Current transactions by sectors; National Accounts

Current transactions by sectors; National Accounts

Institutional sectors Not Consolidated or Consolidated Periods Resources Total (million euros) Resources Imports of goods and services Total (million euros) Resources Imports of goods and services Imports of goods (million euros) Resources Imports of goods and services Imports of services Total (million euros) Resources Imports of goods and services Imports of services Imports of services excluding FISIM (million euros) Resources Imports of goods and services Imports of services Imports of FISIM (million euros) Resources Output Total (million euros) Resources Output Market output Total (million euros) Resources Output Market output Financial intermediation service (FISIM) (million euros) Resources Output Market output Other market output (million euros) Resources Output Output produced for own final use Total (million euros) Resources Output Output produced for own final use Own-account capital formation (million euros) Resources Output Output produced for own final use Products retained for own consumption (million euros) Resources Output Non-market output Total (million euros) Resources Output Non-market output Payments for non-market output (million euros) Resources Output Non-market output Other non-market output (million euros) Resources Compensation of employees Total (million euros) Resources Compensation of employees Wages and salaries (million euros) Resources Compensation of employees Employers' social contributions (million euros) Resources Taxes on production and imports Total (million euros) Resources Taxes on production and imports Taxes on products Total (million euros) Resources Taxes on production and imports Taxes on products Value added tax (VAT) (million euros) Resources Taxes on production and imports Taxes on products Taxes, duties on imports excluding VAT (million euros) Resources Taxes on production and imports Taxes on products Other taxes on products (million euros) Resources Taxes on production and imports Other taxes on production (million euros) Resources Subsidies (-) Total (million euros) Resources Subsidies (-) Subsidies on products (million euros) Resources Subsidies (-) Other subsidies on production (million euros) Resources Property income Total (million euros) Resources Property income Interest Interest; definition National Accounts (million euros) Resources Property income Interest Correction FISIM (million euros) Resources Property income Interest Interest before correction for FISIM (million euros) Resources Property income Distributed income of corporations Total (million euros) Resources Property income Distributed income of corporations Dividends (million euros) Resources Property income Distributed income of corporations Withdrawals from income of quasi-corp. (million euros) Resources Property income Reinvested earnings on foreign investm. (million euros) Resources Property income Other investment income Total (million euros) Resources Property income Other investment income Investm. income attrib. to policy holder (million euros) Resources Property income Other investment income Income payable on pension entitlements (million euros) Resources Property income Other investment income Inv. income attributable to shareholders (million euros) Resources Property income Rent (million euros) Resources Current taxes on income and wealth Total (million euros) Resources Current taxes on income and wealth Current taxes on income (million euros) Resources Current taxes on income and wealth Other current taxes (million euros) Resources Social contributions and benefits Total (million euros) Resources Social contributions and benefits Net social contributions Total (million euros) Resources Social contributions and benefits Net social contributions Employers' actual social contributions (million euros) Resources Social contributions and benefits Net social contributions Employers' imputed social contributions (million euros) Resources Social contributions and benefits Net social contributions Households' actual social contributions (million euros) Resources Social contributions and benefits Net social contributions Households' social contrib. supplements (million euros) Resources Social contributions and benefits Net social contributions The social insur. scheme service charges (million euros) Resources Social contributions and benefits Social benefits in cash Total (million euros) Resources Social contributions and benefits Social benefits in cash Social security benefits in cash (million euros) Resources Social contributions and benefits Social benefits in cash Other social insurance benefits (million euros) Resources Social contributions and benefits Social benefits in cash Social assistance benefits in cash (million euros) Resources Other current transfers Total (million euros) Resources Other current transfers Net non-life insurance premiums (million euros) Resources Other current transfers Non-life insurance claims (million euros) Resources Other current transfers Current transfers within gen. government (million euros) Resources Other current transfers Current international co-operation (million euros) Resources Other current transfers Miscellaneous current transfers (million euros) Resources Other current transfers The VAT- and GNI-based EU own resource (million euros) Resources Adjustm. change in pension entitlements (million euros) Resources Capital transfers Total (million euros) Resources Capital transfers Capital taxes (million euros) Resources Capital transfers Investment grants (million euros) Resources Capital transfers Other capital transfers (million euros) Uses Total (million euros) Uses Exports of goods and services Total (million euros) Uses Exports of goods and services Exports of goods (million euros) Uses Exports of goods and services Exports of services Total (million euros) Uses Exports of goods and services Exports of services Exports of services excluding FISIM (million euros) Uses Exports of goods and services Exports of services Exports of FISIM (million euros) Uses Intermediate consumption (-) (million euros) Uses Compensation of employees Total (million euros) Uses Compensation of employees Wages and salaries (million euros) Uses Compensation of employees Employers' social contributions (million euros) Uses Taxes on production and imports Total (million euros) Uses Taxes on production and imports Taxes on products (million euros) Uses Taxes on production and imports Other taxes on production (million euros) Uses Subsidies (-) Total (million euros) Uses Subsidies (-) Subsidies on products (million euros) Uses Subsidies (-) Other subsidies on production (million euros) Uses Property income Total (million euros) Uses Property income Interest Interest; definition National Accounts (million euros) Uses Property income Interest Correction FISIM (million euros) Uses Property income Interest Interest before correction for FISIM (million euros) Uses Property income Distributed income of corporations Total (million euros) Uses Property income Distributed income of corporations Dividends (million euros) Uses Property income Distributed income of corporations Withdrawals from income of quasi-corps. (million euros) Uses Property income Reinvested earnings on foreign investm. (million euros) Uses Property income Other investment income Total (million euros) Uses Property income Other investment income Investm. income attrib. to policy holder (million euros) Uses Property income Other investment income Income payable on pension entitlements (million euros) Uses Property income Other investment income Inv. income attributable to shareholders (million euros) Uses Property income Rent (million euros) Uses Current taxes on income and wealth Total (million euros) Uses Current taxes on income and wealth Current taxes on income (million euros) Uses Current taxes on income and wealth Other current taxes (million euros) Uses Social contributions and benefits Total (million euros) Uses Social contributions and benefits Net social contributions Total (million euros) Uses Social contributions and benefits Net social contributions Employers' actual social contributions (million euros) Uses Social contributions and benefits Net social contributions Employers' imputed social contributions (million euros) Uses Social contributions and benefits Net social contributions Households' actual social contributions (million euros) Uses Social contributions and benefits Net social contributions Households' social contrib. supplements (million euros) Uses Social contributions and benefits Net social contributions The social insur. scheme service charges (million euros) Uses Social contributions and benefits Social benefits in cash Total (million euros) Uses Social contributions and benefits Social benefits in cash Social security benefits in cash (million euros) Uses Social contributions and benefits Social benefits in cash Other social insurance benefits (million euros) Uses Social contributions and benefits Social benefits in cash Social assistance benefits in cash (million euros) Uses Other current transfers Total (million euros) Uses Other current transfers Net non-life insurance premiums (million euros) Uses Other current transfers Non-life insurance claims (million euros) Uses Other current transfers Current transfers within gen. government (million euros) Uses Other current transfers Current international co-operation (million euros) Uses Other current transfers Miscellaneous current transfers (million euros) Uses Other current transfers The VAT- and GNI-based EU own resource (million euros) Uses Adjustm. change in pension entitlements (million euros) Uses Final consumption expenditure Total (million euros) Uses Final consumption expenditure Actual individual final consumption Total (million euros) Uses Final consumption expenditure Actual individual final consumption Social transfers in kind Total (million euros) Uses Final consumption expenditure Actual individual final consumption Social transfers in kind Transfers in kind non-market production (million euros) Uses Final consumption expenditure Actual individual final consumption Social transfers in kind Transfers in kind market production (million euros) Uses Final consumption expenditure Actual individual final consumption Other individual final consumption (million euros) Uses Final consumption expenditure Actual collective final consumption (million euros) Uses Capital transfers Total (million euros) Uses Capital transfers Capital taxes (million euros) Uses Capital transfers Investment grants (million euros) Uses Capital transfers Other capital transfers (million euros) Uses Gross capital formation Total (million euros) Uses Gross capital formation Gross fixed capital formation Total (million euros) Uses Gross capital formation Gross fixed capital formation Consumption of fixed capital (million euros) Uses Gross capital formation Gross fixed capital formation Net fixed capital formation (million euros) Uses Gross capital formation Changes in inventories incl. valuables Total (million euros) Uses Gross capital formation Changes in inventories incl. valuables Changes in inventories (million euros) Uses Gross capital formation Changes in inventories incl. valuables Acquisitions less disposals of valuables (million euros) Uses Acq. less disposals of non-prod. assets (million euros) Balancing items Gross domestic product (million euros) Balancing items Gross value added (million euros) Balancing items Net domestic product (million euros) Balancing items Net value added (million euros) Balancing items Gross operating surplus (million euros) Balancing items Net operating surplus (million euros) Balancing items Gross profits before taxes (mln euro) Balancing items Net profits before taxes (mln euro) Balancing items Gross national income (million euros) Balancing items Net national income (million euros) Balancing items Gross disposable income (million euros) Balancing items Net disposable income (million euros) Balancing items Gross saving (million euros) Balancing items Net saving (million euros) Balancing items Net transactions of good and services (million euros) Balancing items Surplus nation on current transactions (million euros) Balancing items Net saving and capital transfers (million euros) Balancing items Net lending (+) or net borrowing (-) (million euros) Balancing items Total financial transactions in assets (million euros) Balancing items Total financial transactions liabilities (million euros) Balancing items Net financial transactions (million euros) Balancing items Statistical discrepancy (million euros)
Total domestic sectors Not consolidated 1995 1,260,345 592,653 513,788 11,408 502,380 21,168 7,584 13,584 57,697 5,864 51,833 165,549 138,699 26,850 34,343 31,211 19,832 0 11,379 3,132 4,781 2,466 2,315 139,835 91,437 -1,100 92,537 23,783 23,440 343 738 22,085 4,748 15,018 2,319 1,792 37,474 33,520 3,954 152,309 86,536 16,807 9,831 48,632 15,112 -3,846 65,773 33,068 22,253 10,452 73,822 10,717 10,861 45,583 313 6,348 12,871 49,174 1,051 3,787 44,336 1,244,305 292,906 165,560 138,950 26,610 35,916 32,751 3,165 2,712 695 2,017 142,576 87,916 -2,541 90,457 22,099 22,036 63 9,528 21,241 4,782 15,038 1,421 1,792 37,313 33,359 3,954 153,022 86,627 17,019 9,831 48,502 15,092 -3,817 66,395 33,538 22,309 10,548 78,604 10,782 10,796 45,583 1,618 7,265 2,560 12,903 234,688 204,797 45,300 21,942 23,358 159,497 29,891 50,156 1,049 4,082 45,025 70,700 69,001 52,832 16,169 1,699 1,606 93 0 330,032 299,747 277,200 246,915 133,337 80,505 . . 327,776 274,944 322,442 269,610 87,722 34,890 33,908 16,040 159,939 143,088 16,851 -811
