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FEDERAL RESERVE statistical release
For release at 9:15 am (EST)
February 13, 1987

G.12.3

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION
Industrial production increased an estimated 0.4 percent in January following a downward revised
0.3 percent rise in December. Moderate gains prevailed in most sectors, except home goods and energy materials.
At 126.9 percent of the 1977 average, industrial output in January was 0.6 percent above a year earlier, with
manufacturing nearly 2 percent higher, but mining about 12 percent lower than a year ago.
Market Groupings. Output of consumer goods rose 0.5 percent in January as production of nondurable consumer
goods continued to advance at its recent strong pace. However, output of durable consumer goods was little
changed, on balance, following a sharp gain in December. Production of home appliances, which expanded rapidly
in late 1986, retreated in January, and auto assemblies fell to an annual rate of 7.5 million units from a 7.9
million rate in December; these declines were offset by increases in output of trucks and home goods other than
appliances.
Business equipment production rose 0.4 percent in January, with all major categories posting
gains, but the overall January level remains almost 2 percent lower than a year earlier. Output of defense and
space equipment increased further. Following a small December decline, the output of construction supplies
rose 0.8 percent in January and production of business supplies rose 0.3 percent further to a level more than
5 percent higher than a year ago. Among materials, both durables and nondurables posted gains in January but
energy materials declined about 1 percent following a similar drop in December. Within nondurables, recent
strength has been concentrated in chemicals and paper which may have benefitted, in part, from increased exports
of these products.

Industrial Production: Summary
Seasonally adjusted
Index , 1977=100
Item
DEC

1467
1

4AX

Monthly percent change
S£P

OCT

HOY

DEC

JAM

Current
month from
a year ago

126.4

126.9

-0.1

.3

• 6

.3

.4

• 6

135.2

135.9

-0.4

.6

.4

.5

.5

1.4

Final products
Consumer goods
Durable goods
Nondurable goods
Business equipment
Defense and space

133.9
127.1
121.1
129.3
138.3
185.3

134.6
127.8
121.3
130.1
138.9
186.7

-0.3
-T>.7
1.4
-1.4
.0
.6

.4
.4
-1.0
• 8
-0.2
1.4

.4
.6
1.3
• 4
-0.1
.2

Intermediate products
Construction supplies

139.6
126.9

140.3
127.9

-0.6
.4

1.3
.3

114.4

114.6

.3

Manufacturing
Durable
Nondurable

131.0
129.3
133.5

131.8
129.8
134.5

• 0
.5
-0.6

Mining
Utilities

95.4
111.2

95.6
111.0

-0.3
.0

Total
Marfcet Qroupfcigs
Products, total

Materials
Industry Groupings




.6
1.3
2.8
• 8
-0.4
.2

.5
.5
.2
.7
• 4
.8

.4
.7

.2
-0.2

.5
.8

-0.2

.9

.1

.2

.3
.0
.7

.4
.4
.3

.5
• 5
.6

.6
.4
.7

-0.6
.9

1.2
1.7

-1.3
.0

.2
-0.1

.5
3.2
4.6
2.8
-1.8
4.5
4.5
3. 1
-0.7

|

,

1.8
• 2
4.0
-11.6
-1.3

- 2 -

Industry Groupings. Output in the manufacturing sector rose 0.6 percent in January, while output of mining
and utilities was about unchanged. Within manufacturing, gains were largest in nondurables, which rose 0.7
percent. Production of durables increased 0.4 percent; the gain was damped by further declines in the production of metals.
*

*

*

New Publication:
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION-1986 Edition
Industrial Production-1986 Edition is now available to the public. It contains a
of the industrial production index published in 1985; a description of the methods
and of its historical development from 1919; a listing of the sources and coverage
statistical tables providing historical data through 1985 for the total index, its
components•

summary of the major revision
used to construct the index
of the index series; and
major groupings, and its main

To obtain copies of Industrial Production-1986 Edition, write to the Publication Services, Board of Governors of
the Federal Reserve System, Washington, D.C. 20551. The price of this volume of about 440 pages is $9.00 per
copy.
\
••Industrial production for February is expected to be released on March 13, 1987 at 9:15 am EST.**




FEDERAL RESERVE
Industrial Production

•f*u«s^

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION

JANUARY DATA

SEASONALLY ADJUSTED, RATIO SCALE, 1977=100
140

PRODUCTS

—I 120

100

80
—

MANUFACTURING

mm

s£.~~!

y—i *
//V"

|_-^LV

140

MATERIALS

DURABLE
l^Z^

DURABLE

'*>^ - ^- —""'

NONDURABLE

120

NONDURABLE

^ ^

'"— x ^ ^ — / ^ /
>r— '

^/^^
—

100
ENERGY

I

80
160

CONSUMER GOODS

RU^INF99

INTERMEDIATE PRODUCTS

—

SUPPLIES

140
NONDURABLE
—

120
/- ,

i

DURABLE

CONSTRUCTION

SUPPLIES

I /

\
V

—I

*J

•

100

V x-\7

i

y

80 I—
"
240

140

MOTOR VEHICLES AND PARTS

FINAL PRODUCTS
200

120

DEFENSE AND
SPACE

100 I—

160
140

120
CONSUMER GOODS
100

80
1981



1983

1985

1987

1981

1983

1985

1987

Table 1A

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: MARKET GROUPINGS
Seasonally adjusted, 1977 = 100
1977
Proportion

fldjor Market
Groupings

1986
Ann.
Avg.

1986
JAH

1987
FEB

MAR

APR

MAY

JUN

JUL

AUG

SEP

OCT

MOV

DEC

JAN

125.0

126.2

125.3

1 2 3 . t>

124.7

124.2

124.2

124.9

125-1

124-9

125.3

126.0

126.4

126.9

PRODUCTS, TOTAL
F I N A L PRODUCTS
CONSUMER GOODS
EQUIPMENT, TOTAL

57-72
44.77
25-52
19.25J

133.2
132.3
124.4
142.8

134.0
133.9
123.8
147.5

132-9
132.8
123.3
145.4

131-2
130.6
121-8
142-3

132.7
132. 1
124.5
142-3

132-4
131-6
124.3
141.2

132.4
131.1
124.4
140.0

133.2
132.0
125.2
141.0

133-8
132.6
125. 1
142.5

133-3
132.2
124.2
142.8

1J4.0
132.7
124.7
143-3

134.5
133.1
125.4
143.4

135.2
133.9
127. 1
143.0

135-9
134-6
127.8
143-7

INTERMEDIATE
MATERIALS

12.94
42.28

136.4
113-8

134.2
115.5

133.4
114.8

133.3
113.3

134.5
113.8

135-1
113-0

137.0
113. 1

137.3
113.6

137.8
113.2

137.0
113.5

138-7
113.3

139-3
114.4

139.6
114.4

140.3
114.6

25-52

124.4

123.8

123.3

121.8

124.5

124.3

124.4

125.2

125- 1

124-2

124.7

125.4

127. 1

127.8

6.89
2.98
1.79
1.16
.63
1.19

116.1
115-1
112-9
97.3
141.8
118.4

116.0
116.2
118.2
105.5
141.7
113.3

116.6
117.6
119.4
107.1
142.1
114.9

112.4
110.4
106.3
93.7
129.6
1lo.6

115.9
116.4
115. 1
100.8
141.5
118.4

113.8
113.2
110.3
94.8
139. 1
117.4

114.3
113.7
112.2
99.3
136. 1
116. 1

116.3
116.4
114.5
95.3
150.3
119.1

115.7
114.5
110.4
87.8
1^2.4
120.7

117.4
117.0
116.8
96.2
155. 1
117.3

116.3
112.7
107.7
91.9
137. 1
120. 1

117.8
114.2
107.6
92-3
136.0
124.2

121. 1
118.1
115.6
99.5
145.6
121.8

121.3
120.4
119.1
95.2

3-91 116.9
1.24 1 3 9 . 0
1 . 19 1 4 1 . 2
. 9 6 125-8
1.71
95.8

115.8
133.2
135.7
125-1
98.0

115.8
135.1
137.6
124.4
97.0

113.9
133.7
136.0
121-2
95.5

115.5
138.8
140.6
121.8
95.0

114.3
133.9
135.8
123.3
95.0

114.8
137.5
139. 1
122-5
94.1

116.3
138.9
141.6
126.6
94.1

116.7
139.4
142.5
125.8
95.1

117.7
141.2
143.5
12b.2
96.0

119.0
142.6
144.3
126.8
96.5

120.6
146.2
147.9
131-1
96.3

123.4
152-6
154.5
1J2. b
97.2

122.1
145.9

130.1

TOTAL

100-00

INDEX

PRODUCTS

CONSUMER GOODS
DURABLE CONSUMER GOODS
Automotive products
A u t o s and t r u c k s , c o n s u a e r
Autos, consuaer
Trucks, consuaer
Auto p a r t s & a l l i e d gds
Hose g o o d s
Appliances,TV 6 air-cond
A p p l i a n c e s a n d TV
Carpeting & f u r n i t u r e
M i s c . ho»e g o o d s

staples
foods & tobacco
staples

18.63
3-34
15-29
7.80
7-49

127-5
96.9
134.2
131-9
13b. 5

126.6
98.4
132.8
130. 1
135.6

125-8
9o. 4
132.3
131. 1
133.5

125-3
9b. 2
131.6
130.3
133.0

127.7
97-5
134. 3
131.9
136.7

128.1
96-6
135.0
132.4
137.7

128.1
95.9
135. 1
133.3
137.0

128.4
97-0
135.3
132.2
138.5

128.6
9b. 8
135.5
133.2
137.9

126.7
95.4
133.6
131-0
136.3

127.8
97.4
134.4
131.6
137.2

128.2
97.6
134.9
132.6
137.4

129.3
98.7
136.0
134. 1
137.9

Consuaer c b e o . products
Consuaer paper products
Consumer e n e r g y
Consuaer f u e l
Residential
utilities

2-75
1.88
2.86
1.44
1.42

161.2
147.4
105.7
92.9

156.3
148.9
1i)7.0
94.1
120-1

158.3
143.4
103-2
92.0
114.5

15«>-4
143.1
104.0
92.2
11b. 1

163. 1
145. 1
106.0
93.7
118.. 4

162-4
148.6
106.8
96.4
117-5

163.6
147. 1
104.8
91.8
118. 1

166.4
146.4
106.6
91.2
122.3

163-4
147.7
107. 1
9 4.9
119-b

161.1
145.7
106.3
92.0
120.9

lbl.7
150.3
105.2
90.8
119.8

161.0
151-6
105.5
91.7
119.6

1b1.3
151.8
106.3
93.5

19-25

142.8

NONDURABLE
Clothing
Consuaer
Consuaer
Nonfood

CONSUMER GOODS

EQUIPMENT,

TOTAL

BUSINESS & OZtEHSE
EQUIP.
BUSINESS EQUIPMENT
Constr, aining, 6 fara
Manufacturing egurpaent
Power e g u x p a e n t
Comaercial eguxpaent
Transit e^uipaent
DEFENSE 6 SPACE EQUIPMENT
INTERMEDIATE PRODUCTS
Construction supplies
Business s u p p l i e s
Gen. business s u p p l i e s
Comaercxal energy prod.
MATERIALS
DURABLlv GOODS MATERIALS
Consumer d u r a b l e p a r t s
Eguxpaent p a r t s
Durable m a t e r i a l s nee
Basic a e t a l a a t e r i a l s

I

138-8

147.5

145-4

142.3

142.3

141.2

140.0

141.0

142.5

142-8

143.3

143.4

143.0.

143-7

147.4
140.5
63.0
112-9
82-3
216.8
111.7
176.3

145.5
137.7
59.5
112.4
82.0
214.3
104.3
176.2

146.6
138.6
58.6
111.9
83.0
213.4
112. 1
178.0

14b.0
137.9
60.9
111.9
82.9
212.9
107.3
178.0

145. 1
136.6
61.9
111.7
83-5
208.2
108.8
178.4

146.4
137.9
60.6
112.6
81.7
214.5
103.9
179.5

147.8
139.3
58-3
113.3
81.7
217.5
106.9
181.0

148.0
148.4
139.3
139. 1
58.1
58.0
113.0
112.7
80.3
80.5
2 15. 1 215.4
113.3
111.6
182.0
184.6

148.3
138.9
56.6
110.9
79.5
217.3
110.7
184.9

147.9
138.3
56-3
111.2
80.7
216.0
109. 1
185.3

148.6
138.9

12-94
5.95
6.99
5.b7
1.31

13J.4
122.b
142.6
l4o.7
124.9

133.3
122.6
142.5
146.4
125.6

134.5
123.6
143-8
148-0
125-8

135.1
123.5
145.0
148.3
130-7

137.0
124. 1
147.9
151.6
131.9

137.3
124.0
148.6
153.3
128.3

137.B
125.4
14 8 . 4
152.5
I30.b

137.0
125.9
14b. 4
151.2
125-8

138. 7
126.3
149-3
154- 1
128.6

139.3
127.1
149.7
153-7
132.4

139. b
126.9
150.3
154.2
133.7

140-3
127.9

136.4
124.6
146.5
150.6
128-5

134.2
124.0
142.9
147.2
124.4

111-3
81.0
217.1
109-7
186.7

42-28

113.8

115.5

114.8

113.3

113.8

113.0

113. 1

113.6

113.2

113.5

113.3

114.4

114.4

114.6

20-50
4.92
5-94
9.64
4.64

119.7
98.5
153.8
109.4
bO.O

122.2
103.5
153.8
112-2
85.2

121-3
103.2
153.0
111.0
83.0

119.3
99-9
153.7
108.0
79.6

120.2
99.3
154.8
109.4
82.9

118.4
96.4
152.3
108-8
78.9

117.8
96.3
151.8
107.9
76.7

118.8
96.7
154.3
108.2
77.4

118.8
y5-2

155-6
108. 1
76.9

118.9
95.3
154-8
108.8
78.4

119.2
97.0
153-5
109. 4
78.8

120.4
98.0
154.5
110.6
82.1

120.4
98.8
154. 1
110.7
81.0

121.0
99.4
155.0
111.1

118.2 116.2
118.7 116.5
1 1 0 . 4 1U4. 1
132.11129.7
117.0 116.2
116.5 115-4

11o. 1
116.5
107.5
128.8
115.4
115-0

114.8
115.5
105.7
128.0
114.5
112.8

116.5
115.9
106.7
129.0
114.5
118.2

116-5
11b.9
108.4
12B. 6
115.7
115.3

117.7
118.2
109.5
132.7
116. 1
116.4

118.9
119.0
111.2
135.6
1 15.9
118.3

119. 7
120.5
113.4
13b. 0
117.5
117.2

120.6
121.8
116.0
133.7
119.7
117. 1

120.3
121-3
114.3
1J3.5
119.5
117.5

120.1
121.0
115.0
134.2
118.5
117.6

121.6
122.6
113.9
13 7.4
120.4
118.7

122.6
123.8

102-1
106.7
*3. 6

101.4
107.4
90.5

100.4
106.2
89.7

100.5
106.7
89.2

100.8
106.5
90.4

99.9
104.8
90-9

97.9
103. 7
87.J

96.0
103.8
87.4

96.9
102.7
*6. 2

98.7
104.8
87.5

97.7
102.9
88.2

96.6

99.8
11.69
7.57 105.3
4.12
89.8

103.0
106.9
9 5.8

NOTE: Two coaponents—oxl and gas well drilling and manufactured hones—are included in
total equipment but not shown here. They are shovn in Tables 4A and 4B on page 8 and 9.




136.8

18-01 147.2 149-1
14.34 138.7 141.5
2.08
59.7
b5.3
3.27 112.3 113.0
1.27
81.6
82.S
5.22 214.8 217.8
2.49 109.2 112.7
3.67 180.2 178.7

NONDURABLE GOODS MATERIALS
10-09
Textile,paper,&cnea.aater. 1 7.53
Textile aaterials
|
1-52
Pulp & paper a a t e r i a l s
1.55 I
Cneaical a a t e r i a l s
4.46
2.57
Misc. nondurable a a t e r i a l s
ENERGY MATERIALS
Primary energy
Converted f u e l a a t e r i a l s

122.3

4

Table 1B

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: MARKET GROUPINGS
Not seasonally adjusted, 1977 = 100

1977
Proportion

Major Market
Groupings

TOTAL

INDEI

1986
Ann.
Avg. ,

1986
JAN

1987
FEB

MAR

APR

MAY

JUN

JUL

AUG

SEP

OCT

NOV

DEC

JAN

100.QO

125.0

122.9

124.9

123-1

123.8

123-2

126-9

123.3

127.6

129- 1

128.0

125.5

122.0

123-5

PRODUCTS, TOTAL
F I N A L PRODUCTS
CONSUMER GOODS
EQUIPMENT, TOTAL

57.72
44.77
25.52
19-25

133-2
132.3
124.4
142.8

129.5
130.3
119-2
145.0

1J0.8
131.2
121.2
144.4

129.0
128.8
118.9
141.9

130.6
129.9
122. 1
140.2

130.6
129.8
122.1
140.0

135.8
134.4
128.3
142.5

132.9
131.3
124.7
140. 1

138.0
136.3
130.5
143-9

139-6
136.1
131.8
146.5

138.0
136.4
129.7
145-2

133.9
132.4
124.4
142.9

130. 1
129.0|
119.8
14 1.21

131.2
130.7
123.0
141.0

INTERMEDIATE
MATERIALS

12-94
42.28

136.4
113.8

126.9
113.9

129.5
116.8

129.6
115. 1

133.0
114.5

133.5
113.1

140-6
114.8

138.3
110. 1

143.9
113.4

144.8
114.8

143. b
114.4

139.3
113.9

134.0i
111.0

132.6
112.9

25.52

124.4

119.2

121.2

118.9

122. 1

122.1

128.3

124.7

130.5

131-8

129. 7

124.4

119.8

123.0

116.1
115.1
112.9
97.3
1»1.8
118.4

112. 1
114.4
115. 0
105.3
133.0
113.4

117.9
121.2
126-0
112-5
151. 1
114.0

114.9
116.8
117.0
102.2
144.5
116.5

119. 1
122. 1
124.4
108.3
154.2
118.7

116. 1
118.2
119.9
102.0
153.0
115.6

119.3
122.9
127.6
111.6
157.3
115.8

104.8
99.2
89.1
72-2
120-3
114-5

113.6
106-2
95.4
74.3
134-7
122-5

121-4
119.2
116.8
94.9
157.5
122.6

125. 9
121-4
118. 7
104.2
145.8
125.5

118-9
1 14-7
109-1
96.4
132.6
123.1

10 9 . 1
104.5
95.3
83.6
117.0
118.4

117.2
118.2
115-5
95.0

110.3
132.4
134.4
115.4
91.6

115.3
137. 1
138.7
125.8
93-7

113.4
131.7
132.3
122,8
95.0

116.8
143.0
142. 1
124.2
93.8

114.5
135.9
136.5
122.2
94.6

116.6
136.2
136.7
126. 1
97. 1

109-0
127.2
130.0
116.8
91.5

119-2
140-0
145-2
129.0
98.6

123.0
144.5
148.3
133.4
101-7

129.4
164.5
108-5
135.2
100. 6

122.2
149.1
152.3
132.0
97.2

112-6
127.0J
128-8
126.5
9 4. 4

116.4
145.0

PRODUCTS

CONSUMER GOODS
DURABLE CONSUMER GOODS
Automotive products
A u t o s and t r u c k s , c o n s u m e r
A u t o s , consumer
T r u c k s , consumer
A u t o p a r t s & a l l i e d gds

6.89
2.98
1.79
1.16
.631
1.19

Home g o o d s
Appliances,TV 6 air-cond
A p p l i a n c e s and TV
Carpeting & f u r n i t u r e
M i s c . home g o o d s
HONOURABLE
Clothing
Consumer
Consumer
Nonfood

3.91 116.9
1.24 1 3 9 . 0
1 . 19 1 4 1 . 2 k
.96
125.8
1-71
95.8

CONSUMER GOODS
staples
roods 6
staples

tobacco

Consumer c h e m . p r o d u c t s
Consumer p a p e r p r o d u c t s
Consumer e n e r g y
Consumer f u e l
Residential
utilities
EQUIPMENT,

