View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

NEWS RELEASE
EMBARGOED UNTIL RELEASE AT 8:30 A.M. EDT, MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 2015
BEA 15-36
Technical: James Rankin
Harvey Davis
Kurt Kunze
Media:
Jeannine Aversa

(202) 606-5301 (Personal Income)
piniwd@bea.gov
(202) 606-5302 (Personal Consumption Expenditures) pce@bea.gov
(202) 606-9748 (Revisions)
(202) 606-2649

PERSONAL INCOME AND OUTLAYS: JUNE 2015
REVISED ESTIMATES: 1976 THROUGH MAY 2015
Personal income increased $68.1 billion, or 0.4 percent, and disposable personal income (DPI)
increased $60.6 billion, or 0.5 percent, in June, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
Personal consumption expenditures (PCE) increased $25.9 billion, or 0.2 percent. In May, personal
income increased $66.3 billion, or 0.4 percent, DPI increased $53.8 billion, or 0.4 percent, and PCE
increased $90.8 billion, or 0.7 percent, based on revised estimates.
Real DPI increased 0.2 percent in June, compared with an increase of 0.1 percent in May.
Real PCE decreased less than 0.1 percent, in contrast to an increase of 0.4 percent.

Feb.
Personal income, current dollars
Disposable personal income:
Current dollars
Chained (2009) dollars
Personal consumption expenditures:
Current dollars
Chained (2009) dollars

0.3

2015
Mar.
Apr.
May
(Percent change from preceding month)
0.0
0.4
0.4

June
0.4

0.3
0.2

0.0
-0.2

0.4
0.3

0.4
0.1

0.5
0.2

0.2
0.0

0.5
0.3

0.3
0.2

0.7
0.4

0.2
0.0

Annual Revision of the National Income and Product Accounts
The estimates released today reflect the results of the annual revision of the national income and
product accounts (NIPAs) in conjunction with preliminary estimates for June 2015. In addition to the
regular revision of the estimates for the most recent 3 years and for the first 5 months of 2015, some series
are revised back to 1976. More information is available in "Preview of the 2015 Annual Revision of the
NIPAs" in the June Survey of Current Business and on BEA's Web site. The August Survey will contain an
article that describes the results.
________________
NOTE. Monthly estimates are expressed at seasonally adjusted annual rates, unless otherwise specified. Monthto-month dollar changes are differences between these published estimates. Month-to-month percent changes are
calculated from unrounded data and are not annualized. “Real” estimates are in chained (2009) dollars.

This news release is available on BEA’s Web site at www.bea.gov/newsreleases/rels.htm.
-more-

-2-

Compensation
Wages and salaries increased $18.3 billion in June, compared with an increase of $32.0 billion in
May. Private wages and salaries increased $16.0 billion in June, compared with an increase of $29.6 billion
in May. Government wages and salaries increased $2.3 billion, compared with an increase of $2.4 billion.
Supplements to wages and salaries increased $4.4 billion in June, compared with an increase of $5.6
billion in May.

Other personal income
Proprietors' income increased $11.0 billion in June, compared with an increase of $7.4 billion in May.
Farm proprietors' income increased $4.3 billion in June, the same increase as in May. Nonfarm proprietors'
income increased $6.7 billion in June, compared with an increase of $3.1 billion in May.
Rental income of persons increased $7.4 billion in June, compared with an increase of $7.7 billion in
May. Personal income receipts on assets (personal interest income plus personal dividend income)
increased $20.2 billion, compared with an increase of $8.4 billion. Personal current transfer receipts
increased $8.6 billion, compared with an increase of $8.9 billion.
Contributions for government social insurance -- a subtraction in calculating personal income -increased $1.8 billion in June, compared with an increase of $3.8 billion in May.

Personal current taxes and disposable personal income
Personal current taxes increased $7.5 billion in June, compared with an increase of $12.5 billion in
May. Disposable personal income (DPI) -- personal income less personal current taxes -- increased $60.6
billion, or 0.5 percent, in June, compared with an increase of $53.8 billion, or 0.4 percent, in May.

Personal outlays and personal saving
Personal outlays -- PCE, personal interest payments, and personal current transfer payments -increased $30.5 billion in June, compared with an increase of $95.4 billion in May. PCE increased $25.9
billion, compared with an increase of $90.8 billion.
Personal saving -- DPI less personal outlays -- was $646.3 billion in June, compared with $616.2
billion in May. The personal saving rate -- personal saving as a percentage of disposable personal
income -- was 4.8 percent in June, compared with 4.6 percent in May. For a comparison of personal
saving in BEA's national income and product accounts with personal saving in the Federal Reserve Board's
financial accounts of the United States and data on changes in net worth, go to
www.bea.gov/national/nipaweb/nipa-frb.asp.

-more-

-3-

Real DPI, real PCE, and price index
Real DPI -- DPI adjusted to remove price changes -- increased 0.2 percent in June, compared with an
increase of 0.1 percent in May.
Real PCE -- PCE adjusted to remove price changes -- decreased less than 0.1 percent in June, in
contrast to an increase of 0.4 percent in May. Purchases of durable goods decreased 1.1 percent, in contrast
to an increase of 1.3 percent. Purchases of motor vehicles and parts accounted for most of the decrease
in June. Purchases of nondurable goods decreased less than 0.1 percent in June, in contrast to an increase of
0.9 percent in May. Purchases of services increased 0.2 percent, compared with an increase of 0.1 percent.
The price index for PCE increased 0.2 percent in June, compared with an increase of 0.3 percent in
May. The PCE price index, excluding food and energy, increased 0.1 percent in June, the same increase as
in May.
The June price index for PCE increased 0.3 percent from June a year ago. The June PCE price index,
excluding food and energy, increased 1.3 percent from June a year ago.

NOTE. BEA acknowledges the special efforts by the Bureau of Labor Statistics with the assistance of 18
state employment offices in providing preliminary data for the first quarter of 2015 from the quarterly
census of employment and wages (QCEW). Wage and salary data from the state employment offices of
California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Kansas, Maryland, Massachusetts,
Missouri, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Utah were provided.
These data have greatly improved the estimates of wages and salaries.

Revisions
Revisions to the personal income and outlays estimates reflect the results of the annual revision of
the national income and product accounts (NIPAs). These revisions, usually made each July, incorporate
newly available and more comprehensive source data, as well as improved estimation methodologies.
This year’s revision incorporates a new classification of federal refundable tax credits, which revised
personal income, personal current taxes, government current receipts, and government current expenditures.
The timespan of the revisions is January 1976 through May 2015.
Revisions to annual estimates of personal income and outlays for 2012 through 2014 are shown in
table 12. Revised and previously published monthly estimates of personal income, DPI, PCE, personal
saving as a percentage of DPI, real DPI, and real PCE are shown in table 13; revised and previously
published annual and quarterly estimates are shown in table 14.

-more-

-4-

Personal income was revised up $27.4 billion, or 0.2 percent, for 2012; was revised down $98.5
billion, or 0.7 percent, for 2013; and was revised down $39.7 billion, or 0.3 percent, for 2014.
o For 2012, upward revisions to personal interest income and to government social benefits to
persons were partly offset by downward revisions to farm proprietors’ income, to nonfarm
proprietors’ income, and to rental income of persons.
o For 2013, downward revisions to nonfarm proprietors’ income, to personal dividend income,
and to rental income of persons were partly offset by upward revisions to personal interest
income and to government social benefits to persons.
o For 2014, downward revisions to nonfarm proprietors’ income, to personal dividend income,
and to rental income of persons were partly offset by upward revisions to personal interest
income, to wages and salaries, and to farm proprietors’ income.
Disposable personal income was revised up $19.7 billion, or 0.2 percent, for 2012; was revised down
$109.5 billion, or 0.9 percent, for 2013; and was revised down $76.1 billion, or 0.6 percent, for 2014. The
percent change from the preceding year in real DPI was revised up from an increase of 3.0 percent to an
increase of 3.2 percent in 2012; was revised down from an decrease of 0.2 percent to a decrease of 1.4
percent in 2013; and was revised up from an increase of 2.5 percent to an increase of 2.7 percent in 2014.
Personal outlays was revised down $30.8 billion, or 0.3 percent, for 2012; was revised down $91.4
billion, or 0.8 percent, for 2013; and was revised down $63.7 billion, or 0.5 percent, for 2014. Revisions to
personal outlays primarily reflected downward revisions to PCE.
The personal saving rate (personal saving as a percentage of disposable personal income) was
revised up from 7.2 percent to 7.6 percent for 2012, was revised down from 4.9 percent to 4.8 percent for
2013, and was revised down from 4.9 percent to 4.8 percent for 2014.

BEA's national, international, regional, and industry estimates; BEA news releases; and related
articles in the Survey of Current Business are available for free on BEA's Web site at www.bea.gov. The
entire historical time series for these estimates can be accessed in BEA's Interactive Data Application at
www.bea.gov/itable/. Stay informed about BEA developments by signing up for our email subscription
service or following us on Twitter @BEA_News. You also can access BEA data by registering for our Data
Application Programming Interface, or API at www.bea.gov/API/signup/index.cfm.
BEA's news release schedule is available at www.bea.gov/newsreleases/2015rd.htm.

