Government Finance Statistics Manual 2014

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302 Government Finance Statistics Manual 2014


determine whether such an entity or unit should be
treated as part of the general government sector or
public fi nancial corporations sector:


  • If a public institutional unit is created by govern-
    ment solely to assume management of the assets
    or liabilities of the distressed corporation, and is
    not a market producer, the unit should be classi-
    fi ed in the general government sector because it
    is not involved in fi nancial intermediation.

  • If the new unit has other functions and the man-
    agement of the assets or liabilities of the distressed
    corporation is a temporary task, its classifi cation
    as a government unit or a public fi nancial corpo-
    ration is made according to the rules described
    in the section on restructuring agencies in para-
    graphs 2.129–2.131.


Statistical treatment of “capital injections”

A3.47 Th e assistance provided by government (or
another public sector unit) to the unit suff ering fi -
nancial distress is usually recorded as a loan, a capital
transfer, or an equity injection. Figure A3.2 provides
a decision tree for the statistical treatment of “capital
injections.”
A3.48 When a public sector unit (investor unit),
such as a government unit, intervenes by means of a
capital injection that is legally in the form of a loan
to the corporation in distress, the statistical treat-
ment depends on whether the investor unit obtains
an eff ective fi nancial claim on the corporation, as de-
scribed in paragraph A3.27.
A3.49 When a public sector unit, such as govern-
ment, intervenes by means of a capital injection other
than a loan to the corporation in distress, the statisti-
cal treatment depends on whether a realistic return^14
can be expected on this investment:


  • If the public sector unit (investor unit) can expect
    a realistic return on the investment, the investor
    unit records an increase in fi nancial assets in the
    form of equity and investment fund shares, and
    a decrease in fi nancial assets (e.g., currency and
    deposits) or an increase in liabilities, depending
    on how the acquisition of equity is fi nanced.


(^14) A realistic rate of return on funds is indicated by the intention
to earn a rate of return that is suffi cient to generate dividends or
holding gains at a later date, and that is a claim on the residual
value of the corporation.
Th e corporation in fi nancial distress records an
increase in fi nancial assets (e.g., currency and de-
posits), and an increase in nondebt liabilities in
the form of equity and investment fund shares.



  • Th e portion of the investment on which no real-
    istic return can be expected—which may be the
    entire investment—is treated as a capital transfer.
    A3.50 A capital injection in the form of a capital
    transfer (full or partial) is recorded when the funds
    are provided:

  • Without receiving anything of equal value in
    exchange

  • Without a reasonable expectation of a realistic
    rate of return

  • To compensate for the impairment of assets or
    capital as a result of large operating defi cits accu-
    mulated over two or more years, and exceptional
    losses due to factors outside the control of the
    enterprise.
    A3.51 Th e unit providing the assistance records
    expense in the form of a capital transfer and a de-
    crease in fi nancial assets (e.g., currency and deposits)
    or an increase in liabilities, depending how this capital
    transfer is fi nanced. Th e recipient records revenue in
    the form of a capital transfer and an increase in fi nan-
    cial assets in the form of currency and deposits.
    A3.52 In determining the magnitude of the capital
    transfers, the following points need to be taken into
    account:

  • If the government buys assets from the corpora-
    tion to be assisted, the amount paid may be more
    than the true market price of the assets.

  • Th e purchase of assets should be recorded at
    the current market price, and, except for loans,
    a capital transfer should be recorded for the dif-
    ference between the market price and the actual
    amount paid.

  • Governments oft en buy loans from fi nancial
    institutions during a bailout. Unless a loan be-
    comes tradable and is traded at an established
    market value, it is always recorded in balance
    sheets at nominal value. Only if a market for the
    loans develops and the loans are regularly traded,
    they are reclassifi ed as securities (see paragraphs
    7.157 and 7.163) and also recorded at market
    value.

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