TOTAL

BUSINESS 6 DEFENSE E Q U I P .
BUS1SESS EQUIPMENT
C o n s t r , m i n i n g , & farm
Manufacturing equipment
Power e q u i p m e n t
Commercial equipment
T r a n s i t equipment
i
DEFENSE & SPACE EQUIPMENT
INTERMEDIATE PRODUCTS
Construction supplies
Business s u p p l i e s
i
Gen- b u s i n e s s s u p p l i e s
Commercial energy prod.
|

18.63
3.3H
15.29
7-80
7.49

127.5
96.9
134.2
131-9
136-5

121.8
93.3
128.0
123.9
132.3

122.4
95. b
128.3
125.2
131.5

120.4
95.9
125-8
125.0
l2b.b

123.3
96.4
129. 1
127.7
130.6

124.4
9b. 3
130.5
129.7
131.3

131.6
99.7
138.6
137.7
139.5

132. 1
94.4
140.3
134. 1
146.8

Ub.8
102.0
144. 4
141.4
147.b

135-6
99.5
143.5
140. y
146. 1

131. 1
99-6
U8-0
137.9
138.2

126.5
96.6
133.0
132.0
134.0

123.8
93-9
130.3
1 2 7 . 1J
133.7

2.75
1.88
2.86
1-44
1-42

161.2
147.4
105.7
92.9

145.7
140.6
114.1
92.0
136.7

150-7
140-5
107. 1
8b.7
127.8

147.2
138-3
99. 1
85.0
113. 5

157.0
140.0
99.2
90.3
108.3

157.5
142-7
98-6
96-6
100.6

169.5
149.6
104.0
95.3
112.9

178.3
153.6
1 12.2
94.0
130-7

172.b
163.2
113.3
96.2
1J0.8

176.5
156.2
110.4
94.7
126. 4

167.9
153.2
99.6
90.9
108.9

158-2
148.3
101-3
95.2
107.5

153- 1
143. 1
108.9
97.6J

19-25

142-8

145.0

144.4

141-9

140.2

140-0

142.5

140. 1

143.9

146.5

145.2

142.9

141-2

141-0

18-01
14.34
2-08
3.27
1.27
5.22
2.49
3.67

147.2
138.7
59-7
112.3
81-6
214.8
109.2
180.2

146-1
13 7 . 5
63-3
109.2
81.2
210.4
112.4
179.8

14b. 8
139.1
b5. 1
11J.3
81.8
211.2
1IJ.3
176-9

14 5 - 4
137.3
60.3
112-9
82.2
210-2
109.1
177.1

144. 5
136- 1
58-6
111-0
61. 1
206- 2
115. 1
177.5

144-9
13b.4
60.5
110.6
81.0
208.0
112.2
177-9

147.9
140.0
62.4
113.9
84. 6
212.2
116.3
178.6

145.5
137-5
59.9
111.2
78.9
219.9
94.2
177-0

149.3
141.7
58.3
114. b
82- 1
22b. 8
99.3
178-8

132.0
144.3
59-9
115-8
83-7
226. 5
111.3
181.8

130.2
141.8
57-9
114.2
8 1, 8
220.3
114. b
183- 1

147-b
137.9
55.7
110.7
80.3
215. 1
110. 1
185.6

143-7
134.7
55. 1
109.9
80.7
210.6
102. b
168. 7

145.7
134.9

1 2 . 9 4 1 3 6 . 4 12 6 - 9
5.95 124.6 116.0
6-99 146.5 136.1
5 . 6 7 150., 6 1 3 8 - 9
1.31I 1 2 8 . 5 124.4

129.3
117.7
139.6
142.5
127.0

129.6
120. 1
137-6
142.3
117.4

133.0
124.6
140.2
145.0
119. 1

133.5
125.0
1 40 . 8
145.6
120. 1

140.6
129. 1
150-4
153.3
138.0

138-3
123.7
150-8
153-9
137.8

143.9
128.9
156.7
1b0.5
140.4

144. 8
131.2
156.4
160.9
137- 1

143-D
130.5
154- 7
161. 3
12b-5

139.3
127-7
149.3
154-3
127.5

134-0
121-2
144.9
149-0
127. 1

132.6
119.6

107.6
79-4
209-7
109.4
187.8

116.8

11 5 . 1

114.5

113. 1

114,8

110. 1

113-4

114.8

114.4

1 13.9

11 1.0

112.9

121.8
103.7
152.9
112-0
8b.4

12 1 . 4
101.8
154-9
110.8
86.2

121-2
100.5
153.0
112-2
89. U

120-2
97.7
152.5
111.7
84.9

120.7
98.2
153.6
111-9
80.6

115.7
9 2.5
151.0
105-9
72.5

118.b
9 4.0
153.b
109. 5
7 4.0

121. 1
9 7- 1
155.7
112-0
7 7.3

120. b
99. 7
153.7
1 1 1. 0
7 7-2

119.5
98.3
155.5
10b. 1
77.0

11o.8
9 7- 5
15b. 1
102.5
72.5

117.0
9b.5
154.9
104- 1

118.2 113.9
118.7 114.3
110.4 1103.8
132.1 |12 8. 7
117.0 112.9
116.5 112.8

119.4
119.9
112-0
13*. 9
118.2
117.6

117.4
118.5
109.0
U2„6
116.9
114.0

118.7
118.4
108.3
131-9
117.2
119-5

117.0
118.3
112.5
129.0
1 16.5
113. 1

120.2
120. 7
112.9
1J5. 7
118-2
11b- 7

1 12.3
112.0
94.6
126.0
113.0
113.3

119. J
119.3
11b.2
Ub,4
114.4
119-J

121.9
122-8
117.2
134.0
120.a
119.4

123.0
122. b
119. 7
1 J3. J
119.2
124. 2

120.b
121.8
11b. 1
136.0
1 18.8
117-0

114.3
116. I
10 2 . 1
12b. 3
117. 3
109.0

120. 1
121.5

99.8 106-4
11.69
7.57 I 105.3 108.4
4 - 12 J 8 9 . 8 1 0 2 . 6

105.7
109.6
98-6

102. 1
10 8 . 7
90. 1

99. 1
105.8
86.6

97.5
105.0
83.8

99.6
10 5 . 7
88.5

98.2
101.4
92.4

'J9. J
1U4. b
8 9.b

9/,. 6
104- 1
85.7

9t>- 1
103. 7
ti2.3

98.3
104. b
3b. b

98-0
102-2
9U.2

99.6

j
!

NOTiS: Two components—oxl and gas well d r i l l i n g and manufactured homes-~are included in
t o t a l equipment but not shown here- They are shown in Tables 4A ana 4B on page 8 ana 9-




135.4

1 13-8 113.9

42.28

NONDURABLE GOODS MATERIALS
10.09 !
Tex t r i e , p a p e r , & c a e » . m a t e r - J
7.53 |
Textile materials
|
1.52 |
Pulp & paper m a t e r i a l s
i
»-55 J
Chemical m a t e r i a l s
|
4-46\
Misc.. n o n d u r a b l e m a t e r i a l s
2.57 i
ENERGY MATERIALS
Primary energy
Converted f u e l m a t e r i a l s

125.1
131.8

20.50 119-7 118.2
98.5 100.4
|
4.92
5.94 153-8 153-7
j
9 . 6 4 | 1 0 9 . 4 J10 5 - 3
I
4-b4 I 8 0 . 0
82.8

MATERIALS
DURABLE GOODS MATERIALS
Consumer d u r a b l e p a r t s
Equipment p a r t s
D u r a b l e m a t e r i a l s nee
Basic metal m a t e r i a l s

122.4

Table 2A

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDUSTRY GROUPINGS
Seasonally adjusted, 1977 = 100
1986
Ann.
Avg.

1986
JAN

FEB

MAfi

APS

HAT

JON

JUL

AUG

SEP

OCT

NO?

MINING AND UTILITIES
MINING
UTILITIES

15.791 103.3
9-831 99.4
5.96| 109.7

109.8
108. 1
112-5

106.8
105.1
109.7

105.4
103-0
109.3

104.2
101.0
109-4

103.1
99.8
108.5

102.6
98-9
108.6

101.8
97.1
109.7

100.9
96.4
108.3

100.8
96.2
108.3

100.7
95.6
109.3

MANUFACTUSING
NONDURABLE
DUBABLE

84.211 129.1
35.111 130.8
49.101 127.9

129.4
129.3
129.5

128.7
128-7
128.7

127.2
127-7
126.8

128.7
129.6
128.1

128.2
129.9
127.0

128.3
131.2
126.2

129.2
131.7
127.4

129.5
132.2
127-5

129-5
131.4
128.1

MINING
Metal mining
10
Coal
11,12
Oil & gas extraction
13
Stone & earth minerals
14

.50j
1.60 1 2 4 . 3
7.07
94.4
.66, 114.1

73.5
130.8
104.9
113.5

77.2
126.5
101.1
116.8

75.9
124.7
99.2
111.6

76.0
124.4
96.2
115.0

72.0
124.0
95.1
112.4

65.9
127.3
93.3
114-5

69-2
120.2
92-4
111.8

70.9
122.2
90.7
114.8

NONDURABLE MANUFACTURES
Foods
Tobacco products
Textile mill products
Apparel products
Paper & products

20
21
22
23
26

7.96
.621
2.291
2-791
3-15|

113.1
103.5
136.3

132. 0
93.8
107.9
105-5
133-6

132.9
97.0
109-9
102.8
132.6

132.2
93.6
108.0
102.8
132-4

133.1
100.3
111.4
103.1
134.1

133.7
101-6
111.3
102.6
133.2

134-6
97-6
112.6
101-7
137.2

134-3
97-9
113-4
102.5
138.1

Printing 6 publishing
Chemicals 6 products
Petroleum products
Rubber & plastics prodLeather & products

27
28
29
30
31

4.54 163.5
8.05 133.0
2.40J 9 2 . 1
2.80J 153.4
61.4
.53

160.9
131.7
94.7
150-2
65.4

156.7
132.0
90. 1
151.1
64.8

157.8
130.2
88-6
147.8
62.7

161.6
132.8
91.3
146.8
61.5

161.9
131.5
9 5.7
150.1
59.5

164.0
134.2
91.8
152.2
57-9

DURABLE HANUFACTUfiES
Lumber & products
Furniture 6 fixtures
Clay, glass, stone prod-

120.5
24 2 - 3 0
25; 1 . 2 7 1 4 6 . 7 I 1 4 1 . 2
120.0
32 2 - 7 2 J 1 2 0 . 2

120.3
143.2
119.3

120.7
142.9
120.0

121.3
145.9
121.6

121.6
146.2
120-2

Major I n d u s t r y
Groupings

SIC
Code

19771
Pro-)
por-j
tion]

133.b

DEC J

1987
JAN

102.1
96.7
111.2

101.4
95.4|
111.2]

101.4
95-6
111.0

129.9
132.3
128.1

130.4
132.8
128.6

131-0
133.5
129.3

131.8
134.5
129-8

70.7
120.8
91.0
111.7

68.5
117.6
90.5
116.4

130. 1
89.4
115.2

124.8
88.81
114.. 8

135.1
97. 1
114.7
102.5
138.6

134.3
89-8
116.0
102.7
136.9

133.7
100.1
116.1
104.2
137.8

134. 1
99.7
117.9
105.1
139.5

117.7
106.1
141.4

165.4
134.1
90.6
155.5
61.9

164.6
134.4
94.0
155.5
62.0

163.0
133-9
93.3
154-9
59.4

167.8
133.9
91-1
157-6
60.2

168.5
132.9
91.5
159.0
61.3

168.5
133-5
92.5
160.0
61.1

120.9
147.1
120.8

120^8
149.5
119.6

122-5
148.3
119.7

125-0
147-7
121-6

125.9
149.2
118-1

129.3
148.6
120.6

150.4
121.6

88-7

134.9

170.0
93.5

74.2

Primary metals
33
Iron 6 steel
331,2
Fabricated metal prod34
Nonelectrical machinery
35
Electrical machinery
36

75.9
5-33
3-491 6 3 . 5
6.461 107-3
9.54 142.0
7.15 166.5

|
1
1
I

82.4
72.2
109.2
144.9
166-1

80.3
69.5
108.5
143.9
164.8

76.3
64.3
107.6
141.7
165.2

78.1
65.6
108.2
140.8
166.8

74.8
60.2
106-5
141.3
166.0

71-4
58.3
106.6
140.4
163.2

73.6
61-7
105.7
142.6
166.8

73-4
60.8
105.9
142.6
167.2

74.1
61-1
107.3
140.9
166.9

74.2
62.2
108.3
142.2
167.7

76.8
64.8
107.1
141.6
168.2

74.7
62.0
108.4
140-7 I
169.9

Transportation equip.
37
Hotor vehicles 6 pts371
Aerospace 6 misc.
372-6,9
Instruments
38
39
Miscellaneous afrs.

9.13
5.25
3.87
2-66
1.46

125-9
110-9
146.1
141-4
99.2

|
1
1
I
|

128.2
116.5
143-9
141.5
100.9

127.5
11b.4
142.6
141.9
100.9

122-6
108. 1
142.4
142-0
99.0

126.2
112.6
144.8
142.4
99-2

124-1
108-7
145.0
140.3
101.0

125.1
110.6
144.7
139-9
98-3

125.6
111.2
145.2
141.7
97.5

125.1
108-2
148.0
142-0
98.3

127.7
112.2
148.7
141-7
97.7

125.2
107.1
149.7
140.3
99.0

125.6
107.9
149.6
141.1
98-9

127.9
127.5
111.5 1 112.2
149.3 1 149.1
142.2 | 142.5
100.6

UTILITIES
Electric

4.17

122.4 I

119-7

119-5

119.8

121.6

121-7

123-1

125.4

122-4

122.8

123.8

125-2

125.5

Table 3A

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: PERCENT CHANGES
Based on seasonally adjusted indexes

Series

I
1

1986
JAN

FEB

HAfl

APR

HA?

JON

JUL

AUG

SEP

OCT

NOV

DEC

CHANGE FfiOM PREVIOUS MONTH
TOTAL INDEX
Final
products
Consumer g o o d s
Durable consumer goods
Nondurable consumer goods
Business equipment
Construction
Supplies
Materials
Durable goods materials
Nondurable goods m a t e r i a l s

1
t
i

-5
.5
.4
.6
-3
1. 1
3.5
-0
-2
1.2

-0.7
-0.8
-0.3
.5
-0.6
-0.7
-1.1
-0.6
-0.7
-0. 1

-1.3
-1.7
~\.2
-3.b
-0.4
-2.0
.0
-1.3
-1.7
-1-2

.8
1.2
2-2
3.1
1-9
.6
.8
-5
.7
1-5

-0-4
-0.4
-0.2
-1.fi
.3
-0.5
-0.1
-0.7
-1-4
-0

-0
-0.4
-1
-5
.0
-0.9
-5
-1
-0.5
1-1

-5
.7
.6
1.7
.3
1.0
-0.1
.4
.8
.9

.1
.4
.0
-0.5
.1
1.0
1.1
-0.3
.0
-7

-0.1
-0.3
-0-7
1.4
-1.4
.0
. 4
.3
. 1
.8

-0.4
-0.9
.2
-1.0

.0
-0.6
1.0
-0.5

.7
1.0
.4
-0.7

-2
.1
.4
-0.9

-0
-5
-0-6
-0.2

-3
.4
.4
-1.0
-8
-0-2
.3
-0.2
.2
-0,2

.6
.4
.6
1.3
-4
-0-1
.7
-9
1-0
-0.2

-3
.0
.7
.0

.4
.4
-3
1.4

Manufacturing
Durable manufacturing
Nondurable manufacturing
Mining and u t i l i t i e s

.9
-6
1.4
-0-4

-0-6
-0.7
-0.5
-2.7

-1.2
-1.4
-0.8
-1.4

1-2
1.0
1.5
-1.1

TOTAL INDEX
Final products
Consumer g o o d s
Durable consumer goods
Nondurable consuaer goods
Business equipment
Construction
Supplies
Materials
Durable goods materials
Nondurable goods m a t e r i a l s

2.9
3.8
4.8
4.«*
5.0
2.3
7.4
.5
-1. 1
5.3

1.7
2.2
3.6
3.6
3.6
1-0
7.2
-0. 1
-0.9
4.7

.2
.5
2.1
-1.0
3.2
-0.9
5.6
-l.b
-2-9
3.6

1.2
1.4
4.7
3.8
5. 1
-1.5
5.6
-0.3
-1.7
5.4

-5
.4
3-8
1-6
4.6
-2.1
4.6
-0.7
-1.9
4.9

.5
.4
3-7
1.5
4.5
-1.4
4.6
-0.9
-2.8
5.6

1.2
1.0
4.9
4.4
5.0
-1.2
4.5
.0
-1.1
4.9

.5
.3
3-5
1.1
4.3
-1.2
4.1
-0.6
-2.0
6.1

.5
-0
2.6
3.8
2.2
-0.8
4.7
-0.2
-0-9
5-6

1.4
1-3
3.5
3.6
3.5
.6
5.0
-0.1
-0.7
5.9

.9
-0
2.3
2.1
2-3
-1.3
5.5
.4
-0.6
6.1

3.6
2.3
5.5
-1-3

2.8
1.8
4-3
-4.9

1.1
-0.4
"3.2
-5.2

2. 1
.4
4.4
-5.0

1.5
-0.3
4.2
-5.9

1.7
-0.6
5.1
-6.9

2.3
.4
5.0
-6-1

1.7
-0-5
4.9
-7.3

2.0
.5
4.0
-8-5

2.8
1.1
5.2
-7.4

2.0
-3
4.4
-6.1

-3J
-61
1-31
2.81
-81
-0.4j
-0.2J
-11
.0|
1-21
1
.5|
.51
.61
-0.7J

CHANGE FBOH SAHE MONTH A YEAR EARLIEh

Manufacturing
Durable manufacturing
Nondurable manufacturing
Mining and u t i l i t i e s




j

6-

-71
-51
3.11
5-11
2.4|
-1-21
5.9J
-0.9|
-1.2J
5.8J
1
2.21
.41
4.71
-8.01
1
1
i

1987J
JAN )
1
1
1
4
1
.41
-51
• 51
.21
-71
-41
-8{
.21
.51
.81
1
.61
.41
•71
.11
1
1
1
1
.61
-5|
3.21
4.61
2.81
- 1 . 81
3.1|
-0.74
-1.0J
5.4|
1
U8|
.21
4.01
-7.61
1

1

10 9 . 4
141-7
170.0

Table 2B

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDUSTRY GROUPINGS
Not seasonally adjusted, 1977 = 100

Hajoe I n d u s t r y
Groupings

1
1
19771 1986|
P r o - 1 Ann.
p o r - | Avg.
tioni
(

SIC •
Code

I
1

1986
JAM

FSB

BAR

APR

MAI

JUM

JUL

AUG

SEP

OCT

MOV

DSC

1987
JAM

i
1

a i f f l H G AMD U T I L I T I E S
MIMItfG
UTILITIES

15.791103.3
9.831 99-4
5.96J 109.7

113.1
108.0
121.5

110.8
106.5
117.9

104.5
103.2
106.7

101.1
99.7
103.4

98.5
98.2
98.9

102.1
97.9
109.1

102.1
93.8
115.9

103.8
97.4
114.5

101.9
96.6
110.6

99.1
97.4
101.9

100.9
98.4
105. 0

101.9
96.1
111.5

104.2
95.2
119.0

HAHOFACTUBIHG
MOMDUBABLE
DURABLE

84.211129.1
35.111130.8
49.10|127.9

124.7
122.8
126.1

127.5
126.4
128.3

126.6
125-4
127.5

128.1
127.9
128.2

127.9
128.8
127.2

131.6
134.7
129.3

127.3
131.5
124.3

132.3
137.7
128.3

134.0
138. 1
131-2

133.4
137.0
130.8

130.1
132.4
128.4

125.9
127.3
124.9

127.0
127.7
126.4

;-

•

i

J
HIBIBG
(fetal ainin^
Coal
O i l & gas e x t r a c t i o n
Stone 6 e a r t h a i a e r a l s

1
10
11,12
13
14

-501
i
1.601124.3
7.Q71 9 4 . 4 /
.661114.1

1
1

69.9
120.8
108.3
102.3

77.8
129.2
103.3
107-8

77.8
131.8
98.3
105.0

79.4
124.4
94.1
115.3

79.5
121.9
92-7
114.7

72.3
128.0
91.0
117.8

68.1
109.0
90.4
111.9

69.8
132.2
89.4
118.8

69.6
125.2
90-2
116.6

67-7
125.3
90.7
124.3

128.7
91-8
120.7

114.9
92.6
114.1

91.6

HONOURABLE HANUFACTUBES
Foods
Tobacco p r o d u c t s
T e x t i l e m i l l products
Apparel products
Paper & products

20
7.961133.6
21
.621
2.291113.1 I
22
23 [ 2 . 7 9 1 1 0 3 . 5 |
26
3. 15J136.3

125.7
94.6
102.0
101.4
133.6

126.6
102.5
111.0
100.8
136.8

126.6
95.1
109.5
102.5
136.7

128.7
99.2
112.2
101.5
137.6

130.9
94.9
114.4
101.9
133.2

137.9
108.6
117.4
104.7
140.3

136.3
85.8
103.0
100.4
129.9

142.7
103.2
120.3
106.7
139.3

142.7
93.9
121.1
106.4
137.9

139.4
108.6
122.9
106.5
142.4

134.2
102.7
118.7
104.6
137.6

131.1

Printing 6 publishing
Chenicals & products
Petroleua products
flubber
& p l a s t i c s prod.
Leather 6 products

27
4.541163.5
28
8.051133.0
29 | 2 . 4 0 1 9 2 . 1
30
2.80|153.4 I
31
.531 61.4

146.6
125.2
88.4
142.6
64.1

149.6
129.7
84.8
156.5
67.0

150.0
127.8
82.9
152-7
64.8

154.8
132.6
88.2
149.5
62.1

156.4
132.1
95.6
150.8
60.7

166.8
137.9
95.9
155.9
58.7

173.1
137.1
95.2
146.9
53.8

181.5
135.9
97.8
156.9
63.3

178.2
139.8
96.4
160.5
60.4

176.7
136.3
92.2
162.1
62.4

167.6
132.3
94.1
156.4
62.5

160.4
128.8
93.6
150-3
57-1

DURABLE
flAMUfACTUSSS
Lunber £ p r o d u c t s
Furniture & fixtures
Clay, glass, stone prod.