*

*

*

Next release – August 28, 2015 at 8:30 A.M. EDT for
Personal Income and Outlays for July

-more-

Table 1. Personal Income and Its Disposition (Months)
[Billions of dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

2014
Nov.

1 Personal income......................................................................................
2 Compensation of employees ..............................................................
3
Wages and salaries ..........................................................................
4
Private industries.............................................................................
5
Goods-producing industries.........................................................
6
Manufacturing ...........................................................................
7
Services-producing industries......................................................
8
Trade, transportation, and utilities.............................................
9
Other services-producing industries.........................................
10
Government.....................................................................................
11
Supplements to wages and salaries...............................................
12
Employer contributions for employee pension and insurance
funds 1..........................................................................................
13
Employer contributions for government social insurance ................
14 Proprietors’ income with inventory valuation and capital
consumption adjustments...............................................................
15
Farm ...................................................................................................
16
Nonfarm..............................................................................................
17 Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment...
18 Personal income receipts on assets..................................................
19
Personal interest income ....................................................................
20
Personal dividend income...................................................................
21 Personal current transfer receipts .....................................................
22
Government social benefits to persons ..............................................
23
Social security 2 ..............................................................................
24
Medicare 3 .......................................................................................
25
Medicaid..........................................................................................
26
Unemployment insurance................................................................
27
Veterans’ benefits............................................................................
28
Other ...............................................................................................
29
Other current transfer receipts, from business (net) ...........................
30 Less: Contributions for government social insurance, domestic...
31 Less: Personal current taxes .................................................................
32 Equals: Disposable personal income ...................................................
33 Less: Personal outlays ...........................................................................
34 Personal consumption expenditures ......................................................
35
Goods.................................................................................................
36
Durable goods.................................................................................
37
Nondurable goods ...........................................................................
38
Services..............................................................................................
39 Personal interest payments 4 .................................................................
40 Personal current transfer payments .......................................................
41
To government....................................................................................
42
To the rest of the world (net)...............................................................
43 Equals: Personal saving.........................................................................
44 Personal saving as a percentage of disposable personal income
Addenda:
45 Personal income excluding current transfer receipts, billions of
chained (2009) dollars 5 ...................................................................
Disposable personal income:
46
Total, billions of chained (2009) dollars 5 ............................................
Per capita:
47
Current dollars.................................................................................
48
Chained (2009) dollars....................................................................
49 Population (midperiod, thousands) 6 ......................................................

2015
Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

March

Line
April

May

June

P

14,965.6 15,014.2 15,044.8 15,090.2 15,088.8 15,152.7 15,219.0 15,287.1 1
9,443.4 9,461.9 9,478.3 9,482.0 9,485.4 9,508.5 9,546.1 9,568.8 2
7,650.1 7,664.2 7,676.6 7,676.9 7,677.0 7,695.7 7,727.7 7,746.0 3
6,401.8 6,414.4 6,422.9 6,420.2 6,418.0 6,434.5 6,464.1 6,480.1 4
1,297.9 1,295.3 1,294.2 1,287.9 1,286.5 1,285.1 1,285.6 1,284.2 5
799.5
797.3
796.3
792.6
791.0
790.3
790.9
789.9 6
5,103.9 5,119.1 5,128.7 5,132.2 5,131.5 5,149.4 5,178.6 5,195.9 7
1,205.9 1,211.8 1,209.7 1,212.2 1,208.0 1,211.8 1,217.3 1,217.8 8
3,897.9 3,907.2 3,919.0 3,920.1 3,923.5 3,937.6 3,961.2 3,978.1 9
1,248.2 1,249.8 1,253.7 1,256.7 1,259.0 1,261.1 1,263.5 1,265.9 10
1,793.4 1,797.7 1,801.7 1,805.1 1,808.4 1,812.9 1,818.5 1,822.9 11
1,236.2
557.2

1,239.6
558.1

1,243.1
558.7

1,246.8
558.3

1,250.5
557.9

1,254.2
558.6

1,258.0
560.4

1,261.7 12
561.1 13

1,374.8 1,385.6 1,375.6 1,367.4 1,365.2 1,370.6 1,378.0 1,389.0 14
75.9
76.6
68.5
60.5
52.5
56.8
61.0
65.3 15
1,298.9 1,309.1 1,307.1 1,306.9 1,312.8 1,313.8 1,317.0 1,323.7 16
628.1
631.1
633.2
636.9
640.8
647.7
655.4
662.8 17
2,132.0 2,136.7 2,132.8 2,165.8 2,138.0 2,165.1 2,173.5 2,193.7 18
1,290.4 1,291.1 1,286.8 1,282.6 1,278.3 1,295.8 1,313.2 1,330.6 19
841.5
845.6
846.0
883.2
859.7
869.3
860.3
863.1 20
2,566.7 2,580.1 2,610.3 2,623.2 2,643.9 2,647.2 2,656.2 2,664.7 21
2,524.6 2,538.0 2,568.0 2,580.8 2,601.4 2,604.5 2,613.3 2,621.6 22
841.7
850.0
859.8
859.6
865.4
867.7
871.8
868.9 23
605.3
606.8
608.2
609.8
611.5
613.3
615.3
617.4 24
506.2
505.3
517.2
525.0
529.5
529.5
531.9
539.0 25
31.7
35.4
35.3
35.3
34.6
33.1
32.9
33.5 26
86.6
87.6
89.7
90.3
92.3
93.6
93.3
95.3 27
453.1
452.9
457.7
460.9
468.1
467.4
468.1
467.5 28
42.1
42.1
42.2
42.4
42.6
42.7
42.9
43.1 29
1,179.5 1,181.1 1,185.5 1,185.1 1,184.5 1,186.4 1,190.2 1,192.0 30
1,842.5 1,850.9 1,896.5 1,899.1 1,901.5 1,914.5 1,927.0 1,934.6 31
13,123.1 13,163.4 13,148.2 13,191.0 13,187.4 13,238.1 13,291.9 13,352.5 32
12,516.6 12,509.9 12,456.8 12,479.5 12,540.3 12,580.4 12,675.7 12,706.2 33
12,075.2 12,067.6 12,018.6 12,042.7 12,105.0 12,138.7 12,229.5 12,255.3 34
3,993.5 3,952.5 3,884.8 3,881.1 3,938.7 3,930.4 3,996.3 3,989.2 35
1,311.4 1,300.3 1,297.9 1,292.2 1,315.3 1,320.6 1,335.4 1,318.1 36
2,682.1 2,652.2 2,586.9 2,588.8 2,623.4 2,609.8 2,660.9 2,671.1 37
8,081.7 8,115.1 8,133.8 8,161.7 8,166.3 8,208.3 8,233.2 8,266.1 38
263.4
264.3
262.8
261.3
259.8
264.3
268.7
273.2 39
178.0
178.0
175.5
175.5
175.5
177.4
177.5
177.7 40
95.9
95.9
97.0
97.0
97.0
97.1
97.2
97.3 41
82.2
82.2
78.5
78.5
78.5
80.3
80.3
80.3 42
606.5
653.5
691.4
711.6
647.0
657.8
616.2
646.3 43
4.6
5.0
5.3
5.4
4.9
5.0
4.6
4.8 44

11,338.8 11,396.9 11,450.8 11,461.5 11,416.2 11,466.6 11,483.2 11,511.0 45
12,001.1 12,065.3 12,108.1 12,127.2 12,097.2 12,138.5 12,149.7 12,176.8 46
40,996
37,491

41,099
37,671

41,030
37,785

41,142
37,824

41,108
37,710

41,243
37,817

41,387
37,830

320,107

320,284

320,450

320,621

320,797

320,975

321,162

p Preliminary
1. Includes actual employer contributions and actuarially imputed employer contributions to
reflect benefits accrued by defined benefit pension plan participants through service to employers
in the current period.
2. Social security benefits include old-age, survivors, and disability insurance benefits that are
distributed from the federal old-age and survivors insurance trust fund and the disability insurance
trust fund.
3. Medicare benefits include hospital and supplementary medical insurance benefits that are
distributed from the federal hospital insurance trust fund and the supplementary medical insur-

41,549 47
37,891 48
321,365 49

ance trust fund.
4. Consists of nonmortgage interest paid by households.
5. The current-dollar measure is deflated by the implicit price deflator for personal consumption
expenditures.
6. Population is the total population of the United States, including the Armed Forces overseas
and the institutionalized population. The monthly estimate is the average of estimates for the first
of the month and the first of the following month; the annual and quarterly estimates are averages
of the monthly estimates.

Table 2. Personal Income and Its Disposition (Years and Quarters)
[Billions of dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

2013

2014

2014
I

1 Personal income......................................................................................
2 Compensation of employees ..............................................................
3
Wages and salaries ..........................................................................
4
Private industries.............................................................................
5
Goods-producing industries.........................................................
6
Manufacturing ...........................................................................
7
Services-producing industries......................................................
8
Trade, transportation, and utilities.............................................
9
Other services-producing industries.........................................
10
Government.....................................................................................
11
Supplements to wages and salaries...............................................
12
Employer contributions for employee pension and insurance
funds 1 ..........................................................................................
13
Employer contributions for government social insurance ................
14 Proprietors’ income with inventory valuation and capital
consumption adjustments...............................................................
15
Farm ...................................................................................................
16
Nonfarm..............................................................................................
17 Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment...
18 Personal income receipts on assets..................................................
19
Personal interest income ....................................................................
20
Personal dividend income...................................................................
21 Personal current transfer receipts .....................................................
22
Government social benefits to persons ..............................................
23
Social security 2 ..............................................................................
24
Medicare 3 .......................................................................................
25
Medicaid..........................................................................................
26
Unemployment insurance................................................................
27
Veterans’ benefits............................................................................
28
Other ...............................................................................................
29
Other current transfer receipts, from business (net) ...........................
30 Less: Contributions for government social insurance, domestic...
31 Less: Personal current taxes .................................................................
32 Equals: Disposable personal income ...................................................
33 Less: Personal outlays ...........................................................................
34 Personal consumption expenditures ......................................................
35
Goods.................................................................................................
36
Durable goods.................................................................................
37
Nondurable goods ...........................................................................
38
Services..............................................................................................
39 Personal interest payments 4 .................................................................
40 Personal current transfer payments .......................................................
41
To government....................................................................................
42
To the rest of the world (net)...............................................................
43 Equals: Personal saving.........................................................................
44 Personal saving as a percentage of disposable personal income
Addenda:
45 Personal income excluding current transfer receipts, billions of
chained (2009) dollars 5....................................................................
Disposable personal income:
46
Total, billions of chained (2009) dollars 5 ............................................
Per capita:
47
Current dollars.................................................................................
48
Chained (2009) dollars....................................................................
49 Population (midperiod, thousands) 6 ......................................................

