Measuring Argentina's GDP: Myths and Facts: Ariel Coremberg - January 2014
Measuring Argentina's GDP: Myths and Facts: Ariel Coremberg - January 2014
Measuring Argentina's GDP: Myths and Facts: Ariel Coremberg - January 2014
Since 2007, official economic statistics in Argentina, particularly on consumer inflation and
GDP, have been subject to political manipulation.
This paper reproduces Argentine national income from 2007 using standard methods and
original sector data and finds that declared GDP is 12.7% higher in 1993 prices due to political
intervention.
The paper finds that the distortion is mainly due to changes in accounting methodology
across industries and not to changes in inflation estimates.
The reproduced GDP data dispels the myth that Argentina has been the
fastest growing South American economy in recent years.
In reality the positive biases in the present official GDP are not due to a consistent application of
a new methodology, but to the withdrawal of the traditional national accounts methodology and
the application of discretionary non-reported criteria. The revision reports carried out by our
study through traditional methodology and data sources, shows that only financial
intermediation (5% of GDP) was affected by using inaccurate deflators . Furthermore, analyzing
the contribution of every industrys value added gap, financial intermediation explains only 27%
of the total GDP gap between official figures and reproduced data. The other main sectors
explaining the gap are trade (28%) and manufacturing (20%) while other services (9%), real
It is important to analyse the GDP cycle to study whether an economy is recovering from a
recession or a previous crisis, and whether it is starting a process of growth acceleration. It is
important to assess whether an economy is growing in the long run, beyond a cyclical recovery
(Hausmann et.al. 2005). One of the stylized facts of the commodity price boom that took place
between 2002 and 2011 is that the economic growth of Latin America and Argentina occurred
after a deep economic depression during 1998-2001. But there are a number of questions that
need to be answered? How much of the economic growth was really due to the boom and how
much was due to a recovery effect? By how much did GDP accelerate, in comparison to the
previous positive growth phase that occurred during the so-called Washington Consensus
period in the 1990s? The answers to those questions depend on the consistency of the GDP
series used.
The periods of analysis have been chosen in order to compare the actual boom that which took
place during the reforms of 1990-1998 which lasted until the negative shock of 1998 followed by
the depression of 1998-2002 with later periods. Moreover, comparing that crisis phase 19982002 to 2002-2012 allows an analysis of the impact of the present boom of commodity prices on
the recovery after the crisis. We also report data for the periods 2002-2007 and for 2007-2012,
taking into account that 2007 is not technically a cyclical peak, but rather is the year when the
political intervention of official statistics began.
The Table below shows the GDP performance in the periods previously defined according to the
official INDEC statistics and to our alternative GDP ARKLEMS reproducible estimations.
2007 (47.6% cumulative rate). But after 2007, Argentina suffered an important
GDP slowdown: 15.9% of accumulated growth (3.0% annual rate). The official
GDP performance, however, shows almost double the rate of growth at 29.4%
(5.3% annual rate) compared with the reproducible GDP.
As has been demonstrated in Coremberg (2011,2012), an analysis of Argentinas growth profile
by source showed an unsustainable growth extensively based on factor utilization which was
accompanied by a Total Factor Productivity slowdown during the recent growth episode. The
reason for the slow-down is not only based on unsustainable growth and the inefficiency of
productive factors, but mainly on lower growth performance that it is not recognize in official
statistics. For example, Argentine GDP grew between peaks only by 2.5%, according to
ARKLEMS estimation (instead of the official 3.4%).
The Growth Championship Myth: Argentina is the Latin American country which has had the highest
growth acceleration in the region during the last decade.
According to official figures, Argentina was the growth champion in the whole region over the
period 2002-12 with an impressive cumulative growth of 99%, more than double the regions
average. However, if we use our ARKLEMS GDP estimation, instead, the growth performance
of Argentina is substantially lower (71%, or nearly 30 points less than the official figures) and the
country lies behind Peru and Uruguay in the rankings. This comparison is shown in Figure 2.
Conclusion
This paper has made an exhaustive revision of the Argentina National Accounts'
methodology in order to reproduce GDP series since 1993 and check economic
growth after political interventions in the production of official statistics.
Our series reproduces Argentinas GDP growth closely from 1993 up to 2006. Since then, the
difference between the official series and ARKLEMS reproducible series accumulates a large
positive bias upwards due to intervention.
The divergence between our results and official figures is due to the withdrawal of the traditional
GDP measurement methodology in almost every sector of GDP. The paper shows that these
distortions are not based on deflating value added by industry at current prices levels with
manipulated price indices but mainly on discretionary intervention in every industry component
of the GDP, not only financial sector but also trade and manufacturing and the rest of services
and goods production sectors, with the objective to be to show a higher GDP growth.
The official series present a picture of GDP growing at higher rates during the recent recovery
period (2003-2012) than in the previous one (1990-1998), and they make Argentina lead the
GDP performance of the region. But our research demonstrated that ARKLEMS reproducible
GDP for recent growth episode had a similar performance to the previous positive cycle, 19901998. Technical analyses based on typical National Bureau for Economic Research (NBER)
cycle decomposition updated by Hausman et.al. (2005), shows that Argentina does not have a
sustainable growth acceleration.
The paper showed that Argentina growth was important during recent growth episode, but
contrary to official figures, the country was not the growth champion of the Latin America region.
Argentina has also one of the largest GDP volatilities in the whole region, showing a very slow
performance, lower (next to Mexico) than the region and Brazil, when the comparison is realized
between peaks of economic cycle (1998-2012).
References
Cavallo, Alberto (2012). Online vs Official Price Indexes: Measuring Argentinas
Inflation - Journal of Monetary Economics. December 2012
Coremberg, A. (2011): The Argentine Productivity Slowdown.The challenges after global
financial
collapse,
World
Economics
2011.
Vol.12,
n4.
http://www.world-economics-
journal.com/Contents/ArticleOverview.aspx?ID=481
Coremberg, A. (2012): Measuring Productivity in Land Rich Economies. The ARKLEMS+LAND
Project, WorldKLEMS 2nd Conference, Harvard University
Haussman R., Prichett L. and Rodrik D. (2005): Growth Accelerations, Journal of Economic
Growth, December 2005, Volume 10, Issue 4, pp 303-329
Sturgess, Brian (2010): Greek Economic Statistics: A Decade of Deceit. So how come the rating
agencies
missed
it
again?
World
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No.
AprilJune
2010
Notes
1 The methodology is based on KLEMS framework (Capital, Labor, Energy, Material and Service Inputs) in coordination with the
WORLDKLEMS Project lead by Pr. Dale Jorgenson (Harvard University), Marcel Timmer (Groningen University) and Bart Van
Ark
(Conference
Board
and
Groningen
University).
2 Another important and methodological consistent alternative estimation have been made by G. Bevaqua, former Director of
CPI
as
CPI
GB,
which
is
issue
by
distribution.
3 After 2007, many consultants and experts have been fined by the government; the Argentinean justice system has quashed
penalties
only
The
recently
International
after
more
Standard
than
four
Classification
years
of
of
trials
All
and
judicial
Economic
conflicts
Activities
5 In the case of restaurants and non-regular passenger transportation, the traditional methodology uses a demand function
approach (because there are no direct surveys on those industries), so index prices do not enter directly in the estimation
unless through the relative prices of those categories in the CPI. But this methodology was abandoned in 2003, before the the
intervention.