Impact Study on Social Accounting Matrix by Intrabusiness Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
3. Research Methodology
- O1:
- Identification of the building vulnerabilities for model SAM according to the present conditions on the global market.
- O2:
- Identification of the intrabusiness sectoral flows according to the social accounting criteria.
- O3:
- The literature has taken the first steps in this area [31], highlighting that there is a correlation between intra- and interbusiness connections with implications for consumption, investment and other equilibrium economic relationships.
- O4:
- Defining the social accounting matrix model based on intrabusiness exchanges;
- O5:
- Testing the model for a growth pole in EU27;
- O6:
- Dissemination of the model’s results in connection to the realities in the growth pole;
- O7:
- Evaluating the public policies’ efficiency in the growth pole by using model SAMI.
4. Results and Discussion
- (a)
- Class 1–Food industry;
- (b)
- Class 2–Metallurgical industry;
- (c)
- Class 3–Manufacturing industry
- (d)
- Class 4–Construction and trade;
- (e)
- Class 5–Transport services;
- (f)
- Class 6–IT services;
- (g)
- Class 7–Engineering and technical consultancy services.
- (a)
- Lack of efficiency or lack of public policies;
- (b)
- Fiscal requirements;
- (c)
- Lack of market, inefficiency of intra-business exchanges;
- (d)
- Increasing indebtedness;
- (e)
- Effectiveness of social policies.
- (a)
- Quote 1–upward trend over the average growth rate, coefficient 5;
- (b)
- Quote 2–upward trend as the average of the indicator, coefficient 3;
- (c)
- Quote 3–rising trend below the average growth rate of the indicator, coefficient 1;
- (d)
- Quote 4–downward trend of the indicator, coefficient 0.
5. Conclusions and Policy Implications
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Companies | Households | Public Sector | Other | Net Investment | Total (Revenues) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Companies | C | GF | (X − I)K | Inv | C + GF + (X − I)K + I | |
Households | W | GH | (X − I)C | S + GH + (X − I)C | ||
Public sector | TF | TH | TF + TH | |||
Other | (X − I)K | (X − I)C | (X − I)K + (X − I)C | |||
Net investment | SH | SG | SH + SG | |||
Total (expenditures) | S + TF + (X − I)K | C + TH + (X − I)C + SH | GF + GH + SG | (X − I)C + (X − I)K | Inv |
Class of Activity | CA_AVG | CAP_AVG | Effectiveness of Public Policies | Effectiveness Level |
---|---|---|---|---|
Class 1–Food industry; | 5 | 3 | 2 | Efficient |
Class 2–Metallurgical industry; | 0 | 0 | 0 | Neutral |
Class 3–Manufacturing industry | 5 | 3 | 2 | Efficient |
Class 4–Construction and trade; | 5 | 3 | 2 | Efficient |
Class 5–Transport services; | 0 | 5 | −5 | Inefficient |
Class 6–IT services; | 5 | 3 | 2 | Efficient |
Class 7–Engineering and technical consultancy services. | 5 | 3 | 2 | Efficient |
Class of Activity | PB_AVG | PN_AVG | Effectiveness of Fiscal Policies | Effectiveness Level |
---|---|---|---|---|
Class 1–Food industry; | 1 | 1 | 0 | Neutral |
Class 2–Metallurgical industry; | 1 | 3 | 2 | Efficient |
Class 3–Manufacturing industry; | 1 | 1 | 0 | Neutral |
Class 4–Construction and trade; | 1 | 1 | 0 | Neutral |
Class 5–Transport services; | 0 | 0 | 0 | Neutral |
Class 6–IT services; | 5 | 5 | 0 | Neutral |
Class 7–Engineering and technical consultancy services. | 1 | 1 | 0 | Neutral |
Class of Activity | ST_AVG | PB_AVG | Effectiveness of Intra-Business Exchanges | Effectiveness Level |
---|---|---|---|---|
Class 1–Food industry; | 1 | 1 | 0 | Neutral |
Class 2–Metallurgical industry; | 5 | 1 | 4 | Maximum Efficient |
Class 3–Manufacturing industry; | 0 | 1 | −1 | Inefficient |
Class 4–Construction and trade; | 1 | 1 | 0 | Neutral |
Class 5–Transport services; | 1 | 0 | 1 | Efficient |
Class 6–IT services; | 1 | 5 | −4 | Inefficient |
Class 7–Engineering and technical consultancy services. | 3 | 1 | 2 | Efficient |
Class of Activity | DAT_AVG | CAP_AVG | Efficiency of the Microeconomic Remuneration | Efficiency Level |
---|---|---|---|---|
Class 1–Food industry; | 1 | 3 | −2 | Inefficient |
Class 2–Metallurgical industry; | 0 | 0 | 0 | Neutral |
Class 3–Manufacturing industry; | 3 | 3 | 0 | Neutral |
Class 4–Construction and trade; | 3 | 3 | 0 | Neutral |
Class 5–Transport services; | 5 | 5 | 0 | Neutral |
Class 6–IT services; | 3 | 3 | 0 | Neutral |
Class 7–Engineering and technical consultancy services. | 1 | 3 | −2 | Inefficient |
Class of Activity | SAL_AVG | CA_AVG | Efficiency of the Social Policies | Efficiency Level |
---|---|---|---|---|
Class 1–Food industry; | 5 | 5 | 0 | Neutral |
Class 2–Metallurgical industry; | 0 | 0 | 0 | Neutral |
Class 3–Manufacturing industry; | 5 | 5 | 0 | Neutral |
Class 4–Construction and trade; | 5 | 5 | 0 | Neutral |
Class 5–Transport services; | 0 | 0 | 0 | Neutral |
Class 6–IT services; | 5 | 5 | 0 | Neutral |
Class 7–Engineering and technical consultancy services. | 5 | 5 | 0 | Neutral |
Indicators | Business | Households | Governments | Rest of the World | Intergenerational Transfers | Output | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Investments | Regional Endowment | ||||||
Business | Intermediate goods and services | Personal consumption | Current governmental purchases of goods and services | Net exports; Dividends and interest from rest of the world | Net domestic private investments; Public investments. | Technical progress; Depletion of non-renewable resources, renewable resources, soil resources; Degradation of the environment | Adjusted net regional/national product (NRP) |