II

2015
III

IV

I

Line
II

14,068.4 14,694.2 14,433.5 14,612.8 14,774.8 14,955.7 15,074.6 15,219.6 1
8,839.7 9,248.9 9,103.7 9,177.3 9,289.9 9,424.9 9,481.9 9,541.2 2
7,114.4 7,477.8 7,350.0 7,414.5 7,513.9 7,632.6 7,676.8 7,723.1 3
5,906.8 6,240.5 6,126.6 6,180.3 6,270.7 6,384.4 6,420.3 6,459.6 4
1,190.1 1,260.9 1,233.6 1,250.4 1,266.6 1,292.9 1,289.5 1,285.0 5
746.8
780.9
770.5
775.1
781.4
796.5
793.3
790.4 6
4,716.7 4,979.7 4,892.9 4,930.0 5,004.1 5,091.5 5,130.8 5,174.6 7
1,118.5 1,175.5 1,153.8 1,165.7 1,179.2 1,203.3 1,210.0 1,215.6 8
3,598.2 3,804.2 3,739.2 3,764.3 3,825.0 3,888.2 3,920.8 3,959.0 9
1,207.6 1,237.2 1,223.4 1,234.2 1,243.2 1,248.2 1,256.5 1,263.5 10
1,725.3 1,771.2 1,753.7 1,762.7 1,776.0 1,792.3 1,805.1 1,818.1 11
1,197.8
527.5

1,224.0
547.2

1,213.1
540.5

1,219.4
543.3

1,227.1
548.9

1,236.3
556.0

1,246.8
558.3

1,258.0 12
560.1 13

1,285.1 1,346.7 1,304.8 1,346.3 1,357.8 1,377.9 1,369.4 1,379.2 14
88.8
78.1
71.7
88.8
77.2
74.8
60.5
61.0 15
1,196.3 1,268.6 1,233.0 1,257.5 1,280.6 1,303.0 1,308.9 1,318.1 16
563.4
610.8
591.0
605.5
618.4
628.4
637.0
655.3 17
2,060.4 2,117.5 2,102.7 2,121.8 2,115.0 2,130.6 2,145.5 2,177.5 18
1,271.3 1,302.0 1,320.2 1,310.0 1,288.1 1,289.8 1,282.6 1,313.2 19
789.0
815.5
782.5
811.9
826.8
840.8
863.0
864.3 20
2,426.6 2,529.2 2,476.0 2,513.1 2,556.5 2,571.0 2,625.8 2,656.0 21
2,385.5 2,487.2 2,434.2 2,471.1 2,514.4 2,528.9 2,583.4 2,613.1 22
799.0
834.6
824.5
833.2
837.2
843.8
861.6
869.5 23
574.6
597.8
589.5
595.6
600.8
605.3
609.8
615.3 24
439.7
487.4
463.0
473.6
505.9
507.1
523.9
533.4 25
62.3
35.8
39.7
36.0
34.6
32.9
35.0
33.1 26
79.1
83.7
82.0
82.3
83.8
86.7
90.7
94.1 27
430.8
447.9
435.5
450.5
452.2
453.3
462.2
467.6 28
41.2
42.0
41.8
42.0
42.1
42.1
42.4
42.9 29
1,106.8 1,159.0 1,144.5 1,151.2 1,162.9 1,177.2 1,185.1 1,189.6 30
1,672.8 1,780.2 1,736.0 1,754.1 1,792.0 1,838.8 1,899.1 1,925.4 31
12,395.6 12,913.9 12,697.5 12,858.7 12,982.7 13,116.8 13,175.5 13,294.2 32
11,805.7 12,293.7 12,060.3 12,235.2 12,377.0 12,502.5 12,492.2 12,654.1 33
11,392.3 11,865.9 11,640.3 11,813.0 11,949.1 12,061.4 12,055.5 12,207.8 34
3,836.8 3,948.4 3,874.7 3,951.5 3,987.4 3,980.1 3,901.5 3,972.0 35
1,237.8 1,280.2 1,243.1 1,279.1 1,295.1 1,303.5 1,301.8 1,324.7 36
2,598.9 2,668.2 2,631.6 2,672.4 2,692.2 2,676.6 2,599.7 2,647.3 37
7,555.5 7,917.5 7,765.6 7,861.5 7,961.7 8,081.3 8,153.9 8,235.9 38
244.2
254.2
249.0
250.5
254.3
263.1
261.3
268.7 39
169.3
173.6
170.9
171.7
173.6
178.0
175.5
177.5 40
92.6
95.3
94.4
95.2
95.7
95.9
97.0
97.2 41
76.6
78.3
76.5
76.5
77.9
82.2
78.5
80.3 42
589.9
620.2
637.2
623.5
605.7
614.3
683.3
640.1 43
4.8
4.8
5.0
4.8
4.7
4.7
5.2
4.8 44

10,822.3 11,149.8 11,017.0 11,089.0 11,164.6 11,329.0 11,442.8 11,486.9 45
11,523.1 11,836.3 11,698.8 11,784.7 11,863.1 11,998.7 12,110.8 12,155.0 46
39,123
36,369

40,461
37,084

39,893
36,755

40,331
36,962

40,638
37,134

40,977
37,484

41,094
37,773

316,839

319,173

318,288

318,833

319,470

320,100

320,623

1. Includes actual employer contributions and actuarially imputed employer contributions to
reflect benefits accrued by defined benefit pension plan participants through service to employers
in the current period.
2. Social security benefits include old-age, survivors, and disability insurance benefits that are
distributed from the federal old-age and survivors insurance trust fund and the disability insurance
trust fund.
3. Medicare benefits include hospital and supplementary medical insurance benefits that are
distributed from the federal hospital insurance trust fund and the supplementary medical insur-

41,393 47
37,846 48
321,167 49

ance trust fund.
4. Consists of nonmortgage interest paid by households.
5. The current-dollar measure is deflated by the implicit price deflator for personal consumption
expenditures.
6. Population is the total population of the United States, including the Armed Forces overseas
and the institutionalized population. The monthly estimate is the average of estimates for the first
of the month and the first of the following month; the annual and quarterly estimates are averages
of the monthly estimates.

Table 3. Personal Income and Its Disposition, Change from Preceding Period (Months)
[Billions of dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

2014
Nov.

1 Personal income......................................................................................
2 Compensation of employees ..............................................................
3
Wages and salaries ..........................................................................
4
Private industries.............................................................................
5
Goods-producing industries.........................................................
6
Manufacturing ...........................................................................
7
Services-producing industries......................................................
8
Trade, transportation, and utilities.............................................
9
Other services-producing industries.........................................
10
Government.....................................................................................
11
Supplements to wages and salaries...............................................
12
Employer contributions for employee pension and insurance
funds 1 ..........................................................................................
13
Employer contributions for government social insurance ................
14 Proprietors’ income with inventory valuation and capital
consumption adjustments...............................................................
15
Farm ...................................................................................................
16
Nonfarm..............................................................................................
17 Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment...
18 Personal income receipts on assets..................................................
19
Personal interest income ....................................................................
20
Personal dividend income...................................................................
21 Personal current transfer receipts .....................................................
22
Government social benefits to persons ..............................................
23
Social security 2 ..............................................................................
24
Medicare 3 .......................................................................................
25
Medicaid..........................................................................................
26
Unemployment insurance................................................................
27
Veterans’ benefits............................................................................
28
Other ...............................................................................................
29
Other current transfer receipts, from business (net) ...........................
30 Less: Contributions for government social insurance, domestic...
31 Less: Personal current taxes .................................................................
32 Equals: Disposable personal income ...................................................
33 Less: Personal outlays ...........................................................................
34 Personal consumption expenditures ......................................................
35
Goods.................................................................................................
36
Durable goods.................................................................................
37
Nondurable goods ...........................................................................
38
Services..............................................................................................
39 Personal interest payments 4 .................................................................
40 Personal current transfer payments .......................................................
41
To government....................................................................................
42
To the rest of the world (net)...............................................................
43 Equals: Personal saving.........................................................................
Addenda:
44 Personal income excluding current transfer receipts, billions of chained
(2009) dollars 5 ...................................................................................
45 Disposable personal income, billions of chained (2009) dollars 5 ..........