Total domestic sectors Not consolidated 2000 1,747,538 844,418 741,420 15,510 725,910 30,245 10,843 19,402 72,753 7,852 64,901 226,622 178,450 48,172 50,228 46,175 28,387 0 17,788 4,053 7,053 1,500 5,553 249,506 134,413 511 133,902 61,899 61,545 354 24,579 27,213 5,710 15,631 5,872 1,402 48,522 43,247 5,275 188,818 114,307 33,419 14,642 55,038 15,709 -4,501 74,511 34,283 29,592 10,636 95,203 14,279 16,350 55,733 286 8,555 17,052 21,616 1,695 5,095 14,826 1,726,728 438,445 226,797 178,788 48,009 51,785 47,718 4,067 5,445 348 5,097 252,965 133,065 -946 134,011 50,790 50,609 181 42,992 24,716 5,805 15,677 3,234 1,402 48,133 42,858 5,275 189,543 114,219 33,530 14,642 54,836 15,663 -4,452 75,324 34,904 29,747 10,673 102,226 14,237 16,263 55,733 2,279 9,962 3,752 17,094 317,991 281,931 59,749 28,841 30,908 222,182 36,060 22,461 1,687 5,167 15,607 101,557 101,869 69,098 32,771 -312 -453 141 4 452,191 405,973 383,093 336,875 180,662 111,564 . . 448,608 379,510 441,249 372,151 123,216 54,118 53,273 20,810 386,558 366,339 20,219 591
Total domestic sectors Not consolidated 2010 2,522,084 1,192,983 1,030,111 31,748 998,363 46,820 14,174 32,646 116,052 10,565 105,487 305,637 242,152 63,485 72,910 66,332 41,840 0 24,492 6,578 11,109 934 10,175 400,486 152,765 -26,974 179,739 193,734 192,960 774 3,789 44,642 6,148 22,183 16,311 5,556 67,192 60,653 6,539 263,222 151,527 52,856 11,984 72,055 22,210 -7,578 111,695 47,084 44,430 20,181 155,109 13,011 14,291 108,067 356 19,384 18,624 35,746 1,945 7,790 26,011 2,483,741 617,278 311,900 247,258 64,642 74,829 68,251 6,578 9,833 817 9,016 396,806 155,796 -27,346 183,142 148,353 146,722 1,631 45,044 42,057 6,349 22,210 13,498 5,556 67,409 60,883 6,526 263,410 149,472 51,501 11,984 71,220 22,183 -7,416 113,938 48,623 45,082 20,233 164,666 13,510 14,066 108,067 2,882 22,283 3,858 18,571 459,567 405,410 118,927 51,330 67,597 286,483 54,157 37,761 1,931 7,780 28,050 128,843 125,004 109,569 15,435 3,839 3,398 441 1,119 643,022 575,705 533,453 466,136 267,402 157,833 . . 639,796 530,227 629,834 520,265 170,320 60,751 58,736 38,343 411,759 374,102 37,657 686
Total domestic sectors Not consolidated 2020 3,190,213 1,573,914 1,364,931 29,520 1,335,411 66,217 18,685 47,532 142,766 12,406 130,360 397,812 307,413 90,399 101,843 89,663 58,971 0 30,692 12,180 35,520 1,818 33,702 365,455 90,045 -37,805 127,850 223,343 219,322 4,021 -10,912 61,640 3,598 34,534 23,508 1,339 101,591 93,385 8,206 343,297 199,716 75,393 17,170 84,199 34,549 -11,595 143,581 60,849 58,599 24,133 216,441 15,580 17,010 161,725 759 21,367 26,317 29,841 2,284 5,952 21,605 3,144,861 847,765 406,330 314,084 92,246 105,060 92,132 12,928 33,897 1,816 32,081 378,825 86,797 -38,513 125,310 183,802 180,559 3,243 49,099 57,788 3,633 34,549 19,606 1,339 101,566 93,508 8,058 342,506 196,243 73,229 17,170 82,708 34,534 -11,398 146,263 62,794 59,286 24,183 231,188 16,969 15,606 161,725 3,646 27,391 5,851 26,117 558,446 491,092 149,041 63,006 86,035 342,051 67,354 31,104 2,281 5,754 23,069 174,331 173,694 137,280 36,414 637 385 252 -142 816,463 726,149 679,183 588,869 340,593 203,313 . . 792,981 655,701 779,050 641,770 220,804 83,524 82,261 45,352 403,856 354,923 48,933 -3,581
Total domestic sectors Not consolidated 2021 3,490,292 1,740,104 1,519,634 27,486 1,492,148 68,281 19,427 48,854 152,189 13,209 138,980 414,812 320,893 93,919 110,269 97,740 65,400 0 32,340 12,529 32,222 849 31,373 442,019 79,689 -36,130 115,819 264,688 261,078 3,610 34,159 62,211 2,950 34,668 24,593 1,272 114,962 106,713 8,249 349,907 201,862 77,575 18,564 87,369 34,682 -16,328 148,045 62,272 60,981 24,792 225,772 15,594 16,728 170,348 1,628 21,474 23,582 37,492 2,699 6,444 28,349 3,398,574 948,374 423,799 327,960 95,839 114,025 100,669 13,356 30,509 847 29,662 416,685 75,534 -36,524 112,058 228,319 212,390 15,929 53,111 58,449 2,990 34,682 20,777 1,272 114,619 106,531 8,088 349,090 198,375 75,355 18,564 85,863 34,668 -16,075 150,715 64,192 61,678 24,845 236,997 17,160 15,396 170,348 3,487 23,799 6,807 23,343 606,798 535,605 162,241 67,787 94,454 373,364 71,193 37,724 2,683 6,214 28,827 197,869 184,425 144,622 39,803 13,444 13,177 267 -589 891,550 791,730 746,928 647,108 385,948 241,326 . . 905,854 761,232 895,789 751,167 289,230 144,608 144,376 91,718 346,904 261,388 85,516 6,202
Total domestic sectors Not consolidated 2022 3,953,213 2,010,010 1,774,453 25,830 1,748,623 71,295 20,640 50,655 164,262 14,142 150,120 444,494 340,947 103,547 114,003 102,047 70,458 0 31,589 11,956 21,045 160 20,885 557,058 128,334 -4,251 132,585 278,841 274,874 3,967 83,837 61,773 3,372 33,120 25,281 4,273 133,182 124,558 8,624 372,464 217,697 84,528 21,662 90,756 33,132 -12,381 154,767 63,150 65,260 26,357 234,912 15,665 17,857 174,110 1,833 25,447 27,331 38,874 2,789 8,325 27,760 3,780,697 1,121,836 454,769 348,914 105,855 118,778 105,806 12,972 19,191 160 19,031 555,203 122,975 -3,397 126,372 274,403 255,921 18,482 96,407 57,145 3,389 33,132 20,624 4,273 132,172 123,758 8,414 371,541 213,726 81,885 21,662 89,209 33,120 -12,150 157,815 65,305 66,094 26,416 245,584 17,277 16,280 174,110 3,686 27,709 6,522 27,140 679,345 602,487 172,480 73,262 99,218 430,007 76,858 40,523 2,778 8,759 28,986 227,220 203,422 157,385 46,037 23,798 23,431 367 -106,799 993,820 888,174 836,435 730,789 441,318 283,933 . . 982,479 825,094 973,740 816,355 294,586 137,201 135,552 172,516 585,976 414,665 171,311 1,205
Total domestic sectors Not consolidated 2023 4,234,115 2,073,763 1,819,653 23,725 1,795,928 74,548 21,791 52,757 179,562 15,474 164,088 478,494 369,196 109,298 118,880 106,898 75,594 0 31,304 11,982 19,725 4,803 14,922 661,634 230,909 23,417 207,492 355,738 351,256 4,482 11,576 61,783 3,314 35,454 23,015 1,628 156,229 147,170 9,059 402,644 229,054 89,106 23,013 92,645 35,467 -11,177 173,590 70,131 72,111 31,348 243,096 16,452 18,728 182,298 2,229 23,389 26,855 57,598 3,235 8,532 45,831 4,137,063 1,128,962 489,436 377,681 111,755 123,007 110,135 12,872 17,823 4,801 13,022 646,643 218,770 26,978 191,792 316,750 294,209 22,541 52,347 57,148 3,345 35,467 18,336 1,628 153,612 144,784 8,828 402,063 224,928 86,285 23,013 91,106 35,454 -10,930 177,135 72,510 73,216 31,409 253,844 17,951 17,316 182,298 4,507 26,152 5,620 26,581 734,860 649,465 186,320 78,693 107,627 463,145 85,395 59,368 3,216 9,234 46,918 210,872 213,665 166,573 47,092 -2,793 -2,841 48 127 1,050,133 944,801 883,560 778,228 457,415 290,842 . . 1,051,957 885,384 1,044,407 877,834 309,821 143,248 141,478 97,052 -33,792 -120,739 86,947 10,105
Total domestic sectors Not consolidated 2024 1st quarter* 1,027,910 517,244 452,406 5,389 447,017 19,406 5,700 13,706 45,432 4,173 41,259 119,778 91,867 27,911 31,449 28,303 19,110 0 9,193 3,146 3,701 384 3,317 133,558 58,320 4,386 53,934 45,146 44,550 596 14,485 15,373 823 9,198 5,352 234 41,115 38,759 2,356 100,810 56,454 22,335 6,270 21,348 9,201 -2,700 44,356 17,624 18,986 7,746 65,127 4,393 5,069 49,472 146 6,047 7,279 8,233 658 1,400 6,175 1,000,142 275,382 122,445 93,940 28,505 32,236 29,090 3,146 3,226 384 2,842 128,641 54,350 5,453 48,897 38,755 38,228 527 20,889 14,413 835 9,201 4,377 234 41,104 38,786 2,318 100,677 55,414 21,641 6,270 20,944 9,198 -2,639 45,263 18,231 19,270 7,762 69,487 4,874 4,574 49,472 938 8,674 955 7,215 187,317 165,433 48,283 19,375 28,908 117,150 21,884 8,375 653 1,473 6,249 53,168 54,867 44,083 10,784 -1,699 -1,705 6 -41 270,568 241,862 226,485 197,779 119,588 75,505 . . 272,506 228,423 268,290 224,207 81,037 36,954 36,812 27,768 264,457 235,099 29,358 -1,590
Total domestic sectors Not consolidated 2024 2nd quarter* 1,151,185 547,538 478,616 5,426 473,190 19,076 5,554 13,522 49,846 4,153 45,693 140,425 109,548 30,877 31,669 28,584 20,251 0 8,333 3,085 4,044 383 3,661 175,453 58,872 4,857 54,015 93,419 92,187 1,232 3,633 19,327 960 11,118 7,249 202 44,229 41,801 2,428 116,757 67,593 25,712 5,968 27,839 11,122 -3,048 49,164 21,816 18,945 8,403 68,609 4,242 5,206 53,019 169 5,973 9,127 13,717 772 1,304 11,641 1,131,290 291,781 143,498 111,919 31,579 32,475 29,390 3,085 3,549 383 3,166 179,136 54,069 5,825 48,244 73,096 72,199 897 33,746 18,023 965 11,122 5,936 202 43,063 40,704 2,359 116,630 66,446 24,909 5,968 27,431 11,118 -2,980 50,184 22,531 19,233 8,420 71,390 4,841 4,653 53,019 855 6,696 1,326 9,063 194,952 171,901 51,618 22,642 28,976 120,283 23,051 14,264 764 1,751 11,749 60,879 58,718 44,310 14,408 2,161 2,160 1 0 284,764 255,757 240,454 211,447 112,835 68,525 . . 277,697 233,387 276,209 231,899 81,321 37,011 36,464 19,895 39,593 13,021 26,572 -6,677
Total domestic sectors Not consolidated 2024 3rd quarter* 1,076,536 534,617 467,308 5,482 461,826 19,640 5,480 14,160 47,669 4,295 43,374 119,042 90,864 28,178 30,450 27,192 19,309 0 7,883 3,258 4,217 383 3,834 157,687 58,031 3,712 54,319 78,496 77,174 1,322 4,543 16,346 886 9,588 5,872 271 42,843 40,435 2,408 101,880 56,020 23,103 5,813 20,363 9,591 -2,850 45,860 18,648 18,782 8,430 66,952 4,134 4,792 52,165 177 5,684 7,626 11,605 1,149 1,699 8,757 1,057,032 285,992 121,923 93,109 28,814 31,265 28,007 3,258 3,735 383 3,352 158,741 53,650 4,575 49,075 70,458 58,440 12,018 19,141 15,221 891 9,591 4,739 271 42,671 40,324 2,347 101,728 54,935 22,365 5,813 19,956 9,588 -2,787 46,793 19,275 19,070 8,448 69,842 4,730 4,252 52,165 1,014 6,378 1,303 7,563 195,748 172,731 50,453 20,357 30,096 122,278 23,017 12,056 1,145 2,102 8,809 53,895 51,196 44,621 6,575 2,699 2,702 -3 -120 276,249 248,625 231,628 204,004 127,278 82,657 . . 271,981 227,360 269,415 224,794 73,730 29,109 28,658 19,504 212,476 193,292 19,184 320
Total domestic sectors Not consolidated 2024 4th quarter* 1,144,498 560,107 485,652 5,725 479,927 20,079 5,798 14,281 54,376 4,447 49,929 134,549 103,926 30,623 32,694 29,242 20,135 0 9,107 3,452 5,159 382 4,777 171,400 56,537 2,543 53,994 91,986 90,205 1,781 7,010 14,871 836 9,047 4,988 996 39,544 37,122 2,422 109,624 63,287 25,043 6,341 25,767 9,050 -2,914 46,337 18,815 19,364 8,158 72,220 4,380 5,155 55,260 1,434 5,991 7,112 12,471 901 2,174 9,396 1,111,266 299,013 137,445 106,161 31,284 33,618 30,166 3,452 4,741 382 4,359 168,575 52,080 3,398 48,682 74,421 68,996 5,425 26,970 14,108 843 9,050 4,215 996 39,493 37,147 2,346 109,456 62,181 24,282 6,341 25,360 9,047 -2,849 47,275 19,445 19,653 8,177 75,597 5,002 4,629 55,260 2,301 6,618 1,787 7,048 199,897 173,203 52,911 23,235 29,676 120,292 26,694 13,754 897 3,211 9,646 52,795 58,016 44,724 13,292 -5,221 -5,244 23 0 290,878 261,094 246,154 216,370 124,974 80,250 . . 290,301 245,577 287,143 242,419 87,310 42,586 41,303 33,232 -50,167 -71,465 21,298 11,934
Total domestic sectors Not consolidated 2024* 4,400,129 2,159,506 1,883,982 22,022 1,861,960 78,201 22,532 55,669 197,323 17,068 180,255 513,794 396,205 117,589 126,262 113,321 78,805 0 34,516 12,941 17,121 1,532 15,589 638,098 231,760 15,498 216,262 309,047 304,116 4,931 29,671 65,917 3,505 38,951 23,461 1,703 167,731 158,117 9,614 429,071 243,354 96,193 24,392 95,317 38,964 -11,512 185,717 76,903 76,077 32,737 272,908 17,149 20,222 209,916 1,926 23,695 31,144 46,026 3,480 6,577 35,969 4,299,730 1,152,168 525,311 405,129 120,182 129,594 116,653 12,941 15,251 1,532 13,719 635,093 214,149 19,251 194,898 256,730 237,863 18,867 100,746 61,765 3,534 38,964 19,267 1,703 166,331 156,961 9,370 428,491 238,976 93,197 24,392 93,691 38,951 -11,255 189,515 79,482 77,226 32,807 286,316 19,447 18,108 209,916 5,108 28,366 5,371 30,889 777,914 683,268 203,265 85,609 117,656 480,003 94,646 48,449 3,459 8,537 36,453 220,737 222,797 177,738 45,059 -2,060 -2,087 27 -161 1,122,459 1,007,338 944,721 829,600 484,675 306,937 . . 1,112,485 934,747 1,101,057 923,319 323,398 145,660 143,237 100,399 466,359 369,947 96,412 3,987
Total domestic sectors Not consolidated 2025 1st quarter* 1,095,795 546,237 477,432 5,704 471,728 20,487 5,905 14,582 48,318 4,460 43,858 127,588 97,723 29,865 32,797 29,626 20,146 0 9,480 3,171 3,719 344 3,375 148,609 52,922 2,522 50,400 67,135 65,736 1,399 12,806 15,486 808 9,259 5,419 260 41,954 39,469 2,485 107,516 60,339 23,749 6,840 23,679 9,262 -3,191 47,177 19,017 20,203 7,957 68,239 4,618 5,279 52,060 161 6,121 6,888 12,592 759 1,318 10,515 1,069,359 292,002 130,364 99,881 30,483 33,740 30,569 3,171 3,244 344 2,900 147,392 50,770 3,300 47,470 64,925 60,323 4,602 17,047 14,390 819 9,262 4,309 260 41,842 39,413 2,429 107,423 59,279 23,025 6,840 23,276 9,259 -3,121 48,144 19,669 20,500 7,975 73,548 5,143 4,749 52,060 1,251 8,583 1,762 6,813 196,393 172,919 51,181 20,384 30,797 121,738 23,474 13,052 753 1,669 10,630 54,187 58,019 46,697 11,322 -3,832 -3,839 7 -72 284,460 254,235 237,763 207,538 124,075 77,378 . . 282,433 235,736 277,329 230,632 81,011 34,314 33,854 26,436 361,309 341,117 20,192 6,244
Total domestic sectors Not consolidated 2025 2nd quarter* 1,196,148 570,975 498,178 6,015 492,163 20,146 5,784 14,362 52,651 4,397 48,254 148,765 115,831 32,934 32,696 29,474 21,163 0 8,311 3,222 4,203 348 3,855 183,312 51,956 2,167 49,789 112,578 111,082 1,496 -480 18,955 963 10,835 7,157 303 43,844 41,237 2,607 123,496 71,308 27,616 6,156 29,671 10,839 -2,974 52,188 23,827 19,719 8,642 70,747 4,548 5,391 53,978 742 6,088 9,091 9,367 857 1,529 6,981 1,183,185 301,655 152,049 118,384 33,665 33,602 30,380 3,222 3,708 348 3,360 193,482 49,374 2,777 46,597 80,915 78,983 1,932 45,123 17,767 969 10,839 5,959 303 42,609 40,054 2,555 123,413 70,126 26,778 6,156 29,265 10,835 -2,908 53,287 24,608 20,018 8,661 73,509 5,174 4,828 53,978 1,132 6,849 1,548 9,031 203,733 179,269 54,336 23,790 30,546 124,933 24,464 9,644 849 1,740 7,055 67,130 62,605 46,937 15,668 4,525 4,528 -3 0 299,352 269,320 252,415 222,383 117,904 70,967 . . 285,487 238,550 284,043 237,106 80,370 33,433 33,156 12,963 224,548 204,314 20,234 -7,271
Source: CBS.
Explanation of symbols

