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EMBARGOED UNTIL RELEASE AT 8:30 A.M. EDT, FRIDAY, JUNE 25, 2021
Technical:

Media:

Marissa Crawford (Personal Income)
Kyle Brown (PCE Goods)
Jeff Barnett (PCE Services)
Jeannine Aversa

(301) 278-9729
(301) 278-9086
(301) 278-9663
(301) 278-9003

BEA 21-30
piniwd@bea.gov
pce@bea.gov
Jeannine.Aversa@bea.gov

Personal Income and Outlays, May 2021
Personal income decreased $414.3 billion (2.0 percent) in May according to estimates released today by
the Bureau of Economic Analysis (tables 3 and 5). Disposable personal income (DPI) decreased $436.3
billion (2.3 percent) and personal consumption expenditures (PCE) increased $2.9 billion (less than 0.1
percent).
Real DPI decreased 2.8 percent in May and Real PCE decreased 0.4 percent; goods decreased 2.0
percent and services increased 0.4 percent (tables 5 and 7). The PCE price index increased 0.4 percent.
Excluding food and energy, the PCE price index increased 0.5 percent (table 9).
2021
Jan.
Feb.
Mar.
Apr.
May
Percent change from preceding month
Personal income:
Current dollars
Disposable personal income:
Current dollars
Chained (2012) dollars
Personal consumption expenditures (PCE):
Current dollars
Chained (2012) dollars
Price indexes:
PCE
PCE, excluding food and energy
Price indexes:
PCE
PCE, excluding food and energy

10.2

-6.9

20.9

-13.1

-2.0

11.5
11.2

-7.8
-8.1

23.4
22.8

-14.6
-15.1

-2.3
-2.8

3.3
3.0

-1.0
-1.3

5.0
4.4

0.9
0.3

0.0
-0.4

0.3
0.2

0.3
0.2

0.6
0.4

0.6
0.7

0.4
0.5

Percent change from month one year ago
1.4
1.6
2.4
3.6
3.9
1.4
1.4
1.9
3.1
3.4

COVID-19 Impact on May 2021 Personal Income and Outlays
The estimate for May personal income and outlays reflected the continued economic
recovery, reopening of establishments, and continued government response related to the
COVID-19 pandemic. The decrease in personal income for May reflected declines in
pandemic-related assistance programs. The full economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic
cannot be quantified in the personal income and outlays estimate because the impacts are
generally embedded in source data and cannot be separately identified. For more
information, see Effects of Selected Federal Pandemic Response Programs on Personal
Income.

The decrease in personal income in May primarily reflected a decrease in government social benefits
(table 3). Within government social benefits, "other" social benefits decreased as economic impact
payments made to individuals from the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 continued, but at a lower
level than in April. Unemployment insurance also decreased, led by decreases in payments from the
Pandemic Unemployment Compensation program.
The $2.9 billion increase in current dollar PCE in May reflected an increase of $74.3 billion in spending
for services that was mostly offset by a $71.5 billion decrease in spending for goods (table 3). Within
services, increases were widespread, led by spending for recreation services, food services and
accommodations, as well as housing and utilities. A decrease in spending on motor vehicles and parts
was the leading contributor to the decrease in goods. Detailed information on monthly PCE spending
can be found on Table 2.3.5U.
Personal outlays increased $5.5 billion in May (table 3). Personal saving was $2.29 trillion in May and
the personal saving rate—personal saving as a percentage of disposable personal income —was 12.4
percent (table 1).
The PCE price index for May increased 3.9 percent from one year ago, reflecting increases in both goods
and services (table 11). Energy prices increased 27.4 percent while food prices increased 0.4 percent.
Excluding food and energy, the PCE price index for May increased 3.4 percent from one year ago.

Annual Update of the National Economic Accounts
BEA will release results from the 2021 annual update of the National Economic Accounts,
which includes the National Income and Product Accounts as well as the Industry Economic
Accounts, later this year. Updated monthly personal income and outlays will be released on
July 30, 2021, along with the June 2021 estimate. For details, see Information on the 2021
Annual Update of the National Economic Accounts.

-2-

Updates to Personal Income and Outlays
Estimates have been updated for January through April. Revised and previously published changes from
the preceding month for current-dollar personal income, and for current-dollar and chained (2012)
dollar DPI and PCE, are shown below.
Change from preceding month

Personal income:
Current dollars
Disposable personal
income:
Current dollars
Chained (2012) dollars
Personal consumption
expenditures:
Current dollars
Chained (2012) dollars

March
Previous
Revised
Previous
Revised
(Billions of dollars)
(Percent)

Previous
Revised
(Billions of dollars)

4,214.0

4,224.8

20.9

20.9

-3,205.3

-3,201.9

-13.1

-13.1

4,183.6
3,602.2

4,193.5
3,609.9

23.4
22.7

23.4
22.8

-3,217.2
-2,937.9

-3,224.3
-2,949.5

-14.6
-15.1

-14.6
-15.1

690.4
536.2

741.4
580.5

4.7
4.1

5.0
4.4

80.3
-11.9

141.1
36.6

0.5
-0.1

0.9
0.3

Next release: July 30, 2021 at 8:30 A.M. EDT
Personal Income and Outlays, June 2021 and Annual Update

-3-

April
Previous
Revised
(Percent)

Additional Information
Resources
Real values are inflation-adjusted estimates—that is,
estimates that exclude the effects of price changes.

Additional Resources available at www.bea.gov:
•
•

•
•
•
•
•

For more definitions, see the Glossary: National Income and
Product Accounts.

