210 likes | 329 Views
Issues in Compensation and Profits. Kurt Kunze National Economic Accounts Data Users’ Conference October 15, 2007. Compensation. Compensation can be volatile and subject to large revisions Wages and salaries Increasing impact of irregular pay Stock options Bonuses Pensions
E N D
Issues in Compensation and Profits Kurt Kunze National Economic Accounts Data Users’ Conference October 15, 2007
Compensation Compensation can be volatile and subject to large revisions • Wages and salaries • Increasing impact of irregular pay • Stock options • Bonuses • Pensions • Lack of timely, consistent source data
Quarterly compensation Changes in level
Wages and salaries • Primary source data — BLS quarterly census of employment and wages (QCEW) • QCEW includes: • Bonuses • Gains from exercising nonqualified stock options • Data availability lag • Incorporation of quarterly QCEW • Prior to 2002 — at annual revision • After August 2002 — quarterly incorporation
Annual wage and salary revisions before and after QCEW methodology change Average revision at first annual revision* Average revision 1998-2002 Average revision 2003-2006 1998-2002 2003 -2006 *The average revision is the average of the absolute values of the revisions (without regard to sign) ------------------------------- Source: BEA, Survey of Current Business – various issues
Quarterly wage and salary revisions Revisions resulting from incorporating the QCEW
Quarterly unit labor costs Percent change from proceeding quarter at annual rate [Percent change]
Early wage and salary estimates Extrapolated using BLS monthly current employment statistics (CES): • Average hourly earnings x Average weekly hours x Employment • Featured CES measures • Regular pay • Production and nonsupervisory workers
Irregular pay Gain on the exercise of stock options and bonus payments contribute to volatility and revisions in wages and salaries • Gain on exercise of stock options reflected in QCEW when exercised • Bonus payments reflected in QCEW when paid • Neither is separately identified in QCEW • Neither stock option gains nor bonus payments are included in current employment statistics used for extrapolation
What next for wages and salaries? • New data: All-employee total earnings and gross monthly earnings • Studying the experimental data and evaluating its impact on personal income • When available, more timely data will replace current measures of employment, hours, and earnings
What else? • Relationship of withheld income taxes and QCEW wages • Relationship of stock price changes and wage changes
Pensions • Private pension contributions have contributed to large revisions to compensation • Growing concern about pensions in general as part of concerns about the aging population and retirement saving • Undertaking studies to more clearly identify data inconsistencies with the goal of developing improved methodologies
Growth in unit labor costs(per unit of real gross product of nonfinancial corporate business)
Form 5500 • Informational tax form for pension plans • Comprehensive data source • All large plans (100 or more participants) • Sample of small plans • Extended filing period • Long time lag
Other pension data sources • Corporate financial reports • PBGC tabulations of form 5500 for defined-benefit plans • Corporate tax returns — IRS Statistics of Income tabulations of pension expenses • BLS survey data: • Employment cost index • Employer costs for employee compensation
What’s ahead for pensions? • The updated System of National Accounts (international guidelines for national accounts) will recommend an accrual approach based on actuarial data • Volatility will probably be dampened • Additional estimation challenges
Corporate profits • Corporate profits: Business receipts less business expenses • Wages and salaries and pension contributions are expenses to business • Estimates of profits are volatile and subject to substantial revisions • Improved estimates of stock option gains and pension contributions could lead to improved estimates of profits
Quarterly corporate profits Changes in level
Profits and stock options The gain on the exercise of stock options contributes to volatility and revisions in profits • Reflected in the corporate income tax data as an expense when exercised • Corporate financial reports (used for extrapolation) now expense options when granted based on fair value (option pricing model) • Revisions resulting from stock option activity depend on the timing of option grants and option exercises • In the future, could move to fair-value measures -- could dampen volatility, but challenging estimation issues
Pensions and corporate profits • Corporate expense item • Differing reporting requirements can lead to timing inconsistencies • Reconciliation?