United States - Real Investment





United States: Real Investment

Mnemonic I$.IUSA
Unit Mil. Ch. 2017 USD, SAAR
Adjustments Seasonally Adjusted at Annual Rate
Quarterly 0.21 %
Data 2023 Q4 4,119,802
2023 Q3 4,111,053

Series Information

Source U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA)
Release National Income and Product Accounts
Frequency Quarterly
Start Date 3/31/1947
End Date 12/31/2023

United States: GDP

Reference Last Previous Units Frequency
Government Consumption 2023 Q4 4,866,487 4,794,830 Mil. USD, SAAR Quarterly
Investment 2023 Q4 4,955,349 4,915,033 Mil. USD, SAAR Quarterly
Nominal Fixed Investment (gross fixed capital formation) 2023 Q4 4,870,510 4,813,000 Mil. USD, SAAR Quarterly
Nominal Gross Domestic Product 2023 Q4 27,944,627 27,610,128 Mil. USD, SAAR Quarterly
Private Consumption 2023 Q4 18,901,498 18,679,496 Mil. USD, SAAR Quarterly
Real Fixed Investment (gross fixed capital formation) 2023 Q4 4,005,801 3,981,301 Mil. Ch. 2017 USD, SAAR Quarterly
Real Government Consumption 2023 Q4 3,883,336 3,843,355 Mil. Ch. 2017 USD, SAAR Quarterly
Real Gross Domestic Product 2023 Q4 22,668,986 22,490,692 Mil. Ch. 2017 USD, SAAR Quarterly
Real Investment 2023 Q4 4,119,802 4,111,053 Mil. Ch. 2017 USD, SAAR Quarterly
Real Private Consumption 2023 Q4 15,574,929 15,461,382 Mil. Ch. 2017 USD, SAAR Quarterly

Release Information

For the U.S., the National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA) are a measure of production and the distribution of incomes earned in production. Their goal is to present a reliable and complete picture of the United States economy by including government-, consumer-, and industry-specific data.

Active:

  • Industry classification: NAICS 2017
  • Measurements:
    • Thousands of persons (Ths. #)
    • Millions of U.S. dollars at chained year-2017 prices (Mil. Ch. 2017 USD)
    • At current prices (Mil. USD)
    • Percentage points (% pts.)
    • Year-over-year percent change in volume (Vol. % Y/Y)
    • Index, fixed base, relative to 2017 (Index 2017=100)
  • Adjustments:
    • Not seasonally adjusted (NSA)
    • Seasonally adjusted annualized rate (SAAR)
  • Native frequencies:
    • Monthly
    • Quarterly
    • Annual
  • Start date: As early as 1959

Predecessors:

  • Pre-2023 comprehensive update ("_12")
  • Pre-2022 annual benchmark ("_2021")
  • Pre-2021 ("_2020")
  • Pre-2019 ("_2018")
  • Pre-2018 comprehensive update ("_2017")

For most NIPA components, the current-dollar estimates are derived from source data that are “value data,” where value = price x quantity. Frequently, BEA—which does not collect much of its own data—must adjust the data that are collected by others, primarily government agencies, trade associations, and international organizations. Most source data are collected for purposes other than the estimation of the NIPAs, and therefore use definitions, population parameters, or time periods that differ from NIPA concepts. Much of the data must be adjusted by filling gaps in coverage or by using available data as proxies for the desired NIPA measure.

For periods for which data are not available, NIPA estimates may be derived using existing estimates. For example, when annual data are available and the quarterly are not, the quarterly data are often estimated by interpolation. For the periods beyond those covered by annual estimates (such as the most recent quarter), the quarterly estimates are derived by extrapolation. These interpolations and extrapolations are often based on “indicators”—related data that are used to approximate movements in the NIPA measures.

Quantity and price estimates

Changes over time in the current-dollar measures provided in the NIPAs may reflect a change in quantity, a change in price, or a combination of both. For some analyses, it is important to know these separate effects—for instance, to know how much of the change in GDP is due to changes in the quantities of goods and services without the influence of price changes.

