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4 4  
5 5  = 1. Problem statement =
6 6  
7 -In many cases, data that are exchanged in SDMX data messages do not relate to the calendar year.  However, many statistical system implementations require that data are mapped to and stored as the real calendar.
7 +In many cases, data that are exchanged in SDMX data messages do not relate to the calendar year. However, many statistical system implementations require that data are mapped to and stored as the real calendar.
8 8  
9 9  This guideline provides recommendations for the following four use cases of such non-calendar year data:
10 10  
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20 20  
21 21  [[image:1768553211015-575.png]]
22 22  
23 -Assuming that the time dimension has the ID TIME_PERIOD, case 1 could use TIME_PERIOD=”2015”. All other cases would need to use the notation TIME_PERIOD=”2015-A1”. For the rest of the document we use the more general notation “2015-A1”. [[~[1~]>>path:#_ftn1||style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255);"]]
23 +Assuming that the time dimension has the ID TIME_PERIOD, case 1 could use TIME_PERIOD=”2015”. All other cases would need to use the notation TIME_PERIOD=”2015-A1”. For the rest of the document we use the more general notation “2015-A1”.{{footnote}}The YYYY format is reserved for Gregorian years, i.e. from January 1 to December 31. For reporting years that are not Gregorian years, the format YYYY-A1 (e.g. 2016-A1) must be used for the time dimension.{{/footnote}}
24 24  
25 25  For quarterly or monthly data, the first period of the reporting year would also need to be read as relative to the start of the reporting year. Here are examples for case 2 if the data is quarterly (2a) or monthly (2b):
26 26  
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28 28  
29 29  Note that in case 2a, the third quarter of reporting year 2015 (TIME_PERIOD=2015-Q3) is covering data from March until June 2016. In case 2b, the seventh month of reporting year 2015 (TIME_PERIOD=2015-M07) is covering data for January 2016.
30 30  
31 -It is clear in the graphical view that time series under case 2b should not be directly compared with time series under case 4. If it is required to compare figures of the same time period, the 2015 observation of the type 2b series is compared with the 2016 figure of the type 4 series. Comparing a 2a series with others from the example may be more complicated, because exact alignment of the timelines might not be possible without additional data. It is possible to estimate aligned timelines by doing a time transformation using formulas; for instance, shifting the time series to comply with the calendar year. The methodological aspects of time transformation are not part of these guidelines. For coding the results of such transformations, please refer to the guidelines on coding time transformations in SDMX[[~[2~]>>path:#_ftn2]].
31 +It is clear in the graphical view that time series under case 2b should not be directly compared with time series under case 4. If it is required to compare figures of the same time period, the 2015 observation of the type 2b series is compared with the 2016 figure of the type 4 series. Comparing a 2a series with others from the example may be more complicated, because exact alignment of the timelines might not be possible without additional data. It is possible to estimate aligned timelines by doing a time transformation using formulas; for instance, shifting the time series to comply with the calendar year. The methodological aspects of time transformation are not part of these guidelines. For coding the results of such transformations, please refer to the guidelines on coding time transformations in SDMX{{footnote}}https://sdmx.org/wp-content/uploads/SWG_TimeTransformation_V1.0.docx{{/footnote}}.
32 32  
33 33  = 2. SDMX Concepts for Non-Calendar Year Series =
34 34  
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36 36  
37 37  In SDMX messages, the time period concept (concept ID TIME_PERIOD) specifies the **reporting period**. This reporting period, as outlined above, is in many cases not aligned with the calendar year.
38 38  
39 -To specify the calendar period that a reporting period is covering, the SDMX technical standard already defines an attribute “reporting year start” on series level with format xs:gMonthDay[[~[3~]>>path:#_ftn3]]. It gives a day and month when the reporting year starts. It is optional and if not provided the default is 1^^st^^ January. Using this attribute can cover cases 1, 2 and 3 from above. When added to a series, the attribute will specify on which day of the calendar year the reporting year starts.
39 +To specify the calendar period that a reporting period is covering, the SDMX technical standard already defines an attribute “reporting year start” on series level with format xs:gMonthDay{{footnote}}https://sdmx.org/wp-content/uploads/SDMX_2-1-1-SECTION_6_TechnicalNotes-march-2013.pdf, row 658.{{/footnote}}. It gives a day and month when the reporting year starts. It is optional and if not provided the default is 1^^st^^ January. Using this attribute can cover cases 1, 2 and 3 from above. When added to a series, the attribute will specify on which day of the calendar year the reporting year starts.
