NOTES
ON METHODOLOGY 2017.
Source and methods of data collection
The data source for the statistics on the trading in goods with EU Member States
is the Intrastat form used by the reporting units to report on arrivals and/or
dispatches on the monthly basis, that is, for each month in which goods
physically enter or leave the territory of the Republic of Croatia. The
reporting units are all business entities, value added tax payers, whose value
of trading in goods with EU Member States exceeds the exemption threshold
determined for the reference year. For 2017, an exemption threshold of 1.7
million kuna for arrivals and of 750 thousand kuna for dispatches has been
determined. In order to achieve the complete harmonisation with the EU
methodology and legislation, data on foreign trade in goods have been
supplemented with trade value below the exemption threshold, after being
estimated on the basis of data on supplies and acquisitions of goods in/from EU
Member States provided by the Tax Administration Office of the Republic of
Croatia.
The data source for the statistics on the trading in goods with third countries,
that is, non-EU countries, are Single Administrative Documents on export and
import of goods. The Croatian Bureau of Statistics receives the reviewed Single
Administrative Documents from the Customs Administration of the Republic of
Croatia in the form of data records.
Following basic methodological recommendations of the UN Statistical Office and
Eurostat, the Croatian Bureau of Statistics statistically processes and
disseminates the collected Intrastat and Extrastat data as unique information on
the foreign trade in goods of the Republic of Croatia.
Legal basis
The legal basis for the conduct of the Intrastat survey is the European
legislation related to the statistics on trading in goods between EU Member
States (Regulation (EC) No. 638/2004 and amending regulations Nos 222/2009 and
659/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council as well as the Commission
Implementing Regulation No. 1982/2004 and the Commission amending regulations
Nos 1915/2005, 91/2010, 96/2010 and 1093/2013), the Official Statistics Act (NN,
Nos 103/03, 75/09, 59/12 and 12/13 – consolidated text),
the Annual Implementation Plan
of Statistical Activities of the Republic of Croatia 2017 (NN, No. 63/17) and
the Customs Administration Act (NN, Nos 68/13, 30/14 and 115/16). More detailed
notes on the methodology of this survey are published on the web site of the
Croatian Bureau of Statistics
(http://www.dzs.hr/default_e.htm).
The legal basis for Extrastat is the European legislation related to the
statistics on trading in goods with third countries (the Regulation (EC) No
471/2009 and the amending regulations Nos 2016/1724 and 2016/2119 of the
European Parliament and of the Council, the Commission Regulation (EU) No.
92/2010 and the amending regulation No. 2016/1253 as well as the Commission
Regulation (EU) No 113/2010), the EU Customs Legislations Implementation Act
(NN, No. 40/16), the Official Statistics Act (NN, Nos 103/03, 75/09, 59/12 and
12/13 – consolidated text),
the Annual
Implementation Plan of Statistical Activities of the Republic of Croatia 2017
(NN, No. 63/17), the Customs Administration Act (NN, Nos 68/13, 30/14 and
115/16) and the Ordinance on Filling in the Single Administrative Document (NN,
No. 77/13).
Coverage and comparability
Statistics on foreign trade in goods include all goods exported from or imported
into the country. Data on foreign trade in goods include both export and import
based on gross inward and outward processing.
In inward and outward processing, the total value of goods
is monitored. Thus, in the case of an active transfer, the value of goods
imported for inward processing, that is, the full value of goods exported after
inward processing (including the value of imported goods, the value of domestic
material and the value of domestic services).
Besides commercial transactions (which includes charges), the statistics also
comprises goods for which the trade, that is, export and import, is performed
without the payment of the counter value. This
statistics does not include temporary export and import (less than two years) of
goods that are returned to the owner in an unaltered state, services, monetary
gold, goods used as carriers of customized information including software and
software downloaded from the Internet, means of payment which are legal tender
and securities, goods supplied free of charge which are not the subject of
commercial transactions (advertising material and commercial samples), supplying
of Croatian diplomatic missions abroad and foreign diplomatic missions in the
Republic of Croatia, and temporary exports and imports for repair.
All the data on export and import are expressed in values and quantities. Value
of goods is determined on the basis of original documents of business entities
(contracts, invoices).
The values expressed are real values achieved at the time
deals were contracted (invoice values), which are then further recalculated
according to deliveries at the Croatian border.
Export values are calculated on the basis of the FOB parity. It means that the
invoice value is reduced for transportation and other costs incurred from the
Croatian border to the place of delivery abroad, if it is agreed that goods are
delivered abroad. If it is agreed for delivery to take place in the country
(Republic of Croatia), the invoice value is increased by the costs incurred from
the place of delivery in Croatia to the Croatian border.
Import values are calculated on the basis of the CIF parity. It means that the
invoice value is increased by transportation and other costs incurred from the
place of delivery abroad to the Croatian border, if it is agreed that goods are
delivered abroad. If it is agreed for delivery to take place in the country
(Republic of Croatia), the invoice value is reduced for the costs incurred from
the Croatian border to the place of delivery in Croatia.
The amounts expressed in foreign currencies are converted
into kuna, euros and American dollars according to the monthly exchange rate
lists determined for the reporting month. The mean exchange rate of the Croatian
National Bank is used.
Since 1 January 2002, the 8-digit code of the Combined Nomenclature, the EU
customs and statistical classification of products, has been used in data
collection and it is harmonised up to the 6-digit code level with the Harmonised
system.
Data on export are shown by countries of destination. In
Extrastat, data on import are shown by countries of the origin of goods, while
in Intrastat data on the arrivals of goods are presented by countries of
dispatch.
The economic classification of countries refers to:
European Union – EU (Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech
Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Latvia,
Lithuania, Luxembourg, Hungary, Malta, Netherlands, Germany, Poland, Portugal,
Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom)
European Free Trade Association – EFTA (Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway,
Switzerland)
Central European Free Trade Agreement – CEFTA (Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Montenegro, Kosovo, Macedonia,FYR, Moldova, Serbia)
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries – OPEC (Algeria, Angola, Ecuador,
Iraq, Islamic Republic of Iran, Qatar, Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria, Saudi Arabia,
United Arab Emirates and Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela).
Abbreviations
CIF
cost, insurance and freight
Eurostat
Statistical Office of the European Communities
FOB
free on board
NN
Narodne novine, official gazette of the Republic of
Croatia
UN
United Nations
Prepared by:
Boro Žderić
Dubravka Drempetić
Snježana Šala
Saša Tomašević