 8.27
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Transactions – SNA
Transactions Ŕ SNA
Opération - SCN
A transaction is an economic flow that is an
interaction between institutional units by mutual
agreement or an action within an institutional unit
that it is analytically useful to treat like a
transaction, often because the unit is operating in
two different capacities
Transfer and
payments to other
private entities
Transfer and payments to other private entities are
government transfers and certain other payments
(mainly subsidies) to other private entities
(commercial companies and non-profit
organisations).
Source: SNA 3.12
These transfers and payments can take diverse
forms, e.g., transfers to business or labour
associations that provide adult education;
subsidies to companies or labour organisations (or
associations of such entities) that operate
apprenticeship programmes; and interest rate
subsidies or defaults guarantee payments to
private financial institutions that provide student
loans.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Transactions – BPM
Transactions account Compte d‟opération
A transactions account shows, for a given
transaction or group of transactions (for example,
interest), resources and uses for each sector (or
industry if relevant) engaged in this type of
transaction, but it does not show direct relations
between transacting sectors
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: SNA 2.152
Transfer clause
A provision that commits the debtor government to
guarantee the immediate and unrestricted transfer
of foreign exchange in all cases, provided that the
private sector pays the local currency counterpart
for servicing its debt.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Transactor principle
There are two principles that may serve as the
basis for geographic allocation of financial flows:
the debtor/creditor principle and the transactor
principle. Under the transactor principle,
transactions resulting from changes in the claims
and liabilities are allocated to the country of
residence of the non-resident party to the
transaction (the transactor), even if this is not the
country of residence of the direct investment
enterprise or direct investor
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Transfer in kind
Transfert en nature
A transfer in kind consists either of the transfer of
ownership of a good or asset, other than cash, or
the provision of a service, without any counterpart
Source: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms, OECD, 2001 – not published
See also: Debtor/creditor principle
Source: SNA 8.27 [3.40]
Transboundary
Pollution
pollution
transfrontalière
Transboundary pollution is pollution that originates
in one country but, by crossing the border through
pathways of water or air, is able to cause damage
to the environment in another country
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Transfer price
Prix de transfert
A transfer price is a price, adopted for bookkeeping purposes, which is used to value
transactions between affiliated enterprises
integrated under the same management at
artificially high or low levels in order to effect an
unspecified income payment or capital transfer
between those enterprises
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Transfer
Transfert
801
in nature
Source: SNA 3.79, BPM 97
Source: SNA 8.105
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Intra-company transfer price
Transfer risk
The risk that a borrower will not be able to convert
local currency into foreign exchange, and so be
unable to make debt-service payments in foreign
currency. The risk normally arises from exchange
restrictions imposed by the government in the
borrower‘s country. This is a particular kind of
political risk.
Transit of an inland
waterways transport
(IWT) vessel
Any laden or unladen inland waterways transport
(IWT) vessel which has entered and left the
country at different points by whatever means of
transport provided the total journey within the
country was by inland waterway and that there has
been no loading or unloading operation in the
country.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Context: IWT vessels loaded/unloaded at the
frontier of that country onto/from another mode of
transport are included.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Transferable deposits Dépôts transférables
Transferable deposits comprise all deposits that
are (a) exchangeable on demand at par, without
penalty or restriction; (b) freely transferable by
cheque or giro-order and (c) otherwise commonly
used to make payments
Transit of road vehicle
Any loaded or empty road motor vehicle, which
enters and leaves the country at different points by
whatever means of transport, provided the total
journey within the country is by road and that
there is no loading or unloading in the country.
Source: SNA 11.71, (AF.22) – Annex to chapter
XIII
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Context: Road motor vehicles loaded/unloaded at
the frontier of that country onto/from another
mode of transport are included.
Transferable revolving
underwriting facility
(TRUF)
Similar to an revolving underwriting facility (RUF),
but the underwriting banks‘ contingent liability
(backup line) to purchase notes in the event of
nonplacement by the borrower is fully transferable.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Transitional safeguard
mechanism
Allows members to impose restrictions against
individual exporting countries if the importing
country can show that both overall imports of a
product and imports from the individual countries
are entering the country in such increased
quantities as to cause — or threaten — serious
damage to the relevant domestic industry.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Transfers of individual Transferts de biens et
non-market goods or services non
services
marchands individuels
Transfers of individual non-market goods or
services consist of goods or services provided to
individual households free, or at prices which are
not economically significant, by non-market
producers of government units or NPISHs;
although some of the non-market services
produced by NPISHs have some of the
characteristics of collective services, all the nonmarket services produced by NPISHs are, for
simplicity and by convention, treated as individual
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Transitivity
802
See Circularity
Transport equipment Matériels de transport
(as assets)
(comme actifs)
Transport equipment (assets) consists of
equipment for moving people and objects, other
than any such equipment acquired by households
for final consumption
See also: Circularity
Transitivity (in
Transitivité
international
(comparaisons
comparisons)
internationales)
Transitivity (in international comparisons) is a
condition which implies that the direct (binary)
index for country k based on country i is equal to
the indirect index obtained by multiplying the
direct (binary) index for country k based on
country j by the direct (binary) index for country j
based on country i
Source: (AN.11131) – Annex to chapter XIII
Transport for hire of
reward
The carriage for remuneration, of persons or
goods, on behalf of third parties.
Source: SNA 16.88
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Circularity
Trans-national
Stocks transnationaux
fisheries
ou transfrontières
Trans-national fisheries are fisheries in which the
same resource stock(s) crosses the exclusive
economic zones (EEZs) of two or more countries
Transport margin
Marges (de transport)
A transport margin consists of those transport
charges paid separately by the purchaser in taking
delivery of the goods at the required time and
place
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Source: SNA 15.40 [15.42]
See also: Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ)
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Transparency
Transparency refers to an environment in which
the objectives of policy, its legal, institutional, and
economic framework, policy decisions and their
rationale, data and information related to
monetary and financial policies, and the terms of
agencies‘ accountability, are provided to the public
in a comprehensible, accessible, and timely
manner.
Transport of
containers or swap
bodies (by active
mode)
Carriage of containers or swap bodies by an active
mode of transport.
Source: Code of Good Practices on Transparency in
Monetary and Financial Policies, Part 1—
Introduction, Approved by the IMF Executive Board
on July 24, 2000.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/mae/mft/sup/part
1.htm#appendix_III
Transport on own
account
Transport which is not for hire or reward.
Transplants, number
of
The number of transplants refers to the number of
transplants conducted according to national and
local registries, usually measured as procedures
per 100 000 population. Transplants are collected
for:
*
*
*
*
*
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Bone marrow
Heart
Kidney
Liver
Lung
Transposition check
A transposition check detects whether the data has
been recorded at the correct position (i.e., whether
the data in various character positions have been
transposed).
Source: OECD Health Data 2001: A Comparative
Analysis of 30 Countries, OECD, Paris, 2001, data
sources, definitions and methods
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
803
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
du Tresor a Taux Fixe et Interet Precomptes - BTF
(France), Buoni Ordinari del Tesoro - BOT (Italy),
Letras Del Tesoro (Spain), Cetes - peso
denominated TBill (Mexico), Tesobono - US dollar
denominated TBill (Mexico), SBI (Indonesia)
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
(Financial Terminology Database, Bank of England)
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments.
Travel cost method
A pricing method that seeks to estimate a money
value on the basis of the amount that people
actually pay (in money and time) to gain access to
beautiful sites, wilderness and so on, or to avoid
various forms of damage and degradation. The
costs incurred by visitors to a site are used to
determine a demand curve for the recreational
value they place upon that site. This can be the
basis for estimates of the value of the site, and
hence of the significance in monetary terms of
benefit or damage to or loss of availability of the
site.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Treasury bond
A treasury bond is a bond issued by a national
government. Treasury bonds normally carry a
higher rating than local government or corporate
bonds, thereby offering a lower yield
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 9.86
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Treasury note
A treasury note is an intermediate interest bearing
obligation of a national government with a
maturity ranging from one to five years
Treasury bills
Government obligation, issued for periods of three
to 12 months. T-bills are traded on a discount
basis. They are the most liquid form of short-term
investment.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Context: Treasury bills are a common form of
sovereign short-term debt, Treasury Bills (TBills)
are issued by many governments of the world.
Typically issued through the central bank with
maturities ranging from four weeks to two years,
they bear no interest, are issued at a discount to
face value and redeemed at par.
Trend
Tendance
A long-term movement in an ordered series, say a
time series, which may be regarded, together with
the oscillation and random component, as
generating the observed values.
Central banks can manage the supply of Treasury
Bills as part of their undertaking to maintain
adequate liquidity within the domestic banking
system. Many countries auction their TBills. This
enables the central bank to cut the cost of the debt
by accepting the highest bids.
Context: In time series analysis, a given time
series can be decomposed into: a) a cyclical
component; b) a trend component; c) a seasonal
component; d) an irregular component.
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003.
The primary market participants are principally
banks (one reason for their demand is that
Treasury Bills provide a high quality liquid asset
which attracts a low cost in terms of capital
adequacy requirements). The secondary markets
for TBills are very large and almost without
exception highly liquid.
See also: Time series, Trend estimates
Trend component of a
time series
The trend is the component of a time series that
represents variations of low frequency in a time
series, the high and medium frequency fluctuations
having been filtered out. This component can be
viewed as those variations with a period longer
than a chosen threshold (usually 8 years is
considered as the maximum length of the business
cycle).
As sovereign issues they offer the highest levels of
security; TBills normally trade at yields below
those of other money market instruments because
of their lower credit risk.
Examples of national TBill issues are :- TBills
(USA), DTC's (Dutch Treasury Certificates), Bons
804
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_34
349_1965941_1_1_1_1,00.html
Context: The trend is normally referred to as the
long-term movement in a cyclical context (i.e. the
trend variations have a longer period than the
maximum duration of the business cycle).
Trend-cycle
The trend-cycle is the component that represents
variations of low frequency in a time series, the
high frequency fluctuations having been filtered
out. This component can be viewed as those
variations with a period longer than a chosen
threshold (usually 1½ years is considered as the
minimum length of the business cycle).
In practice, statistical agencies do not estimate the
trend but rather focus on the trend-cycle
component (see Trend-cycle).
There is no international consensus involving the
preferred use of the terms ―fluctuation‖ or
―variation‖. Common usage of the former term is
in the context of a rise or fall in number or
amount, and the latter in terms of changes or
slight differences in amount or level, typically
within certain limits.
Context: In practice, statistical agencies estimate
the trend-cycle by estimating and removing the
seasonal and irregular components from the
original non-adjusted data.
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
4: Guidelines for the reporting of different forms of
data
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
4: Guidelines for the reporting of different forms of
data
See also: Trend-cycle
Triennial Central Bank
Survey
A triennial survey of foreign exchange and
derivatives markets coordinated by the BIS. The
objective is to obtain reasonably comprehensive
and internationally consistent information on the
size and structure of foreign exchange and overthe-counter derivatives markets. The purpose of
these statistics is to increase market transparency
and thereby help central banks, other authorities,
and market participants to better monitor activity
in the global financial system.
Trend estimates
Trend estimates are derived from seasonally
adjusted estimates via an averaging process which
attempts to remove the irregular component of the
time series. This allows the underlying direction of
a time series to be identified
Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics, "An
Analytical Framework for Price Indexes in
Australia: Glossary and References", Canberra,
1997
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs%40.nsf/66f3
06f503e529a5ca25697e0017661f/ff4de83064a2e4
25ca25697e0018fd44!OpenDocument
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
See also: Estimate, Seasonal adjustment, Trend
TRIMS
Trade-related investment measures
Trend fitting
The general process of representing the trend
component of a time series. A trend may be
represented by a particular curve form, e.g. the
logistic, or by a particular form of the general class
of polynomial in time, or by a moving average.
TRIPS
Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property
Rights
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Trolleybus
Passenger road vehicle designed to seat more than
nine persons (including the driver), which is
connected to electric conductors and which is not
rail-borne.
Context: This term covers vehicles which are
sometimes used as trolleybuses and sometimes as
buses (since they have an independent motor).
Trend restored
The trend-restored form of the composite leading
indicator (CLI) is calculated by multiplying the
amplitude-adjusted and ratio-to-trend CLI by the
trend of the reference series to obtain the trend
restored CLI. This trend-restoration enables direct
comparison with the reference series
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: OECD Leading Indicator Website,
Glossary, 2001
Hyperlink:
Tromboning
805
Sending domestic fixed-to-mobile traffic via
international routes to bypass domestic
interconnection rates.
lower bound and the Laspeyres output price index
is the upper bound.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: Cellular Mobile Pricing Structures and
Trends, Working Party on Telecommunication and
Information Services Policies – November 1999,
page 9, Select Glossary of Mobile Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/54/42/2538118.pdf
See also: Fixed-input output price index (FIOPI),
Fixed-output input price index (FOIPI)
Trophic levels
Niveaux trophiques
Trophic levels is the classification of natural
communities or organisms according to their place
in the food chain. Green plants (producers) can be
roughly distinguished from herbivores (consumers)
and carnivores (secondary consumers
True value
The actual population value that would be obtained
with perfect measuring instruments and without
committing any error of any type, both in
collecting the primary data and in carrying out
mathematical operations.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: An idealized concept of a quantity which
is to be measured; in some cases it can be
achieved, but in others there is disagreement as to
the definition of the quantity. Illustrations are the
number of persons who are "unemployed," and the
dollar value of farm sales.
Tropical forest
Fôret tropicale
A tropical forest is a type of forest found in areas
with high regular rainfall and no more than two
months of low rainfall, and consisting of a
completely closed canopy of trees that prevents
penetration of sunlight to the ground and
discourages ground-cover growth
In most surveys an approximation to the "true"
value is used, defined in such a way that one
would expect to be able to measure it provided
there were sufficient time, money, knowledge of
techniques, etc., and no errors in the reporting,
collection, and processing of the data. (Statistical
Policy Working Paper 4 - Glossary of Nonsampling
Error Terms: An Illustration of a Semantic Problem
in Statistics, United States Federal Committee on
Statistical Methodology, 1978)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Tropopause
Tropopause
The tropopause is the boundary between the
troposphere and the stratosphere located at a
height of about 10 kilometres above the earth‘s
surface
Source: Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
October 2003
Hyperlink: http://www.fcsm.gov/workingpapers/sw4.html
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Statistical population
Trunked radio system
A method of operation in which a number of radio
frequency channel pairs are assigned to mobile and
base stations in the system for use as a trunk
group.
Troposphere
Troposphère
The troposphere is the layer of the atmosphere
extending about 10 kilometres upward from the
earth‘s surface
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Telecommunications services: Glossary of
terms – World Trade Organisation
True index
A theoretically defined index that lies between the
Laspeyres price index and the Paasche price index.
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/tratop_e/serv_e/t
elecom_e/tel12_e.htm
Context: For a theoretical output price index, the
Laspeyres output price index is the lower bound
and the Paasche output price index is the upper
bound.
Trustee
Fiduciaire
A person or a company appointed to carry out the
tasks of the trust.
For a theoretical input price index, the situation is
reversed: the Paasche output price index is the
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
806
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Turning point
In an ordered series, an observation which is a
peak or a trough. When several contiguous values
are equal, and greater than or less than the
neighbouring values, a convention is required in
order to determine which is regarded as the
turning point, e.g. the middle one may be chosen.
See also: Corporate trustee, Trusts - OECD
Trusts - IMF
Trusts are arrangements that provide for legal
control of portfolios of assets and liabilities and
specify the use of the portfolio holdings and
income generated thereby
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Monetary and Financial Statistics Manual,
IMF, Washington DC, 2000, para. 102
See also: Trusts - OECD
Trusts - OECD
Fiducie - OCDE
A legal scheme, whereby named people (termed
trustees) hold property on behalf of other people
(termed beneficiaries).
See also: Trustee, Trusts - IMF
Turning point (in
Point de
growth cycle analysis) retournement
In the growth cycles analysis, a turning point
occurs in a series when the deviation-from-trend
series reached a local maximum (Peak) or a local
minimum (Trough). Growth cycle peaks (end of
expansion) occur when activity is furthest above its
trend level. Growth cycle troughs (end of
contraction/recession) occur when activity is
furthest below its trend level
TSA
See Tourism Satellite Accounts
Source: OECD Leading Indicator Website,
Glossary, 2001
See also: Tourism Satellite Account:
Recommended Methodological Framework
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_34
349_1965941_1_1_1_1,00.html
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
TSD
Total Survey Design
Turnover
Chiffre d‟affaires
There is currently no universal definition of the
concept ―turnover‖.
TSE
See Total Support Estimate
The nearest thing to a standard are the various
definitions of turnover included in the Council
Regulation on structural business statistics which
essentially define turnover as ―the totals invoiced
by the observation unit during the reference
period, and this corresponds to the market sales of
goods or services supplied to third parties. …..
Reductions in prices, rebates and discounts as well
as the value of returned packaging must be
deducted. Price reductions, rebates and bonuses
conceded later to clients (e.g. at the end of the
year) are not taken into account.‖
See also: Total Support Estimate (TSE)
Tuberculosis
Infections and contagious disease, with particular
localization in the lungs, caused by the
Mycobacterium tuberculosis. BCG vaccination is
important, but the disease is still endemic in many
regions and is a real hazard in crowded unsanitary
conditions following disaster. One of the six
diseases in the WHO immunization programme.
Source: S.W.A. Gunn. Multilingual Dictionary of
Disaster Medicine and International Relief, English,
Français, Español, Arabic. Boston, Kluwer
Academic Publishers, 1990. (p. 82)
Context: The terms ―turnover‖ and ―sales‖ are
often used interchangeably by a number of
national and international agencies. Unfortunately,
in many instances, the methodological information
provided by agencies does not provide sufficient
detail on the variable labelled ―turnover‖ to enable
the precise agency definition of that variable to be
identified. Some countries apply the term
―turnover‖ only in the context of receipts from
sales of merchandise (i.e. receipts from the
primary activity of the unit) whilst others also
include other types of receipts such as those from
services, repairs, commissions, etc. In some
countries, turnover or sales exclude taxes but
includes deferred payments for orders received.
Tug
Powered vessel developing not less than 37 kW
and designed for the towing of dumb barges,
pushed-towed barges, and rafts, but not for the
carriage of goods.
Context: Port and sea tugs are excluded.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Goods sold to produce turnover may be derived
from either available stocks or production. This
807
indicator shows the production process not from
the supply side, as is the case for production and
output, but from the demand side. As the Eurostat
guidelines state, turnover data provide an
indication of ―the future flow of money towards the
units for the activities observed and hence an
indicator of future investments. ‖ It may therefore
be used for forecasting and to assess the
possibility of financing future investment.
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Turnover (of oil
pipeline enterprises)
Total amount invoiced by the oil pipeline transport
enterprise during the period under review. This
corresponds to market sales of goods or services
supplied to third parties.
Source: Eurostat Manual of Business Statistics,
Section 3.1, Short-term Statistics – Industry, page
2.
Turnover includes all duties and taxes on the
goods or services invoiced by the enterprise with
the exception of VAT invoiced by the unit vis-a-vis
its customers. It also includes all other charges to
the customers. Reductions in prices, rebates and
discounts must be deducted, but not cash
discounts.
Hyperlink:
http://forum.europa.eu.int/irc/dsis/bmethods/info/
data/new/embs/sts/part2a.html
See also: Production – SNA, Revenues, Sales
Context: Turnover does not include sales of fixed
assets. Operating subsidies received from public
authorities are also excluded.
Turnover (for railway
enterprises)
Total amount invoiced by the railway enterprise
during the period under review. This corresponds
to market sales of goods or services supplied to
third parties.
Turnover (of road
transport enterprises)
Total amount invoiced by the road transport
enterprise during the period under review. This
corresponds to market sales of goods or services
supplied to third parties.
Turnover includes all duties and taxes on the
goods or services invoiced by the enterprise with
the exception of VAT invoiced by the unit vis-a-vis
its customers. It also includes all other charges to
the customers. Reduction in prices, rebates and
discounts as well as the value of returned packing
must be deducted, but not cash discounts.
Turnover includes all duties and taxes on the
goods or services invoiced by the enterprise with
the exception of VAT invoiced by the unit vis-a-vis
its customer. It also includes all other charges
ascribed to the customer. Reduction in prices,
rebates and discounts as well as the value of
returned packing must be deducted, but not cash
discounts.
Turnover does not include sales of fixed assets.
Operation subsidies received from public
authorities are also excluded.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Turnover does not include sales of fixed
assets. Operating subsidies received from public
authorities are also excluded.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Turnover (of inland
waterways transport
enterprise)
Total amount invoiced by the inland waterways
transport (IWT) enterprise during the period under
review. This total corresponds to market sales of
goods or services supplied to third parties.
Turnover (of sea
transport enterprises)
Total amount invoiced by the sea transport
enterprise during the period under review. This
total corresponds to market sales of goods or
services supplied to third parties.
Turnover includes all duties and taxes on the
goods or services invoiced by the enterprise with
the exception of VAT invoiced by the unit vis-a-vis
its customers. It also includes all other charges to
customers. Reductions in prices, rebates and
discounts as well as the value of returned packing
must be deducted, but not cash discounts.
Turnover includes all duties and taxes on the
goods or services invoiced by the enterprise with
the exception of VAT invoiced by the unit vis-à-vis
its customers. It also includes all other charges to
customers. Reductions in prices, rebates and
discounts as well as the value of returned packing
must be deducted, but not cash discounts for
prompt payments.
Context: Turnover does not include sales of fixed
assets. Operating subsidies received from public
authorities are also excluded.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Context: Turnover does not include sales of fixed
assets. Operating subsidies received from public
808
authorities are also excluded.
the first stage, and these are then subsampled
with respect to their secondary units: this
constitutes the second stage.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Turnover ratio
The turnover ratio is an indicator of market depth,
a dimension of market liquidity. It is calculated as
the number of securities bought and sold during a
trading period divided by the average of the
number of securities outstanding at the beginning
and the end of the trading period.
