posted on 2017-11-02, 05:56authored byFausten, Dietrich K, Pickett, Brett
Large and variable errors & omissions imply that reported data constitute erroneous and potentially unreliable information for policy formation. To the extent that successive data revisions involve substantial alterations in the reported statistics, the study of policy conduct and of policy effectiveness is susceptible to distortion. These considerations d m attention to the nature and extent to which economic processes are misreported. Accordingly, the present study explores two specific issues in the statistical reporting of Australia's cross-border transactions: convergence of reported transactions over successive revisions, and the potential source or prominent driver/-s of the balancing item. The major positive findings are that there is only limited evidence of convergence of measured to true magnitudes of cross-border transactions; that there is robust evidence of structural instability of the balancing item; and that financial sector transactions appear increasingly to constitute the major source of misreporting of balance of payments outcomes.
History
Year of first publication
2002
Series
Monash University. Faculty of Business and Economics. Department of Economics