Table explanation


This table provides an overview of the non-financial transactions of the institutional sectors of the Dutch economy, distinguishing between uses and resources. Non-financial transactions consist of current transactions and transactions from the capital account. Furthermore, this table provides the main balancing items of the (sub)sectors.
Non-financial transactions are estimated for the main institutional sectors of the economy and the rest of the world.
Sectors are presented both consolidated and non-consolidated.

Data available from:
Annual figures from 1995.
Quarterly figures from first quarter 1999.

Status of the figures:
Annual figures from 1995 up to and including 2023 are final. Quarterly data from 2023 are provisional.

Changes as of September 23rd, 2025:
Data of the second quarter 2025 have been added.

Adjustment as of April 10th 2025:
Due to an error made while processing the data, the initial preliminary figures for government expenditure in 2024 were calculated incorrectly, which means that the figure published for the general government balance was also incorrect. We refer to the Government Finance Statistics for the current figures. Links to the Government Finance Statistics could be found in paragraph 3. Until the publication end of June the Sector accounts therefore diverge from the Government Finance Statistics.

Adjustment as of July 12th 2024:
Total consolidated resources and uses are adjusted for most sectors, due to a calculation error. For the sector rest of the world, the non-consolidated total resources and uses have also been adjusted. Imports and exports of goods and services were wrongly not included in the total resources and uses. For the sectors non-financial corporations and financial corporations, capital taxes (uses) were wrongly shown as empty cell (figure not applicable).

When will new figures be published?
Annual figures:
The first annual data are published 85 day after the end of the reporting year as the sum of the four quarters of the year. Subsequently provisional data are published 6 months after the end of the reporting year. Final data are released 18 months after the end of the reporting year. Furthermore the sector accounts are annually revised for all reporting periods. These data are published each year in June.
Quarterly figures: The first quarterly estimate is available 85 days after the end of each reporting quarter. The first quarter may be revised in September, the second quarter in December. Should further quarterly information become available thereafter, the estimates for the first three quarters may be revised in March. If (new) annual figures become available in June, the quarterly figures will be revised again to bring them in line with the annual figures.
Please note that there is a possibility that adjustments might take place at the end of March or September, in order to provide the European Commission with the latest figures. Revised yearly figures are published in June each year.