Information on COVID-19 and recovery impacts
is available on our website.
Stay informed about BEA developments Stay
informed about BEA developments by reading
The BEA Wire, signing up for BEA’s email
subscription service, or following BEA on Twitter
@BEA_News.
Historical time series for these estimates can be
accessed in BEA’s Interactive Data Application.
Access BEA data by registering for BEA’s Data
Application Programming Interface (API).
For more on BEA’s statistics, see our monthly
online journal, the Survey of Current Business.
BEA's news release schedule
NIPA Handbook: Concepts and Methods of the
U.S. National Income and Product Accounts

Statistical conventions
Annual rates. Monthly and quarterly values are expressed
at seasonally-adjusted annual rates (SAAR). Dollar changes
are calculated as the difference between these SAAR
values. For detail, see the FAQ “Why does BEA publish
estimates at annual rates?”
Month-to-month percent changes are calculated from
unrounded data and are not annualized.
Quarter-to-quarter percent changes are calculated from
unrounded data and are displayed at annual rates. For
detail, see the FAQ “How is average annual growth
calculated?” and “Why does BEA publish percent changes
in quarterly series at annual rates?”

Definitions
Personal income is the income received by, or on behalf of,
all persons from all sources: from participation as laborers
in production, from owning a home or business, from the
ownership of financial assets, and from government and
business in the form of transfers. It includes income from
domestic sources as well as the rest of world. It does not
include realized or unrealized capital gains or losses.

Quantities and prices. Quantities, or “real” volume
measures, and prices are expressed as index numbers with
a specified reference year equal to 100 (currently 2012).
Quantity and price indexes are calculated using a Fisherchained weighted formula that incorporates weights from
two adjacent periods (months for monthly data, quarters
for quarterly data and annuals for annual data). For details
on the calculation of quantity and price indexes, see
Chapter 4: Estimating Methods in the NIPA Handbook.

Disposable personal income is the income available to
persons for spending or saving. It is equal to personal
income less personal current taxes.

Chained-dollar values are calculated by multiplying the
quantity index by the current dollar value in the reference
year (2012) and then dividing by 100. Percent changes
calculated from real quantity indexes and chained-dollar
levels are conceptually the same; any differences are due
to rounding. Chained-dollar values are not additive
because the relative weights for a given period differ from
those of the reference year. In tables that display chaineddollar values, a "residual" line shows the difference
between the sum of detailed chained-dollar series and its
corresponding aggregate.

Personal consumption expenditures (PCE) is the value of
the goods and services purchased by, or on the behalf of,
“persons” who reside in the United States.
Personal outlays is the sum of PCE, personal interest
payments, and personal current transfer payments.
Personal saving is personal income less personal outlays
and personal current taxes.
The personal saving rate is personal saving as a percentage
of disposable personal income.
Current-dollar estimates are valued in the prices of the
period when the transactions occurred—that is, at “market
value.” Also referred to as “nominal estimates” or as
“current-price estimates.”

-4-

List of Personal Income and Outlays News Release Tables
Table 1.
Table 2.
Table 3.
Table 4.
Table 5.
Table 6.
Table 7.
Table 8.
Table 9.
Table 10.
Table 11.

Personal Income and Its Disposition (Months)
Personal Income and Its Disposition (Years and Quarters)
Personal Income and Its Disposition, Change from Preceding Period (Months)
Personal Income and Its Disposition, Change from Preceding Period (Years and Quarters)
Personal Income and Its Disposition, Percent Change from Preceding Period (Months)
Personal Income and Its Disposition, Percent Change from Preceding Period (Years and Quarters)
Real Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product (Months)
Real Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product (Years and Quarters)
Price Indexes for Personal Consumption Expenditures: Level and Percent Change from Preceding Period (Months)
Real Disposable Personal Income and Real Personal Consumption Expenditures: Percent Change from Month One
Year Ago
Price Indexes for Personal Consumption Expenditures: Percent Change from Month One Year Ago

-5-

June 25, 2021

Table 1. Personal Income and Its Disposition (Months)
[Billions of dollars]

Oct.
19,728.2
11,759.7
9,606.3
8,168.5
1,541.4
907.3
6,627.2
1,491.7
5,135.5
1,437.7
2,153.4
1,477.4
676.0

2020
Nov.
19,544.4
11,884.9
9,715.7
8,279.7
1,565.3
929.4
6,714.4
1,511.5
5,202.9
1,436.0
2,169.2
1,487.8
681.4

Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
2021
Dec.
Jan. r
Feb. r
March r
19,677.1
21,688.8
20,195.6
24,420.5
11,973.5
12,069.3
12,085.0
12,198.0
9,789.6
9,866.8
9,877.8
9,978.4
8,353.0
8,421.5
8,434.3
8,528.9
1,583.1
1,594.8
1,599.3
1,620.5
941.2
949.3
957.1
969.8
6,769.9
6,826.7
6,835.0
6,908.4
1,514.2
1,534.6
1,527.6
1,550.3
5,255.7
5,292.1
5,307.4
5,358.1
1,436.5
1,445.4
1,443.5
1,449.5
2,183.9
2,202.4
2,207.2
2,219.6
1,498.1
1,510.3
1,515.2
1,521.6
685.8
692.2
692.0
698.0

April r
21,218.5
12,307.1
10,074.9
8,619.4
1,623.2
965.7
6,996.2
1,564.1
5,432.1
1,455.5
2,232.2
1,528.0
704.2

May p
20,804.2
12,396.7
10,152.8
8,692.3
1,629.5
973.5
7,062.8
1,574.7
5,488.1
1,460.5
2,243.9
1,534.5
709.4

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13

1,918.4
150.7
1,767.7
807.4
2,858.3
1,622.0
1,236.4
3,855.4
3,809.3
1,091.2
854.0
680.5
304.3
147.3
732.0
46.1
1,470.9
2,251.7
17,476.5
15,115.4
14,627.1
4,922.8
1,788.7
3,134.1
9,704.3
283.5
204.7
113.3
91.4
2,361.1
13.5