2015
Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

March

Line
April

May

June

P

78.3
74.0
66.4
64.7
12.4
6.9
52.2
13.8
38.4
1.7
7.7

48.6
18.5
14.1
12.6
–2.6
–2.1
15.2
5.9
9.3
1.6
4.3

30.6
16.4
12.4
8.5
–1.2
–1.0
9.6
–2.1
11.7
3.9
4.0

45.4
3.7
0.3
–2.7
–6.2
–3.7
3.5
2.4
1.1
3.0
3.4

–1.3
3.4
0.1
–2.2
–1.5
–1.6
–0.7
–4.1
3.4
2.3
3.3

63.8
23.1
18.6
16.6
–1.4
–0.7
17.9
3.7
14.2
2.1
4.5

66.3
37.6
32.0
29.6
0.5
0.5
29.1
5.6
23.6
2.4
5.6

68.1 1
22.7 2
18.3 3
16.0 4
–1.4 5
–1.0 6
17.3 7
0.5 8
16.9 9
2.3 10
4.4 11

3.3
4.4

3.4
0.9

3.4
0.6

3.7
–0.3

3.8
–0.5

3.7
0.7

3.8
1.8

3.7 12
0.7 13

1.5
3.8
–2.3
2.0
8.8
2.5
6.3
0.5
0.5
2.1
1.4
–3.6
0.3
0.8
–0.6
0.0
8.5
19.3
59.0
35.6
33.8
–0.8
12.4
–13.3
34.6
1.8
0.0
0.0
0.0
23.4

10.8
0.7
10.2
2.9
4.7
0.6
4.1
13.4
13.4
8.3
1.5
–0.9
3.7
1.0
–0.2
0.0
1.6
8.4
40.3
–6.7
–7.6
–41.0
–11.1
–29.9
33.4
0.8
0.0
0.0
0.0
47.0

–10.0
–8.0
–1.9
2.2
–3.8
–4.2
0.4
30.1
30.0
9.8
1.5
11.9
–0.1
2.1
4.8
0.2
4.4
45.7
–15.1
–53.1
–49.0
–67.8
–2.4
–65.4
18.7
–1.5
–2.6
1.1
–3.7
37.9

–8.2
–8.0
–0.2
3.6
32.9
–4.2
37.2
13.0
12.8
–0.2
1.5
7.7
0.0
0.5
3.2
0.2
–0.4
2.6
42.8
22.7
24.1
–3.7
–5.7
2.0
27.9
–1.5
0.0
0.0
0.0
20.1

–2.2
–8.0
5.8
3.9
–27.8
–4.2
–23.5
20.7
20.5
5.8
1.7
4.6
–0.7
2.0
7.2
0.2
–0.6
2.4
–3.7
60.8
62.3
57.7
23.1
34.6
4.6
–1.5
0.0
0.0
0.0
–64.5

5.3
4.3
1.1
6.9
27.1
17.4
9.7
3.3
3.2
2.3
1.8
–0.1
–1.5
1.3
–0.7
0.2
1.9
13.1
50.7
40.0
33.6
–8.3
5.2
–13.6
42.0
4.5
1.9
0.1
1.9
10.7

7.4
4.3
3.1
7.7
8.4
17.4
–9.0
8.9
8.7
4.1
2.0
2.4
–0.2
–0.3
0.7
0.2
3.8
12.5
53.8
95.4
90.8
65.9
14.8
51.1
24.9
4.5
0.1
0.1
0.0
–41.6

87.4

58.1

53.9

10.7

–45.3

50.4

16.6

71.2

64.2

42.7

19.2

–30.0

41.2

11.2

p Preliminary
1. Includes actual employer contributions and actuarially imputed employer contributions to
reflect benefits accrued by defined benefit pension plan participants through service to employers
in the current period.
2. Social security benefits include old-age, survivors, and disability insurance benefits that are
distributed from the federal old-age and survivors insurance trust fund and the disability insurance
trust fund.

11.0
4.3
6.7
7.4
20.2
17.4
2.8
8.6
8.4
–2.9
2.2
7.2
0.6
2.0
–0.6
0.2
1.8
7.5
60.6
30.5
25.9
–7.1
–17.2
10.1
33.0
4.5
0.1
0.1
0.0
30.1

14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43

27.8 44
27.2 45

3. Medicare benefits include hospital and supplementary medical insurance benefits that are
distributed from the federal hospital insurance trust fund and the supplementary medical insurance trust fund.
4. Consists of nonmortgage interest paid by households.
5. The current-dollar measure is deflated by the implicit price deflator for personal consumption
expenditures.

Table 4. Personal Income and Its Disposition, Change from Preceding Period (Years and Quarters)
[Billions of dollars]
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

1 Personal income......................................................................................
2 Compensation of employees ..............................................................
3
Wages and salaries ..........................................................................
4
Private industries.............................................................................
5
Goods-producing industries.........................................................
6
Manufacturing ...........................................................................
7
Services-producing industries......................................................
8
Trade, transportation, and utilities.............................................
9
Other services-producing industries.........................................
10
Government.....................................................................................
11
Supplements to wages and salaries...............................................
12
Employer contributions for employee pension and insurance
funds 1 ..........................................................................................
13
Employer contributions for government social insurance ................
14 Proprietors’ income with inventory valuation and capital
consumption adjustments...............................................................
15
Farm ...................................................................................................
16
Nonfarm..............................................................................................
17 Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment...
18 Personal income receipts on assets..................................................
19
Personal interest income ....................................................................
20
Personal dividend income...................................................................
21 Personal current transfer receipts .....................................................
22
Government social benefits to persons ..............................................
23
Social security 2 ..............................................................................
24
Medicare 3 .......................................................................................
25
Medicaid..........................................................................................
26
Unemployment insurance................................................................
27
Veterans’ benefits............................................................................
28
Other ...............................................................................................
29
Other current transfer receipts, from business (net) ...........................
30 Less: Contributions for government social insurance, domestic...
31 Less: Personal current taxes .................................................................
32 Equals: Disposable personal income ...................................................
33 Less: Personal outlays ...........................................................................
34 Personal consumption expenditures ......................................................
35
Goods.................................................................................................
36
Durable goods.................................................................................
37
Nondurable goods ...........................................................................
38
Services..............................................................................................
39 Personal interest payments 4 .................................................................
40 Personal current transfer payments .......................................................
41
To government....................................................................................
42
To the rest of the world (net)...............................................................
43 Equals: Personal saving.........................................................................
Addenda:
44 Personal income excluding current transfer receipts, billions of chained
(2009) dollars 5 ...................................................................................
45 Disposable personal income, billions of chained (2009) dollars 5 ..........

2013

2014

2014

2015

Line

I

II

III

IV

I

II

153.3
229.8
184.1
174.7
34.6
12.5
140.1
25.9
114.3
9.4
45.6

625.8
409.3
363.4
333.8
70.8
34.0
263.0
57.0
206.0
29.6
45.9

212.8
137.8
126.3
120.0
27.2
16.3
92.9
19.0
73.8
6.2
11.5

179.2
73.6
64.5
53.8
16.7
4.6
37.1
11.9
25.1
10.8
9.0

162.0
112.6
99.4
90.4
16.2
6.3
74.2
13.5
60.7
9.0
13.3

180.9
135.0
118.7
113.7
26.3
15.0
87.4
24.1
63.3
5.0
16.3

118.9
57.0
44.2
35.9
–3.4
–3.2
39.3
6.7
32.6
8.3
12.8

145.0 1
59.2 2
46.3 3
39.3 4
–4.6 5
–2.9 6
43.8 7
5.7 8
38.2 9
7.0 10
13.0 11

32.5
13.1

26.2
19.7

5.1
6.5

6.3
2.8

7.7
5.6

9.1
7.1

10.5
2.3

11.2 12
1.8 13

43.7
27.2
16.5
38.1
–63.4
–17.5
–45.9
60.3
61.9
36.9
18.2
22.4
–21.5
8.9
–3.2
–1.6
155.2
161.4
–8.1
348.7
341.7
97.7
45.9
51.7
244.0
3.5
3.5
1.6
1.9
–356.8

61.6
–10.6
72.2
47.4
57.1
30.7
26.5
102.5
101.7
35.6
23.2
47.7
–26.5
4.7
17.1
0.8
52.2
107.5
518.3
488.0
473.7
111.7
42.4
69.3
362.0
10.1
4.3
2.7
1.6
30.3

20.4
–5.4
25.8
11.6
35.9
39.1
–3.2
29.6
29.4
15.7
6.9
14.5
–16.9
1.2
8.0
0.3
22.6
40.0
172.8
85.9
83.4
9.9
0.3
9.6
73.5
1.3
1.2
1.0
0.2
86.9

41.5
17.1
24.5
14.6
19.2
–10.2
29.4
37.1
36.9
8.7
6.1
10.5
–3.7
0.3
15.0
0.2
6.7
18.0
161.2
174.9
172.7
76.8
36.0
40.8
96.0
1.5
0.8
0.8
0.0
–13.7

11.5
–11.6
23.1
12.9
–6.9
–21.8
15.0
43.4
43.3
4.0
5.2
32.3
–1.3
1.5
1.6
0.1
11.6
38.0
124.0
141.8
136.1
35.9
16.0
19.8
100.2
3.8
1.9
0.5
1.4
–17.8

20.1
–2.3
22.4
10.0
15.6
1.7
13.9
14.5
14.5
6.6
4.5
1.2
–1.8
2.9
1.1
0.0
14.3
46.8
134.1
125.6
112.3
–7.2
8.4
–15.6
119.6
8.8
4.5
0.2
4.3
8.6

–8.4
–14.3
5.9
8.5
14.9
–7.3
22.2
54.8
54.5
17.9
4.5
16.9
2.2
4.1
9.0
0.3
7.9
60.2
58.7
–10.3
–5.9
–78.6
–1.7
–76.9
72.7
–1.8
–2.6
1.1
–3.7
69.0

–60.3

327.5

125.5

72.0

75.5

164.4

113.8

–165.2

313.2

113.1

85.9

78.4

135.6

112.1

1. Includes actual employer contributions and actuarially imputed employer contributions to
reflect benefits accrued by defined benefit pension plan participants through service to employers
in the current period.
2. Social security benefits include old-age, survivors, and disability insurance benefits that are
distributed from the federal old-age and survivors insurance trust fund and the disability insurance
trust fund.

9.8
0.5
9.2
18.3
31.9
30.6
1.3
30.3
29.7
7.9
5.5
9.5
–1.9
3.3
5.4
0.5
4.5
26.3
118.6
161.9
152.4
70.4
22.9
47.6
81.9
7.5
2.1
0.2
1.9
–43.2

14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43

44.1 44
44.2 45

3. Medicare benefits include hospital and supplementary medical insurance benefits that are
distributed from the federal hospital insurance trust fund and the supplementary medical insurance trust fund.
4. Consists of nonmortgage interest paid by households.
5. The current-dollar measure is deflated by the implicit price deflator for personal consumption
expenditures.