1
24 1 2 - 3 0 1
25
1.271146.7
32
2.721120.2

112.4
138.5
111.5

116.6
149.7
113.3

120. 1
143.5
116.6

122-5
143.2
121.8

122.5
141.2
121.4

126.8
147.2
124.7

117.9
139.2
120.8

130.5
152.8
125.4

131.4
152.9
125-3

131.8
153.8
124.1

127.6
150.2
122.4

148.6
115.4

82.3
70.4
108.3
142.3
164.1

81.7
69.3
107.4
140.4
164.8

84.4
72.6
107.7
136.8
166.2

80.4
66.9
106.2
138.4
164.6

76.8
64.2
108.4
143.8
163.3

68.7
59.1
104.3
145.6
162.0

69.8
57.4
107.4
149.0
166.9

72.6
59.3
110.4
148.2
169.5

72.6
59.4
109.6
144.3
173.3

72.9
59.8
106.9
140. 1
170.8

68.4
55-2
106.9
135-2 I
167.3

129.5
119.9
142.6
139-2
100.3

126.6
113.9
143.9
140.4
97.6

129.3
117.9
144.7
139.8.
96.3

127.4
114.5
144.9
138.6
99.2

130.3
120.0
144.3
142.6
100.3

114.7
95.3
140.9
143.1
97.6

117.8
98.7
143.8
145.1
104.0

127.3
111.9
148. 1
145. 4
105.7

128.8
113.5
149.5
141.7
103.4

126.9
108.7
151.6
140.8
97.9

127.6
123.9
101.4 1 110.9
154.4 | 150.3
141.4 | 139.0
94.7

127.4

114.1

112.6

109.2

125.7

135.7

133.0

127.8

114.8

116.8

124.2

Priaarj aetals
33
5.331 75.9
79.7
Iron & steel
331,2 | 3.491 63.5
68.8
34 | 6 . 4 6 ) 1 0 7 . 3
Fabricated a e t a l prod.
104.6
9.541142.0 I 139.9
Honelectrical aacaiaery
35
E l e c t r i c a l aachinery
36 | 7 . 1 5 1 1 6 6 . 5
165.0
I
37 | 9 . 1 3 1 1 2 5 . 9
127.9
Transportation eguip.
371 | 5 . 2 5 1 1 1 0 . 9 1 115.3
Hotor v e h i c l e s & p t s .
Aerospace £ a i s c .
3 7 2 -- 6 , 9
3.871146.1 1 145.1
Instruaeats
38 | 2 . 6 6 | 1 4 1 . 4 I 1 3 8 . 0
39
Miscellaneous a f r s .
1.46|
99.2 I
93.2
1
1
1
1
| 4.171122.4 I

UTILITIES
Electric

127.0

104.5
103.9
130.2

Table 3B

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: HISTORICAL DATA
Seasonally adjusted, 1977 = 100
YEAR

JAN

FEB

MAR

APR

MAY

JUNE

JULY

AUG

SEPT

OCT

NOV

DEC

QI

QI

QUE

QET

ANNUAL

INDEX
72
73
74
75
78
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85

83.8
91.8
93.3
84.8
89-3
96.5
101.6
110.3
111.3

84.4
93.1
93.0
83.5
90.9
97.2
101.6
110.9
111.4

85.1
93.1
93-4
82.0
90.7
98.0
103.0
111.2
111.4

86.5
93.4
93.2
82.7
91.1
99.0
105.5
109.9
109-1

86.3
93.8
94.3
82.5
92.1
99.0
105-8
110.9
106.2

86.5
94.5
94.6
83.6
92.2
100.4
10O.9
110.9
105.0

86.4
95.1
94.2
84.1
92-7
100.7
107.5
110.5
104.8

87.6
95. 1
93.9
85.6
93.2
101.0
107.7
110.2
106.3

88.5
95.8
94.2
86.4
93.5
101.4
108.3
110.4
107.7

89.8
96.1
93.6
86.9
93-9
101.8
109.2
111.0
108.5

90.9
96.2
90.9
87.7
95.4
102.1
109.9
111.0
110.7

91.8
94.7
8 7.1
88.4
90.2
102.1
110-8
111.0
111.0

84.4
92.7
93.2
83.4
90.3
97.3
102.1
110.8
111.4

86.4
93.9
94. 1
82-9
91-8
99.7
106. 1
110.6
10b. 8

87.5
95.3
94.1
85.3
93-2
101.0
107.9
110.4
106.3

90.8
95.7
90.5
87.6
95.2
102.0
110.0
111.0
110.1

87.3
94.4
93.0
84.8
92.6
100.0
106.5
110.7
108.6

111.0
105-4
102.5
118.5
122.7

111.2
107.0
103.3
119.3
123.2

111.6
105.8
104.2
119.9
123.4

110.6
104.5
105.6
120.5
123.3

111.2
103.6
106.9
121.0
123-6

112.0
103.0
107.8
121.9
123.6

113.4
102.5
109.8
122.8
123.4

112.8
102.0
111.6
123.0
124.4

111.5
101.3
113.7
122.4
124.3

110.4
100.5
114.4
122. 1
123.6

109-0
100.6
114.8
122.7
124.8

107.4
100.5
11S.5
122.7
12*. 6

111.2
106.1
103.3
119.3
123.1

111.3
103.7
106.8
121.1
123-5

112.5
102.0
111.7
122.7
124.0

108.9
100.6
114.9
122.5
124.7

111.0
103.1
109.2
121.4
123.8

2.2
0.0
'-1.5
-2.6
1.0
0.3
-0.5
-0.5
0.3

0.7
1.4
-0.3
-1-5
1.8
0.7
0.0
0.5
0.1

0.8
0.0
0.4
-1.8
-0.2
0.8
1-4
0.3
0.0

1.6
0.3
-0-2
0.9
0.4
1.0
2.4
-1.2
-2.1

-0.2
0.4
1.2
-0.2
1.1
0.6
0.3
0.9
-2.7

0.2
0.7
0.3
1.3
0.1
0.6
1.0
0.0
-1.1

-0-1
0.6
-0.4
0.6
0-5
0.3
0.6
-0.4
-0.2

1.4
0.0
-0.3
1.8
0.5
0.3
0.2
-0.3
1.4

1.0
0.7
0.3
0.9
0.3
0.4
0.6
0.2
1.3

1.5
0.3
-0.6
0.6
0.4
0.4
0.8
0.5
0.7

1.2
0.1
-2.9
0.9
1.6
0.3
0.6
0.0
2.0

1.0
-1.0
-4.2
0.8
0.0
0.6
0.0
0.3

3.8
2-1
-2.6
-7-8
3-1
2.2
0.1
0.7
0.4

2.4
1.3
1.0
-0.0
1.7
2.5
3.9
-0.2
-4.1

1.3
1.5
0.0
2.9
1.5
1.3
1.7
-0.2
-0.5

3.8
0.4
-3-8
2.7
2. 1
1.0
1.9
0.5
3.6

9-7
8.1
-1.5
-8.8
9.2
8.0
6.5
3.9
-1.9

0.0
-1-9
2.0
2.0
0.0

0.2
1.5
0.8
0.7
0.4

0.4
-1.1
0.9
0.5
0.2

-0.9
-1.2
1.3
0.5
-0.1

0.5
-0.9
1.2
0.4
0.2

0.7
-0.6
0.8
0.7
0.0

1.2
-0.5
1.9
0.7
-0.2

-0.5
-0.5
1.6
0.2
0.8

-1.2
-0-7
1-9
-0.5
-0.1

-uo

-1.3
0-1
0-3
0.5
1.0

-1.5
-0.1
0.0
0.0
0.6

1.0
-2.0
2.7
3.8
0.5

0.1
-2.3
3.4
1.5
0.3

1.1
-1.6
4.6
1.3
0.4

-3.2
-1.4
2.9
-0.2
0.6

2.2
-7.1
5.9
11-2
2.0

CHANGE*
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85

•CHANGE IS THE PERCENT CHANGE FROM THE PRECEEDING LIKE PERIOD.




7

-0.8
0.6
-0.2
-0.6

o.a

154.9
87.3

71.9
104.8
136.7
168.9

Table 4A

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIVIDUAL SERIES
Seasonally adjusted, 1977 = 100

Series

1986
DEC

1987
JAM

METAL MINING
10 j
Irdn o r e
101J
Nonferrous o r e s
102 -6,8,5*1
Copper ore
102|
Lead and z i n c o r e s
1031
Gold.and s i l v e r , o r e s
104J
Ferroalloy ores
106|

77-3
74.2
76.4
88-3
65.6
149.6
101,1

ANTHRACITE
BITUMINOUS

Hi
12 J

OIL AND GAS EXTRACTION
Crude o i l $ n a t u r a l g a s
Crude16il, total
Texas crude
Alas*a,Calif.crude
La.'and other'crude
Natural g a s
NaturaX g a s l i q u i d s ,, :
Propane
^
Liquetied ^etroleui
Oil & g a s well d r i l l i n g

FEB

HAD

APR

MAI

JUM

JUL

AUG

S£P

OCT

NOV

73.5
7o.7
74.3
84.5
73.4
160.7
87.1

77,2
83.8
74.5
81.6
69.3
171-8
96.8

75.9
82.0
72.6
80.5
67-9
156.9
89,4

76.0
82.7
71.5
80.6
63.0
151-3
71.3

72.0
84.3
68.9
60-4
59.4
157.7
75.5

65.9
56-0
72.1
83.3
51.1
170.0
80.3

69.2
58.5
75.6
86. 1
56.3
162.6
89.3

70.9
59.2
74.7
89.4
49.3
175.7
77.3

70.7
69. 1
72.0
86.8
52.2
163.7
68. 1

68.5
61.9
71.0
83.0
51.6
169.0
73.6

62.3
69.2
80.6
47.0
187.6
69.3

61.4
129.8

68.8
132.9

72.8
127-2

65.6
124.2

75-3
124.3

62.6
122. 5

63.8
128.7

55.0
121-0

59.6
122.8

61.9
121.4

72.8
117.7

74.9
133.1

60.9
124.6

131
131J

104-2
99^8
108:6
78.4
213.3
96.0

101-1
98.7
107.6
76.3
209-1
97.2
84.3

99.2
99.4
108.2
77.0
209.7
97^5
85.4

96.2
98.0
106.8
75.4
212.9
94. 6
83.9

95.1
99.0
107.5
76,2
214, 1
95,1
85,3

93.3
97.9
106.4
73.7
211.1
95.8
84. 4

92w4
97.5
106.6
73.1
211.1
96.9
82-9

90.7
95. 3
104.1
71.5
206.4
94.3
81.4

91.0
96.2
105. 1
70.6
207.5
97.0
82. 1

90.5
95. 5
103.9
70.7
211.0
92.9
82.1

89.4
94*4
102- 0
70.1
205.9
91.0
• 82.4

88.8
93.4
102.2
70.7
208.4
90- 1

85-7

104-9
100.5
108.9
79.2
208.6
97.5
87-2

1321

99*4
107,4
98,5
131.8

104.6
106.6
104.3
13 Of 5

103.7
105.0
103.6
113.2

99.3
T02.3
98.9
96.4

97.3
98.0
97.2
76.5

101. 1
98.6
101.3
67.8

97.7
97.3
97.7
60.9

96^8
96.6
96.9
58i4

92.4
93.3
92.3
60. 8

90.6
96.2
89.9
62.0

90.9
95.2
90.4
64-9

90.7
97.4
89.9
67.4

13 2 . 1
120.2
91.2
108,7
151,5
171,9

132.0
95.8
110.9
147.0
168.7

132.9
122.7
93.5
114.3
154.5
169.4

132-2
119.4
94. 1
108.2
145.5
167.2

133.1
127.7
106.;4
113.4
152.7
171.8

133,7
121,5
100. 1
108.4
146.6
163.6

134.6
121.9
99. 4
104.3
151.4
168.1

134.3
122. 1
101-6
106-5
14 6 . 7
166. 1

135.1
118.3
98- 1
104.2
142.9
159.4

134.3
120.3
94.7
104.9
156.6
163.5

133.7
115-6
92-0
104.0
145.2
155.8

134. 1
116.5
92.5
102.5
153^6
152.3

134^9
120.0
93*1
104.8

131.9
124,6
15^4 9
1471 0
|40,9

133.9
117,6
156. y
15^.3
144.7

133.9
120,7
158.2
153,1
145; 1

132.8
121-7
157.6
148,3

13*.6
116.4
156.1
14$; 1
147.9

132.0
111.0
155.9
142.4
149.5

130.0
108.9
150.3
137.5
146.2

129. 7
lOo.s
157.0
130.4
144.8

130.3
104.3
158.6
131-5
150.3

127.9
108.4
160. 4
128. 4
135.5

126.4
96.0
155.1
118.1
146.3

126*0
106.3
148.6
121.7
147.4

127.4
104.2
154-0
131,6
143.7

147.4
133,2
11?;, 9
130. 0

14717
\34.2

145.6

137.3

143.4
133.9
122,5
133,0

130.5
111.6
131. 3

147.4
134.3
116*. 3
133,2

150.2
135.0
117.0
129.9

146.2
135.9
121.8
133.1

149. 3 • 153.2
136.4
136.5
120. 1
132.0
134.5
131-8

150. 1
131. 1
124.6
135.1

143.7
135.5
126.0
138.1

151.0
140.5
145. 4
131.9

159.7
139.3
125.8
130.7

122.1
116.0
159-8
129.3
84. 7

129,3
119. 8
17o,2
138.5
86.6

126.6
115.6
164.7
138.2
80.3

127.7
115-4
191.8
137.4
81.0

130.5
115. 0
207.1
140.2
86.2

135.2
117. 1
208-7
146.6
90.1

132-3
108.0
223.2
142.3
100.4

130.4
113.5
182.6
141.5
92-8

129.5
111.0
204.7
140.4
87.5

125.6
114.6

129.8
113*1

127.6

134.6
83-1

142.3

135.8

121.7
147. 1

116.7
147.3

119.8
145.0

125.3
14/.4

117.8
142. 7

121.5
142.7

124.9
141.2

119.2
149.2

121.0
146. 5

124-4
147.0

121.8
148.6

120.9
145.5

93.8

97.0
99.4
63.6

93.6
92-2
61.0

100.3
106.5
75.8

101.6
104.3
87.0

97.6
97.3
72.7

97.9
9 9.4
75.2

97.1
97.2
69.1

' 89.8
90-6
71.7

100. 1
103.1
64.6

99.7

109-9
108.2
124.4
100.3

108.0
106.5
124.0
97.9

111.4
108.5
127.2
100.3

111.3
107.7
126.0
100. 1

112.6
109.4
129.1
101.0

113.4
10 9 . 4
127.7
102.6

114.7
107. 1
135.4
, 92.5

116.0
114.6
1J6. 7
105.9

116.1
112.4
133.2
103.3

117.9
116.8
138. 4
108.3

117.7
116.6
141.3
106.6

103.7
153.6
,89.5

106.4
152.8
93. 1

101.6
144.6
89. 3

109.6
167.0
93. 1

107.2
150.5
94.8

106. 9
150.8
94.3

101.6
129.0
93.7

110.6
171.2
93.2

103.9
152. 1
90. 1

109.8
166.5
93.6

109,2
179.9
89.0

105.0

88. 1
157.7
110.3

89.3
141.2
116.5

,84,7
134. 1
112.5

84.6
136,6
111.7

' 86.5
137.3
116. 1

83.1
140.8
121- 1

92-o
153* 9
121.3

81.8
157.1
126.4

85.4
151.4
126.6

84.6
153.1
120.5

85.9
165.0
127-1

83.5
158.9
127.1
106,1

sic r

DEC

Code 1

138|

FOUDS;'

Beat p r o d u c t s '
Beef
Pork
Poultry
Misc. s e a t s

'"

Dairy p r o d u c t s
Butter
" Cheese
Concentrated'"'. B i l k
Frozen d e s s e r t s

«

2021 - 8 0 j
20211 - 0 1 1
'' ' 20221
\" 2023 1
; 2 0 2 4 | ' ;;o9i
1

Canned and f r o z e n ' fobd
Grain a x i l , p r o d u c t s

2031 1-09J
• 94|
204|
!
] " 2041] - 1 2 J
2051 Uooj

Fiburf ',','.

Bakery p r o d u c t s

• ;

Beverages
Beer and a l e
Viae and brandy
Soft drinks
Liquors
F a t s and o i l s
Cofree & a i s c . f o o d s

21]
211 J
212 I

WU2

115.2

1
.621

100.3

103.5 I
90.9
• 541
66.2
64.9
.021
I
221 2 . 2 9 1 1 1 3 . 1 1 0 7 . 7
107.9
106.9
221-4J
.771 110.2 105.8
221J - 2 8 1 1 3 0 . 4 1 1 8 . 6 1 2 3 - 5
{ 2221. . 4 0 1 1 0 1 , 4 1 0 0 . 9
9 9 - to

TEXTILE MILO. PRODUCTS
Fabrics
Cotton f a b r i c s ,
Synthetic fabrics

2^5 |
2251,2|
-2253 # 4 , 7 - 9 J

I

-551 106.2
-121
.431 92.3

303.1
139.0
92.8

I
88.5
*20i 8 5 , 7
.221 148,5 145*4
,551 119.6 113.0
1
104.5
231 2.79J

Fabric f i n i s h i n g
Carpeting .
Yarns t» m i s c . t e x t .