1,719.6
79.6
1,640.0
804.3
2,894.7
1,624.2
1,270.5
3,725.0
3,678.8
1,087.6
860.4
682.0
280.8
148.3
619.7
46.2
1,484.1
2,271.5
17,273.0
15,008.2
14,532.8
4,862.1
1,747.6
3,114.5
9,670.7
270.5
205.0
113.6
91.4
2,264.7
13.1

1,641.0
71.3
1,569.8
801.3
2,959.9
1,626.6
1,333.2
3,795.8
3,749.4
1,090.0
867.3
684.8
304.3
149.2
653.9
46.4
1,494.4
2,287.3
17,389.8
14,913.7
14,451.1
4,772.3
1,707.9
3,064.4
9,678.8
257.4
205.2
113.8
91.4
2,476.0
14.2

1,668.8
59.4
1,609.4
806.4
2,882.4
1,637.0
1,245.4
5,779.2
5,732.6
1,105.1
873.9
692.3
556.4
150.2
2,354.7
46.7
1,517.3
2,291.9
19,396.9
15,384.5
14,921.1
5,150.5
1,906.3
3,244.2
9,770.6
256.9
206.6
114.0
92.5
4,012.4
20.7

1,719.9
65.0
1,654.9
811.7
2,899.6
1,647.4
1,252.2
4,198.5
4,151.6
1,107.2
880.2
699.8
535.4
150.9
778.1
46.9
1,519.0
2,309.6
17,886.1
15,237.3
14,774.0
4,993.8
1,822.5
3,171.3
9,780.2
256.4
206.9
114.4
92.5
2,648.8
14.8

1,834.6
71.9
1,762.7
817.9
2,909.5
1,657.7
1,251.8
8,192.8
8,145.8
1,110.3
886.2
708.1
541.2
151.7
4,748.2
47.0
1,532.3
2,340.8
22,079.6
15,978.4
15,515.3
5,512.4
2,093.3
3,419.2
10,002.9
255.9
207.2
114.7
92.5
6,101.2
27.6

1,892.4
82.9
1,809.5
824.6
2,923.8
1,662.2
1,261.6
4,816.0
4,768.8
1,108.9
890.9
717.4
495.1
152.4
1,404.1
47.2
1,545.4
2,363.2
18,855.4
16,122.2
15,656.4
5,540.5
2,129.2
3,411.4
10,115.9
258.3
207.5
115.0
92.5
2,733.2
14.5

1,943.9
87.9
1,856.0
831.0
2,935.0
1,666.7
1,268.3
4,253.9
4,206.5
1,110.5
895.7
723.7
458.8
153.1
864.7
47.4
1,556.3
2,385.1
18,419.1
16,127.7
15,659.3
5,469.1
2,070.4
3,398.6
10,190.2
260.6
207.8
115.3
92.5
2,291.4
12.4

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

14,211.0

14,162.9

14,166.4

14,151.2

14,188.7

14,312.5

14,374.8

14,439.4

45

15,646.7

15,464.2

15,512.0

17,253.1

15,864.0

19,473.9

16,524.4

16,069.9

46

52,848
47,315
330,692

52,211
46,744
330,829

52,549
46,875
330,924

58,607
52,129
330,968

54,036
47,927
331,004

66,694
58,823
331,061

56,943
49,904
331,126

55,613
48,520
331,204

47
48
49

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
Trade, transportation, and utilities
8
Other services-producing industries
9
10
Government
11
Supplements to wages and salaries
12
Employer contributions for employee pension and insurance funds 1
Employer contributions for government social insurance
13
14
Proprietors' income with inventory valuation and capital
consumption adjustments
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

Farm
Nonfarm
Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment
Personal income receipts on assets
Personal interest income
Personal dividend income
Personal current transfer receipts
Government social benefits to persons
Social security 2
Medicare 3
Medicaid
Unemployment insurance
Veterans' benefits
Other
Other current transfer receipts, from business (net)
Less: Contributions for government social insurance, domestic
Less: Personal current taxes
Equals: Disposable personal income
Less: Personal outlays
Personal consumption expenditures
Goods
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Services
Personal interest payments 4
Personal current transfer payments
To government
To the rest of the world (net)
Equals: Personal saving
Personal saving as a percentage of disposable personal income
Addenda:
45
Personal income excluding current transfer receipts,

46
47
48
49

billions of chained (2012) dollars 5
Disposable personal income:
Total, billions of chained (2012) dollars 5
Per capita:
Current dollars
Chained (2012) dollars
Population (midperiod, thousands) 6

Line

p Preliminary
r Revised
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 insurance trust fund.
4. Consists of nonmortgage interest paid by households. Note that mortgage interest paid by households is an expense item in the calculation of rental income of persons.
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.
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis

-6-

June 25, 2021

Table 2. Personal Income and Its Disposition (Years and Quarters)
[Billions of dollars]
Line
1 Personal income
Compensation of employees
2
Wages and salaries
3
4
Private industries
5
Goods-producing industries
6
Manufacturing
7
Services-producing industries
Trade, transportation, and utilities
8
Other services-producing industries
9
10
Government
Supplements to wages and salaries
11
12
Employer contributions for employee pension and insurance funds 1
Employer contributions for government social insurance
13
14
Proprietors' income with inventory valuation and capital
consumption adjustments
15
Farm
16
Nonfarm
Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment
17
Personal income receipts on assets
18
19
Personal interest income
20
Personal dividend income
Personal current transfer receipts
21
22
Government social benefits to persons
23
Social security 2
24
Medicare 3
25
Medicaid
26
Unemployment insurance
27
Veterans' benefits
28
Other
Other current transfer receipts, from business (net)
29
Less: Contributions for government social insurance, domestic
30
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
Personal saving as a percentage of disposable personal income
44
Addenda:
45
Personal income excluding current transfer receipts,
billions of chained (2012) dollars 5
Disposable personal income:
46
Total, billions of chained (2012) dollars 5
Per capita:
47
Current dollars
48
Chained (2012) dollars
49
Population (midperiod, thousands) 6

