Prefatory NoteIntroduction and OverviewI. Underlying Measurement Challenges1. Addressing the Challenges of Globalization in National Accounts2. Meaningful Information for Domestic Economies in the Light of Globalization: Will Additional Macroeconomic Indicators and Different Presentations Shed Light?3. National Accounts for a Global Economy: The Case of Ireland4. Eliminating the Pass-Through: Towards FDI Statistics That Better Capture the Financial and Economic Linkages between Countries5. Multinational Profit Shifting and Measures throughout Economic AccountsComment: Stephen J. Redding6. Strategic Movement of Intellectual Property within US Multinational EnterprisesComment: J. Bradford Jensen7. The Relationship between Tax Payments and MNE’s Patenting Activities and Implications for Real Economic Activity: Evidence from the NetherlandsComment: Robert E. YuskavageII. Global Value Chains for Intermediate Products8. Accounting Frameworks for Global Value Chains: Extended Supply-Use Tables9. Accounting for Firm Heterogeneity within US Industries: Extended Supply-Use Tables and Trade in Value Added Using Enterprise and Establishment Level DataComment: Susan N. Houseman10. The Role of Exporters and Domestic Producers in GVCs: Evidence for Belgium Based on Extended National Supply and Use Tables Integrated into a Global Multiregional Input-Output Table11. Measuring Bilateral Exports of Value Added: A Unified FrameworkIII. Globally Intangible Capital12. A Portrait of US Factoryless Goods ProducersComment: Teresa C. Fort13. R&D Capitalization: Where Did We Go Wrong?Comment: Michael Connolly14. Capturing International R&D Trade and Financing Flows: What Do Available Sources Reveal about the Structure of Knowledge-Based Global Production?Comment: Nune HovhannisyanNotesContributorsAuthor IndexSubject Index