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/en/utenriksokonomi/statistikker/brutgjeld/kvartal
15791_om
statistikk
2014-09-12T10:00:00.000Z
External economy
en
true

External debt positionQ2 2014

As from December 2014 the statistics is published with Foreign assets and liabilities.

Content

About the statistics

Definitions

Name and topic

Name: External debt position
Topic: External economy

Responsible division

Division for Financial Accounts

Definitions of the main concepts and variables

Not relevant

Standard classifications

Financial instruments are grouped according to the European System of National Accounts (ESA 1995). The debt items are classified as follows: money market instruments, bank deposits, bonds, loans, trade credits and other liabilities.Public sector external debt usually consists of two main components: domestic government bonds held by foreigners and repurchase agreements. Repurchase agreements in securities are instruments that are actively used in the management of the Government Pension Fund (SPU). SPU sells a portfolio of securities and agrees to buy the portfolio back at a future date. In the accounts the sales value of the portfolio is recorded as loans on the liabilities side of the Fund's balance. This accounting method significantly affects public sector external debt.

The units are grouped into the institutional sectors: general government, financial corporations, non-financial corporations and households. The groups are defined according to the European System of National Accounts (ESA 1995).

The published table enterprises are grouped into the following sectors: Central government, Monetary Authorities, Banks and Other sectors. Intercompany lending between entities in a direct investment relationship is shown separately.

Administrative information

Regional level

National level

Frequency and timeliness

Frequency: Quarterly

Timeliness: The statistics is published three months after the reporting period.

International reporting

Tables and figures are reported to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

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

The purpose is mainly to fulfill Norway's obligations for reporting to the IMF. The reporting is conducted according to IMF's Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS).

Users and applications

The figures are mainly used for reporting to the IMF. The figures for external debt are also included in Statistic Norway's publication of Economic Indicators and Prognosis and used in the Balance of Payments.

Coherence with other statistics

The statistics is based on the guidelines in the System of National Accounts (SNA 2008), European System of Accounts (ESA 1995), Manual on Monetary and Financial Statistics (IMF) and Balance of Payments Manual (IMF 2006).

Legal authority

Statistics Act Section 2.2 (1)

EEA reference

Council Regulation 2223/96 of 25 June 1996.

Production

Population

The survey comprises quarterly external debt statistics for the main institutional sectors. The main institutional sectors are general government, financial enterprises, non-financial enterprises and households. The external debt figures include long-term debt such as bonds and notes, loans from credit institutions, and short-term debt such as certificates, overdraft facilities and trade credit. Shares, participations and other equity capital in Norwegian companies with foreign owners are not included. Intercompany lending between entities in a direct investment relationship is shown separately.

Data sources and sampling

For the general government the source is balance sheet data from the general government's accounts and other data from general governmental bodies such as the Government Pension Fund - Global, the Government Petroleum Insurance Fund and the National Insurance Scheme Fund. For financial enterprises data from the reporting scheme ORBOF (Public reporting for banks and financing companies) and other reports to Norges Bank, the reporting scheme FORT (The insurance companies accounting and surveillance reporting) to the Financial Supervisory Authority of Norway and Statistics Norway and data collected electronically for pension funds, financial holding companies and other financial enterprises. For non-financial enterprises data from the Balance of Payments reporting is used. This survey is linked to the Standard Industrial Form (SIF) from the Directorate of Taxes and hence data for trade in services, financial incomes and costs, foreign assets and liabilities etc are collected in the Balance of Payments survey. Information about securities from the Norwegian Central Securities Depository is also used and depot information for financial enterprises.

For both financial enterprises excluding banks and insurance and non-financial enterprises a sample is used for quarterly and annual surveys. The samples cover about 80 per cent of total foreign assets and liabilities quarterly, whereas the sample covers 95 per cent in the annual surveys. For both samples all companies with assets and liabilities towards abroad of a certain amount are covered.

Collection of data, editing and estimations

Administrative registers are used for data collection for the general government, banks etc and insurance, and for information about securities from the Norwegian Central Securities Depository and depot information for financial enterprises. For the remaining sectors data are collected in coordinated surveys comprising questions about trade in services, financial incomes and costs, foreign assets and liabilities etc.

Manual controls are undertaken when data are received and the database comprises control routines for the content and the logical coherence.

A sample is used to collect data for non-financial enterprises. The total external debt figures for the non-financial enterprises is weighted.

For the other institutional sectors figures for the total external debt are taken from the various surveys or registers in use.

Confidentiality

Figures are not released if there are less than three units comprising a variable in a table and if it hence is possible to identify the respondent.

Comparability over time and space

The revision of international standards and large changes in accountancy laws may result in gaps in the time series data.

In Q1 2003 - Q4 2004 quarterly external debt were based on a variety of sources and methods by Statistics Norway.

Data collection for statistics published in its present form was initiated by Statistics Norway in June 2005 (first quarter of 2005).

The debt liability of SDR allocations is included in The Central Bank of Norway's other long-term debt liabilites from 1. quarter of 2009.

Accuracy and reliability

Sources of error and uncertainty

The interpretation of what constitutes liabilities between a Norwegian company and a foreign counterpart and how the debt is to be distributed by the various debt items can lead to errors in the statistics.

The response rate in the survey covering the non-financial enterprises is about 96-97 per cent. Occasionally these enterprises do not report all their debt. Notable errors are corrected by direct contact with respondents and/or construction of data. The total level of debt and distribution accross debt objects should be close to correct. 
For other sectors than non-financial enterprises the non-response rate is close to zero.  Thus these sectors' total external debt should be close to correct.

The sampling methods presupposes that the entire population of all companies with assets and liabilities towards foreign countries is covered.  The collection procedures are modeled in such a way that it is unlikely that important units are not included.

Since the survey to a large extent is based on a cut-off sample, it is difficult to produce good figures for sampling errors. Hence, the variation coefficient will not give a good estimate of the sampling error.