International Services Surveys: BE-120 Benchmark Survey of Transactions in Selected Services and Intellectual Property With Foreign Persons, 4834-4838 [2018-02065]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 23 / Friday, February 2, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
Richard Downing Airport to coincide
with the FAA’s aeronautical database.
This action enhances the safety and
management of standard instrument
approach procedures for IFR operations
at these airports.
Class E airspace designations are
published in paragraph 6005 of FAA
Order 7400.11B, dated August 3, 2017,
and effective September 15, 2017, which
is incorporated by reference in 14 CFR
71.1. The Class E airspace designations
listed in this document will be
published subsequently in the Order.
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(f), 106(g); 40103,
40113, 40120; E.O. 10854, 24 FR 9565, 3 CFR,
1959–1963 Comp., p. 389.
Regulatory Notices and Analyses
The FAA has determined that this
regulation only involves an established
body of technical regulations for which
frequent and routine amendments are
necessary to keep them operationally
current, is non-controversial and
unlikely to result in adverse or negative
comments. It, therefore: (1) Is not a
‘‘significant regulatory action’’ under
Executive Order 12866; (2) is not a
‘‘significant rule’’ under DOT
Regulatory Policies and Procedures (44
FR 11034; February 26, 1979); and (3)
does not warrant preparation of a
regulatory evaluation as the anticipated
impact is so minimal. Since this is a
routine matter that only affects air traffic
procedures and air navigation, it is
certified that this rule, when
promulgated, does not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities under the
criteria of the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
*
Environmental Review
The FAA has determined that this
action qualifies for categorical exclusion
under the National Environmental
Policy Act in accordance with FAA
Order 1050.1F, ‘‘Environmental
Impacts: Policies and Procedures,’’
paragraph 5–6.5.a. This airspace action
is not expected to cause any potentially
significant environmental impacts, and
no extraordinary circumstances exist
that warrant preparation of an
environmental assessment.
Lists of Subjects in 14 CFR Part 71
Airspace, Incorporation by reference,
Navigation (air).
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Adoption of the Amendment
In consideration of the foregoing, the
Federal Aviation Administration
amends 14 CFR part 71 as follows:
PART 71—DESIGNATION OF CLASS A,
B, C, D, AND E AIRSPACE AREAS; AIR
TRAFFIC SERVICE ROUTES; AND
REPORTING POINTS
1. The authority citation for part 71
continues to read as follows:
■
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§ 71.1
[Amended]
2. The incorporation by reference in
14 CFR 71.1 of FAA Order 7400.11B,
Airspace Designations and Reporting
Points, dated August 3, 2017, and
effective September 15, 2017, is
amended as follows:
■
Paragraph 6005 Class E Airspace Areas
Extending Upward From 700 Feet or More
Above the Surface of the Earth.
*
*
*
*
AGL OH E5 Millersburg, OH [Amended]
Holmes County Airport, OH
(Lat. 40°32′12″ N, long. 81°57′21″ W)
That airspace extending upward from 700
feet above the surface within a 6.5-mile
radius of the Holmes County Airport.
*
*
*
*
*
AGL OH E5 Coshocton, OH [Amended]
Richard Downing Airport, OH
(Lat. 40°18′37″ N, long. 81°51′09″ W)
That airspace extending upward from 700
feet above the surface within a 6.5-mile
radius of Richard Downing Airport and
within 2.0 miles either side of the 037°
bearing from the airport extending from the
6.5-mile radius to 8.6 miles northeast of the
airport.
Issued in Fort Worth, Texas, on January 26,
2018.
Christopher L. Southerland,
Acting Manager, Operations Support Group,
ATO Central Service Center.
[FR Doc. 2018–02017 Filed 2–1–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Bureau of Economic Analysis
15 CFR Part 801
[170322303–8069–01]
RIN 0691–AA87
International Services Surveys: BE–
120 Benchmark Survey of
Transactions in Selected Services and
Intellectual Property With Foreign
Persons
Bureau of Economic Analysis,
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This final rule amends
regulations of the Department of
Commerce’s Bureau of Economic
Analysis (BEA) to set forth the reporting
requirements for the mandatory BE–120
Benchmark Survey of Transactions in
Selected Services and Intellectual
Property with Foreign Persons. This
SUMMARY:
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survey applies to the 2017 fiscal
reporting year. The benchmark survey
covers the universe of transactions in
selected services and intellectual
property and is BEA’s most
comprehensive survey of such
transactions. For the 2017 benchmark
survey, BEA is making changes to the
reporting requirements of the survey,
the data items collected, and the design
of the survey form to satisfy changing
data needs and to improve data quality
and the effectiveness and efficiency of
data collections.
DATES: This final rule is effective March
5, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Christopher Stein, Chief, Services
Surveys Branch (BE–50), Balance of
Payments Division, Bureau of Economic
Analysis, U.S. Department of
Commerce, 4600 Silver Hill Rd.,
Washington, DC 20233; phone (301)
278–9189; or via email at
Christopher.Stein@bea.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On
November 15, 2017, BEA published a
notice of proposed rulemaking that set
forth the revised reporting criteria for
the BE–120 Benchmark Survey of
Transactions in Selected Services and
Intellectual Property with Foreign
Persons (82 FR 52863). No comments on
the proposed rule were received.
This final rule amends 15 CFR part
801 to set forth the reporting
requirements for the BE–120 Benchmark
Survey of Transactions in Selected
Services and Intellectual Property with
Foreign Persons.
BEA typically conducts the BE–120
survey once every five years under the
authority of the International
Investment and Trade in Services
Surveys Act (22 U.S.C. 3101–3108).
In 2012, BEA established regulatory
guidelines for collecting data on
international trade in services and direct
investment (77 FR 24373; April 24,
2012). This final rule, unlike most
annual or quarterly BEA surveys
conducted pursuant to the Act, amends
those regulations to require a response
from persons subject to the reporting
requirements of the BE–120, whether or
not they are contacted by BEA.