Description topics

Resources
Resources are transactions add to the economic value of sectors.
Total
Imports of goods and services
Transactions in goods and services (sales, barter and gifts) from non-residents to residents (in the Netherlands). Imports of goods occurs when economic ownership of goods is passed from non-residents to residents. This applies irrespective of corresponding physical movements of goods across frontiers. An enterprise or institution is considered residential after it has been active in the Netherlands for at least one year. This applies irrespective of the question whether the enterprise or institute has foreign owners.
Total
Imports of goods
Transactions in goods (sales, barter and gifts) from non-residents to residents (in the Netherlands). Imports of goods occurs when economic ownership of goods is passed from non-residents to residents. This applies irrespective of corresponding physical movements of goods across frontiers. An enterprise or institution is considered residential after it has been active in the Netherlands for at least one year. This applies irrespective of the question whether the enterprise or institute has foreign owners. Part of the imports are raw materials, semifinished products, fuel and fixed assets. Furthermore, imports of goods may be re-exports: goods that were imported before being exported, after having received at most minor adaptations.
Imports of services
Transactions in services (sales, barter and gifts) from non-residents to residents (in the Netherlands). Imports of services applies among others to expenses made by Dutch companies abroad, like costs of transportation, banking costs and business travels. Imports by services are also made by the Dutch general government, among others by means of expenses made by Dutch embassies and consulates. Imports of services by households consist among others of imports of consumer goods and the direct consumptive expenditure by Dutch residents abroad.
Total
Imports of services excluding FISIM
This is the imports of services less the imports of financial intermediation services indirectly measured (fisim) from non-resident financial corporations to residents
Imports of FISIM
This is the imports of financial intermediation services indirectly measured (fisim) from non-resident financial corporations to residents.
Output
The ensemble of goods and services produced. Also called production. Three types of output are distinguished:
- market output: goods and services sold at a market or intended for sale at a market
- the own-account production of all goods that are retained by their producers for their own final consumption or gross fixed capital formation.
- non-market output: goods and services delivered for free or at economically non-significant prices to other units

Output is valued at basic prices. These are the prices experienced by the producers: product-related taxes have been subtracted from the original prices, subsidies haven been added to them. Costs of transportation, when charged separately by the producer, are not included. Changes in the values of financial and non-financial assets during the reference period are not included either.

Included is the output by all kind-of-activity units residing in the Netherlands, including those that are held by foreign owners. The kind-of-activity units include general government units and other non-commercial units.
Total
Market output
Market output consists of output that is disbursed of on the market or intended to be disbursed of on the market. Market output includes:
- products sold at economically significant prices;
- products bartered;
- products used for payments in kind, including compensation of employees in kind and mixed income in kind;
- products supplied by one local Kind-of-activity unit to another within the same institutional unit to be used as intermediate inputs or for final uses;
- products added to the inventories of finished goods and work-in-progress intended for one or other of the above uses (including natural growth of animal of vegetable products and uncompleted structures for which the buyer is unknown).
Total
Financial intermediation service (FISIM)
The concept of imputed bank services encompasses the remuneration for financial services which are not paid for directly. This remuneration is included in the actual interest paid or received. In the national accounts this indirect remuneration is specified as financial intermediation service charge indirectly measured.
The size of the imputed bank services is determined on the basis of a ‘reference rate’. This reference rate equals the rate of the interbank loans. The difference between the reference rate and the actual interest paid to depositors or the actual interest received from borrowers is the indirectly measured financial intermediation service charge. The actual interest paid and received is corrected for these imputed bank services.
Other market output
Market output consists of output that is disbursed of on the market or intended to be disbursed of on the market. Market output includes:
- products sold at economically significant prices;
- products bartered;
- products used for payments in kind, including compensation of employees in kind and mixed income in kind;
- products supplied by one local Kind-of-activity unit to another within the same institutional unit to be used as intermediate inputs or for final uses;
- products added to the inventories of finished goods and work-in-progress intended for one or other of the above uses (including natural growth of animal of vegetable products and uncompleted structures for which the buyer is unknown).
Output produced for own final use
Output produced for own final use consists of goods or services that are retained either for own final consumption or for capital formation by the same institutional unit.
Total
Own-account capital formation
Output of gross fixed capital formation by the same institutional unit.

Examples of products used for own gross fixed capital formation:
- special tools or machines;
- dwellings, or extensions of dwellings, which are produced by households.
Products retained for own consumption
Products retained for own final consumption can only be produced by the households sector. Examples of products retained for own final consumption include:
- agricultural products retained by farmers;
- dwelling services produced by owner-occupiers;
- household services produced by employing paid staff.
Non-market output
Non-market output is output that is provided to other units for free, or at prices that are not economically significant. Non-market output is subdivided into two items: 'Payments for non-market output', which consists of various fees and charges, and 'Non-market output, other', which is output provided for free.
Non-market output is produced for the following reasons.
- It may be technically impossible to make individuals pay for collective services because their consumption of such services cannot be monitored and controlled. The production of collective services is organized by government units and financed out of funds other than receipts from sales, namely taxation or other government incomes.
- Government units and NPISHs may also produce and supply goods or services to individual households for which they could charge but choose not to do so as a matter of social or economic policy. Examples are the provision of education or health services, for free or at prices that are not economically significant.
Total
Payments for non-market output
Payments for non-market output is output that is provided to other units at prices that are not economically significant.
Non-market output is produced for the following reasons.
- It may be technically impossible to make individuals pay for collective services because their consumption of such services cannot be monitored and controlled. The production of collective services is organized by government units and financed out of funds other than receipts from sales, namely taxation or other government incomes.
- Government units and NPISHs may also produce and supply goods or services to individual households for which they could charge but choose not to do so as a matter of social or economic policy. Examples are the provision of education or health services, for free or at prices that are not economically significant.
Other non-market output
Other non-market output is output that is provided to other units for.
Non-market output is produced for the following reasons.
- It may be technically impossible to make individuals pay for collective services because their consumption of such services cannot be monitored and controlled. The production of collective services is organized by government units and financed out of funds other than receipts from sales, namely taxation or other government incomes.
- Government units and NPISHs may also produce and supply goods or services to individual households for which they could charge but choose not to do so as a matter of social or economic policy. Examples are the provision of education or health services, for free or at prices that are not economically significant.
Compensation of employees
The compensation of employees is the total remuneration, in cash or in kind, payable by an employer to an employee in return for work done by the latter during an accounting period. The compensation of employees is equal to the sum of wages and salaries and employers' social contributions.
Total
Wages and salaries
Wages and salaries are the remunerations an employee receives in return for work done during an accounting period. Wages and salaries include social contributions, income taxes and other payments payable by the employee, including those withheld by the employer and paid directly to social insurance schemes, tax authorities etc. on behalf of the employee. The most important form of wages and salaries is wages in cash (including withheld income taxes and social contributions). Wages in cash are composed of regular gross wages, standard extra allowances (for instance for hazardous work), bonuses, overtime pay, tips and compensation for costs related to employment (for instance refunds of fares to and from work). Bonuses include holiday pay, tantième, gratifications, profit shares and a thirteenth or fourteenth month. Wages in kind occur if an employee benefits from his or her job besides being paid wages. Examples of payment in kind are private use of a company car, free housing, free food, lower interest rates on mortgages, free or cheap use of the company's products or services, and company supplied or subsidized child care.
Employers' social contributions
Employers' social contributions are social contributions payable by employers to social security schemes or other employment-related social insurance schemes to secure social benefits for their employees. Employer's social contributions may be either actual or imputed. As set out by the ESA 2010, pay over periods in which no work is done due to illness or bad weather is registered as part of employers' social contributions.
Taxes on production and imports
Taxes on production and imports are compulsory payments to the government and the European Union (EU), which are related to production, imports and to the use of production factors. Taxes on production and imports are classified into taxes on products and other taxes on production.
Total
Taxes on products
Taxes that are payable per unit of a given good or service produced or imported. The tax may be a specific amount of money per unit of quantity of a good or service, or it may be calculated as a specified percentage of the price per unit or value of the goods and services produced or traded.
Total
Value added tax (VAT)
Value added tax (VAT) is a tax on goods or services collected in stages by enterprises and which is ultimately charged in full to the final purchaser. The common feature of VAT is that producers are obliged to pay to the government only the difference between the VAT on their sales and the VAT on their purchases for intermediate consumption and gross fixed capital formation.
Taxes, duties on imports excluding VAT
Taxes and duties on imports excluding VAT comprise compulsory payments levied by general government or the institutions of the European Union on imported goods, excluding VAT, in order to admit them to free circulation on the economic territory, and on services provided to resident units by non-resident units.
Other taxes on products
Taxes on products which are related to domestically produced goods and services. Examples are excise duties on beer and petrol which are produced in the Netherlands.
Other taxes on production
Other taxes on production include all taxes on production paid by producers, not related to the value or volume of products produced or transacted. Examples are real estate tax and sewerage charges paid by producers.
Subsidies (-)
Current payments from the Dutch government or the European Union to producers with the objective to influence output prices, employment or the remuneration of production factors. Subsidies are distinguished between subsidies on products and other subsidies on production.
Total
Subsidies on products
Subsidies payable per unit of a good or service produced or imported. The amount of subsidies is related to the value or amount of product.
Other subsidies on production
Other subsidies on production include all subsidies on production paid to producers, not related to the value or volume of products domestically produced or transacted. These are subsidies on agricultural products, subsidies on R&D and wage subsidies.
Property income
Property income is the income receivable by the owner of a financial asset or a tangible non-produced asset in return for providing funds to, or putting the tangible non-produced asset at the deposal of, another institutional unit.
Total
Interest
Interest is imputed to the period for which the underlying claim or debt exists. The actual interest payments or receipts are corrected for imputed bank services. Therefore there is a shift from actual interest payments and receipts to the production or the consumption of bank services. For producers of imputed bank services this means a decrease of the received interest and an increase of the paid interest with respect to the actual interest flows. For the consumers of imputed bank services this means an increase of received interest and a decrease of paid interest, compared with the actual interest flows.
Interest; definition National Accounts
Interest is imputed to the period for which the underlying claim or debt exists. The actual interest payments or receipts are corrected for imputed bank services. Therefore there is a shift from actual interest payments and receipts to the production or the consumption of bank services. For producers of imputed bank services this means a decrease of the received interest and an increase of the paid interest with respect to the actual interest flows. For the consumers of imputed bank services this means an increase of received interest and a decrease of paid interest, compared with the actual interest flows.
Correction FISIM
The concept of imputed bank services encompasses the remuneration for financial services which are not paid for directly. This remuneration is included in the actual interest paid or received. In the national accounts this indirect remuneration is specified as financial intermediation services indirectly measured.