Table 5. Personal Income and Its Disposition, Percent Change from Preceding Period (Months)
Seasonally adjusted at monthly rates
Line

2014
Nov.

2015
Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

March

Line
April

June P

May

Based on current-dollar measures
1 Personal income.........................................................................
2 Compensation of employees ....................................................
3
Wages and salaries ...............................................................
4
Supplements to wages and salaries......................................
5 Proprietors’ income with inventory valuation and capital
consumption adjustments......................................................
6 Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment
7 Personal income receipts on assets .........................................
8
Personal interest income .......................................................
9
Personal dividend income......................................................
10 Personal current transfer receipts .............................................
11 Less: Contributions for government social insurance, domestic
12 Less: Personal current taxes ....................................................
13 Equals: Disposable personal income ......................................
Addenda:
14 Personal consumption expenditures .........................................
15
Goods....................................................................................
16
Durable goods....................................................................
17
Nondurable goods ..............................................................
18
Services.................................................................................

0.5
0.8
0.9
0.4

0.3
0.2
0.2
0.2

0.2
0.2
0.2
0.2

0.3
0.0
0.0
0.2

0.0
0.0
0.0
0.2

0.4
0.2
0.2
0.2

0.4
0.4
0.4
0.3

0.4
0.2
0.2
0.2

1
2
3
4

0.1
0.3
0.4
0.2
0.8
0.0
0.7
1.1
0.5

0.8
0.5
0.2
0.0
0.5
0.5
0.1
0.5
0.3

–0.7
0.3
–0.2
–0.3
0.0
1.2
0.4
2.5
–0.1

–0.6
0.6
1.5
–0.3
4.4
0.5
0.0
0.1
0.3

–0.2
0.6
–1.3
–0.3
–2.7
0.8
–0.1
0.1
0.0

0.4
1.1
1.3
1.4
1.1
0.1
0.2
0.7
0.4

0.5
1.2
0.4
1.3
–1.0
0.3
0.3
0.7
0.4

0.8
1.1
0.9
1.3
0.3
0.3
0.2
0.4
0.5

5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13

0.3
0.0
1.0
–0.5

–0.1
–1.0
–0.8
–1.1

–0.4
–1.7
–0.2
–2.5

0.2
–0.1
–0.4
0.1

0.5
1.5
1.8
1.3

0.3
–0.2
0.4
–0.5

0.7
1.7
1.1
2.0

0.2
–0.2
–1.3
0.4

0.4

0.4

0.2

0.3

0.1

0.5

0.3

14
15
16
17
0.4 18

Based on chained (2009) dollar measures
19
20

Real personal income excluding transfer receipts ....................
Real disposable personal income.............................................

0.8

0.5

0.5

0.1

–0.4

0.4

0.1

0.6

0.5

0.4

0.2

–0.2

0.3

0.1

0.2 19
0.2 20

p Preliminary

Table 6. Personal Income and Its Disposition, Percent Change from Preceding Period (Years and Quarters)
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

2013

2014

2014
I

II

2015
III

IV

I

Line
II

Based on current-dollar measures
1 Personal income.........................................................................
2 Compensation of employees ....................................................
3
Wages and salaries ...............................................................
4
Supplements to wages and salaries......................................
5 Proprietors’ income with inventory valuation and capital
consumption adjustments......................................................
6 Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment
7 Personal income receipts on assets .........................................
8
Personal interest income .......................................................
9
Personal dividend income......................................................
10 Personal current transfer receipts .............................................
11 Less: Contributions for government social insurance, domestic
12 Less: Personal current taxes ....................................................
13 Equals: Disposable personal income ......................................
Addenda:
14 Personal consumption expenditures .........................................
15
Goods....................................................................................
16
Durable goods....................................................................
17
Nondurable goods ..............................................................
18
Services.................................................................................

1.1
2.7
2.7
2.7

4.4
4.6
5.1
2.7

6.1
6.3
7.2
2.7

5.1
3.3
3.6
2.1

4.5
5.0
5.5
3.0

5.0
5.9
6.5
3.7

3.2
2.4
2.3
2.9

3.9
2.5
2.4
2.9

1
2
3
4

3.5
7.2
–3.0
–1.4
–5.5
2.5
16.3
10.7
–0.1

4.8
8.4
2.8
2.4
3.4
4.2
4.7
6.4
4.2

6.5
8.2
7.1
12.8
–1.6
4.9
8.3
9.8
5.6

13.4
10.2
3.7
–3.1
15.9
6.1
2.4
4.2
5.2

3.5
8.8
–1.3
–6.5
7.6
7.1
4.1
9.0
3.9

6.1
6.6
3.0
0.5
6.9
2.3
5.0
10.9
4.2

–2.4
5.5
2.8
–2.2
11.0
8.8
2.7
13.8
1.8

2.9
12.0
6.1
9.9
0.6
4.7
1.5
5.7
3.7

5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13

3.1
2.6
3.9
2.0

4.2
2.9
3.4
2.7

2.9
1.0
0.1
1.5

6.1
8.2
12.1
6.3

4.7
3.7
5.1
3.0

3.8
–0.7
2.6
–2.3

–0.2
–7.7
–0.5
–11.0

5.2
7.4
7.2
7.5

3.3

4.8

3.9

5.0

5.2

6.1

3.6

14
15
16
17
4.1 18

Based on chained (2009) dollar measures
19
20

Real personal income excluding transfer receipts ....................
Real disposable personal income.............................................

–0.6

3.0

4.7

2.6

2.8

6.0

4.1

–1.4

2.7

4.0

3.0

2.7

4.7

3.8

1.6 19
1.5 20

Table 7. Real Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product (Months)
2014

Line

Nov.

2015
Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

March

April

June P

May

Line

Billions of chained (2009) dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates
1 Personal consumption expenditures
2 Goods .......................................................................................
3
Durable goods .......................................................................
4
Nondurable goods .................................................................
5 Services....................................................................................

11,042.8
3,804.8
1,432.4
2,397.3

11,061.0
3,802.0
1,427.5
2,398.7

11,067.8
3,798.4
1,427.2
2,395.5

11,071.5
3,783.1
1,418.5
2,388.3

11,104.4
3,829.7
1,445.7
2,409.6

11,130.3
3,827.3
1,449.1
2,404.5

11,178.5
3,866.6
1,467.4
2,426.4

11,176.3
3,851.6
1,451.3
2,425.7

7,238.8

7,259.1

7,269.2

7,286.9

7,276.1

7,303.5

7,314.2

7,325.8

–2.2
–15.0
–16.2
–0.7

1
2
3
4
5

Change from preceding period in billions of chained (2009) dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates
6 Personal consumption expenditures
7 Goods .......................................................................................
8
Durable goods .......................................................................
9
Nondurable goods .................................................................
10 Services....................................................................................

46.8
32.1
21.9
12.2

18.2
–2.8
–4.9
1.4

6.8
–3.6
–0.3
–3.1

3.7
–15.4
–8.7
–7.2

32.8
46.6
27.2
21.2

26.0
–2.4
3.4
–5.1

48.2
39.4
18.3
21.9

15.6

20.4

10.0

17.7

–10.8

27.4

10.7

6
7
8
9
11.6 10

Percent change from preceding period in chained (2009) dollars, seasonally adjusted at monthly rates
11 Personal consumption expenditures
12 Goods .......................................................................................
13
Durable goods .......................................................................
14
Nondurable goods .................................................................
15 Services....................................................................................

0.4
0.9
1.6
0.5

0.2
–0.1
–0.3
0.1

0.1
–0.1
0.0
–0.1

0.0
–0.4
–0.6
–0.3

0.3
1.2
1.9
0.9

0.2
–0.1
0.2
–0.2

0.4
1.0
1.3
0.9

0.2

0.3

0.1

0.2

–0.1

0.4

0.1

0.0
–0.4
–1.1
0.0

11
12
13
14
0.2 15

p Preliminary

Table 8. Real Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product (Years and Quarters)
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

2013

2014

2014
I

2015

II

III

IV

I

Line
II

Billions of chained (2009) dollars
1 Personal consumption expenditures .......................................
2 Goods .......................................................................................
3
Durable goods .......................................................................
4
Nondurable goods .................................................................
5 Services....................................................................................

10,590.4
3,612.8
1,307.6
2,319.8

10,875.7
3,731.2
1,384.1
2,367.8

10,724.7
3,658.3
1,333.2
2,341.3

10,826.3
3,718.0
1,377.2
2,361.0

10,918.6
3,755.2
1,402.5
2,375.2

11,033.3
3,793.2
1,423.5
2,393.7

11,081.2
3,803.7
1,430.4
2,397.8

11,161.7
3,848.5
1,455.9
2,418.8

6,977.0

7,144.6

7,065.7

7,108.5

7,163.8

7,240.4

7,277.4

7,314.5

80.5
44.8
25.5
21.0

1
2
3
4
5

Change from preceding period in billions of chained (2009) dollars
6 Personal consumption expenditures .......................................
7 Goods .......................................................................................
8
Durable goods .......................................................................
9
Nondurable goods .................................................................
10 Services....................................................................................

177.2
108.5
71.4
42.3

285.3
118.4
76.5
48.0

34.4
10.3
8.6
2.4

101.6
59.7
44.0
19.7

92.3
37.2
25.2
14.2

114.7
38.0
21.0
18.5

48.0
10.5
7.0
4.1

68.9

167.6

24.0

42.9

55.3

76.5

37.0

6
7
8
9
37.1 10

Percent change from preceding period in chained (2009) dollars
11 Personal consumption expenditures .......................................
12 Goods .......................................................................................
13
Durable goods .......................................................................
14
Nondurable goods .................................................................
15 Services....................................................................................