The benchmark survey covers the
universe of selected services and
intellectual property transactions with
foreign persons and is BEA’s most
detailed survey of such transactions. In
nonbenchmark years, the universe
estimates covering these transactions are
derived from the sample data reported
on BEA’s BE–125 Quarterly Survey of
Transactions in Selected Services and
Intellectual Property with Foreign
Persons. The purpose of the benchmark
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survey is to obtain universe data,
including data from respondents not
subject to filing on an ongoing quarterly
basis, that will be used, in conjunction
with quarterly data collected on the
companion BE–125 survey, to produce
estimates of selected services
components for BEA’s international
transactions accounts (ITAs), national
income and product accounts, and
industry accounts. These data are also
used to monitor U.S. trade in services,
to analyze the impact on the U.S.
economy and on foreign economies, to
compile and improve the U.S. economic
accounts, to support U.S. commercial
policy on trade in services, to conduct
trade promotion, and to improve the
ability of U.S. businesses to identify and
evaluate market opportunities.
Description of Changes
This final rule amends the regulations
(15 CFR part 801) and the survey form
for the BE–120 benchmark survey.
These amendments include changes to
the reporting requirements for those not
subject to reporting on the mandatory
schedule(s) of the survey, changes in
data items collected, and changes to the
design of the survey form.
BEA changes the reporting
requirements for reporters with
transactions in covered services below
the threshold for mandatory reporting
on the schedule(s) of the survey ($2
million in combined sales or $1 million
in combined purchases for fiscal year
2017). All reporters, regardless of the
amount of their transactions in covered
services are required to provide a total
dollar amount for their sales and
purchases, as applicable, by transaction
type.
BEA adds and modifies some items on
the benchmark survey form. The
following items are added to the
benchmark survey:
(1) Mandatory questions are added to
collect information on contract
manufacturing services. Reporters are
required to provide a description of the
primary manufactured (finished) good
and the materials received or provided
for further processing. Reporters are
required to identify, on mandatory
Schedule(s) A and B, as applicable, the
foreign country(ies) involved in the
transaction(s) and to distribute the
amounts reported for each country
according to whether the foreign person
is the U.S. person’s foreign affiliate, part
of the U.S. person’s foreign parent
group, or an unaffiliated foreign person.
As a result of respondent feedback
obtained through various agency
outreach efforts, BEA has decided not to
collect the additional proposed
aggregate and country-level detail on
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sales and purchases to foreign persons
for: (1) The cost of materials received or
provided for use in the manufacturing
process, (2) the primary country of
origin of the inputs used, (3) the final
value of the product returned after the
manufacturing service was completed,
and (4) the primary country of
destination of the finished product.
(2) Mandatory questions are added to
collect new information on services
transactions that were conducted
remotely, e.g. where both the supplier
and the consumer are in their respective
territories when the service is delivered.
This information will be collected for
both sales of services performed
remotely for foreign persons by U.S.
persons and for purchases of services
performed remotely by foreign persons
for U.S. persons. For transactions in
selected services, respondents are
required to check a box identifying the
percentage of their transactions that
were conducted remotely, and to
identify if this information was sourced
from their accounting records or from
recall/general knowledge. As a result of
respondent feedback obtained through
various agency outreach efforts, BEA
has deciced not to collect this new
information for other modes of delivery
of services.
In addition, this final rule makes the
following modifications to the survey
form:
(1) Mandatory Schedules A and B are
expanded to collect additional detail on
intellectual property (IP) transactions. A
U.S. person who engages in IP
transactions with foreign persons is
required to distribute their sales
(receipts) and/or purchases (payments)
according to the type of transaction and
the type of IP. The covered transaction
types are: (1) Transactions for the rights
to use IP, (2) transactions for the rights
to reproduce and/or distribute IP, and
(3) transactions for the outright sales or
purchases of IP. Reporters are required
to identify the foreign country(ies)
involved in the transaction(s) and to
distribute the amounts reported for each
country according to whether the
foreign person is the U.S. person’s
foreign affiliate, part of the U.S. person’s
foreign parent group, or an unaffiliated
foreign person.
(2) Research and development
services are broken out into two
categories: (1) Provision of customized
and non-customized R&D services, and
(2) other R&D services, including
testing.
(3) Engineering, architectural, and
surveying services are broken out into
three categories: (1) Architectural
services; (2) engineering services; (3)
surveying, cartography, certification,
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testing, and technical inspection
services. The current category of
industrial engineering services has been
dropped and captured within
engineering services.
(4) Management, consulting, and
public relation services are broken out
into three categories: (1) Market research
services; (2) public opinion polling
services; and (3) other management,
consulting, and public relations
services. Trade exhibition and sales
convention services are collected
separately.
(5) Database and other information
services are broken out into two
components: (1) News agency services,
and (2) other information services.
(6) Computer services are expanded
into three categories: (1) Computer
software, including end-user licenses
and customization services; (2) cloud
computing and data storage services;
and (3) other computer services.
(7) Several service categories
previously collected under ‘‘Other
selected services’’ are collected
separately. These services include
audiovisual services, artistic-related
services, health services, heritage and
recreational services, other personal
services, disbursements for sales
promotion and representation,
photographic services (including
satellite photography), and space
transport services.
(8) Mandatory Schedule C only
collects related goods details for
construction services. Mining services
as well as the three new categories that
replace engineering, architectural, and
surveying services (see (3) above) are
collected on Schedule A.
(9) The identification of transaction
types and voluntary reporting of
additional country and affiliation detail
has been streamlined. All reporters,
regardless of the amount of their
transactions in covered services are
required to provide a total dollar
amount for their sales and purchases, as
applicable, by transaction type.
Reporters with transactions below the
threshold have the option to voluntarily
report information on transactions by
country and by affiliation on the
standard reporting schedules.
In addition, BEA has redesigned the
format and wording of the survey. The
new design incorporates improvements
made to other BEA surveys as well as
enhancements from a recent cognitive
review conducted with selected survey
respondents. Survey instructions and
data item descriptions have been
changed to improve clarity and ensure
the benchmark survey form is more
consistent with other BEA surveys.
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Executive Order 12866
This final rule has been determined to
be not significant for purposes of E.O.
12866.
Executive Order 13771
This rule is not an Executive Order
13771 regulatory action because this
rule is not significant under Executive
Order 12866. Additionally, this rule is
not subject to the requirements of
Executive Order 13771 because this rule
results in no more than de minimis
costs.