226 1
2271
228,9|

APPABEL.PRODUCTS

142.5

i

208 | 1 , 4 1 1
125.6
115.2
2082,3|
,38|
161.9
20841 . 0 7 1
136.4
2086,7J
-79|
2085J
81.8
.161
1
2071 - 2 7 | 1 2 1 - 2 1 1 9 , 7
209J
.791 1 4 5 . 5 146.2

TOBACCO PRODUCTS
Cigarettes
Cigars

Knit goods
Hosiery •
Knit g a r a e & t s

201
201

67-9

159.7

92.7

*">.>

102.8

102.8

103-1

102. 6

101.7

102.5

102.5

102.7

104.2

105, 1

116.1
103.1
125.8
144.4
100.2

120-5
106.7
133.0
158.1
98.6

1^0.3
108.6
128.3
151.3
96-0

120.7
110.2
129-4
153.7
90.4

121,3
104.7
135-5
164,5
89,9

121.6
110.2
131.5
159. 1
86.9

120.9
107.3
131.4
160.6
83.5

120.8
10J.6
136.5
167.9
85.0

122-5
114.9
133-2
160.9
84.3

12S.0
115. 1
132.7
164.2
64.7

125.9
112-7
134.5
164.4
86.3

129.3
125.9
135-2
16 5 . 4
89.5

140.5
115.9
183.9

141.2
118.6
185.3

143.-:
118.8
184-5

142-9
115.6
188.3

145.9
117.4
194,8

146.2
119.3
192. 1

147. 1
117.2
198.4

I49.i>
120.9
192. 1

148.3
118.4
194.5

147.7
117.9
191.3

149.2
121.9
195-1

148.6
121.3
197.7

150.4
124.0
197.8

131.3
128.7
118.4
138-1
129.5

U3.6
124.0
121.0
125.7
125.4

132.6
122-3
117-9
126.0
122.9

132.4
122.6
116.2
129.1
122. 7

134.1
124.2
121.5
127.7
123.4

133.2
122.9
117.7
127.4
123. 7

137-2
128-2
123.0
133.4
128-2

138-1
129.2
129.4
130.5
127.6

138.6
129.3
123.1
135.4
129.4

136.9
125.3
121.6
131.3
122.9

137.8
125.4
121-4
128.1
126.8

13 9 . 5
' 128.0
120.2
133.8
130-0

141.4
134.9
135,3
141.8

264 1 1-031 1 5 9 . 1 1 5 4 . 1
265 1 - 7 5 1 1 2 5 , 6 1 1 8 . 3
I

155.2
125-3

153.6
123,5

153.8
118.2

153.3
131.1

153.7
122.9

161.1
126.4

159.1
128.5

163. 1
125.6

163.8
124.8

163.1
126.7

162.9
127-2

167,3
127.7

I

LUflBEK AND PfiODUCTS
Logging and luaJber
Luaber p r o d u c t s
Millwork t; plywood
Manufactured homes

241 ^ , 3 0 1
2** 1,21 n o 5 j
243-5,9J 1,251
24 J 1 , 6 7 |
2451 . 2 5 1
I
FUBNITUBE AMD FIXTUEES
25J 1 . 2 7 1 1 4 6 . 7
Household f u r n i t u r e
251 J - 7 4 1 1 1 9 . 2
F i x t . , o f f i c e furn.
252,4,9 1 .471 1?2-6

118.8

90.4

1

PAPEB AND PfiODUCTS
Pulp and paper
Hood pulp
Paper
Paperboard

26J 3 . 1 5 1
261-3 1 1-331
261 J . 4 4 1
262 | , 4 4 |
263 | . 4 4 1

„-.,.-,4-i

130.2
126.8

1

Converted paper p r o d .
Paperboard c o n t a i n e r s
;-.-

136,3
126.2

-

Note: Seasonally adjusted industry t o t a l s are not aggregated froa t h e s e a s o n a l l y adjusted components,
but r e s u l t from i n d e p e n d e n t s e a s o n a l a d j u s t a e n t of t h e a g g r e g a t e d not s e a s o n a l l y a d j u s t e d c o m p o n e n t s .




8

Table 4B

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIVIDUAL SERIES
Not seasonally adjusted, 1977 = 100
1977
Proportion

1985
Ann.
Avg.

DEC

1987
JAN

67.5
50.3
74.9
85.7
64.4
150.4
89.9

69.'9
60.7
73.8
83.6
74.5
147.8
62.2

77.6
81.5
76.2
83.0
74.8
164.4
95.4

77.8
82.9
75-7
84.5
72.1
159.6
92.5

79.4
95.9
72.4
82.3
62.6
155.0
72.7

79.5
102.7
69.7
81.0
58-0
153.0
83.4

72.3
69.3
73.6
86.1
49.9
180.6
83.7

68. 1
65.5
69-2
80.0
51.2
159.6
7 7.8

69.8
65.7
71.6
62.9
48.4
176. 1

69.6
65.6
71.3
85.5
51.7
171. 1
08. 3

67.7
56.7
71.6
84.6
53.6
171.1
75.6

4 9.7
71.2
84.3
46.5
186.0
71.2

-Q2 65.9 66.1
1-58 124.9 119.8

38.9
12L5

62.9
129.9

64.4
132.5

60-5
125.1

59.2
122.6

62.7
128.8

56.6
109.6

68.6
132.9

66.1
125. y

83.1
125.7

62.7
129.2

65.5
115.0

7.07 9 4 . 4 108.6
5.62 97.1 101.5,
3.46 105.7 108.2i
1.34 73.7 78.1
. 5 7 2 0 9 . 6 211.5
1-54 9 5 . 0 9 5 . 9
2.16
90.8

108.3
102.6
108.3
78.5
210.1
96.4
93.5

103.3
101.2
108.3
76.7
210.3
97.9
89.9

98.3
99.7
108.3
77.6
210.4
97.0
85.9

94.1
97.8
106.7
75.9
212.2
94.3
83.5

92.7
97.5
107.3
76.4
213.2
94.8
81.9

91.0
96.6
106.2
73.6
211.4
95.4
81.4

90.4
96.1
106.3
72.7
212.2
9o.2
79.9

89.4
94. 1
103.9
71-0
206.0
94.5
7«.6

90.2
95.3
105.2
70. 7
207. 7
97.2
79.3

90.7
95.0
104.3
70.5
211.3
94-0
80-0

91.8
94.9
102.2
70.4
20 4. 1
92.0
83.1

92.6
94.9
101.7
70.4
206.7
90.0

.47
-05
.42
.99

101.1
109.0
100.2
77.7 152.8

104.5
111.0
103.8
142.7

104.3
108.8
103.8
114.4

98.9
102.3
98.5
90.5

95.6
98.0
95.4
72.2

98.1
98.6
98.1
62.4

95.9
95.5
96.0
56.5

96.7
94. 1
97.0
55.2

93.3
91.2
93.6
58.9

90.7
93.5
*0. 4
61. 1

90.8
93.7
90.5
66.5

93.8
99.2
93.2
73.2

20
201

7.96
1.06
.43
.25
.20
.18

133.6 128.4
120.5 116.6
88.6
96.7
107.2 111.4
136.0
163.6 170.6

125.7
120.7
98-1
111.4
138.8
168.6

126.6
118.4
92.2
110.1
143.4
165.9

126.6
118.9
90.3
112.1
139-8
174.5

128.7
127.0
100.9
118.4
152.0
174.3

130.9
U0.6
98. 7
108.6
149.4
158. 1

137.9
121.8
101.1
101-8
159.4
157.5

13o. 3
116.0
98-5
93.3
149.2
152.9

142-7
119.5
101.4
97. 1
153- 1
157.1

142- 7
123.5
98.0
104.2
163-3
168. 0

139.4
125. 1
98.5
112.5
159.0
169.3

134.2
118.2
92.2
109.0
149.8
159.0

131.1
116.1
90.4
107.3

Dairy products
Butter
Cheese
Concentrated ailk
Frozen desserts

202
2021
2022
2023
2024

.80
.01
-13
.11
-09

130.4
111.0
155.6
137.4
145.4

123.4
127.2
152.7
135.7
106.1

125.5
•43.1
149.4
144.7
107.1

131.7
142.9
154.8
151.9
128.4

136.0
134.7
162.2
153.2
144.7

141.3
133.6
167.1
166.4
151. 1

144. 1
124.3
168.5
167.0
166.8

144.8
105.4
166.3
164.0
185.8

134.7
35.8
154. 1
141.8
17 7. 7

129.4
81.0
149.0
125-0
177.0

123.4
67. 0
150.3
111-2
146.8

118.3
89.1
149.2
100.8
131-0

115.8
98.4
144. 1
101-2
119.5

119.1
106.4
152.8
121.5
108.2

Canued and frozen food
Graxn aill products
Flour
Bakery products

203
204
2041
205

1.09
-94
.12
^.00

148.9
135.0
123.2
133.3

135.4
132.6,
108.7
123.4

132.2
131.0
113.4
126.1

134.5
132-2
129.1
121.9

136.5
128.7
114.6
121.0

134.3
129.8
112.9
124.6

140.2
130.9
115.2
126.3

147.2
136.3
119.6
139.8

151.6
136.0
113.2
144.9

168.5
141.9
135. 6
149-2

178.4
137.6
130.5
130.4

165.3
137.7
130.3
142.2

150.7
139.2
142.7
129.6

146.7
138.7
121.0
124.1

208
2082,3
2084
2086,7
2085

1.41 128.9 113.1
.38
92.0
.07
161.2
.79
127.4
-16
72.2

111-5
105.7
132.5
119.6
76.3

118.7
116.2
156.6
124.9
77.7

120.6
118. 1
170.0
125.7
80.6

126.3
126.0
190.0
130.0
80.6

131-7
128. 1
206.0
136.5
83.9

147.4
136.3
225.4
155.9
98.2

141.3
123.3
195-7
156.9
84.6

142.6
122-0
192-0
159.0
91-9

ua. 4

128.9
105.0

124.3
9 4.0

115.0

106.9
200. 0
157.0

137.9
101.9

139.0

126.8

9 5. 7

207

- 2 7 121.2 125-5
. 7 9 145.5 153.9

124.1
141.4

121.4
140.0

122.3
135. 1

120.7
134.0

115-2
139.7

119.4
142.2

113.6
145.7

112.9
161. 1

116.0
132,8

130.4
151.0

130.0
150.7

127.0
152.0

76.9
76.1
50.1

94.6
96-6
64.1

102.5
104.7
b6.6

95. 1
97. 1
65.8

99.2
101.9
72.6

94.9
96.4
88.8

108.6
110. 1
75.5

85.8
86.9
59.3

103.2
104.4
74.1

94.4
77.7

108.6
1 10.0
74.3

113.1 96.5
110.2 91.6
130.4 100.8
101.4 86. 1

1U2.0
106.7
123.7
100-3

111.0
113.1
129.8
106.4

109.5
110.0
128.5
101.8

112.2
110.3
129.8
102. 1

114.4
111.8
131.9
103.8

117.4
110.7
128.5
102-8

103.0
9 5.0
109.9
68.1

120.3
110.3
140.8
94.6

121. 1
116.2
138.0
107. 1

122.9
120.0
144.2
110.0

118.7
117.7
139.8
10 9. 1

104.5
100.8
120. 1
90.9

. 5 5 106.2 9 2 . 1
.12
124.5
.43
82.9

88.9
147.2
72.3

101.2
154.3
86.1

99.0
151.3
84. 1

108.7
178.6
88.7

108. 1
151.8
95.6

117-8
160-6
105.5

106.7
141*.3
96.0

119.3
159.3
107.9

113.4
148.0
103.3

112.5
164.4
97.6

105.3
168.0
87.3

82.8

.20 85.7 80.0
. 2 2 148.5 130.4,
. 5 5 119.6 1U0.3

85.3
122.9
106.5

94.7
127.9
116.8

91. 1
139-3
114. 1

89.3
148-8
112.3

90.9
143.4
121.5

85.6
148.4
125.8

67.5
152.4
103. y

84.9
151.3
135.9

64.9
167. 7
130.3

90.4
171.6
129.9

88.0
16 5.7
126.0

75.4
142.5
112.2
103.9

sic
Code
flETAL JSINING
10
Iron ore
101
Nonferrous o r e s
102-6,8,9
Copper o r e
102
Lead and zinc ores
103
Gold and silTer ores
104
Ferroalloy ores
106
ANTHRACITE
BITUMINOUS

11
12

OIL AND GAS EXTRACTION
Crude oil & natural gas
Crude oil, total
Texas crude
Alaska,Calif.crude
La. and other crude
Natural gas

U
131

Natural gas liquids
Propane
Liquefied petroleum
Oil & gas well drxllxng

132

FOODS
Seat products
Beef
Pork
Poultry
disc, meats

Beverages
Beer and ale
Sine and brandy
Soft drinks
Liquors
Fats and oils
Coffee & aisc.foods

21
211
212

TOBACCO PRODUCTS
Cigarettes
Cigars
TEXTILE HILL PRODUCTS
Fabrics
Cotton f a b r i c s
Synthetic fabrics
Knit g o o d s
Hosiery
Knit g a r a e n t s

138

22
221-4
221
222

22b
2251,2
2253,4,7-9

Fabric f i n i s h i n g
Carpeting
Yarns & a i s c . t e x t .

226
227
228,9

.50
.15
.35
-15
-05
-02
-04,

.62
.54
.02
2.29
-77
.28;
-40

1986

78.7

158.4

93.9

23

2.79

102.3

101-4

100.8

102.5

101.5

101.9

104.7

100.4

106.7

1U6.4

106.5

104.6

24
241,2
243-5,9
243
245

2.30
1.05
1.25
.67
.25

104.8
9 1.6
115.9
136.9,
72-0

112.4
98-0
124.5
151-b
76.8

110.6
106.2
125.3
146-9
87.7

120. 1
109-4
129.0
151.2
91.5

122.5
105.5
136.7
163.0
97.9

122.5
108-7
134. 1
160.7
96.0

126-8
115-3
136.4
164.9
96-6

117.9
100. 3
132.7
163.9
83.2

130.5
120. 1
139.2
168.3
97.2

131.4
123.3
138.2
170.9
92. 1

131.8
121.0
140.8
173.0
94.9

127.6
121.2
133.0
164-2
81.4

FURNITURE AND FIXTURES
25
Household f u r n i t u r e
251
F i x t . , o f f i c e furn.
252,4,9

1.27 146.7 138.8
. 7 4 119.2 113.9i
. 4 7 192.6 178.7

138-5
113.2
180.3

149.7
125.2
192.0

143.5
118-0
166.6

143.2
117.0
187.2

141.2
115.9
183.7

147.2
119-5
193.4

139.2
1U7.6
191. 1

152.8
122.4
203.2

132.9
123. 3
202. 2

153.8
124.5
202.7

150.2
122. 1
196.5

146.6
121.9
192-2

PAPER AND PRODUCTS
Pulp and paper
Mood pulp
Paper
Paperboard

3-15
1-33
.44
-44
.44

136.3 122.7
126.2 117.1
109.6
130.2 128.9
126.8 112.9

133.6
123.3
120.0
127.0
122.9

136.6
126.9
122.5
131.9
126.4

136.7
128. 1
121.6
133.8
128.9

137.6
126.4
123-6
129.0
126.5

133.2
124.5
118.8
126.7
128-0

140.3
130-4
125.6
134.3
131.1

129.9
121.4
121.0
122-4
120.8

139.3
129.2
U3. 1
133.5
131. 1

137.9
125.9
121.2
131- 1
125.3

142.4
127-5
122.5
132.4
127.7

137.6
128.5
121.2
134.3
129.9

130.2
122.6

1.03 159.1 144.9
. 7 5 125.6 103-8

155.0
124.8

159.6
125.5

160.6
121.4

156.7
133.8

154.9
120.9

162.7
129.6

14 6.4
121.3

162.2
126.4

161-6
129.2

166.5
138-5

163-2
121-4

157.4
112.0

APPAREL PRODUCTS
LUflBEfi AND PRODUCTS
Logging and l u a b e r
Luaber p r o d u c t s
Millwork & plywood
Manufactured h o a e s

C o n v e r t e d paper p r o d .
Paperboard c o n t a i n e r s

26
261-3
261
262
263
264
265

Seasonally adjusted industry totals are not aggregated froa tne seasonally adjusted components,
but result froa independent seasonal adjustment of the aggregated not seasonally adjusted components.




9

126.3
123.6

Table 4A—continued

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIVIDUAL SERIES
Seasonally adjusted, 1977 = 100
1977
Proportion

SIC
Code

Series

1985
Ann. i
Avg.

198b
DEC (

1987
JAN

FEB

MAR

APR

NAT

JUN

JUL

AUG

SEP

OCT

NQV

DEC

157.6
134.6
155.1
174.9

160.9
140.2
159,1
177.3

156.7
135.0
151.8
175.9

157.8
135.5
152.4
178.1

1b1.6
137.4
154.9
182.5

161.9
139.2
156.8
179.6

164.0
144.2
156-1
163.6

165.4
145.9
156.7
185.3

164.6
144.4
158.6
182.9

163.0
141.5
150.2
183.8

167.8
140.7
159.8
193.4

168.5
139.1
162.5
191.3

168.5
139.6
158-0
193.0

CHEHICALS 6 PRODUCTS
28
8.05 133.0
Chemicals & syn. m a t . 2 8 1 , 2 , 6
3.86 123.2
.92
99.3
Basic chemicals
281
. V2
97.7
Alkalies & chlorine
2812
. 1 0 131.6
I n d u s t r i a l Gases
2813 |
-08 100.2
I n o r g a n i c pigments
2816

128.1
119.3
94.7
96.2!
126.9
105-9

131-7
123.6
102.4
98-2
131.1
107.8

132.0
121.7
103.2
96-3
129-7
100.5

130.2
119-5
95.5
99.8
124.6
99.3

132.8
120-1
9 5.2
95.8
12 5 . 3
9 6-9

131.5
121.6
100.7
96.5
110.4
107.9

134.2
122.5
98.4
97.8
126.2
92- 1

134.1
123.8
98.2
98.9
129.7
106-2

134.4
124. 1
97.4
100-8
139.1
99.7

133.9
125.3
103. 1
99.0
139.8
93.6

133.9
125.9
101.2
93.5
140.7
100.1

132.9
124.7
97.8
93.4
140.1
94.1

133.5
126.5
99.4
103.0
143.9
108.2

94.1
.62
.40
95-2
1.11 162.7
.59
.08
-44
98.5
1.83 111-2

87.5
84.0
156.3
211. 1
80.3
97.5
109.2

97.7
100.2
163.3
221.6
99-6
97.6
110.1

100.4
104.6
157.6
207.5
107-2
100.8
109.2

89.3
87.7
157.5
210.3
111.5
96.1
108.4

89.8
88.5
158.8
213.3
111.3
95.3
109.0

98.9
102.8
157.5
211.3
104.6
95.9
110.2

94.7
95.9
158-9
216.5
105-2
92-4
112.4

91.8
91.0
165.6
224.5
101.6
99-3
111.2

89-4
87-4
165-5
226.0
91-9
98.8
112.4

99.0
103.0
165.8
223.7
91.2
102.6
111.8

96. 1
99.3
168.0
229.8
87-8
100-8
112.7

92-0
92.9
165-5
229.6
71-2
97-8
113.5

90.0
89.4
170.5

105.0
113.3

144.9
Chemical products
283- 5,9
3.65 149.9
1-41 1 3 5 . 1 I 129. 1
Drugs & m e d i c i n e s
283
284 | 1 . 3 4 1 8 8 , 4 | 1 7 9 . 5
Soap 6 t o i l e t r i e s
285 |
99.9
100. 1
Paints
.40
287
-54
85.5 [
83.3
A g r i c u l t u r a l chemicals

147.4
129.2
184.3
102-7
82.5

148.2
131.8
185. 1
102.6
88.3

143.0
127.8
179.9
98.1
88.9

15 5 . 0
141.4
193.9
108.6
89.6

150.8
134.7
191.7
102.3
90.8

151.6
135.8
193-4
98.0
85.7

156.2
138.6
201.3
101.3
80.9

150.4
135.8
187.5
101. 1
78.7

148.2
134.4
185.8
98.0
86.4

150.9
139.1
186-7
98.7
87.1

148.8
135.0
185.9
96.9
82.8

147.9
135.8
186.1
85.8
83.2

PETROLEUH PRODUCTS
29
2.40
Petroleum r e f i n i n g
291,9
2.21
Automotive gasoline
|
.96
Distillate fuel oil
|
.43
Residual f u e l o i l
-15
Aviation f u e l & keros.
- 18

88.9
88.2
92.3
92.7
53.4
114.8

94.7
91-5
94.5
8b. 8
49.6
126.8

90. 1
88.2
92.5
79-6
46.2
125-7

88.6
86.2
69.3
86.1
46-9
117-7

91.3
90.9
95.3
92.2
52.4
11 1 . 6

95.7
94.6
100.8
83.5
54.4
113.4

91.8
91.1
97.4
81.7
49.4
117.3

90.6
90.1
96.0
60.9
51.9
117.7

94.0
93.8
100-3
87.0
55-9
117.3

93.3
91.9
96.1
86.5
50.8
120-2

91. 1
90.0
96.6
81.3
47.5
120.3

91.5
91.0
96.7
85.3
53-8
119.3

92-5
9 1.7

77.4
117.6
64.2
76.5

89.9
128-d
78.4
86.6

86.6
122.8
71.1
92-7

80.8
117.0
65.9
85.8

85.5
120-5
68-7
9 4.9

93.6
124.4
75.9
107.7

90.7
122.0
73.8
102.9

86.7
118.9
71-9
101.5

90.3
128- 1
73.2
98.5

91.3
124-3
77-5
9b-1

86.7
122.6
73.3
89.1

85.9
119.4
72.6
89.6

149.4
103.9
117.6
175.7

150-2
105.0
121.7
177.2

151. 1
105-2
125-7
177.2

147.8
104.2
121.5
173.3

146.8
100.5
108.9
172.8

150.1
100.1
122.9
177.7

152-2
100.8
123-6
180.6

155.5
109.0
125.6
181.8

155.5
109.2
127.b
180.7

154.9
106.0
128.1
180.6

157.6
110.7
125.8
183.7

159-0
116. 5
123-5
184.4

160-0

65.4
77.9
60.4

64.8
76.3
60.5

62.7
75.9
56.7

61.5
7 4.2
57.6

59.5
72.4
53.4

57.9
72.3
50.7

61.9
69.8
58.5

62.0
72.2
58.1

59.4
72-2
52-5

60.2
73.1
52.3

61.3
73.1
56.1

61.1
76-5
51.4

27
PRINTING 6 PUBLISHING
Newspapers
271
Period-.books,cards
272,3,7
Job p r i n t i n g
2 7 4 -- 6 , 8 , 9

4.54
1.35J
1-24
1.95

2819
I n o r g a n i c chem, nee
Acids & o t h e r chea.
|
282
Synthetic materials
Plastics materials
2821
Synthetic rubber
2822
Synthetic fibers
2823,4
286
I n d u s t . o r g a n i c chem.

