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/en/bank-og-finansmarked/statistikker/k3/arkiv
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statistikk
2011-06-09T10:00:00.000Z
Banking and financial markets
en
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The credit indicator C3March 2011

Content

About the statistics

Definitions

Name and topic

Name: The credit indicator C3
Topic: Banking and financial markets

Responsible division

Division for Financial Markets Statistics

Definitions of the main concepts and variables

The public comprises the institutional sectors Local government, Private Non-Financial Enterprises, Public Non-Financial Enterprises and Households (Quasi-corporated private enterprises etc.)

  • stands for "Credit from domestic sources in NOK", i.e. "the indicator of gross domestic debt for the non-financial private sector and municipalities in NOK".
  • stands for "Credit from domestic sources in NOK and foreign currency", i.e. "the indicator of gross domestic debt for the non-financial private sector and municipalities in NOK and foreign currency".
  • stands for "Total credit", i.e. "the indicator of gross debt for the non-financial private sector and municipalities from domestic and foreign sources in NOK and foreign currency".

The public's external loan debt is the total of all foreign short-term and long-term loan debt at the end of the month. This debt is made up of money market instruments, bonds and notes, deposits and other debt. Long-term debt is defined as debt outstanding for more than one year.

Oil activities comprise all enterprises in industry 11 Extraction of Crude Petroleum and Natural Gas, and Ocean transport comprises all enterprises classified in 61.101 Ocean Transport according to the Standard Industrial Classification.

Standard classifications

The C2 statistics have three types of classifications; NOK/foreign currency, credit sources and borrowing sectors:

NOK/foreign currency: the C2 data is divided into NOK and foreign currency.

Credit sources: the C2 data is classified according to credit source, where a source could either be a combination of a lending sector and a finance object, for instance bank loan, or just a finance object, for instance bond debt.

Borrowing sector: the C2 data is classified according to the borrowing sector’s municipalities, non-financial corporations and households.

The C3 statistics have two types of classifications: domestic/external debt and the industry classification oil activities/mainland Norway.

Administrative information

Regional level

Only at national level

Frequency and timeliness

Monthly

International reporting

No mandatory reporting, but data are posted on Statistics Norway’s website under "Economic Indicators".

Microdata

The original data and the revised micro data are stored in accordance with Statistic Norway's standard for file storage (DataDok).

Background

Background and purpose

C2 is an approximate measure of the magnitude of the gross domestic debt of the public (households, non-financial enterprises and municipalities) in NOK and foreign currency, while C3 gives an indication of the total gross debt, i.e. the sum of the public’s gross domestic and gross external debt.

The purpose is to contribute to the basis of information for the monetary policy. The statistics provide an overview of the development of credit at an early stage and are an important indicator of economic activity.

Norges Bank introduced the credit indicator statistics in the mid 1980s, and such data are available dating back to December 1985. After Statistics Norway took over most of the work involved in collecting and publishing financial statistics from Norges Bank on 1 January 2007, the credit indicator statistics work was also transferred to Statistics Norway.

Users and applications

Monetary authorities, i.e. Norges Bank and the Ministry of Finance. Other important users are the Financial Supervisory Authority of Norway, the financial markets and research institutions. These statistics attract a great deal of media attention.

Equal treatment of users

No external users have access to the statistics and analyses before they are published and accessible simultaneously for all users on ssb.no at 8 am. Prior to this, a minimum of three months' advance notice is given in the Statistics Release Calendar. For more information, see Principles for equal treatment of users in releasing statistics and analyses.

Coherence with other statistics

The statistics are based on the guidelines in the System of National Accounts (SNA 1993), European System of Accounts (ESA 1995), Manual on Monetary and Financial Statistics (IMF) and Balance of Payments Manual (IMF 1993).

The figures for the Public's External Loan Debt and The Gross External Debt Position are identical on a quarterly basis (i.e. figures for the various quarters in a year) for the relevant institutional sectors.

Legal authority

Not relevant

EEA reference

Derived statistics, without direct Council Directives or Council Regulations from the EU.

Production

Population

Sources included in C2 are loans in NOK and foreign currency to the public by banks, state lending institutions, finance companies, life and non-life insurance companies, mortgage companies, private and municipal pension funds, the Norwegian Public Service Pension Fund and Norges Bank. C2 also includes the public's bond loan debt to domestic lenders and the public's certificate debt in the domestic market. The public's debt, in the form of secured and non-secured domestic inter-company loans, is included up to the end of December 1999.