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Executive Order 13132
This final rule does not contain
policies with Federalism implications
sufficient to warrant preparation of a
Federalism assessment under E.O.
13132.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
Paperwork Reduction Act
The collection-of-information in this
final rule was submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB)
pursuant to the requirements of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 44
U.S.C. 3501–3520 (PRA). OMB
approved the reinstatement of the
information collection under OMB
control number 0608–0058.
Notwithstanding any other provisions
of law, no person is required to respond
to, nor shall any person be subject to a
penalty for failure to comply with, a
collection of information subject to the
requirements of the PRA unless that
collection displays a currently valid
OMB control number.
The BE–120 survey is expected to
result in the filing of reports from
approximately 15,500 respondents.
Approximately 11,500 respondents will
report mandatory data on the survey,
and approximately 4,000 will file
exemption claims. The respondent
burden for this collection-of-information
will vary from one respondent to
another but is estimated to average (1)
23 hours for the 5,000 respondents that
file mandatory or voluntary data by
country and affiliation for relevant
transaction types on the mandatory
schedules; (2) 4 hours for the 6,500
respondents that file mandatory data by
transaction type but not by country or
affiliation—including time for reviewing
instructions, searching existing data
sources, gathering and maintaining the
data needed, and completing and
reviewing the collection of information;
and (3) 1 hour for other responses. Thus,
the total respondent burden for this
survey is estimated at 145,000 hours, or
about 9.5 hours (145,000 hours/15,500
respondents) per response, compared to
105,000 hours, or about 7 hours
(105,000/15,000) for the previous BE–
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120 benchmark survey in 2011. The
increase in burden hours is due to an
increase in the size of the respondent
universe as well as changes to the
reporting requirements and content of
the survey.
Written comments regarding the
burden-hour estimates or other aspects
of the collection-of-information
requirements contained in the final rule
should be sent to both BEA via email at
Christopher.Stein@bea.gov and to OMB,
O.I.R.A., Paperwork Reduction Project
0608–0058, Attention PRA Desk Officer
for BEA, Kerrie Leslie, via email at
OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov.
The Chief Counsel for Regulation,
Department of Commerce, certified to
the Chief Counsel for Advocacy, Small
Business Administration, under the
provisions of the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 605(b), that this
action will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The factual
basis for the certification was published
in the proposed rule and is not repeated
here. No final regulatory flexibility
analysis was prepared, as no comments
were received regarding the
determination that this action will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
List of Subjects in 15 CFR Part 801
Economic statistics, Foreign trade,
International transactions, Penalties,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
Dated January 17, 2018.
Brian C. Moyer,
Director, Bureau of Economic Analysis.
For reasons set forth in the preamble,
BEA amends 15 CFR part 801 as
follows:
PART 801—SURVEY OF
INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN SERVICES
BETWEEN U.S. AND FOREIGN
PERSONS AND SURVEYS OF DIRECT
INVESTMENT
1. The authority citation for 15 CFR
part 801 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; 15 U.S.C. 4908;
22 U.S.C. 3101–3108; E.O. 11961 (3 CFR,
1977 Comp., p. 86), as amended by E.O.
12318 (3 CFR, 1981 Comp. p. 173); and E.O.
12518 (3 CFR, 1985 Comp. p. 348).
■
2. Revise § 801.3 to read as follows:
§ 801.3
Reporting requirements.
Except for surveys subject to
rulemaking in §§ 801.7, 801.8, 801.9,
801.10, and 801.11, reporting
requirements for all other surveys
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conducted by the Bureau of Economic
Analysis shall be as follows:
(a) Notice of specific reporting
requirements, including who is required
to report, the information to be reported,
the manner of reporting, and the time
and place of filing reports, will be
published by the Director of the Bureau
of Economic Analysis in the Federal
Register prior to the implementation of
a survey;
(b) In accordance with section
3104(b)(2) of title 22 of the United States
Code, persons notified of these surveys
and subject to the jurisdiction of the
United States shall furnish, under oath,
any report containing information
which is determined to be necessary to
carry out the surveys and studies
provided for by the Act; and
(c) Persons not notified in writing of
their filing obligation by the Bureau of
Economic Analysis are not required to
complete the survey.
■ 3. Add § 801.11 to read as follows:
§ 801.11 Rules and regulations for the BE–
120 Benchmark Survey of Transactions in
Selected Services and Intellectual Property
with Foreign Persons—2017.
The BE–120 Benchmark Survey of
Transactions in Selected Services and
Intellectual Property with Foreign
Persons will be conducted covering
fiscal year 2017. All legal authorities,
provisions, definitions, and
requirements contained in §§ 801.1 and
801.2 and §§ 801.4 through 801.6 are
applicable to this survey. Specific
additional rules and regulations for the
BE–120 survey are given in paragraphs
(a) through (e) of this section. More
detailed instructions are given on the
report form and in instructions
accompanying the report form.
(a) Response required. A response is
required from persons subject to the
reporting requirements of the BE–120
Benchmark Survey of Transactions in
Selected Services and Intellectual
Property with Foreign Persons—2017,
contained in this section, whether or not
they are contacted by BEA. Also, a
person, or its agent, that is contacted by
BEA about reporting on this survey,
either by sending them a report form or
by written inquiry, must respond in
writing pursuant to this section. This
may be accomplished by:
(1) Completing and returning the BE–
120 by the due date of the survey; or
(2) If exempt, by completing the
determination of reporting status section
of the BE–120 survey and returning it to
BEA by the due date of the survey.
(b) Who must report. A BE–120 report
is required of each U.S. person that had
sales to foreign persons or purchases
from foreign persons in the services and
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intellectual property categories covered
by the survey during its 2017 fiscal year.