Misc- petroleum prodRefinery f u e l , nee
R e f i n e r y n o n f u e l matR e f i n e r y p r o d u c t s , nee

|

163-5
140-1
156-4
184.0

92-1
91-0
|

-48
.09
.26
.\3

30
RUBBER & P L A S T I C S PROD.
2.80 153-4
Tires
301 |
.62
Rub. p r o d . e x . t i r e s
302-4,6 1
-51 123.1
3
0
7
1
.
67 179.5
P l a s t i c s p r o d u c t s , nee
LEATHER AND PRODUCTS
31 |
P e r s . l e a t h e r gds
313,5-7,9|
Shoes
314

.53
.16
-29

61.4
73.8 |
55.7

66.4.
77.9
60.2

123.3
184. 1

CLAK,GLASS 6 STONE PROD.
32
2-72 120.2
Pressed & blown g l a s s
322
. 5 1 110.9
Glass containers
3221 i
.30
95.5

118.2
108.3
94.0

120.0
110.9
96.2

119.3
111.8
95.4

120.0
107.9
94.0

121.6
112.0
97.0

120.2
111.5
95.2

120.8
113-1
97.0

119. b
109.1
96.4

119.7
110.1
93.4

121.6
110.8
96.1

118.1
110.7
93-8

120.6
112.4
95.5

121.6
110.6
96.1

Cement
Structural clay prod.
Brick
Clay sever pipe
Clay t i l e
C o n c r e t e and m i s c .

324
325 I
3251 |
3259 |
3253,5 |
326-9

PRIMARY METALS
33
I r o n and s t e e l
331,2
Basic s t . & m i l l prod.
331
B a s i c i r o n and s t e e l
Pig i r o n
Raw s t e e l
S t e e l m i l l products
Consumer d u r . s t e e l
Equipment s t e e l
Construction s t e e l
Can 6 c l o s u r e s t e e l
flisc.
steel
Iron

*

steel

foundries

I
|
|
|

I
|
|
|

332

-24
-15
-07
.02
.07
1-55

107.8
128.6
92.8
3Z.U
191.0 I
123.3

101.6
124.3
90.4
36.7
182.3
124.2

125.3
110.2
94.3
27.0
148.9
124.6

108.5
117.3
92.0
32.9
165-8
121-9

109.8
114.0
86.3
20.1
167.5
124.3

114.7
124.3
9 4.6
3 1-b
179.4
124.9

106.4
123.9
87.9
37.1
183.8
123.7

105.1
126.2
90.9
32.8
187.1
123.7

106. 1
138.5
99.8
35-1
205.7
121.9

104.8
137.3
90.1
34.6
212.8
V22.2

105.9
136.3
91.9
31.1
209.6
124.7

107.0
133.8
98.9
33.0
196.5
119.0

105.2
141.4
92.0
33.2
220. 6
123.6

144.8
96.4
37.3
222.9
125.8

5.33
3.49
2-60
1.11
-42
-51

75-9
63.5
68.8
58.1 |
54.0
64.3

81.7
71.6
76.0
61.4
61.3
64-8

82.4
72.2
80.4
68.2
66.5
74.0

80.3
69.5
76.2
66.1
64.5
71.5

76.3
64.3
71.2
62.9
59.3
68.7

7 8.1
65.6
70.9
63.0
59.8
69.7

74.8
60.2
67-7
59.4
56.2
65.4

71.4
58.3
64.3
55.9
51.3
63.6

73-6
61.7
67.6
56.3
50.2
63.7

73.4
60.8
65.4
51.5
45.0
58.9

74.1
61.1
63.7
51.7
46.9
57.3

74.2
62.2
64.4
53.8
48.4
59.6

76-8
64.8
69.4
54.1
49.6
59-1

74.7
62.0
65.0
52.5
49.1
57.1

1-49
76.8
57-1 I
.38
.36
40.2
73-1
.19
.10
59-3 |
. 4 6 126.7

86.7
54.5
46.8
80.0
67.0
151.3

89.4
69.9
51.0
82.8
59.0
144.5

83.7
66.8
46.2
76.7
57.4
135.4

77.3
58.9
43.6
71.1
59.6
125.1

76.7
59.3
40.4
74.0
61.2
123.6

73.8
56.9
38.7
72-9
57.2
119.0

70.5
52.1
36.3
70.6
57.4
115.0

76.0
50-9
37.8
77.6
69.0
127.3

75.6
52.0
41.3
77.0
69.2
122.6

72.6
52-5
36.6
67.4
60.6
121-7

72.3
53.7
35.4
67.7
51.7
122.4

80.7
60.4
37.7
73.1
57.5
138.9

74.3
51-7
37.2
67.0
52.3
129. 3

.89

Nonferrous metals
333-6,9
1.85
Primary nonf. metals
333
.51
3331 1
Copper
-13
3334 |
Aluminum
.28
Secondary n o n f . m t l s .
334 1
-11
Nonferrous products
Nonf. m i l l products
Copper m i l l p r o d .

335,6 1
335 i
3351 1

Alum, m i l l p r o d .
3353-7 I
Construction
i
Misc- alum. mats.
i
Nonferrous foundries
336

59- 1

46.3

46-1

45.4

51.2

42.3

44.9

46.0

47.2

54.4

50.5

50-6

51.7

99.1
100.8
80.9 |
86.8
92.4 J
95.3
73.8 |
76.7
70.9

101.8
87.6
97.0
78.0
73-9

100.8
83.0
86.9
79.0
77.0

98.8
84.7
85.5
80.3
77.9

101.6
83.3
8 3.7
80.8
77.1

102.3
85.4
88.8
80.7
61.4

96.3
77.0
87.2
71.7
76.2

95.9
76.8
101.0
67.7
77.2

97.3
81.1
103.3
66.6
78.4

98.6
78.9
99.9
68.1
70.6

96.8
76.9
94.3
69.2
69.7

99-5
76.5
88.9
70.4
75.7

98.8
80.7
99.7
71.3

47.9

1.12 109.2 |
.64
97.3 |
-14 88.7 I

110.3
96.5
89.1

109-9
95.6
78.4

110.7
95.7
81.7

107.8
95.6
85.0

113.3
10 2 . 6
9 9.3

112.5
100.6
92-4

108.1
95.5
88.8

106. 0
93.6
86.6

106.5
96.3
91.3

109.0
98.8
100.7

107.6
96.5
64.6

110.7
96.9
86.4

107.7
99-5
88.4

i
|
|
!

101.6
109.5
98.5
151.9

103.8
106.5
102.8
153.1

103.6
106.5
102.5
155.8

103.7
101.8
104.5
144.4

115.7
117.0
115.2
145.6

113.2
116.0
112-1
148.3

108.6
135.0
98.2
145.9

107.6
116.2
104.2
143.3

105.5
108.9
104.2
137.0

106.2
117.6
104.6
139.6

108.7
115.6
106.1
140.8

107.3
114. 1
104.6
152.2

112.3
121.7
108.6
132.4

-32
.09
-23
.28

108.2
114.6
105.6
145.1

•<•

Mote: Seasonally adjusted industry t o t a l s are not aggregated from the seasonally adjusted components,
but result from independent seasonal adjustment of the aggregated not seasonally adjusted components.




10

i

.

.

Table 4B—continued

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIVIDUAL SERIES
Not seasonally adjusted, 1977 = 100

1986,
DEC |

1987
JAN

PRINTING £ PUBLISHING
27|
newspapers
271J
Period.,books,cards
272,3,71
Job p r i n t i n g
274- 6,8,91

150.0
137.61
145.11
161.8

146.6
126.2
147.4
160.1

CHEMICALS & PRODUCTS
28J
Chemicals & syn. m a t . 2 8 1 , 2 , 6 |
Basic chemicals
281J
Alkalies & chlorine
28121
I n d u s t r i a l Gases
28131
Inorganic pigments
28161

Series

SIC 1
Code J

HAfi

APR

fl AY

JUN

JUL

AUG

SEP

OCT

NOV

DEC

149.6
133.5
145.9
163- 1

150.0
136.4
142.6
164.2

154.8
142-4
145.6
16 9 . 3

156.4
143.1
148.7
170.5

166.8
142.3
159.6
188.4

173.1
131.2
169.7
204.3

181.5
136.5
180.3
213.4

178.2
143. 1
169.0
208.4

176.7
151.4
163.3
202-6

167.6
152.4
156.5
185.3

160.4
142.8
147.7
178.5

123.7
125.2
117.4
119.9
92.4
97.7
95.9
91.8
123.31 127.0
96.7
95.5

129.7
124.0
107, 1
98. 1
133. 1
108,0

127.8
122.3
98.6
98.9
128.3
103.1

132.6
122.7
98.2
9 9.2
129.5
104.9

132.1
122.0
99.7
98.1
111.9
106.1

137-9
124.4
100.5
101.7
127.7
98.9

137. 1
120.3
94-8
98.7
125.3
101.7

135.9
120.9
94.9
97.5
137.6
93.4

139.8
127.2
105-3
100.6
141.0
103.0

136.3
125.7
100.8
92.2
137.7
96.3

132.3
124.4
97.3
92.6
140.0
93.1

128.8
124.4
96.9
102.7
139.9
97.6

8 6 . 1,
81.3
150.4
199.4
80.0
98.21
109.9

94.0
94.6
154.4
205.7
101.2
96.2
110.0

104.4
111-8
163.2
215.2
106.6
104.7
108.7

92.9
93.0
164.8
223.1
112.0
97.2
108-5

91.8
91-6
164.5
221.5
112.4
98.5
109.7

97.2
99.5
159.9
215.2
105.6
96.7
110.2

96.0
97.9
163.7
224.2
103.9
94.4
112.6

88. 1
85.4
157.0
212.9
95.0
94.2
110.9

87.4
84.7
158.7
216.7
84.6
95.3
111.0

100.4
105.7
170.2
231.7
91.1
103. 1
112. 1

96.6
99.8
168.4
230.6
91.0
100. 1
112.2

91.5
91.9
163.7
226.5
77.5
96.3
114.1

88.5
8 6.5
164.0

136.1
120.41
172.7
72.6
84.2

137-6
118.3
174.6
84.5
79-9

141.9
120-2
182-9
96-7
88-3

138.9
119.5
176.4
101.8
91.7

148-6
133.7
181.6
119.5
9 4.3

148.7
130.4
186.2
117.3
91.3

158.7
145.1
195.1
121. 1
85.4

163.6
162.4
205.7
107.5
77.4

160. 1
14 7 . 7
198.8
110.4
76.0

161.0
149.9.
202.4
101.3
86.3

154.8
144.0
193. 1
94.8
86.9

145.9
132.5
185.5
81.1
83.9

139.2
126.7
179.0
62.2
8 4.2

89.9
89.4
94.6
96.7
60.2
117.3

88.4
88.7
92-7
86.3
53.3
127.0

84-8
84.9
89.5
78. 1
48.9
127.4

82-9
82.8
86.2
80.6
46.2
119.5

8 8-2
87.8
92-4
84.9
52.9
107.6

95.6
94.4
100.8
87.0
52-1
108.9

95.9
94.4
101.0
62.6
46.7
115. 1

95.2
93.5
99.2
82.6
48.5
117-8

97.8
96.0
101.0
89.1
51.2
117.3

96.4
94.3
98.1
87.1
46.8
120. 1

92-2
89.8
94.4
82.8
47.2
121.3

94.1
92.3
97.9
88.8
55.6
123.1

93.6
92.8

i

71.3
117.9
61.6
59.3

78.1
122.9
71.7
60.7

77.0
117.6
70.0
65.9

76-2
113.4
67.7
67.9

84.8
116.1
71.5
89.8

96-2
124.3
77.6
113.7

99.3
128.6
77.6
122.2

97.2
124.9
75.2
121.6

98.5
133.3
72.5
126. 1

98. 1
128.6
77.0
116.8

88.8
119.3
71.9
101.5

84.6
119.2
71-4
87.3

fiOBBEH & PLASTICS PROD.
30 J
Tires
3011
Bub.prod.ex.tires
302-4,6J
P l a s t i c s p r o d u c t s , nee
307J

140.3
92-8
123-1 1 113.7
179-5
166. 1

142.0
106.4
114.3
163.6

156.5
115. 1
127.9
180.7

152.7
112.8
125.0
176.0

149.5
106.5
109.8
17 5 . 1

150.8
98.9
125.1
177-9

155.9
101.9
126. 1
185.0

146.9
91.9
118.0
176. 1

156.9
107.3
127. 1
184.4

160.5
109.6
129.9
188-7

162. 1
117.2
129.3
188.8

156.4
109.1
125.3
183.4

150.3

62.1
78.3
53. 1

64.1
74.2
59.1

67.0
74.5
64.6

64.8
75-0
60.5

62.1
73.0
57.2

60.7
71.3
56.1

58.7
73.3
51.2

53.8
65.6
46.4

63.3
73.1
59-9

60-4
74.7
53.8

62.4
76.8
56-2

62-5
77.2
55.7

57. 1
76.9
4 5.3

CLAY,GLASS 6 STONE PROD.
32|
P r e s s e d & blown g l a s s
3221
Glass c o n t a i n e r s
3221*

112.2
120-2
92.9
110.9 1
95.5 I
70.9

111.5
102.4
88.8

113.3
114.0
101.6

!1o-6
110.9
98.3

12 1.8
114.2
101.4

121-4
111.9
96-9

124.7
118.2
103.8

120.8
110.7
96.5

125. 4
115.7
100-2

125.3
112.5
94.4

124. 1
115.3
99.3

122.4
109.9
90.0

115.4
94.8
72.6

Cement
324J
Structural clay prod.
3251
Brick
3251J
Clay s e w e r p i p e
32591
Clay t i l e
3253,5J
C o n c r e t e and m i s c .
326-91

107.8
128.6
92.8
32.0
191.0
123.3

|

I n o r g a n i c chem, n e e
28191
A c i d s S o t h e r chem.
Synthetic materials
2821
Plastics materials
28211
Synthetic rubber
2Q221
Synthetic fibers
2823,4J
I n d u s t . o r g a n i c chem.
286]

|
98-5
111.2

Chemical p r o d u c t s
283- 5,9
1
Drugs 6 m e d i c i n e s
283J
Soap & t o i l e t r i e s
284 1
Paints
2851
Agricultural chemicals
2871

149.9
135.1

PETROLEUH PRODUCTS
291
Petroleum r e f i n i n g
291,91
Automotive g a s o l i n e
Distillate fuel o i l
fiesidual
fuel oil
Aviation fuel 6 keros.

92- 1
91-0

Misc. petroleum prod.
Refinery f u e l , nee
Refinery nonfuel mat.
Refinery p r o d u c t s , nee

188.4
99.9
85.5

I
I

1

LEATHER AND PRODUCTS
311
P e r s . l e a t h e r gds 313, 5-7,91
Shoes
3141

61.4
73.8
55.7 I

PRIMARY METALS
33J
I r o n and s t e e l
331,21
Basic s t . 6 m i l l prod.
331J
B a s i c i r o n and s t e e l
Pig i r o n
Raw s t e e l
Steel mill products
Consumer d u r . s t e e l
Equipment s t e e l
Construction s t e e l
Can & c l o s u r e s t e e l
disc, steel
Iron 6 s t e e l foundries

332 J

-89

Nonferrous products
Nonf, m i l l p r o d u c t s
Copper m i l l prod.