Two-way call
origination
The call origination service used to originate a call
on network A which is terminated on network B
and there is a reciprocal relationship between the
networks. The payment for this service is usually
not set directly but is, in effect, the difference
between the end-user price (the payment for the
whole service) and the two-way termination charge
(the payment for terminating).
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
Twelve month rate of
change (OECD
composite leading
indicators)
The 12-month rate of change at annual rate
smoothed used in the OECD composite leading
indicator is calculated by dividing the figure for a
given month m by the 12-month moving average
centred on m-12
Source: OECD Leading Indicator Website,
Glossary, 2001
Two-way call
termination
The call termination service used to terminate on
network B a call which was originated on network
A and there is a reciprocal relationship between
the networks (each needs the other to terminate
calls). The clearest example is the interconnection
of two local fixed networks.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_34
349_1965941_1_1_1_1,00.html
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
See also: Rate of change, six month – OECD CLIs
Two-way
classification
The classification of a set of observations according
to two criteria of classification as, for example, in a
double dichotomy or a correlation table.
Twenty foot
equivalent unit (TEU)
Standard unit for counting containers of various
capacities and for describing the capacities of
container ships or terminals. One 20 Foot ISO
container equals 1 TEU.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
One 40 Foot ISO container equals two TEU.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Type of data collection
The type of data collection refers to the main
process used in the collection of statistical data by
the primary source of the data, those commonly
used being survey data collection and
administrative data collection. Each of these broad
types may be further broken down on the basis of
some characteristic, e.g. the nature of the data
provider (enterprise / household) or
exhaustiveness (sample survey, complete
enumeration census).
Two-stage line
sampling
See Line sampling
See also: Line sampling
Two-stage sample
A simple case of a multi-stage sample. In this case
the population to be sampled is first classified into
primary units, each of which consists of a collection
of the basic sampling unit, the secondary unit. A
sample of these primary units is taken, constituting
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
809
necessary nor required that a wagon be used
exclusively.
See also: Data collection
Type of marriage
Type of marriage is the type of act, ceremony or
process by which the legal relationship of husband
and wife is constituted, that is, whether civil, civil
religious, religious only or customary
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Types of containers
The main types of containers, as defined by ISO
Standards Handbook on Freight Containers are:
1. General purpose containers;
2. Specific purpose containers.
- closed ventilated container;
- open top container;
- platform based container open sided;
- platform based container open sided with
complete superstructure;
- platform based container open sided with
incomplete superstructure and fixed ends;
- platform based container open sided with
incomplete superstructure and folding ends;
- platform (container);
3. Specific cargo containers;
- thermal container;
- insulated container;
- refrigerated container - (expendable refrigerant);
- mechanically refrigerated container;
- heated container;
- refrigerated and heated container;
- tank container;
- dry bulk container;
- named cargo container (such as automobile,
livestock and others); and,
- air mode container.
Type of relationship
Type of relationship is an expression that
characterizes the relationship between the data
element and related data
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 3, Basic Attributes of
Data Elements (draft)
Types of body of
goods road vehicle
Classification of goods road vehicles by types of
their superstructures.
The following classification of types of bodies of
goods road vehicles are considered:
-- Ordinary open box (1)
- with cover
- flat
-- Tipper (2)
-- Tanker (3)
- solid bulk
- liquid bulk
-- Temperature controlled box (4)
-- Other closed box (5)
-- Skeletal Container and Swap-body transporter
(6)
-- Livestock transporter (7)
-- Others (8)
Context: Receptacles used in the international
freight industry to transport various commodities.
Individual items or packages may be loaded into a
single larger unit (International Merchandise
Trade, Australia, Concepts, Sources and Methods,
Glossary, Australian Bureau of Statistics. Available
at
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/0/6B7D
040A646F264ECA256A5B001BD777?Open&Highlig
ht=0,warehouse).
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Types of consignment
(rail)
The main categories are:
Types of costs (for
railway enterprises)
The main categories of costs being considered are:
-- Full train load: Any consignment comprising one
or several wagon loads transported at the same
time by the same sender at the same station and
forwarded with no change in train composition to
the address of the same consignee at the same
destination station;
-- Labour costs
Including wages and salaries of active staff,
pensions, various social charges etc.
-- Full wagon load: Any consignment of goods for
which the exclusive use of a wagon is required
whether the loading capacity is utilized or not;
-- Material and service costs
Including purchase of other material and services
-- Smalls: Any consignment for which it is neither
810
-- Other costs
Including amounts allocated to depreciation and
provisions, etc.
provided by third parties but excludes energy
consumption costs for traction purposes.
-- Energy consumption costs
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Including amounts allocated for the quantity of
energy for traction purposes.
-- Taxes
-- Financial charges
-- Other costs
Types of data source
The institutional, administrative, sample survey
and/or census based information that serve as
principal inputs for compiling statistical
aggregates.
Including amounts allocated to depreciation and
provisions etc.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Under the SDDS, "data sources" pertains
to the characteristics and components of the basic
statistical data. Sources can be distinguished,
according to the modality of data collection, in: a)
administrative (for data coming from
administrative records); b) survey (for data
coming from surveys for a specific sector or
institutional unit).
Types of costs (of
inland waterways
transport enterprises)
The main categories of costs are:
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) – BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF and OECD
– Metadata Common Vocabulary, Release 1,
December 2003.
-- Labour costs
Including wages and salaries of active staff,
pensions, various social charges, etc.
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
-- Material and service costs
Including purchases of other material and services
supplied by third parties, but excludes energy
consumption cost.
See also: Basic statistical data, Primary source (of
statistical data), Secondary source (of statistical
data), Special Data Dissemination Standard
(SDDS)
-- Energy consumption costs
-- Taxes
-- Financial charges
-- Other costs
Including amounts allocated to depreciation and
provisions,etc.
Types of electric
power (for rail
transport)
The following types of electric current are in use:
- AC
25 000 Volts, 50 Hz
15 000 Volts, 16 2 / 3 Hz
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
- DC
3 000 Volts
1 500 Volts
750 Volts
660 Volts
630 Volts
Types of costs (of
road transport
enterprises)
The main categories of costs being considered are:
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
-- Labour costs
Including wages and salaries of active staff,
pensions, various social charges, etc.
-- Material and service costs
Including purchase of other material and services
provided by third parties, but excludes energy
consumption costs.
Types of employment
(in railway
enterprises)
The main categories of employment being
considered are:
-- Energy consumption costs
-- Taxes
-- Financial charges
-- General administration
811
Includes central and regional management staff
(e.g. finance, legal, personnel etc.) and boards of
directors. The management staff of specialist
departments (operations and traffic, traction and
rolling stock, ways and works) are excluded but
are taken into account in the statistics specific to
each of these services.
Types of goods
transported by oil
pipeline
The categories of goods carried by oil pipeline are
those defined by the NST/R nomenclature
(Standard Goods Nomenclature for Transport
Statistics/revised - EUROSTAT) or CSTE
nomenclature (Commodity Classification for
Transport Statistics in Europe - UN/ECE).
-- Operations and traffic
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Station staff, train crews (excluding locomotive
crews) and associated central and regional offices.
Includes tourism and advertising.
-- Traction and rolling stock
Locomotive crews, workshop, inspection staff and
associated central and regional offices.
Types of household
The types of household that could be distinguished
in a census could be:
-- Way and works
Permanent way maintenance and supervision staff.
-
-- Other operation
Passenger and goods road services, shipping
services, electric power plants, hotel staff etc.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
one–person household;
nuclear household;
extended household;
composite household;
other/unknown
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.82
See also: Household – UN
Types of passenger
road motor vehicle
These vehicles may be classified according to the
type of energy used by the motor, the main
ones being:
Types of goods
carried by inland
waterways
The categories of goods carried by inland
waterways are those defined by the NST/R
nomenclature (Standard Goods Nomenclature for
Transport Statistics/revised -EUROSTAT) or CSTE
nomenclature (Commodity Classification for
Transport Statistics in Europe - UN/ECE).
------
Gasoline (petrol)
Diesel
Gas-powered
Electricity
Other
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Types of goods
carried by road
The categories of goods carried by road are those
defined by the NST/R nomenclature (Standard
Goods Nomenclature for Transport
Statistics/revised - EUROSTAT) or the CSTE
nomenclature (Commodity Classification for
Transport Statistics in Europe - UN/ECE).
Types of prices
Types of prices refer to the extensive range of
prices at which goods and services are valued.
These comprise:
- current or constant prices;
- market or non-market prices;
- basic prices;
- producer's prices;
- purchaser's prices.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Context: Under SDDS, types of prices refer to the
nature of the prices included in the calculation of
the relevant indices (e.g., CPI/PPI) (IMF).
In terms of CPI the types of prices to be
considered generally are transaction prices actually
paid by consumers including taxes less any
812
-- Amounts received from the State or other public
bodies
discounts or rebates vs. list or asking prices. While
for PPI there is an extensive variety of prices that
can be used (e.g., basic prices received by the
producer; specific transaction prices paid by
purchasers "at factory gate"; producer prices
excluding VAT; wholesale prices; etc.)
This category includes compensation receipts and
other subsidies.
-- Other revenues
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) – BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF and OECD
– Metadata Common Vocabulary, Release 1,
December 2003
This category includes revenues not related to
transport activities, e.g. financial revenues etc.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
See also: Consumer price index, Producer price
index, Special Data Dissemination Standard
(SDDS)
Types of rail transport
The main categories are:
Types of train
The main categories being considered are:
-- Revenue earning rail transport: Transport
conveyed for an outside party against payment.
-- Service rail transport: Transport which the
railway enterprise performs in order to meet its
internal requirements whether or not such
transport produces revenues for bookkeeping
purpose.
-- Goods train: Train made up of one or more
wagons and, possibly, vans moving either empty
or under load.
-- Passenger train: Train for the carriage of
passengers composed of one or more passenger
railway vehicles and, possibly, vans moving either
empty or under load.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
-- Mixed train: Train composed of passenger
railway vehicles and of wagons.
-- Other trains: Trains moving solely for the
requirements of the railway enterprise, which
involve no commercial traffic.
Types of revenues (of
oil pipeline
enterprises)
The main categories of revenues to be considered
are:
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
-- Revenues from transport operations
-- Amounts received from the State or other public
bodies
This category includes compensation receipts and
other subsidies.
-- Other revenues
This category includes revenues not related to oil
pipeline transport activities, e.g. financial
revenues, etc.
Typical age
Typical ages refer to the ages that normally
correspond to the age at entry and ending of a
cycle of education. These ages relate to the
theoretical duration of a cycle assuming full-time
attendance and no repetition of a year. The
assumption is made that, at least in the ordinary
education system, a student can proceed through
the educational programme in a standard number
of years, which is referred to as the theoretical
duration of the programme.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Types of revenues (of
transport enterprises)
The main categories of revenues to be considered
are:
-- Revenues from transport operations
Typical ending age
The typical ending age should be the age at the
beginning of the last school/academic year of the
corresponding level and programme.
This category includes goods and passenger traffic
revenues.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
813
Ultimate control
enterprise
An investor (company or individual) is considered
to be the ultimate control investor if it is at the
head of a chain of companies and directly or
indirectly controls all the enterprises in the chain
without itself being controlled by another investor.
Typical graduation
age
The typical graduation age should be the age at
the end of the last school/academic year of the
corresponding level and programme when the
degree is obtained. Note that at some levels of
education the term ―graduation age‖ may not
translate literally and would be equivalent to a
―completion age‖; it is used here purely as a
convention.
Source: OECD, 2005, Measuring Globalisation:
OECD Handbook on Economic Globalisation
Indicators, OECD, Paris - Glossary
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Ultimate control unit
See Ultimate control enterprise
See also: Ultimate control enterprise
Typical starting age
The typical starting age should be the age at the
beginning of the first school/academic year of the
corresponding level and programme.
Ultimate host /
investing country
Geographic analysis of direct investment
transactions is complicated by holding companies;
that is, when the ultimate parent enterprise‘s
investment in a foreign country is held through
another subsidiary in a third country. The
compilation of foreign direct investment statistics
on income and financial flows based on the
ultimate source of such flows would require a basis
for the recording of transactions other than the
change-of-ownership principle that is
recommended in the fifth edition of the IMF
Balance of Payments Manual.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Ubiquitous computing
Ubiquitous computing is not a specific technology,
but a scenario in which computers become more
numerous and fade into the background, providing
information to human users and embedding
intelligence and computing capabilities in
seemingly everyday objects.
Therefore, direct investment flows should be
compiled only in respect of the immediate
host/investing country. The regional allocation of
the international investment position statement
should also be compiled on the basis of the
immediate host or investing country. However, it is
suggested that the stock of direct investment net
assets could also be compiled in respect of the
ultimate host or controlling country, as
supplementary information
Context: The term was first coined by Mark Weiser
who championed the concept at Xerox PARC. It has
since been extended, with terms such as pervasive
and invisible computing to describe the
incorporation of information technology into many
devices and applications.
Source: OECD, 2002, OECD Information
Technology Outlook, OECD, Paris, p. 222
Source: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms, OECD, 2001 – not published
Ultimate beneficial
owner
When a parent company abroad is not owned more
than 50% by another natural or legal person, the
foreign parent and the ultimate beneficial owners
are the same.
Ultimate sampling
unit
The ultimate sampling unit may be defined as the
smallest unit which is the subject of sample
selection. In a household survey the ultimate
sampling unit might be the household
Context: The notion of ultimate beneficial owner
corresponds more to the concept of ―ownership‖
than to the ―control‖ concept.
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 4.12
In the framework of the OECD Handbook on
Economic Globalisation Indicators, the term
―ultimate beneficial‖ is replaced by the term
―ultimate controlled‖ or ―ultimate control unit‖.
See also: Sampling unit
Ultraviolet rays
Rayons ultraviolets
Ultraviolet rays is radiation in the wavelength
range between visible light and X—rays, divided
into wave length bands A, B, C. Much of the
ultraviolet radiation‘s in bands B and C are
prevented from reaching the earth‘s surface by the
ozone layer present in the atmosphere
In reality, there could be several ultimate
beneficiaries, but only one ultimate control unit.
Source: OECD, 2005, Measuring Globalisation:
OECD Handbook on Economic Globalisation
Indicators, OECD, Paris - Glossary
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
814
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Unbundled Local Loop
(ULL)
The provision of access to both ends of the copper
local loop on a permanent basis, allowing the
installation of equipment for upgrading the local
loop to provide DSL services or the lease of any
such equipment which is already installed.
UML
Unified Modelling Language
Source: OECD, 2004, Access Pricing in
Telecommunications, OECD, Paris, Glossary of
Terms
UN / CEFACT
UN/CEFACT is the United Nations Centre for Trade
Facilitation and Electronic Business. It is open to
participation from Member States,
intergovernmental organizations, and sectoral and
industry associations recognized by the Economic
and Social Council of the United Nations
(ECOSOC).
UNCCS
United Nations Common Coding System
The Centre's objective is to be "inclusive" and it
actively encourages organizations to contribute
and help develop its recommendations and
standards. The participation of many private-sector
associations in UN/CEFACT's work at the policy
level, and of hundreds of private-sector technical
experts in UN/CEFACT working groups, is a unique
feature of the Centre which is forging new
cooperative relationships between private business
and public organizations.
Uncompensated
Saisies sans
seizures
compensation
Uncompensated seizures occur when governments
or other institutional units take possession of the
assets of other institutional units, including nonresident units, without full compensation for
reasons other than the payment of taxes, fines, or
similar levies
Within the United Nations, UN/CEFACT is located in
the Economic Commission for Europe (UN/ECE),
which is part of the United Nations network of
regional commissions
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 12.38
UNCTAD
United Nations Conference on Trade and
Development
Source: UNECE website
Hyperlink: http://www.unece.org/cefact/index.htm
Under-coverage
Under-coverage results from the omission from the
frame of units belonging to the target population.
Unbiased error
An error which may be regarded as a member
drawn at random from an error population with
zero mean. This in the long run positive and
negative errors tend to cancel out in the sense of
having a mean which tends to zero.
Context: Under-coverage refers to units not
included in the frame, but which should be. Of
course, for these units no information is obtained;
but under-coverage should not be confused with
non-response.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
October 2003
See also: Frame, Over-coverage, Target population
Unbiased sample
A sample drawn and recorded by a method which
is free from bias. This implies not only freedom
from bias in the method of selection, e.g. random
sampling, but freedom from any bias of procedure,
e.g. wrong definition, non-response, design of
questions, interviewer bias, etc. An unbiased
sample in these respects should be distinguished
from unbiased estimating processes which may be
employed upon the data.
Underemployment
Underemployment exists when a person‘s
employment is inadequate in relation to specified
norms of alternative employment, account being
taken of his or her occupational skill. Two forms of
underemployment may be distinguished: visible
and invisible.
Context: In the Resolution Concerning the
measurement of underemployment and inadequate
employment situations adopted by the 16th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians in
October 1998 recommendations concerning the
measurement of underemployment are limited to
time-related underemployment.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: International Labour Organisation (ILO)
815
Resolution Concerning statistics of economically
active population, employment, unemployment
and underemployment, adopted by the 13th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians
(October 1982)
statistics
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
See also: Invisible underemployment, Time related
underemployment, Visible underemployment
See also: Contributory cause of death
Underfunding
Sous-capitalisation
The situation when the value of a plan‘s assets are
less than its liabilities, thereby having an actuarial
deficiency.
Undernourished
persons
Persons whose food intake falls below the
minimum requirement or food intake that is
insufficient to meet dietary energy requirements
continuously.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: Food and Agriculture Organization of the
United Nations. The State of Food Insecurity in the
World. Rome, annual. (pp. 6, 26)
See also: Actuarial deficiency, Funding level
(pension plan), Overfunding
Underground
economy
Producers engaged in underground production are
described as belonging to the underground
economy.
Undisbursed
Funds committed by the creditor but not yet
utilized by the borrower. In BIS terminology, this
refers to open lines of credit that are legally
binding on lending banks. A transaction in the
balance of payments or a position in the
international investment position (IIP) is only
recorded when an actual disbursement takes place.
Source: SNA 6.34
See also: Underground production
Underground
production
Underground production consists of activities that
are productive in an economic sense and quite
legal (provided certain standards or regulations are
complied with), but which are deliberately
concealed from public authorities for the following
reasons:
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
a) to avoid the payment of income, value added or
other taxes;
Unduplicated total
count of graduates
Unduplicated total count of graduates is calculated
by netting out those students who graduated from
programmes in a previous year and/or who are
earning more than one qualification at the
specified level during the reference period. It
represents therefore a count of individuals
graduating and not certificates being awarded.
b) to avoid payment of social security
contributions;
c) to avoid meeting certain legal standards such as
minimum wages, maximum hours, safety or health
standards, etc;
d) to avoid complying with certain administrative
procedures, such as completing statistical
questionnaires or other administrative forms.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Source: SNA 6.34
UNECE
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Illegal production, Informal sector – ILO,
Informal sector – SNA
Unemployed Ŕ
Chômage Ŕ Eurostat
Eurostat
Unemployed persons are those who, during the
reference week:
Underlying cause of
death
The underlying cause of death refers to the disease
or injury that initiated the train of morbid events
leading directly to death or the circumstances of
the accident or violence that produced the injury.
(a) had no employment, and
(b) were available to start work within the next
two weeks, and
(c) had actively sought employment at some time
during the previous four weeks.
The underlying cause of death is the one to be
adopted as the cause for tabulation of mortality
816
In addition, unemployed persons include those
who had no employment and had already found a
job to start later
Unemployment rate Eurostat
Unemployment rates represent unemployed
persons as a percentage of the civilian labour force
Source: Statistics in focus Theme 3 – 11/1999:
Labour force survey – Principal results 1999 p.3
Source: The European Union Labour Force Survey
- Methods and Definitions, 1996, Eurostat, p.13
See also: Unemployed – ILO
Unemployed Ŕ ILO
Chômage Ŕ BIT
The unemployed comprise all persons above a
specified age who during the reference period
were:
See also: Unemployment rate - OECD standardised
unemployment rates
Unemployment rate
(standardised
unemployment) OECD
The OECD standardised unemployment rate gives
the number of unemployed persons as a
percentage of the of the civilian labour force
- without work, that is, were not in paid
employment or self employment during the
reference period;
- currently available for work, that is, were
available for paid employment or self-employment
during the reference period; and
Source: OECD Main Economic Indicators, OECD,
monthly, Technical Notes
- seeking work, that is, had taken specific steps in
a specified recent period to seek paid employment
or self-employment.
See also: Unemployment rate - Eurostat
Unequivocal price
index
See Pure price index
The specific steps may include registration at a
public or private employment exchange;
application to employers; checking at worksites,
farms, factory gates, market or other assembly
places; placing or answering newspaper
advertisements; seeking assistance of friends or
relatives; looking for land, building, machinery or
equipment to establish own enterprise; arranging
for financial resources; applying for permits and
licences, etc
See also: Pure price index
UNESCO
See United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organisation (UNESCO)
See also: United Nations Educational, Scientific
and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO)
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning Economically Active
Population, Employment, Unemployment and
Underemployment Adopted by the 13th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians,
October 1982, para. 10
Unforeseen
obsolescence Ŕ OECD
Unforeseen obsolescence is the loss in value on an
asset due to a fall in demand for that type of asset
that could not have been foreseen when the asset
was acquired.