2019

2020

Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
2020
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
18,951.0 20,457.3
19,853.5
19,649.9
11,674.4 10,949.5
11,466.2
11,872.7
9,526.1
8,908.8
9,343.3
9,703.8
8,044.5
7,487.2
7,900.9
8,267.1
1,543.1
1,431.0
1,506.3
1,563.3
913.8
857.8
887.0
926.0
6,501.4
6,056.2
6,394.6
6,703.8
1,444.2
1,362.1
1,447.8
1,505.8
5,057.2
4,694.1
4,946.8
5,198.0
1,481.6
1,421.6
1,442.4
1,436.8
2,148.3
2,040.7
2,122.9
2,168.8
1,482.3
1,400.1
1,457.9
1,487.8
666.0
640.5
665.0
681.1

Q1 r
22,101.6
12,117.4
9,907.7
8,461.5
1,604.8
958.7
6,856.7
1,537.5
5,319.2
1,446.1
2,209.7
1,515.7
694.1

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13

2021

Line

18,551.5
11,432.4
9,309.3
7,858.5
1,529.9
910.3
6,328.7
1,415.3
4,913.4
1,450.8
2,123.1
1,474.0
649.1

19,727.9
11,490.7
9,370.5
7,924.9
1,510.9
896.2
6,414.0
1,440.0
4,974.0
1,445.6
2,120.2
1,457.0
663.2

2019
Q4
18,760.8
11,564.8
9,422.5
7,953.0
1,541.3
917.5
6,411.6
1,427.2
4,984.5
1,469.5
2,142.4
1,486.1
656.3

1,657.7
49.7
1,608.0
787.1
2,967.9
1,677.4
1,290.4
3,125.2
3,078.0
1,030.7
783.7
614.0
27.7
130.9
490.9
47.2
1,418.8
2,202.9
16,348.6
15,117.4
14,544.6
4,512.2
1,534.4
2,977.9
10,032.4
362.3
210.5
115.2
95.3
1,231.2
7.5

1,695.1
64.7
1,630.5
801.8
2,912.8
1,640.2
1,272.6
4,268.7
4,221.6
1,078.5
833.0
664.8
549.9
143.6
951.8
47.2
1,441.2
2,202.7
17,525.3
14,648.2
14,145.3
4,658.8
1,619.0
3,039.8
9,486.5
299.2
203.7
112.8
90.9
2,877.1
16.4

1,697.7
58.7
1,639.0
795.5
2,980.4
1,693.4
1,287.0
3,155.2
3,108.7
1,043.0
797.9
619.4
27.9
134.5
486.0
46.5
1,432.9
2,221.2
16,539.6
15,335.8
14,759.2
4,562.4
1,554.1
3,008.2
10,196.8
364.6
212.0
116.0
96.0
1,203.8
7.3

1,706.0
56.4
1,649.6
802.3
2,984.3
1,679.7
1,304.6
3,235.5
3,189.6
1,068.5
804.7
624.1
43.4
138.6
510.4
45.9
1,451.5
2,252.4
16,698.6
15,103.3
14,545.5
4,552.9
1,496.4
3,056.5
9,992.5
352.9
204.9
112.2
92.7
1,595.3
9.6

1,511.9
38.9
1,473.0
796.1
2,910.2
1,637.0
1,273.2
5,678.0
5,627.4
1,075.4
824.1
668.8
1,084.6
142.1
1,832.5
50.6
1,388.4
2,096.5
18,360.8
13,590.0
13,097.3
4,361.5
1,478.3
2,883.2
8,735.8
286.0
206.6
112.5
94.1
4,770.8
26.0

1,803.0
62.8
1,740.2
804.4
2,852.3
1,619.8
1,232.6
4,369.3
4,323.4
1,080.7
842.7
683.7
775.2
145.3
795.8
45.9
1,441.6
2,191.6
17,661.9
14,887.1
14,401.5
4,868.4
1,753.0
3,115.4
9,533.2
287.2
198.4
113.0
85.5
2,774.8
15.7

1,759.7
100.5
1,659.1
804.3
2,904.3
1,624.3
1,280.0
3,792.1
3,745.8
1,089.6
860.6
682.4
296.4
148.2
668.5
46.2
1,483.1
2,270.2
17,379.7
15,012.4
14,537.0
4,852.4
1,748.1
3,104.3
9,684.6
270.5
205.0
113.6
91.4
2,367.3
13.6

1,741.1
65.4
1,675.7
812.0
2,897.2
1,647.4
1,249.8
6,056.8
6,010.0
1,107.5
880.1
700.1
544.3
150.9
2,627.0
46.9
1,522.8
2,314.1
19,787.5
15,533.4
15,070.1
5,218.9
1,940.7
3,278.3
9,851.2
256.4
206.9
114.4
92.5
4,254.1
21.5

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

14,042.9

13,907.6

14,119.5

14,173.6

13,383.3

13,896.4

14,180.2

14,217.0

45

14,882.5

15,766.3

14,964.5

15,060.3

16,626.5

15,850.8

15,541.1

17,533.3

46

49,763
45,301
328,527

53,082
47,755
330,152

50,244
45,459
329,186

50,674
45,702
329,529

55,656
50,399
329,898

53,461
47,979
330,368

52,536
46,978
330,815

59,779
52,969
331,011

47
48
49

r Revised
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 insurance trust fund.
4. Consists of nonmortgage interest paid by households. Note that mortgage interest paid by households is an expense item in the calculation of rental income of persons.
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.
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis

-7-

June 25, 2021

Table 3. Personal Income and Its Disposition, Change from Preceding Period (Months)
[Billions of dollars]

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
1
12
Employer contributions for employee pension and insurance funds
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
2
23
Social security
3
24
Medicare
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
4
39
Personal interest payments
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 (2012) dollars
45