The size of the imputed bank services is determined on the basis of a reference rate. This reference rate equals the rate of the interbank loans. The difference between the reference rate and the actual interest paid to depositors or the actual interest received from borrowers is the indirectly measured financial intermediation service charge. The actual interest paid and received is corrected for these imputed bank services.
Interest before correction for FISIM
Actual interest is the interest imputed to the period for which the underlying claim or debt exists. This deviates from the concept of interest in the national accounts. In the concept of interest in the national accounts, the actual interest is corrected for imputed bank services.
Distributed income of corporations
Distributed income of corporations consists of dividends and withdrawals from income of quasi-corporations.
Dividends are a form of property income received by owners of shares to which they become entitled as a result of placing funds at the disposal of corporations. Dividends are recorded gross, before deduction of dividend tax. This applies also for the taxes on dividends to and from the rest of the world. Dividends are recorded at the moment they are made payable.
Quasi-corporations have no independent legal status. However, they have an economic and financial behavior that is different from that of their owners and similar to that of corporations. Therefore they are classified as non-financial or financial corporations.
Total
Dividends
Dividends are a form of property income received by owners of shares to which they become entitled as a result of placing funds at the disposal of corporations. Dividends are recorded gross, before deduction of dividend tax. This applies also for the taxes on dividends to and from the rest of the world. Dividends are recorded at the moment they are made payable.
Withdrawals from income of quasi-corp.
Quasi-corporations have no independent legal status. However, they have an economic and financial behavior that is different from that of their owners and similar to that of corporations. Therefore they are classified as non-financial or financial corporations.
Reinvested earnings on foreign investm.
Reinvested earnings on foreign direct investment are equal to the operating surplus of the foreign direct investment enterprise
plus any property incomes or current transfers receivable, minus any property incomes or current transfers payable, including actual remittances to foreign direct investors and any current taxes payable on the income, wealth, etc., of the foreign direct investment enterprise.
On the financial account this return on foreign direct investment are returned in the form of the purchase of shares. If the dividends paid is greater than the profit earned in a period, this means that the retained earnings on foreign direct investment are negative.
Other investment income
Other investment income consists of:
- investment income attributable to insurance policy holders
- investment income payable on pension entitlements
- investment income attributable to collective investment fund shareholders
Total
Investm. income attrib. to policy holder
In the national accounts pension and life insurance technical reserves are seen as a liability of insurance corporations to policy holders. Therefore, the investment revenues on these technical reserves are booked as payments from insurance corporations to households.
Subsequently, households pay back these revenues as imputed contributions to pension funds and life insurance corporations. In the financial accounts the latter transaction is recorded as a component of net equity in life insurance and pension funds technical reserves.
Income payable on pension entitlements
In the national accounts collective life insurance and pension provisions are seen as a liability of insurance enterprises and pension funds to pension participants. Therefore, the investment revenues on these provisions are booked as payments from insurance enterprises and pension funds to households.
Subsequently, households pay back these revenues as imputed premiums to insurance companies and pension funds.
Inv. income attributable to shareholders
Investment fund shareholders in a transaction recorded in the financial account.
Investment income attributable to collective investment fund shareholders, including mutual funds and unit trusts, consists of the following separate components:
— dividends attributable to collective investment fund shareholders
— retained earnings attributable to collective investment fund shareholders.

Dividends are a form of property income received by owners of shares to which they become entitled as a result of placing funds at the disposal of investments funds.
Reinvested earnings are equal to the operating surplus of the investment funds minus the dividends attributable to shareholders. Reinvested earnings are re-injected into the fund by a transaction recorded in the financial account.
Rent
Rent is the income receivable by the owner of a natural resource for putting the natural resource at the disposal of another institutional unit.
There are two different types of resource rents: rent on land, and rent on subsoil resources. Resource rents on other natural resources such as radio spectra follow the same pattern. Examples are rents received by landowners from tenants and royalties for the permission to explore or to extract minerals or fossil fuels (received by owners of such deposits).
Current taxes on income and wealth
Current taxes on income and wealth of corporations consist of corporation tax and dividend tax. These taxes are based on the profits of corporations.
Current taxes on income and wealth of households include all taxes, which are periodically imposed on income and wealth, such as the income tax, the wage tax and the tax on net wealth of individuals. Non-periodical levies, such as inheritance tax are defined as capital transfers. Several types of taxes are simultaneously seen as taxes on production and imports when imposed on producers and as taxes on income and wealth when imposed on consumers. For instance, motor vehicle tax is a tax on production when it is imposed on company cars and it is a tax on income and wealth and imports when it is imposed on cars for private use.
The treatment of dividend tax results from the recording of dividends. Because dividends are recorded gross, i.e. before deduction of dividend tax, dividend tax is in all cases recorded at the receiving sector. The same applies for the dividend tax to and from the rest of the world.
Total
Current taxes on income
Tax levied on income. These include: corporate income tax, payroll tax, income tax, dividend tax, gambling tax and one-time revenue in connection with the liquidation of holding companies.
Other current taxes
Tax levied on capital (such as bank balances, savings and investments). The amount to be paid depends on the volume of the capital.
Social contributions and benefits
Social contributions and benefits are transfers to households, in cash or in kind, intended to relieve them from the financial burden of a number of risks or needs, made through collectively organized schemes, or outside such schemes by government units and NPISHs; they include payments from general government to producers which individually benefit households and which are made in the context of social risks or needs.
Social benefits are transfers to households, intended to relieve them from the financial burden of a number of risks or needs, such as sickness, invalidity, disability, old age, survivors and unemployment.
Total
Net social contributions
Social contributions include social security contributions, private social contributions (among which contributions to pension schemes) and imputed social contributions. Employers, employees, self-employed persons and non-active persons pay these contributions. Actually, the employers' part is paid directly to the insurers. However, in the national accounts, the employers' contributions are supposed to be part of primary income of households (i.e. the income from direct participation in the production process). Therefore, in first instance these contributions are treated as payments by employers to households as compensation of employees, who are deemed to pay them to the insurers in the income account.
Total
Employers' actual social contributions
Payments by employers, enforced by laws or (collective) labor agreement, in order to make social benefits possible.
Employers' imputed social contributions
Imputed social contributions represent the counterpart to the 'unfunded employee social benefits' (less any employees' social contributions) paid directly by employers to their (former) employees. It is necessary to introduce this imputation because the direct payments are recorded twice. Firstly they are recorded as employers' social contributions (part of the compensation of employees). Secondly they are recorded as social benefits.
Households' actual social contributions
Households' actual social contributions are social contributions payable on their own behalf by employees, self-employed or non-employed persons to social insurance schemes.
Households' social contrib. supplements
Households' social contribution supplements consist of the property income earned during the accounting period on the stock of pension and non-pension entitlements.
The social insur. scheme service charges
The social insurance scheme service charges are the service fees charged by the units administering the schemes. They appear here as part of the calculation for net social contributions; they are not redistributive transactions but part of output and consumption expenditure.
Social benefits in cash
Social benefits other than social transfers in kind is made up of three sub-headings:
- social security benefits in cash
- other social insurance benefits
- social assistance benefits in cash
Total
Social security benefits in cash
Social security benefits in cash are social insurance benefits payable in cash to households by social security funds. Reimbursements are excluded and treated as social transfers in kind.
Other social insurance benefits
Other social insurance benefits correspond to benefits payable by employers in the context of other employment related social insurance schemes.
Examples are:
- A continued payment of normal, or reduced, wages during periods of absence from work as a result of ill health, accident, maternity, etc;
- The payment of retirement of survivors’ pensions to ex-employees or their survivors, and the payment of severance allowances to workers of their survivors in the event of redundancy, incapacity, accidental death etc. (if linked to collective agreements).
Social assistance benefits in cash
Social assistance benefits are payments of the central and local government to households, for which no quid pro quo by the beneficiary is expected. These benefits are based on a number of Dutch laws, such as the Act on Labor and Social Assistance.
Other current transfers
Other current transfers consist of non-life insurance premiums, non-life insurance claims, current transfers within general government, current international co-operation and miscellaneous current transfers.
Total
Net non-life insurance premiums
These premiums provide cover against damage as a result of fires, floods, crashes, collisions, sinkings, theft, violence, accidents, sickness, etc.
The premiums are paid by policy holders to non-life insurance companies and. The premiums are recorded net (i.e. the sum of production costs are deducted).
Non-life insurance claims
Non-life insurance claims represent the amounts which insurance enterprises are obliged to pay in settlement of injuries or damage as a result of fires, floods, crashes, collisions, sinkings, theft, violence, accidents, sickness, etc. The claims are paid by the insurance enterprises to the policy holders.
Current transfers within gen. government
Current transfers within general government include transfers between the different subsectors of general government (central government, state government, local government and social security funds) with the exception of taxes, subsidies, investment grants and other capital transfers.
Current international co-operation
Current international co-operation includes all transfers in cash or in kind between general government and governments or international organizations in the rest of the world, except investment grants and other capital transfers.