Unforeseen obsolescence may occur because of a
new invention or discovery which destroys the
market for the asset or because a shift in relative
prices makes it uneconomical to continue using the
asset.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
See also: Unemployed – Eurostat
Unemployment
See Unemployed - ILO
It is not included in consumption of fixed capital
but in ―other changes in non-financial asset n.e.c.‖
in the ―Other changes in assets account‖.
Unforeseen obsolescence is a synonym for "
abnormal obsolescence"
See also: Unemployed – ILO
Unemployment
compensation
Unemployment compensation includes all forms of
cash benefit to compensate for unemployment,
except early retirement. In addition to
unemployment insurance and assistance, this
covers publicly funded redundancy payments,
compensation to workers whose employers go
bankrupt, and special support of various groups
such as construction workers laid off during bad
weather
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
See also: Abnormal obsolescence, Abnormal
obsolescence, Unforeseen obsolescence – SNA
Unforeseen
Obsolescence
obsolescence Ŕ SNA
imprévue Ŕ SCN
Unforeseen obsolescence arises when the amount
included in consumption of fixed capital for an
Source: Definitions of the Standardised categories
and Sub-categories of Labour Market Programmes,
OECD, 2001
817
asset‘s normally expected obsolescence falls short
of the amount required to cover its actual
obsolescence
United Nations International Children's Emergency
Fund
Source: SNA [12.43]
UNICRI
United Nations Interregional Crime and Justice
Institute
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Abnormal obsolescence, Unforeseen
obsolescence – Capital stock
Unidentified samples
Are those from an unidentified collection of human
biological specimens.
Unfunded employee
Prestations
social insurance
d‟assurance sociale
benefits
directes d‟employeurs
Unfunded employee social insurance benefits are
social benefits payable to their employees, their
dependants or survivors by employers
administering unfunded social insurance schemes
Context: Sometimes also termed ―anonymous‖.
Source: OECD, 2006, Creation and Governance of
Human Genetic Research Databases, OECD. Paris
See also: Identified samples
Source: SNA 8.80
UNIDO
See United Nations Industrial Development
Organisation (UNIDO)
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: United Nations Industrial Development
Organisation (UNIDO)
Unfunded pension
Plans de retraite non
plans
capitalisés
Plans that are financed directly from contributions
from the plan sponsor or provider and/or the plan
participant.
Uniform delivered
pricing
See Basing point pricing
See also: Basing point pricing
Unfunded pension plans are said to be paid on a
current disbursement method (also known as the
pay as you go, PAYG, method). Unfunded plans
may still have associated reserves to cover
immediate expenses or smooth contributions
within given time periods. Most OECD countries do
not allow unfunded private pension plans.
Uniform Resource
Locator (URL)
The Uniform Resource Locator (URL) is a pointer to
a referenced document or object and its associated
access service on the internet or an intranet
Source: Survey Design and Statistical Methodology
Metadata, Software and Standards Management
Branch, Systems Support Division, United States
Bureau of the Census, Washington D.C., August
1998, Section 3.4.3, page 39
Context: Identical term, "PAYG plan"
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Funded pension plan
Uniform sampling
fraction
If a sample is selected from a population which has
been grouped into strata, in such a way that the
number of units selected from each stratum is
proportional to the total number of units in that
stratum, the sample is said to have been selected
with a uniform sampling fraction.
Unfunded public
pension liabilities
This term refers to future liabilities of government
under unfunded (pay-as-you-go) or partially
funded public pension schemes.
Context: Liabilities for such schemes are generally
not recognized in accounting terms until the
obligation to pay arises, though this will depend on
institutional arrangements in particular countries.
Such future liabilities need to be taken into
account in assessing fiscal sustainability over the
long term.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
Unimodal
An adjective describing a frequency distribution
which has a single mode.
UNHCR
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
UNICEF
818
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
The term is used to characterize the situation
where an individual can be distinguished from all
other members in a population or sample in terms
of information available on microdata records (or
within a given key).
Unincorporated
Entreprise non
enterprise
constituée en société
An unincorporated enterprise is a producer unit
which is not incorporated as a legal entity separate
from the owner (household, government or foreign
resident); the fixed and other assets used in
unincorporated enterprises do not belong to the
enterprises but to their owners, the enterprises as
such cannot engage in transactions with other
economic units nor can they enter into contractual
relationships with other units nor incur liabilities on
their own behalf; in addition, their owners are
personally liable, without limit, for any debts or
obligations incurred in the course of production
Context: The existence of uniqueness is
determined by the size of the population or sample
and the degree to which it is segmented by
geographic information and the number and detail
of characteristics provided for each unit in the
dataset (or within the key).
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: SNA 4.140 and 4.141
Unisex annuity rate
Taux de pension
unisexe
Annuity rates that are the same for men and
women.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Union unique
A sample unique that is also population unique.
The proportion of sample uniques that are union
uniques is one measure of file level disclosure risk.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
See also: Annuity rate
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Unisex mortality table Table de mortalité
unisexe
Mortality table where the rate of death is equal for
males and females.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Unique items
Items that are important in only one country within
a region and consequently are not suitable for
price comparisons.
See also: Mortality table
Unistatus annuity rate Taux de pension
uniforme
Annuity rates which are the same for both men
and women and for all family status.
Source: Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social
Development, Statistical Division, New York, 1992,
Glossary
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
See also: Annuity rate
Unit investment trust
A unit investment trust is an investment company
that owns a fixed set of securities for the life of the
company. That is, the investment company rarely
alters the composition of its portfolio over the life
of the company. (Investments, W.F. Sharpe/G.J.
Alexander)
Unique product
A product that is only manufactured once to the
specification of an individual customer.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: Institutional Investors Statistical
Yearbook, 2000 edition, Annex III, Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Unit labour cost Coût unitaire de la
Eurostat
main-d‟oeuvre
Unit labour cost is defined as personnel costs per
employee
Uniqueness
819
Source: Statistics in focus: Industry, trade and
services; Theme 4 – 7/2001 - Distributive trades
statistics, Eurostat, Methodological Notes, page 7
See also: Labour productivity, Unit labour cost Eurostat
Unit measure of
precision
Unit of measure precision is the degree of
specificity for a unit of measure.
See also: Unit labour costs - OECD
Unit labour costs Coût unitaire de la
OECD
main-d‟oeuvre
Unit labour costs (ULC) measure the average cost
of labour per unit of output and are calculated as
the ratio of total labour costs to real output.
Source: ISO/IEC FCD 11179-3, Registry
Metamodel, Final Committee Draft 2001
Context: In broad terms, unit labour costs show
how much output an economy receives relative to
wages, or labour cost per unit of output. ULCs can
be calculated as the ratio of labour compensation
to real GDP. It is also the equivalent of the ratio
between labour compensation per labour input (per
hour or per employee) worked and labour
productivity .
Unit non-response
See Non-response
See also: Non-response
Unit of measure
Unité de mesure
A Unit of measure is the actual unit in which the
associated values are measured.
Unit labour costs (ULCs) represent a direct link
between productivity and the cost of labour used in
generating output. A rise in an economy‘s unit
labour costs represents an increased reward for
labour‘s contribution to output. However, a rise in
labour costs higher than the rise in labour
productivity may be a threat to an economy's cost
competitiveness, if other costs are not adjusted in
compensation.
Context: The dimensionality of the associated
conceptual domain must be appropriate for the
specified unit of measure.
ISO 31-0:1982 specifies a system of physical
measurement (the International System of Units,
SI).
Physical measurement is only one type of
measurement. Value measurement is another type
of measurement. ISO/IEC International Standard
11179-3 allows the use of any appropriate system
of measurement.
ULCs should not be interpreted as a
comprehensive measure of competitiveness, but as
a reflection of cost competitiveness. Unit labour
cost measures deal exclusively with the cost of
labour, which though important, should also be
considered in relation to changes in the cost of
capital, especially in advanced economies.
Attributes of a unit of measure:
Unit of measure name is the name of a unit of
measure.
(Key Indicators of the Labour Market (KILM):
2001-2002, International Labour Organisation,
Geneva, 2002, page 622)
Unit of measure precision is the degree of
specificity for a unit of measure. Expressed as a
number of decimal places to be used in any
associated data element values. To be used as a
default if no precision is specified on the data
element itself.
ULC statistics are compiled by a number of OECD
Member countries as an indicator of productivity.
In some instances the statistics are compiled by
national statistical institutes and in others, by
other government and non-government bodies.
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179-3 Information technology - Metadata registries
(MDR) - Part 3: Registry metamodel and basic
attributes", February 2003
In 2007 the OECD launched the Organisation's
System of Unit Labour Cost Indicators covering all
OECD Member countries. This interface provides
access to long time series of annual and quarterly
Unit Labour Cost (ULC) and related indicators for a
wide range of sectors including Total Economy,
Industry, Market Services and the Business Sector.
Unit Labour Cost data are updated at the end of
each quarter and are compiled according to a
specific methodology to ensure comparability
across OECD Member countries. The Unit Labour
Cost annual database also includes time series by
sector for Exchange Rate Adjusted Unit Labour
Costs, Labour Income Share ratios, Labour
Productivity and Labour Compensation.
See also: Conceptual domain, Dimension,
Dimensionality, ISO / IEC 11179
Unit of measure used
- MetaStore
Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types refers to
the unit in which associated values are measured,
e.g. USD.
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
Source: OECD, 2007, OECD System of Unit Labour
Cost Indicators, OECD, Paris
Unit response rate
The ratio, expressed in percentage of the number
of interviews to the number of eligible units in the
sample.
Hyperlink:
http://stats.oecd.org/mei/default.asp?rev=3
820
Context: The weighted response rate calculates the
ratio using the inverse probability of inclusion in
the sample as a weight for each unit. In some
occasions a value that reflects the importance of
the unit is also used as a weighting factor (like size
of workforce for establishment).
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Source: Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
October 2003
Source: United Nations Department of Economic
and Social Development - Statistical Division,
Handbook of the International Comparison
Programme, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 62,
New York, 1992, Glossary Development, Statistical
Division, New York, 1992, Glossary
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Unit trust and openended investment
company (OEIC)
A unit of an open-end fund or an open-ended
investment company (OEIC) governed by a trust
deed or memorandum with specific investment
objectives. The funds are pooled under
management, and the price of units is based on
net asset value. Purchases and sales are largely
directed through the managers. (Issued in
registered form; the units may be certificate or
dematerialized.)
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/methods/icp/ipco_htm.
htm
See also: Average value, Unit value index
Unit value index
Indice de valeur
unitaire
The percentage of an eligible sample for which
information is obtained.
Context: For an interview survey, the numerator of
the formula is the number of interviews. The
denominator is the total sample size minus noneligible respondents, i.e. minus those not meeting
the criteria for a potential respondent as defined
for that particular study. Weighted response rate is
more useful.
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
In addition to this, another non-response rate
using the following weights may be computed: the
sampling weights times any existing important
variable from the sampling frame (turnover or
size). The latter figure illustrates an impact of nonresponse.
Unit Trust Part d‟un
Fonds Commun de
Placement
Participation unit in a mutual fund (―unit trust‖). A
unit trust can issue capitalization and distribution
units.
A unit value index is a ―price‖ index which
measures the change in the average value of units
that are not homogeneous and which may
therefore be affected by changes in the mix of
items as well as by changes in their prices. (SNA
16.13)
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
Source: Lessler, J.T. and Kalsbeek, W.D. (1992),
"Non Sampling Error in Survey", New York: John
Wiley or US department of Commerce (1978),
"Glossary of Non Sampling Error Terms: An
Illustration of a Semantic Problem in Statistics",
Statistical Policy Working Paper 4, Office of Federal
Statistical Policy Standards.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Unit trusts
See Mutual fund
See also: Unit value
See also: Mutual fund
Unit value mix
problem
That the change in the value of a unit value index,
thereby implying a ―price change‖, arises from a
change in the relative quantities of the items
covered without there being any change in their
prices.
Unit value
When the expenditures or value of production of
an item is divided by the quantity, the result is
known as a unit value.
Context: The unit value of a set of homogeneous
products is the total value of the purchases / sales
divided by the sum of the quantities. It is therefore
a quantity-weighted average of the different prices
at which the product is purchased / sold. Unit
values may change over time as a result of a
change in the mix of the products sold at different
prices, even if the prices do not change.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
821
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Glossary of Organisations
United Nations
Conférence des
Conference on
Nations Unies sur
Environment and
l‟environnement et le
Development
développement
The United Nations Conference on Environment
and Development was held in 1992 in Rio de
Janeiro (also referred to as the Earth Summit).
United Nations
Environment
Programme (UNEP)
The United Nations Environment Programme
(UNEP) is an international organization established
in 1972 to catalyse and coordinate activities to
increase scientific understanding of environmental
change and develop environmental management
tools
Hyperlink: http://www.unesco.org
The Conference adopted the Rio Declaration on
Environment and Development, an action plan
termed Agenda 21 and the Non—legally Binding
Authoritative Statement of Principles for a Global
Consensus on the Management, Conservation and
Sustainable Development of All Types of Forests
(Forest Principles).
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
United Nations
Industrial
Development
Organisation (UNIDO)
The United Nations Industrial Development
Organisation (UNIDO) was established in 1966 to
act as the central co-ordinating body for industrial
activities and to promote industrial development
and co-operation at the global, regional, national
and sectoral levels. In 1985, UNIDO became the
16th specialised agency of the United Nations, with
a mandate to help develop scientific and
technological plans and programmes for
industrialisation in the public, co-operative and
private sectors.
The Conference also presented for signature by
Governments the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change and the Convention
on Biological Diversity
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Hyperlink:
http://www.unep.org/Documents/Default.asp?Doc
umentID=78&ArticleID=1163
United Nations
Convention des
Convention on the
Nations Unies sur le
Law of the Sea
droit de la mer
(UNCLOS)
(UNCLOS)
The United Nations Convention on the Law of the
Sea (UNCLOS) is a convention under the auspices
of the United Nations dealing with all matters
relating to the Law of the Sea. UNCLOS embodies
and enshrines the notion that all problems of
ocean space are closely interrelated and need to
be addressed as a whole. It entered into force on
16 November 1994
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002 – Appendix F.
Glossary of Organisations
Hyperlink: http://www.unido.org
United Nations
Statistical
Commission (UNSC)
The first session of the United Nations Statistical
Commission was held in 1947.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
The UNSC was established and given terms of
reference by the Economic and Social Council. The
terms of reference as set forth in Economic and
Social Council resolution 1566 (L) of 3 May 1971,
reaffirming its resolution 8 (I) of 16 February
1946, as amended by resolution 8 (II) of 21 June
1946, state that the Commission shall assist the
Council:
United Nations
Educational, Scientific
and Cultural
Organisation
(UNESCO)
The United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) is a specialised
agency of the United Nations established in 1945
to promote ―collaboration among nations through
education, science and culture in order to further
universal respect for justice, for the rule of law,
and for the human rights and fundamental
freedoms ………. for the peoples of the world,
without distinction of race, sex, language or
religion …‖.
"(a) In promoting the development of national
statistics and the improvement of their
comparability;
(b) In the coordination of the statistical work of
specialized agencies;
(c) In the development of the central statistical
services of the Secretariat;
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002 – Appendix F.
(d) In advising the organs of the United Nations on
general questions relating to the collection,
822
analysis and dissemination of statistical
information;
United States GAAP
See Generally accepted accounting principles
(e) In promoting the improvement of statistics and
statistical methods generally."
See also: Generally accepted accounting principles
Units (classified)
Units refer to entities, respondents to a survey or
things used for the purpose of calculation or
measurement. Their statistics are collected,
tabulated and published. They include, among
others, businesses, government institutions,
individual organisations, institutions, persons,
groups, geographical areas and events. They form
the population from which data can be collected or
upon which observations can be made
In resolution 1566 (L), the Council stressed the
importance of the Commission's coordination
function and the need to achieve an integrated
system in the collection, processing and
dissemination of international statistics; recognized
the interest of the Statistical Commission and the
Statistical Division in matters related to the use of
computers in the United Nations system; and
requested the Secretary-General to undertake, in
cooperation with the specialized agencies,
concerted action to assist the developing countries
in strengthening their statistical systems.
Source: United Nations Glossary of Classification
Terms. Prepared by the Expert Group on
International Economic and Social Classifications
Context: The Commission consists of 24 member
countries of the United Nations elected by the
United Nations Economic and Social Council on the
basis of an equitable geographical distribution
according to the following pattern:
Hyperlink:
http://www.un.org/Depts/unsd/class/glossary_sho
rt.htm
(a) Five members from African States;
(b) Four members from Asian States;
(c) Four members from Eastern European States;
(d) Four members from Latin American and
Caribbean States;
(e) Seven members from Western European and
other States.
Universal service
The concept that every individual within a country
should have basic telephone service available at an
affordable price. The concept varies, among
countries, from having a telephone in every home
and business in the wealthier countries to most
inhabitants' being within a certain distance or time
away from a public telephone in developing
countries.
The term of office of members is four years. In
July 1999 the Economic and Social Council decided
that the Commission should meet annually for four
days each session, starting in the year 2000.
Source: Telecommunications services: Glossary of
terms – World Trade Organisation
The sessions of the Statistical Commission are
substantively serviced by the United Nations
Statistics Division (UNSD) and attended by the
regional commissions, other United Nations
organizations, specialized agencies and related
organizations, and non-United Nations
international organizations active in international
statistical work.
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/tratop_e/serv_e/t
elecom_e/tel12_e.htm
Universe
Univers
The population of producers and products to be
sampled.
Source: Statistical Commission website, United
Nations Statistical Division, New York
Context: An alternative term for population derived
from the ―universe of discourse‖ of classical logic.
(A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th edition,
prepared for the International Statistical Institute
by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the International
Statistical Institute by Longman Scientific and
Technical)
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/statcom/commission.ht
m
United Nations
Division de statistique
Statistics Division
de l‟ONU
(UNSD)
The United Nations Statistics Division (UNSD),
formerly United Nations Statistical Office, is the
body responsible for the collection, compilation and
dissemination of international statistical data, the
improvement of statistical methodology,
substantive support for technical cooperation in
statistics and the promotion of coordination in
international statistical work
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Unladen inland
waterways traffic
823
Any movement of an inland waterways transport
(IWT) freight vessel for which the gross-gross
weight of goods carried, including that of
equipment such as containers, swap-bodies and
pallets, is nil; as well as any movement of an IWT
passenger vessel without passengers.
Unlisted voting stocks
Are equity/shares that give voting rights to the
holder, but are not listed on an official stock
exchange.
Source: OECD, 2005, Measuring Globalisation:
OECD Handbook on Economic Globalisation
Indicators, OECD, Paris - Glossary
Context: The movement of an IWT vessel carrying
empty equipment such as containers, swap-bodies
and pallets is not considered to be an unladen
journey.
UNODC
United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Unofficial language
See Non-official language
See also: Non-official language
Unladen sea traffic
Sea traffic for which neither goods nor passengers
are carried.
Unpaid family
members (working in
an establishment)
Unpaid family members (working in an
establishment) include all persons living in the
household(s) of the proprietor(s) of the owning
enterprise and working in or for the establishment
without regular pay for at least one third of the
normal working hours of the establishment.
Individual countries may find it necessary to either
restrict or extend this definition to take account of
their own culture and economy
Context: The movement of a sea going vessel
carrying empty equipment such as containers,
swap-bodies and pallets is not considered to be an
unladen journey.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: International Recommendations for
Construction Statistics, Statistical Papers, Series
M, No. 47, Rev. 1, United Nations, New York,
1997, para. 94
Unleaded motor
gasoline
Motor gasoline where lead compounds have not
been added to enhance octane rating. It may
contain traces of organic lead.
See also: Contributing family worker
Unpaid labour
Work that produces goods or services but is
unremunerated. It includes domestic labour,
subsistence production and the unpaid production
of items for market.
Source: Oil Information 2001, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 3. General Definitions
Context: Not to be confused with ―unpaid family
labour‖, a term used in some developing country
statistical agencies as a category to cover
production of marketed goods in the home or on
the farm without pay, as in home-based industries
and rural production.
See also: Leaded motor gasoline
Unlinked samples
Unlinked samples are those that lack identifiers or
codes that can link samples to identified specimens
or particular individuals.
Context: Typically, unlinked samples are sent from
identified human biological specimens to
investigators without identifiers or codes so that
identifying particular individuals through the
clinical or demographic information that is supplied
with the sample or biological information derived
from the research would be extremely difficult for
the investigator, the repository or a third party.
Source: Alexander, P., Baden, S., 2000, Glossary
on macroeconomics from a gender perspective,
Institute of Development Studies, University of
Sussex
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/52/56/31594934.p
df
Unlinked samples also include samples that are
already in an investigator‘s possession and whose
identifiers have been removed by a disinterested
party.
Unprotected pension
Plan de retraite sans
plan
garanti
A plan (personal pension plan or occupational
defined contribution pension plan) where the
pension plan/fund itself or the pension provider
does not offer any investment return or benefit
guarantees or promises covering the whole
plan/fund.
Sometimes also termed ―anonymised‖.
Source: OECD, 2006, Creation and Governance of
Human Genetic Research Databases, OECD. Paris
824
Development Assistance Committee".
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/glossary/0,2586,en_2649_33
721_1965693_1_1_1_1,00.html
See also: Protected pension plan
Unquoted shares
Actions non cotées
Unquoted shares are shares which are not traded
on stock exchanges or other organised financial
markets
Unused extraction
Materials which are extracted by economic
activities but that do not normally serve as input
for production or consumption activities (mining
overburden, etc.). They are not used for further
processing and are usually without economic
value.
Source: SNA 13.73
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.200
Unrecovered claims
See Claim payments
See also: Claim payments
Unregulated fishery
Pêcheries non
réglementées
An unregulated fishery is a fishery in which
harvesters (and any other participants) are not
subjected to any regulations
UPOV
Union internationale
pour la protection des
obtentions végétales
International Union for the Protection of New
Varieties of Plants
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Upper bound
The highest possible value of a cell in a table of
frequency counts where the cell value has been
perturbed or suppressed.