(c) What must be reported. (1) A U.S.
person that had combined sales to
foreign persons that exceeded $2
million or combined purchases from
foreign persons that exceeded $1
million in the services and intellectual
property categories covered by the
survey during its 2017 fiscal year, on an
accrual basis, is required to provide data
on total sales and/or purchases of each
of the covered types of services and
intellectual property transactions and
must disaggregate the totals by country
and by relationship to the foreign
transactor (foreign affiliate, foreign
parent group, or unaffiliated). The $2
million threshold for sales and the $1
million threshold for purchases should
be applied to services and intellectual
property transactions with foreign
persons by all parts of the consolidated
domestic U.S. Reporter. Because the $2
million threshold for sales and $1
million threshold for purchases apply
separately to sales and purchases, the
mandatory reporting requirement may
apply only to sales, only to purchases,
or to both. The determination of
whether a U.S. company is subject to
this reporting requirement may be based
on the judgment of knowledgeable
persons in a company who can identify
reportable transactions on a recall basis,
with a reasonable degree of certainty,
without conducting a detailed manual
records search.
(2) A U.S. person that had combined
sales to foreign persons that were $2
million or less or combined purchases
from foreign persons that were $1
million or less in the intellectual
property or services categories covered
by the survey during its 2017 fiscal year,
on an accrual basis, is required to
provide the total sales and/or purchases
for each type of transaction in which
they engaged. The $2 million threshold
for sales and the $1 million threshold
for purchases should be applied to
services and intellectual property
transactions with foreign persons by all
parts of the consolidated domestic U.S.
Reporter. Because the $2 million
threshold for sales and $1 million
threshold for purchases apply separately
to sales and purchases, the mandatory
reporting requirement may apply only
to sales, only to purchases, or to both.
(i) Voluntary reporting: If, during
fiscal year 2017, combined sales were $2
million or less, on an accrual basis, the
U.S. person may, in addition to
providing the required total for each
type of transaction, report sales at a
country and affiliation level of detail on
the applicable mandatory schedule(s).
Provision of this additional detail is
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voluntary. The estimates may be
judgmental, that is, based on recall,
without conducting a detailed records
search.
(ii) If, during fiscal year 2017,
combined purchases were $1 million or
less, on an accrual basis, the U.S. person
may, in addition to providing the
required total for each type of
transaction, report purchases at a
country and affiliation level of detail on
the applicable mandatory schedule(s).
Provision of this additional detail is
voluntary. The estimates may be
judgmental, that is, based on recall,
without conducting a detailed records
search.
(3) Exemption claims: Any U.S.
person that receives the BE–120 survey
form from BEA, but is not subject to the
reporting requirements, must file an
exemption claim by completing the
determination of reporting status section
of the BE–120 survey and returning it to
BEA by the due date of the survey. This
requirement is necessary to ensure
compliance with reporting requirements
and efficient administration of the Act
by eliminating unnecessary follow-up
contact.
(d) Covered types of services. Services
transactions covered by this survey
consist of sales and purchases related to
certain intellectual property rights (see
paragraphs (d)(1) through (18) of this
section for a list of intellectual propertyrelated transactions covered by this
survey) and sales and purchases of
selected services (see paragraphs (d)(19)
through (59) of this section for a list of
services covered by this survey). The
transactions (sales or purchases)
between U.S. companies and foreign
persons covered by the BE–120 survey
are:
(1) Rights related to the use of a
patent, process, or trade secret to
produce and/or distribute a product or
service;
(2) Outright sales of proprietary rights
related to patents, processes, and trade
secrets;
(3) Rights to use books, music, etc.,
including end-user rights related to
digital content;
(4) Rights to reproduce and/or
distribute books, music, etc.;
(5) Outright sales of proprietary rights
related to books, music, etc.;
(6) Rights to use trademarks;
(7) Outright sales of proprietary rights
related to trademarks;
(8) Rights to use recorded
performances and events, including
end-user rights related to digital
content;
(9) Rights to reproduce and/or
distribute recorded performances and
events;
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(10) Outright sales of proprietary
rights related to recorded performances
and events;
(11) Rights to broadcast and record
live performances and events;
(12) Rights to reproduce and/or
distribute general use computer
software;
(13) Outright sales of proprietary
rights related to general use computer
software;
(14) Fees associated with business
format franchising;
(15) Outright sales of proprietary
rights related to business format
franchising;
(16) Rights to use other intellectual
property;
(17) Rights to reproduce and/or
distribute other intellectual property;
(18) Outright sales of proprietary
rights related to other intellectual
property;
(19) Accounting, auditing, and
bookkeeping services;
(20) Advertising services;
(21) Auxiliary insurance services;
(22) Computer software, including
end-user licenses and customization
services;
(23) Cloud computing and data
storage services;
(24) Other computer services;
(25) Construction services;
(26) News agency services (excludes
production costs related to news
broadcasters);
(27) Other information services;
(28) Education services;
(29) Architectural services;
(30) Engineering services;
(31) Surveying, cartography,
certification, testing and technical
inspection services;
(32) Financial services;
(33) Maintenance services;
(34) Installation, alteration, and
training services;
(35) Legal services;
(36) Market research services;
(37) Public opinion polling services;
(38) Other management, consulting,
and public relations services;
(39) Merchanting services (net
receipts);
(40) Mining services;
(41) Operational leasing;
(42) Trade-related services, other than
merchanting services;
(43) Artistic-related services;
(44) Premiums paid on primary
insurance;
(45) Losses recovered on primary
insurance;
(46) Provision of customized and noncustomized research and development
services;
(47) Other research and development
services;
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(48) Telecommunications services;
(49) Health services;
(50) Heritage and recreational
services;
(51) Audiovisual and production
services;
(52) Contract manufacturing services;
(53) Disbursements for sales
promotion and representation;
(54) Photographic services (including
satellite photography services);
(55) Space transport services;
(56) Trade exhibition and sales
convention services;
(57) Agricultural services;
(58) Waste treatment and depollution
services; and
(59) Other selected services n.i.e. (not
included elsewhere).
(e) Types of transactions excluded
from the scope of this survey. (1) Sales
and purchases of goods. Trade in goods
involves products that have a physical
form, and includes payments or receipts
for electricity.
(2) Sales and purchases of financial
instruments, including stocks, bonds,
financial derivatives, loans, mutual fund
shares, and negotiable CDs. (However,
securities brokerage is a service).
(3) Income on financial instruments
(interest, dividends, capital gain
distributions, etc).
(4) Compensation paid to, or received
by, employees.
(5) Penalties and fines and gifts or
grants in the form of goods and cash
(sometimes called ‘‘transfers’’).