SAM results | International analysis without globalisation factor | Traditional consumption evaluation under the influence of international markets | Analysis of government policies in the context of the international markets’ expansion | Trade agreements in the context of customs protectionism | National Strategic Investment Policies | Technical Progress analyzed from the perspective of competitive advantage | Business services aiming at territorial expansion and winning international markets |
SAMI results | Strength model, including globalisation factor; Business to business analysis. | Evaluation of the global acquisition for the digitized society under the influence of the global markets | Analysis of Cohesion Policies in context of the global markets | Multinational corporative policies in the context of free movement of goods and services | The role of FDI in the context of globalization; Financing schemes at European level | Technical Progress in the global digitized society | Analysis of intra-business exchanges, quantification of financial flows and strategic development agreements on long-term for economic entities through global partnerships |
Households | Wages, salaries, other labour income; Net personal interest; Proprietor’s income; Rental income; Business transfers | Net interest paid by governments; Transfer payments less social security contributions | Increase in human capital | ||||
SAM results | Labour productivity analysis by intruder Input- Output method | Assessing the success of social policies through their monetary side | SAM model does not quantify the elements of labor migration and the global change in consumer behavior under the impact of global trade | SAM model doesn’t cover intergenera-tional transfers related to investments | SAM evaluates inter-regional transfers at the household level by increasing the value of the skilled labour. | The outputs of the SAM matrix are limited to the development of human capital in the traditional context of national markets engaged in international competitions. | |
SAMI results | Introduction of CSR values and staff motivation for optimizing labor productivity | Quantifying sustainable social protection efforts through social cohesion policies at European level | The elements of global trade are quantified by intrabusiness financial flows | SAMI, through its regional component, quantifies the impact of investments on households | Aspects regarding labor migration and social protection of European citizens through CBM community monitoring mechanisms are introduced in the SAMI matrix | SAMI integrates innovative concepts on social responsibility and community monitoring to assess the impact of households in social accounting | |
Govern-ments | Corporate taxes; Social security taxes; Indirect taxes; Surplus of government enterprises less subsidies | Personal taxes; Local taxes | Increase in value of subsoil resources | ||||
SAM results | Financing the economy through the business component is quantified through SAM exclusively through taxation. | Financing the economy through the social component is quantified through SAM exclusively through taxation. | SAM does not assess the financing of macroeconomics through external financing mechanisms (European Sector Financing Scheme, for example). | SAM does not quantify the intra-regional impact of the investments. | SAM sets the foundations for sustainable development concepts but does not assess them at the current market demands’ level. | SAM carries out a fiscal quantification of the macroeconomics’ remuneration through the classic components of fiscal mechanisms and does not correspond to the current requirements on the complexity of fiscal policies applied at regional level. | |
SAMI results | The introduction of intra-business flows strengthens the financing component by adding the multiplier effect of the economy to the commercial and investment chains. | SAMI highlights regional labor transfers as a potential development factor. | SAMI encompasses European funding schemes in the context of macro and micro financial flows. | SAMI quantifies the intra-regional impact of the investments. | SAMI quantifies the sustainability objectives mentioned in Agenda 2030. | SAMI quantifies intra-business exchanges and sustainable development components. SAMI improves the prospect of macroeconomic remuneration on the society’s integrated financial flows based on interchange. | |
Rest of the world | Transfer payments | Net investment or disinvestment in the rest of the world | |||||
SAM results | SAM does not quantify global intrabusiness flows. | Phenomena such as migration of qualified labour with impact on the development of a region (concrete case analyzed in the paper) are not analyzed by SAM. The impact of labour transfer through the size of goodwill elements at regional entity level is a major vulnerability of the model. | The monetary payment system, as a support to the national economy, is addressed by SAM in payments balances’ equilibrium, but the global dimensions to which national monetary systems must currently face cannot be quantified. | SAM quantifies net investment as growth support. Currently, under the pressure of multinationals, the SAM model does not distinguish between national private and public net investments. | SAM does not quantify this component. | The international component is partially quantified by SAM by taking into account the transfer of payments and net investment. | |