Unrelated
diversification
Unrelated diversification takes place when the
products are very different from each other, for
example a food processing firm manufacturing
leather footwear as well.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Upper level index
An index constructed from elementary or lowerlevel indices. Weights are used to combine them.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Diversification, Related diversification
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
UNSC
See United Nations Statistical Commission
See also: United Nations Statistical Commission
(UNSC)
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
UNSD
See United Nations Statistical Division
Upper secondary
education (ISCED 3)
Upper secondary education (ISCED 3) corresponds
to the final stage of secondary education in most
OECD countries.
See also: United Nations Statistics Division (UNSD)
Untied aid
Aide non liée
Untied aid is Official Development Assistance for
which the associated goods and services may be
fully and freely procured in substantially all
countries
Instruction is often more organised along subjectmatter lines than at ISCED level 2 and teachers
typically need to have a higher level, or more
subject-specific, qualifications than at ISCED 2.
The entrance age to this level is typically 15 or 16
Source: Glossary of Key Terms and Concepts.
From the "Development Co-operation Report:
Efforts and Policies of Members of the
825
years.
Urban population
Because of national differences in the
characteristics that distinguish urban from rural
areas, the distinction between urban and rural
population is not amenable to a single definition
that would be applicable to all countries. National
definitions are most commonly based on size of
locality. Population which is not urban is
considered rural.
Context: There are substantial differences in the
typical duration of ISCED 3 programmes both
across and between countries, typically ranging
from two to five years of schooling. ISCED 3 may
either be ―terminal‖ (i.e., preparing the students
for entry directly into working life) and/or
―preparatory‖ (i.e., preparing students for tertiary
education).
Programmes at level 3 can also be subdivided into
three categories based on the degree to which the
programme is specifically oriented towards a
specific class of occupations or trades and leads to
a labour-market relevant qualification: General,
Pre-vocational or pre-technical, and Vocational or
technical programmes.
Source: United Nations. Principles and
Recommendations for Population and Housing
Censuses, Revision 1. Series M, No. 67, Rev. 1
(United Nations publication, Sales No.
E.98.XVII.1). (P1.3)
Urban railway
enterprise
Railway enterprise wholly operating urban,
suburban or similar lines within the boundaries of
one or more built-up areas.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Upper-middle-income
countries
In the context of the Paris Club, countries not
considered lower-middle-income or low-income
countries. These countries receive nonconcessional rescheduling terms, originally with
flat repayment schedules, but in the 1990s
increasingly with graduated payment schedules
that have a maturity of up to 15 years and a grace
period of 2–3 years for commercial credits. Official
development assistance credits are rescheduled
over 10 years, including a grace period of 5–6
years. The World Bank classifies as upper-middle
income those countries with GNP per capita income
of between $2,996 and $9,265 in 2000.
Context: Data on such enterprises must be
separated from data on principal and secondary
enterprises.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Urban road
A road within the boundaries of a built-up area,
which is an area with entries and exits specially
sign-posted as such.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
URAA
See Uruguay Round Agreement on Agriculture
Urban road passenger
enterprise
Road passenger transport enterprise performing
urban, metropolitan or similar scheduled or nonscheduled transport services within the boundaries
of one or more built-up areas and whose main
activities in the field of road passenger transport,
according to value-added, is urban road passenger
transport.
See also: Uruguay Round Agreement on
Agriculture (URAA)
Urban inland
waterways transport
Transport carried out on inland waterways located
within the boundaries of a built-up area.
Context: Only transport carried out mainly or
solely on inland waterways located within the
boundaries of a built-up area are regarded as
urban transport.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Urban road traffic
826
Traffic carried out on urban roads or tramways.
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
Context: Proportions of a through journey
involving a relatively short passage over urban
roads are not counted as urban traffic.
See also: Built-in agenda
Uruguay Round
Accord d‟Uruguay sur
Agreement on
l‟ agriculture
Agriculture (URAA)
The terms of the Uruguay Round Agreement on
Agriculture (URAA) are contained in the section
entitled the ―Agreement on Agriculture‖ of the Final
Act Embodying the Results of the Uruguay Round
of Multilateral Trade Negotiations. This text
contains commitments in the areas of market
access, domestic support, and export subsidies,
and general provisions concerning monitoring and
continuation. In addition, each country‘s schedule
is an integral part of its contractual commitment
under the URAA.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Urban road transport
Transport carried out on urban roads or tramways.
Context: Only transport mainly or solely performed
on urban roads is considered to be urban
transport.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
There is a separate agreement entitled the
Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and
Phyto-sanitary Measures. This agreement seeks
establishing a multilateral framework of rules and
disciplines to guide the adoption, development and
the enforcement of sanitary and phyto-sanitary
measures in order to minimise their negative
effects on trade
Urban sprawl
Prolifération urbaine
Urban sprawl is the expansion of an urban area to
accommodate its growing population
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms) See
also Phyto-sanitary regulations and Sanitary
regulations.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Blair House Agreement, Phytosanitary
regulations, Sanitary regulations
Urbanization
Urbanization:
Use benefits
Use benefits include both direct and indirect
benefits. Use benefits also include option and
bequest benefits.
Urbanisation
1. increase in the proportion of a population living
in urban areas;
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.36
2. process by which a large number of people
becomes permanently concentrated in relatively
small areas, forming cities
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Use of IMF credit and
loans
These comprise members‘ drawings on the IMF
other than those drawn against the country‘s
reserve tranche position. Use of IMF credit and
loans includes purchases and drawings under
Stand-By, Extended, Structural Adjustment,
Enhanced Structural Adjustment, and Systemic
Transformation Facility Arrangements, together
with Trust Fund loans.
URL
See Uniform Resource Locator
See also: Uniform Resource Locator (URL)
Uruguay Round
The Uruguay Round is the eighth round of
multilateral trade negotiations conducted within
the framework of the General Agreement on Tariffs
and Trade (GATT). Launched in Punta del Este,
Uruguay, in 1986 and concluded in December
1993, the final Uruguay Round agreement, signed
in Marrakech in April 1994, embraces 136
participating countries (―contracting partners‖) and
came into effect in 1995
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
827
The remaining amount of the revenue is regarded
as true income
Use tables for natural
resources
A table that describes the use of natural resources
(from the national or the rest of the world
environment) by the national or the rest of the
world economy.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 3.109
User cost of capital
The user cost of capital is the unit cost for the use
of a capital asset for one period--that is, the price
for employing or obtaining one unit of capital
services. The user cost of capital is also referred to
as the ―rental price‖ of a capital good, or the
―capital service price"
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Used asset
A used asset is one which has already been
acquired by at least one resident or non-resident
user, or produced on own account. A used asset
will usually be exchanged at less than the price
when it was first acquired. It is a synonym for
―second-hand asset"
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
User needs (for
statistics)
User needs refer to the data and metadata
requirements of persons or organisations to meet a
particular use or set of uses. Such needs may be
specified in terms of the quality dimensions
promulgated by international organisations or
national agencies.
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
See also: Second hand asset
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
User charges
Payments made by consumers to providers of
government services.
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
Source: IMF, 2007, Manual on Fiscal Transparency,
IMF, Washington DC, Glossary
User satisfaction
survey
A statistical survey aiming to assess the
satisfaction of users of statistics.
User cost
The cost incurred over a period of time by the
owner of a fixed asset or consumer durable as a
consequence of using it to provide a flow of capital
or consumption services. User cost consists of the
depreciation on the asset or durable (measured at
current prices and not at historic cost) plus the
capital, or interest, cost.
Source: Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
October 2003
User-cost method
The method of estimating the value of imputed
rentals by summing the relevant cost items:
intermediate consumption (current maintenance
and repairs, insurance), consumption of fixed
capital, other taxes on production and net
operating surplus (nominal rate of return on the
capital invested in the dwelling and land).
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Source: Eurostat, OECD, 2007, Eurostat-OECD
Methodological Manual on Purchasing Power
Parities, OECD, Paris – Annex VII, Glossary of
terms and abbreviations
User cost (in
Coût d‟usage
valuation of mineral
deposits)
User cost is the concept proposed for the valuation
of the depletion of mineral deposits according to
which a time—bound stream of net revenues from
the sale of an exhaustible natural resource is
converted into a permanent income stream by
investing part of the revenues, that is, the user
cost allowance, over the lifetime of the resource.
User-pays principle
Principe du pollueurpayeur
The user-pays principle is the variation of the
polluter-pays principle that calls upon the user of a
natural resource to bear the cost of running down
828
natural capital
(for visitors)
The usual environment required to distinguish a
visitor from all other travellers within a location is
difficult to define in precise terms. Generally
speaking, it corresponds to the geographical
boundaries within which an individual displaces
himself/herself within his/her regular routine of
life.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Polluter-pays-principle
Uses (transactions in Inscription en partie
current accounts)
double (principe de)
The term uses refers to transactions in the current
accounts that reduce the amount of economic
value of a unit or sector (for example, wages and
salaries are a use for the unit or sector that must
pay them); by convention, uses are put on the left
side of the account
As stated in the Recommendations on Tourism
Statistics, the usual environment of a person
consists of the direct vicinity of his/her home and
place of work or study and other places frequently
visited.
Context: It has two dimensions:
Source: SNA 2.54
- Frequency: places which are frequently visited by
a person (on a routine basis) are considered as
part of his/her usual environment even though
these places may be located at a considerable
distance from his/her place of residence;
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
- Distance: places located close to the place of
residence of a person are also part of his/her usual
environment even if the actual spots are rarely
visited
Uses approach
An approach to CPIs in which the consumption in
some period is identified with the consumption
goods and services actually used up by a
household to satisfy their needs and wants (as
distinct from the consumption goods and services
acquired). In this approach, the consumption of
consumer durables in a given period is measured
by the values of the flows of services provided by
the stocks of durables owned by households. These
values may be estimated by the user costs.
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, para 2.6
Usual hours of work
(per week)
Usual hours of work per week identifies the most
common weekly working schedule over a selected
period of a person in employment.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Context: While no international statistical definition
of ―usual hours of work‖ exists, it has been defined
as the hours worked in an activity during a typical
week, 7 or more technically, as the modal value of
the workers‘ ―hours actually worked‖ per week
over a long period. This definition is applicable to
all workers with regular schedules, even to those
who do not possess a working contract – for
example, workers engaged in small-scale or family
enterprises, or self-employed workers. For workers
who do not work regular schedules, measures of
average hours actually worked per week over a
long period are sometimes used.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Uses of value added
Quadrant des emplois
quadrant
de la valeur ajoutée
The uses of value added quadrant (of an inputoutput table) shows those production costs of
producers other than intermediate consumption
Source: SNA 15.74
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
When compared with workers‘ ―normal hours of
work‖, the ―usual hours of work‖ includes the
overtime that occurs systematically every day or
week and excludes time not worked on a usual
basis. This measure is affected neither by irregular
or unusual overtime, whether worked for premium
pay, regular pay, or not compensated at all, nor by
unusual absence or rest.
U-shaped distribution
A frequency distribution shaped more or less like a
letter "U", though not necessarily symmetrical, i.e.
with the maximum frequencies at the two
extremes of the range of the variate.
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 203
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
See also: Normal hours of work
Usual residence
Usual environment
829
See Country of usual residence
A continuous monitoring of the process of
compilation and of the results of this process.
See also: Country of usual residence
Context: In SDMX, "Validation" describes methods
and processes for routinely assessing source data
– including censuses, sample surveys, and
administrative records – and how the results of the
assessments are monitored and made available to
guide statistical processes.
Usually active
population
The usually active population comprises all persons
above a specified age whose activity status, as
determined in terms of the total number of weeks
or days during a long specified period (such as the
preceding 12 months or the preceding calendar
year) was either employed or unemployed
It also describes how intermediate results are
validated against other information where
applicable, how statistical discrepancies in
intermediate data are assessed and investigated
and how statistical discrepancies and other
potential indicators or problems in statistical
outputs are investigated. All the controls made in
terms of quality of the data to be published or
already published are included in the validation
process.
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.177
Utility
Often defined as the satisfaction derived from
consumption of a good or service.
Validation also includes the results of studies and
analysis of revisions and how they are used to
inform the statistical processes. In this process,
two dimensions can be distinguished:
Source: A Guide to the Consumer Price Index 13th Series, Glossary, Australian Bureau of
Statistics
(i) validation before publication of the figures, and
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/0/9171
F5CDC94489A9CA25697E0018FD59?Open&Highlig
ht=0,glossary
(ii) validation after publication.
Source: Eurostat, "Handbook on Quarterly National
Accounts", Luxembourg, 1999
Validation
Validation
A continuous monitoring of the process of
compilation and of the results of this process.
See also: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX)
Context: In SDMX, "Validation" describes methods
and processes for routinely assessing source data
– including censuses, sample surveys, and
administrative records – and how the results of the
assessments are monitored and made available to
guide statistical processes.
Validation edit
A validation edit undertakes checks which are
made between fields in a particular record. This
includes the checking of every field of every record
to ascertain whether it contains a valid entry and
the checking that entries are consistent with each
other.
It also describes how intermediate results are
validated against other information where
applicable, how statistical discrepancies in
intermediate data are assessed and investigated
and how statistical discrepancies and other
potential indicators or problems in statistical
outputs are investigated. All the controls made in
terms of quality of the data to be published or
already published are included in the validation
process.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Validation also includes the results of studies and
analysis of revisions and how they are used to
inform the statistical processes. In this process,
two dimensions can be distinguished:
Validity error
A validity error is an occurrence of the value of a
data item which is not an element of the set of
permissible codes or values assigned to that data
item.
(i) validation before publication of the figures, and
(ii) validation after publication.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: Eurostat, "Handbook on Quarterly National
Accounts", Luxembourg, 1999
See also: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX)
Validation
Hyperlink:
Validation
830
bank calculates the value of underlying assets as
their market value reduced by a certain percentage
(haircut). The Eurosystem applies valuation
haircuts reflecting features of the specific assets,
such as their residual maturity.
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Valuables
Objets de valeur
Valuables are produced assets that are not used
primarily for production or consumption, that are
expected to appreciate or at least not to decline in
real value, that do not deteriorate over time under
normal conditions and that are acquired and held
primarily as stores of value
Source: European Central Bank, 2003, Annual
Report: 2003, ECB, Frankfurt, Glossary
Valuation of natural
Evaluation des actifs
assets
naturels
Valuation of natural assets are methods of
applying a monetary value to natural assets in
environmental accounting that include:
Source: (AN.13) – Annex to chapter XIII [10.7,
10.116, 13.15, 13.50]
(a) market valuation,
(b) direct non—market valuation such as the
assessment of the willingness to pay for
environmental services (contingent valuation), and
(c) indirect non-market valuation, for example,
costing of environmental damage or of compliance
with environmental standards
Valuation
Under the SDDS, valuation refers to such items as:
1) the exchange rates or conversion factors used
to convert foreign-currency-denominated assets
and liabilities into the national currency equivalent;
2) whether transactions are recorded at market
prices, face or nominal value vs. issue or
discounted prices;
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
3) adjustments to convert CIF imports to an FOB
basis;
See also: Contingent valuation, Maintenance (cost)
valuation (environmental accounting), Market
valuation
4) adjustments to align data with balance of
payments concepts as well as the frequency of any
revaluation (e.g., daily, monthly, quarterly,
yearly).
Valuation of stocks
The fifth edition of the IMF Balance of Payments
Manual (BPM5) and the OECD Benchmark
Definition of Foreign Direct Investment recommend
using market price as the basis for stock valuation.
However, it is recognised that, in practice, book
values from the balance sheets of direct
investment enterprises (or investors) are often
used to determine the value of the stock of direct
investment
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
See also: Accounting basis, Actuarial valuation,
Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS)
Valuation
Under the SDDS, valuation refers to such items as:
1) the exchange rates or conversion factors used
to convert foreign-currency-denominated assets
and liabilities into the national currency equivalent;
Source: Report on the Survey of Implementation
of Implementation of Methodological Standards for
Direct Investment – IMF, OECD, March 2000 –
Appendix II: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms.
2) whether transactions are recorded at market
prices, face or nominal value vs. issue or
discounted prices;
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/bopage/pdf/mar2000.
pdf
3) adjustments to convert CIF imports to an FOB
basis;
See also: Book value
Valuation of the
degradation of land
and soil
The present value of the future rent on land that is
foregone due to the degradation attributed to the
period.
4) adjustments to align data with balance of
payments concepts as well as the frequency of any
revaluation (e.g., daily, monthly, quarterly,
yearly).
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.296
See also: Accounting basis, Actuarial valuation,
Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS)
Valuation haircut
A risk control measure applied to underlying assets
used in reverse transactions, in which the central
831
Value
Valeur
Value at the level of a single, homogeneous good
or service is equal to the price per unit of quantity
multiplied by the number of quantity units of that
good or service; in contrast to price, value is
independent of the choice of quantity unit.
Investment subsidies are excluded. Specific
calculation methods are needed for NACE Rev. 1
classes 66.01 and 66.03.
Context: Values are expressed in terms of a
common unit of currency and are commensurate
and additive across different products. Quantities,
on the other hand, are not commensurate and
additive across different products even when
measured in the same kind of physical units.
i) The first comprises VAT and other deductible
taxes directly linked to turnover which are
excluded from turnover. These taxes are collected
in stages by the enterprise and fully borne by the
final purchaser.
Note: Indirect taxes can be separated into three
groups:
ii) The second group concerns all other taxes and
duties linked to products which are either 1) linked
to turnover and not deductible or 2) taxes on
products not linked to turnover. Included here are
taxes and duties on imports and taxes on the
production, export, sale, transfer, leasing or
delivery of goods and services or as a result of
their use for own consumption or own capital
formation.
ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World Bank,
2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory and
Practice, International Monetary Fund, Washington
DC.
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Source: SNA 16.9
iii) The third group concerns taxes and duties
linked to production. These are compulsory,
unrequited payments, in cash or in kind which are
levied by general government, or by the
Institutions of the European Union, in respect of
the production and importation of goods and
services, the employment of labour, the ownership
or use of land, buildings or other assets used in
production irrespective of the quantity or the value
of goods and services produced or sold
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Value added - basic
prices Ŕ NACE
Value added at basic prices is calculated from the
production value plus subsidies on products less
the purchases of goods and services (other than
those purchased for resale in the same condition)
plus or minus the change in stocks of raw
materials and consumables less other taxes on
products which are linked to turnover but not
deductible. It represents the value added by the
various factor inputs in the operating activities of
the unit concerned.
Source: Definitions of Structural Business Statistics
Regulation (Commission Regulation (EC) No.
2700/98 of 17 December 1998) variables (12 14
0)
See also: Value added - basic prices – SNA
Income and expenditure classified as financial or
extra-ordinary in company accounts is excluded
from value added.
Value added - basic
prices Ŕ SNA
Value added - basic prices – refers to output
valued at basic prices less intermediate
consumption valued at purchasers' prices
Value added at basic prices is calculated "gross"
because value adjustments (such as depreciation)
are not subtracted.
Source: SNA 6.226
Context: Operating subsidies can be separated into
two groups:
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
i) Subsidies on products are subsidies payable per
unit of a good or service. The subsidy may be a
specific amount of money per unit of a good or
service or it may be calculated ad valorem as a
specified percentage of the price per unit. A
subsidy on a product usually becomes payable
when the good or service is produced, sold or
imported, but it may also be payable in other
circumstances such as when a good is transferred,
leased, delivered or used for own consumption or
own capital formation.
See also: Value added - basic prices – NACE
Value added (for
railway enterprises)
Gross output of the railway enterprise less the
value of its intermediate consumption. Value added
of domestic production of all railway enterprises in
a country is equal to their contribution to the GDP
of that country.
Context: It is understood that Value Added, in this
context, is expressed in market prices.
ii) Subsidies linked to production are subsidies
received by a unit which are not linked to the
quantity or the value of goods produced or sold.
Notably these subsidies include subsidies on the
payroll and workforce, subsidies for environmental
protection and grants for interest relief.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
832
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
minus the changes in stocks, minus the purchases
of goods and services, minus other taxes on
products which are linked to turnover but not
deductible, minus the duties and taxes linked to
production
Value added (of inland
waterways transport
enterprises)
Gross output of the IWT enterprise less the value
of its intermediate consumption. Value added of
domestic production of all of a country‘s IWT
enterprises is equal to their contribution to the
GDP of that country.
Source: Statistics in focus: Industry, trade and
services; Theme 4 – 7/2001 - Distributive trades
statistics, Eurostat, Methodological Notes, page 7
Value added function
The value added function indicates the maximum
amount of current-price value-added that an
establishment or industry can generate, given a
set of prices for its output and for its intermediate
inputs, and given a certain quantity of primary
inputs
Context: It is understood that Value added, in this
context, is expressed in market prices.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: OECD Productivity Manual: A Guide to the
Measurement of Industry-Level and Aggregate
Productivity Growth, OECD, Paris, March 2001,
Annex 1 – Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/59/29/2352458.pdf
Value added (of oil
pipeline enterprises)
Gross output of the oil pipeline transport enterprise
less the value of its intermediate consumption.
Value added of domestic production of all oil
pipeline transport enterprises in a country is equal
to their contribution to the GDP of that country.
Value added producer
price index
The weighted average of an output producer price
index (PPI) and input PPI.
Context: It is understood that Value Added, in this
context, is expressed in market prices.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Value added (of road
transport enterprises)
Gross output of the road transport enterprise less
the value of its intermediate consumption. Value
added of domestic production of all road transport
enterprises in a country is equal to their
contribution to the GDP of that country.