(f) Due date. A fully completed and
certified BE–120 report, or qualifying
exemption claim with the determination
of reporting status section completed, is
due to be filed with BEA not later than
June 29, 2018 (or by July 30, 2018 for
respondents that use BEA’s eFile
system).
[FR Doc. 2018–02065 Filed 2–1–18; 8:45 am]
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with RULES
BILLING CODE 3510–06–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Parts 100, 117, 147, and 165
[USCG–2018–0048]
2017 Quarterly Listings; Safety Zones,
Security Zones, Special Local
Regulations, Drawbridge Operation
Regulations and Regulated Navigation
Areas
Coast Guard, DHS.
Notification of expired
temporary rules issued.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
This document provides
notification of substantive rules issued
by the Coast Guard that were made
temporarily effective but expired before
they could be published in the Federal
Register. This document lists temporary
safety zones, security zones, special
local regulations, drawbridge operation
regulations and regulated navigation
areas, all of limited duration and for
which timely publication in the Federal
Register was not possible.
DATES: This document lists temporary
Coast Guard rules that became effective,
primarily between April 2017 to June
2017, unless otherwise indicated, and
were terminated before they could be
published in the Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: Temporary rules listed in
this document may be viewed online,
under their respective docket numbers,
using the Federal eRulemaking Portal at
https://www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
questions on this document contact
Yeoman First Class David Hager, Office
of Regulations and Administrative Law,
telephone (202) 372–3862.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Coast
Guard District Commanders and
Captains of the Port (COTP) must be
immediately responsive to the safety
and security needs within their
jurisdiction; therefore, District
Commanders and COTPs have been
delegated the authority to issue certain
local regulations. Safety zones may be
established for safety or environmental
purposes. A safety zone may be
stationary and described by fixed limits
or it may be described as a zone around
a vessel in motion. Security zones limit
access to prevent injury or damage to
SUMMARY:
Docket No.
USCG–2016–0085
USCG–2016–0086
USCG–2017–0128
USCG–2016–0087
VerDate Sep<11>2014
................
................
................
................
16:21 Feb 01, 2018
vessels, ports, or waterfront facilities.
Special local regulations are issued to
enhance the safety of participants and
spectators at regattas and other marine
events. Drawbridge operation
regulations authorize changes to
drawbridge schedules to accommodate
bridge repairs, seasonal vessel traffic,
and local public events. Regulated
Navigation Areas are water areas within
a defined boundary for which
regulations for vessels navigating within
the area have been established by the
regional Coast Guard District
Commander.
Timely publication of these rules in
the Federal Register may be precluded
when a rule responds to an emergency,
or when an event occurs without
sufficient advance notice. The affected
public is, however, often informed of
these rules through Local Notices to
Mariners, press releases, and other
means. Moreover, actual notification is
provided by Coast Guard patrol vessels
enforcing the restrictions imposed by
the rule. Because Federal Register
publication was not possible before the
end of the effective period, mariners
were personally notified of the contents
of these safety zones, security zones,
special local regulations, regulated
navigation areas or drawbridge
operation regulations by Coast Guard
officials on-scene prior to any
enforcement action. However, the Coast
Guard, by law, must publish in the
Federal Register notice of substantive
rules adopted. To meet this obligation
without imposing undue expense on the
public, the Coast Guard periodically
publishes a list of these temporary
safety zones, security zones, special
local regulations, regulated navigation
areas and drawbridge operation
regulations. Permanent rules are not
included in this list because they are
published in their entirety in the
Federal Register. Temporary rules are
also published in their entirety if
sufficient time is available to do so
before they are placed in effect or
terminated.
The following unpublished rules were
placed in effect temporarily during the
period between April 2017 to June 2017
unless otherwise indicated. To view
copies of these rules, visit
www.regulations.gov and search by the
docket number indicated in the
following table.
Type
Location
Security Zones ..................................................
Security Zones ..................................................
Special Local Regulations ................................
Security Zones ..................................................
Montgomery County, MD ..................................
Montgomery County, MD ..................................
Tuscaloosa, AL .................................................
Montgomery County, MD ..................................
Jkt 244001
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\02FER1.SGM
02FER1
Effective
date
3/25/2017
3/26/2017
4/1/2017
4/1/2017
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 23 (Friday, February 2, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 4834-4838]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-02065]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Bureau of Economic Analysis
15 CFR Part 801
[170322303-8069-01]
RIN 0691-AA87
International Services Surveys: BE-120 Benchmark Survey of
Transactions in Selected Services and Intellectual Property With
Foreign Persons
AGENCY: Bureau of Economic Analysis, Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule amends regulations of the Department of
Commerce's Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) to set forth the reporting
requirements for the mandatory BE-120 Benchmark Survey of Transactions
in Selected Services and Intellectual Property with Foreign Persons.
This survey applies to the 2017 fiscal reporting year. The benchmark
survey covers the universe of transactions in selected services and
intellectual property and is BEA's most comprehensive survey of such
transactions. For the 2017 benchmark survey, BEA is making changes to
the reporting requirements of the survey, the data items collected, and
the design of the survey form to satisfy changing data needs and to
improve data quality and the effectiveness and efficiency of data
collections.
DATES: This final rule is effective March 5, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Christopher Stein, Chief, Services
Surveys Branch (BE-50), Balance of Payments Division, Bureau of
Economic Analysis, U.S. Department of Commerce, 4600 Silver Hill Rd.,
Washington, DC 20233; phone (301) 278-9189; or via email at
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On November 15, 2017, BEA published a notice
of proposed rulemaking that set forth the revised reporting criteria
for the BE-120 Benchmark Survey of Transactions in Selected Services
and Intellectual Property with Foreign Persons (82 FR 52863). No
comments on the proposed rule were received.
This final rule amends 15 CFR part 801 to set forth the reporting
requirements for the BE-120 Benchmark Survey of Transactions in
Selected Services and Intellectual Property with Foreign Persons.
BEA typically conducts the BE-120 survey once every five years
under the authority of the International Investment and Trade in
Services Surveys Act (22 U.S.C. 3101-3108).