Miscellaneous current transfers
Miscellaneous current transfers include all current transfers not elsewhere classified. They include:
- current transfers to NPISHs include all voluntary contributions (other than legacies), membership subscriptions and financial assistance which NPISHs receive from households (including non-resident households) and, to a lesser extent, from other units;
- current transfers between households consist of all current transfers in cash or in kind made, or received, by resident households to, or from, other resident or non-resident households. In particular, they comprise remittances by emigrants or workers permanently settled abroad (or working abroad for a period of a year or longer) to members of their family living in their country of origin, or by parents to children in another location;
- fines and penalties imposed on institutional units by courts of law or quasi-judicial bodies are treated as other miscellaneous current transfers;
- the amounts paid for lottery tickets or placed in bets consist of two elements: the payment of a service charge to the unit organiing the lottery or gambling and a residual current transfer that is paid out to the winners;
- sponsoring by corporations if those payments cannot be regarded as purchases of advertising or other services (for instance, transfers for a good cause, or scholarships.
The VAT- and GNI-based EU own resource
The VAT- and GNI-based third and fourth EU own resources are current transfers paid by the general government of each Member State to the institutions of the European Union.
The VAT-based third EU own resource and the GNI-based fourth EU own resource are contributions to the budget of the Union institutions. The level of the contribution of each Member State is based on the levels of their VAT base and their GNI.
The heading also includes miscellaneous non-tax contributions of the government to the institutions of the European Union.
Adjustm. change in pension entitlements
Since households are treated in the financial accounts as owners of the pension entitlements an adjustment item is necessary to ensure that any excess of contributions to pension schemes over pension benefits does not affect household savings. This adjustment is equal to the difference between net pension contributions (including imputed contributions) and pension benefits.
Capital transfers
Capital transfers are payments for which no quid pro quo by the beneficiary is expected. They burden the wealth of the payer, or are meant to finance fixed capital formation or other long-term expenditures of the receiver. Capital transfers can be classified into capital taxes, investment grants, imputed capital transfers and other capital transfers.
Total
Capital taxes
Capital taxes are compulsory, non-periodical payments to the government. They are based on the wealth of taxable persons. Taxes on net wealth of individuals are imposed periodically and are therefore recorded as taxes on income and wealth.
Investment grants
Investment grants are capital transfers, which are intended to finance fixed capital formation of other units.
Other capital transfers
Other capital transfers are capital transfers that cannot be characterized as investment grants or as capital taxes.
Uses
Uses are transactions appear which deduces the economic value of sectors.
Total
Exports of goods and services
Transactions in goods and services (sales, barter and gifts) from residents (in the Netherlands) to non-residents. Exports of goods occurs when economic ownership of goods is passed from residents to non-residents. This applies irrespective of corresponding physical movements of goods across frontiers. An enterprise or institution is considered residential after it has been active in the Netherlands for at least one year. This applies irrespective of the question whether the enterprise or institute has foreign owners.
Total
Exports of goods
Transactions in goods (sales, barter and gifts) from residents (in the Netherlands) to non-residents. Exports of goods occurs when economic ownership of goods is passed from residents to non-residents. This applies irrespective of corresponding physical movements of goods across frontiers. An enterprise or institution is considered residential after it has been active in the Netherlands for at least one year. This applies irrespective of the question whether the enterprise or institute has foreign owners. Part of the exports of goods are re-exports: goods that were imported before being exported, after having received at most minor adaptations.
Exports of services
Transactions in services (sales, barter and gifts) from residents (in the Netherlands) to non-residents. Exports of goods occurs when economic ownership of goods is passed from residents to non-residents. Exports of services include among others the following cases: transportation by resident carriers abroad, harbor services and ship maintenance to non-residents, works performed abroad by resident contractors. Expenses made in the Netherlands by foreign tourists, diplomats and cross-border workers.
Total
Exports of services excluding FISIM
This is the exports of services less the exports of financial intermediation services indirectly measured from resident financial corporations to non-residents.
Exports of FISIM
This is the exports of financial intermediation services indirectly measured from resident financial corporations to non-residents.
Intermediate consumption (-)
Goods and services used as input in a production process, with the exception of capital goods. Intermediate consumption consists of goods reshaped into other goods or consumed entirely in the course of the production process (by definition, this holds for all hired services). According to international standards an acquired good or hired service is classified as a fixed asset rather than intermediate consumption when it lasts over one year in a production process. Goods and services that are part of intermediate consumption are valued at market prices at the time they were used.
Compensation of employees
The compensation of employees is the total remuneration, in cash or in kind, payable by an employer to an employee in return for work done by the latter during an accounting period. The compensation of employees is equal to the sum of wages and salaries and employers' social contributions.
Total
De vergoedingen voor de werknemer, die in een bepaalde periode arbeid verricht, en die ten laste komen van de werkgever, inclusief de door de werkgever ingehouden loonbelasting en de sociale premies die ten laste komen van de werknemer.
Wages and salaries
Wages and salaries are the remunerations an employee receives in return for work done during an accounting period. Wages and salaries include social contributions, income taxes and other payments payable by the employee, including those withheld by the employer and paid directly to social insurance schemes, tax authorities etc. on behalf of the employee. The most important form of wages and salaries is wages in cash (including withheld income taxes and social contributions). Wages in cash are composed of regular gross wages, standard extra allowances (for instance for hazardous work), bonuses, overtime pay, tips and compensation for costs related to employment (for instance refunds of fares to and from work). Bonuses include holiday pay, tantième, gratifications, profit shares and a thirteenth or fourteenth month. Wages in kind occur if an employee benefits from his or her job besides being paid wages. Examples of payment in kind are private use of a company car, free housing, free food, lower interest rates on mortgages, free or cheap use of the company's products or services, and company supplied or subsidized child care.
Employers' social contributions
Employers' social contributions are social contributions payable by employers to social security schemes or other employment-related social insurance schemes to secure social benefits for their employees. Employer's social contributions may be either actual or imputed. As set out by the ESA 2010, pay over periods in which no work is done due to illness or bad weather is registered as part of employers' social contributions.
Taxes on production and imports
Taxes on production and imports are compulsory payments to the government and the European Union (EU), which are related to production, imports and to the use of production factors. Taxes on production and imports are classified into taxes on products and other taxes on production.
Total
Taxes on products
Taxes that are payable per unit of a given good or service produced or imported. The tax may be a specific amount of money per unit of quantity of a good or service, or it may be calculated as a specified percentage of the price per unit or value of the goods and services produced or traded.
Other taxes on production
Other taxes on production include all taxes on production paid by producers, not related to the value or volume of products produced or transacted. Examples are real estate tax and sewerage charges paid by producers.
Subsidies (-)
Current payments from the Dutch government or the European Union to producers with the objective to influence output prices, employment or the remuneration of production factors. Subsidies are distinguished between subsidies on products and other subsidies on production.
Total
Subsidies on products
Subsidies payable per unit of a good or service produced or imported. The amount of subsidies is related to the value or amount of product.
Other subsidies on production
Other subsidies on production include all subsidies on production paid to producers, not related to the value or volume of products domestically produced or transacted. These are subsidies on agricultural products, subsidies on R&D and wage subsidies.
Property income
Property income is the income receivable by the owner of a financial asset or a tangible non-produced asset in return for providing funds to, or putting the tangible non-produced asset at the deposal of, another institutional unit.
Total
Interest
Interest is imputed to the period for which the underlying claim or debt exists. The actual interest payments or receipts are corrected for imputed bank services. Therefore there is a shift from actual interest payments and receipts to the production or the consumption of bank services. For producers of imputed bank services this means a decrease of the received interest and an increase of the paid interest with respect to the actual interest flows. For the consumers of imputed bank services this means an increase of received interest and a decrease of paid interest, compared with the actual interest flows.
Interest; definition National Accounts
Interest is imputed to the period for which the underlying claim or debt exists. The actual interest payments or receipts are corrected for imputed bank services. Therefore there is a shift from actual interest payments and receipts to the production or the consumption of bank services. For producers of imputed bank services this means a decrease of the received interest and an increase of the paid interest with respect to the actual interest flows. For the consumers of imputed bank services this means an increase of received interest and a decrease of paid interest, compared with the actual interest flows.
Correction FISIM
The concept of imputed bank services encompasses the remuneration for financial services which are not paid for directly. This remuneration is included in the actual interest paid or received. In the national accounts this indirect remuneration is specified as financial intermediation services indirectly measured.

The size of the imputed bank services is determined on the basis of a reference rate. This reference rate equals the rate of the interbank loans. The difference between the reference rate and the actual interest paid to depositors or the actual interest received from borrowers is the indirectly measured financial intermediation service charge. The actual interest paid and received is corrected for these imputed bank services.
Interest before correction for FISIM
Actual interest is the interest imputed to the period for which the underlying claim or debt exists. This deviates from the concept of interest in the national accounts. In the concept of interest in the national accounts, the actual interest is corrected for imputed bank services.
Distributed income of corporations
Distributed income of corporations consists of dividends and withdrawals from income of quasi-corporations.
Dividends are a form of property income received by owners of shares to which they become entitled as a result of placing funds at the disposal of corporations. Dividends are recorded gross, before deduction of dividend tax. This applies also for the taxes on dividends to and from the rest of the world. Dividends are recorded at the moment they are made payable.
Quasi-corporations have no independent legal status. However, they have an economic and financial behavior that is different from that of their owners and similar to that of corporations. Therefore they are classified as non-financial or financial corporations.
Total
Dividends
Dividends are a form of property income received by owners of shares to which they become entitled as a result of placing funds at the disposal of corporations. Dividends are recorded gross, before deduction of dividend tax. This applies also for the taxes on dividends to and from the rest of the world. Dividends are recorded at the moment they are made payable.
Withdrawals from income of quasi-corps.
Quasi-corporations have no independent legal status. However, they have an economic and financial behavior that is different from that of their owners and similar to that of corporations. Therefore they are classified as non-financial or financial corporations.
Reinvested earnings on foreign investm.
Reinvested earnings on foreign direct investment are equal to the operating surplus of the foreign direct investment enterprise
plus any property incomes or current transfers receivable, minus any property incomes or current transfers payable, including actual remittances to foreign direct investors and any current taxes payable on the income, wealth, etc., of the foreign direct investment enterprise.
On the financial account this return on foreign direct investment are returned in the form of the purchase of shares. If the dividends paid is greater than the profit earned in a period, this means that the retained earnings on foreign direct investment are negative.
Other investment income
Other investment income consists of:
- investment income attributable to insurance policy holders
- investment income payable on pension entitlements
- investment income attributable to collective investment fund shareholders
Total
Investm. income attrib. to policy holder
Investment income attributable to insurance policy holders corresponds to total primary incomes received from the investment of insurance technical reserves. The reserves are those where an insurance corporation recognises a corresponding liability to the policyholders.
In the national accounts pension and life insurance technical reserves are seen as a liability of insurance corporations to policy holders. Therefore, the investment revenues on these technical reserves are booked as payments from insurance corporations to households.
Subsequently, households pay back these revenues as imputed contributions to pension funds and life insurance corporations. In the financial accounts the latter transaction is recorded as a component of net equity in life insurance and pension funds technical reserves.