Value added tax (VAT) Taxe sur la valeur
Ŕ ESA
ajoutée (TVA) - SEC
A value added type tax (VAT) is a tax on goods
and services collected in stages by enterprises and
which is ultimately charged in full to the final
purchasers. This heading value added type taxes
comprises the value added tax which is collected
by the General government and which is applied to
national and imported products, as well as, where
appropriate, other deductible taxes applied under
similar rules to those governing VAT, for simplicity
henceforth called ‗VAT‘. Producers are obliged to
pay only the difference between the VAT on their
sales and the VAT on their purchases for their own
intermediate consumption or gross fixed capital
formation
Context: It is understood that value added, in this
context, is expressed in market prices.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: ESA [4.17]
See also: Value added tax (VAT) – SNA
Value added at factor
cost
Value added at factor cost is the gross income
from operating activities after adjusting for
operating subsidies and indirect taxes. It can be
calculated from turnover, plus capitalised
production, plus other operating income, plus or
Value added tax (VAT) Taxe sur la valeur
Ŕ SNA
ajoutée (TVA) - SCN
A value added tax (VAT) is a tax on products
collected in stages by enterprises; it is a wideranging tax usually designed to cover most or all
goods and services but producers are obliged to
pay to government only the difference between the
833
VAT on their sales and the VAT on their purchases
for intermediate consumption or capital formation,
while VAT is not usually charged on sales to nonresidents (i.e. exports)
Source: SNA 1.6 [2.172, 6.4, 6.222]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: SNA 6.207 and 6.208 [15.47]
Value added, net
Valeur ajoutée nette
Net value added is the value of output less the
values of both intermediate consumption and
consumption of fixed capital
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Deductible VAT, Non-deductible VAT,
Value added tax (VAT) – ESA
Source: SNA 6.4, 6.222 [1.6]
Value added tax
TVA déductible
(VAT), deductible
Deductible value added tax (VAT) is the VAT
payable on purchases of goods or services
intended for intermediate consumption, gross fixed
capital formation or for resale which a producer is
permitted to deduct from his own VAT liability to
the government in respect of VAT invoiced to his
customers
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Value domain
A value domain is a set of permissible values.
Context: In the context of ISO 11179, a domain is
the set of possible data values of an attribute. A
―data value‖ is an element of a value domain.
―Enumerated value domain‖ is a value domain that
is specified by a list of all its permissible values.
Source: SNA 6.209
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
The value domain provides representation, but has
no implication as to what data element concept the
values may be associated with or what the values
mean.
See also: VAT – non-deductible
Value added tax
TVA facturée
(VAT), invoiced
Invoiced value added tax (VAT) is the VAT payable
on the sales of a producer; it is shown separately
on the invoice which the producer presents to the
purchaser
The permissible values may either be enumerated
or expressed via a description.
Non-enumerated value domain is a value domain
that is specified by a description rather than a list
of all Permissible values.
Source: SNA 6.209
Non-enumerated value domain description is a
description or specification of a rule, reference, or
range for a set of all permissible values for the
value domain.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Value added tax
TVA non déductible
(VAT), non-deductible
Non-deductible value added tax (VAT) is VAT
payable by a purchaser which is not deductible
from his own VAT liability, if any
Value domain representation class is the class of
representation of a value domain.
Attributes of value domain:
Source: SNA 6.209
Value domain administration record is the
administration record for a value domain.
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Value domain datatype is the datatype used in a
value domain.
See also: VAT – deductible
Value domain format is a template for the
structure of the presentation of the Value(s) e.g. YYYY-MM-DD for a date.
Value added, gross
Valeur ajoutée brute
Gross value added is the value of output less the
value of intermediate consumption; it is a measure
of the contribution to GDP made by an individual
producer, industry or sector; gross value added is
the source from which the primary incomes of the
SNA are generated and is therefore carried forward
into the primary distribution of income account.
Value domain maximum character quantity is the
maximum number of characters to represent the
Data Element value and is applicable only to
character datatypes.
Value domain relationship is a relationship among
two or more Value domains.
Context: Gross value added may be calculated at
basic prices, factor cost, producers‘ prices or at
market prices. (Services: Statistics on Value Added
and Employment, OECD, 2000 edition,
Introduction, page 12)
Value domain unit of measure is the unit of
measure used in a value domain.
(ISO/IEC 11179-3 "Information technology Metadata registries-Part 3: Registry metamodel
834
and basic attributes", February 2003)
Value meaning identifier is the unique identifier for
a value meaning.
Source: ISO/IEC FCD FCD 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registers-Part 1:
Framework", May 2003
Source: ISO/IEC FCD 11179-1 "Information
technology - Metadata registers - Part 1:
Framework", May 2003
See also: Attribute, ISO / IEC 11179, Permissible
value, Permitted value, Value item
See also: Conceptual domain, ISO / IEC 11179,
Permissible value, Value item
Value index
An index number formed from the ratio of
aggregate values in the given period to the
aggregate values in the base period. Strictly
speaking this is not an index number as ordinarily
understood but a value relative.
Value of work put in
place (construction)
The value of work put in place is the value of work
carried out on projects completed during the
inquiry period, plus the value of work under
construction at the end of the inquiry period minus
the value at the beginning of the period. It
includes construction work done as a main
contractor and on own-account, plus work done as
a subcontractor (minus the payments to subcontractors for work done)
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: Bulletin of Housing and Building Statistics
for Europe and North America, UNECE, Geneva,
2000, Annex II, Definitions and General Terms,
page 84
Value item
A representation of a value meaning in a specific
value domain - the actual value.
Source: ISO/IEC International Standard 11179-3 Information technology - Metadata registries
(MDR) - Part 3: Registry metamodel and basic
attributes", February 2003
See also: Work completed (construction)
Value updating
See Price updating
See also: ISO / IEC 11179, Value domain, Value
meaning
See also: Price updating
Value weights
The measures of the relative importance of
products in the index. The weight reference-period
values or shares of the various components of
output (or input) covered by the index. Being
commensurate and additive across different
products, value weights can be used at
aggregation levels above the detailed product
level.
Value meaning
The meaning or semantic content of a value.
Context: Given a permissible value, representation
of its value meaning shall be independent of (and
shall not constrain) the representation of its
corresponding value.
The representation of value meanings in a registry
shall be independent of (and shall not constrain)
their representation in any corresponding value
domain.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Value meaning set is the relationship between a
conceptual domain and a set of value meanings.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Attributes of value meaning:
Value meaning begin date is the effective date of
this value meaning in the conceptual domain. A
registration authority may determine whether this
date is the date the value meaning becomes valid
in a registry or the date the value meaning
becomes part of the source domain or some other
date.
See also: Quantity weights, Weights
Values at constant
exchange rates of
period t0
Values at constant exchange rates of period t0 are
series at current domestic prices converted to a
common currency by way of constant exchange
rates of period t0.
Value meaning description is a description of a
value meaning.
Context: A value index of this kind corresponds to
a weighted average of the value changes in
domestic prices, as exchange rates are held fixed
Value meaning end date is the date this value
meaning became/becomes invalid. A registration
authority may determine whether this date is the
date the value meaning becomes no longer valid in
a registry or the date the value meaning becomes
no longer part of the source domain or some other
date.
Source: Statistical Series for the Euro Area Conclusions and Recommendations of the OECD
ASTF Euro Subgroup, 15 May 2001
835
Conclusions and Recommendations of the OECD
ASTF Euro Subgroup, 15 May 2001
Values at constant
exchange rates of
period t-1
Values at constant exchange rates of period t-1 are
series at current domestic prices converted to a
common currency by way of constant exchange
rates of period t-1.
Values at current
international prices
(at current PPPs)
Values at current international prices (at current
PPPs) are series at current domestic prices
converted to a common currency by way of current
PPPs. Because PPPs are price relatives of goods
and services, this implies substituting the set of
domestic prices by a set of international prices
Context: A value index of this kind corresponds to
a weighted average of the value changes in
domestic prices, as exchange rates are held fixed
at their previous year‘s value. However, weights
are continuously updated
Source: Statistical Series for the Euro Area Conclusions and Recommendations of the OECD
ASTF Euro Subgroup, 15 May 2001
Source: Statistical Series for the Euro Area Conclusions and Recommendations of the OECD
ASTF Euro Subgroup, 15 May 2001
Valuing natural
resources
The principles for valuing produced assets and
calculating the decline in their value can be applied
to natural resources in like manner. Natural
resources provide a stream of services to the
economy as they are used. The value of these
services represents the resource rent of the asset.
The decline in value of the resource (ignoring price
effects and disasters) can be called the
consumption of natural capital, parallel to the
consumption of fixed capital.
Values at constant
international prices of
period t0 (at PPPs of
period t0)
Values at constant international prices of period t0
(at PPPs of period t0) are series at current
domestic prices converted to a common currency
by way of constant PPPs of a given year.
Context:
A value index of this kind corresponds to a
weighted average of the value changes in domestic
prices, as PPPs are held fixed
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 2.136
Source: Statistical Series for the Euro Area Conclusions and Recommendations of the OECD
ASTF Euro Subgroup, 15 May 2001
Values at constant
international prices of
period t-1 (at PPPs of
period t-1)
Values at constant international prices of period t-1
(at PPPs of period t-1) are series at current
domestic prices converted to a common currency
by way of PPPs of year t-1.
Van (railway)
Railway vehicle without motor forming part of a
passenger or goods train and used by the train
crew as well as, if need be, for the conveyance of
luggage, parcels, bicycles, etc.
Context: A value index of this kind corresponds to
a weighted average of the value changes in
domestic prices, as PPPs are held fixed at their
previous year‘s value. However, weights are
continuously updated
Context: Vehicles possessing one or more
passenger compartments must not be counted as
vans but as passenger carriages. Mail vans,
belonging to railway enterprises, are included
under vans when they do not have a passenger
compartment.
Source: Statistical Series for the Euro Area Conclusions and Recommendations of the OECD
ASTF Euro Subgroup, 15 May 2001
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Values at current
exchange rates (at
current USD)
Values at current exchange rates (at current USD)
are series at current domestic prices converted to
a common currency by way of current exchange
rates. Because exchange rates are price relatives
of currencies, this expresses domestic values in
terms of a foreign currency
Variable
Variable
A variable is a characteristic of a unit being
observed that may assume more than one of a set
of values to which a numerical measure or a
category from a classification can be assigned (e.g.
income, age, weight, etc., and ―occupation‖,
―industry‖, ―disease‖, etc.
Source: Statistical Series for the Euro Area -
836
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Context: A variable in the mathematical sense, i.e.
a quantity which may take any one of specified set
of values. It is convenient to apply the same word
to denote non-measurable characteristics, e.g.,
'sex' is a variable in this sense since any human
individual may take one of two 'values', male or
female. It is useful, but far from being the general
practice, to distinguish between a variable as so
defined and a random variable (The International
Statistical Institute, "The Oxford Dictionary of
Statistical Terms", edited by Yadolah Dodge,
Oxford University Press, 2003).
Variable rate notes
(VRNs)
These securities adopted the standard
characteristics of a variable-rate bond. However,
whereas a standard characteristic of a variablerate bond is that it carries a fixed spread over a
referral index, the spread over LIBOR on a VRN
varies over time depending on the change in the
perceived credit risk of the issuer. The spread is
reset at each rollover date—normally every three
months—by means of negotiation between the
issuer and arranging house.
Source: "United Nations Glossary of Classification
Terms" prepared by the Expert Group on
International Economic and Social Classifications;
unpublished on paper
See also: Characteristic, Data item, Observation
Context: VRNs are usually issued with no maturity
date (perpetual VRNs) but fixed five-year and
longer-dated issues are in existence. VRNs
generally have a put option for the existing holders
of notes to sell the issue back to the lead manager
of the issuing syndicate, at par, at any interest
payment date.
Variable costs
Variable costs are costs that vary with the amount
produced. Examples are materials, fuel, production
labour and maintenance. As the relevant time
period is extended, more costs become variable.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/class/family/glossary_s
hort.htm
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Variable sampling
Taux de sondage
fraction
variable
If from a stratified population a simple random
selection is selected from each stratum in such a
way that the proportion of units sampled in each
stratum varies from stratum to stratum, the
sample is said to be selected with variable
sampling fraction. Applicability of the term to other
sampling schemes rests upon the general definition
of sampling fraction.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
See also: Costs, Fixed costs
Variable rate
A variable rate is an interest rate that may
fluctuate over the life of the loan, unlike a fixed
rate. A change in the variable rate will affect either
the size of the re-payment or the length of the
loan
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Variable selection
The problem of selecting subsets of variables, in
regression or multivariate statistics, that contain
most of the relevant information in the full data
set.
Variable rate bond
A bond whose interest payments are linked to a
reference index (for example, LIBOR), or the price
of a specific commodity, or the price of a specific
financial instrument that normally changes over
time in a continuous manner in response to market
pressures.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Variable-rate note
FRN where the margin over the reference rate is
fixed by the issuer and the remarketing agent
Hyperlink:
837
several days before the following interest period.
The holders, during a predetermined period of
time, have the right to either bid for the new
applicable margin over the reference rate or
(under certain conditions) put the notes to the
arranger (but not the issuer) on the following
interest payment date.
number of sub-samples are derived from the initial
sample and variance is estimated from the
variability of the results in this set of sub-samples.
Several methods are based on re-sampling, such
as the jack-knife, the bootstrap and the balanced
repeated replication methods.
Source: Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
October 2003
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
See also: Estimate, Variance
Variate
In contradistinction to a variable, a variate is a
quantity which may take any of the values of a
specified set with a specified relative frequency or
probability. The variate is therefore often known as
a random variable. It is to regarded as defined, not
merely by a set of permissible values like an
ordinary mathematical variable, but by an
associated frequency (probability) function
expressing how often those values appear in the
situation under discussion.
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Variance
Variance
The variance is the mean square deviation of the
variable around the average value. It reflects the
dispersion of the empirical values around its mean.
Source: Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
October 2003
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Variance analysis
Analyse de la variance
The total variation displayed by a set of
observations, as measured by the sums of squares
of deviations from the mean, may in certain
circumstances be separated into components
associated with defined sources of variation used
as criteria of classification for the observations.
Such an analysis is called an analysis of variance,
although in the strict sense it is an analysis of
sums of squares. Many standard situations can be
reduced to the variance analysis form.
Variate
transformation
The transformation of one variate into another,
usually by a mathematical equation connecting
them. The object is, as a rule, to transform the
distribution function of one variate exactly or
approximately into a distribution function of known
form and properties.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Variance estimation
The task of estimating the value of the variance of
an estimate.
Context: Methods employed are commonly
classified as:
Vegetable oil
Huiles végétales
Vegetable oil is defined as rapeseed oil (canola),
soybean oil, sunflower seed oil and palm oil,
except in Japan where it excludes sunflower seed
oil
- analytic methods: use and compute the proper
formulae of the variance;
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
- approximate methods: methods that use
approximations for complex and muti-stage sample
designs.
Vehicle companies
Vehicle companies are financial entities created to
be holders of securitized assets or assets that have
been removed from the balance sheets of
corporations or government units as part of the
restructuring of these units. Many are organized as
trusts or special purpose vehicles created solely to
hold specific portfolios of assets or liabilities.
These methods can be classified in three
categories:
- simplifying assumptions: setting assumptions
which allow use of straightforward formulae (as if
an analytic method could be applied).
- Taylor's linearisation techniques: estimation of
non-linear statistics is simplified in using a Taylor's
development of the concerned statistics.
- Replication or re-sampling methods: a large
Source: IMF, 2004, Compilation Guide on Financial
Soundness Indicators, IMF, Washington DC,
Appendix VII, Glossary
838
Vehicle-kilometre
Unit of measurement representing the movement
of a road motor vehicle over one kilometre.
with money and banking statistics, custodian data;
differences with partner data or preshipment
inspection data; the treatment of differences
between GDP compiled for the production approach
and GDP compiled from the expenditure approach.
Context: The distance to be considered is the
distance actually run. It includes movements of
empty road motor vehicles. Units made up of a
tractor and a semi-trailer or a lorry and a trailer
are counted as one vehicle.
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: Compilation practices, Special Data
Dissemination Standard (SDDS)
Version
A version is the identification of an issue of a data
element specification in a series of evolving data
element specifications within a registration
authority
Vehicle-kilometre (for
inland waterways
transport)
Unit of measurement of traffic representing the
movement of an individual inland waterways
transport (IWT) vessel or convoy over one
kilometre.
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 1, Framework for the
specification and standardization of data elements,
1998
Version identifier
A version identifier is an identifier assigned to a
version under which a data element registration is
submitted or updated
Context: The distance taken into account is the
distance actually run. Movements of unladen
individual vessels or convoys are included.
Source: ISO/IEC 11179, Part 1, Framework for the
specification and standardization of data elements,
1998
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Vertical integration
Vertical integration describes the ownership or
control by a firm of different stages of the
production process, e.g., petroleum refining firms
owning "downstream" the terminal storage and
retail gasoline distribution facilities and "upstream"
the crude oil field wells and transportation
pipelines.
Vehicles
See Motor vehicles
See also: Motor vehicles
Velocity (of money)
The average number of times a measure of money
(as captured, for instance, by a monetary
aggregate) turns over within a specified period of
time. The income velocity of circulation is typically
calculated as the ratio of a monetary aggregate to
nominal GDP.
"Forward" integration refers to the production to
distribution stages whereas "backward" integration
refers to the production to raw material stages of
the operations of a firm.
Context: Vertical integration may be achieved
through new investment and/or vertical mergers
and acquisition of existing firms at different stages
of production. An important motive for vertical
integration is efficiencies and minimization of
transaction costs.
Source: A glossary of terms used in payments and
settlement systems, July 2001, Committee on
Payment and Settlement Systems, Bank for
International Settlements
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/cpss00b.pdf
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Verification
Refers to the principal methods to review, audit, or
verify the accuracy of the disseminated data (e.g.,
internal review, statistical confidence tests,
internal audit, audit by outside accountants, crosschecks with other macroeconomic accounts, etc.).
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Context: Under the SDDS, this may entail,
according to the data category under
consideration, the reconciliation of stocks and
transactions data; reconciliation of reported data
Vertical integration
Intégration verticale
(of a fishery)
Vertical integration of a fishery (or industry) is
vertically integrated when firms in the fishery
839
engage in multiple levels of the supply chain. For
example, a firm that operates and manages fishing
vessels, processing plants, and a wholesale
distribution operation is considered vertically
integrated
Refers to links between firms, or within a firm, upand-down the production chain for a particular
product. In recent times the production chain for a
range of products and services has become more
global.
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Source: OECD, June 2004, Glossary, OECD
Economic Outlook, Paris, France
See also: Horizontal integration
Vertically integrated
enterprise
Entreprise
verticalement
intégrée
A vertically integrated enterprise is one in which
different stages of production, which are usually
carried out by different enterprises, are carried out
in succession by different parts of the same
enterprise (the output of one stage becomes an
input into the next stage, only the output from the
final stage being actually sold on the market
Vertical merger
A Vertical merger is a merger between firms
operating at different stages of production, e.g.,
from raw materials to finished products to
distribution. An example would be a steel
manufacturer merging with an iron ore producer.
Context: Vertical mergers usually increase
economic efficiency, although they may sometimes
have an anticompetitive effect.
Source: SNA 5.31
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
See also: Horizontally integrated enterprise
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Vessel catch limit
The vessel catch limit is a limit on the quantity
each individual vessel can land per trip or short
period of time (e.g., day, week)
See also: Conglomerate merger, Horizontal
merger, Merger
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Vertical restraints (or
restrictions)
Vertical restraints (or restrictions) refers to certain
types of practices by manufacturers or suppliers
relating to the resale of their products.
Vessel-kilometre (for
inland waterways
transport)
Unit of measurement representing the movement
of an inland waterways transport (IWT) vessel over
one kilometre.
The usual practices adopted in this regard are
resale price maintenance (RPM), exclusive dealing
and exclusive territory or geographic market
restrictions.
Context: The distance taken into account is the
distance actually run. Movements of unladen
vessels are included. In a convoy, each unit is
counted as a vessel
Under exclusive dealing and/or exclusive territory,
a single distributor is the only one who obtains the
rights from a manufacturer to market the product.
Context: A significant debate exists in the
economic literature as to whether this confers
monopoly power on the distributor. Usually, the
distributor's market power is limited by interbrand competition. The manufacturer's purpose is
normally to provide incentives to the distributor to
promote the product and provide better service to
customers.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Vested benefit
Obligations au titre
obligation (VBO)
des droits acquis
The actuarial present value, using current salary
levels, of vested benefits only.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Vested benefits
Vertical supply
linkages
840
Prestations acquises
See Vested rights
See Central European Free Trade Agreement
(CEFTA)
See also: Vested rights
See also: Central European Free Trade Agreement
(CEFTA)
Vested rights
Droits acquis
Deferred pensions for deferred pensioners, benefits
accrued to active members and benefits of passive
members.
Visible
underemployment
Visible underemployment includes individuals who
are involuntarily working less than the normal
duration of work determined for the activity, who
are seeking or available for additional work during
the reference period.
Context: Identical term, "Vested benefits"
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Context: Visible underemployment can usually be
measured in labour force surveys. [OECD
Employment Outlook, July 1995, page 45]
Video-conferencing
See Tele-conferencing
In the Resolution Concerning the measurement of
underemployment and inadequate employment
situations adopted by the 16th International
Conference of Labour Statisticians in October 1998
recommendations concerning the measurement of
underemployment are limited to time-related
underemployment.
See also: Teleconferencing
Virtual corporation
A partnership among several enterprises sharing
complementary expertise created expressly to
produce a product with a short perspective life
span with the production of the product being
controlled through a computerized network. The
corporation is disbanded with the conclusion of the
product‘s life span.
