

DEALERS AND REVENUE OF
ECONOMIC INDUSTRIES
ACCORDING TO
VALUE ADDED TAX 1998-2000
JERUSALEM, DECEMBER 2001
C O N T E N T S
INTRODUCTION
2. Definitions and Explanations
PART A - ANNUAL DATA - DIAGRAMS AND TABLES
Diagrams
1. Distribution of Revenue in the Economy for 2000
2. Distribution of Dealers in the Economy for 2000
3. Percentage of Revenue at Nil V.A.T. Rate of Total Revenue for 2000
4. Percentage of Total Inputs of Total Revenue for 1998-2000
T a b l e s
List of Categories, Divisions, Groups and Classes of Economic Industries
Tables For 1998-2000
1. Revenue of Industries of the Economy by
2. Number of Active Dealers of the Economy, by
3. Rate of Change in Revenue of the Economy, Each Year
Compared
with the
4. Percentage of Revenue at Nil Rate
5. Percentage of Inputs (incl. Equipment) on which
6. Dealers, Revenue and Product in the Commerce
Industries
Tables For 2000
7. Dealers and Revenue in Commerce and Services Industries,
by
Type of Dealer and Type of
8. Dealers and Revenue in Commerce and Services Industries,
by
Quantitative
Characteristics
9. Dealers and Revenue in Commerce and Services Industries,
by
Size Groups of Revenue
10. Dealers in Commerce and Services Industries, by
Districts (Revenue, NIS
Million)
11. Dealers in Commerce and Services Industries, by
Cities (Revenue, NIS Million)
12. Opening and Closing of Businesses in
2000
PART B - MONTHLY INDICES, 1999-2000
Diagrams
5. Total Commerce and Services
7. Accommodation Services and Restaurants
8. Personal and other Services
9. Banking, Insurance and other Financial Institutions
10. Busines Activities, Real Estate
12. Health Services and Welfare and Social Work
T a b l e s
13. Revenue Indices in the Economy’s Industries, According to
14. Revenue Indices in Total Commerce and Services Industries
– Original,
Seasonally Adjusted and Trend Data, at 1995 Prices
15. Revenue Indices in Commerce Industry Original, Seasonally
Adjusted and Trend Data, at 1995 Prices
16. Revenue Indices in Wholesale and Retail Commerce Industries
– Original,
Seasonally Adjusted Data, at 1995 Prices
17. Revenue Indices in Accommodation Services and Restaurants
Industry –
Original, Seasonally Adjusted and Trend Data, at 1995 Prices
18. Revenue Indices in Banking, Insurance and other Financial
Institutions
Industry – Original, Seasonally Adjusted and Trend Data, at
1995 Prices
19. Revenue Indices in Business Activities, Real Estate and
Renting Industry –
Original, Seasonally Adjusted and Trend Data, at 1995
Prices
20. Revenue Indices in Computer and other Business Activities
Industry –
Original, Seasonally Adjusted Data, at 1995 Prices
21. Revenue Indices in the Education Industry – Original,
Seasonally Adjusted and Trend Data, at 1995 Prices
22. Revenue Indices in Health Services and Welfare and Social Work
–
Original, Seasonally Adjusted and Trend Data, at 1995
Prices
23. Revenue Indices in Personal and other Services –
Original, Seasonally
Adjusted and Trend Data, at 1995 Prices
INTRODUCTION
This publication continues previous publications on “Dealers and Revenue According to Value Added Tax Data” starting with 1987 data.
Part A - Annual Tables
Tables 1-5 present data on revenue, number of dealers, price changes, real changes in revenue, input as a percentage of total revenue and the percentage of revenue on which no V.A.T. is due of total revenue - for the entire economy, by economic industries.
Tables 6-11 present economic data on Commerce and Services industries (and sometimes data for the total economy, as well).
Tables 1-6 relate to a number of years and the rest of the tables only relate to 2000. Data of 1998 and 1999 in these tables were revised.
Similarly, there are Diagrams that describe the distribution by industry of revenue, number of dealers, percentage of inputs and revenue on which V.A.T. is not due in 2000.
Part B - Monthly Indices 1999-2000
Table 13 presents monthly indices of revenue for economic industries at current prices and Tables 14-23 present monthly indices at fixed prices of 1995 for Commerce and Services industries, seasonally adjusted indices and the trend change according to the Henderson method.
It should be mentioned that the industry distribution is based on the Standard Classification of All Economic Activities 1993 .
2. Definitions and Explanations
2.1 General Definitions
Population - The survey population includes all the dealers who were active (see definition below) in 2000. According to the definition of a dealer, the population does not include banks, insurance companies, provident funds, non-profit institutions (NPIs) and government and municipal institutions. Similarly, tables do not include the diamonds industry.
A dealer - defined for V.A.T. as one who sells products and assets or supplies services, and is not a non-profit or a financial institution.
An active dealer - according to the definition of the Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS) an active dealer is someone who reported a revenue higher than zero in at least one month in the year (meaning that nil rate dealers are deducted).
It should be mentioned that V.A.T. authorities, for administrative considerations, define a dealer as active if he submitted reports during the year, even if total annual revenue was zero.
The tables of this publication use the CBS’s definition.
Nil rate dealer - the CBS defines a nil rate dealer as a
dealer who reports to V.A.T. authorities amounts of zero revenue in all months
of a calendar year.
The numeration of the dealers was arranged in two ways:
A. Tables 2, 6, 10 and 11 show data concerning the number of
active dealers in 1999, after deducting nil dealers.
