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Have revisions to GDP over time (from new source data and improved methods) raised GDP growth?
Why does GDP include imputations?
Recession: How is that defined?
Why do gross domestic product (GDP) and gross domestic income (GDI) differ, and what does that imply?
Can BEA use data on withheld taxes to improve its early estimates of wages and salaries?
What is BEA planning to do to improve the accuracy of early estimates of wages and salaries?
How does BEA treat Federal payments to the Military and Civil Service Retirement Funds?
How are bad debt expenses, asset write downs, and loan-loss provisions treated in estimating NIPA corporate profits?
Is offshoring causing GDP and productivity growth to be overstated?
What new data lead to the sometimes large revisions in wages and salaries?
Why did motor vehicle domestic unit production in the third quarter of 2006 decline, while the real—inflation adjusted—value of motor vehicle output in GDP increased?
What factors explain the difference between average compensation of federal government civilian employees and average compensation of private-sector employees?
Why is the estimate of NIPA dividends as a share of corporate profits much larger than the share reported in private-sector estimates?
How are S corporations reported in the NIPAs?
How is BEA using the Census Bureau's quarterly services survey in its estimates of personal consumption expenditures?
Where are the dividend measures shown in the national accounts?
How is the Medicare Prescription Drug Plan reflected in the NIPAs?
How do I use percent changes from month (or quarter) one year ago?
What are changes in definitions to the NIPA accounts?
How did the conversion to the 1997 North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) affect the National Income and Product Account (NIPA) estimates?