1.7
3.1
5.8
1.9

2.7
3.3
5.9
2.1

1.3
1.1
2.6
0.4

3.8
6.7
13.9
3.4

3.5
4.1
7.5
2.4

4.3
4.1
6.1
3.1

1.8
1.1
2.0
0.7

1.0

2.4

1.4

2.4

3.1

4.3

2.1

2.9
4.8
7.3
3.6

11
12
13
14
2.1 15

Table 9. Price Indexes for Personal Consumption Expenditures: Level and Percent Change From Preceding Period (Months)
2014

Line

Nov.

2015
Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

March

April

May

June

P

Line

Chain-type price indexes (2009=100), seasonally adjusted
1 Personal consumption expenditures (PCE) ............................
2 Goods .......................................................................................
3
Durable goods .......................................................................
4
Nondurable goods .................................................................
5 Services....................................................................................
Addenda:
6 PCE excluding food and energy ...............................................
7 Food 1........................................................................................
8 Energy goods and services 2 ....................................................
9 Market-based PCE 3 .................................................................
10 Market-based PCE excluding food and energy 3 ......................

109.352
104.953
91.531
111.879
111.650

109.103
103.952
91.070
110.566
111.797

108.594
102.269
90.926
107.984
111.901

108.776
102.587
91.085
108.394
112.011

109.015
102.845
90.968
108.873
112.240

109.063
102.692
91.114
108.541
112.394

109.405
103.350
90.983
109.668
112.570

109.658
103.568
90.810
110.119
112.842

108.519
110.960
120.359
108.363

108.535
111.184
114.206
108.085

108.589
110.903
102.491
107.464

108.732
111.012
103.597
107.646

108.952
110.684
105.107
107.844

109.098
110.494
103.602
107.928

109.239
110.451
108.444
108.257

109.401
110.768
110.356
108.467

107.246

107.265

107.270

107.407

107.576

107.777

107.874

1
2
3
4
5

6
7
8
9
107.974 10

Percent change from preceding period in price indexes, seasonally adjusted at monthly rates
11 Personal consumption expenditures (PCE) ............................
12 Goods .......................................................................................
13
Durable goods .......................................................................
14
Nondurable goods .................................................................
15 Services....................................................................................
Addenda:
16 PCE excluding food and energy ...............................................
17 Food 1 ........................................................................................
18 Energy goods and services 2 ....................................................
19 Market-based PCE 3 .................................................................
20 Market-based PCE excluding food and energy 3 ......................

–0.1
–0.9
–0.6
–1.0
0.2

–0.2
–1.0
–0.5
–1.2
0.1

–0.5
–1.6
–0.2
–2.3
0.1

0.2
0.3
0.2
0.4
0.1

0.2
0.3
–0.1
0.4
0.2

0.0
–0.1
0.2
–0.3
0.1

0.3
0.6
–0.1
1.0
0.2

0.2
0.2
–0.2
0.4
0.2

0.1
0.3
–4.4
–0.2

0.0
0.2
–5.1
–0.3

0.0
–0.3
–10.3
–0.6

0.1
0.1
1.1
0.2

0.2
–0.3
1.5
0.2

0.1
–0.2
–1.4
0.1

0.1
0.0
4.7
0.3

0.1
0.3
1.8
0.2

0.0

0.0

0.1

0.2

0.2

0.1

0.0

p Preliminary
1. Food consists of food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption; food services,
which include purchased meals and beverages, are not classified as food.
2. Consists of gasoline and other energy goods and of electricity and gas services.

11
12
13
14
15

16
17
18
19
0.1 20

3. Market-based PCE is a supplemental measure that is based on household expenditures for
which there are observable price measures. It excludes most imputed transactions (for example,
financial services furnished without payment) and the final consumption expenditures of nonprofit
institutions serving households.

Table 10. Real Disposable Personal Income and Real Personal Consumption Expenditures: Percent Change From Month One Year Ago
2014

Line

Nov.

1 Disposable personal income ....................................................
2 Personal consumption expenditures .......................................
3 Goods .......................................................................................
4
Durable goods .......................................................................
5
Nondurable goods .................................................................
6 Services....................................................................................

2015
Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

March

April

June P

May

3.5
3.2
4.2
7.4
2.6

4.0
3.2
4.0
8.1
2.1

4.0
3.8
5.3
9.9
3.2

3.6
3.2
3.2
6.5
1.7

3.0
3.0
3.4
5.6
2.4

3.2
3.0
3.1
5.9
1.8

3.2
3.4
4.3
6.7
3.1

3.0
2.9
3.1
4.5
2.5

2.7

2.8

3.1

3.1

2.8

3.0

2.9

2.8

Line
1
2
3
4
5
6

p Preliminary

Table 11. Price Indexes for Personal Consumption Expenditures: Percent Change From Month One Year Ago
Line
1 Personal consumption expenditures (PCE) ............................
2 Goods..........................................................................................
3 Durable goods...........................................................................
4 Nondurable goods.....................................................................
5 Services ......................................................................................
Addenda:
6 PCE excluding food and energy ...............................................
7 Food 1 ........................................................................................
8 Energy goods and services 2 ....................................................
9 Market-based PCE 3 .................................................................
10 Market-based PCE excluding food and energy 3 ......................

2014
Nov.

2015
Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

March

April

June P

May

1.2
–0.8
–2.5
0.0
2.2

0.8
–1.9
–2.6
–1.5
2.1

0.2
–3.5
–2.7
–3.9
2.0

0.3
–3.1
–2.3
–3.6
2.0

0.3
–2.8
–2.3
–3.1
1.8

0.1
–3.2
–2.2
–3.8
1.8

0.2
–2.7
–1.9
–3.1
1.7

0.3
–2.7
–2.0
–3.0
1.9

1.4
2.8
–5.4
0.9

1.4
3.0
–11.7
0.5

1.3
2.7
–21.3
–0.2

1.3
2.4
–20.1
–0.1

1.3
1.7
–18.9
–0.1

1.3
1.3
–20.1
–0.2

1.3
0.7
–16.9
–0.1

1.3
1.0
–15.9
0.0

1.2

1.1

1.0

1.1

1.1

1.1

1.1

p Preliminary
1. Food consists of food and beverages purchased for off-premises consumption; food services,
which include purchased meals and beverages, are not classified as food.
2. Consists of gasoline and other energy goods and of electricity and gas services.

Line
1
2
3
4
5

6
7
8
9
1.0 10

3. Market-based PCE is a supplemental measure that is based on household expenditures for
which there are observable price measures. It excludes most imputed transactions (for example,
financial services furnished without payment) and the final consumption expenditures of nonprofit
institutions serving households.

Table 12. Revisions to Personal Income and Its Disposition
Billions of dollars

1 Personal income ....................................................................................
2 Compensation of employees.............................................................
3
Wages and salaries .........................................................................
4
Private industries ...........................................................................
5
Goods-producing industries........................................................
6
Manufacturing..........................................................................
7
Services-producing industries ....................................................
8
Trade, transportation, and utilities............................................
9
Other services-producing industries........................................
10
Government ...................................................................................
11
Supplements to wages and salaries..............................................
Employer contributions for employee pension and insurance
12
funds 1 .........................................................................................
13
Employer contributions for government social insurance ...............
14 Proprietors’ income with inventory valuation and capital
consumption adjustments..............................................................
15
Farm ..................................................................................................
16
Nonfarm.............................................................................................
17 Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment
18 Personal income receipts on assets.................................................
19
Personal interest income ...................................................................
20
Personal dividend income .................................................................
21 Personal current transfer receipts ....................................................
22
Government social benefits to persons .............................................
23
Other current transfer receipts, from business (net)..........................
24 Less: Contributions for government social insurance, domestic
25 Less: Personal current taxes ................................................................
26 Equals: Disposable personal income ..................................................
27 Less: Personal outlays ..........................................................................
28 Personal consumption expenditures.....................................................
29
Goods................................................................................................
30
Durable goods................................................................................
31
Nondurable goods..........................................................................
32
Services ............................................................................................
33 Personal interest payments 2 ................................................................
34 Personal current transfer payments ......................................................
35
To government...................................................................................
36
To the rest of the world (net)..............................................................
37 Equals: Personal saving........................................................................
38 Personal saving as a percentage of disposable personal income
Addenda:
39 Personal income excluding current transfer receipts, billions of
chained (2009) dollars 3 ..................................................................
Disposable personal income:
40
Total, billions of chained (2009) dollars 3 ...........................................
Per capita:
41
Current dollars................................................................................
42
Chained (2009) dollars...................................................................
43 Population (midperiod, thousands) 4 .....................................................

