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Le Comptes nationaux des pays de l'OCDE, Comptes financiers inclut les transactions financières (à la fois acquisition nette d'actifs financiers et accroissement net des passifs), par secteur institutionnel (sociétés non financières, sociétés financières, administrations publiques, ménages et institutions sans but lucratif au service des ménages, économie totale et reste du monde) et par opération financière. Les données sont exprimées en monnaie nationale. Les données sont basées sur le Système de Comptabilité Nationale de 2008 (SCN 2008) pour tous les pays sauf le Chili, le Japon et la Turquie (SCN 1993). PAYS COUVERTSAllemagne, Australie, Autriche, Belgique, Canada, Chili, Corée, Danemark, Espagne, Estonie, États-Unis, Finlande, France, Grèce, Hongrie, Irlande, Islande, Israël, Italie, Japon, Luxembourg, Mexique, Norvège, Nouvelle-Zélande, Pays-Bas, Pologne, Portugal, République slovaque, République tchèque, Royaume-Uni, Slovénie, Suède, Suisse et Turquie. ÉGALEMENT DISPONIBLE EN LIGNECette publication est également disponible sous forme de base de données en ligne sous le titre Comptes financiers, Statistiques de l'OCDE sur les comptes nationaux (http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/na-fa-data-fr). Cette base de données donne accès également à des versions d'archive au format CSV.
National income. --- Finance, Public. --- Cameralistics --- Public finance --- Currency question --- Net national product --- Flow of funds --- Gross national product --- Income --- Public finances
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- Signes et abréviations conventionnels - Australie - Autriche - Belgique - Canada - Chili - République tchèque - Danemark - Estonie - Finlande - France - Allemagne - Grèce - Hongrie - Islande - Irlande - Israël - Italie - Japon - Corée - Luxembourg - Mexique - Pays-Bas - Nouvelle-Zélande - Norvège - Pologne - Portugal - République slovaque - Slovénie - Espagne - Suède - Suisse - Turquie - Royaume-Uni - États-Unis.
National income. --- Finance, Public. --- Cameralistics --- Public finance --- Currency question --- Net national product --- Flow of funds --- Gross national product --- Income --- Public finances
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We find historical fiscal multipliers for Brazil around 0.5, larger than what existing literature typically identifies for the average emerging market. However, spending and public credit multipliers seem to have dropped to near zero since the global financial crisis, as the estimate for the whole sample period (1999-2014) is about ½ of that for precrisis years. By contrast, revenue multipliers have remained broadly stable. We conclude that fiscal consolidations based on expenditure and public credit retrenchment are likely to entail a modest drag on growth in the near term.
Multiplier (Economics) --- National income --- Expenditures, Public. --- Government spending policy --- Expenditures, Public --- Public spending policy --- Spending policy, Government --- Economic policy --- Finance, Public --- Full employment policies --- Unfunded mandates --- Appropriations and expenditures --- Government appropriations --- Government expenditures --- Government spending --- Public expenditures --- Public spending --- Spending, Government --- Public administration --- Net national product --- Flow of funds --- Gross national product --- Income --- Economic multiplier --- Economics --- Circular velocity of money --- Government policy --- Banks and Banking --- Macroeconomics --- Money and Monetary Policy --- Public Finance --- Fiscal Policy --- Governmental Loans, Loan Guarantees, Credits, and Grants --- Monetary Policy, Central Banking, and the Supply of Money and Credit: General --- National Government Expenditures and Related Policies: General --- Banks --- Depository Institutions --- Micro Finance Institutions --- Mortgages --- Monetary economics --- Public finance & taxation --- Banking --- Credit --- Expenditure --- Fiscal multipliers --- State-owned banks --- Bank credit --- Money --- Fiscal policy --- Financial institutions --- Banks and banking --- Brazil
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Benchmarking methods can be used to extrapolate (or “nowcast”) low-frequency benchmarks on the basis of available high-frequency indicators. Quarterly national accounts are a typical example, where a number of monthly and quarterly indicators of economic activity are used to calculate preliminary annual estimates of GDP. Using both simulated and real-life national accounts data, this paper aims at assessing the prediction accuracy of three benchmarking methods widely used in the national accounts compilation: the proportional Denton method, the proportional Cholette-Dagum method with first-order autoregressive error, and the regression-based Chow-Lin method. The results show that the Cholette-Dagum method provides the most accurate extrapolations when the indicator and the annual benchmarks move along the same trend. However, the Denton and Chow-Lin methods could prevail in real-life cases when the quarterly indicator temporarily deviates from the target series.
Information storage and retrieval systems. --- National income --- Economic indicators --- Econometric models. --- Business indicators --- Indicators, Business --- Indicators, Economic --- Leading indicators --- Economic history --- Quality of life --- Economic forecasting --- Index numbers (Economics) --- Social indicators --- Net national product --- Flow of funds --- Gross national product --- Income --- Automatic data storage --- Automatic information retrieval --- Automation in documentation --- Computer-based information systems --- Data processing systems --- Data storage and retrieval systems --- Discovery systems, Information --- Information discovery systems --- Information processing systems --- Information retrieval systems --- Machine data storage and retrieval --- Mechanized information storage and retrieval systems --- Computer systems --- Electronic information resources --- Data centers --- Digital libraries --- Information organization --- Information retrieval --- Exports and Imports --- Macroeconomics --- Time-Series Models --- Dynamic Quantile Regressions --- Dynamic Treatment Effect Models --- Diffusion Processes --- Optimization Techniques --- Programming Models --- Dynamic Analysis --- Methodology for Collecting, Estimating, and Organizing Macroeconomic Data --- Data Access --- Trade: General --- General Aggregative Models: General --- Retail and Wholesale Trade --- e-Commerce --- International economics --- National accounts --- Exports --- Imports --- Trade in goods --- International trade --- Balance of trade --- Morocco
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