Several different areas of the socio-economic activity of countries, and in particular
the distribution of income, can be studied with the use of Social Accounting
Matrices (SAMs).
The features underlying a SAM allow for the reading and interpretation of the
socio-economic activity of countries, leading to the production of an empirical
work that can highlight specific aspects of the reality under study and offers the
chance to perform experiments with changes in those aspects. Thus, SAMs can
also be used to support policy decision processes.
With the aid of some methodological principles based on the works of R. Stone,
G. Pyatt and J. Round, a SAM-based approach to the study of income distribution
is carried out, seeking to provide both an empirical and a theoretical description
of the socio-economic activity of a country, respectively through a numerical and
an algebraic version of a SAM. The algebraic version can also be referred to as
a ‘SAM-based model’.
This study uses the nomenclatures of the latest version of the System of National
Accounts (2008 SNA).
By including production and institutions accounts in a matrix format, the structural
features of a country’s production and income distribution can be worked
upon together, making it possible to capture specific networks of linkages and
the corresponding multiplier effects, in subsequent modelling exercises.A basic SAM is presented, with rows and columns representing accounts. The
production accounts are represented by activities (or industries), products (or
goods and services), and factors of production. The (domestic) institutions are
represented by the current, capital and financial accounts. The rest of the world
account represents the “external” part of the (domestic) economy.
Bearing in mind the importance of ensuring the consistency of the whole system,
possible disaggregations and extensions to that basic structure are analysed.
Aggregates and balancing items that can be identified and calculated outside this
matrix format are also presented.
An assessment of a country’s distribution and use of income is presented, by
means of the identification of some of the underlying structural features of SAMs.
Macroeconomic effects of changes in income are then identified by way of an
experiment with a change in the taxes on income and wealth, paid by the households
to the government, using a SAM-based approach.
The exposition is accompanied by an example which is applied to Portugal.