Page tools: Print Page Print All | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
METHODOLOGY
The factors were formulated from a subset of businesses sampled in the QBIS. In order to be included in the derivation of the factors, businesses must have met the following criteria:
Sales and service income and other expenses factors were not generated for Education and training and Health care and social assistance (Divisions P and Q respectively), as the information is not collected by QBIS (see Scope and Population above). For each data item, quarterly QBIS data reported by the subset of businesses established above were summed to give an aggregate value for each in scope ANZSIC subdivision. These aggregate quarterly values were then used to create factors that model the impact of off-June reporting for each of the four data items by each in scope subdivision. To calculate each factor, a ratio of the data reported during the standard financial year and the relevant off-June time-period was generated, by summing data from the four quarters of the standard financial year and dividing this by the summed annualised data from the four quarters of the relevant off-June reporting period, as described by Equation 1. EQUATION 1. CALCULATING OFF-JUNE FACTORS where Q is quarterly QBIS data aggregated by industry subdivision for the subset of businesses identified above. Since inventories are stock variables (that is, represent a quantity existing at a particular point in time) the formulae for deriving inventories factors differed slightly, as described by Equation 2. EQUATION 2. CALCULATING OFF-JUNE INVENTORIES FACTORS Factors were produced for opening and closing inventories, by type of inventory. The types of inventories specified were raw materials inventories and finished goods inventories (including work-in-progress). The factors generated give an indication of the variability in trading conditions between off-June reporting periods and the standard Australian financial year. A factor of 1 indicates no variability, implying there is no effect of off-June reporting on estimates published in Australian Industry (cat. no. 8155.0). Conversely, the further a factor lies from 1, the greater the impact of off-June reporting on industry estimates. Where there were five or less contributing QBIS businesses in an ANZSIC subdivision, it was considered that data was of insufficient quality to model accurately. An example of the calculation of factors for Subdivision 14, Wood product manufacturing is provided below. Quarterly sales and service income estimates derived from in-scope QBIS data (see Table 3) were utilised to produce 'off-June' factors (see Equation 3) to be applied to EAS estimates of sales and service income.
EQUATION 3. CALCULATING FACTORS - EXAMPLE: SALES OF GOODS AND SERVICES, SUBDIVISION 14 WOOD PRODUCT MANUFACTURING Applying factors to EAS Data Once the off-June year factors were established for each subdivision, they were applied to selected data items from the EAS. The adjusted items are shown in Table 4, as well as the factors which were used to adjust them. Note that not all components of the published items have been adjusted, due to a lack of available QBIS data from which to create factors. Businesses were identified as either 'on-June reporters' or one of the three types of 'off-June reporters' described above based on the reporting period they indicated on the EAS form. Factors were only applied to in scope businesses eligible for selection in EAS with an employment size of at least 20. For 2009-10, the following four categories were created:
Calculating off-June year adjusted estimates Following the application of off-June year factors to EAS data reported by off-June year businesses, estimates were recalculated using the standard EAS methodology described in Technical Note 1 of Australian Industry (cat. no. 8155.0). Estimates were generated for the four published data items wages and salaries, total income, total expenses and IVA, for all in scope ANZSIC divisions and subdivisions.
|