Current transactions by sectors; National Accounts
Institutional sectors | Not Consolidated or Consolidated | Periods | Resources Output Output produced for own final use Products retained for own consumption (million euros) | Uses Intermediate consumption (-) (million euros) | Uses Final consumption expenditure Total (million euros) | Uses Final consumption expenditure Actual collective final consumption (million euros) | Uses Final consumption expenditure Actual individual final consumption Total (million euros) | Uses Final consumption expenditure Actual individual final consumption Other individual final consumption (million euros) | Uses Gross capital formation Gross fixed capital formation Consumption of fixed capital (million euros) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total domestic sectors | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 13,619 | 291,520 | 194,163 | 22,935 | 171,228 | 119,938 | 44,137 |
Total domestic sectors | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 13,619 | 291,520 | 194,163 | 22,935 | 171,228 | 119,938 | 44,137 |
The non-financial corporations sector | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 232,156 | 23,525 | |||||
The non-financial corporations sector | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 232,156 | 23,525 | |||||
Financial corporations | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 11,458 | 1,467 | |||||
Financial corporations | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 11,458 | 1,467 | |||||
Monetary financial institutions | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 2,058 | 622 | |||||
Monetary financial institutions | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 2,058 | 622 | |||||
Central bank | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 60 | 16 | |||||
Central bank | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 60 | 16 | |||||
Deposit-taking corporations and MMFs | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 1,998 | 606 | |||||
Deposit-taking corporations and MMFs | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 1,998 | 606 | |||||
Other financial institutions | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 5,104 | 477 | |||||
Other financial institutions | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 5,104 | 477 | |||||
Non-MMF investment funds | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 1,699 | 166 | |||||
Non-MMF investment funds | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 1,699 | 166 | |||||
Other fin. inst. excl. investment funds | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 3,405 | 311 | |||||
Other fin. inst. excl. investment funds | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 3,405 | 311 | |||||
Financial intermediaries and auxiliaries | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 2,869 | 311 | |||||
Financial intermediaries and auxiliaries | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 2,869 | 311 | |||||
Other financial intermediaries | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 535 | 118 | |||||
Other financial intermediaries | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 535 | 118 | |||||
Financial auxiliaries | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 2,334 | 193 | |||||
Financial auxiliaries | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 2,334 | 193 | |||||
Captive institutions and money lenders | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 536 | 0 | |||||
Captive institutions and money lenders | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 536 | 0 | |||||
Insurance corporations and pension funds | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 4,296 | 368 | |||||
Insurance corporations and pension funds | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 4,296 | 368 | |||||
Insurance corporations | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 1,806 | 295 | |||||
Insurance corporations | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 1,806 | 295 | |||||
Pension funds | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 2,490 | 73 | |||||
Pension funds | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 2,490 | 73 | |||||
General government | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 18,073 | 72,190 | 22,935 | 49,255 | 8,026 | ||
General government | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 18,073 | 72,190 | 22,935 | 49,255 | 8,026 | ||
Central government | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 7,443 | 20,223 | 14,600 | 5,623 | 3,968 | ||
Central government | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 7,443 | 20,223 | 14,600 | 5,623 | 3,968 | ||
Local government | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 9,880 | 28,451 | 8,335 | 20,116 | 4,026 | ||
Local government | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 9,880 | 28,451 | 8,335 | 20,116 | 4,026 | ||
Social security funds | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 750 | 23,516 | 0 | 23,516 | 32 | ||
Social security funds | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 750 | 23,516 | 0 | 23,516 | 32 | ||
Households including NPISHs | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 13,619 | 29,833 | 121,973 | 121,973 | 119,938 | 11,119 | |
Households including NPISHs | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 13,619 | 29,833 | 121,973 | 121,973 | 119,938 | 11,119 | |
Households | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 13,619 | 28,367 | 119,938 | 119,938 | 119,938 | 11,065 | |
Households | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 13,619 | 28,367 | 119,938 | 119,938 | 119,938 | 11,065 | |
Non-profit institutions serv. households | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 1,466 | 2,035 | 2,035 | 54 | |||
Non-profit institutions serv. households | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | 1,466 | 2,035 | 2,035 | 54 | |||
Rest of the world | Not consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | |||||||
Rest of the world | Consolidated | 2024 2nd quarter* | |||||||
Source: CBS. |
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 2022 are final. Quarterly data from 2022 are provisional.
Changes as of September 23rd 2024:
Data on the second quarter of 2024 are available. The figures for the first quarter of 2024 have been revised. Figures for 2022 have been revised as a result of updated information on the government accounts. The revisions mainly impacted current taxes on income and general government net lending/borrowing.
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 financial accounts and stocks 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.
- 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.- 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.
- 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.
- Uses
- Uses are transactions appear which deduces the economic value of sectors.
- 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.
- 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
- 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.
- Gross capital formation
- Capital formation consists of capital formation in fixed assets and changes in inventories including valuables.
- 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.- 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.