335,61 1-12
.84
335J
33511 . 1 4

Alum, m i l l p r o d .
3353-71
Construction
Misc. alum. mats.
Nonferrous foundries
336|

,32
.09
.23
.28

119.2
174.0

74.5
113.7
83.5
30.9
166.7
122.3

69.3
104.7
79.8
24.6
151.5
119.5

71.9
115.4
81-6
27-0
173-5
117.6

91.9
115.9
84.3
20.6
173.7
121.3

115.3
126.9
9 6.3
34.1
183.0
124.7

117.7
126-8
92.5
34.5
186.4
124.2

130-0
133.8
97.9
34.5
196.9
124.8

125. 1
126.3
98.6
37.3
1 78.2
121.6

132-3
139.4
96.4
35.5
211. 1
124.9

127.7
141.8
100.7
35.0
2\2.3
126.7

131.0
138.6
104.6
36.2
200. 7
123.7

104.1
141.5
92.3
33.9
220.3
126.5

132.5
89.0
31.4
20 3 . 8
123.9

75.9 !
63.5 1
68.8 1
58. 11
54.0 1
64.3 1

75.0
63.8
69.1
58.2
56.9
62.1

79.7
68-8
76.9
66.5
62.3
73.8

82.3
70.4
78.0
68. 1
64.2
75.7

81.7
69.3
76.6
67-4
62.9
75-2

84.4
72.6
77.9
68.b
6 5.0
76.3

80.4
66.9
74.4
64.1
62. 1
69.5

76.8
64.2
69.6
56.7
55.4
65.2

68.7
59. 1
65.1
54. 7
51. 1
59.5

69.8
5/. 4
61.4
47.8
43.0
53.3

72.o
59.3
61.3
49.0
44.6
54.2

72.6
59.4
61.5
51.3
45.6
57.6

72.9
59.8
64.0
51.2
46.4
56.5

68. 4
55.2
59.2
49.7
45.6
54.7

85.4
68- 1
4 7. 1
78.2
58.6
138- 1

63.4
63.5
47.0
76.6
64.2
134.9

84.8
6 5.5
44.7
81.8
6 7.7
136.7

82. 1
63.3
43.0
81.1
63.6
132.3

77.7
57.4
40.0
77.8
63.3
126.7

72.8
48.8
36.2
74. 4
66. 1
122.0

71.5
49.2
39. 1
72.8
65.4
115.8

70.5
51.0
35.5
65.5
58.9
118.2

69.0
51.3
33.9
64. 6
49.4
116.9

73.4
54.9
34.3
66-5
52.3
12t>.4

66.2
46. 1
33. 1
5 9.7
4 6-6
115.2

I
]
1
1
1
1

77.3
84.6
48.6
66. 1
41.7
48.2
7 1 . 31
78-3
59.7
55.8
134.8
136.7

47.9 |

48.0 i

44.9

**8. 1

48.1

5 6.9

45.0

48.5

41.6

45-8

53.5

53-2

47.5

42.0

99.1
80-9
92-4
73.8

96-3 I
86.4I
9 3 . 21
7 7 . 51
65.7 l

100.5
87.9
93-4
78.1
69.4

104-9
86-2
90.2
79.6
62-6

104.9
86.8
89.6
80.3
80.4

106.7
87.2
9 5.1
81.2
78.5

105.7
87.7
95.5
81.3
79.7

100.5
78.3
94.7
71.5
77.5

86.7
71.0
89.6
66.2
67.3

93. 1
7b. 2
86.6
67.3
77.0

97.6
76.6
89.8
68. 1
74.8

97.6
77.4
92.9
69.6
74.2

97.6
77.8
92.6
70.7
78.4

93.3
80.0
9 6-5
72. 1

109. 2 1 1 0 2 . 9 |
9 2 . 01
97.3 1
79.7 [
88.7 1

109.1
93.6
76.4

115.9
97.8
86.4

115.7
101.2
9b. 3

118.5
10 5 . 3
103.8

116.5
103.6
100.0

112-2
98-7
92.0

94.8
88.9
75.1

102- 1
93.6
63.9

109.0
99.6
105.2

108.4
96.2
83.7

107.6
94.0
80.0

100-5
9 4.6
79.0

98.7
101.9
97.5
155.6

107.5
109.7
106.7
170.3

111.7
106.6
113-6
159.5

120.2
122.0
119.5
158.2

118.2
117.3
118.6
155.2

115-2
141.6
104-9
152.9

103.9
111.6
100.8
112.5

104.5
110.6
1u2. 1
127.3

107.2
120.4
102.0
137.4

108.0
120.4
103. 1
145. 1

101.2
111.6
97.1
148.7

101.7
101.9
101.6
118-3

108.2
114.6
105.6
145.1

|
1
1
I
1

1
1
1
1

92.0 I
9 1 . 81
9 2 . 11
1 3 5 . 71

N o t e : S e a s o n a l l y a d j u s t e d I n d u s t r y t o t a l s a r e n o t a g g r e g a t e d from t h e s e a s o n a l l y a d j u s t e d c o m p o n e n t s ,
b u t r e s u l t from i n d e p e n d e n t s e a s o n a l a d j u s t m e n t of t h e a g g r e g a t e d n o t s e a s o n a l l y a d j u s t e d c o m p o n e n t s .




105.8
114.0

I
1
1
1
I
|

76.8
57.1
40.2
73.1
59.3
126.7

Nonferrous metals
333-6,91 1-85
Primary nonf. m e t a l s
3331 . 5 1
Copper
33311 - 1 3
Aluminum
3334 1 - 2 8 ,
Secondary nonf, m t l s .
3341 . 1 1

FEB

11

Table 4A—continued

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIVIDUAL SERIES
Seasonally adjusted, 1977 = 100
11977 1985
]Pro- A n n .
sic 1 pos- AvgCode ition

1986|
DEC |

1987
JAN

108.2]
88-71
100.8]
109.01
110.41

109.2
90.1
100.4
109.4
114.8

99.1
107.7
116.5

107.6
85.3
100.2
107.8
111.3

108.2
93.6
101.9
109.5
113.1

106.5
90.6
100. 1
109.7
108.4

106.6
91.7
104.4
107.8
107.9

105.7
88.3
103.5
107.5
108.2

105-9
89.2
104.8
107-6
108.1

107.3
92.3
104. 1
107.8
110.3

108-3
92.0
104.7
106.5
113.4

107.1
90.7
100.7
106-1
109.7

108.4
93.9
99.6
106.9
114.2

NONELECTRICAL MACHINERY
35 1 9.54 142.0 146.2] 144.9
64.0
E n g i n e £ farm e q u i p .
3 5 1 , 2 | 1.48 6 0 . 4 62.81
C o n s t r u c t . & a l l i e d e g . 3 5 3 | 1.68 7 4 - 2 79.91 78. 1

143.9
62.8
77.1

141.7
61.7
74.3

140.8
63.3
72.2

141.3
60.9
76.0

140.4
61.0
76.6

142.6
60.5
73.4

142.6
59.9
74.9

140.9
58. 1
73.6

142.2
58.3
72.6

141.6
57.7
70.6

140.7
56.4
71.0

Metalworking a a c h i n e r y
354 1 1.24 132.1 130.7] 132.3
S p e c . 6 g e n l - i n d . e g . 3 5 5 , 6 1 2.12 95-1 9 5 . 1 ] 95.1
Office, serv, 6 aisc3 5 7 - 9 | 3.02 2 5 6 . 7 2 6 5 . 7 ] 266.6

130.6
95.7
263.9

131.0
95.2
257.2

128.3
96-6
252.9

129.5
95.9
252. 1

134.9
95.0
250.7

134.0
96.2
257.4

136.8
94.9
255.5

133.6
93.7
254.6

134.1
96.0
256.2

131.7
93.4
259.9

129.0
94.1
255.4

7.15 166.5 168-7] 166.1
1.27 88.7 8 7 . 2 ] 88.9
-75 136.3 126.2] 129.1
-11 2 6 3 . 6 2 2 2 . 4 ] 260.6

164.8
88.9
133.5
269.5

165.2
88.4
131.9
258.3

166.8
90.3
138.3
258.8

166.0
91.3
131.9
266.6

163.2
90.9
137.8
2 96.0

166.8
91.1
137. 1
254.4

167.2
89-3
138. 1
253-1

137.5
267. 7

167.7
85.8
136.0
242-7

168.2
86-1
141.8
262.0

169.9
86.7
148.2
278.4

Refrigeration appl.
3632 J -17 110.1 i 9 7 . 1 | 94.2
Laundry a p p l i a n c e s
3633 ] . 12| 145-51136.7] 130.5
Misc. a p p l i a n c e s
3 6 3 4 - 6 , 9 | .35 105-3 105.91 103.5

109-5
133.5
101.8

101.8
133.6
105.6

119-3
155.2
103.3

103.5
137.9
100.6

117.0
133.2
99.2

107.7
164.7
104.5

121.1
147.1
106.6

104.7
147.0
108.6

113.3
153.5
107.0

116.0
15*1.6
111.5

121.3
166.4
113.4

154.2
218.6
241.8
142.0

148-2
216.0
241.4
129.1

143.9
215. 1
247-8
124.6

154.0
217.9
247.6
131.7

147.5
218.4
243.4
111.8

139.8
207.1
239-2
105.9

147.9
216.5
243.9
125.4

152.6
218.6
240.7
95.6

148.7
219.4
242-6
87.7

146.0
218.7
244.5
130.9

161.9
216.4
248.4
149.0

171.7
218.2
248.6
146.8

J -70 116.0 120.0] 116.0
132-6] 1O8.0
1 -13

114.8
113-8

115.2
123.4

115.5
138.3

118.9
140.5

113.8
123.7

117.6
137.6

118.1
142.6

114.5
124.2

114.9
127.9

119.0
141-7

114.5

9.13 125-9 1 124.0] 128.2
5.25 110.9 111.4] 116.5
1.82 111.0 108.0] 120.4
1.16 97.3 ] 9 4 . 6 ] 105.5
.66 135.4 131.6] 146.8

127.5
116.4
122.3
107.1
149.0

122.6
108.1
107.0
93-7
130-4

126.2
112.6
115. 1
100.8
140.3

124. 1
108.7
108.2
94.8
132.0

125-1
110.6
113.4
99.3
138.2

125.6
111.2
108.8
95.3
132.6

125.1
108.2
100.2
87.8
122.2

127.7
112.2
109.7
96.2
133.8

125.2
107.1
104.9
91-9
127.9

125.6
107-9
105.3
92.3
128.4

127.5
111.5
113.6
99.5
138.5

135.0
124.6
141.7
130.9
104.6

133.0
118.9
142.1
111-6
104.5

119.9
104.9
129.6
123.7
103.0

131.8
117.0
141.5
125.8
101.4

126.8
107.9
139.1
133.5
100.1

125.6
109.4
136.1
135.0
100.8

136.4
115.0
150.3
133.3
101.0

139.8
120.4
152-4
134.0
99-3

143.2
124.9
155. 1
130.3
99.5

126.3
109.6
137.1
122-8
99.7

127.7
114.8
136.0
111.6
100.9

131.7
110-4
145.6
114.5
100.6

2.09 157.8 148.5] 153.9
.66 8 6 . 4 8 6 . 8 | 88.0
1.11 i159.6 164.2] 161.5
31-2|
. 2 7 22.9
21-8

151.5
83.9
156.0
9-8

152.3
84.4
157.8
18.3

154.6
85.8
160.2
31-5

155.7
85.9
159.2
*9.Q

156.5
84.5
157.4
20.2

155.6
86.7
159.4
20.6

161.6
87.4
161.2
27.8

161.1
88.7
162. 1
30.8

162.2
87-8
161.9
30-0

164.2
87.1
160.1
18.2

164.3
87.4
161.1
16.6

38 1 2.66 141-4 I 140.4] 141.5
381-4 | 1.52 163-0 160.7] 160. 1

141-9
160.8

142.0
161.9

142.4
163.9

140.3
161.9

139.9
162.0

141.7
162.0

142.0
163.7

141.7
161.6

140.3
163.7

141. 1
166.7

142.2
168.3

MISC. MANUFACTURES
39>] 1.46 99.2 [ 9 6 . 6 ]100.9
H i s c cons- goods
3 9 1 , 3 , 4 , 6 1 . 8 4 1 9 4 . 8 I 9 3 . 2 | 96.5
Misc. bus- s u p p l i e s
3 9 5 , 9M . 6 2 | 104.8 101.3] 102.8

100.9
95-9
105-9

99.0
95.4
100. 1

99.2
94.5
103.6

101.0
95-2
108.9

98.3
94.4
102.6

97.5
93.4
104.2

98.3
93.5
104.6

97.7
95.3
103.0

99.0
95.9
108.1

98.9
93.8
.108. 1

100.6
94.7
106.3

119.7
114.0
107.8
139.0

119.5
114.4
107.0
144.2

119.8
113.2
105.9
142.5

121.6
114.9
107.5
144.6

121.7
116.8
110-0
144- 1

123.1
117.0
110.7
141.9

125.4
121-5
115.1
147.4

122.4
114.U
105.6
151-5

122.8
117.9
107.6
159.3

123.8
118.4
105.8
168.7

125.2
118.0
107.6
159.3

123.8
127.5
121.4
104.4
136.1

123-2
124.4
122.5
105.9
136.9

124.6
124.0
124.9
108.7
139.0

126.5
128-0
125-6
107.7
141.2

125.3
125.6
125. 1
104.4
143.2

127.6
128.0
127.4
104.7
147.1

128-3
134.8
124.0
103.9
141.5

128.0
130.7
126.2
105-9
143.9

126.3
132.6
122-2
102.9
139-0

127.7
132.0
124.9
104.9
142.4

130.4
130.7
130.3
108.1
149.6

FABRICATED METAL PRODUCTS 34 1
Metal c o n t a i n e r s
341 I
Hardware,tooIs,cutlery
342 J
S t r u c t u r a l metal prod.
344 i
F a s t e n e r s , s t a a p , e t c . 345-7 |

ELECTRICAL MACHINERY
36 J
Major e l e c t , eg.fc p t s 3 6 1 , 2 i
Household a p p l i a n c e s
363 1
Cooking e g u i p a e n t
3631 1

TV a n d r a d i o s e t s
365 1
C o a a u n i c a t i o n e g u i p a e n t 366 |
Electronic coaponents
367 |
TV t u b e s
3671-3 I
Misc. e l e c t r i c a l supp.
Storage b a t t e r y , r e p l .

369
3691

TRANSPORTATION EQUIPMENT
37 I
Motor v e h i c l e s & p a r t s
371 |
A u t o s , total
J
1
Consumer
J
Business
T r u c k s and b u s e s
Business vehicles

Consumer t r u c k s
Truck t r a i l e r s
Motor v e h i c l e p a r t s

1
i
|
3715 |
3714 J

A i r c r a f t and p a r t s
372 |
Ships and b o a t s
373 i
R a i l 6 a i s c t r a n s e g . 3 7 4 - 6 , 9U
Railroad eguipaent
374 J
INSTRUMENTS
Egurpaent i n s t r . 6 p t s

6.46 107.3
.52 9 0 . 5
.73 1 0 2 . 0
1-&7(107.8
1.95 111.3

.44
2.01
1-31
-13

150.6 |166.8|
216-7 220.5]
244-0 242.0]
122.4 120.7]

1.03 131.0
-41 114.5
.631141.8
-09 125.5
2.31 101-3

130.4|
116.0]
| 139.8]
129-7]
105.0]

ELECTRIC UTILITIES
49 | 4.17 122.4 1122.4]
1117. 3 ]
| 1.76
Elec. uti.1. generation
]110.9|
| 1.41
Fossil fuel generation
1143.1]
I -35
Hydro & n u c l e a r g e a e r .
Elec. u t i i . sales
Residential elec.
Nonresidential elec.
Industrial elec.
Commercial & o t h e r e l e c .

i 2-41
J -95
J 1.46
] .68
1 .78
.1
I

126.1]
| 127.9]
1125.0]
1108.2]
]139.6|
1
1

Note: Seasonally adjusted i n d u s t r y t o t a l s a r e not aggregated from t h e s e a s o n a l l y adjusted coaponents,
but r e s u l t froa independent s e a s o n a l adjustment of the aggregated not s e a s o n a l l y adjusted coaponents.




12

Table 4B—continued

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIVIDUAL SERIES
Not seasonally adjusted, 1977=100
1977
1985
ProAnn.
Avg. ,
portion i

Series
SIC
Code

1986
DEC .

1987
JAM

FEB

MAB

APB

MAY

JON

JUL

AUG

SEP

OCT

NOV

DEC

FABRICATED METAL PRODUCTS 34
Hetal containers
341
Hardware, t o o l s , c u t l e r y
342
S t r u c t u r a l a e t a l prod344
Fasteners, s t a a p , e t c . 345-7

6.46,
.52]
.73 J
1.67
1.95

107.3^ 1 0 6 . 6
90.5
83-2
102.0J 98.01
107-8J 111.71
111.3 105-8

104.6
83.4
95.1
106.1
107.4

108.3
87.2
101.0
103.3
118.4

107-4
84.3
100.9
104.3
115.6

107.7
92.7
99.9
105.5
114.5

106.2
90.3
99-4
107.7
108-7

108.4
95.2
105.4
109.2
110.7

104.3
92.2
101.8
107.8
105.0

107.4
94. 1
106.7
110.2
108.0

110.4
97.7
108.2
111.8
112-6

109-6
92.3
107.2
110.0
115.0

106.9
88.9
101.2
108.9
109.8

106.9
88.0
96.9
109.5
109.4

NONELECTRICAL MACHINEBI
35
Engine & f a n e g u i p .
351,2
C o n s t r u c t . & a l l i e d e g . 353

9.54
1.48
1.68

1 4 2 - 0! 1 4 0 . 5
60.4] 64.1
74.2i 79-7,

139.9
64.1
76.4

142.3
64.2
78-1

140.4
63.6
73.4

136.8
63.4
70.8

138.4
61.1
74.1

143-8
61.1
77.2

145.6
58.6
74.1

149.0
57.6
75.2

148.2
58.0
76.3

144.3
57.4
72.9

140.1
57.7
70.5

135.2
57-6
70.9

Metalvorking aachxnery
354
Spec. & g e n l . i n d . e g . 355,6
O f f i c e , s e r v , 6 uisc.
357-9

1-24
2.12
3.02

132.1 126.2
95.11 9 4.6
256.7 250.2

127.9
92.8
250.5

133-5
96.1
252-6

132.4
96. 1
249.8

129.2
95.3
242.0

127.9
95-4
246-7

134.7
96.2
258.7

131.7
94.1
270.2

137.5
95.3
277.4

138.8
97.0
272-5

137.7
95-7
263.8

129.8
94.0
256. 1

124.6
93.6
240.4

ELECTRICAL MACHINERY
36
Major e l e c t , e g - £ p t s 3 6 1 , 2
Household a p p l i a n c e s
363
Cooking e g u i p a e n t
3631

7.15
1.27
.75
.11

166.5 166.5
88.7| 84.3
136-3 109.3
263.6 198.6

165.0
86.2
129.9
259.6

164.1
87.1
139.8
269.1

164.8
87.8
135.5
248.9

166.2
88.0
144.0
258.7

164.6
90.2
132.2
279. 1

163.3
92.6
138.0
286.6

1t»2.0
90.8
122-0
224.7

166.9
91.3
131.2
246.5

169.5
90.9
143.4
280.8

173.3
89.2
155.3
292.1

17 0.8
85.9
136.9
268.3

167.3
83.8
127.9
248.6

fiefrigeration
appl.
3632
Laundry a p p l i a n c e s
3633
Misc. appliances
3634-6,9

.17
.12
.35

110.1
145.5
105.3

96.3
138.8
101.7

118.1
148.0
106.3

114.9
142.1
107.0

134.6
159.0
107.2

109.7
134.0
95.8

123.5
135.0
98.8

109.7
137.3
90.2

sa.2
148-3
109. 2

111.3
147.8
113.6

127.5
177.1
117.7

100.6
138.5
111.8

86.6
140.6
105.0

T¥ a n d r a d i o s e t s
365
Consumeation eguipaent
366
E l e c t r o n i c coaponents
367
TV t u b e s
3671-3

.44
2.01
1.31
.13

150.6 139.7
216.7J 228-2]
244.0 244.6
122.4
89.0

142.2
219.7
240.8
135.3

136.8
215.7
238.8
130.1

126.9
217-0
245.8
118.5

138.9
215.9
246.3
139.6

143.9
216.1
242. 1
117.2

134.6
207.2
241.5
101.2

143.5
213.8
230. 1
107.2

169.1
215.0
242.0
106.7

157.2
217.5
245.0
95.2

191.2
217.7
247.7
155-7

178.9
218.9
252.0
154.0

144.0
225.8
250.5
108.2

69.3
115.5
97.9

369
3691

.70
-13

116.0

128.6
162.4

117.2
114.5

109.9
96.9

109-7
98.8

108.7
102.7

112-3
106.7

111.2
107.0

109.3
112.3

117.9
149.6

123. 1
163.0

124.0
167.5

125.9
171.5

122.4

TBANSPOBTATION EQUIPMENT
37
Motor v e h i c l e s £ p a r t s
371
Autos,
total
Consuaer
Business