Source: International Labour Organisation (ILO)
Resolution Concerning statistics of economically
active population, employment, unemployment
and underemployment, adopted by the 13th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians
(October 1982)
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
See also: Invisible underemployment, Time related
underemployment, Underemployment
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Visitor consumption
Visitor consumption is the basic concept measuring
tourism activity and refers to total consumption of
or on behalf of visitors and could, consequently,
also be termed as "visitor demand".
Virtual population
analysis
A method used by biologists to assess the physical
data on stocks of fish. It employs data on catches
from different cohorts of the same stock, together
with data on catch per unit effort.
Context: In visitor consumption concepts, visitor
final consumption expenditure in cash (its main
component), corresponds to the term "visitor
expenditure", traditionally used in the analysis of
tourism.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.283
Visitor consumption exceeds visitor purchases on a
trip. It encompasses these purchases as well as all
expenditure on goods and services by all other
institutional units on behalf of visitors. If cash or
financial assets are transferred to the visitor to
finance his/her trip, the purchases funded by these
are included in visitor consumption. Along with this
are all forms of transfers in kind and other
transactions benefiting visitors where it is not cash
or financial assets which is provided to the visitors
but the goods and services themselves - thus the
consumption of individual non-market services is
included. Essentially all transactions where there is
a direct link between the visitor and the
producer/provider of the good or service are within
scope.
Virtual safe setting
Synonym of Remote data laboratory.
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Source: Basic References on Tourism Statistics,
World Tourism Organisation
See also: Remote data laboratory
Visitor demand
Visegrad group
841
See Visitor consumption
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
See also: Visitor consumption
Visitors
The persons referred to in the definition of tourism
are termed ―visitors‖: ―Any person travelling to a
place other than that of his/her usual environment
for less than 12 months and whose main purpose
of trip is other than the exercise of an activity
remunerated from within the place visited‖
(Recommendations on Tourism Statistics, Part
One, para. 20)
Vital statistics
Vital statistics are information systematically
collected and compiled in numerical form, relating
to or derived from vital event records
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Source: Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended
Methodological Framework, Eurostat, OECD, WTO,
UNSD, 2001, para 2.4
Vocabulary
(a) List of words of a language.
Visitors (from abroad
to the country)
Visitors (from abroad to the country) are persons
who do not reside in the country of arrival and who
are admitted for short stays for purposes of
leisure, recreation, holidays; visits to friends or
relatives; business or professional activities not
remunerated from within the receiving country;
health treatment; or religious pilgrimages. Visitors
include excursionists, tourists and business
travellers.
(b) Repertory of words of a particular individual.
Source: Glossary of Terms for the Standardization
of Geographical Names, United Nations Group of
Experts on Geographic Names, United Nations,
New York, 2002
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/geoinfo/glossary.pdf
Source: Recommendations on Statistics of
International Migration, Revision 1, Statistical
Papers, Series M, No. 58, United Nations, New
York, 1998, Glossary
See also: Lexicon
Vocational
programmes
Vocational education prepares participants for
direct entry, without further training, into specific
occupations. Successful completion of such
programmes leads to a labour-market relevant
vocational qualification. Some indicators divide
vocational programmes into school-based
programmes and combined school and work-based
programmes on the basis of the amount of training
that is provided in school as opposed to training in
the workplace.
Vital event
A vital event refers to the live birth, death, foetal
death, marriage, divorce, adoption, legitimation,
recognition of parenthood, annulment of marriage,
or legal separation
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Vital event record
A vital event record is a legal document entered in
the civil register which attests to the occurrence
and characteristics of a vital event
Vocational
rehabilitation
Vocational rehabilitation includes ability testing,
work adjustment measures and training other than
ordinary labour market training
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Source: Definitions of the Standardised categories
and Sub-categories of Labour Market Programmes,
OECD, 2001
Vital statistical record
A vital statistical record is a document or form,
containing the items of information concerning an
individual vital event or a number of vital events of
the same type, filled in at the time of registration,
to meet the needs of vital statistics compilation
Voice print
A stored digital model of an individual‘s voice, used
for identification purposes.
Source: Adapting new technologies to census
operations, Arij Dekker, Symposium on Global
Review of 2000 Round of Population and Housing
Censuses: Mid-Decade Assessment and Future
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
842
Prospects, Statistics Division, Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations
Secretariat New York, 7-10 August 2001, Glossary
pattern is changing towards cheaper goods (even if
total quantity is not decreasing). It should be
noted that although a change in volume terms
reflects changes in quantity and or quality, it
cannot in itself tell which of the factors is
responsible. Further investigation is required
before it can be ascertained how much of the
change is due to quantity and how much to quality
influences.
Hyperlink:
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/docs/sym
posium_06.htm#_Toc8547016
Volatility (in financial
markets)
Volatility is a measure of the risk or uncertainty
faced by participants in financial markets. It can be
measured either from the past variation of asset
prices.
The expression ―constant prices‖ is often used
interchangeably with ―volume‖. However, there is
a slight distinction between the terms even though
both have had the effects of price changes
removed from the underlying value series. More
specifically, the term ―constant prices‖ describes
aggregate data for several periods compiled using
a fixed-base Laspeyres formula so that all the
items are expressed in their respective prices of
the base period and for which the components and
totals are additive. However, for an annually
chained volume series the resulting data is nonadditive and it is no longer strictly correct to
describe then as being at constant prices although
for convenience they may be described as such.
Source: OECD Economic Outlook Glossary
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/28/54/1890650.ht
m
See also: ARCH / stochastic volatility models,
Historic volatility, Implied volatility
Volume
In national accounts figures that refer to the value
of a transaction in the numeraire of the base year.
Volume figures are quality adjusted.
(Main Economic Indicators - Comparative
Methodological Analysis: Industry, Retail and
Construction Indicators. Available at:
http://www.oecd.org/oecd/pages/home/displaygen
eral/0,3380,EN-document-notheme-15-no-no18317-0,00.html)
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 4.21
Source: SNA 16.11
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Volume index of
capital services
A volume index of capital services measures the
flow of services into the production process from
the different types of assets included in the capital
stock
Volume index
Indice de volume
A volume index is most commonly presented as a
weighted average of the proportionate changes in
the quantities of a specified set of goods or
services between two periods of time; volume
indices may also compare the relative levels of
activity in different countries (e.g. those calculated
using PPPs)
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Context: A major aim of economic analysis is to
develop an understanding of changes taking place
in an economy over time. This includes the
measurement of short-term growth or decline. To
achieve this for key economic value aggregates,
such as the value of industrial production or the
value of retail turnover, it is necessary to
distinguish between changes arising solely from
price changes and those arising from other
influences such as quantity and quality, which are
referred to as changes in ―volume‖.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
Volume of buildings
The volume of buildings is the total volume
included between the outer surface of the outer
walls measured from the level of the lowest storey
to the roof of the building
Source: Bulletin of Housing and Building Statistics
for Europe and North America, UNECE, Geneva,
2000, Annex II, Definitions and General Terms,
page 83
Volume movements are determined by holding the
price constant. By keeping fixed the prices on each
item included in the volume index, period to period
changes in the constant price estimates for
aggregates of items reflect changes in the
quantities and/or the quality of the different
products. For example, if there is a fall in the total
quantity of goods produced or goods consumed,
volume data will decrease. Volume data will also
decrease where the production or consumption
See also: Building - UN, Floor area
Volume similarity
index
843
See Quantity similarity index
Context: When expressed as a volume index, this
corresponds to a weighted average of the volume
index of each country in the area with weights
based on PPPs of period t-1. Thus, PPP-based
weights are periodically updated
See also: Quantity similarity index
Volumes at constant
exchange rates of
period t0
Volumes at constant exchange rates of period t0
are series at constant domestic prices (reference
year t0) converted to a common currency by way
of constant exchange rates of period t0.
Source: Statistical Series for the Euro Area Conclusions and Recommendations of the OECD
ASTF Euro Subgroup, 15 May 2001
Context: When expressed as a volume index, this
corresponds to a weighted average of the volume
index of each country in the area with weights
based on exchange rates of period t0
Voluntary contribution Cotisation volontaire
An extra contribution paid in addition to the
mandatory contribution a member can pay to the
pension fund in order to increase the future
pension benefits.
Source: Statistical Series for the Euro Area Conclusions and Recommendations of the OECD
ASTF Euro Subgroup, 15 May 2001
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Volumes at constant
exchange rates of
period t-1
Volumes at constant exchange rates of period t-1
are series at constant domestic prices (reference
year t-1) converted to a common currency by way
of constant exchange rates of period t-1.
See also: Contribution (to a pension plan),
Mandatory contribution
Voluntary export
restraints (VER)
Voluntary export restraints (VER) are
arrangements between exporting and importing
countries in which the exporting country agrees to
limit the quantity of specific exports below a
certain level in order to avoid imposition of
mandatory restrictions by the importing country.
The arrangement may be concluded either at the
industry or government level
Context: When expressed as a volume index, this
corresponds to a weighted average of the volume
index of each country in the area with weights
based on exchange rates of period t-1. Thus,
exchange rate based weights are periodically
updated
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Source: Statistical Series for the Euro Area Conclusions and Recommendations of the OECD
ASTF Euro Subgroup, 15 May 2001
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Volumes at constant
international prices of
period t0 (at PPPs of
period t0)
Volumes at constant international prices of period
t0 (at PPPs of period t0) are series at constant
domestic prices (reference year t0) converted to a
common currency by way of constant PPPs of
period t0.
Voluntary
Plans de retraite
occupational pension professionnels
plans
facultatifs
The establishment of these plans is voluntary for
employers (including those in which there is
automatic enrolment as part of an employment
contract or where the law requires employees to
join plans set up on a voluntary basis by their
employers).
Context: When expressed as a volume index, this
corresponds to a weighted average of the volume
index of each country in the area with weights
based on PPPs of period t0
In some countries, employers can on a voluntary
basis establish occupational plans that provide
benefits that replace at least partly those of the
social security system. These plans are classified
as voluntary, even though employers must
continue sponsoring these plans in order to be
exempted (at least partly) from social security
contributions.
Source: Statistical Series for the Euro Area Conclusions and Recommendations of the OECD
ASTF Euro Subgroup, 15 May 2001
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Volumes at constant
international prices of
period t-1 (at PPPs of
period t-1)
Volumes at constant international prices of period
t-1 (at PPPs of period t-1) are series at constant
domestic prices (reference year t-1) converted to a
common currency by way of constant PPPs of
period t-1.
See also: Mandatory occupational plan,
Occupational pension plan
Voluntary personal
pension plans
844
Plans de retraite
individuels facultatifs
Participation in these plans is voluntary for
individuals. By law individuals are not obliged to
participate in a pension plan. They are not required
to make pension contributions to a pension plan.
Vulnerability analysis
Analyse de
vulnérabilité
Vulnerability analysis is the process of estimating
the vulnerability to potential disaster hazards of
specified elements at risk
Voluntary personal plans include those plans that
individuals must join if they choose to replace part
of their social security benefits with those from
personal pension plans.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Vulnerable species
Espèces vulnérables
Vulnerable species are taxa of various types,
including:
See also: Mandatory personal plan
Voluntary reporting
requirements
Voluntary reporting requirements are situations
where there is no legal obligation for reporters to
provide the requested information
(a) taxa believed likely to move into the
―endangered‖ category in the near future if the
relevant causal factors continue to operate. These
factors may include overexploitation, extensive
destruction of habitat and other environmental
disturbances,
Source: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms, OECD, 2001 – not published
(b) taxa with populations that have been seriously
depleted and whose ultimate security has not yet
been assured, and
Voluntary restraint
arrangement (VRA)
Bilateral arrangement whereby an exporting
country (government or industry) agrees to reduce
or restrict exports without the importing country
having to make use of quotas, tariffs or other
import controls.
(c) taxa with populations that are still abundant
but are under threat from severe adverse factors
throughout their range.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Wage and labour
costs
Wage and labour costs may be described through
use of three distinct and complementary
indicators:
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Voorburg Group
See City groups
- average real wages
- nominal and real wage rates and/or earnings
- average compensation costs
See also: City groups
The first two may be viewed from the workers‘
standpoint and represent a measure of the levels
and trends of their purchasing power and an
approximation to their standard of living. The third
measure provides an estimate of employers‘
expenditure on the employment of labour.
Voting stocks
Voting stocks are equity/shares that give voting
rights to the holder. These can either be ―listed
voting stocks‖ (that is, equity/shares that are
listed on an official stock exchange), or ―unlisted
voting stock‖ (that is, equity/shares that are not
listed on a official stock exchange
Whilst these measures can be compiled for the
total economy, they are more frequently available
for the manufacturing sector. However, it should
be noted that the development of wages and
labour costs may vary across sectors.
Source: Glossary of Foreign Direct Investment
Terms, OECD, 2001 – not published
See also: Non-voting stocks
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 475
Vulnerability
Vulnérabilité
Vulnerability is a measure of the extent to which a
community, structure, service or geographical area
is likely to be damaged or disrupted, on account of
its nature or location, by the impact of a particular
disaster hazard
Wage indexation (for Indexation sur les
pension benefits)
salaires
The method with which pension benefits are
adjusted taking into account changes in wages.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
845
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
withheld by the employer and paid directly to
social insurance schemes, tax authorities, etc. on
behalf of the employee. Wages and salaries do not
include social contributions payable by the
employer.
See also: Price indexation (of pension benefits)
Wage rates
Wage rates measure the basic remuneration per
time unit or unit of output.
Wages and salaries include: all gratuities, bonuses,
ex gratia payments, "thirteenth month payments",
severance payments, lodging, transport, cost-ofliving, and family allowances, tips, commission,
attendance fees, etc. received by employees, as
well as taxes, social security contributions and
other amounts payable by employees and withheld
at source by the employer. Wages and salaries
which the employer continues to pay in the event
of illness, occupational accident, maternity leave or
short-time working may be recorded here or under
social security costs, dependent upon the unit's
accounting practices.
Although the Resolutions of the 12th International
Conference of Labour Statisticians (ICLS, 1973)
does not contain a specific definition of ―wages‖ as
such, it recommends the compilation of wage rate
statistics which should include basic wages, cost-of
living allowances and other guaranteed and
regularly paid allowances, but exclude overtime
payments, bonuses and gratuities, family
allowances and other social security payments
made by employers. Ex gratia payments in kind,
supplementary to normal wage rates, are also
excluded.
Payments for agency workers are not included in
wages and salaries
Wage rate data should relate to an appropriate
time period – hour, day, week or month.
Source: Definitions of Structural Business Statistics
Regulation (Commission Regulation (EC) No.
2700/98 of 17 December 1998) variables (13 32
0)
Wage rates may be viewed from the perspective of
a ―price‖ of labour services.
Context: In a number of OECD Member countries
wage rates are determined by law or regulation
through collective bargaining agreements, etc. The
statistics compiled on these award rates (which are
generally minimum or standard rates) are clearly
distinguished from statistics referring to wage
rates actually paid to individual workers.
See also: Compensation of employees – SNA,
Wages and salaries – SNA
Wages and salaries Ŕ Salaires et
SNA
traitements - SCN
Wages and salaries consist of the sum of wages
and salaries in cash and wages and salaries in kind
The term ―average collectively agreed pay‖ is used
in many countries, particularly in relation to the
collection bargaining processes used for setting
rates of pay. However, as would be expected,
there is no internationally agreed definition of the
concept and national definitions, particularly with
respect to the wage components included, are
determined on the basis of the current industrial
relations institutional framework within each
country.
Context: Wages and salaries include the values of
any social contributions, income taxes , etc.,
payable by the employee even if they are actually
withheld by the employer for administrative
convenience or other reasons and paid directly to
social insurance schemes, tax authorities, etc., on
behalf of the employee. Wages and salaries may
be paid in various ways, including goods or
services provided to employees for remuneration in
kind instead of, or in addition to, remuneration in
cash (SNA 7.32-7.42).
Furthermore, in some OECD Member countries the
evolution to more decentralised enterprise based
bargaining has meant the loss of economy-wide or
industry-wide indicators of the outcomes of
collective bargaining.
Source: SNA 7.32
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: An Integrated System of Wages Statistic:
A Manual on Methods, International Labour
Organisation, 1979, p. 22
See also: Wages and salaries – Eurostat, Wages
and salaries in cash, Wages and salaries in kind
See also: Average wage or salary rates
Wages and salaries in Salaires et
cash
traitements en
espèces
Wages and salaries in cash consist of wages or
salaries payable at regular weekly, monthly or
other intervals, including payments by results and
piecework payments; plus allowances such as
those for working overtime; plus amounts paid to
employees away from work for short periods (e.g.
on holiday); plus ad hoc bonuses and similar
payments; plus commissions, gratuities and tips
received by employees
Wages and salaries Ŕ Salaires et
Eurostat
traitements Ŕ Eurostat
Wages and salaries are defined as "the total
remuneration, in cash or in kind, payable to all
persons counted on the payroll (including
homeworkers), in return for work done during the
accounting period" regardless of whether it is paid
on the basis of working time, output or piecework
and whether it is paid regularly or not.
Context: Wages and salaries include the values of
any social contributions, income taxes, etc.
payable by the employee even if they are actually
Source: SNA 7.33
846
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Waiting period
Délai d'attente
The length of time an individual must be employed
by a particular employer before joining the
employer‘s pension scheme.
See also: Wages and salaries in kind
Wages and salaries in Salaires et
kind
traitements en nature
Wages and salaries in kind consist of remuneration
in the form of goods and/or services that are not
necessary for work and can be used by employees
in their own time, and at their own discretion, for
the satisfaction of their own needs or wants or
those of other members of their households
Context: Identical term, "Qualifying period"
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Waiver
Permission granted by WTO members allowing a
WTO member not to comply with normal
commitments. Waivers have time limits and
extensions have to be justified.
Source: SNA 7.37
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
See also: Payments in kind, Wages and salaries in
cash
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Wagon
Railway vehicle normally intended for the transport
of goods.
Context: Railcars and railcar trailers fitted only for
the conveyance of goods are included.
Waiver approach
Instead of suppressing tabular data, some
agencies ask respondents for permission to publish
cells even though doing so may cause these
respondents‘ sensitive information to be estimated
accurately. This is referred to as the waiver
approach.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Wagon for intermodal
transport
Wagon specially built or equipped for the transport
of intermodal transport units (ITUs) or other goods
road vehicles.
Context: Waivers are signed records of the
respondents‘ granting permission to publish such
cells. This method is most useful with small
surveys or sets of tables involving only a few cases
of dominance, where only a few waivers are
needed. Of course, respondents must believe that
their data are not particularly sensitive before they
will sign waivers.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Statistics Netherlands, Statistics Canada,
Germany FSO, University of Manchester, 2005,
Glossary of Statistical Disclosure Control,
incorporated in paper presented at Joint
UNECE/Eurostat work session on statistical data
confidentiality, Geneva, 9-11 October 2005
Wagon-kilometre (rail
transport)
Unit of measure representing any movement of a
wagon loaded or empty over a distance of one
kilometre.
Walsh price index
A price index defined as the weighted arithmetic
average of the current to base period price
relatives which uses the quantities of an
intermediate basket as weights. The quantities of
the intermediate basket are geometric averages of
the quantities of the base and current periods. It is
a symmetric index and a superlative index.
Context: The distance to be considered is that
actually run. Shunting and other similar
movements are excluded. All wagon journeys are
included irrespective of the ownership of the
wagon.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
847
Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health
(ICF) has been accepted as the basic framework
for the development of the sets. All disability
measures recommended by the group, general or
extended, will be accompanied by descriptions of
their technical properties and methodological
guidance will be given on their implementation and
their applicability to all sections of the population.
The Washington Group will disseminate work
products globally through the World Wide Web.
WAN
See Wide area network
See also: Wide area network (WAN)
Warrants Ŕ BPM
Warrants Ŕ MBP
Warrants (a particular form of option) are tradable
instruments giving the holder the right to buy from
the issuer of the warrant (usually a corporation) a
certain number of shares or bonds under specified
conditions for a designated of time. Warrant scan
be traded apart from the underlying securities to
which the warrants are linked and thus have a
market value.
Source: UNSD website
Hyperlink:
http://www.un.org/depts/unsd/citygrp/citygrp.htm
The treatment of warrants is the same as that for
other options, and the issuer of the warrant is
considered, by convention, to have incurred
liability, which is the counterpart of the asset held
by the buyer and reflects the current cost of
buying out the issuer‘s contingent liability
Washington Treaty
Treaty for the protection of intellectual property in
respect of lay-out designs of integrated circuits.
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
Source: BPM para. 403
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/BOPman.
pdf
See also: Warrants – SNA
Waste
Résidus
Waste refers to materials that are not prime
products (that is, products produced for the
market) for which the generator has no further use
in terms of his/her own purposes of production,
transformation or consumption, and of which
he/she wants to dispose.
Warrants Ŕ SNA
Warrants Ŕ SCN
Warrants are a form of options that are treated in
the financial account in the same way as other
options; they are tradable instruments giving the
holder the right to buy, under specified terms for a
specified period of time, from the issuer of the
warrant (usually a corporation) a certain number
of shares or bonds
Context: Wastes may be generated during the
extraction of raw materials, the processing of raw
materials into intermediate and final products, the
consumption of final products, and other human
activities. Residuals recycled or reused at the place
of generation are excluded.
Source: SNA 11.41
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Warrants – BPM
Washington Group
The main purpose of the Washington Group on
Disability Statistics is the promotion and
coordination of international cooperation in the
area of health statistics by focusing on disability
measures suitable for censuses and national
surveys which will provide basic necessary
information on disability throughout the world.