In 2012, BEA established regulatory guidelines for collecting data
on international trade in services and direct investment (77 FR 24373;
April 24, 2012). This final rule, unlike most annual or quarterly BEA
surveys conducted pursuant to the Act, amends those regulations to
require a response from persons subject to the reporting requirements
of the BE-120, whether or not they are contacted by BEA.
The benchmark survey covers the universe of selected services and
intellectual property transactions with foreign persons and is BEA's
most detailed survey of such transactions. In nonbenchmark years, the
universe estimates covering these transactions are derived from the
sample data reported on BEA's BE-125 Quarterly Survey of Transactions
in Selected Services and Intellectual Property with Foreign Persons.
The purpose of the benchmark
[[Page 4835]]
survey is to obtain universe data, including data from respondents not
subject to filing on an ongoing quarterly basis, that will be used, in
conjunction with quarterly data collected on the companion BE-125
survey, to produce estimates of selected services components for BEA's
international transactions accounts (ITAs), national income and product
accounts, and industry accounts. These data are also used to monitor
U.S. trade in services, to analyze the impact on the U.S. economy and
on foreign economies, to compile and improve the U.S. economic
accounts, to support U.S. commercial policy on trade in services, to
conduct trade promotion, and to improve the ability of U.S. businesses
to identify and evaluate market opportunities.
Description of Changes
This final rule amends the regulations (15 CFR part 801) and the
survey form for the BE-120 benchmark survey. These amendments include
changes to the reporting requirements for those not subject to
reporting on the mandatory schedule(s) of the survey, changes in data
items collected, and changes to the design of the survey form.
BEA changes the reporting requirements for reporters with
transactions in covered services below the threshold for mandatory
reporting on the schedule(s) of the survey ($2 million in combined
sales or $1 million in combined purchases for fiscal year 2017). All
reporters, regardless of the amount of their transactions in covered
services are required to provide a total dollar amount for their sales
and purchases, as applicable, by transaction type.
BEA adds and modifies some items on the benchmark survey form. The
following items are added to the benchmark survey:
(1) Mandatory questions are added to collect information on
contract manufacturing services. Reporters are required to provide a
description of the primary manufactured (finished) good and the
materials received or provided for further processing. Reporters are
required to identify, on mandatory Schedule(s) A and B, as applicable,
the foreign country(ies) involved in the transaction(s) and to
distribute the amounts reported for each country according to whether
the foreign person is the U.S. person's foreign affiliate, part of the
U.S. person's foreign parent group, or an unaffiliated foreign person.
As a result of respondent feedback obtained through various agency
outreach efforts, BEA has decided not to collect the additional
proposed aggregate and country-level detail on sales and purchases to
foreign persons for: (1) The cost of materials received or provided for
use in the manufacturing process, (2) the primary country of origin of
the inputs used, (3) the final value of the product returned after the
manufacturing service was completed, and (4) the primary country of
destination of the finished product.
(2) Mandatory questions are added to collect new information on
services transactions that were conducted remotely, e.g. where both the
supplier and the consumer are in their respective territories when the
service is delivered. This information will be collected for both sales
of services performed remotely for foreign persons by U.S. persons and
for purchases of services performed remotely by foreign persons for
U.S. persons. For transactions in selected services, respondents are
required to check a box identifying the percentage of their
transactions that were conducted remotely, and to identify if this
information was sourced from their accounting records or from recall/
general knowledge. As a result of respondent feedback obtained through
various agency outreach efforts, BEA has deciced not to collect this
new information for other modes of delivery of services.
In addition, this final rule makes the following modifications to
the survey form:
(1) Mandatory Schedules A and B are expanded to collect additional
detail on intellectual property (IP) transactions. A U.S. person who
engages in IP transactions with foreign persons is required to
distribute their sales (receipts) and/or purchases (payments) according
to the type of transaction and the type of IP. The covered transaction
types are: (1) Transactions for the rights to use IP, (2) transactions
for the rights to reproduce and/or distribute IP, and (3) transactions
for the outright sales or purchases of IP. Reporters are required to
identify the foreign country(ies) involved in the transaction(s) and to
distribute the amounts reported for each country according to whether
the foreign person is the U.S. person's foreign affiliate, part of the
U.S. person's foreign parent group, or an unaffiliated foreign person.
(2) Research and development services are broken out into two
categories: (1) Provision of customized and non-customized R&D
services, and (2) other R&D services, including testing.
(3) Engineering, architectural, and surveying services are broken
out into three categories: (1) Architectural services; (2) engineering
services; (3) surveying, cartography, certification, testing, and
technical inspection services. The current category of industrial
engineering services has been dropped and captured within engineering
services.
(4) Management, consulting, and public relation services are broken
out into three categories: (1) Market research services; (2) public
opinion polling services; and (3) other management, consulting, and
public relations services. Trade exhibition and sales convention
services are collected separately.
(5) Database and other information services are broken out into two
components: (1) News agency services, and (2) other information
services.
(6) Computer services are expanded into three categories: (1)
Computer software, including end-user licenses and customization
services; (2) cloud computing and data storage services; and (3) other
computer services.
(7) Several service categories previously collected under ``Other
selected services'' are collected separately. These services include
audiovisual services, artistic-related services, health services,
heritage and recreational services, other personal services,
disbursements for sales promotion and representation, photographic
services (including satellite photography), and space transport
services.
(8) Mandatory Schedule C only collects related goods details for
construction services. Mining services as well as the three new
categories that replace engineering, architectural, and surveying
services (see (3) above) are collected on Schedule A.
(9) The identification of transaction types and voluntary reporting
of additional country and affiliation detail has been streamlined. All
reporters, regardless of the amount of their transactions in covered
services are required to provide a total dollar amount for their sales
and purchases, as applicable, by transaction type. Reporters with
transactions below the threshold have the option to voluntarily report
information on transactions by country and by affiliation on the
standard reporting schedules.
In addition, BEA has redesigned the format and wording of the
survey. The new design incorporates improvements made to other BEA
surveys as well as enhancements from a recent cognitive review
conducted with selected survey respondents. Survey instructions and
data item descriptions have been changed to improve clarity and ensure
the benchmark survey form is more consistent with other BEA surveys.
[[Page 4836]]
Executive Order 12866
This final rule has been determined to be not significant for
purposes of E.O. 12866.