9-13
5.25
1.82
1.16
.66

125.9
110.9
111.0
97.3
135.4

120.3
101.5
89.6
78.5
109.2

127.9
115.3
120.2
105.3
146.5

129.5
119.9
128.4
112.5
156.5

126.6
113.9
116.6
102.2
142-2

129.3
117.9
123.7
108.3
150.8

127-4
114.5
116.5
1O2.0
142.0

130.3
120.0
127.4
111.6
155.3

114.7
95.3
82.4
72.2
100-5

117.8
98.7
84.8
74.3
103.4

127.3
111.9
108.3
94.9
132. 1

128.8
113.5
118.9
104.2
144.9

126.9
108.7
110- 1
96.4
134.2

123.9
101.4
95.4
83.6
116.3

3715
3714

1.03
.41
.63
.09
2.31

131.0
114.5
141.8
125.5
101.3

105.5
94.9
112-4
132.8
107.8

130. 1
125.7
133.0
116.3
104.9

141.5
126.7
151.1
111.0
104-0

131.5
111.6
144.5
131.4
103.2

143.1
126.0
154.2
129.3
101.6

139.9
119.8
153-0
134.3
100.8

145.2
126.6
157.3
140.3
102- 1

109.5
92.9
120.3
117.1
98-3

124.3
108.5
134.7
133-7
96.7

142.4
119. 1
157.5
136-8
100. 1

134.2
116.5
145. 8
125.0
99.5

124.0
110.7
132-6
113.3
100.6

106.5
90.3
117.0
117.2
103.3

A i r c r a f t and p a r t s
372
Ships and boats
373
Bail & uisc trans eg.374-6,9
Bailroad eguipaent
374

2.09
.66
1.11
.27

157.8
86.4
159.6
22.9

152-9
88.3
166.9
31.9

154.5
87.6
161.6
21.1

153.8
84.5
156.2
9.2

154.0
85.6
159-5
19.0

154.1
8b.9
161.4
31-6

155. 2
87.1
160. 1
30.8

155.7
85.0
158.1
22.5

151.6
84-5
154-0
19.7

155-4
84.2
157-7
22-1

160. 4
86.9
161.7
31.5

162.6
87.5
161-6
32-1

166.9
88.4
160.6
18.5

169.0
88.8
162.4
17.0

IMSTBOMENTS
Eguipaent i n s t r . &

2.66
1-52

141.4
163.0

139.6
155-6

138.0
154-1

139.2
157.1

140.4
159-3

139.8
159-0

138.6
159-5

142.6
165.8

143. 1
167. 1

145- 1
170. b

145.4
172. U

141.7
1b5. 1

140.8
164.2

141.4
162.7

90-9
86.2
97-3

33.2
89.8
97.7

100.3
94.4
108.3

97.6
95.0
101- 1

96.3
92.6
101.3

99.2
94.6
105-5

100-3
97.9
103.7

97.6
92.4
104.7

104-0
99.4
109-6

105.7
102.7
109.7

103.4
100-0
108.0

97.9
91.8
106. 1

94.7
87.6
102.1

ELECTBIC U T I L I T I E S
491 | 4 . 1 7 122. 4 123-3
127.0
1 2 0 . 7 | 119.9
Elec. u t i l .
generation
i 1-76
Fossil f u e l generation
| 1-41
1 1 3 - 9 I 113.7
Hydro & n u c l e a r gener.
| -35
1 4 7 - 7 i 145.0

127.4
117.0
107.5
155.0

114. 1
107.9
97.9
147.7

112-6
106-0
95.0
149.9

109-2
108.6
99-1
146-6

125.7
122.4
115-8
148.7

135.7
134.0
130.0
149.8

13J.0
124.1
118.5
146.6

127.8
117.4
109.5
149. 1

114.8
108.5
99-7
143-6

116.8
111.4
101.7
150. 1

124.2

135.0
144.2
128.9
110.6
144-9

118.6
120.2
117.6
104.9
128.6

117.4
112.8
120.4
107.8
131.3

109.6
100.4
115.7
102.5
127.1

128.2
120.3
133.3
109.1
154.4

137.0
147.2
130.4
103.9
153.4

139.5
147.4
134.4
107.8
157.6

135.4
140.9
131.8
108.0
152.5

119.5
115-7
122.0
104.3
137.4

120.8
112.7
126.1
108.7
141. 1

Misc. e l e c t r i c a l supp.
Storage b a t t e r y , r e p l .

T r u c k s and buses
Business v e h i c l e s
Consumer t r u c k s
Truck t r a i l e r s
Motor v e h i c l e p a r t s

HISC.
Misc.
Misc.

38
pts 381-4

MANUFACTURES
39
c o n s , goods
391,3,4,6 i
bus. supplies
395,9

Elec. u t i l .
sales
Besidentlal elec.
Nonresidential elec.
Industrial elec.
coaaercial & other elec.

1.46
99.2
.84I 94.8
.62 104.8

j 2.41
J -95
J 1.46
|
.68
|
.78

125.3
1132.4
1120.6
1103.2
1135-8

132.1
I 152.2
1 119.0
|
98.7
| 136.7

Note: Seasonally adjusted industry totals are not aggregated fron the seasonally adjusted coaponents,
but result froa independent seasonal adjustment of the aggregated not seasonally adjusted coaponents.




13

Table 5

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDEXES; 1977 = 100
Quarterly averages, seasonally adjusted
Quarterly Averages
of M o n t h l y I n d e x e s

1984

Q3

SEBXBS

Industrial production
Products, total
Final products
Consumer goods
Durable consuaer goods
Autoaotive products
Home g o o d s
Nondurable consuaer goods
E q u i p m e n t , total
Business 6 defense equipaent
Business equipaent
D e f e a s e and s p a c e e q u i p a e n t
Interaediate products
Construction supplies
Business supplies
C o a a e r c i a l energy p r o d u c t s

Manufacturing
Durable
Nondurable
Mining and
Mining
Utilities

Ql

Q3

Q2

Q4

Q2

Q1

QJ

Q4

1

122.7
128.0
128.7
118.1

122.5
128.7
129i3
118.8

123.1
129.1
129-7
118.8

123-5
130-4
130.6
119.5

124.0
131.6
131.7
120.5

124.7
132-3
132.4
122.1

125.0
132.7
132.5
123.0

124.4
132.5
131-6
124-4

125.0
133.4
132. J
124.8

125.9)
134.6|
133.2|
125-71

112.5
109.5
114.7
120.2

112.6
109.0
115.3
121.1

112-4
113.7
111.4
121.2

112.1
112.4
111.8
122.2

113.0
115.9
110.8
123.2

114.3
114.2
114.4
125.0

115.0
114.7
115.2
125.9

114.7
114.4
114.8
128-0

116.5
116.0
116.9
127.9

118.4|
115.0|
121.0J
128.4J

142.6
141.5
137.1
158.8

143.4
142.6
137.8
161.3

144.0
144.0
138.8
164.5

145.3
145.8
140.0
168.4

146.5
146.9
140.3
172.9

146.1
147.3
139.7
176.8

145.0
147.5
139.9
177.1

141.2
145-9
137-7
178.1

142.1
147.4
138.0
180.8

143.2J
148.21
138.8]
184.9]

125.8
114.5
135.4
119-3

126.5
115.0
136.3
120.6

127.2
115.3
137.4
121-5

129.9
117.9
140.2
122.3

131.2
119.8
140.9
123-1

131.7
120-2
141.5
125-1

133.7
123.1
142.7
125.0

135.5
123.7
145.6
129-5

137.4
125.1
147.8
128.2

139.21
126.8J
149.81
131.61

115.5
123.1
85.5
111.7
112.4
102.3
128.0
110.4
105.4

114.2
123-1 |
84.3 |
110.7
110.5 I
95.0
125.7
110.6
101.1

114.9
123.0
84.1
110-7
111.2
93.2
126.6
112.0
104.4

114.0
121.4
84.3
111.0
110.6
95.2
121.6
112.1
103.7

113.8
120.4
84.0
113-4
113.3
101.7
123.8
113.6
102.5

114.3
121.1
87.1
113.9 |
114.0 |
105.0 |
124.8
113.4
102.6

114.5
120.9
82.6
115.7
116.2
105.8
128.8
115.3
102.2

113-3
118.8
79.5
116.9
117.0
108.2
130.1
115.4
100,. 6

113.4
118.8
77.6
119.7
120.4
113.5
135.1
117.7
98.6

114.0]
120.0]
80.6]
120.7]
121.6]
114.4]
135.0]

124.7
125.9
122.9

124.9
126.4 |
122.9

125.3
126.8
123.3

126.1
127.3
124.6

126.8
127.5
125.9

127.4
127.9 |
126.8

128.4
128.3
128.6

128.4
127.1
130-2

12y-4
127.7
131.8

130.4]
128.7|
132.9]

112.2
113.7
109.7

109.5
108.6
110.8

111-6
110.1
114.1

109.8
109.9
109.6

109.1
107.9
111.1

109-3
107.1
112.8

107-3
105.4
110-5

103.3
99.9
108.9

101.2
96.6
108.8

101.4]
95.91
110.6]

|

Materials
Durable goods aaterials
Basic aetal aaterials
Hondurable goods aaterials
Textile, paper, & chea aaterials
Textile aaterials
P u l p and p a p e r a a t e r i a l s
Cheaical aaterials
Energy a a t e r i a l s

1986

1985

Q4

|
|
|

i

Utilities
|

119.5]
97.8|

Table 6

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: GROSS VALUE OF PRODUCTS
Billions of 1982 dollars at annual rates, seasonally adjusted

Billions of 1982 Dollars at Annual Rates

1982
Dollars
Products, total
Final products
Consuaer goods
Durable consuaer goods
Autoaotive products
Hone goods
Nondurable consuaer goods
Equipment, total
Business & defense equipment
Business equipaent
Defense and space eguxpaent
Interaediate products
Construction supplies
Business supplies
Coaaercial energy products




1986 ]
Ann. ] 1985
Avg. ] Q3

1376.8 1683.2] 1652.
1084.5 1297-51 1281.
703.7 845.5] 818.
133.3
65.9
67.4
570.4

200.6| 197.
109.2] 110.
91.4] 86.
645.0] 621.

380.8
345.4
278.0
67.4

452.01 462.
433.51 430.
341.4] 343.
92.11 87.

292-2 385.6] 371.
108.3 [ 152.2] 146.
183.9 233.4] 224.
72.
63.4

Quarters
198b
Q4

Ql

Q2

1671.9] 1683.1 1683.5 1676.3
1297.3] 1304.7 1299-2 1289.2
834.01 842-7 849.5 843.0
1
197.6] 199.6 198.6 201.8
108.2] 109.6 108.8 110.4
91.4
89.9
89.4] 90.0
636.3] 64 3.1 650.9 641.2
i
463.4] 462.0 449.7 446.2
434.0] 437.0 432.8 430.8
343.5] 345.9 341.9 338.9
91.9
91.0
90.4] 91.0
1
374.6] 378.4 384.3 387.1
147.11 150.3 151.1 153.0
227.5] 228.1 233.2 234. 1
75.7
77.6
75.3] 73.8
1

14

1986
AUG

Q3

1987
JAN

1692.9] 1681.3 1677.8 1683.9 1690.8 1703, .911716.2
1299.7] 1292.6 1292.3 1292.5 1297.3 1309, 3|1323.3
849.0] 846.9 839.8 839.3 846.2 861. ,4| i»69. 1
1
198.8 200.7 208.. 3 ] 210.6
202.61 1 9 9 . 3 * 2 0 4 . 4
107.91 108.2 112.2 105.6 106.3 111,. 9 ] 115.3
91.0
92.2
93.1
94.4
96..«! 9 5 . 3
94.6]
646.4] 647.6 635.4 640.6 645.6 653,• U 658.6
1
1
450.7] 445.7 452.5 453.2 4 5 1 . 1 447.. 9 | 454.1
4 3 4 . 3 430. • 9 ] 437.3
434. 1] 4 3 0 . 3 4 3 6 . 9 4 3 7 . 0
3 4 2 . 8 3 3 9 . 8 336. . 0 ] 341.5
339.51 3 3 8 . 6 3 4 3 . 9
95.8
91-8
92.9
94.2
94.5
94. . 9 ]
94.5]
1
I
393.1] 388.7 385.5 391.4 393.4 394,.6] 393.0
153.8
153.5 155.1 155..0] 155.9
154.51 153.5
238.6] 235.2 231.6 237.9 238.3 239..61
76.7
74.6
78.3
78.8
I
I

1.

Table 7

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: DIFFUSION INDEXES
Percent of component series higher than in earlier months
ONE MONTH
EABLIEB

THBEE HONTHS
EABLIEB

SIX HONTHS
EABLIEB

53-5
76-6
26.4

55-7
79.4
23-2

57-4
88.3
23.0

19.84
DECSHBEB

53.2

51.4

53-2

1*85
JANUABY
FEBBUABY
HABCH

51.8
55.8
54.8

55.8
55.6
56.0

48.2
47.6
54.8

51.0
54.6
53.4

55.6
54.0
52.2

53.6
56.9
59.1

JULY
AUGUST
SEPTSHB SB

53.4
57.5
51-2

51.8
57.9
57-1

56.0
57-7
57-1

OCTOBEB
NOYEHBEB
DECEHBSB

49.6
61.7
57.5

56-0
56.2
60-9

58.3
58.3
63.5

1986
JANUABY
FEBBUABY
HABCH

60-7
42.5
37. 1

68.7
55.4
38.9

67-1
56.2
51-0

APBIL
HAY
JUNE

65.9
42.7
46.6

46.2
47.8
56.0

60.9
55.2
47.8

55.2
53.0
43.7

46.4
54.4
53.8

47.4
56.0
59-9

54.0
56.7
56.2

51.6
53.6
59.3

48.6
55.6
60.3

imr86
AYEBAGE
HIGH
LOH

APBIL
HAY
JUNE

1

|

ill

I

OCTOBEB
NOYEHBEB
DECSHBEB

NOTE: THE DIFFUSION INDEXES SHOH THE PEBCENT OF THE INDUSTBIAL PBODUCTION INDEX'S 252 SEASONALLY ADJUSTED COMPONENT SSBIES
THAT IN THE HONTH INDICATED HEBE HIGHBB THAN THEY UEBE ONE HONTH EABLIEB, THBEE HONTHS EABLIEB, AND SIX HONTHS EABLIEB. IN
CALCULATING THE DIFFUSION INDEXES HALF OF THE UNCHANGED COHPONENTS ABE COUNTED AS BEING HIGHEB AND NO ALLOWANCE IS HADE FOB THE
RELATIVE IHPOBTANCS OF THE INDIVIDUAL COHPONENTS IN TOTAL INDUSTBIAL PBODUCTION. DIFFUSION INDEXES BASED ON CHANGES QYEfi A
SIX-MONTH PEBIOD GEHEBALLY SHOH HOBE PBONOUNCED CYCLICAL PATTEBNS THAN DIFFUSION INDEXES BASED ON CHANGES OVEB SHOBTEB PERIODS.

Table 8

AUTO ASSEMBLIES AT ANNUAL RATES
Seasonally adjusted




15

Table 9A

ELECTRIC POWER USE BY INDUSTRIES
Seasonally adjusted indexes, 1977 = 100
ladexeg

.

Eercen,t3fle.„chang e

,

previous

TOTAL
HAJQB INDUSTRY

1977
{toil. J

1985

SIC
code

-MML-

10-14,20-39

785-8

100.4

59.4
726.4
344.3
382-1

15- 1
6.1
5.9

Series

1985
__0.4

1986

fii

__£2

_£3

04

1986
] _ 0 J
.4

__0.2

99.6

100.0

98.0

98.5

99-5

-2.0

122.2
98.9
97.31
100.5,

121.7
98.2
97.4
98.9

121.2
98.6
97.2
99.6

110.5
97.2
95.8
98.5

106.9
97-9
93.9
101.6

105.9
99.2]
95.4
102-4,

-0.4
.4
-0.2
.8

-8.8
-1.4
-1.5
-1.2

106.6
108.5/
110.2

103.6
107.6
107.4

104.1
97.5
116.7

92.3
89.7
95.9

90.7
82.2
112.3

84.3
7 3 . 8j
112.2,

.4
-9.4
8.7

-11.3
-8.0
-17.8

froi

Q3

xes
year
ago

quarter

04

1985
04
,

1986
filC

.5

1.0

-0-1,

98.9

99.7

-3.3
-7
-2-0
3.2

-1.0
1.3
1.6
.6

-13.0
1-0
-2.0J
3.0

104. 1
98.6
95.6
101.2

108.1
99.2
95.7
102.2

-1.8
-b.3
17. 1

-7.0
-10.3
-0. 1

-18.6
-31.5
4.5

82.8
67.9
110.1

84.7
73.7
107.7

DIVISIONS

HIIIING
MANUFACTURING
DURABLE
NONDURABLE
I&egs,££I,GfLQff?s

10-14
20-39
24,25,32-39
20-23,26-31
AMP.

s$&lM

METAL H I K I N G
Iron ore
Copper ore

10
101
102
11,12

10.3

131.2

128.5

140.3

135.9

127.4

127.8

9.2

O I L AND GAS EXTRACTION
Crude o i l and n a t u r a l gas
N a t u r a l gas l i q u i d s

13
131
132

23.0
18.2
3-4

13 5 - 0
139.8
104.9

U7.9
142.1
112.4

137.2
140.4
111. 1

120.6
123.5
101.4

116.9
118-9
94.0

116.0
118. 1
98-5

-0.5
-1.2
-1. 1

STONE AND EARTH MINERALS
Crushed s t o n e
Sand and g r a v e l
Chenical & f e r t i l i z e r aat.

14
142
144
147

11.0
2.4
2.0
5.0

109-3
145-2
91.3
100.7

104.9
144.7
93.0
91.9

93.4
139.8
90.8
77.5

90.2
142.0
96.8
69.0

92.6
139.8
95.9
72.7

90.2
147.5
101.2
64.6

FOODS
Meat p r o d u c t s
Dairy products
C a n n e d and f r o z e n f o o d s
Grain a x i l products

20
201
202
203
204

42.4
6.9
5.3
5.7
7.4

119.0
109.9
117.5
133.5
111.6

119.6
109.8
120.2
132.2
112.3

120.1
112.3
122.9
131.6
110-4

121.7
114. 1
126.0
132.8
109.2

121.7
112.0
124.3
135.2
110.4

Bakery p r o d u c t s
Sugar and c o n f e c t i o n e r y
F a t s and o i l s
Beverages
Misc. rood p r e p a r a t i o n s

205
206 |
2U7
208
209

2-5
3.3
3.4
4.8
3-1

135.3
167.0
109.8
122.8
115.8

137.4
166.4
110.0
122.2
114.7

142.5
171.8
114.4
121.2
115.5

140.7
179. 1
113.4
126.3
117.0

142-3
177.6
113.0
125.6
117.1

COAL

TOBACCO PRODUCTS

21

-o-2

.3

-0-5

121.4

133.4

-12-0
-12.0
-8.8

-J. 1

-3.1
-3-8
-7-3

-0.7
-0.6
4.8

-15.8
-lo.9
-12.4

114.9
116.5
10 1 . 0

117.9
121-5
96.5

-10.9
-3.4
-2.4
-15.7

-3.4
1.6
6.6
-10.^

2.7
-1.6
-1.0
4.5

- 2 . to
5.5
5.6
-11.2

-13.9
1.9
8.8
-29.6

90.9
147.2
101.2
06. 1

88.4
146.2
94.8
62.6

120-7
114.3
123.8
135.9
109.6

.4
2.2
2.2
-0.5
-1.7

1.4
1.7
2.6
1.0
-1.1

.0
-1.8
-1.4
1.8
1. 1

-0.8
2.0
-0.4
.6
-0.7

.9
4. 1
3.0
2.8
-2.4

120.8
113.0
122.6
135.4
109.4

120.8
116.2
122-6
143.4
110.4

140-7
181. 1
103.6
122.2
114.9

3.7
3.3
4.0
-0.8
-7

-1.3
4.2
-0.9
4.2
1-3

\.2
-0.8
-0.3
-0.5
- 1

-1.2
2.0
-8.4
-2.7
-1.9

2.4
8.9
-5.9
.1
.2

138,5
176.6
102. 1
128.3
115.7

136.6
178.2
99.5
120.4
116.6

-12.0

-10.2

1.3

104.4

111.1

97.7

99.6

96.7

99.8

1-*

-J.0

3.2

101.0

95.7

T E X T I L E M I L L PRODUCTS
Fabrics
K n i t goods
Fabric finishing
Yarn and t h r e a d
Miscellaneous t e x t i l e s

