A compact file detailing sources and notes by country and account are given in the Economic Outlook Statistical Sources file.
For further details of specific variables and coverage issues see:
Frequently Asked Questions
Economic Outlook Database Inventory
If you are looking specifically for explanations of words, abbreviations or concepts, please consult the OECD Statistical Glossary.
Table 25 General government total outlays
Table 26 General government current tax and non-tax receipts
Table 27 General government financial balances
Table 28 General government cyclically-adjusted balances
Table 29 General government underlying balances
Table 30 General government underlying primary balances
Table 31 General government net debt interest payments
Table 32 General government gross financial liabilities
Table 33 General government net financial liabilities
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Annex Table 25 - General government total outlays
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Definition: The figures for total outlays consist of current outlays plus capital outlays. Current outlays are the sum of current consumption, transfer payments, subsidies and property income paid (including interest payments). Data refer to the general government sector, which is a consolidation of accounts for the central, state and local government plus social security. One-off revenues from the sale of the third generation mobile telephone (often called Universal Mobile Telephone System) licenses are recorded as negative capital outlays. The general treatment of large one-off fiscal items in the national accounts and the OECD Economic Outlook database is described in Joumard , I., M. Minegishi, C. André, C. Nicq and R. Price (2008), Accounting for one-off operations when assessing underlying fiscal positions.
Sources: National accounts
Related links: OECD National Accounts and The 1993 System of National Accounts, Glossary
Last updated: December 2011
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Annex Table 26 - General government current tax and non-tax receipts
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Definition: Tax receipts of the government sector are defined as the sum of direct taxes on household and business sectors, indirect taxes and social security contributions. Non-tax receipts include operating surpluses, property income, user charges and fees, other current and capital transfers received by the general government. Data refer to the general government sector, which is a consolidation of accounts for the central, state and local government plus social security.
Note: Revenue/GDP-ratios based on the national accounts methodology used are not fully comparable with those found in the OECD's Revenue Statistics which diverge from national accounts in a number of areas. For further details see Frequently Asked Questions.
Sources: National Accounts
Related links: OECD National Accounts and The 1993 System of National Accounts, Glossary
Last updated: Decembre 2011
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Annex Table 27 - General government financial balances
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Definition: Government net lending is general government current tax and non-tax receipts less general government total outlays. See notes to Annex Tables 25 and 26.
The ESA95 definition of net lending differs from the Maastricht definition in that it does not include streams of payments and receipts from swap agreements and forward rate agreements, as these are recorded as financial transactions rather than interest expenditure.
Sources: National Accounts
Related links: National Accounts , The 1993 System of National Accounts, Glossary
Last updated: December 2011
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Annex Table 28 - General government cyclically-adjusted balances
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Notes and definitions: The decomposition of budget balance into a cyclical and a non-cyclical component is aimed at separating cyclical influences associated with divergences 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 related 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 cyclical component of the budget balance.
For details on the methodology used in calculating cyclically-adjusted budget deficits see Giorno, C., P. Richardson, D. Roseveare and P. van den Noord (1995), Estimating potential output gaps and structural budget balances, Van den Noord, P. (2000), The size and role of automatic fiscal stabilisers in the 1990s and beyond, and Girouard, N. and C. André (2005), Measuring cyclically-adjusted budget balances for OECD countries.
Exceptionally, estimates for Norway exclude net revenues from petroleum activities and are expressed as a percentage of mainland GDP; but do not make adjustments for certain other transactions which are used by the Norwegian authorities in their estimates of underlying balances.
Sources: OECD estimates
Related links: National Accounts and The 1993 System of National Accounts, Glossary
Last updated: December 2011
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Annex Table 29 - General government underlying balances
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Definition: This indicator eliminates the impact of so called one-off transactions from the cyclically-adjusted financial balances. One-offs are derived as the deviations from trend in net capital transfers, special one-offs not related to capital transfers and one-off revenues from the sale of the third generation mobile telephone licenses. For more details on the methodology see Joumard , I., M. Minegishi, C. André, C. Nicq and R. Price (2008), Accounting for one-off operations when assessing underlying fiscal positions. See notes to Tables 27 and 28.
Sources: OECD estimates
Related links: National Accounts and The 1993 System of National Accounts, Glossary
Last updated: December 2011
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Annex Table 30 - Cyclically-adjusted general government primary balances
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Definition: These figures are derived by adding back net interest payments (Annex Table 31) to general government underlying balances (Annex Table 29). See notes to Tables 27, 28, 29 and 31.
Sources: OECD calculations
Related links: National Accounts and The 1993 System of National Accounts, Glossary
Last updated: December 2011
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Annex Table 31 - General government net debt interest payments
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Definition: Interest paid for general government debt net of interest received for general government assets.
Sources: National Accounts
Notes: There are a number of important country differences in definitions and availability of debt interest statistics. For individual country notes see Economic Outlook Statistical Sources file.
Related links: National Accounts and The 1993 System of National Accounts, Glossary
Last updated: December 2011
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Annex Table 32 - General government gross financial liabilities
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Definition: Gross financial liabilities are defined as the debt and other liabilities (short and long-term) of all the institutions in the general government sector, defined by ESA95/SNA93, subject to data availability. For the United States, Flow of Funds estimates are used, which value debt at face value. The gross data are consolidated within and between the sub-sectors of the general government sector, national sources permitting.
Sources: National Accounts
Related links: Economic Outlook Frequently Asked Questions. National Accounts and The 1993 System of National Accounts, Glossary
Last updated: December 2011
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Annex Table 33 - General government net financial liabilities
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Definition: Net financial liabilities are defined as the gross financial liabilities of the general government sector less the financial assets of the general government sector. Such assets may be cash, bank deposits, loans to the private sector, participation in private sector companies, holdings in public corporations or foreign exchange reserves, depending on the institutional structure of the country concerned and data availability.
The status and treatment of government liabilities in respect of their employee pension plans in the national accounts have been diverse across countries, making international comparability of government debts difficult. The current interpretation of the 1993 SNA is that: i) "autonomous" funded pension plans should be classified outside the general government sector, which entails that their assets and liabilities are not reflected in the general government debt data; ii) non-autonomous pension plans should be classified inside the general government sector and only the funded component should be reflected in the general government liabilities. Furthermore, the 1993 SNA recommends that the liability inherent in unfunded schemes be recorded as a memorandum item for the government sector. However, while some countries have produced some estimates of these implicit liabilities, few follow the 1993 SNA recommendation.
For individual country notes see Economic Outlook Statistical Sources file.
Sources: National Accounts
Related links: Maastricht definition of general government gross public debt (Annex Table 62)
Last updated: December 2011
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Related Documents
Economic Outlook
OECD Economic Outlook No. 90 Annex Tables - Table of Contents
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