See also: Biological waste, Household waste,
Industrial wastes, Solid waste
Waste collection
Ramassage des
déchets
Waste collection is the collection and transport of
waste to the place of treatment or discharge by
municipal services or similar institutions, or by
public or private corporations, specialized
enterprises or general government. Collection of
municipal waste may be selective, that is to say,
carried out for a specific type of product, or
undifferentiated, in other words, covering all kinds
of waste at the same time
Context: More specifically, the Washington Group
aims to guide the development of a small set or
sets of general disability measures, suitable for use
in censuses, sample based national surveys, or
other statistical formats, for the primary purpose
of informing policy on equalization of opportunities.
The second priority of the Washington Group is to
recommend one or more extended sets of survey
items to measure disability, or principles for their
design, to be used as components of population
surveys or as supplements to specialty surveys.
These extended sets of survey items are intended
to be related to the general measure(s). The World
Health Organization (WHO) International
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Waste disposal
848
See Disposal of waste
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Disposal of waste
Waste management
Gestion des déchets
The characteristic activities of waste management
include:
(a) collection, transport, treatment and disposal of
waste,
Water pollution
Pollution aquatique
Water pollution refers to the presence in water of
harmful and objectionable material —obtained
from sewers, industrial wastes and rainwater run—
off — in sufficient concentrations to make it unfit
for use
(b) control, monitoring and regulation of the
production, collection, transport, treatment and
disposal of waste, and
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
(c) prevention of waste production through in—
process modifications, reuse and recycling
Water quality
Qualité de l‟eau
Water quality refers to the physical, chemical,
biological and organoleptic (taste-related)
properties of water.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Context: A classification of the quality of
watercourses or water bodies according to the uses
and e.g. levels of photochemical, biological, salinity
characteristics.
Waste water
Eaux résiduelles
Waste water is used water, typically discharged
into the sewage system. It contains matter and
bacteria in solution or suspension
United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.125
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Waste-water
Traitement des eaux
treatment
résiduaires
Waste—water treatment is the process to render
waste water fit to meet environmental standards
or other quality norms. Three broad types of
treatment may be distinguished: mechanical,
biological and advanced
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Water quality
accounts
Accounts that describe the quality and changes in
quality of the water bodies (watercourses) by
classes of quality.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Water conservation
Mise en valeur des
eaux
Water conservation refers to the preservation,
control and development of water resources, both
surface and groundwater, and prevention of
pollution
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.124
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Water quality clauses
Water quality clauses are categories of water
quality that encompass the overall state of the
pollution or cleanliness of water
Water cycle
Cycle de l‟eau
The water cycle is the sequence of climatological
events. The heat of the sun evaporates water from
land and water surfaces; vapour, being lighter than
air, rises until it reaches the cooler upper air level
where it condenses into clouds; further
condensation produces precipitation that falls to
earth as rain, sleet or snow; some of the water is
retained by the soil and some run—off returns to
rivers, lakes and oceans
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Saprobic water classification
Water quality criteria
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
849
Critères de la qualité
des eaux
Water quality criteria refer to specific levels of
water quality desired for identified uses, including
drinking, recreation, farming, fish production,
propagation of other aquatic life, and agricultural
and industrial processes
drainage facilities.
Context: This indicator shows how much water a
given area of land can hold taking into account
differences in land use, soil types, management
practices and other relevant factors. A decrease in
water retaining capacity implies greater potential
risk of flooding.
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: Environmental Indicators for Agriculture:
Methods and Results, Executive Summary, OECD,
2000, page 34
See also: Drinking water standards
Water quality index
Indice de la qualité de
l‟eau
A water quality index is a weighted average of
selected ambient concentrations of pollutants
usually linked to water quality classes
Water supply system
A water supply system is a system for the
collection, transmission, treatment, storage and
distribution of water from source to consumers, for
example, homes, commercial establishments,
industry, irrigation facilities and public agencies for
water—related activities (fire—fighting, street
flushing and so forth)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Water quality
Surveillance de la
monitoring
qualité de l‟eau
See Monitoring (environmental)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Monitoring, Monitoring (environmental)
Water treatment
Epuration des eaux
Water treatment refers to:
Water resources SEEA
The water found in fresh and brackish surface
water and groundwater bodies within the national
territory. In the case of surface water, the volume
in artificial reservoirs and watercourses is included
in addition to that in natural water bodies. The
water of the oceans and open seas is excluded on
the grounds that the volumes involved are so
enormous as to make any stock measure
meaningless and that extraction for human use has
no measurable impact on them.
1. (prior to first use) process to render water
withdrawn from any source suitable for first use;
2. waste—water treatment by mechanical,
biological and advanced procedures
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.47, EA. 13
Water use
Utilisation des eaux
Water use refers to use of water by agriculture,
industry, energy production and households,
including in—stream uses such as fishing,
recreation, transportation and waste disposal
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Water resources - SNA
Water resources SNA
Water resources consist of aquifers and other
groundwater resources to the extent that their
scarcity leads to the enforcement of ownership
and/or use rights, market valuation and some
measure of economic control.
Waterlogging
Sursaturation en eau
Waterlogging is the natural flooding and overirrigation that brings water at underground levels
to the surface. As a consequence, displacement of
the air occurs in the soil with corresponding
changes in soil processes and an accumulation of
toxic substances that impede plant growth
Source: SNA (AN.214)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
See also: Water resources - SEEA
Water retaining
capacity indicator
The water retaining capacity indicator measures
the quantity of water that can be retained in the
short-term in agricultural soil, as well as on
agricultural land, and by agricultural irrigation or
Waterway
River, canal, lake or other stretch of water which
by natural or man-made features is suitable for
navigation.
850
Context: Waterways of a maritime character
(waterways designated by the reporting country as
suitable for navigation primarily by sea-going
ships) are included. Waterways also include river
estuaries; the boundary being that point nearest
the sea where the width of the river is both less
than 3 km at low water and less then 5 km at high
water.
Wear and tear
Wear and tear is a synonym for physical
deterioration
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
See also: Physical deterioration (of assets)
Weather
Météorologie
Weather is the day—to-day or sometimes even
instantaneous changes of atmospheric conditions
over a given place or area.
WCO
See World Customs Organisation (former CCC)
In contrast, climate encompasses the statistical
ensemble of all weather conditions during a long
period of time over that place or area. Atmospheric
conditions are measured by the meteorological
parameters of air temperature, barometric
pressure, wind velocity, humidity, clouds and
precipitation
See also: World Customs Organisation (WCO)
Weak sustainability
All forms of capital are more or less substitutes for
one another; no regard has to be given to the
composition of the stock of capital. Weak
sustainability allows for the depletion or
degradation of natural resources, so long as such
depletion is offset by increases in the stocks of
other forms of capital (for example, by investing
royalties from depleting mineral reserves in
factories).
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Weathering
Altération des roches
Weathering is the disintegration of rocks into small
soil particles through the physical and chemical
action of atmospheric agents, for example, rain,
water, frost, wind, temperature changes, plant and
animals
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 1.27
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Wealth capital stock
The wealth capital stock is a synonym for the ―net
capital stock‖. The term is widely used in North
America but in this Manual the SNA term ―net
capital stock‖ is used
Web forms
A form on a website that enables visitors to
communicate with the host by filling in the fields
and submitting the information. Information
received via a form can be received by email and
processed by other specific software.
Source: Measuring Capital: OECD Manual, Annex 1
Glossary of Technical Terms Used in the Manual,
OECD, 2001
Source: OECD, 2004, Promise and Problems of EDemocracy: Challenges of Online Citizen
Engagement, OECD, Paris, Annex 1: Commonly
used E-Engagement Terms
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/61/57/1876369.pdf
See also: Net capital stock
Web link agreement
Designed for use by the operator of an highly
trafficked Web site and another party who wishes
to take advantage of that traffic to attract visitors
to its Web site. The owner of the highly trafficked
site agrees to include an image incorporating the
Uniform Resource Locator (URL) for the less
trafficked site.
Wealth effects
Wealth effects are effects on private spending
arising from a change in wealth. Wealth effects are
usually associated with changes in the value of
equity, bonds and real estate
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Source: Measuring Electronic Commerce, OECD
Working Party on the Information Economy, 1998,
Software Publishers Association (SPA), (1996),
page 29 - A typology of Internet and e-commerce
agreements. Adapted from The SPA Guide to
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
851
Contracts and the Legal Protection of Software,
September, Washington D.C.
The weight to be taken into consideration is the
gross-gross weight of goods.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/32/52/2094340.pdf
Context: The weight taken into consideration is
equivalent to the total weight of the goods and
packaging and the tare weight of equipment such
as containers, swap bodies and pallets. When this
tare-weight is excluded, the weight is gross
weight.
Web site notices and
disclaimers
An operator has virtually no control over who
views its Web Site. This often raises a number of
legal concerns for Web site operators. They can
post notices and disclaimers in an attempt to
protect themselves.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Measuring Electronic Commerce, OECD
Working Party on the Information Economy, 1998,
Software Publishers Association (SPA), (1996),
page 29 - A typology of Internet and e-commerce
agreements. Adapted from The SPA Guide to
Contracts and the Legal Protection of Software,
September, Washington D.C.
Weight (for road
transport)
The weight to be taken into consideration is the
gross-gross weight of goods.
Context: This includes the total weight of the
goods, all packaging, and tare-weight of the
container, swap-body and pallets containing goods.
When this tare-weight is excluded, the weight is
gross weight.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/32/52/2094340.pdf
Web wrap agreement
Agreement requiring a party to manifest its assent
by hitting a key or clicking an on-screen button. It
is especially designed for use in the context of the
on-line sale of goods.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Measuring Electronic Commerce, OECD
Working Party on the Information Economy, 1998,
Software Publishers Association (SPA), (1996),
page 29 - A typology of Internet and e-commerce
agreements. Adapted from The SPA Guide to
Contracts and the Legal Protection of Software,
September, Washington D.C.
Weight (for sea
transport)
The weight to be taken into consideration is the
gross-gross weight of goods.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/32/52/2094340.pdf
Context: This includes the total weight of the
goods, all packaging, and the tare weight of the
container, swap-body and pallets containing goods
as well as road goods vehicles, wagons or barges
carried by sea. When this tare-weight is excluded,
the weight is the gross weight.
Website
Used to refer to a single location on the World
Wide Web, usually on the same piece of hardware.
Part of the Internet that stores and gives access to
documents using HTTP.
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
Source: Memory of the World: Safeguarding the
Documentary Heritage - A guide to Standards,
Recommended Practices and Reference Literature
Related to the Preservation of Documents of All
Kinds, International Advisory Committee for the
UNESCO Memory of the World Programme SubCommittee on Technology for the General
Information Programme and UNISIST United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization - Part 9 - Glossary
Weight (of goods
carried by rail)
The weight to be taken into consideration is the
gross-gross weight of goods.
This includes the total weight of the goods, all
packaging, and tare-weight of the container, swapbody and pallets containing goods as well as road
goods vehicles carried by rail. When this tareweight is excluded, the weight is the gross weight.
Hyperlink:
http://www.unesco.org/webworld/mdm/administ/
en/guide/guide011.htm
Weight (for inland
waterways transport)
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
852
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
An average which is obtained by combining
different numbers (e.g. prices or index numbers)
according to the relative importance of each.
Source: Producer and International Trade Price
Indexes, Glossary of terms – Australian Bureau of
Statistics
Weight at birth
The weight at birth is the weight determined
immediately after a child is born, whether alive or
dead (generally expressed in grams)
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs%40.nsf/66f3
06f503e529a5ca25697e0017661f/f2b7a9d7152e50
18ca25697e0018fc77!OpenDocument
Source: Handbook of Vital Statistics Systems and
Methods, Volume 1: Legal, Organisational and
Technical Aspects, United Nations Studies in
Methods, Glossary, Series F, No. 35, United
Nations, New York 1991
Weighted index
number
An index number in which the component items
are weighted according to some system of weights
reflecting their relative importance. In one sense
nearly all index numbers are weighted by
implication; for example, an index number of
prices amalgamates prices per unit of quantity and
the size of these units may vary from one
commodity to another in such a way as to
constitute weighting.
Weight bias
Bias, usually in an index number, due to the use of
incorrect or undesirable weights. Since the true
value of the complete quantity which an index
purports to measure is not in general capable of
direct measurement, bias in this sense is to some
extent an arbitrary quantity.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
It is, however, usual to describe an index as
―weighted‖ only when weighting coefficients enter
explicitly into its definition and calculation.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Weight reference
period
The period whose value shares serve as weights
for a set of price relatives or elementary price
indices. It does not have to have the same
duration as the periods for which the index is
calculated and in the case of a PPI is typically
longer, a year or more, rather than a month or
quarter. Nor does it have to be a single period as
in the case of symmetric indices such as the
Marshall Edgeworth, the Walsh and the Törnqvist
price indices.
Weighted minimal set
A weighted minimal set is a minimal set in which
fields are weighted according to reliability in
generating imputations. If fields (variables) are
given weights, then it is the set of fields that give
the minimum weight. There may be two of more
sets that give the same minimum.
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Weighted arithmetic
average index
An index defined as a weighted arithmetic average
of the price relatives.
Weighting base
The period to which the fixed weights relate.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Source: Producer and International Trade Price
Indexes, Glossary of terms – Australian Bureau of
Statistics
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs%40.nsf/66f3
06f503e529a5ca25697e0017661f/f2b7a9d7152e50
18ca25697e0018fc77!OpenDocument
Weighted average
Moyenne pondérée
853
Weighting coefficient
The coefficient attached to an observation as its
weight in a procedure involving weighting.
Wheat crop year refers to the crop marketing year
beginning 1 April for Japan, 1 June for the United
States, 1 July for the European Union and New
Zealand, 1 August for Canada and 1 October for
Australia.
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Source: OECD Agricultural Outlook: 2001-2006,
OECD, 2001, Annex II – Glossary of Terms
See also: Raising factor
White spirit and SBP
White spirit and SBP are refined distillate
intermediates with a distillation in the
naphtha/kerosene range. They are subdivided as:
Weights - ISI
The importance of an object in relation to a set of
objects to which it belongs; a numerical coefficient
attached to an observation, frequently by
multiplication, in order that it shall assume a
desired degree of importance in a function of all
the observations of the set.
- industrial spirit (SBP);
- white spirit.
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Context: Reweighting consists of raising the
original weights for the respondent values when
estimates are computed. Reweighting concerns
mainly unit non-response. It may also be used to
increase precision through the use of auxiliary
information. Standard methods include poststratification, calibration and response propensity
modelling (Eurostat, ―Assessment of Quality in
Statistics: Glossary‖, Working Group, Luxembourg,
October 2003).
White-collar workers
Office, clerical, administrative, sales, professional,
and technical employees, as distinguished from
production and maintenance employees who are
usually referred to as blue-collar workers.
Source: Glossary of Compensation Terms – United
States Bureau of Labor Statistics, August 1998
Source: The International Statistical Institute, ―The
Oxford Dictionary of Statistical Terms‖, edited by
Yadolah Dodge, Oxford University Press, 2003
Hyperlink:
http://stats.bls.gov/ocs/sp/ncbl0062.pdf
See also: Base weight, Non-response, Nonresponse errors, Ratio estimation, Weights MetaStore
See also: Blue collar workers
WHO
World Health Organisation
Weights - MetaStore
Within the OECD's list of Metadata Types refers to
information on sources of weights, nature of
weights, period of current index weights, frequency
of weight updates, weights (other).
Wholesale prices
index
A measure that reflects changes in the prices paid
for goods at various stages of distribution up to the
point of retail. It can include prices of raw
materials for intermediate and final consumption,
prices of intermediate or unfinished goods, and
prices of finished goods. The goods are usually
valued at purchasers‘ prices.
Source: OECD, 2005, OECD MetaStore User Guide,
OECD, OECD, unpublished, Appendix 1: Metadata
Types
See also: Weights
West Central Atlantic
Fishery Commission
(WCAFC)
Commission des
pêches de l‟Atlantique
Centre- Ouest
(WCAFC)
The West Central Atlantic Fishery Commission
(WCAFC) is an inter-governmental organisation
established in 1973 under the auspices of the
United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation
(FAO). Its functions include: facilitating the coordination of research; assisting Member
governments in establishing rational policies; and
promoting the rational management of resources
of interest in two or more countries. Its area of
competence is the western central Atlantic
Context: For some countries the name Producer
price index replaced the name Wholesale price
index in the 1970s or 1980s after a change in
methodology. For some countries, the name
Wholesale price index is used for historical reasons
and in fact refers to a price index following the
same methodology as for a Producer price index.
(Producer Price Indices: Sources and Methods,
OECD, Paris, 1994, page 7)
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Producer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Monetary Fund,
Washington DC
Source: Review of Fisheries in OECD Countries:
Glossary, February 1998
Wheat crop year
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/tegppi/index.h
tm
Campagne (blé)
See also: Producer price index
854
See Subsidiary
Wholesale trade Ŕ
ISIC Rev. 3
Wholesale trade is defined in the International
Standard Industrial Classification (ISIC) as the
resale (sale without transformation) of new and
used goods to retailers; to industrial, commercial,
institutional or professional users; to other
wholesalers; or acting as agents in buying
merchandise for, or selling merchandise to, such
persons or companies.
See also: Subsidiary
Wide area network
(WAN)
A computer network that connects computers over
large distances by means of high-speed
communications links or satellites.
Source: Handbook on Geographic Information
Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies in Methods,
Series F, No. 79, United Nations Department of
Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division,
New York, 2000, Annex VI - Glossary
Wholesale trade is defined in ISIC Rev. 3 as
comprising the following Groups in Division 51):
- wholesale on a fee or contract basis;
- wholesale of agricultural raw materials, live
animals, food, beverages and tobacco;
- wholesale of household goods;
- Wholesale of non-agricultural intermediate
products, waste and scrap;
- wholesale of machinery, equipment and supplies;
- other wholesale
Wildlife refuge
Parc naturel
A wildlife refuge is an area designated for the
protection of wild animals, within which hunting
and fishing are either prohibited or strictly
regulated
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Source: ISIC Rev. 3
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/cr/registry/regcst.asp?Cl=3
&Lg=1
Willingness to accept
The stated price that an individual would accept in
compensation for the loss or the diminution of an
environmental service.
See also: Wholesale trade – NACE
Wholesale trade Ŕ
NACE
Wholesale trade is a form of trade in which goods
are purchased and stored in large quantities and
sold, in batches of a designated quantity, to
resellers, professional users or groups, but not to
final consumers.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 9.92
This corresponds to the NACE Rev. 1 Division
wholesale trade and commission trade, except of
motor vehicles and motorcycles. It includes the
following Groups:
Willingness to pay
Acceptation des
charges
The stated price that an individual would accept to
pay for avoiding the loss or the diminution of an
environmental service.
— wholesale on a fee or contract basis;
— wholesale of agricultural raw materials and live
animals;
— wholesale of food, beverages and tobacco;
— wholesale of household goods;
— wholesale of non-agricultural intermediate
products, waste and scrap;
— wholesale of machinery, equipment and
supplies;
— other wholesale.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 9.92
Source: Eurostat and NACE Rev. 1
See also: Contingent valuation
Wind energy
Kinetic energy of wind exploited for electricity
generation in wind turbines.
Hyperlink:
http://europa.eu.int/comm/eurostat/ramon/cgi/Si
mWWWFrame.SimResetBottomFrame?nID=NACE_
REV1&lId=&pId=&test=&frameType=4&associatio
n=&property=DESCRIPTION&language=EN
See also: NACE, Wholesale trade – ISIC Rev. 3
Source: Energy Statistics of OECD Countries:
1999-2000, 2002 Edition, International Energy
Agency, Paris, Part 2 – Notes on Energy Sources
Wholly-owned
subsidiary
Winding-up
855
Liquidation
The termination of a pension scheme by either
providing (deferred) annuities for all members or
by moving all its assets and liabilities into another
scheme.
Source: OECD Working Party on Private Pensions,
2005, ―'Private Pensions: OECD Classification and
Glossary, 2005 edition‖, OECD, Paris
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 7.67
Winsorisation
Winsorisation is an imputation rule limiting the
influence of the largest and smallest observations
in the available data.
Work
Travail
Work is any activity which contributes to the
production of goods or services within the
production boundary
Source: Glossary of Terms Used in Statistical Data
Editing
Located on K-Base, the knowledge base on
statistical data editing, UN/ECE Data Editing Group
Source: SNA 17.9
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Work at home
Work at home includes those economic activities
that are conducted from units or offices within the
home. This category includes farmers who work
and live on their farms, persons working and living
at work camps, and those engaged in ownaccount production of goods
Hyperlink:
http://www3.sympatico.ca/guylaine.theoret/kbase/
Withdrawals from
income of quasicorporations
Revenu que les
propriétaires de
quasi- sociétés
prélèvent sur elles
The income that the owners of quasi-corporations
withdraw from them is analogous to the income
withdrawn from corporations by paying out
dividends to their shareholders
Source: Principles and Recommendations for
Population and Housing Censuses, Revision 1,
United Nations, New York, 1998, para. 2.245
Work experience
Work experience refers to the past work
experience of the person classified as unemployed.
It establishes whether the person worked before or
is seeking or available for work for the first time
Source: SNA 7.89 [7.115]
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
Source: Handbook of Household Surveys, Revised
Edition, Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 31,
United Nations, New York, 1984, para. 11.107
Wooded land
The sum of forested and other wooded land.