Income payable on pension entitlements
Investment income payable on pension entitlements. Pension entitlements arise from one of two different types of pension schemes. These are defined contribution schemes and defined benefit schemes.
A defined contribution scheme is one where contributions by both employers and employees are invested on behalf of the employees as future pensioners. No other source of funding of pensions is available and no other use is made of the funds. The investment income payable on defined contribution entitlements is equal to the investment income on the funds plus any income earned by renting land or buildings owned by the fund.
The characteristic of a defined benefit scheme is that a formula is used to determine the level of payments to be made to pensioners. This characteristic makes it possible to determine the level of entitlements as the present value of all future payments, calculated using actuarial assumptions about life lengths and economic assumptions about the interest or discount rate. The present value of the entitlements existing at the start of the year increases because the date when the entitlements become payable is one year nearer. This increase is regarded as investment income attributed to the pension holders in the case of defined benefit scheme. The amount of the increase is neither affected by whether the pension scheme actually has sufficient funds to meet all the obligations nor by the type of increase in the funds, whether it is investment income or holding gains, for example.
Inv. income attributable to shareholders
Investment income attributable to collective investment fund shareholders, including mutual funds and unit trusts, consists of the following separate components:
- dividends attributable to collective investment fund shareholders
- retained earnings attributable to collective investment fund shareholders
The dividend component is recorded in exactly the same manner as dividends for individual corporations, as described above. The retained earnings component is recorded using the same principles as those described for foreign direct investment enterprises but is calculated excluding any reinvested earnings on foreign direct investment. The remaining retained earnings are attributed to the investment fund shareholders leaving the investment fund with no saving, and are re-injected into the fund by the investment fund shareholders in a transaction recorded in the financial account.
Rent
Rent is the income receivable by the owner of a natural resource for putting the natural resource at the disposal of another institutional unit.
There are two different types of resource rents: rent on land, and rent on subsoil resources. Resource rents on other natural resources such as radio spectra follow the same pattern. Examples are rents received by landowners from tenants and royalties for the permission to explore or to extract minerals or fossil fuels (received by owners of such deposits).
Current taxes on income and wealth
Current taxes on income and wealth of corporations consist of corporation tax and dividend tax. These taxes are based on the profits of corporations.
Current taxes on income and wealth of households include all taxes, which are periodically imposed on income and wealth, such as the income tax, the wage tax and the tax on net wealth of individuals. Non-periodical levies, such as inheritance tax are defined as capital transfers. Several types of taxes are simultaneously seen as taxes on production and imports when imposed on producers and as taxes on income and wealth when imposed on consumers. For instance, motor vehicle tax is a tax on production when it is imposed on company cars and it is a tax on income and wealth and imports when it is imposed on cars for private use.
The treatment of dividend tax results from the recording of dividends. Because dividends are recorded gross, i.e. before deduction of dividend tax, dividend tax is in all cases recorded at the receiving sector. The same applies for the dividend tax to and from the rest of the world.
Total
Current taxes on income
Tax levied on income. These include: corporate income tax, payroll tax, income tax, dividend tax, gambling tax and one-time revenue in connection with the liquidation of holding companies.
Other current taxes
Tax levied on capital (such as bank balances, savings and investments). The amount to be paid depends on the volume of the capital.
Social contributions and benefits
Social contributions and benefits are transfers to households, in cash or in kind, intended to relieve them from the financial burden of a number of risks or needs, made through collectively organized schemes, or outside such schemes by government units and NPISHs; they include payments from general government to producers which individually benefit households and which are made in the context of social risks or needs.
Social benefits are transfers to households, intended to relieve them from the financial burden of a number of risks or needs, such as sickness, invalidity, disability, old age, survivors and unemployment.
Total
Net social contributions
Social contributions include social security contributions, private social contributions (among which contributions to pension schemes) and imputed social contributions. Employers, employees, self-employed persons and non-active persons pay these contributions. Actually, the employers' part is paid directly to the insurers. However, in the national accounts, the employers' contributions are supposed to be part of primary income of households (i.e. the income from direct participation in the production process). Therefore, in first instance these contributions are treated as payments by employers to households as compensation of employees, who are deemed to pay them to the insurers in the income account.
Total
Employers' actual social contributions
Payments by employers, enforced by laws or (collective) labor agreement, in order to make social benefits possible.
Employers' imputed social contributions
Imputed social contributions represent the counterpart to the 'unfunded employee social benefits' (less any employees' social contributions) paid directly by employers to their (former) employees. It is necessary to introduce this imputation because the direct payments are recorded twice. Firstly they are recorded as employers' social contributions (part of the compensation of employees). Secondly they are recorded as social benefits.
Households' actual social contributions
Households' actual social contributions are social contributions payable on their own behalf by employees, self-employed or non-employed persons to social insurance schemes.
Households' social contrib. supplements
Households' social contribution supplements consist of the property income earned during the accounting period on the stock of pension and non-pension entitlements.
The social insur. scheme service charges
The social insurance scheme service charges are the service fees charged by the units administering the schemes. They appear here as part of the calculation for net social contributions; they are not redistributive transactions but part of output and consumption expenditure.
Social benefits in cash
Social benefits other than social transfers in kind is made up of three sub-headings:
- social security benefits in cash
- other social insurance benefits
- social assistance benefits in cash.
Total
Social security benefits in cash
Social security benefits in cash are social insurance benefits payable in cash to households by social security funds. Reimbursements are excluded and treated as social transfers in kind.
Other social insurance benefits
Other social insurance benefits correspond to benefits payable by employers in the context of other employment related social insurance schemes.
Examples are:
- A continued payment of normal, or reduced, wages during periods of absence from work as a result of ill health, accident, maternity, etc;
- The payment of retirement of survivors’ pensions to ex-employees or their survivors, and the payment of severance allowances to workers of their survivors in the event of redundancy, incapacity, accidental death etc. (if linked to collective agreements).
Social assistance benefits in cash
Social assistance benefits are payments of the central and local government to households, for which no quid pro quo by the beneficiary is expected. These benefits are based on a number of Dutch laws, such as the Act on Labor and Social Assistance.
Other current transfers
Other current transfers consist of non-life insurance premiums, non-life insurance claims, current transfers within general government, current international co-operation and miscellaneous current transfers.
Total
Net non-life insurance premiums
These premiums provide cover against damage as a result of fires, floods, crashes, collisions, sinkings, theft, violence, accidents, sickness, etc.
The premiums are paid by policy holders to non-life insurance companies and. The premiums are recorded net (i.e. the sum of production costs are deducted).
Non-life insurance claims
Non-life insurance claims represent the amounts which insurance enterprises are obliged to pay in settlement of injuries or damage as a result of fires, floods, crashes, collisions, sinkings, theft, violence, accidents, sickness, etc. The claims are paid by the insurance enterprises to the policy holders.
Current transfers within gen. government
Current transfers within general government include transfers between the different subsectors of general government (central government, state government, local government and social security funds) with the exception of taxes, subsidies, investment grants and other capital transfers.
Current international co-operation
Current international co-operation includes all transfers in cash or in kind between general government and governments or international organizations in the rest of the world, except investment grants and other capital transfers.
Miscellaneous current transfers
Miscellaneous current transfers include all current transfers not elsewhere classified. They include:
- current transfers to NPISHs include all voluntary contributions (other than legacies), membership subscriptions and financial assistance which NPISHs receive from households (including non-resident households) and, to a lesser extent, from other units;
- current transfers between households consist of all current transfers in cash or in kind made, or received, by resident households to, or from, other resident or non-resident households. In particular, they comprise remittances by emigrants or workers permanently settled abroad (or working abroad for a period of a year or longer) to members of their family living in their country of origin, or by parents to children in another location;
- fines and penalties imposed on institutional units by courts of law or quasi-judicial bodies are treated as other miscellaneous current transfers;
- the amounts paid for lottery tickets or placed in bets consist of two elements: the payment of a service charge to the unit organizing the lottery or gambling and a residual current transfer that is paid out to the winners;
- sponsoring by corporations if those payments cannot be regarded as purchases of advertising or other services (for instance, transfers for a good cause, or scholarships.
The VAT- and GNI-based EU own resource
The VAT- and GNI-based third and fourth EU own resources are current transfers paid by the general government of each Member State to the institutions of the European Union.
The VAT-based third EU own resource and the GNI-based fourth EU own resource are contributions to the budget of the Union institutions. The level of the contribution of each Member State is based on the levels of their VAT base and their GNI.
The heading also includes miscellaneous non-tax contributions of the government to the institutions of the European Union.
Adjustm. change in pension entitlements
Since households are treated in the financial accounts as owners of the pension entitlements an adjustment item is necessary to ensure that any excess of contributions to pension schemes over pension benefits does not affect household savings. This adjustment is equal to the difference between net pension contributions (including imputed contributions) and pension benefits.
Final consumption expenditure
Expenditure on produced assets that are used in a production process for more than one year. This may concern a building, dwelling, transport equipment or a machine. This in contrast with goods and services which are used up during the production process, the so-called intermediate use (e.g. iron ore). Fixed capital does lose value over time as a result of normal wear and tear and obsolescence. This is called consumption of fixed capital (also called depreciation). The value of fixed capital formation in which the consumption of fixed capital is not deducted is called gross fixed capital formation. Deduction of the consumption of fixed capital results in net fixed capital formation.

The following types of fixed assets exist: dwellings and other buildings and structures, machinery and equipment, transport equipment, weapon systems (included in machinery and equipment), computers, software, telecommunication equipment, research and development, cultivated biological resources, mineral exploration and evaluation, and costs of ownership transfer on non-produced assets, like land, contracts, leases and licenses.
Total
Actual individual final consumption
Expenditure on goods or services that are used for the direct satisfaction of individual needs.
Total
Social transfers in kind
Social transfers in kind consist of individual goods and services provided for free or at prices that are not economically significant to individual households by government units and NPISHs, whether purchased on the market or produced as non-market output by government units or NPISHs. They are financed out of taxation, other government income or social security contributions, or out of donations and property income in the case of NPISHs.
Total
Transfers in kind non-market production
Social transfers in kind are individual goods and services provided directly to the beneficiaries by non-market producers. Any payments made by the households themselves should be deducted.
Transfers in kind market production
Individual goods and services in the form of reimbursements by social security funds of approved expenditures made by households on specific goods and services; or
provided directly to the beneficiaries by market producers from which general government purchases the corresponding goods and services.
Any payments made by the households themselves are to be deducted.
Other individual final consumption
Other individual final consumption.
Actual collective final consumption
Expenditure on goods or services that are used for the direct satisfaction of collective needs.

Collective services have the following characteristics:
-they can be delivered simultaneously to every member of the community or to particular sections of the community, such as those in a particular region or locality;
- the use of such services is usually passive and does not require the agreement or active participation of all the individuals concerned;
- the provision of a collective service to one individual does not reduce the amount available to other in the same community or section of the community.
Capital transfers
Capital transfers are payments for which no quid pro quo by the beneficiary is expected. They burden the wealth of the payer, or are meant to finance fixed capital formation or other long-term expenditures of the receiver. Capital transfers can be classified into capital taxes, investment grants, imputed capital transfers and other capital transfers.
Total
Capital taxes
Capital taxes are compulsory, non-periodical payments to the government. They are based on the wealth of taxable persons. Taxes on net wealth of individuals are imposed periodically and are therefore recorded as taxes on income and wealth.
Investment grants
Investment grants are capital transfers, which are intended to finance fixed capital formation of other units.
Other capital transfers
Other capital transfers are capital transfers that cannot be characterized as investment grants or as capital taxes.
Gross capital formation
Capital formation consists of capital formation in fixed assets and changes in inventories including valuables.
Total
Gross fixed capital formation
Expenditure on produced assets that are used in a production process for more than one year. This may concern a building, dwelling, transport equipment or a machine. This in contrast with goods and services which are used up during the production process, the so-called intermediate use (e.g. iron ore). Fixed capital does lose value over time as a result of normal wear and tear and obsolescence. This is called consumption of fixed capital (also called depreciation). The value of fixed capital formation in which the consumption of fixed capital is not deducted is called gross fixed capital formation. Deduction of the consumption of fixed capital results in net fixed capital formation.