Executive Order 13771
This rule is not an Executive Order 13771 regulatory action because
this rule is not significant under Executive Order 12866. Additionally,
this rule is not subject to the requirements of Executive Order 13771
because this rule results in no more than de minimis costs.
Executive Order 13132
This final rule does not contain policies with Federalism
implications sufficient to warrant preparation of a Federalism
assessment under E.O. 13132.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The collection-of-information in this final rule was submitted to
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) pursuant to the requirements
of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501-3520 (PRA). OMB
approved the reinstatement of the information collection under OMB
control number 0608-0058.
Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, no person is required
to respond to, nor shall any person be subject to a penalty for failure
to comply with, a collection of information subject to the requirements
of the PRA unless that collection displays a currently valid OMB
control number.
The BE-120 survey is expected to result in the filing of reports
from approximately 15,500 respondents. Approximately 11,500 respondents
will report mandatory data on the survey, and approximately 4,000 will
file exemption claims. The respondent burden for this collection-of-
information will vary from one respondent to another but is estimated
to average (1) 23 hours for the 5,000 respondents that file mandatory
or voluntary data by country and affiliation for relevant transaction
types on the mandatory schedules; (2) 4 hours for the 6,500 respondents
that file mandatory data by transaction type but not by country or
affiliation--including time for reviewing instructions, searching
existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and
completing and reviewing the collection of information; and (3) 1 hour
for other responses. Thus, the total respondent burden for this survey
is estimated at 145,000 hours, or about 9.5 hours (145,000 hours/15,500
respondents) per response, compared to 105,000 hours, or about 7 hours
(105,000/15,000) for the previous BE-120 benchmark survey in 2011. The
increase in burden hours is due to an increase in the size of the
respondent universe as well as changes to the reporting requirements
and content of the survey.
Written comments regarding the burden-hour estimates or other
aspects of the collection-of-information requirements contained in the
final rule should be sent to both BEA via email at
[email protected] and to OMB, O.I.R.A., Paperwork Reduction
Project 0608-0058, Attention PRA Desk Officer for BEA, Kerrie Leslie,
via email at [email protected].
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Chief Counsel for Regulation, Department of Commerce, certified
to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy, Small Business Administration, under
the provisions of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C.
605(b), that this action will not have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities. The factual basis for the
certification was published in the proposed rule and is not repeated
here. No final regulatory flexibility analysis was prepared, as no
comments were received regarding the determination that this action
will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities.
List of Subjects in 15 CFR Part 801
Economic statistics, Foreign trade, International transactions,
Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Dated January 17, 2018.
Brian C. Moyer,
Director, Bureau of Economic Analysis.
For reasons set forth in the preamble, BEA amends 15 CFR part 801
as follows:
PART 801--SURVEY OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN SERVICES BETWEEN U.S.
AND FOREIGN PERSONS AND SURVEYS OF DIRECT INVESTMENT
0
1. The authority citation for 15 CFR part 801 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; 15 U.S.C. 4908; 22 U.S.C. 3101-3108;
E.O. 11961 (3 CFR, 1977 Comp., p. 86), as amended by E.O. 12318 (3
CFR, 1981 Comp. p. 173); and E.O. 12518 (3 CFR, 1985 Comp. p. 348).
0
2. Revise Sec. 801.3 to read as follows:
Sec. 801.3 Reporting requirements.
Except for surveys subject to rulemaking in Sec. Sec. 801.7,
801.8, 801.9, 801.10, and 801.11, reporting requirements for all other
surveys conducted by the Bureau of Economic Analysis shall be as
follows:
(a) Notice of specific reporting requirements, including who is
required to report, the information to be reported, the manner of
reporting, and the time and place of filing reports, will be published
by the Director of the Bureau of Economic Analysis in the Federal
Register prior to the implementation of a survey;
(b) In accordance with section 3104(b)(2) of title 22 of the United
States Code, persons notified of these surveys and subject to the
jurisdiction of the United States shall furnish, under oath, any report
containing information which is determined to be necessary to carry out
the surveys and studies provided for by the Act; and
(c) Persons not notified in writing of their filing obligation by
the Bureau of Economic Analysis are not required to complete the
survey.
0
3. Add Sec. 801.11 to read as follows:
Sec. 801.11 Rules and regulations for the BE-120 Benchmark Survey of
Transactions in Selected Services and Intellectual Property with
Foreign Persons--2017.
The BE-120 Benchmark Survey of Transactions in Selected Services
and Intellectual Property with Foreign Persons will be conducted
covering fiscal year 2017. All legal authorities, provisions,
definitions, and requirements contained in Sec. Sec. 801.1 and 801.2
and Sec. Sec. 801.4 through 801.6 are applicable to this survey.
Specific additional rules and regulations for the BE-120 survey are
given in paragraphs (a) through (e) of this section. More detailed
instructions are given on the report form and in instructions
accompanying the report form.
(a) Response required. A response is required from persons subject
to the reporting requirements of the BE-120 Benchmark Survey of
Transactions in Selected Services and Intellectual Property with
Foreign Persons--2017, contained in this section, whether or not they
are contacted by BEA. Also, a person, or its agent, that is contacted
by BEA about reporting on this survey, either by sending them a report
form or by written inquiry, must respond in writing pursuant to this
section. This may be accomplished by:
(1) Completing and returning the BE-120 by the due date of the
survey; or
(2) If exempt, by completing the determination of reporting status
section of the BE-120 survey and returning it to BEA by the due date of
the survey.
(b) Who must report. A BE-120 report is required of each U.S.
person that had sales to foreign persons or purchases from foreign
persons in the services and
[[Page 4837]]
intellectual property categories covered by the survey during its 2017
fiscal year.
(c) What must be reported. (1) A U.S. person that had combined
sales to foreign persons that exceeded $2 million or combined purchases
from foreign persons that exceeded $1 million in the services and
intellectual property categories covered by the survey during its 2017
fiscal year, on an accrual basis, is required to provide data on total
sales and/or purchases of each of the covered types of services and
intellectual property transactions and must disaggregate the totals by
country and by relationship to the foreign transactor (foreign
affiliate, foreign parent group, or unaffiliated). The $2 million
threshold for sales and the $1 million threshold for purchases should
be applied to services and intellectual property transactions with
foreign persons by all parts of the consolidated domestic U.S.