Oct.
-34.0
194.8
177.3
184.2
33.2
27.3
151.1
26.4
124.7
-6.9
17.5
9.7
7.8
17.8
81.4
-63.6
-4.3
19.7
10.2
9.5
-242.2
-242.3
9.1
6.0
0.4
-54.7
0.9
-204.0
0.1
19.9
36.3
-70.3
35.3
44.3
-6.5
14.0
-20.5
50.8
-13.1
4.0
0.2
3.8
-105.6

-198.8
-71.1
-127.7
-3.1
36.4
2.3
34.1
-130.3
-130.5
-3.6
6.4
1.5
-23.5
1.0
-112.2
0.1
13.2
19.7
-203.5
-107.1
-94.3
-60.7
-41.1
-19.6
-33.6
-13.1
0.2
0.2
0.0
-96.4

-78.5
-8.3
-70.2
-3.1
65.1
2.4
62.8
70.7
70.6
2.4
6.8
2.8
23.5
0.9
34.2
0.2
10.2
15.8
116.8
-94.5
-81.7
-89.8
-39.7
-50.1
8.1
-13.1
0.2
0.2
0.0
211.3

27.8
-11.9
39.7
5.2
-77.5
10.4
-87.9
1,983.5
1,983.2
15.2
6.6
7.5
252.1
1.1
1,700.8
0.3
22.9
4.6
2,007.1
470.8
469.9
378.2
198.3
179.8
91.8
-0.5
1.4
0.3
1.1
1,536.3

51.1
5.6
45.5
5.2
17.2
10.4
6.8
-1,580.8
-1,581.0
2.1
6.3
7.5
-21.0
0.7
-1,576.6
0.2
1.7
17.6
-1,510.8
-147.3
-147.1
-156.7
-83.8
-72.9
9.6
-0.5
0.3
0.3
0.0
-1,363.6

181.7
-68.1

-48.1
-182.5

3.5
47.8

-15.2
1,741.2

37.4
-1,389.1

5

Disposable personal income, billions of chained (2012) dollars

Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
2021
r
r
r
Dec.
Jan.
Feb.
March
132.6 2,011.8 -1,493.2 4,224.8
88.6
95.8
15.7
113.0
73.8
77.3
11.0
100.6
73.3
68.4
12.8
94.6
17.8
11.7
4.5
21.2
11.7
8.2
7.7
12.7
55.5
56.8
8.4
73.4
2.7
20.4
-7.0
22.7
52.8
36.4
15.3
50.6
0.5
8.9
-1.9
6.0
14.8
18.5
4.8
12.4
10.3
12.2
4.9
6.4
4.5
6.3
-0.1
6.0

2020
Nov.
-183.8
125.2
109.5
111.2
23.9
22.1
87.2
19.8
67.4
-1.7
15.7
10.4
5.3

5

Line
r

p

April
-3,201.9
109.2
96.6
90.6
2.7
-4.1
87.8
13.8
74.1
6.0
12.6
6.4
6.2

May
-414.3
89.5
77.8
72.9
6.3
7.7
66.6
10.6
56.0
5.0
11.7
6.5
5.2

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13

114.7
6.9
107.7
6.2
9.9
10.3
-0.4
3,994.4
3,994.2
3.2
6.0
8.3
5.8
0.7
3,970.1
0.2
13.3
31.3
4,193.5
741.2
741.4
518.6
270.8
247.8
222.7
-0.5
0.3
0.3
0.0
3,452.4

57.9
11.0
46.9
6.8
14.3
4.5
9.8
-3,376.9
-3,377.0
-1.5
4.7
9.3
-46.2
0.7
-3,344.1
0.2
13.2
22.3
-3,224.3
143.7
141.1
28.1
35.9
-7.8
113.0
2.4
0.3
0.3
0.0
-3,368.0

51.5
5.0
46.5
6.3
11.3
4.5
6.8
-562.1
-562.3
1.7
4.8
6.3
-36.3
0.7
-539.5
0.2
10.9
21.9
-436.3
5.5
2.9
-71.5
-58.7
-12.7
74.3
2.4
0.3
0.3
0.0
-441.8

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

123.8
3,609.9

62.3
-2,949.5

64.7
-454.5

44
45

p Preliminary
r Revised
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 insurance trust fund.
4. Consists of nonmortgage interest paid by households. Note that mortgage interest paid by households is an expense item in the calculation of rental income of persons.
5. The current-dollar measure is deflated by the implicit price deflator for personal consumption expenditures.
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis

-8-

June 25, 2021

Table 4. Personal Income and Its Disposition, Change from Preceding Period (Years and Quarters)
[Billions of dollars]
2019

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
1
12
Employer contributions for employee pension and insurance funds
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
2
23
Social security
3
24
Medicare
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
4
39
Personal interest payments
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 (2012) dollars
45

5

Disposable personal income, billions of chained (2012) dollars

5

2020

Seasonally adjusted at annual rates
2020
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
190.2 1,506.3
-603.8
-203.6
109.6
-724.9
516.7
406.5
103.6
-617.3
434.5
360.5
91.5
-557.3
413.7
366.2
1.8
-112.1
75.3
56.9
-3.6
-56.0
29.2
39.0
89.8
-445.2
338.4
309.2
17.0
-82.0
85.7
58.0
72.8
-363.2
252.7
251.2
12.1
-60.0
20.8
-5.6
6.0
-107.7
82.2
46.0
-3.8
-82.2
57.7
29.9
9.8
-25.5
24.5
16.1