B. Tables 7-9 show data concerning the number of active dealers in 1999, after deducting nil dealers and weighting the active months for those dealers who were active only part of the year. The purpose of this weighting is to avoid duplicity in the number of dealers, in cases when new dealers files that opened during the year replaced previous dealer files which were still registered in the V.A.T. The weighting enables an exact representation of the population.
2.2 Classification of Dealers - Definitions
Classification of Dealers by Size and by Type of Dealer
Petty dealer - a dealer with no more than two employed persons, whose turnover does not exceed a certain sum determined by the Minister of Finance. According to rule No. 5877, starting January 1st 1999, the sum is NIS 240 thousand per year.
Exempt petty dealer - from May 1992 the V.A.T. authorities exempted a group of petty dealers, with small a turnover (NIS 59,155 a year as of January 1st 2001), from paying V.A.T. and they are not included in the investigated population or in the CBS’s sample.
Authorized dealer - a dealer registered according to the registration requirement as an authorized dealer and is not a petty dealer. Only an authorized dealer may issue invoices that can be used for deducting input tax.
Authorized dealers are divided in the tables into two types:
Company - a dealer listed as a company in the Registrar of Companies.
Authorized dealer that is not a company - and from herein, will be called authorized dealer.
Additional definitions of types of employment:
Partnership - several dealers who requested to register as one dealer are considered a partnership.
Self-employed - a petty dealer or an authorized dealer with no employees.
Employer - a dealer that is not self employed.
2.3 Economic Data - Definitions
For all the active dealers in a calendar year, annual and monthly data were accepted. The data accepted are: revenue at the rate of 17%, revenue at nil V.A.T. rate, total inputs, descriptive characteristics of the dealers and their reporting patterns.
Definition of Revenue and its Components
Total V.A.T. reincludes: revenue on which V.A.T. at 17% rate is due, revenue at nil V.A.T. rate and revenue exempt from V.A.T.
Revenue on which V.A.T. is Due
The revenue of this component includes revenue from sales of goods and provision of services in Israel (except revenue at nil V.A.T. rate) and the revenue from sales of fixed assets of the company. The revenue of all the indirect taxes (except for V.A.T.) that are due on products and services.
Revenue at Nil V.A.T. Rate
This is revenue on which V.A.T. is not paid. The revenue at nil V.A.T. rate is revenue from sales of fresh fruits and vegetables, and from exports of goods and services and provision of services to tourists from abroad as well, and the tax rate on it is zero.
Revenue Exempt from V.A.T.
This is revenue on which V.A.T. is not paid and can not be
returned on inputs. Revenue exempt from V.A.T. includes diamonds sales within
the Commerce Industry, rental of assets for residence and sales of goods and
provision of services for consumption in Elat (except for sales of vehicles and
durable goods).
Total Inputs
Total inputs is the value of purchases of the dealer from
authorized dealers which entitles it to V.A.T. returns, and includes current
inputs for production and purchases of capital formation, such as: acquisition
of buildings, equipment and machinery. Not included are purchases that are
exempt from V.A.T. like fresh fruits and vegetables, crude diamonds, and
purchases from dealers whose revenue is exempt from V.A.T.
2.4 Definition of Locality
The locality attributed to the dealer is that which serves
for correspondence with the dealer, that may differ from the place of the
business.
2.5 Explanations
2.5.1Reporting Unit - Dealer
The reporting unit for V.A.T. is different from the reporting unit for other administrative sources, such as National Insurance or Income Tax. For V.A.T., the unit is the dealer and for National Insurance, the unit is the employer or the self-employed.
These differences in the definitions often cause lack of correspondence between the data from the different sources. For example, the employer that appears in National Insurance, in a certain economic industry can include additional dealers in V.A.T. and otherwise.
The most prominent difference between the reporting unit for V.A.T. and for the other sources is in cases where the reporting unit for V.A.T. is V.A.T. partnership (see next item).
2.5.2V.A.T. Partnerships
V.A.T. partnerships are created under the V.A.T. Law which requires registration as a dealer of V.A.T. partnership, but also enables for a non-registered partnership to register as a V.A.T. partnership.
A partnership may include businesses from similar or different industries. In a case where the companies act in the same industry, the partnership classification is simple. In cases where the companies act in different industries, the partnership was classified according to its main industry. It should be mentioned that:
a. In individual cases, when a specific industry could not be determined, the dealers were classified to an inclusive industry. The problem mainly exists in large conglomerates.
b. In most files of kibbutzim the complete revenue report of the kibbutz from Agriculture, Manufacturing, Commerce or Services industries appear in one dealer file, and therefore, it was difficult to classify kibbutz files in the appropriate industry.
The difficulty in classifying partnerships leads to small distortions in the industry estimates. For instance, in 2000 the percentage of partnerships was 6% of total dealers and 24% of total annual revenue.
2.5.3Data Obtained from V.A.T. Authorities
The listing obtained from V.A.T. authorities includes: dealer number (that identifies the dealer), locality code and other address details, economic industry according to V.A.T. classification as well as total revenue, revenue on which V.A.T. is due, revenue at nil rate, exempt revenue and total inputs.
There are separate fields for current inputs and inputs for capital formation in V.A.T. files, but actually the separation is not done diligently. Therefore, it is not possible to calculate the added value and the industry product from these figures and due to this, the separation between these fields was eliminated in the file obtained by the CBS.
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