SAMI results | SAMI quantifies global intrabusiness flows. | SAMI quantifies goodwill by identifying intra-business flows. | The efficiency of public policies quantified by the model translates precisely the need for funding based on the global trade of national economies, including up to the regional level–growth poles. | SAMI quantifies net investment as growth support. Currently, under the pressure of multinationals, the SAMI model distinguishes between private and public national net investments. | SAMI is focused on regional development, intra-business flows and the expansion of public-private entropy in the region. | The international component is quantified by SAMI at regional level by increasing system entropy and highlighting globalization in all its aspects. | |
Savings | Retained earnings NRP | Personal savings | Governments’ surplus or deficit on current account | ||||
SAM results | SAM quantifies performance through the Adjusted net regional/national product (NRP), calculating a global accumulation value based on Input–Output method. | SAM quantifies indirect welfare through personal savings. | SAM quantifies social welfare through the surplus or deficit of the balance of payments. | SAM does not quantify the impact of global trade on the region’s welfare. | SAM doesn’t quantify the regional dimension of welfare. | Welfare is calculated by extrinsic accumulation function. | |
SAMI results | SAMI quantifies the transaction performance and economic chain which gives it greater sustainability and greater entropy of the analyzed regional system. | SAMI takes into account the social policy elements introduced by international cohesion agreements and precisely quantifies welfare based on the capacity of the system to provide long-term sustainable growth. | SAMI quantifies the viability of the macro system through demand-supply interaction with the economic environment in the region, which highlights the entropy of the system. | SAMI quantifies the impact of global trade on the regional welfare. | SAMI accomplishes this by introducing into the equation the assessment of sustainable regional development. | SAMI quantifies welfare through sustainable accumulation as well as through intra-business flows. | |
Changes in wealth | Net increase in assets | Net increase in endowment | Net increase in wealth | ||||
SAM results | SAM does not quantify the asymptotic curves of the evolution of welfare at the level of economic agents. | SAM does not quantify changes in population welfare, this being a vulnerability of the system. | The national economic performance materialized in the medium- and long-term growth of the economy is omitted by the SAM model. | The impact of global trade on economic well-being is ignored by SAM, which is destabilized in fulfilling its function of assessing social accounting as a whole. | SAM evaluates intra-regional investment transfers through net asset growth, not highlighting the qualitative side induced by technological progress. | SAM performs a rough assessment of the endowment growth with an emphasis on environmental components, making a preliminary review of sustainable development. | SAM concretises the change of welfare by conceptualizing net growth in welfare, which represents the quintessence of the model. |
SAMI results | SAMI aims at calculating the asymptotic curves for NACE Rev2 activity domains evaluating on their basis the interaction of economic policies with the business environment (see Figure 7). | SAMI, through regional dimension and intrabusiness flows quantification, places individuals as beneficiaries of the system and evaluates population welfare based on sustainable regional development. | These changes include macro phenomena such as inflation/deflation, unemployment, population migration, etc. and are quantified and evaluated at the level of public policy efficiency through the proposed SAMI model. | SAMI involves assessing the impact of global trade on regional sustainable development for growth poles and materializes in a multimodal complex of social accounting. | SAMI focuses on competitiveness and relates intra-regional transfers both to technological progress and to know-how. | SAMI evaluates all aspects of sustainable regional development, and through intrabusiness flow components highlights the effectiveness of sustainable development in growth poles. | SAMI emphasizes net growth in welfare through sustainable policy components and intra-business flows, potentiating their application to current market conditions. |
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Zlati, M.L.; Ionescu, R.-V.; Antohi, V.M. Impact Study on Social Accounting Matrix by Intrabusiness Analysis. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 12547. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182312547
Zlati ML, Ionescu R-V, Antohi VM. Impact Study on Social Accounting Matrix by Intrabusiness Analysis. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(23):12547. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182312547
Chicago/Turabian StyleZlati, Monica Laura, Romeo-Victor Ionescu, and Valentin Marian Antohi. 2021. "Impact Study on Social Accounting Matrix by Intrabusiness Analysis" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 23: 12547. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182312547
APA StyleZlati, M. L., Ionescu, R. -V., & Antohi, V. M. (2021). Impact Study on Social Accounting Matrix by Intrabusiness Analysis. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(23), 12547. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182312547