40 40  
41 41  This is not sufficient to cover case 4, because in this case the reporting year 2015 starts in 2014. In order to specify this case, a different attribute “reporting year end” should be used. It is also on series level with format xs:gMonthDay and gives a day and month when the reporting year ends. It is optional and if not provided the default is 31^^st^^ December.
42 42  
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46 46  
47 47  == //ISO 8601 time interval// ==
48 48  
49 -As outlined above, in some cases reporting periods might not have the same duration as calendar periods. A crop year in agriculture may only last for a couple of months. To specify these periods on a more granular level, the SDMX technical standard suggests using the time intervals as defined by ISO 8601. ISO specifies four ways to express a time interval[[~[4~]>>path:#_ftn4]]:
49 +As outlined above, in some cases reporting periods might not have the same duration as calendar periods. A crop year in agriculture may only last for a couple of months. To specify these periods on a more granular level, the SDMX technical standard suggests using the time intervals as defined by ISO 8601. ISO specifies four ways to express a time interval{{footnote}}http://www.iso.org/iso/home/standards/iso8601.htm and
50 +https://sdmx.org/wp-content/uploads/SDMX_2-1-1-SECTION_6_TechnicalNotes-march-2013.pdf, row 749.{{/footnote}}:
50 50  
51 51  1. Start and end, such as "2007-03-01T13:00:00Z/2008-05-11T15:30:00Z"
52 52  1. Start and duration, such as "2007-03-01T13:00:00Z/P1Y2M10DT2H30M"
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53 53  1. Duration and end, such as "P1Y2M10DT2H30M/2008-05-11T15:30:00Z"
54 54  1. Duration only, such as "P1Y2M10DT2H30M", with additional context information
55 55  
56 -
57 -
58 58  An attribute time range (ID:TIME_RANGE) is suggested at the observation level to specify further in which particular time range a specific observation was collected. The series will still specify when the reporting period starts or ends for the whole series and each observation can have a specific time range within that reporting period. It is suggested for that case to use only option 1, the start and end date, and not the other options in SDMX context.
59 59  
60 60  = 3. Example 1: Based on National Accounts data exchange =
... ... @@ -67,49 +67,47 @@
67 67  
68 68  The code list for “reference period detail” previously used in the National Accounts DSDs is as follows:
69 69  
70 -|**Code**|**Description**
71 -|C|Calendar year
72 -|F_O|Fiscal year (other definition)
73 -|F02|Fiscal year starting in February
74 -|F03|Fiscal year starting in March
75 -|F04|Fiscal year starting in April
76 -|F05|Fiscal year starting in May
77 -|F06|Fiscal year starting in June
78 -|F07|Fiscal year starting in July
79 -|F08|Fiscal year starting in August
80 -|F09|Fiscal year starting in September
81 -|F10|Fiscal year starting in October
82 -|F11|Fiscal year starting in November
83 -|F12|Fiscal year starting in December
69 +|(% style="width:168px" %)**Code**|(% style="width:2050px" %)**Description**
70 +|(% style="width:168px" %)C|(% style="width:2050px" %)Calendar year
71 +|(% style="width:168px" %)F_O|(% style="width:2050px" %)Fiscal year (other definition)
72 +|(% style="width:168px" %)F02|(% style="width:2050px" %)Fiscal year starting in February
73 +|(% style="width:168px" %)F03|(% style="width:2050px" %)Fiscal year starting in March
74 +|(% style="width:168px" %)F04|(% style="width:2050px" %)Fiscal year starting in April
75 +|(% style="width:168px" %)F05|(% style="width:2050px" %)Fiscal year starting in May
76 +|(% style="width:168px" %)F06|(% style="width:2050px" %)Fiscal year starting in June
