EESTI PANK'S STATISTICAL ACTIVITY
Since the restoration of Eesti Pank one of its tasks
has been collecting banking statistics and drawing up the
balance of payments of the Republic of Estonia. Since 1997,
Eesti Pank also draws up Estonia's international investment
position.
The economic crises in Asia, Russia and Brazil have
considerably increased the importance of prompt, adequate and
internationally comparable macroeconomic statistics. In 1998,
the activity of Eesti Pank was mostly aimed at improving and
systematising the current practice of publishing statistical
data, proceeding from international requirements and the
development of the local financial market. At the same time,
the quality of statistical information was being improved,
and the information basis expanded.
CHANGES IN REPORTING AND COVERAGE
The systematisation of the credit institutions'
reporting and rearranging of its structure began in
1997 when data required on the banks' loan and securities
portfolio and resources incorporated was made more
detailed. In 1998, one of the priorities of improving
reporting was getting more detailed information on
off-balance sheet transactions. Six new reporting
forms on off-balance sheet activities were drawn up,
tested and introduced. These enable to get information on
the guarantees given and received by credit institutions
and other non-revocable claims and liabilities,
derivatives as well as claims and liabilities that can
arise from managing and investing the assets of
customers. In 1998, the content and format of reports
reflecting the purchase and sale of foreign currency
through credit institutions was changed. After
considering the suggestions made during the test period,
the statistical reporting concerning payment
intermediation by credit institutions was introduced from
1 July.
Proceeding from Eesti Pank's goal of guaranteeing
efficient monetary policy and banking supervision by
devoting more attention to non-banking financial
intermediation, the specification and expansion of
the necessary statistical basis was started in 1998.
Concrete steps were taken in arranging the collection of
data on leasing companies. Eesti Pank, the Estonian
Leasing Association and its members worked out a set of
reports, which helps to provide a survey of the
activities of leasing companies in Estonia. In order
to secure smooth co-operation an agreement was signed.
The first statistics of leasing companies arrived in
Eesti Pank at the beginning of 1999.
In 1998, much emphasis was put on improving the
availability of economic statistics and coverage
within Eesti Pank. A division was created for collecting
macroeconomic and real sector statistics. Handling of the
data contained in various databases was made easier by
the introduction of a new user interface (MetaCube). The
aim of these steps is to improve the awareness of Eesti
Pank management and analysts and guarantee as quick as
possible access to the data needed for decision-making.
In drawing up Estonia's balance of payments and the
international investment position Eesti Pank focussed
on the quality of the sources of information in 1998.
This was achieved by improving and adjusting
questionnaires in line with changes in legislation and
the economic environment.
In 1998, the bank also began to elaborate the rules of
publishing data on credit institutions or the so-called public
reporting. These rules will set the minimum of data
that has to be made public, the format of reporting, the
ways of publication, frequency and deadlines, as well as
the responsibility of the credit institutions' management
for the correctness of the published data.
STATISTICS ON THE INTERNATIONAL LEVEL
One goal of Eesti Pank in collecting statistical data,
making conclusions and publishing them is to improve the
availability of information to both local and
international economic agents and harmonising the data
with international standards. In 1998, the most
important step in implementing this principle was joining
the Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS) of the
IMF. Ever growing economic and financial integration
of the world has considerably increased the need for
providing the public with all-round, timely, reliable and
comparative macroeconomic statistics. In order to
guarantee this, the IMF began to introduce a data
standard for its members in 1995. In April 1996, the
Board of IMF approved the SDDS, aimed at harmonising the
content of the main economic indices of the member
countries and the publication practice. Joining the SDDS
is voluntary but once a country has joined, it has to
obey the requirements of the standard.
Since this is a framework covering the entire
macroeconomic statistics of a country it presupposes
close co-operation of the institutions collecting the
data. In Estonia, the Ministry of Finance, the State
Statistical Office and Eesti Pank prepared joining the
SDDS.
The SDDS includes 17 categories of data, which provide
information on four macroeconomic areas: - the real sector (GDP, production indices,
price indices, the labour market);
- the government sector (state budget,
government sector debt);
- the financial sector (most important data of credit institutions and the central bank, including reserve money, interest rates, stock market index);
- the external sector (the balance of payments, foreign trade, international investment position, exchange rates).
The SDDS sets definite requirements on the content,
regularity and deadlines of publishing the data. In every
category the so-called metapages have to be filled in,
describing the nature of the data, quality and
methodology of compilation as well as access by the
public. The metapages are sent to the IMF, which puts
them up on the Dissemination Standard Bulletin Board in
the Internet (http://dsbb.imf.org). By the
beginning of 1999, the IMF electronic Bulletin Board
provided data on 47 countries. The Bulletin itself does
not contain any numerical data but the IMF has provided
the possibility of linking the metapages with the
respective country pages, which provide the concentrated
numerical data described by the SDDS.
Estonia joined the SDDS in early October 1998;
Estonian metapages are available on the IMF electronic
Bulletin since 1 January 1999. As soon as the
description of the data had been published, the State
Statistical Office began building the country page
containing concrete data. The country page was
completed in January 1999 and can be found through the
Statistical Office's Internet home page at http://www.stat.ee.
The turbulence of the world economy has increased the
need for up-to-date statistical information and the IMF's
SDDS has been welcome by the market players. Positive
responses have encouraged the IMF to develop the project
further. In 1999, the system of data categories will be
improved and clear requirements on constant updating of
the metapages and country pages will be worked out.
Besides joining the SDDS, the introduction of EU
requirements into the existing Estonian statistical
system continued as an important developmentin
1998.
In December, the Board of the European Central Bank adopted a decree on the consolidated balance sheet of
financial institutions[1] . It took effect on 1
January 1999. The decree makes institutions of the
euro-zone to submit statistical data and specifies the
definitions and classifiers concerning the information.
The collected statistical data will be used for compiling
the consolidated balance sheet of financial institutions,
aimed at providing an extensive picture of the
development of the euro-zone monetary environment through
the aggregated financial assets and liabilities of the
financial institutions acting in the region seen as a
unified economic territory. However, these requirements
apply only on the Member States of the European Monetary
Union. Although the ECB requirements on banking
statistics are not mandatory for Estonia, Eesti Pank has
set the goal of introducing them into the credit
institutions' reporting practice in the near future.
Currently, the task of gathering statistical data of
the EU candidate countries lies with Statistical Office
of the European Communities (Eurostat), which has
specified the data to be provided and the deadlines. In
1998, Eesti Pank and Eurostat specified the content and
the format of the data and continued regular exchange of
information, which began in 1997.
[1] Regulation (EC) No 2819/98 of the European Central Bank of 1 December 1998 concerning the consolidated balance sheet of the monetary financial institutions sector (ECB/1998/16).
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