Therefore, the NIPAs provide separate estimates of changes in quantities and prices, derived as indexes that provide information on the change from some reference period. BEA describes estimates of quantities as “real” expenditures—for example “real GDP” or “real PCE.” Note that the level of an index in any single period is not in itself meaningful. Instead, it is the relation of that index level to the index level in another period—that is, it is the change in the index over time—that is important. Indeed, the change in real GDP over time is the featured measure of economic activity. In addition, BEA provides measures of the contributions of various components (such as personal consumption expenditures or investment) to GDP growth.

BEA also provides quantity measures in value terms—called chained dollars—by scaling the index. Specifically, the index in the reference year is set equal to the current-dollar level in the same year, and the change in the index in successive and previous periods is multiplied by the current-dollar level to form a time series in monetary terms.

To facilitate the analysis of the drivers of change in the real estimates, BEA provides measures of the contributions of real components to the percent change in real aggregates. These are provided because the chained-dollar measures of components are not additive,and therefore, accurate measures of a component’s contribution to change cannot be derived from the chained-dollar measures.

Moody's Analytics 1: Extension of real series

Motivation: The U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) reports many real NIPA series beginning only in 1970Q1 to avoid misleading analysis (citation). That is, real (inflation-adjusted) figures are estimates, and distortions increase with distance from the base year (2012).

Response: For convenience of our users, we have extended the real series backwards, as far as 1947, by using the reported quantity index and nominal series.

Steps:

  1. For fixed investment:
    1. Calculate extension using quantity index and averaged nominal series:
      • PDQIF.IUSA * AVE(IF_RQ.IUSA[2012Q1 to 2012Q4])
    2. Splice history to reported real series (IF$.IUSA).
  2. Repeat for all indicators where the quantity index and nominal series have longer history than the corresponding real series.

Series like "PDP" are price deflators and are calculated as nominal/real *100. For example:
PDPC.IUSA = C.IUSA/C$.IUSA * 100

Series like "PDQ" are volume indexes and are multiplied by base year value to calculate the real series. For example:
C$.IUSA = AVE(C.IUSA<2012q1 to 2012q4>) * PDQC.IUSA/100

Moody's Analytics 2: Extension of real series

We have back-extended "real manufacturing and trade sales" (NCU18_KPMTM.IUSA) by 30 years, by using its predecessor (NCU96_KPMTM.IUSA).

Moody's Analytics 3: Supplements

We compute:

  • Contribution to volatility in GDP growth for six components: Consumption, government, inventories, residential, nonresidential, net exports.
  • Interest coverage ratio for nonfinancial corporate business.
  • Private sector financial balance.
  • PCE (in index, nominal and real terms) for three special aggregates: "all items excluding food, energy and housing", "services excluding housing" and "core services excluding housing."

Annual estimates of GDP that are first available as the sum of the quarterly estimates are revised in the annual revision each July and in the following two annual revisions. Annual revisions are timed to incorporate newly available annual source data and quarterly data that are released too late to be used in the current quarterly estimates.

The revision cycle culminates, at about five-year intervals, in a comprehensive revision of the NIPAs. Comprehensive revisions differ from annual revisions in a variety of ways. First, the data used for comprehensive revisions are based in large part on censuses of economic activity, while the monthly, quarterly, and annual data discussed above are generally based on sample surveys. Second, comprehensive revisions have traditionally been used to introduce major improvements in definitions, estimating methods, and data presentations into the accounts. Finally, the estimates may be revised back as far as 1929.

For some components of GDP, GDI, direct indicators are not available. Data for state and local government spending is available from Census Bureau with a two-year lag. Comprehensive IRS corporate profits data is available with a two-year lag. IRS data on proprietors’ and partnership income is also available with a two-year lag.

Further reading

At the source:

  • 21 Dec 2022, Phillip Thorne - Moody's Analytics supplements
  • 2 Feb 2023, Phillip Thorne - Moody's Analytics supplements