2021 Line
r
Q1
2,451.7
1
244.7
2
203.8
3
194.4
4
41.6
5
32.7
6
152.9
7
31.7
8
121.2
9
9.4 10
40.9 11
27.9 12
13.0 13

699.7
482.3
415.1
366.8
61.1
26.7
305.7
54.6
251.1
48.3
67.2
43.3
23.9

1,176.4
58.3
61.2
66.4
-18.9
-14.1
85.3
24.7
60.6
-5.2
-2.9
-17.0
14.1

2019
Q4
163.1
126.9
111.2
100.7
16.4
13.5
84.3
10.7
73.6
10.5
15.7
8.4
7.3

71.7
6.6
65.1
27.8
21.2
35.8
-14.6
154.9
155.1
58.3
49.5
24.2
-0.1
11.2
12.1
-0.2
58.4
117.6
582.1
588.2
551.3
140.4
52.8
87.6
411.0
29.4
7.4
3.8
3.6
-6.1

37.5
15.0
22.5
14.6
-55.1
-37.2
-17.8
1,143.5
1,143.5
47.8
49.3
50.8
522.2
12.7
460.9
-0.1
22.4
-0.2
1,176.6
-469.2
-399.3
146.6
84.6
62.0
-545.9
-63.2
-6.7
-2.4
-4.4
1,645.8

20.7
-0.2
20.9
5.9
10.4
11.7
-1.3
13.3
13.9
8.8
8.0
-2.9
0.3
2.6
-2.9
-0.6
13.9
24.1
139.1
115.9
113.9
8.8
1.3
7.5
105.1
-0.3
2.3
0.5
1.8
23.2

8.3
-2.3
10.6
6.8
3.9
-13.7
17.6
80.3
80.9
25.4
6.7
4.7
15.5
4.1
24.4
-0.6
18.7
31.2
159.0
-232.5
-213.7
-9.5
-57.7
48.2
-204.3
-11.7
-7.1
-3.8
-3.4
391.5

-194.1
-17.5
-176.6
-6.3
-74.1
-42.7
-31.4
2,442.5
2,437.8
6.9
19.4
44.7
1,041.1
3.5
1,322.1
4.7
-63.2
-155.9
1,662.2
-1,513.3
-1,448.1
-191.4
-18.1
-173.3
-1,256.7
-66.9
1.7
0.3
1.5
3,175.5

291.1
23.8
267.2
8.3
-57.9
-17.3
-40.6
-1,308.8
-1,304.0
5.2
18.7
14.9
-309.4
3.3
-1,036.7
-4.7
53.3
95.1
-698.9
1,297.2
1,304.2
506.8
274.7
232.1
797.3
1.2
-8.2
0.5
-8.7
-1,996.0

-43.3
37.8
-81.1
-0.1
52.0
4.5
47.5
-577.2
-577.6
8.9
17.9
-1.3
-478.7
2.9
-127.3
0.3
41.5
78.6
-282.2
125.3
135.5
-15.9
-4.9
-11.0
151.4
-16.7
6.5
0.6
5.9
-407.5

-18.6
-35.1
16.5
7.7
-7.1
23.1
-30.2
2,264.8
2,264.2
18.0
19.5
17.6
247.9
2.7
1,958.5
0.6
39.7
43.9
2,407.8
521.0
533.1
366.5
192.6
173.9
166.6
-14.1
1.9
0.8
1.1
1,886.8

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

294.1
316.1

-135.2
883.8

82.1
69.1

54.1
95.8

-790.3
1,566.3

513.1
-775.8

283.8
-309.7

36.8
1,992.3

44
45

r Revised
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 insurance trust fund.
4. Consists of nonmortgage interest paid by households. Note that mortgage interest paid by households is an expense item in the calculation of rental income of persons.
5. The current-dollar measure is deflated by the implicit price deflator for personal consumption expenditures.
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis

-9-

June 25, 2021

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

2020

2021

Oct.
Nov.
Dec.
Based on current-dollar measures
1 Personal income
-0.2
-0.9
0.7
2
Compensation of employees
1.7
1.1
0.7
3
Wages and salaries
1.9
1.1
0.8
4
Supplements to wages and salaries
0.8
0.7
0.7
5
Proprietors' income with inventory valuation and capital consumption
adjustments
0.9
-10.4
-4.6
-0.5
-0.4
-0.4
6
Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment
7
Personal income receipts on assets
0.7
1.3
2.3
8
Personal interest income
0.6
0.1
0.1
9
Personal dividend income
0.8
2.8
4.9
10
Personal current transfer receipts
-5.9
-3.4
1.9
1.4
0.9
0.7
11
Less: Contributions for government social insurance, domestic
12 Less: Personal current taxes
1.6
0.9
0.7
13 Equals: Disposable personal income
-0.4
-1.2
0.7
Addenda:
14
Personal consumption expenditures
0.3
-0.6
-0.6
15
Goods
-0.1
-1.2
-1.8
16
Durable goods
0.8
-2.3
-2.3
17
Nondurable goods
-0.7
-0.6
-1.6
18
Services
0.5
-0.3
0.1
Based on chained (2012) dollar measures
19
20

Real personal income excluding transfer receipts
Real disposable personal income

1.3
-0.4

-0.3
-1.2

0.0
0.3

Jan.

r

Feb.