Reporter. Because the $2 million threshold for sales and $1 million
threshold for purchases apply separately to sales and purchases, the
mandatory reporting requirement may apply only to sales, only to
purchases, or to both. The determination of whether a U.S. company is
subject to this reporting requirement may be based on the judgment of
knowledgeable persons in a company who can identify reportable
transactions on a recall basis, with a reasonable degree of certainty,
without conducting a detailed manual records search.
(2) A U.S. person that had combined sales to foreign persons that
were $2 million or less or combined purchases from foreign persons that
were $1 million or less in the intellectual property or services
categories covered by the survey during its 2017 fiscal year, on an
accrual basis, is required to provide the total sales and/or purchases
for each type of transaction in which they engaged. The $2 million
threshold for sales and the $1 million threshold for purchases should
be applied to services and intellectual property transactions with
foreign persons by all parts of the consolidated domestic U.S.
Reporter. Because the $2 million threshold for sales and $1 million
threshold for purchases apply separately to sales and purchases, the
mandatory reporting requirement may apply only to sales, only to
purchases, or to both.
(i) Voluntary reporting: If, during fiscal year 2017, combined
sales were $2 million or less, on an accrual basis, the U.S. person
may, in addition to providing the required total for each type of
transaction, report sales at a country and affiliation level of detail
on the applicable mandatory schedule(s). Provision of this additional
detail is voluntary. The estimates may be judgmental, that is, based on
recall, without conducting a detailed records search.
(ii) If, during fiscal year 2017, combined purchases were $1
million or less, on an accrual basis, the U.S. person may, in addition
to providing the required total for each type of transaction, report
purchases at a country and affiliation level of detail on the
applicable mandatory schedule(s). Provision of this additional detail
is voluntary. The estimates may be judgmental, that is, based on
recall, without conducting a detailed records search.
(3) Exemption claims: Any U.S. person that receives the BE-120
survey form from BEA, but is not subject to the reporting requirements,
must file an exemption claim by completing the determination of
reporting status section of the BE-120 survey and returning it to BEA
by the due date of the survey. This requirement is necessary to ensure
compliance with reporting requirements and efficient administration of
the Act by eliminating unnecessary follow-up contact.
(d) Covered types of services. Services transactions covered by
this survey consist of sales and purchases related to certain
intellectual property rights (see paragraphs (d)(1) through (18) of
this section for a list of intellectual property-related transactions
covered by this survey) and sales and purchases of selected services
(see paragraphs (d)(19) through (59) of this section for a list of
services covered by this survey). The transactions (sales or purchases)
between U.S. companies and foreign persons covered by the BE-120 survey
are:
(1) Rights related to the use of a patent, process, or trade secret
to produce and/or distribute a product or service;
(2) Outright sales of proprietary rights related to patents,
processes, and trade secrets;
(3) Rights to use books, music, etc., including end-user rights
related to digital content;
(4) Rights to reproduce and/or distribute books, music, etc.;
(5) Outright sales of proprietary rights related to books, music,
etc.;
(6) Rights to use trademarks;
(7) Outright sales of proprietary rights related to trademarks;
(8) Rights to use recorded performances and events, including end-
user rights related to digital content;
(9) Rights to reproduce and/or distribute recorded performances and
events;
(10) Outright sales of proprietary rights related to recorded
performances and events;
(11) Rights to broadcast and record live performances and events;
(12) Rights to reproduce and/or distribute general use computer
software;
(13) Outright sales of proprietary rights related to general use
computer software;
(14) Fees associated with business format franchising;
(15) Outright sales of proprietary rights related to business
format franchising;
(16) Rights to use other intellectual property;
(17) Rights to reproduce and/or distribute other intellectual
property;
(18) Outright sales of proprietary rights related to other
intellectual property;
(19) Accounting, auditing, and bookkeeping services;
(20) Advertising services;
(21) Auxiliary insurance services;
(22) Computer software, including end-user licenses and
customization services;
(23) Cloud computing and data storage services;
(24) Other computer services;
(25) Construction services;
(26) News agency services (excludes production costs related to
news broadcasters);
(27) Other information services;
(28) Education services;
(29) Architectural services;
(30) Engineering services;
(31) Surveying, cartography, certification, testing and technical
inspection services;
(32) Financial services;
(33) Maintenance services;
(34) Installation, alteration, and training services;
(35) Legal services;
(36) Market research services;
(37) Public opinion polling services;
(38) Other management, consulting, and public relations services;
(39) Merchanting services (net receipts);
(40) Mining services;
(41) Operational leasing;
(42) Trade-related services, other than merchanting services;
(43) Artistic-related services;
(44) Premiums paid on primary insurance;
(45) Losses recovered on primary insurance;
(46) Provision of customized and non-customized research and
development services;
(47) Other research and development services;
[[Page 4838]]
(48) Telecommunications services;
(49) Health services;
(50) Heritage and recreational services;
(51) Audiovisual and production services;
(52) Contract manufacturing services;
(53) Disbursements for sales promotion and representation;
(54) Photographic services (including satellite photography
services);
(55) Space transport services;
(56) Trade exhibition and sales convention services;
(57) Agricultural services;
(58) Waste treatment and depollution services; and
(59) Other selected services n.i.e. (not included elsewhere).
(e) Types of transactions excluded from the scope of this survey.
(1) Sales and purchases of goods. Trade in goods involves products that
have a physical form, and includes payments or receipts for
electricity.
(2) Sales and purchases of financial instruments, including stocks,
bonds, financial derivatives, loans, mutual fund shares, and negotiable
CDs. (However, securities brokerage is a service).
(3) Income on financial instruments (interest, dividends, capital
gain distributions, etc).
(4) Compensation paid to, or received by, employees.
(5) Penalties and fines and gifts or grants in the form of goods
and cash (sometimes called ``transfers'').
(f) Due date. A fully completed and certified BE-120 report, or
qualifying exemption claim with the determination of reporting status
section completed, is due to be filed with BEA not later than June 29,
2018 (or by July 30, 2018 for respondents that use BEA's eFile system).
[FR Doc. 2018-02065 Filed 2-1-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-06-P