Revisions as a percentage
of previously published

Revisions to
previously published

Revised estimates

Line
2012

2013

2014

13,915.1
8,609.9
6,930.3
5,732.0
1,155.5
734.3
4,576.5
1,092.6
3,483.9
1,198.2
1,679.6

14,068.4
8,839.7
7,114.4
5,906.8
1,190.1
746.8
4,716.7
1,118.5
3,598.2
1,207.6
1,725.3

14,694.2
9,248.9
7,477.8
6,240.5
1,260.9
780.9
4,979.7
1,175.5
3,804.2
1,237.2
1,771.2

27.4
3.4
–1.8
–1.8
–1.6
–0.1
–0.2
–1.3
1.2
0.0
5.2

–98.5
–5.1
–10.3
–9.8
–5.2
–0.7
–4.6
–2.9
–1.8
–0.5
5.2

–39.7
21.3
26.1
11.0
–3.3
2.0
14.3
1.4
12.9
15.1
–4.8

0.2
0.0
0.0
0.0
–0.1
0.0
0.0
–0.1
0.0
0.0
0.3

–0.7
–0.1
–0.1
–0.2
–0.4
–0.1
–0.1
–0.3
0.0
0.0
0.3

–0.3 1
0.2 2
0.4 3
0.2 4
–0.3 5
0.3 6
0.3 7
0.1 8
0.3 9
1.2 10
–0.3 11

1,165.3
514.3

1,197.8
527.5

1,224.0
547.2

4.8
0.4

3.9
1.3

–2.4
–2.4

0.4
0.1

0.3
0.2

–0.2 12
–0.4 13

1,241.4
61.6
1,179.8
525.3
2,123.8
1,288.8
834.9
2,366.3
2,323.6
42.7
951.6
1,511.4
12,403.7
11,457.0
11,050.6
3,739.1
1,191.9
2,547.2
7,311.5
240.6
165.8
91.1
74.7
946.7
7.6

1,285.1
88.8
1,196.3
563.4
2,060.4
1,271.3
789.0
2,426.6
2,385.5
41.2
1,106.8
1,672.8
12,395.6
11,805.7
11,392.3
3,836.8
1,237.8
2,598.9
7,555.5
244.2
169.3
92.6
76.6
589.9
4.8

1,346.7
78.1
1,268.6
610.8
2,117.5
1,302.0
815.5
2,529.2
2,487.2
42.0
1,159.0
1,780.2
12,913.9
12,293.7
11,865.9
3,948.4
1,280.2
2,668.2
7,917.5
254.2
173.6
95.3
78.3
620.2
4.8

–18.8
–10.7
–8.1
–7.6
35.2
32.9
2.3
15.6
16.0
–0.4
0.4
7.7
19.7
–30.8
–32.5
–2.8
–0.2
–2.6
–29.7
–1.0
2.7
1.1
1.5
50.5
0.4

–51.5
5.6
–57.1
–32.4
–19.3
16.2
–35.5
12.1
13.3
–1.2
2.3
11.0
–109.5
–91.4
–92.1
–14.4
–11.5
–3.0
–77.6
–2.9
3.6
1.3
2.3
–18.1
–0.1

–33.5
–1.5
–3.9
–2.4
14.5
–14.9
6.7
22.8
–48.1
–0.7
–4.6
–3.6
–29.4
–1.4
–5.4
–4.6
–7.8
1.7
–0.9
–0.4
37.3
2.6
1.3
3.0
–45.1
0.3
–4.3
–5.2
6.5
0.7
0.5
0.3
8.7
0.7
0.6
0.4
–2.2
–0.9
–2.8
–5.0
–3.2
0.0
0.2
–0.3
36.3
0.5
0.7
2.1
–76.1
0.2
–0.9
–0.6
–63.7
–0.3
–0.8
–0.5
–64.4
–0.3
–0.8
–0.5
–20.2
–0.1
–0.4
–0.5
–22.3
0.0
–0.9
–1.7
2.0
–0.1
–0.1
0.1
–44.2
–0.4
–1.0
–0.6
–2.6
–0.4
–1.2
–1.0
3.2
1.6
2.2
1.9
0.5
1.2
1.4
0.6
2.7
2.1
3.2
3.6
–12.4 ................ ................ ................
–0.1 ................ ................ ................

10,882.7

10,822.3

11,149.8

5.1

–127.1

–77.5

0.0

–1.2

–0.7 39

11,688.3

11,523.1

11,836.3

12.1

–127.7

–107.0

0.1

–1.1

–0.9 40

39,440
37,165
314,499

39,123
36,369
316,839

40,461
37,084
319,173

63
39
0

–345
–403
0

–237
–335
0

0.2
0.1
0

–0.9
–1.1
0

–0.6 41
–0.9 42
0 43

1. Includes actual employer contributions and actuarially imputed employer contributions to reflect
benefits accrued by defined benefit pension plan participants through service to employers in the current
period.
2. Consists of nonmortgage interest paid by households.
3. The current-dollar measure is deflated by the implicit price deflator for personal consumption expen-

2012

2013

2014

2012

2013

Line

2014

14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38

ditures.
4. Population is the total population of the United States, including the Armed Forces overseas and the
institutionalized population. The monthly estimate is the average of estimates for the first of the month
and the first of the following month; the annual and quarterly estimates are averages of the monthly estimates.

Table 13. Changes in Personal Income and Related Measures: Comparisons with Previously Published Estimates (Months)—Continues
2012

Line

Jan.

Feb.

March

April

May

June

2013
July

Aug.

Jan.

Feb.

March

Line

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

117.8
121.6
97.4
100.2
76.1
74.8

120.8
116.9
109.7
104.7
13.8
20.2

175.7
190.9
152.4
166.2
17.0
22.9

371.2
396.3
329.8
356.2
24.8
22.4

–788.9
–741.1
–817.6
–761.1
45.4
58.0

74.5
121.8
67.9
101.6
58.5
68.3

23.0
42.6
11.6
33.7
2.7
7.4

1
2
3
4
5
6

Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Change from preceding period in billions
of dollars:
Personal income .......................................
Previously published ..............................
Disposable personal income.....................
Previously published ..............................
Personal consumption expenditures .........
Previously published ..............................

94.7
139.7
118.5
120.3
78.3
78.2

7 Personal saving as a percentage of
disposable personal income..................
8 Previously published .................................

6.6

6.7

7.0

7.2

7.3

7.6

7.1

7.1

7.2

7.8

8.8

11.0

4.6

4.6

4.7

7

6.6

6.7

6.9

7.0

7.0

7.1

6.6

6.4

6.5

7.1

8.2

10.5

4.5

4.7

4.9

8

1
2
3
4
5
6

108.1
105.3
94.3
88.7
70.4
73.7

69.6
63.0
60.0
54.0
11.3
15.1

56.2
42.2
49.1
40.5
30.2
35.9

4.0
–5.1
4.0
–3.6
–7.1
–1.2

31.0
28.8
24.5
21.0
–12.9
3.5

–27.3
–23.0
–29.0
–28.9
37.5
42.4

28.6
26.5
19.5
14.8
20.0
30.0

Percent change from preceding period for current-dollar measures, seasonally adjusted at monthly rates
9 Personal income...........................................
10 Previously published .................................

0.7
1.0

0.8
0.8

0.5
0.5

0.4
0.3

0.0
0.0

0.2
0.2

–0.2
–0.2

0.2
0.2

0.9
0.9

0.9
0.8

1.2
1.4

2.6
2.8

–5.4
–5.1

0.5
0.9

0.2 9
0.3 10

11 Disposable personal income ........................
12 Previously published .................................

1.0
1.0

0.8
0.7

0.5
0.4

0.4
0.3

0.0
0.0

0.2
0.2

–0.2
–0.2

0.2
0.1

0.8
0.8

0.9
0.8

1.2
1.3

2.6
2.8

–6.3
–5.8

0.6
0.8

0.1 11
0.3 12

13 Personal consumption expenditures ............
14 Previously published .................................

0.7
0.7

0.6
0.7

0.1
0.1

0.3
0.3

–0.1
0.0

–0.1
0.0

0.3
0.4

0.2
0.3

0.7
0.7

0.1
0.2

0.2
0.2

0.2
0.2

0.4
0.5

0.5
0.6

0.0 13
0.1 14

Percent change from preceding period for chained-dollar measures, seasonally adjusted at monthly rates
15 Real disposable personal income ................
16 Previously published .................................

0.7
0.7

0.6
0.5

0.3
0.2

0.3
0.2

0.1
0.0

0.2
0.1

–0.3
–0.3

–0.2
–0.2

0.5
0.5

0.6
0.6

1.3
1.4

2.6
2.8

–6.4
–5.9

0.2
0.5

0.2 15
0.4 16

17 Real personal consumption expenditures ....
18 Previously published .................................

0.4
0.5

0.4
0.5

–0.1
–0.1

0.1
0.2

0.0
0.0

–0.1
0.0

0.3
0.4

–0.2
0.0

0.4
0.4

–0.2
–0.1

0.3
0.3

0.2
0.2

0.3
0.4

0.1
0.3

0.1 17
0.1 18

2013

Line

April

May

June

July

Aug.

2014
Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

March

April

Line

Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Change from preceding period in billions
of dollars:
Personal income .......................................
Previously published ..............................
Disposable personal income.....................
Previously published ..............................
Personal consumption expenditures .........
Previously published ..............................

17.6
22.4
–2.5
15.8
–12.6
–5.6

86.8
63.1
73.8
58.8
40.2
33.8

54.9
62.0
51.3
57.2
46.6
55.3

–5.8
–6.7
10.2
4.2
20.1
22.3

52.5
63.2
52.0
56.2
13.3
26.9

49.0
54.6
45.2
47.5
64.3
48.0

–20.9
–16.1
–27.1
–25.1
37.8
42.5

63.0
37.7
46.9
23.9
63.1
69.3

39.6
–6.4
29.7
–10.3
35.9
14.9

82.3
78.6
66.6
73.8
–42.1
–22.4

85.2
84.3
71.7
72.8
83.4
50.5

79.1
89.7
68.8
77.6
74.8
92.7

37.5
35.0
37.8
42.8
48.8
18.1

1
2
3
4
5
6

7 Personal saving as a percentage of
disposable personal income..................
8 Previously published .................................

4.7
5.1

5.0
5.2

5.1
5.3

5.0
5.1

5.2
5.3

5.0
5.2

4.5
4.7

4.4
4.3

4.3
4.1

5.1
4.9

5.0
5.0

4.9
4.8

4.8
5.0

7
8

1
2
3
4
5
6

Percent change from preceding period for current-dollar measures, seasonally adjusted at monthly rates
9 Personal income...........................................
10 Previously published .................................