r

March

Line
r

April

r

May

p

10.2
0.8
0.8
0.8

-6.9
0.1
0.1
0.2

20.9
0.9
1.0
0.6

-13.1
0.9
1.0
0.6

-2.0
0.7
0.8
0.5

1
2
3
4

1.7
0.6
-2.6
0.6
-6.6
52.3
1.5
0.2
11.5

3.1
0.6
0.6
0.6
0.5
-27.4
0.1
0.8
-7.8

6.7
0.8
0.3
0.6
0.0
95.1
0.9
1.4
23.4

3.2
0.8
0.5
0.3
0.8
-41.2
0.9
1.0
-14.6

2.7
0.8
0.4
0.3
0.5
-11.7
0.7
0.9
-2.3

5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13

3.3
7.9
11.6
5.9
0.9

-1.0
-3.0
-4.4
-2.2
0.1

5.0
10.4
14.9
7.8
2.3

0.9
0.5
1.7
-0.2
1.1

0.0
-1.3
-2.8
-0.4
0.7

14
15
16
17
18

-0.1
11.2

0.3
-8.1

0.9
22.8

0.4
-15.1

0.4
-2.8

19
20

p Preliminary
r Revised
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis

June 25, 2021

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

2019

2020

2020

2019
Q4

Q1

Q2

2021
Q3

Q4

Q1

Line

r

Based on current-dollar measures

1 Personal income
3.9
6.3
3.6
2
Compensation of employees
4.4
0.5
4.5
3
Wages and salaries
4.7
0.7
4.9
4
Supplements to wages and salaries
3.3
-0.1
3.0
5
Proprietors' income with inventory valuation and capital consumption
adjustments
4.5
2.3
5.0
6
Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment
3.7
1.9
3.0
7
Personal income receipts on assets
0.7
-1.9
1.4
8
Personal interest income
2.2
-2.2
2.8
9
Personal dividend income
-1.1
-1.4
-0.4
10
Personal current transfer receipts
5.2
36.6
1.7
4.3
1.6
4.0
11
Less: Contributions for government social insurance, domestic
12 Less: Personal current taxes
5.6
0.0
4.5
13 Equals: Disposable personal income
3.7
7.2
3.4
Addenda:
14
Personal consumption expenditures
3.9
-2.7
3.1
15
Goods
3.2
3.2
0.8
16
Durable goods
3.6
5.5
0.3
17
Nondurable goods
3.0
2.1
1.0
18
Services
4.3
-5.4
4.2
Based on chained (2012) dollar measures
19
20

Real personal income excluding transfer receipts
Real disposable personal income

2.1
2.2

r Revised
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis

- 10 -

-1.0
5.9

2.4
1.9

4.1
3.8
4.5
1.1

35.8
-22.6
-23.5
-18.6

-11.3
20.3
21.0
17.1

-4.0
15.0
16.4
9.0

60.1
8.5
8.7
7.8

1
2
3
4

2.0
3.5
0.5
-3.2
5.6
10.6
5.3
5.7
3.9

-38.3
-3.1
-9.6
-9.8
-9.3
848.5
-16.3
-24.9
46.2

102.2
4.3
-7.7
-4.1
-12.2
-64.9
16.3
19.4
-14.4

-9.3
0.0
7.5
1.1
16.3
-43.3
12.0
15.1
-6.2

-4.2
3.9
-1.0
5.8
-9.1
550.9
11.1
8.0
68.0

5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13

-5.7
-0.8
-14.0
6.6
-7.8

-34.3
-15.8
-4.8
-20.8
-41.6

46.2
55.2
97.7
36.3
41.8

3.8
-1.3
-1.1
-1.4
6.5

15.5
33.8
51.9
24.4
7.1

14
15
16
17
18

1.5
2.6

-20.5
48.6

16.2
-17.4

8.4
-7.6

1.0
62.0

19
20

June 25, 2021

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

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15

2020

2021

Oct.
Nov.
Dec.
Jan. r
Feb. r
March r
Billions of chained (2012) dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Personal consumption expenditures (PCE)
13,095.6
13,011.0
12,890.7
13,272.0
13,103.7
13,684.3
Goods
5,214.7
5,150.4
5,037.9
5,405.0
5,216.8
5,718.2
Durable goods
2,067.2
2,025.0
1,975.7
2,206.6
2,100.6
2,398.9
Nondurable goods
3,180.0
3,155.5
3,091.0
3,240.7
3,152.9
3,372.7
Services
8,028.8
8,000.9
7,977.7
8,042.9
8,035.0
8,178.2
Change from preceding period in billions of chained (2012) dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates
Personal consumption expenditures (PCE)
35.4
-84.7
-120.3
381.3
-168.2
580.5
Goods
-0.9
-64.3
-112.6
367.2
-188.2
501.4
Durable goods
18.9
-42.2
-49.3
230.8
-106.0
298.4
Nondurable goods
-17.4
-24.5
-64.5
149.7
-87.8
219.8
Services
33.6
-28.0
-23.2
65.3
-7.9
143.2
Percent change from preceding period in chained (2012) dollars, seasonally adjusted at monthly rates
Personal consumption expenditures (PCE)
0.3
-0.6
-0.9
3.0
-1.3
4.4
Goods
0.0
-1.2
-2.2
7.3
-3.5
9.6
Durable goods
0.9
-2.0
-2.4
11.7
-4.8
14.2
Nondurable goods
-0.5
-0.8
-2.0
4.8
-2.7
7.0
Services
0.4
-0.3
-0.3
0.8
-0.1
1.8

Line

April r

May p

13,720.9
5,696.5
2,395.7
3,354.7
8,229.3

13,662.1
5,585.2
2,293.5
3,338.0
8,262.9

1
2
3
4
5

36.6
-21.7
-3.2
-18.0
51.1

-58.8
-111.3
-102.2
-16.8
33.6

6
7
8
9
10

0.3
-0.4
-0.1
-0.5
0.6

-0.4
-2.0
-4.3
-0.5
0.4

11
12
13
14
15

p Preliminary
r Revised
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis

June 25, 2021

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

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15

2019

2020

Q4
Q1
Billions of chained (2012) dollars
Personal consumption expenditures (PCE)
13,240.2
12,725.6
13,353.7
13,118.4
Goods
4,760.5
4,944.3
4,811.8
4,812.9
Durable goods
1,774.6
1,886.9
1,811.7
1,752.0
Nondurable goods
3,001.5
3,078.8
3,018.2
3,070.6
Services
8,520.5
7,898.6
8,584.9
8,365.3
Change from preceding period in billions of chained (2012) dollars
Personal consumption expenditures (PCE)
312.1
-514.6
52.3
-235.3
Goods
170.3
183.8
6.6
1.1
Durable goods
81.9
112.3
13.8
-59.7
Nondurable goods
91.2
77.3
-5.7
52.4
Services
153.4
-622.0
43.4
-219.5
Percent change from preceding period in chained (2012) dollars
Personal consumption expenditures (PCE)
2.4
-3.9
1.6
-6.9
Goods
3.7
3.9
0.6
0.1
Durable goods
4.8
6.3
3.1
-12.5
Nondurable goods
3.1
2.6
-0.7
7.1
Services
1.8
-7.3
2.0
-9.8

