Informatics professional services price indexes (IPSPI)

Detailed information for 2002

Status:

Active

Frequency:

Annual

Record number:

2333

The Informatics Professional Services Price Index (IPSPI) collects financial, wage and contractor fee information that is used to produce price indexes measuring changes in prices for informatics professional services.

Data release - October 28, 2003

Description

The Informatics Professional Services Price Index (IPSPI) collects financial, wage and contractor fee information that is used to produce price indexes measuring changes in prices for informatics professional services such as data processing, hosting and related services, software development, packaged software and publishing, hardware and software consultancy, computer facilities management and system maintenance.

The IPSPI series is a useful indicator of economic activity in the informatics services industry, and can also prove helpful as a supplementary tool for performance evaluation, cost monitoring, contract assessment and benchmark comparisons. In addition, the indexes are used by the Canadian System of National Accounts to arrive at estimates of real value output for the industry through deflation.

Subjects

  • Business, consumer and property services
  • Prices and price indexes
  • Professional, scientific and technical services
  • Service price indexes

Data sources and methodology

Target population

Under the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS), this industry consists of establishments primarily engaged in: NAICS 541510: Computer Systems and Related Services (includes computer information technology consultants, development of custom software, systems and network design, systems development and analysis, computer programming to meet a customer's specifications), NAICS 511210 Software Publishers : packaged software development and publishing, NAICS 518210 Data Processing, Hosting and Related Services : Web hosting, streaming services, application hosting, processing and preparation of reports from data supplied by the customer, optical scanning data services , data entry and validation etc..

Instrument design

The questionnaire used for the IPSPI was developed and tested in consultation with numerous respondents and experts in the informatics services industry.

Sampling

This is a sample survey with a longitudinal design.

For the IPSPI, the target population consists of all establishments primarily engaged in informatics professional services, as identified on Statistics Canada's Central Frame Database. The respondents are selected through a cut-off sample survey based on the significance of their operating income and based on the region they are located in. The sample size is approximately 1000 establishments.

Data sources

Responding to this survey is mandatory.

Data are collected directly from survey respondents.

Respondents receive the questionnaire by mail. Contacts with the respondent take place when questionnaires are late or the responses provided require clarification. In the case of late respondents, several follow-up contacts can be made including sending out a reminder letter in order to obtain their response.

View the Questionnaire(s) and reporting guide(s) .

Error detection

A set of systematized error detection procedures are in place to identify outliers and possible reporting errors. For example, a larger than average increase or decrease in one of the items collected will trigger a follow up with the respondent.

Imputation

This methodology does not apply.

Estimation

Weights

The weights come from Statistics Canada's Central Frame Database and represent the gross business income for each establishment for the current reference year. The weights are updated annually.

Prices

The prices collected for the IPSPI represent the input costs of labour and the realized profit for the firm. The labour cost is calculated as the geometric mean of the firm's contract fees and wage rates for the year, while the profit portion reported is used to derive the realized net multiplier. Both of these inputs are combined using a geometric average to arrive at a total price index.

Quality evaluation

The quality of this index is maintained through the expertise of the few trained analysts assigned to it. They develop a thorough knowledge of the domain, which is supplemented by outside personal contacts for particular goods or services. Much time and effort is devoted to detecting and following up unusual fluctuations over time in the pricing patterns of goods and services. Prior to dissemination, the price indexes are analyzed and historic trends reviewed.

Disclosure control

Statistics Canada is prohibited by law from releasing any information it collects which could identify any person, business, or organization, unless consent has been given by the respondent or as permitted by the Statistics Act. Various confidentiality rules are applied to all data that are released or published to prevent the publication or disclosure of any information deemed confidential. If necessary, data are suppressed to prevent direct or residual disclosure of identifiable data.

Collected data are converted to price indexes and data are released as such, so that it is not possible to identify the suppliers of raw prices.

Revisions and seasonal adjustment

The most recent two years of published indexes are subject to revision.

Data accuracy

The statistical accuracy of this index depends on price and weight data. Price data are obtained from a sample survey and the weight information is obtained from Statistics Canada's Central Frame Database. Both kinds of input data are subject therefore to their own errors. The quality of the price data rests on the response rate. In this regard, the quality of the price information is judged to be good, as the response rate is about 79%.

Though the IPSPI uses a sample survey methodology to obtain the necessary information, confidence intervals are not currently estimated, due to the longitudinal nature of price index series. Indexes for higher and lower levels of aggregation are considered to be statistically reliable.

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