0.1
0.2

0.6
0.4

0.4
0.4

0.0
0.0

0.4
0.4

0.3
0.4

–0.1
–0.1

0.4
0.3

0.3
0.0

0.6
0.5

0.6
0.6

0.5
0.6

0.3 9
0.2 10

11 Disposable personal income ........................
12 Previously published .................................

0.0
0.1

0.6
0.5

0.4
0.5

0.1
0.0

0.4
0.4

0.4
0.4

–0.2
–0.2

0.4
0.2

0.2
–0.1

0.5
0.6

0.6
0.6

0.5
0.6

0.3 11
0.3 12

13 Personal consumption expenditures ............
14 Previously published .................................

–0.1
0.0

0.4
0.3

0.4
0.5

0.2
0.2

0.1
0.2

0.6
0.4

0.3
0.4

0.5
0.6

0.3
0.1

–0.4
–0.2

0.7
0.4

0.6
0.8

0.4 13
0.2 14

Percent change from preceding period for chained-dollar measures, seasonally adjusted at monthly rates
15 Real disposable personal income ................
16 Previously published .................................

0.1
0.2

0.5
0.4

0.2
0.2

0.0
–0.1

0.3
0.4

0.3
0.3

–0.3
–0.3

0.3
0.1

0.1
–0.2

0.4
0.5

0.5
0.5

0.3
0.5

0.1 15
0.1 16

17 Real personal consumption expenditures ....
18 Previously published .................................

0.0
0.1

0.2
0.2

0.2
0.2

0.1
0.1

0.0
0.2

0.5
0.3

0.2
0.3

0.5
0.5

0.1
0.0

–0.5
–0.3

0.7
0.4

0.4
0.6

0.2 17
–0.1 18

Table 13. Changes in Personal Income and Related Measures: Comparisons with Previously Published Estimates (Months)—Table Ends
2014

Line

May

June

July

Aug.

2015
Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Jan.

Feb.

March

April

May

Line

Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Change from preceding period in billions
of dollars:
Personal income .......................................
Previously published ..............................
Disposable personal income.....................
Previously published ..............................
Personal consumption expenditures .........
Previously published ..............................

53.4
49.4
48.3
51.5
35.3
39.1

74.9
59.8
64.5
57.4
68.2
58.3

39.2
46.0
26.7
28.0
23.1
21.7

64.9
58.3
46.1
39.8
73.3
72.6

35.3
28.9
22.4
18.1
20.7
27.6

67.3
65.9
51.1
47.7
54.1
51.9

78.3
68.5
59.0
47.8
33.8
45.8

48.6
53.3
40.3
43.9
–7.6
–20.2

30.6
51.5
–15.1
21.8
–49.0
–37.8

45.4
63.3
42.8
57.3
24.1
18.5

–1.3
5.9
–3.7
1.8
62.3
78.0

63.8
69.6
50.7
57.0
33.6
8.5

66.3
79.0
53.8
65.5
90.8
105.9

1
2
3
4
5
6

7 Personal saving as a percentage of
disposable personal income..................
8 Previously published .................................

4.9
5.1

4.8
5.1

4.8
5.1

4.6
4.7

4.6
4.6

4.5
4.6

4.6
4.5

5.0
5.0

5.3
5.5

5.4
5.7

4.9
5.1

5.0
5.4

4.6
5.1

7
8

1
2
3
4
5
6

Percent change from preceding period for current-dollar measures, seasonally adjusted at monthly rates
9 Personal income...........................................
10 Previously published .................................

0.4
0.3

0.5
0.4

0.3
0.3

0.4
0.4

0.2
0.2

0.5
0.4

0.5
0.5

0.3
0.4

0.2
0.3

0.3
0.4

0.0
0.0

0.4
0.5

0.4 9
0.5 10

11 Disposable personal income ........................
12 Previously published .................................

0.4
0.4

0.5
0.4

0.2
0.2

0.4
0.3

0.2
0.1

0.4
0.4

0.5
0.4

0.3
0.3

–0.1
0.2

0.3
0.4

0.0
0.0

0.4
0.4

0.4 11
0.5 12

13 Personal consumption expenditures ............
14 Previously published .................................

0.3
0.3

0.6
0.5

0.2
0.2

0.6
0.6

0.2
0.2

0.5
0.4

0.3
0.4

–0.1
–0.2

–0.4
–0.3

0.2
0.2

0.5
0.6

0.3
0.1

0.7 13
0.9 14

Percent change from preceding period for chained-dollar measures, seasonally adjusted at monthly rates
15 Real disposable personal income ................
16 Previously published .................................

0.2
0.2

0.4
0.2

0.1
0.1

0.4
0.4

0.1
0.1

0.4
0.3

0.6
0.5

0.5
0.6

0.4
0.6

0.2
0.3

–0.2
–0.2

0.3
0.4

0.1 15
0.2 16

17 Real personal consumption expenditures ....
18 Previously published .................................

0.1
0.1

0.4
0.3

0.1
0.1

0.6
0.7

0.1
0.2

0.4
0.4

0.4
0.5

0.2
0.1

0.1
0.2

0.0
0.0

0.3
0.5

0.2
0.0

0.4 17
0.6 18

Table 14. Changes in Personal Income and Related Measures:
Comparisons with Previously Published Estimates (Years and Quarters)
Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

2012

2013

2014

2012
I

Line

II

III

IV

Change from preceding period in billions of
dollars:
Personal income ...........................................................
Previously published ..................................................
Disposable personal income.........................................
Previously published ..................................................
Personal consumption expenditures .............................
Previously published ..................................................

660.6
685.7
602.4
582.7
361.3
393.8

153.3
279.2
–8.1
121.1
341.7
401.2

625.8
567.0
518.3
484.9
473.7
446.0

264.0
304.9
265.1
261.1
128.4
131.8

151.7
125.4
131.3
110.6
52.1
70.9

53.0
52.7
34.1
27.1
65.3
89.2

449.7
466.2
392.7
405.9
90.7
102.8

1
2
3
4
5
6

7 Personal saving as a percentage of disposable
personal income .........................................................
8 Previously published .....................................................

7.6
7.2

4.8
4.9

4.8
4.9

6.8
6.7

7.4
7.0

7.1
6.5

9.2
8.6

7
8

1
2
3
4
5
6

Percent change from preceding period for current-dollar measures
9 Personal income...............................................................
10 Previously published .....................................................

5.0
5.2

1.1
2.0

4.4
4.0

8.1
9.5

4.5
3.7

1.5
1.5

13.6 9
14.2 10

11 Disposable personal income ............................................
12 Previously published .....................................................

5.1
4.9

–0.1
1.0

4.2
3.9

9.2
9.1

4.4
3.7

1.1
0.9

13.3 11
13.8 12

13 Personal consumption expenditures ................................
14 Previously published .....................................................

3.4
3.7

3.1
3.6

4.2
3.9

4.8
5.0

1.9
2.6

2.4
3.3

3.3 13
3.8 14

Percent change from preceding period for chained-dollar measures
15 Real disposable personal income ....................................
16 Previously published .....................................................

3.2
3.0

–1.4
–0.2

2.7
2.5

6.7
6.8

3.1
2.3

–0.2
–0.4

10.9 15
11.8 16

17 Real personal consumption expenditures ........................
18 Previously published .....................................................

1.5
1.8

1.7
2.4

2.7
2.5

2.4
2.8

0.7
1.3

1.1
1.9

1.1 17
1.9 18

Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Line

2013
I

II

2014
III

IV

I

II

2015
III

IV

Line

I

Change from preceding period in billions of
dollars:
Personal income ...........................................................
Previously published ..................................................
Disposable personal income.........................................
Previously published ..................................................
Personal consumption expenditures .............................
Previously published ..................................................

–425.6
–317.9
–497.9
–389.3
107.5
128.6

133.9
154.1
94.1
130.3
51.0
63.1

111.1
116.0
118.7
115.1
94.9
104.4

84.5
64.4
61.6
37.8
139.2
134.7

212.8
173.0
172.8
149.3
83.4
75.1

179.2
175.7
161.2
172.3
172.7
142.3

162.0
150.8
124.0
116.0
136.1
131.3

180.9
168.0
134.1
119.5
112.3
118.3

118.9
154.0
58.7
105.8
–5.9
2.4

1
2
3
4
5
6

7 Personal saving as a percentage of disposable
personal income .........................................................
8 Previously published .....................................................

4.6
4.7

4.9
5.2

5.1
5.2

4.4
4.4

5.0
4.9

4.8
5.1

4.7
4.8

4.7
4.7

5.2
5.4

7
8

1
2
3
4
5
6

Percent change from preceding period for current-dollar measures
9 Personal income...............................................................
10 Previously published .....................................................

–11.4
–8.6

3.9
4.5

3.2
3.3

2.4
1.8

6.1
4.9

5.1
4.9

4.5
4.2

5.0
4.6

3.2 9
4.2 10

11 Disposable personal income ............................................
12 Previously published .....................................................

–14.7
–11.7

3.1
4.3

3.9
3.7

2.0
1.2

5.6
4.8

5.2
5.5

3.9
3.6

4.2
3.7

1.8 11
3.2 12

13 Personal consumption expenditures ................................
14 Previously published .....................................................

3.9
4.7

1.8
2.2

3.4
3.7

5.0
4.8

2.9
2.6

6.1
4.9

4.7
4.5

3.8
4.0

–0.2 13
0.1 14

Percent change from preceding period for chained-dollar measures
15 Real disposable personal income ....................................
16 Previously published .....................................................

–15.9
–12.6

2.7
3.8

2.2
2.0

0.6
0.2

4.0
3.4

3.0
3.1

2.7
2.4

4.7
4.1

3.8 15
5.3 16

17 Real personal consumption expenditures ........................
18 Previously published .....................................................

2.5
3.6

1.4
1.8

1.7
2.0

3.5
3.7

1.3
1.2

3.8
2.5

3.5
3.2

4.3
4.4

1.8 17
2.1 18