r Revised
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis

- 11 -

2020

2019
Q2

2021
Q3

Q4

Q1

Line

r

11,860.3
4,677.4
1,744.6
2,947.9
7,306.9

12,924.7
5,152.4
2,028.2
3,154.5
7,919.6

12,999.1
5,134.3
2,022.6
3,142.1
8,002.5

13,353.3
5,446.7
2,235.3
3,255.4
8,085.4

1
2
3
4
5

-1,258.2
-135.5
-7.4
-122.7
-1,058.4

1,064.5
475.0
283.6
206.6
612.6

74.4
-18.1
-5.6
-12.4
82.9

354.2
312.4
212.7
113.3
82.9

6
7
8
9
10

-33.2
-10.8
-1.7
-15.0
-41.8

41.0
47.2
82.7
31.1
38.0

2.3
-1.4
-1.1
-1.6
4.3

11.4
26.6
49.2
15.2
4.2

11
12
13
14
15

June 25, 2021

Table 9. Price Indexes for Personal Consumption Expenditures: Level and Percent Change from Preceding Period (Months)
2020
Oct.
Nov.
Dec.
Jan. r
Chain-type price indexes (2012=100), seasonally adjusted
111.697
111.700
112.109
112.433
94.399
94.402
94.731
95.300
86.510
86.292
86.443
86.392
98.558
98.703
99.143
100.119
120.871
120.874
121.328
121.486

Line

Feb. r

Personal consumption expenditures (PCE)
112.757
1
95.740
2 Goods
Durable goods
3
86.766
Nondurable goods
4
100.600
121.726
5 Services
Addenda:
PCE excluding food and energy
6
114.023
114.006
114.341
114.564
114.736
7
108.646
108.519
108.684
108.602
108.828
Food 1
8
78.335
78.926
81.080
83.910
87.121
Energy goods and services 2
9
109.146
109.185
109.475
109.853
110.237
Market-based PCE 3
10
111.387
111.409
111.591
111.862
112.082
Market-based PCE excluding food and energy 3
Percent change from preceding period in price indexes, seasonally adjusted at monthly rates
Personal consumption expenditures (PCE)
0.0
0.0
0.4
0.3
0.3
11
-0.1
0.0
0.3
0.6
0.5
12 Goods
Durable goods
13
-0.1
-0.3
0.2
-0.1
0.4
Nondurable goods
14
-0.1
0.1
0.4
1.0
0.5
0.1
0.0
0.4
0.1
0.2
15 Services
Addenda:
PCE excluding food and energy
16
0.0
0.0
0.3
0.2
0.2
17
0.2
-0.1
0.2
-0.1
0.2
Food 1
0.6
0.8
2.7
3.5
3.8
18
Energy goods and services 2
19
0.0
0.0
0.3
0.3
0.3
Market-based PCE 3
20
0.0
0.0
0.2
0.2
0.2
Market-based PCE excluding food and energy 3

2021
March r

Line

April r

May p

113.393
96.419
87.265
101.395
122.319

114.119
97.280
88.879
101.705
122.932

114.631
97.939
90.279
101.834
123.332

1
2
3
4
5

115.215
109.020
91.337
110.827
112.484

116.023
109.402
91.156
111.386
113.110

116.581
109.746
91.146
111.841
113.607

6
7
8
9
10

0.6
0.7
0.6
0.8
0.5

0.6
0.9
1.8
0.3
0.5

0.4
0.7
1.6
0.1
0.3

11
12
13
14
15

0.4
0.2
4.8
0.5
0.4

0.7
0.4
-0.2
0.5
0.6

0.5
0.3
0.0
0.4
0.4

16
17
18
19
20

p Preliminary
r Revised
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.
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.
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis

June 25, 2021

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

Oct.

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

4.8
-1.9
8.3
14.8
5.0
-6.4

2020
Nov.
3.1
-2.6
7.0
11.7
4.6
-6.8

Dec.
3.7
-3.5
4.7
8.5
2.7
-7.2

Jan. r
14.5
-1.1
11.8
20.2
7.3
-6.7

Feb. r
4.6
-2.2
8.3
15.8
4.4
-6.8

2021
March r
30.3
9.2
19.5
49.3
6.4
4.2

April r
-4.4
24.7
36.0
67.9
21.8
19.4

May p
-2.3
14.5
16.6
25.2
12.1
13.3

Line
1
2
3
4
5
6

p Preliminary
r Revised
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis

June 25, 2021

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

2020

2021

1.2
-0.4
0.4
-0.8
1.9

1.1
-0.4
0.6
-0.9
1.8

1.2
-0.2
1.3
-0.9
1.9

Jan. r
1.4
0.4
1.1
0.0
1.8

1.4
3.9
-9.1
1.1
1.4

1.3
3.7
-9.1
1.1
1.3

1.4
3.9
-8.2
1.1
1.3

1.4
3.6
-4.5
1.3
1.4

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Feb. r
1.6
1.0
1.4
0.8
1.8

March r
2.4
2.6
2.4
2.7
2.3

April r
3.6
4.7
5.7
4.1
3.1

May p
3.9
5.4
6.7
4.6
3.1

1.4
3.3
1.3
1.6
1.4

1.9
2.9
13.0
2.4
1.8

3.1
0.9
24.8
3.2
2.5

3.4
0.4
27.4
3.5
2.8

Line
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10

p Preliminary
r Revised
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.
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.
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis

- 12 -