The Handbook on Extended Supply and Use Tables and Extended Input-Output Tables is the outcome of a collaborative effort by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and the European Commission’s Joint Research Centre (JRC). It was produced under the auspices of the OECD Expert Group on Extended Supply and Use Tables (EGESUT) and benefitted greatly from discussions at the yearly meetings of the EGESUT. Drafts of each chapter were made available to all members of the EGESUT, many of whom provided useful written feedback. The Handbook also benefitted from discussions at the 2021, 2022 and 2023 meeting of the OECD Working Party on National Accounts (WPNA), the 2022 and 2024 meeting of the Eurostat Expert Group on Integrated Global Accounts, the 2022 and 2023 conference of the International Input-Output Association and the 2024 OECD Working Party on International Trade in Goods and Services Statistics (WPTGS).
The editors of the Handbook are Oscar Lemmers (Statistics Netherlands) and José M. Rueda Cantuche (JRC), with the members of the Bureau of the OECD EGESUT functioning as the editorial board and with Annabelle Mourougane (OECD) providing valuable advice and editorial support.
The work was completed under the management of Annabelle Mourougane (OECD) and Carlos Torrecilla Salinas (JRC).
Special thanks go to those who provided specific contributions included within the handbook, including Caroline Hambÿe (Federal Planning Bureau Belgium); Cuihong Yang, Yiying Shi (Academy of Mathematics and Systems Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences and University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, People’s Republic of China); Zhuoying Zhang (Academy of Mathematics and Systems Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, People’s Republic of China); Rui Wei (Hunan University, People’s Republic of China), Kunfu Zhu (Renmin University of China); Ahías Steller, Allison Pierce, Fabián Ramírez, Gabriela Saborío (Banco Central de Costa Rica); Isabelle Remond-Tiedrez (Eurostat); Pontus Lindroos, Merja Myllymäki (Statistics Finland); Agnès Topiol (Central Bureau of Statistics, Israel); Federico Sallusti, Stefania Cuicchio (Istituto Nazionale di Statistica, Italy); Satoru Hagino, Takeshi Sakuramoto (Economic and Social Research Institute, Cabinet Office, Government of Japan); Jiyoung Kim (Okayama University, Japan); Haruka Mitoma (Hiroshima University, Japan); José M. Rueda Cantuche, Juan M. Valderas-Jaramillo (JRC); Vitor Manuel Soto Jaramillo, Gissela Gutierrez Aguirre, José Teran Vargas (National Institute of Statistics and Geography (INEGI), Mexico); Oscar Lemmers (Statistics Netherlands); Nadim Ahmad, Norihiko Yamano, Colin Webb, Peter Horvát, Juergen Amann, Graham Pilgrim, Carmen Zürcher, Mattia Cai, Sébastien Miroudot, John Mitchell (OECD); Jon D. Samuels, Thomas Howells, Jessica McCloskey, Robert Omohundro (United States Bureau of Economic Analysis); Fariha Kamal (United States Census Bureau) and two authors who preferred to remain anonymous.
The following experts provided valuable comments on the Handbook: Jason Annabel, Katherine Keenan, Peter Radisich, Jacqui Vitas (Australian Bureau of Statistics); Caroline Hambÿe (Federal Planning Bureau Belgium); María Isabel Méndez Ferrada, Felipe Aviles (Banco Central de Chile, Chile); Fabienne Montaigne (Eurostat); Kasperi Lavikainen, Merja Myllymäki (Statistics Finland); Haydee Faur, Agnès Topiol (Central Bureau of Statistics, Israel); Federico Sallusti, Stefania Cuicchio (Istituto Nazionale di Statistica, Italy); Tatsuya Sekiguchi (Economic and Social Research Institute, Cabinet Office, Government of Japan); José M. Rueda Cantuche (JRC); Kamal Romero (University of Castille La Mancha, Spain); Inese Medne (Central Statistical Bureau of Latvia, Latvia); Alberto Lopez Esparza, Sandra Arellano Jaime, Sylvia Rios Casanova, Diana Paredes Malagon, Guillermo Lopez Delgado, Sofia Valdivia Oseguera, Gloria Huerta Palacios, Vitor Manuel Soto Jaramillo, Gissela Gutierrez Aguirre, José Teran Vargas (National Institute of Statistics and Geography (INEGI), Mexico); Thijs ten Raa (Utrecht University, the Netherlands); Bart Los (University of Groningen, the Netherlands); Timon Bohn, Oscar Lemmers, Khee Fung Wong (Statistics Netherlands); Norihiko Yamano (OECD); Si Qi Oh, Yuan Chang Ng, Hwee Peng Chai, Bee Kuan Yew (Singapore Department of Statistics, Singapore); Nikos Tsotros (Department for Business and Trade, United Kingdom); Heran Zheng (University College London, United Kingdom); Eric Crane, Sanjiv Mahajan (Office for National Statistics, United Kingdom); Jason Chute, Jiemin Guo, Thomas Howells, Robert Kornfeld, Jeff Young, Dan Yorgason (Bureau of Economic Analysis, United States) and two experts who preferred to remain anonymous.
Furthermore, several current and former OECD colleagues provided important contributions to the work over the past years, including Nadim Ahmad, David Brackfield, Fabienne Fortanier, Guannan Miao, Rodolfo Ostoloza and Diana Wyman.
The final version of the report was formatted by Virginie Elgrably with assistance from Sonia Primot (OECD).