For C2, the population is made up of all commercial banks, savings banks, mortgage companies, and finance companies under the jurisdiction of the Financial Supervisory Authority of Norway, state lending institutions and Norges Bank, restricted in accordance with the standards of the National Accounts, together with insurance companies and private and municipal pension funds. With reference to the Standard Industrial Classification, this includes the industries 65.11, 65.12, 65.22 and 66. The Norwegian Public Service Pension Fund, which is included in industry 75.30, also reports data for these statistics.

As discussed, C3 is comprised of the sum of C2 and the public’s external loan debt. The external part of C3 comprises monthly external debt statistics for the main institutional sectors Local Government, Private Non-Financial Enterprises, Public Non-Financial Enterprises and Households (Quasi-corporated private enterprises etc.) The debt figures comprise external long-term debt such as bond loans, loans from credit institutions, loans from companies within the same group of companies, subordinated loans and short-term debt such as certificates, overdraft facilities, short-term debt to companies within the same group of companies, owners, employees etc. Foreign shareholders in Norwegian companies are not included.

Data sources and sampling

The C2 statistics are derived from the accounting statistics of ORBOF (Reporting of Bank, Mortgage company and Finance company accounts to the Public Authorities), Life and non-life insurance companies, account statistics and Pension funds. The data for the public's bond and certificate debts are derived from statistics for securities registered in VPS, included in industry 67.11. The Norwegian Public Service Pension Fund also reports data for these statistics.

The calculations of revaluations due to exchange rate fluctuations are based on stock data for the public’s gross debt to the credit sources in the C2 statistics, official data for exchange rates and data for the composition of currencies of the bank’s receivables and debts from the quarterly BIS survey.

The data on the external loan debt are based on the Balance of Payments Statistics. A new system for collecting and producing data for the balance of payments was established in 2005 after the Norges Bank Foreign Exchange Statistics were discontinued. The most significant change in the data collection process is that Statistics Norway has established new sampling surveys for non-financial and private quasi-corporated public enterprises. The shareholdings of foreign shareholders in Norwegian enterprises, as mentioned above, and &“other liabilities´´ are not included in the public’s external debt. This is in accordance with the definitions of C1 and C2, neither of which including these financial objects.

Data from the Balance of Payments reporting is used for the external loan debt of non-financial enterprises and quasi-corporated private enterprises. This survey is linked to the Standard Industrial Form (SIF) from the Directorate of Taxes, and data for trade in services, financial incomes and costs, foreign assets and liabilities etc. are collected quarterly and annually for use in the Balance of Payments survey. The data for the public's external loan debt are collected on a monthly basis. Information on securities from the Norwegian Central Securities Depository is also used and depot information for financial enterprises is collected by Norges Bank.

The C2 statistics are, in principle, based on total censuses.

For both non-financial enterprises and quasi-corporated private enterprises in the public’s external loan debt samples are used for monthly, quarterly and annual surveys. The samples cover about 70 per cent of the public's external loan debt on a monthly basis, 80 per cent of total foreign assets and liabilities on a quarterly basis, and approximately 95 per cent of the annual surveys on average. For the non-financial enterprises and quasi-corporated private companies, the samples comprise 75 enterprises in the monthly survey, 500 enterprises on a quarterly basis and 2 500 enterprises annually.

Collection of data, editing and estimations

 From 2007, Statistics Norway have had the responsibility for collecting accounting data for banks and financial corporations, while the Financial Supervisory Authority of Norway and Statistics Norway are jointly collecting accounting data from insurance companies and pensions funds. Most of the input data for the C2 statistics are based on data collected in relation to these. In addition, Statistics Norway obtains data via e-mail from the Norwegian Public Service Pension Fund and VPS.

For the external part of C3, administrative registers are used to collect data on securities from the Norwegian Central Securities Depository and depot information on financial enterprises. For the non-financial companies and quasi-corporated private companies, these data are either submitted via Altinn (the central government authorities' common Internet reporting portal) or by e-mail.

The editing of the financial institutions’ accounting statements are undertaken by Statistics Norway and the Financial Supervisory Authority of Norway. The data from the Norwegian Public Service Pension Fund and VPS are controlled by Statistics Norway.

Manual controls are undertaken when the data on the public’s external loan debt are received, and the database contains control routines for content and logical coherence.

