| Data: | Adjusted savings net forest depletion (% of GNI) | ||||||||
| Year: | 1960 - 2013 | ||||||||
| Country: | Indonesia | ||||||||
| Source: | World Bank (the information in this section is direct quotation from World Bank development data) | ||||||||
| Series Code: | NY.ADJ.DFOR.GN.ZS | ||||||||
| Topic: | Economic Policy & Debt: National accounts: Adjusted savings & income | ||||||||
| Short Definition: | 0 | ||||||||
| Long Definition: | Net forest depletion is calculated as the product of unit resource rents and the excess of roundwood harvest over natural growth. | ||||||||
| Unit of Measurement: | 0 | ||||||||
| Periodicity: | Annual | ||||||||
| Base Period: | 0 | ||||||||
| Reference Period: | 0 | ||||||||
| Aggregation method: | Weighted average | ||||||||
| Limitations and exceptions: | A positive net depletion figure for forest resources implies that the harvest rate exceeds the rate of natural growth; this is not the same as deforestation, which represents a change in land use. In principle, there should be an addition to savings in countries where growth exceeds harvest, but empirical estimates suggest that most of this net growth is in forested areas that cannot currently be exploited economically. Because the depletion estimates reflect only timber values, they ignore all the external and nontimber benefits associated with standing forests. | ||||||||
| Notes from original source: | 0 | ||||||||
| General Comments: | 0 | ||||||||
| Original Source: | World Bank staff estimates based on sources and methods in World Bank's "The Changing Wealth of Nations: Measuring Sustainable Development in the New Millennium" (2011). | ||||||||
| Statistical concept and methodology: | 0 | ||||||||
| Development relevance: | 0 | ||||||||

.png)