Source: United Nations, European Commission,
International Monetary Fund, Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development, World
Bank, 2005, Handbook of National Accounting:
Integrated Environmental and Economic
Accounting 2003, Studies in Methods, Series F,
No.61, Rev.1, Glossary, United Nations, New York,
para. 8.150
Work for the disabled
Work for the disabled in the context of labour
market programmes comprises sheltered work and
subsidies to regular employment
Wooded land and
associated surface
water
Forested land and other wooded land. Forested
land is defined as land under cultivated or noncultivated stands of trees of a size of more than
0.5 hectares with crown cover of more than 10 per
cent and on which trees are able to grow to a
height of 5 metres or more at maturity. Other
wooded land is defined as land either with a tree
crown cover of 5-10 per cent of trees able to reach
a minimum height of 5 metres or with a crown
cover of more than 10 per cent of trees not able to
reach a height of 5 metres.
Work study
programmes
Work-study programmes‘ are combinations of work
and education in which periods of both form part of
an integrated, formal education or training activity.
Examples of such programmes include the ‗dual
system‘ in Germany; ‗apprentissage‘ or ‗formation
en alternance‘ in France and Belgium; internship or
co-operative education in Canada; apprenticeship
in Ireland; and ―youth training‖ in the United
Kingdom.
Source: Definitions of the Standardised categories
and Sub-categories of Labour Market Programmes,
OECD, 2001
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
856
International Conference of Labour Statisticians,
January 1993, para. 14(f))
Workable competition
Workable competition is a notion which arises from
the observation that since perfect competition does
not exist, theories based on it do not provide
reliable guides for competition policy.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Context: The idea was first enunciated by
economist J.M. Clark in 1940. He argued that the
goal of policy should be to make competition
"workable," not necessarily perfect. He proposed
criteria for judging whether competition was
workable, and this provoked a series of revisions
and counter- proposals. The criteria put forward
are wide ranging e.g. the number of firms should
be at least large as economies of scale permit,
promotional expenses should not be excessive and
advertising should be informative. No consensus
has arisen over what might constitute workable
competition but all bodies which administer
competition policy in effect employ some version of
it.
Workers involved in a
lockout
Workers involved in a lockout comprise:
- workers directly involved in a lockout are those
employees of the establishments involved who
were directly concerned by the labour dispute and
who were prevented from working by the lockout;
- workers indirectly involved in a lockout are those
employees of the establishments involved who
were not directly concerned by the labour dispute
but who were prevented from working by the
lockout.
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Source: International Labour Organisation (ILO)
Resolution Concerning Statistics of Strikes,
Lockouts and other Action Due to Labour Disputes
(January 1993), page 2-3
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Workers in seasonal
employment
Workers in seasonal employment are workers who
hold implicit or explicit contracts of employment
where the timing and duration of the contract is
significantly influenced by seasonal factors such as
the climatic cycle, public holidays and/or
agricultural harvests. These workers may be
classified as employees or own-account workers
according to the specific characteristics of the
employment contract
Workers involved in a
strike
Workers involved in a strike comprise:
- workers directly involved in a strike are those
who participated directly by stopping work;
- workers indirectly involved in a strike are those
employees of the establishments involved, or selfemployed workers in the group involved, who did
not participate directly by stopping work but who
were prevented from working because of the
strike.
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning International Classification
of Status in Employment Adopted by the 15th
International Conference of Labour Statisticians,
January 1993, para. 14(g))
Source: International Labour Organisation (ILO)
Resolution Concerning Statistics of Strikes,
Lockouts and other Action Due to Labour Disputes
(January 1993), page 2-3
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Workers in short-term
employment
Workers in short-term employment are workers
who hold explicit or implicit contracts of
employment which are expected to last longer than
the period used to define casual workers, but
shorter than the one used to define regular
employees. These workers may be classified as
employees or own- account workers according to
the specific characteristics of the employment
contract
Workers involved in
other action
Workers involved in other action comprise:
- workers directly involved in other action are
those who participated directly in the action;
- workers indirectly involved in other action are
those employees of the establishments involved or
self-employed workers in the groups involved who
did not participate directly in the action but who
were unable to perform their work in the usual
manner or prevented from working as a result of
it.
Source: International Labour Organization (ILO)
Resolutions Concerning International Classification
of Status in Employment Adopted by the 15th
857
much difference between Mondays, Tuesdays,
through the Fridays. The US on the other hand,
has distinctly different patterns of activity each day
of the week and methods used in that country try
to account for that difference.
Source: International Labour Organisation (ILO)
Resolution Concerning Statistics of Strikes,
Lockouts and other Action Due to Labour Disputes
(January 1993), page 2-3
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/res/i
ndex.htm
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
4: Guidelines for the reporting of different forms of
data
Workers not
classifiable by status
Workers not classifiable by status include those for
whom insufficient relevant information is available,
and/or who cannot be included in any of the
preceding categories.
Working group
A group that meets regularly to consider a
particular issue.
Source: Ireland Central Statistics Office, Freedom
of Information – Appendix 5: Glossary of CSO
Terminology
Source: ILO: 15th International Conference of
Labour Statisticians, Report of the Conference.
CLS/15/1D.6 (Rev. 1) (Geneva, International
Labour Office, 1993)
Hyperlink:
http://www.cso.ie/text/foi/append5.html
See also: International Classification by Status in
Employment (ICSE-1993)
Working poor
The working poor are defined as the proportion of
employed persons living below the poverty line.
Working / trading day
adjustment
Working day or trading adjustments refer to the
correction for differences in the number of working
or trading days in a given month or quarter which
differ from year to year which will impact upon the
level of activity in that month or quarter for flow
series or the sort / type of day for stock series.
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002, page 705
Working proprietors
(in an establishment)
Working proprietors (in an establishment) include
all individual proprietors and partners actively
engaged in the work of the establishment,
excluding silent or inactive partners whose
principal activity is outside of the establishment
In most countries working day adjustment and
trading day adjustment are used as synonyms.
Context: The number of working or trading days in
a given month or quarter can vary significantly for
each statistical domain (e.g. production,
merchandise trade) because of differing
institutional arrangements, trade specific holidays,
etc.
Source: International Recommendations for
Construction Statistics, Statistical Papers, Series
M, No. 47, Rev. 1, United Nations, New York,
1997, para. 93
Some countries also include bridging effects in
working day adjustments. These result from people
taking holidays, for example, on Mondays and
Fridays when an official public holiday occurs on
Tuesdays and Thursdays respectively.
Working time in
school
Working time in school refers to the working time
teachers are supposed to be at school including
teaching time and non-teaching time.
The type of working / trading day adjustment
carried out needs to be tailored to the cultural and
institutional environment operating within
individual countries. In the United States, for
example, working day adjustment classifies the
days of the week into workdays (Monday through
to Friday) and non-workdays (Sat. and Sun.) and
thus the seasonal adjustment estimates two
factors – workday and non-workday. Trading day
adjustment (as performed in the US at least)
allows for a different effect for each day of the
week and computes seven factors – a Monday
factor, a Tuesday factor and so on. Essentially,
trading day adjustment is a more fine tuned
seasonal adjustment method to account for
calendar variation.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
Working-time
arrangements
Working-time arrangements comprise different
elements: normal and maximum number of hours
per working day or week; overtime provisions; rest
periods; the distribution of working-time during the
day, week or year and the associated flexible time
arrangements. These elements are regarded as a
fundamental dimension of international labour
standards.
In other countries there may be very distinct
differences between workdays and non-workdays
in the amount of business conducted, but not so
Source: OECD Employment Outlook, July 1994,
858
was published in 1991
Chapter 4, Labour Standards and Economic
Integration, page 143
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Work-in-progress on
Travaux en cours sur
cultivated assets Ŕ
actifs cultivés Ŕ
inventories
stocks
See Inventories of work-in-progress on cultivated
assets
World Conservation
Union
See IUCN
See also: Inventories of work-in- progress on
cultivated assets
See also: IUCN
Work-in-progress,
Travaux en cours Ŕ
inventories of
stocks
See Inventories of work-in-progress
World Customs
Organisation (WCO)
World Customs Organization, a multilateral body
located in Brussels through which participating
countries seek to simplify and rationalize customs
procedures.
See also: Inventories of work-in- progress
World Bank Group
The World Bank Group is made up of five
organisations, the:
Source: Doha World Trade Organisation
Ministerial: Glossary of Terms
- International bank for Reconstruction and
Development (IRBD);
- International Development Organisation (IDA);
- International Finance Corporation (IDC);
- Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency
(MIGA); and the
- International Centre for Settlement of
Investment Disputes (ICSID).
Hyperlink:
http://www.wto.org/wto/english/thewto_e/minist_
e/min01_e/brief_e/brief22_e.htm#_Toc528136428
World export / import
volumes
World export (import) volumes are constructed by
aggregating measures of the volume of exports
(imports) of individual countries on a constant
price basis
Established in 1944 at a conference of world
leaders in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, United
States, the World bank is a lending institution
whose aim is to help integrate developing and
transition economies with the global economy, and
reduce poverty by promoting economic growth.
The Bank lends for policy reforms and
development projects and policy advice, and offers
technical assistance and non-lending services to its
181 member countries.
Source: OECD Main Economic Indicators, OECD,
Paris, monthly, Explanatory Notes
World Heritage
See National Estate
Héritage mondial
See also: National estate
Source: Key Indicators of the Labour Market
(KILM): 2001-2002, International Labour
Organisation, Geneva, 2002 – Appendix F.
Glossary of Organisations
World Intellectual
Property Organisation
(WIPO)
The World Intellectual Property Organization
(WIPO) is an international organization dedicated
to promoting the use and protection of works of
the human spirit. These works -- intellectual
property -- are expanding the bounds of science
and technology and enriching the world of the arts.
Through its work, WIPO plays an important role in
enhancing the quality and enjoyment of life, as
well as creating real wealth for nations.
Hyperlink: http://www.worldbank.org
World Conservation
Stratégie mondiale de
Strategy
la conservation
The World Conservation Strategy is a strategy
published by the International Union for
Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources
(IUCN) (currently the World Conservation Union),
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)
and the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) in
1980 with the objectives of:
Context: With headquarters in Geneva,
Switzerland, WIPO is one of the 16 specialized
agencies of the United Nations system of
organizations. It administers 23 international
treaties dealing with different aspects of
intellectual property protection. The Organization
counts 182 nations as member states.
(a) maintaining essential ecological processes and
life support systems,
(b) preserving genetic diversity, and
Source: World Intellectual Property Organisation
website
(c) ensuring the sustainable utilization of species
and ecosystems.
Hyperlink:
http://www.wipo.int/portal/index.html.en
An updated version entitled Caring for the Earth: A
Strategy for Sustainable Living (IUCN/WWF, 1991)
859
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
World price
See Reference (border) price
See also: Reference (border) price
World Wide Web
(WWW)
The World Wide Web is a part of the Internet
designed to allow easier navigation of the network
through the use of graphical user interfaces and
hypertext links between different addresses.
World trade (growth
of)
Growth of world trade is calculated as the
arithmetic mean of the growth of world import
volumes and world export volumes
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Context: Originally developed by the European
Laboratory for Particle Physics Consortium (CERN)
in Switzerland as a system to distribute electronic
documents that are composed of, or point to many
different files of various formats that are located
around the world.
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
World Trade
Organisation (WTO)
Organisation
mondiale du
commerce (OMC) AGR
The World Trade Organisation (WTO) is the
successor body to the General Agreement on
Tariffs and Trade (GATT), established formally on 1
January 1995 as part of the final agreement of the
Uruguay Round of multilateral trade negotiations.
Its main objectives include: (i) to administer trade
agreements; (ii) to act as a forum for trade
negotiations; (iii) to settle trade disputes; (iv) to
review national trade policies; and (v) to assist
developing countries in trade policy issues
Documents are created in a standardised hypertext
markup language (HTML) that can be interpreted
by Web browsers on a user‘s computer. The
location of HTML documents are defined by links or
addresses called universal resource locators
(URLs).
The WWW has been rapidly growing and is
becoming an important channel for distributing
documents and data. (Handbook on Geographic
Information Systems and Digital Mapping, Studies
in Methods, Series F, No. 79, United Nations
Department of Economic and Social Affairs,
Statistics Division, New York, 2000, Annex VI Glossary)
Context: International organisation dealing with
the global rules of trade between nations. Its main
function is to ensure that trade flows as smoothly,
predictably and freely as possible. The system —
known as the multilateral trading system — is
centred around WTO agreements, negotiated and
signed by a large majority of the world‘s trading
nations, and ratified in their parliaments.
Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, Paris, 2002,
Glossary
See also: Internet, Local area network (LAN)
Write-off
A financial claim that a creditor regards as
unrecoverable and so no longer carries on its
books.
These agreements are the legal ground-rules for
international commerce. Essentially, they are
contracts, guaranteeing member countries
important trade rights. They also bind
governments to keep their trade policies within
agreed limits. The agreements were negotiated
and signed by governments. But their purpose is to
help producers of goods and services, exporters,
and importers conduct their business.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix III, Glossary,
IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
(OECD Economic Outlook Glossary. Available at
http://www.oecd.org/htm/M00009000/M00009936
.htm)
Written-down (net)
value of a fixed asset
Valeur après
amortissement
(valeur nette) d‟un
actif fixe
The written-down (net) value of a fixed asset is the
actual or estimated current purchaser‘s price of a
new asset of the same type less the cumulative
value of the consumption of fixed capital accrued
up to that point in time
Source: Agricultural Policies in OECD Countries:
Monitoring and Evaluation 2000: Glossary of
Agricultural Policy Terms, OECD
World Wide Fund for
Fonds mondial pour la
Nature (WWF)
nature
The World Wide Fund for Nature (formerly World
Wildlife Fund (WWF)) aims to conserve nature and
ecological processes by preserving biodiversity,
ensuring sustainable use of natural resources and
promoting the reduction of pollution and wasteful
use of resources and energy
Source: SNA 6.199
Hyperlink:
http://esa.un.org/unsd/sna1993/introduction.asp
WTO (tourism)
860
World Tourism Organization
Glossary, J. Hawkins
Hyperlink: http://www.bis.org/publ/bispap07l.pdf
WTO (trade)
OMC
See World Trade Organisation
Year of construction
of vessel (for inland
waterways transport)
Year of original construction of the hull.
See also: World Trade Organisation (WTO)
WTTC
World Travel and Tourism Council
Source: Glossary for Transport Statistics, prepared
by the Intersecretariat Working Group on
Transport Statistics – Eurostat, European
Conference of Ministers of Transport (ECMT),
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
(UNECE)
WWW
See World Wide Web
See also: World Wide Web (WWW)
XDSL
See DSL.
Year-on-year (YoY)
growth rates
Year-on-year growth rates are rates of change
expressed over the corresponding period (month
or quarter in relation to the frequency of the data)
of the previous year.
See also: Digital Subscriber Line (DSL)
X-efficiency
See Efficiency, X-inefficiency
Context: Also often referred to as Year-over-year
growth rates, Year-to-year growth rate, Rate of
change from the previous year, or 12-month rate
of change.
See also: X-inefficiency
X-inefficiency
In The Wealth of Nations published in 1776, Adam
Smith observed that "Monopoly... is a great enemy
to good management." This insight explicitly
recognized that the problem of monopoly is not
only one of price but also one of costs.
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
3: Guidelines for the reporting of different types of
data
While monopoly may provide the basis for
extracting higher prices from customers, the lack
of competitive stimulus may raise the costs of
producing the goods and services it sells. The lack
of incentives or competitive pressures may lead
monopolistic firms to neglect minimizing unit costs
of production, i.e., to tolerate "X-inefficiency"
(phrase coined by H. Leibenstein). Included in Xinefficiency are wasteful expenditures such as
maintenance of excess capacity, luxurious
executive benefits, political lobbying seeking
protection and favourable regulations, and
litigation.
Year-on-year changes
Year-on-year changes are changes in levels
expressed over the corresponding period (month
or quarter in relation to the frequency of the data)
of the previous year.
Context: Also often referred to as Year-over-year
changes, or Year-to-year changes.
Source: OECD, 2005, Data and Metadata Reporting
and Presentation Handbook, OECD, Paris, Section
3: Guidelines for the reporting of different types of
data
Source: Glossary of Industrial Organisation
Economics and Competition Law, compiled by R. S.
Khemani and D. M. Shapiro, commissioned by the
Directorate for Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise
Affairs, OECD, 1993
Year-to-date data
Data expressed in cumulative terms from the
beginning of the year; sometimes referred to as
cumulative data.
Hyperlink:
http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/8/61/2376087.pdf
Source: Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange
(SDMX) - BIS, ECB, Eurostat, IBRD, IMF, OECD
and UNSD - Metadata Common Vocabulary
XML
eXtensible Markup Language
Hyperlink: www.sdmx.org
Y2K issue
Concerns that computer systems would be
disrupted by treating 1 January 2000 as 1 January
1900 as old programs only stored the last two
digits of years.
Yen-linked bond
Bond expressed in U.S. dollars or Swiss francs,
whose face value is also indicated in yen (parity
fixed at issuance). Issuance and redemption are in
yen, which are converted into the original currency
at the parity of the payment date.
Source: BIS Business papers, November 2001,
861
Source: Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey
Guide, Second Edition, International Monetary
Fund, 2002, Washington DC. Appendix VI:
Definition and Description of Instruments
and Sub-categories of Labour Market Programmes,
OECD, 2001
Zero population
growth (ZPG)
Croissance
demographique zéro
(CDZ)
Zero population growth (ZPG) is the absence of
population growth in which equal birth and death
rates create a stable human population
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/cpis/2002/pdf
/cpis_index.pdf
Yield
The yield is the net present rate of return on an
investment. For a bond the current yield is the
coupon rate of interest divided by the purchase
price. A yield is inversely related to the price of a
bond, such that as the price of the bond goes up,
its yield declines
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
Zero sum game
Jeu à somme nulle
A game played by a number of persons in which
the winner takes all the stakes provided by the
losers so that the algebraic sum of gains at any
stage is zero. It has been argued that many
decision problems may be viewed as zero sum
games between two persons.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Source: A Dictionary of Statistical Terms, 5th
edition, prepared for the International Statistical
Institute by F.H.C. Marriott. Published for the
International Statistical Institute by Longman
Scientific and Technical
Yield curve
The yield curve is a curve that traces yields on
securities with varying maturities. The slope of the
yield curve is an indication of the stance of
monetary policy. Under normal conditions, interest
rates for long term rates are likely to be higher
than short-term rates, resulting in an upward
sloping yield curve.
Zero tillage
Refer No-tillage
An inverted yield curve occurs when short-term
interest rates rise above long-term rates, usually
due to the central bank raising short-term interest
rates to prevent the economy from overheating
See also: No-tillage
Young index
An index defined as a weighted arithmetic average
of the price relatives.
Zero-coupon / deep
discount bond
A zero-coupon/deep discount bond is a debt
security with no coupon (zero-coupon) or
substantially lower coupon than current interest
rates. The bonds are issued at a discount to their
nominal value, with the discount reflecting the
prevailing market interest rate. In the case of a
zero-coupon bond, investors receive at maturity
the difference between the purchase price and the
nominal value of the bond (so called "uplift"). The
longer the maturity of the bond, the greater the
discount against par value.
Source: ILO, IMF, OECD, Eurostat, UNECE, World
Bank, 2004, Consumer Price Index Manual: Theory
and Practice, International Labour Office, Geneva
Context: There are three main advantages of zero
or deep discount bonds to the investor.
Hyperlink:
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/guid
es/cpi/index.htm
In some countries there may be some tax
advantage in receiving a capital gain rather than
an income gain.
Source: The OECD Economic Outlook: Sources and
Methods
Hyperlink: http://www.oecd.org/eco/sources-andmethods
Secondly, there is no or significantly reduced
reinvestment risk for the investor i.e. the
possibility that market interest rates may fall in the
future; the bond has a longer "duration" than a
bond of comparable maturity which pays fixed or
floating interest.
Youth measures (of
labour market
programmes)
Youth measures of labour market programmes
include only special programmes for youth in
transition from school to work. It does not include
young people‘s participation in programmes that
are open to adults as well
Thirdly, a zero coupon bond is a leveraged
investment: because the bonds are sold at a
discount a relatively small up-front payment gives
the investor exposure to a larger nominal amount
Source: Definitions of the Standardised categories
Source: Financial Terminology Database, Bank of
862
England
Zero-coupon bonds
Obligations à coupon
zéro
A single-payment security that does not involve
interest payments during the life of the bond. The
bond is sold at a discount from par value, and the
full return is paid at maturity. The difference
between the discounted issue price and the face or
redemption value reflects the market rate of
interest at the time of issue and time to maturity.
The longer the maturity of the bond and the higher
the interest rate, the greater the discount against
the face or redemption value.
Context: Zero-coupon, and deep-discount bonds,
have four particular advantages for investors:
- There may be some tax advantage in receiving a
capital gain rather than an income payment;
- There is no or little (deep-discount bond)
reinvestment risk (the possibility that when coupon
payments fall due, and need to be reinvested,
interest rates will be lower);
- The bond has a longer ―duration‖ than a bond of
comparable maturity that pays fixed- or variable
rate interest, so making the zero-coupon bond‘s
price more sensitive to interest rate changes; and
- A zero-coupon bond is a leveraged investment in
that a relatively small initial outlay gives exposure
to a larger nominal amount.
Source: IMF, 2003, External Debt Statistics: Guide
for Compilers and Users – Appendix 1. Special
financial instruments and transactions:
classifications, IMF, Washington DC
Hyperlink:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/eds/Eng/Guid
e/index.htm
Zones
Zones
See Main Economic Indicator main country
groupings
See also: Main Economic Indicator main country
groupings
Zoning
Zonage
Zoning is the process in physical planning, or the
results thereof, in which specific functions or uses
are assigned to certain areas (for example,
industrial zones, residential areas)
Source: Glossary of Environment Statistics,
Studies in Methods, Series F, No. 67, United
Nations, New York, 1997
ZPG
See Zero population growth
See also: Zero population growth (ZPG)
863