The editing policy is to disseminate changes of the previous month’s data together with the current month’s data. Statistics Norway is fully prepared to edit in a timely manner, with appropriate notification to users and the media, should it be deemed necessary by the magnitude of a past error, or, owing to other exceptional circumstances. Some of the reported data may contain preliminary data that are subsequently corrected.

All growth rate calculations based on holdings that include foreign currency loans are adjusted for exchange rate fluctuations in order to eliminate all changes not related to transactions. The growth rate calculations are also adjusted for statistical breaks that are not attributable to transactions or valuation changes. An example of this kind of break could be that a financial enterprise moves from one sector to another. Another example is that inter-company loans are not updated as of January 2000.

The figures for the external loan debt of the non-financial companies and quasi-corporated private companies are scaled up in the monthly, quarterly and annual surveys by means of statistical methods to represent figures for the total external loan debt.

Up to the end of 2004, the transaction figures for calculating "Credit from foreign sources" were obtained from the balance of payments, while Statistics Norway’s “Foreign assets and liabilities" was the source for the volume figures. In the new system as from January 2005, the calculation of the development of the foreign component of C3 is based on monthly data for loan debt and revaluation from a sample of non-financial companies and quasi-corporated private companies, together with projections of the external loan debt of municipalities and households. The transactions in a period are calculated as the change in the loan debt during the period minus the revaluations and any &“statistical breaks´´ during the period.

This calculation method means that there will not be full accord between the transaction figures and the changes in volume figures for foreign debt. Percentage changes are calculated by combining cumulative transaction figures with volume figures from the beginning of the period.

Seasonal adjustment

The data for the credit indicator C3 is not seasonally adjusted due to an unstable seasonal pattern in the data for the external loan debt.

Confidentiality

The debt data will not be published if a cell in a table is based on less than three reporting units, and this implies a risk of identification, i.e. that the figure can be traced back to the reporting unit. Exceptions here are Norges Bank and the Norwegian Public Service Pension Fund, who do not object to such identification.

Comparability over time and space

The revision of international standards and major changes in accountancy laws may result in a gap in the time series data. A change of sectors may have the same result, for instance if a financial enterprise moves from one sector to another. We try as far as possible to make adjustments for statistical breaks in our calculations of transactions (break corrections).

The external loan debt statistics in their present form were collected by Statistics Norway in March 2005 (figures for January 2005).

Accuracy and reliability

Sources of error and uncertainty

As mentioned in section 3.2, the C2 statistics are mainly derived from the financial statistics. Errors and inconsistencies in these statistics will also affect C2 and C3. In this context, we refer to the sections on Sources of error and uncertainty from these statistics. The sources of inconsistencies for data from the Norwegian Public Service Pension Fund will also be of the same type as the statistics mentioned above.

For the non-financial enterprises, the monthly and quarterly surveys on external loan debt are based on a sample of companies. Furthermore, for these companies the surveys comprise parts of the companies' balance sheet according to the SIF, i.e. the items that provide information on the foreign debt. The interpretation of what constitutes a liability between a Norwegian company and a foreign counterpart, and how the debt should be distributed into the various debt items can lead to errors in the statistics.

The response rate for the C2 statistics is 100 per cent.

The response rate for the external loan debt usually amounts to 96-97 per cent for the part of the survey covering the non-financial enterprises. Hence, the non-response figure is relatively low. There are, however, some non-response errors with regard to some of the debt items in the forms. This is corrected through contact with the respondents and estimation of data for some units in the sample in such a manner that the published data probably do not contain any notable errors with regard to the total level of debt or distributed by debt objects.

The sampling error for the external loan debt is the uncertainty caused by producing figures a selection of entities and not the total population. Hence, the sampling error measures the expected deviation between the result from using the sample and the expected result from running a total census for the entire population of companies with foreign assets and liabilities.

The sampling methods presuppose that the population itself covers the vast majority of all companies with foreign assets and liabilities. There is, however, no overview of companies with these balance sheet items, and hence it may be difficult to detect all relevant units that should be included in the quarterly surveys. The collection procedures are, however, modeled in such a way that it is unlikely that important units are not included.

There may be errors or flaws in the reporting for the external loan debt statistics. The most common errors and flaws are numbers stated in items where they should not be included according to the items' definitions, and partly that the distinction between a Norwegian and a foreign unit can be unclear or that the reporting parties do not state all relevant information in their submitted data.

Revision

The statistics show preliminary figures. Data may be revised in future publications.