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MODIFICATIONS OF ACCOUNTING DATA IN NATIONAL-INCOME ESTIMATION.

The Accounting Review 1953 28(2), 199-210
Abstract National income estimations are in large part based upon business accounting data. Nevertheless, accounting data are in several instances modified in an attempt to obtain greater completeness and uniformity in the measurement of national income and product. The purpose of this paper is to consider some of the more important modifications of accounting data, both with regard to their quantitative significance in national-income estimation and with regard to the validity of the assumption that modifications of accounting data are necessary or desirable. The most important of the modifications of business-accounting data are (1) the inventory-valuation adjustment, applied to business profits and production data, and (2) the so-called imputations, or items of production and income in kind. Included in the latter category are imputations made in measuring national output for (a) wages and salaries paid in kind, (b) the rental value of owner-occupied houses, (c) the value of food and fuel produced and consumed on farms, and (d) nonmonetary income and product flows arising in connection with financial intermediaries.

BUSINESS INCOME AND NATIONAL INCOME: A CONTRAST OF CONCEPTS.

The Accounting Review 1952 27(2), 189-194
Abstract The purpose of this article is to set forth in rather elementary fashion some of the more fundamental differences between the business and national income concepts. The contrast of concepts is presented in terms of certain widely accepted standards and postulates underlying the measurement of business income. The national income accountant is concerned with the creation of product, not alone with its subsequent sale. The national income and product concepts are measures of output within the economy. Income is attributed to all productive processes and is not associated solely with the event of sale. National income is expressed in terms of the cost of the factors of production, while gross and net national product are measures of the market value of production. Thus a fundamental difference between enterprise and national income accounting lies in the difference in timing of recognition of revenue on the one hand and product on the other. Gains from exchanges of assets other than stock in trade are generally regarded as components of business revenue and are therefore given accounting recognition according to the same principles as other revenues. However, the realization of gain on the sale of a capital asset does not necessarily imply any contribution by the seller to the social product during the period of realization.