77 +|(% style="width:168px" %)F07|(% style="width:2050px" %)Fiscal year starting in July
78 +|(% style="width:168px" %)F08|(% style="width:2050px" %)Fiscal year starting in August
79 +|(% style="width:168px" %)F09|(% style="width:2050px" %)Fiscal year starting in September
80 +|(% style="width:168px" %)F10|(% style="width:2050px" %)Fiscal year starting in October
81 +|(% style="width:168px" %)F11|(% style="width:2050px" %)Fiscal year starting in November
82 +|(% style="width:168px" %)F12|(% style="width:2050px" %)Fiscal year starting in December
84 84  
85 -
86 -
87 87  Following this code list, the cases lined out in the problem statement could be coded as such:
88 88  
89 -1. Reporting year is equal to the calendar year
86 +1) Reporting year is equal to the calendar year
90 90  
91 91  <na_:Series **REF_PERIOD_DETAIL="C" **STO="B1G" REF_AREA="LU" FREQ="Q">
92 - <na_:Obs  OBS_VALUE="44" TIME_PERIOD="**1995**-Q1"/>
89 + <na_:Obs OBS_VALUE="44" TIME_PERIOD="**1995**-Q1"/>
93 93  </na_:Series>
94 94  
95 95  
96 96  REF_PERIOD_DETAIL="C" à reporting year 1995 starts 1^^st^^ January 1995
97 97  
98 -1. Reporting year starts on the first day of a month different to January
95 +2) Reporting year starts on the first day of a month different to January
99 99  Example: fiscal year starting on the 1^^st^^ of July
100 100  
101 101  <na_:Series **REF_PERIOD_DETAIL="F07" **STO="B1G" REF_AREA="LU" FREQ="Q">
102 - <na_:Obs  OBS_VALUE="44" TIME_PERIOD="**1995**-Q1"/>
99 + <na_:Obs OBS_VALUE="44" TIME_PERIOD="**1995**-Q1"/>
103 103  </na_:Series>
104 104  
105 105  
106 106  REF_PERIOD_DETAIL="F07" à reporting year 1995 starts 1^^st^^ July 1995 and Q1 projected on the calendar year goes from: 07-09/1995
107 107  
108 -1. Reporting year starts on a given day in the year
105 +3) Reporting year starts on a given day in the year
109 109  Example: tax year starting on the 5^^th^^ of April
110 110  
111 111  <na_:Series **REF_PERIOD_DETAIL="F04" **STO="B1G" REF_AREA="LU" FREQ="Q">
112 - <na_:Obs  OBS_VALUE="44" TIME_PERIOD="**1995**-Q1"/>
109 + <na_:Obs OBS_VALUE="44" TIME_PERIOD="**1995**-Q1"/>
113 113  </na_:Series>
114 114  
115 115  
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116 116  REF_PERIOD_DETAIL="F04" à reporting year 1995 would start 1^^st^^ April 1995. The case is not solved because we do not know anymore that it should be on the 5^^th^^. Another option would be to use the “F_O” code:
117 117  
118 118  <na_:Series **REF_PERIOD_DETAIL="F_O" **STO="B1G" REF_AREA="LU" FREQ="Q">
119 - <na_:Obs  OBS_VALUE="44" TIME_PERIOD="**1995**-Q1"/>
116 + <na_:Obs OBS_VALUE="44" TIME_PERIOD="**1995**-Q1"/>
120 120  </na_:Series>
121 121  
122 122  
... ... @@ -126,7 +126,7 @@
126 126  Example: fiscal year ending on the 30^^th^^ of June, equivalent to fiscal year starting on the 1^^st^^ of July Y-1
127 127  
128 128  <na_:Series **REF_PERIOD_DETAIL="??" **STO="B1G" REF_AREA="LU" FREQ="Q">
129 - <na_:Obs  OBS_VALUE="44" TIME_PERIOD="**1995**-Q1"/>
126 + <na_:Obs OBS_VALUE="44" TIME_PERIOD="**1995**-Q1"/>
130 130  </na_:Series>
131 131  
132 132  
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139 139  1. Reporting year is equal to the calendar year
140 140  
141 141  <na_:Series **REF_PERIOD_DETAIL="C" REPYEARSTART="~-~-01-01"// //**STO="B1G" REF_AREA="LU" FREQ="Q">
142 - <na_:Obs  OBS_VALUE="44" TIME_PERIOD="**1995**-Q1"/>
139 + <na_:Obs OBS_VALUE="44" TIME_PERIOD="**1995**-Q1"/>
143 143  </na_:Series>
144 144  
145 -
146 146  1995-Q1 is the same as the calendar definition: from 1^^st^^ January 1995 until 31^^st^^ March 1995. In this case, the attribute REPYEARSTART may be omitted, since it expressed the default value of 1^^st^^ January.
