1993 SNA Update Information - Military expenditures |
Issue description | Issue description in [English] | [French] | [Russian] | [Spanish] | The 1993 SNA divides military acquisitions into offensive weapons and their means of delivery, and all
other. The former are excluded from capital formation regardless of their life length. This treatment implies
that “defence” is not a service provided by government using military hardware as associated assets.
Further, weapons that have already been expensed can actually be taken out of stock for use or for exports
and would have to be balanced by a negative component in government final consumption. Should the line
between gross capital formation and intermediate consumption be drawn differently? |
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Corresponding papers (Click on icon to see document in either pdf or word format) | AEG papers: | Posted on 4/30/2004 | | | Canberra II Group’s recommendations to treat military weapon systems as fixed assets - revised | | Posted on 4/28/2004 | | | Canberra II Group’s recommendations to treat military weapon systems as fixed assets | | AEG summaries: | Posted on 5/28/2004 | | | Decision of the AEG on the classification of military weapon systems as fixed assets - outcome of the consultation | | Posted on 4/27/2004 | | | Decision of the AEG on the classification of military weapon systems as fixed assets |
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Statistics | Number of AEG recommendations: | 2 | Number of country comments: | 50 | Number of expert comments: | 3 |
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Corresponding AEG Meetings | The issue was discussed at the following meetings: | February 2004 |
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