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Unit value indices and Import/Export price surveys : Pros and Cons of collection methods

Unit value indices and Import/Export price surveys : Pros and Cons of collection methods. 1. Sources of information 2. Unit value vs specific price indices 3. Comparison of indices in the EU 4. Way forward. 1. Data sources. Customs data  Unit Value Indices (UVI)

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Unit value indices and Import/Export price surveys : Pros and Cons of collection methods

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  1. Unit value indices and Import/Export price surveys : Pros and Cons of collection methods • 1. Sources of information • 2. Unit value vs specific price indices • 3. Comparison of indices in the EU • 4. Way forward

  2. 1. Data sources • Customs data  Unit Value Indices (UVI) • Enterprise-based price surveys - Survey of transactions  Specific price Indices (SPI) • Partner countries (e.g. USA & Canada) • Special sources for specific products : electricity, water, petroleum, gas … • Proxies: PPI, CPI…

  3. 2. Unit values vs. specific prices2.1. Problems with unit values • Heterogeneity of items at the lowest level of the product classification • Misreporting of values (e.g., transfer pricing). • Misreporting of quantities. • Inadequate measures of quantities. • Consignments with mixed products. • Unrecorded transactions (low value transactions, e-commerce …) • [Within the EU: absence of intra-EU customs data]

  4. 2. Unit values vs. specific prices2.1. Problems with unit values : lack of harmonisation between countries

  5. 2.2. Problems with price surveys • Coverage and representativeness • Products • Traders • Size of sample (traders, items) and sampling errors • Need to adjust for quality change, new products; etc. • Cost

  6. 2.3. Summary of Pros and Cons of UVIs and SPIs

  7. 3. Comparison UVI/SPI on EU data3.1. The study • Datasets: Monthly data on Imports from 4 EU Member States; SPIs; UVIs; CPA 3 digits (close to CPC) • Methodology: SPIs as reference • Measures: distance, discrepancy, association / correlation, variability / instability

  8. Normalised average standard deviation of monthly, quarterly, annual and pluriannual UVI / SPI discrepancies by product

  9. Normalised average standard deviation of monthly, quarterly, annual and pluriannual UVI / SPI discrepancies by product

  10. 3.2. Results (1) • Stability • SPIs more stable than UVIs • Monthly UVIs often very unstable • Long-term vs. short-term • More discrepancies on the short-term than on the long-term • Little relationship between ST and LT discrepancies

  11. 3.2. Results (cont’d) • Aggregation level • less discrepancies at aggregated levels • no SPI data at very disaggregated level • low-discrepancy product groups differ among MS • Technological levels – for high tech products • more short-term discrepancies • long-term systematic upward bias of UVIs

  12. 3.3 Methodological issues • Data limitations: • geographical coverage • time coverage • disaggregation • Eurostat vs. national UVI data: • sensitivity to methodology (detail, outliers) • Quality of SPI data: • erratic movements / stability • synchronisation among EU MS

  13. 4. The way forward (1) • a. More detailed specification for UVI ? • Narrower specification • Country of origin or destination • Point of export / import • Size of shipment • Individual trader • Experience with consumer goods: bar-code scanner data

  14. 4. The way forward (cont’d) • b. Different formulas? • c. Improving data editing? • Lack of benchmark • The risk of discarding all large price changes, even real ones… • d. Hybrid solutions?

  15. Thank you

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