147 147  
148 148  Reporting year starts on the first day of a month different to January
... ... @@ -149,7 +149,7 @@
149 149  Example: fiscal year starting on the 1^^st^^ of July
150 150  
151 151  <na_:Series **REF_PERIOD_DETAIL="F07" REPYEARSTART="~-~-07-01" **STO="B1G" REF_AREA="LU" FREQ="Q">
152 - <na_:Obs  OBS_VALUE="44" TIME_PERIOD="**1995**-Q1"/>
148 + <na_:Obs OBS_VALUE="44" TIME_PERIOD="**1995**-Q1"/>
153 153  </na_:Series>
154 154  
155 155  Reporting period 1995-Q1 lasts in that case from 1^^st^^ July 1995 until 30^^th^^ September 1995.
... ... @@ -158,7 +158,7 @@
158 158  Example: tax year starting on the 5^^th^^ of April
159 159  
160 160  <na_:Series **REF_PERIOD_DETAIL="F04" REPYEARSTART="~-~-04-05" **STO="B1G" REF_AREA="LU" FREQ="Q">
161 - <na_:Obs  OBS_VALUE="44" TIME_PERIOD="**1995**-Q1"/>
157 + <na_:Obs OBS_VALUE="44" TIME_PERIOD="**1995**-Q1"/>
162 162  </na_:Series>
163 163  
164 164  Reporting period 1995-Q1 lasts in that case from 5^^th^^ April 1995 until 4^^th^^ July 1995.
... ... @@ -167,7 +167,7 @@
167 167  Example: fiscal year ending on the 30^^th^^ of June, equivalent to fiscal year starting on the 1^^st^^ of July Y-1
168 168  
169 169  <na_:Series **REF_PERIOD_DETAIL="??" REPYEAREND="~-~-06-30" **STO="B1G" REF_AREA="LU" FREQ="Q">
170 - <na_:Obs  OBS_VALUE="44" TIME_PERIOD="**1995**-Q1"/>
166 + <na_:Obs OBS_VALUE="44" TIME_PERIOD="**1995**-Q1"/>
171 171  </na_:Series>
172 172  
173 173  Reporting period 1995-Q1 lasts in that case from 1^^st^^ July 1994 until 30^^th^^ September 1994
... ... @@ -192,7 +192,6 @@
192 192  
193 193  Note that the DSD proposal below does not constitute a real usable DSD for agriculture statistics. It is heavily simplified to only include concepts that are relevant for the purpose of these guidelines. Also the SDMX fragments shown in the example are not syntactically correct. They just serve the purpose of explaining the issue and show the coding in a readable way (pseudo code).
194 194  
195 -
196 196  |**Concept ID**|**Description**|**Role**|**Code List / Format**
197 197  |**FREQ**|Frequency|Dimension|A (annual), S (Half-yearly)
198 198  |**REF_AREA**|Reference area|Dimension|IN (India), CN (China)
... ... @@ -346,11 +346,4 @@
346 346  
347 347  ----
348 348  
349 -[[~[1~]>>path:#_ftnref1]] The //YYYY// format is reserved for Gregorian years, i.e. from January 1 to December 31. For reporting years that are not Gregorian years, the format YYYY-A1 (e.g. 2016-A1) must be used for the time dimension
350 -
351 -[[~[2~]>>path:#_ftnref2]] [[https:~~/~~/sdmx.org/wp-content/uploads/SWG_TimeTransformation_V1.0.docx>>url:https://sdmx.org/wp-content/uploads/SWG_TimeTransformation_V1.0.docx]]
352 -
353 -[[~[3~]>>path:#_ftnref3]] [[https:~~/~~/sdmx.org/wp-content/uploads/SDMX_2-1-1-SECTION_6_TechnicalNotes-march-2013.pdf>>url:https://sdmx.org/wp-content/uploads/SDMX_2-1-1-SECTION_6_TechnicalNotes-march-2013.pdf]], row 658
354 -
355 -[[~[4~]>>path:#_ftnref4]] [[http:~~/~~/www.iso.org/iso/home/standards/iso8601.htm>>url:http://www.iso.org/iso/home/standards/iso8601.htm]] and
356 -[[https:~~/~~/sdmx.org/wp-content/uploads/SDMX_2-1-1-SECTION_6_TechnicalNotes-march-2013.pdf>>url:https://sdmx.org/wp-content/uploads/SDMX_2-1-1-SECTION_6_TechnicalNotes-march-2013.pdf]], row 749.
344 +{{putFootnotes/}}
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