Government Finance Statistics Manual 2014

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186 Government Finance Statistics Manual 2014


7.82 Work in progress inventories are valued on
the basis of the cost of production at current prices
as of the balance sheet date. Th e value of standing
timber and other cultivated crops may be estimated
by discounting the future proceeds of selling the fi nal
product at current prices and the expenses of bringing
the product to maturity.

Finished goods (61223)


7.83 Finished goods (61223) consist of goods that
are the output of a production process, are still held by
their producer, and are not expected to be processed
further by the producer before being supplied to other
units. Finished goods may be held only by the units
that produce them. General government units will
have fi nished goods only if they produce goods for
sale or transfer to other units. Inventories of fi nished
goods are valued at their current sales value (before
adding any taxes, transport, or distribution charges)
or at the cost to produce them currently (i.e., their
current replacement prices).

Goods for resale (61224)


7.84 Goods for resale (61224) are goods acquired
for the purpose of reselling or transferring to other
units without being further processed. Goods for
resale may be transported, stored, graded, sorted,
washed, or packaged by their owners to present them
for resale in ways that are attractive to their custom-
ers or benefi ciaries, but they are not otherwise trans-
formed. Any general government unit that sells goods
for economically signifi cant prices, such as a museum
gift shop, is likely to possess an inventory of goods for
resale. Th is category also includes goods purchased by
general government units for provision free of charge
or at prices that are not economically signifi cant to
other units. Goods acquired by government for distri-
bution as social transfers in kind but that have not yet
been so delivered are also included in goods for resale.
7.85 Inventories of goods intended for resale are
valued at their current replacement prices.

Military inventories (61225)


7.86 Military inventories (61225) consist of sin-
gle-use items, such as ammunition, missiles, rockets,
bombs, etc., delivered by weapons or weapons sys-
tems. As noted in paragraph 7.74, in the discussion of
weapons systems as fi xed assets, most single-use items

are treated as inventories, but some types of missiles
with highly destructive capability may be treated as
fi xed assets. Military inventories are valued at their
current replacement prices.

Valuables (613)


7.87 Valuables (613) are produced assets of consid-
erable value that are not used primarily for purposes
of production or consumption but are held as stores
of value over time. Th ey are expected to appreciate, or
at least not to decline, in real value, and they do not
deteriorate over time under normal conditions.
7.88 Included in valuables are:


  • Nonmonetary gold and other precious stones and
    metals that are not intended to be used as materi-
    als and supplies in the processes of production

  • Paintings, sculptures, and other objects recog-
    nized as works of art or antiques held primarily
    as stores of value over time

  • Jewelry of signifi cant value fashioned out of pre-
    cious stones and metals, collections, and miscel-
    laneous other valuables.
    Many items fi tting the description of a valuable
    that are owned by general government units will be
    classifi ed as machinery and equipment not elsewhere
    classifi ed (611222) because they are not held primar-
    ily as stores of value but used in production, such as
    by being displayed in government museums. (See also
    paragraph 7.57.)
    7.89 To the extent that there are well-organized
    markets for valuables, they can be valued at current
    market prices, including any costs of ownership trans-
    fer, such as agents’ fees or commissions. Otherwise,
    the amounts for which they are insured against fi re,
    theft , and other risks may be appropriate.


Nonproduced assets (614)


7.90 Nonproduced assets consist of tangible, nat-
urally occurring assets—natural resources—over
which ownership rights are enforced, and intangible
nonproduced assets (6144) that are constructs of soci-
ety. Natural resources comprise land (6141), mineral
and energy resources (6142), and other naturally occur-
ring assets (6143). If ownership rights have not or can-
not be enforced over naturally occurring resources,
then they are not economic assets.
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