The following types of fixed assets exist: dwellings and other buildings and structures, machinery and equipment, transport equipment, weapon systems (included in machinery and equipment), computers, software, telecommunication equipment, research and development, cultivated biological resources, mineral exploration and evaluation, and costs of ownership transfer on non-produced assets, like land, contracts, leases and licenses.
Total
Consumption of fixed capital
The decline in value of fixed assets owned, as a result of normal wear and tear and obsolescence.

For the estimation of the consumption of fixed capital the perpetual inventory method (PIM) is applied. The capital stock at the beginning of the year is brought to replacement value because of price changes. The fixed capital formation during the year is added to this capital stock. Next it is diminished with the value of capital goods discarded. This gives to value of capital stock at the end of the year. The consumption of fixed obtained by applying a depreciation percentage.
This method may differ considerably from the method used to calculate depreciation in business accounts, which is based on historical costs or fiscal life span.
Net fixed capital formation
Expenditure on produced assets that are used in a production process for more than one year. This may concern a building, dwelling, transport equipment or a machine. This in contrast with goods and services which are used up during the production process, the so-called intermediate use (e.g. iron ore). Fixed capital does lose value over time as a result of normal wear and tear and obsolescence. This is called consumption of fixed capital (also called depreciation). The value of fixed capital formation in which the consumption of fixed capital is not deducted is called gross fixed capital formation. Deduction of the consumption of fixed capital results in net fixed capital formation.

The following types of fixed assets exist: dwellings and other buildings and structures, machinery and equipment, transport equipment, weapon systems (included in machinery and equipment), computers, software, telecommunication equipment, research and development, cultivated biological resources, mineral exploration and evaluation, and costs of ownership transfer on non-produced assets, like land, contracts, leases and licenses.
Changes in inventories incl. valuables
Changes in inventories including acquisitions less disposals of valuables.
Changes in the stock of raw materials, semi-finished products, work-in-progress (unfinished works like ships or oil rigs) and finished products still held by the producer. Changes in stock do not include work-in-progress in construction. Positive changes in inventories arise when products are finished in the reference period but not yet sold. Alternatively, they arise when goods are purchased for intermediate consumption but not yet used. Negative changes in inventories arise when goods from stocks have been sold, or used in the production process.

In measuring changes in inventories, changes in prices during the reference period are not allowed to have any effect. The initial and final inventory is therefore valued at the same price. Raw materials are valued at the price of purchase. Final products are valued at the selling price. Work-in-progress is valued at the cost-price.

Acquisitions less disposals of valuables consists of the acquisitions less disposals of precious stones, non-monetary gold, antiques, art objects and jewelry that are acquired and held primarily as stores of value. In the national accounts this transaction is mostly combined with changes in inventories.
Total
Changes in inventories
Changes in inventories including acquisitions less disposals of valuables.
Changes in the stock of raw materials, semi-finished products, work-in-progress (unfinished works like ships or oil rigs) and finished products still held by the producer. Changes in stock do not include work-in-progress in construction. Positive changes in inventories arise when products are finished in the reference period but not yet sold. Alternatively, they arise when goods are purchased for intermediate consumption but not yet used. Negative changes in inventories arise when goods from stocks have been sold, or used in the production process.

In measuring changes in inventories, changes in prices during the reference period are not allowed to have any effect. The initial and final inventory is therefore valued at the same price. Raw materials are valued at the price of purchase. Final products are valued at the selling price. Work-in-progress is valued at the cost-price.
Acquisitions less disposals of valuables
Acquisitions less disposals of valuables consists of the acquisitions less disposals of precious stones, non-monetary gold, antiques, art objects and jewelry that are acquired and held primarily as stores of value
Acq. less disposals of non-prod. assets
Acquisitions less disposals of non-produced non-financial assets mainly consist of sales of land by public (municipal) development corporations to investors in dwellings and non-residential buildings. The valuation of sales and purchases of land is exclusive of VAT and transfer costs. These are included in fixed capital formation.
For the sector general government intangible assets are included, like the sale of UMTS-frequencies.
Balancing items
A balancing item is obtained by subtracting the total value of the entries on one side of an account from the total value on the other side.
Gross domestic product
Gross domestic product (GDP) is a quantity that expresses the size of an economy. The volume change of GDP during a reference period expresses the growth or shrinkage of the economy. Gross domestic product at market prices is the final result of the production activity of resident producer units. It can be defined in three ways:

- production approach: GDP is the sum of gross value added of the various institutional sectors or the various industries plus taxes and less subsidies on products (which are not allocated to sectors and industries). It is also the balancing item in the total economy production account;
- expenditure approach: GDP is the sum of final uses of goods and services by resident institutional units (final consumption and gross capital formation), plus exports and minus imports of goods and services;
- income approach: GDP is the sum of uses in the total economy generation of income account (compensation of employees, taxes on production and imports less subsidies, gross operating surplus and mixed income of the total economy).
Gross value added
The value of all goods and services produced (production value or output), minus those that have been intermediately used upon production (intermediate consumption). Value added is rated at basic prices: purchaser's prices minus trade and transport margins and taxes on products paid and plus subsidies on products received. Intermediate consumption is rated at purchaser's prices minus non-deductible VAT.
Included is the output by all kind-of-activity units residing in the Netherlands, also those that are held by foreign owners.
Net value added can be obtained by deducting consumption of fixed capital from gross value added.
Net domestic product
Gross domestic product (GDP) is a quantity that expresses the size of an economy. The volume change of GDP during a reference period expresses the growth or shrinkage of the economy. Gross domestic product at market prices is the final result of the production activity of resident producer units. It can be defined in three ways:

- production approach: GDP is the sum of gross value added of the various institutional sectors or the various industries plus taxes and less subsidies on products (which are not allocated to sectors and industries). It is also the balancing item in the total economy production account;
- expenditure approach: GDP is the sum of final uses of goods and services by resident institutional units (final consumption and gross capital formation), plus exports and minus imports of goods and services;
- income approach: GDP is the sum of uses in the total economy generation of income account (compensation of employees, taxes on production and imports less subsidies, gross operating surplus and mixed income of the total economy).

Net domestic product at market prices (NDP) can be obtained by deducting consumption of fixed capital from GDP.

Net value added
The value of all goods and services produced (production value or output), minus those that have been intermediately used upon production (intermediate consumption). Value added is rated at basic prices: purchaser's prices minus trade and transport margins and taxes on products paid and plus subsidies on products received. Intermediate consumption is rated at purchaser's prices minus non-deductible VAT.
Included is the output by all kind-of-activity units residing in the Netherlands, also those that are held by foreign owners.
Net value added can be obtained by deducting consumption of fixed capital from gross value added.
Gross operating surplus
The surplus that remains after compensation of employees and taxes less subsidies on production and imports have been subtracted from the sum of value added at basic prices. For the self-employed (who are part of the sector households) the surplus is called mixed income, it is partly a reward for their entrepreneurship compensation for their labor.

In the system of national accounts gross means that consumption of fixed capital (depreciation) has not been subtracted. When it has, net is used. Depreciation must be paid for from the gross operating surplus.
Net operating surplus
The surplus that remains after compensation of employees and taxes less subsidies on production and imports have been subtracted from the sum of value added at basic prices. For the self-employed (who are part of the sector households) the surplus is called mixed income, it is partly a reward for their entrepreneurship compensation for their labor.

In the system of national accounts gross means that consumption of fixed capital (depreciation) has not been subtracted. When it has, net is used. Depreciation must be paid for from the gross operating surplus.



Gross profits before taxes
The gross profits before taxes of non-financial corporations is calculated as follows:
Gross operating surplus
plus property income (interest, dividends, etc.) received
minus interest paid
minus rent paid
Net profits before taxes
The net profits before taxes of non-financial corporations is calculated as follows:
Gross operating surplus
plus property income (interest, dividends, etc.) received
minus interest paid
minus rent paid
minus consumption of fixed capital
Gross national income
Total primary income received by resident institutional units: compensation of employees, operating surplus / mixed income (gross), net property income and net taxes on production and imports less subsidies. Incomes flowing from one domestic sector to another have no effect on net national income. Gross national income (at market prices) equals GDP minus primary income paid by resident institutional units to non-resident institutional units plus primary income received by resident institutional units from the rest of the world. The division of payments by member states to the European Union is largely based upon differences in gross national income.

National income is not a production concept but an income concept, which is more significant if expressed in net terms, i.e. after deduction of consumption of fixed capital.
Net national income
Net national income remains after deducting consumption of fixed capital from gross national income.
Gross disposable income
The sum of the gross disposable incomes of the institutional sectors. Gross national disposable income equals gross national income (at market prices) minus current transfers (current taxes on income, wealth et cetera, social contributions, social benefits and other current transfers) paid to non-resident units, plus current transfers received by resident units from the rest of the world. Because disposable national income is not a production concept but an income concept, it is usually expressed in net terms, i.e. after deduction of depreciation (consumption of fixed capital).
Net disposable income
Net disposable income remains after deducting consumption of fixed capital from gross disposable income.
Gross saving
The portion of national disposable income that has not been used for final consumption expenditure.
Net saving
Net saving remains after deducting consumption of fixed capital from gross saving.
Net transactions of good and services
Net exports is the difference between the value of the exports of goods and services and the value of the imports of goods and services.
Surplus nation on current transactions
The net lending (if positive) or borrowing (if negative) of the total economy to / from the rest of the world on current transactions (trade, primary income, current transfers). The surplus of the nation on current transactions is the last item in the use of income account to the rest of the world and consists of: net exports, net primary income from the rest of the world and net current transfers from the rest of the world. The surplus of the nation on current transactions equals the net national savings less the net fixed capital formation.
Net saving and capital transfers
Changes in net worth, due to saving and capital transfers, which corresponds to net saving plus capital transfers receivable, minus capital transfers payable.

Net lending (+) or net borrowing (-)
Net lending (+) or net borrowing (-) is the balancing item on the current and the capital account. This balancing item equals the balance of transactions on the financial account; a deficit on the current and capital account is financed by new liabilities and/or the sale of financial assets. In case of a surplus, liabilities are repaid and/or financial assets acquired.
Net lending or net borrowing for the total economy is equal to the balance on the current and the capital account of all institutional sectors. The balance of the financial account for the total economy shows the amount of net lending to or borrowing from the rest-of-the-world.
Total financial transactions in assets
Total financial transactions in assets.
Total financial transactions liabilities
Total financial transactions in liabilities.
Net financial transactions
Total financial transactions in assets less total financial transactions liabilities.
Statistical discrepancy
The statistical discrepancy arises by the use of different sources for the current and capital transactions on the one hand and the financial transactions on the other hand. It is not possible to eliminate these statistical discrepancies at the moment.