22
221-4
225
226 |
228
229

28-3
12.1
3.7
2.2
6.7
2.1

94.8
90.2
79.1
117.1
104.8
95.4

98.3
92.0
82.1
121.5
112-9
97.0

96-8
91.5
81.2
119.2
107.9
96.2

97-9
91.9
84. 1
118.3
109.7
98.9

99.9
91.3
82.6
129.2
115.7
99.8

101.0
9 2 . 31
62. 1
126.6
1 1 9 . 1J
100.8

-1.6
-0.5
-1. 1
-1.9
-4.4
-0.8

\.2
.4
3.5
-0.8
1.6
^.7

2.0
-0.7
-1-6
9.2
b.5
1.0

1.0
1. 1
-0.5
-2.0
3.0 I
1.0

2.7
.3
.0
4.2
5.5
4.0

99.7
91.8
79.6
126.6
117.2
103.3

102.5
92.9
83.0
125.8
121.6
100.5

APPAREL PRODUCTS
Men's o u t e r w e a r
Vomen's o u t e r w e a r

23
231,2 I
233

6.6
*• 1
1-9

117-3
113,5
109.0

119.5
115.5
109.6

118.9
114.7
116.4

121.8
116.7
113.0

119.7
112.5
106.6

121. 1
115.9
112.7

-0-5
-0.7
6.2

2.4
1.7
-2.9

-1.7
-3.to
-5-6

1. 1
3.0
5.8

1.3
-3
2.9

121-1
118.6
112.6

119.5
113.3
113.9

1.3
2.6
.6

5.7
6.7
3-4

129.0
110.4
139.2

128.2
106.7
142.1

LUMBER AND PRODUCTS
Luaber
M i l l w o r k and p l y w o o d

24
242
243

16.4
6.9
4. 4

119.1
100.0
129.0

121.5
101.6
134.7

122.9
103.9
133.9

128.4
107.6
138. 1

126.8
105.5
138.4

128.4
108.4]
139.3

1. 1
2.3
-0.6

4.5
3.o
3. 1

-1.3
-2.0
.2

FURNITURE AND FIXTURES
Hoae f u r n i t u r e

25
251

4.^
2.8

122.6
114.6

123-0
116.0

126.4
117.0

127.7
117.8

129.2
116.8

131.9
122.5

2.2
.8

1. 1
. J

1-2
.9

2. 1
3. 1

0.7
5.6

130-5
121.3

13 3 . 0
124. 1

PAPER AND PRODUCTS
Hood p u l p
Paper
Paperboard

26
261 |
262
263

118.4
123.3
125.5
108.1

119.5
129.1
127.9
99.8

120.3
118.9
1^9.9
101.7

121.0
125.1
130.6
99.7

121.8
127.5
128.6
104.6

.9
4.7
1.9
-7.7

. o
-7.9
l.o
2.0

.6
5.2
-5
-2.0

.6
2.0
-1.5
4. 6

2.9
3.4
2.4
-3.3

120.2
13 5 . 5
125.8
102.0

124.3
118.9
129.8
108.4

Converted paper
Paperboard c o n t a i n e r s
B u i l d i n g p a p e r and b o a r d

264
265
266

5.0
3.4
1. 1

116.7
110.2
150.5

112.8
113.6
150.6

109.7
111.7
156.6

109-0
114.6
154.4

111.2
121.1
163.5

112.7
122.5
162.2

-2.7
-1.7
4.0

-0.1
2.6
-1.4

2.0
5.7
5-9

1.4
1.2
-0.8

-0. 1
7.8
7.7

112.7
120.9
106. 1

115.1
124.6
169. 1

P R I N T I N G "AND PUBLISHING
Newspapers
Coaaercial Printing

21
271
275

10.6
2.6
4.8

141.1
120.1
154.7

142.7
121.8
158.4

145.4
123.7
162.6

149.3
128.6
169. 1

148.7
125-7
170.3

152.5
126. 1
176.4

1-9
1.6
2.6

2.7
4.0
4.0

-0-4
-2.2
.1

2.0
.3
3.0

6-9
3.6
11-4

151.8
1^:5.3
175.0

151.3
126.6
174.3

62.3
67.7
62.2
53.0
71.4
45-4

83-0
69.5
90.1
52.2
75.1
42.8

80. 1
too. 4
91. 1
48.6
60. 9
40.9

84. o
70.6
88.9
51.4
68.5
44.2

8 5 . 2^
70.7
82.9]
52.9
76.8
42.9

.9
2.6
9.6
-1-6
5.3
-5.9

-3.3
-4.4
1. 1
-o. 7
-11-0
-4.4

:>. o
0.2
-2.4
5-7
2.3
6.2

. J
.2
-6.6
2.6
\2.2
-6.0

3.5
4.5
.8
-0.2
7.7
-5.5

84.3
70.3
82.2
53. 1
77.1
42.8

84.3
69.5
81.6
52.7
7o.7
43.0

119.1
146.7
141.1
124.3
92.4
87.3

109.6
132.9
148.7
129. 1
93.3
91.2

118.9
157.5
146.8
127.7
96.6
82.9

2-8
4. 1
-0-4
3-7
-2.6
-5.5

-6.0
-9.4
5.4
3.*
.9
4.5

8.5
18.5
-1.2
-1. 1
3-5
-9. 1

3.9
o. 3
1.0 1
-3.7
.2
.8 1
1

6.6
18.8
4.7
2.6 |
2.0
-9.5
l

122.5
167.0
146.0
121-9
94.3
82.5

125-3
169.6
148.4
123. 1
98.4
63.2

CHEMICALS AND PRODUCTS
28
Basic c h e a i c a l s
281
A l k a l i e s and c h l o r i n e
2812 |
Inorganic cheaicals,nee
2819 |
A c i d and f e r t i l i z e r
aat.
|
Nuclear n a t s . , nondefense
Synthetic materials
Plastics aaterials
Drugs
Soaps and t o i l e t r i e s
I n d u s t r i a l organic chea.
Fara cheaicals




282 1
2821
283
284
286 |
287 1

71.y
119.0
5 . 9 '129.5
34. 4
125.5
2 2 . 1 | 106.7

162. 1
85.6
13.3
58.1
13.0
44.6
19-3
9.2
4. 1
2.1
35.8
10.5

86.3
74.9
92.6
62.2
80.9J
54.4
113.1
133.8
140.8
117.7
92.0
95.1 |
L
J1

115.9
141.0
141.7
119.9
94.9 |
92.4I
L

16

123.6
167.5
148.3
123.0
96.8
83.6

Table 9B

ELECTRIC POWER USE BY INDUSTRIES
Not seasonally adjusted, 1977 = 100
I&dfexes.

1
previous

SIC
._£2£e

Series
TOTAL

1977 |
{bil.
|

10-14, 20-39

1985

|

1985
__0.4

1986

oj

__fi2.

__P.3_

Q*

1986
oj

I

Q2

guar^ej-

ia

year 1
j . ago
l

- 03

04

1

1986

1985 i
Q4
i

nor,

DEC

785.81

100.4,

98.2]

98.1

99.3

100.3

9 8 . 1j

-0.1

1.2

1.0

-2.2i

-0.1

97.5

96.4

5 9 - 4|
726.4J
344.31
382.1,

122-21
98.9J
97-31
100.5j

118.8]
96.91
95-71
9 7 . 9j

125.5
96.3
96.1
96.5

113.0
98.4
97.0
99.7

103.2
100.1
95.3
104.5

103.4|
97.9J
93-81
101.4|

5.6
-0.6
-4
-1-5

-9.9
2.2
.9
3.4

-8.7
1.7
-1.8
4.8

-2
-2.21
-1.51
-2.9

-13.0,
1-0 J
-2.01
3.6

101.4
97.3
94.3
100.0

105.5
95.8
91.9
99.4

15. 1
6 . 1j
5-9|

106.6,
108.51
110.2]

94.4,
89.31
105.9

108.8
107.6
113.8

101.9
103.3
102.7

84.9
74.9
108.4

76-9|
61.2|
110.5|

15.2
20.7
7.5

-6.3
-4.2
-9.8

-16.7
-27.5
5.5

-9.5
-18.31
2.0,

-18.6
-31.51
4.4

74.7
56. 1
111.9

74.4
57.6
10 8 . 2

&4J0fi_lS£fiSTBX_DIIISI01iS
HIKING
MANUFACTURING
DUfiABLE
NONDURABLE
INDUSTRY

10-14,
20-39]
24,25, 32-39|
20-23,26-31

GROUPS AND SEBJ

METAL H I N I N G
Iron ore
Copper ore
COAL

10
101J
102]

10.3!

131.2!

127.9

160.0

133.4

111.8

127.4|

25.1

-16.6

-16.2

-0.4

122.9

138.6

O I L AND GAS EXTRACTION
Crude o i l and n a t u r a l gas
N a t u r a l gas l i q u i d s

13
131
132

23.0i
18.21
3.4

135.o!
139-8
104.9|

137.8
142.41
107.61

136.1
140.5
104.9

120.5
122.5
104.7

117.9
119.5
100.0

115.9
118.41
94.3

-1.2
-1.3
-2.5

-11.5
-12.9
-0.2

-2.1
-2.4
-4.4

-1.7
-0.91
-5.7

-15.8
-16.8
-12.3

113. 1
115.1
93.9

120.6
124.6
90.9

STONE AND SAHTH MINERALS
Crushed s t o n e
Sand and g r a v e l
Cheaxcal & f e r t i l i z e r
aat.

14
142
144
147

11.0
2 . 4J
2-0|
5-0,

109.3!
145.21
91.3
100.7,

106.7
147.7J
99.01
93.1

91.6
126.8
78.9
80.2

92.2
146.0
97.0
70.8

90.9
146.2
101.9
68.2

9i.e!
150.3J
107.91
65-4

-14.2
-14.1
-20.3
-13.9

.7
15. 1
22.8
-11.6

-1.4
-1
5.1
-3.7

1.0
-14.0
1.8
2 . 61
9.0
5.9
-4. 1 -29.8

94.4
153.2
109.8
68.8

85.9
140.0
96.2
61.3

FOODS
Meat p r o d u c t s
Dairy products
C a n n e d and f r o z e n f o o d s
Grain a i l l products

20
201
202
203
204

42.4,
6-9
5-3
5-7
7.4J

119.0j
109.9
117.5
133.5
111.61

120.9
109.8
116.4
1J4. 7
114.6

112.7
104.0
113.6
121.3
108.6

118.2
111.0
125.9
126.5
105.6

131.2
123.2
137.5
149.1
113.5

122-0
114-3
120.01
138.11
111.8

-6.7
-5-3
-2-5
-9.9
-5.2

4.8
6.7
10.9
4-3
-2.8

11.0
11.0
9.2
17.9
7.5

-7.0
-7.2
-12.8
-7.4
-1.5

.9
4.1
3.0
2.5
-2.4

121.7
J13. 5
118.7
135.0
111.0

117.8
111.0
114.4
131.2
111.2

Bakery products
S u g a r and c o n f e c t i o n e r y
F a t s and o i l s
Beverages
Misc. food preparations

205
206
207
208
209

2.5
3- 3
3.4
4.8
3. 1

135.3
167.0
109.81
122-8
11 5 . 81

135.7
189-9
117.0
119.6
115.6

130.9
168-5
114.9
110.O
107.8

136.5
160. 1
107.7
125-8
114.3

157.6
174.8
111.0
139.9
126.6

139- 1
206.6,
110.1
119.6
115.9

-3.6
-11-2
-1.8
-7.5
-6.8

5.9
-5.0
-6.3
13.8
6.1

13.8
9.2
3.1
11-2
10-7

-11.7
18.2
-0.8
-14.5
-8.4

2.5
8.8
-5.9
.0
.2

136.3
208.0
111.1
125.3
115.0

129.9
212.6
105.2
112.6
112.6

1.3

104.4

112.7

91.5

96.7

103.9

101.3

-18.8

5.7

7-4

-2.5

-10.1

101. 1
92.8
79.8
128.0
119.4
100.0

-10.8
-11-1
-9-4
-7.4
-14-2
-5.8

15.2
15.8
19.6
5-9
16.2
10.7

4.4
2.0
6.1
9.2
5.9
4.7

TOBACCO PRODUCTS

11,12

21

13.9

102-6

88.4

-4.2
-4. 1
-12-9
-2-7
-1.6
-4.8

2.9
.5
.1
4.2
5.7 |
4.0

99.8
91.3
78.1
128.3
118.0
98.7

9 4.9
86.7
74.0
123.5
112-3
95.8

T E X T I L E H I L L PEODUCIS
Fabrics
K n i t goods
Fabric finishing
Yarn and t h r e a d
Miscellaneous t e x t i l e s

22
221-4
225
226
228
229

28-3
12-1
3.7
2.2
6.7
2. 1

94-8
90.21
79-1
117-1
104-8
95-4

98-3
92-31
79.7
122-8
113.1
9b.2

87.7
82.0
72.3
113.7
96.9
90.6

101.1
95.0
86.4
120.4
114.6
100.3

105.5
96.8
91.6
131.5
121.4
105.0

APPAREL PRODUCTS
Hen's outerwear
Women's o u t e r w e a r

23
231,2
233

6.6
2.1
1.9

117-3
113.5
109.0

115.3
110.9
105-0

108.6
100.9
\03.Q

117.8
114.7
106.6

137.9
132.3
127.0

117-0
111.4
108.0

-5-9
-9.0
-1.9

8.5
13.7
5.5

12.1
15.3
16.9

-15. 1
-15.8
-15.0

1.4
.5
2.9

116.2
112.7
106.6

105.1
99.0
100.0

LUHiJEK AND PRODUCTS
Lumber
M i l l w o r k and plywood

24
242
243

16.4
6.9
4-4

119.1
100.0
129-0

121.6
102.2
134.0

125.5
106.2
136.5

128.3
107.8
139.4

123.9
102.4
135.0

128.6
109.0
138-5

3.2
3.9
1.9

2.3
1.6
2.2

-3.5
-5.0
-3.2

3.8
6.4
2.6

5.7
6.7
3.4

130.4
111.8
139.4

128.0
108.2
140.8

FUSNITUBE AND FIXTUBES
ttoae
furniture

25
251

4.2
2.8

122-6
114-6

124.1
116.3

126.4
118.1

126. 1
117.2

130.1
117.8

132.4
122-8

1.8
1.5

-0.3
-0.8

3.2
.5

1.8
4.3

6.7
5.6

131.2
122.1

130.2
121.9

PAPEB AND PRODUCTS
lood pulp
Paper
Paperboard

26
261 I
262 I
263 i

71.9
5-9
34.4
22- 1

119.0
129-5
125.5
106.7

118.1
125.4
124.6
105.6

117.9
124.2
127.0
100.7

120.9
120.2
131.2
103.7

122.2
125.9
131.1
99.0

121.4
129.7 |
127.7
102.2

-0.1
-1-0
1.9
-4.7

2.5
-3-2
3.3
3.0

1.1
4.7
-0.1
-4.5

-0.7
3.0 I
-2.6 |
3.1 I

120.5
2.8
3.4 | 139.5
125.3
2.5
-3m3 , 1 0 0 . 9

120.3
121.3
124.6
104.6

Converted paper
Paperboard c o n t a i n e r s
B u i l d i n g paper and board

264
265 1
266 1

116-7
110.2
150.5

111.9
112.9 I
151.5

106.2
109.6
154.5

109.9
114.4
156.3

114.7
124.0
162.2

111.7
121.8 I
162.9

-5.1
-2-9
2.0

3.5
4.4
1.2

4.4
8.4
3.8

-2.6
-1.8 I
.4 |

111.7
~Q.\
7.9 i 121.2
7-5 i 160.2

110.3
118. 2
17 1 . 6

P H I N T O G AND PUBLISHING
Newspapers
Comaerciai P r i n t i n g

21 |
271 I
275 1

141.1
120.1
154-7

140.1
119.6
156.5

133.5
112.9
149.2

144.7
125.8
162.4

168.1
141-5
193-0

149.8
123.9 |
174-5

-4.7
-5.6
-4.7

6.4
11.4
8.8

16.1
12.5
16.8

-10.9 [
-12.4 f
-9.6 |

7.0 I
3.6 |
11.5 i

146.8
121.4
171.4

142.8
12 Q. 9
164.0

81.5
68.5
87.9
51.6
73.8
42.4

82.6
68.5
94.5
50.7
68.5
43.3

85.2
70.3
88.5
50.9
66.4
43.6

83-3
69-7
82.1
51.6
76.2
41.3

1
|
|
|
I

1.3
2.6
8.1
-0.1
4.2
-3.0

1.3
-0
7.4
-1.8
-7.2
2.1

3.1
2.7
-6.3
.4
-0.1
.7

-2.2
-1.0
-7.2
1.3
11.4
-5.3

I
1
1
1
|
|

3.5 |
4.5 |
-91
- 0 . 21
7 . 6I
-5.5|

82.1
68.4
82.4
50.8
75-8
40.4

82.1
69.0
80-0
52.0
76.7
41.6

112.9
114.0
136.4 i 142.0
|
129.5
138.5
1 1 9 . 5t 1 2 0 . 6
1
93.8
90.7
85.8
91.5 1

113.3
137.3
147.9
125.8
96.2
93.0

123.0
162.2
162.7
134.8
96.3
83.5

120.4 I
162. 0 1
145. 1J
122.7 1
92.4 1
82.8 |

-9
4.1
-6.5
-9
3.4
-6.3

-0.6
-3.3
14.3
4.2
2.5
8.4

8.6
18.1
10.0
7.2
.2
-10.2

-2.2 |
-0.1 )
-10.9 1
-9.0 1
- 4 . 11
-0.8 |

6.6 |
18.8|
4.81
2 . 61
1-9|
-9.5|

120.5
160.9
141.6
121.5
91.9
83.1

117.9
161.0
137.4
118.3
94.5
80.1

CHEMICALS AND PRODUCTS
28 i
Basic c h e a i c a l s
281|
A l k a l i e s and c h l o r i n e
2812 |
Inorganic cheaicals,nee
2819 |
A c i d and f e r t i l i z e r mat.
|
Nuclear B a t s . , nondefease
1
Synthetic a a t e r i a l s
Plastics aaterials
Drugs
Soaps and t o i l e t r i e s
I n d u s t r i a l organic chea.
Fara cheaicals




282
2821
283
284
286
287

|
I
1
I
|
1

5.0
3.4 |
1- 1
10.6
2.6
4.8
162.1
85.6|
13.3I
5 8 . 1|
13.01
44.6

86.3
74.9
92.6
62.2|
80.9 |
54.4 |

19.3
113-1
9 . 2i 133.8
4 . 11 1 4 0 . 8 |
2 . 1J 1 1 7 . 7 |
3 5 . 8i
92.0|
10.5 |
95.1

80.5
66.7 |
81.4 |
51.7|
70.81
43.7

17

Table 9A—continued

ELECTRIC POWER USE BY INDUSTRIES
Seasonally adjusted indexes, 1977 = 100
.

Indexes

rcentac
year
ago

pr evjous
SIC

29

PRODUCTS

1985

1986

1986

1985
iii

1986
pj

112.9

113.5

115.0

117.1

118.8

122.4,

1.3

1.9

1.4

J-1

7.9

117.5

123.1

23.1
126.3
5. 4J
77.4
94.0
2.2
164.1
14.2

128.7
76.6
95.5
168.5

128.7
71.2
97.1
170.3

127.2
67.3
93.0
171.2

131.7
72.4
97.8
174.9

132.7
69.5
97.51
178.2

.0
-7.0
1.7
1.0

-1.1
-5.5
-4.2
.6

3.5
7.6
5.1
2.1

.7
-3.9
-0.2
1.9

3.1
-9.2
2.1
5.8

132.9
71.1
96.9
178.8

132.5
68.2
97.3
178.2

1985
-alS*.-

code

Serj.es.
PETROLEUM

1977
(bil.

34.7

__£Li

. Oi

,Q4

Q2

• 03

.

U4

BOBBER & P L A S T I C S P R O D U C T S
Tires
Rubber p r o d u c t s , n e e
Plastics products, nee

30
301
306
307

LEATHER
Shoes

31
314

1.4
.7

88.4
79.4

88.0
78.0

87.4
82.3

83.6
77.1

83.6
76.6

83.3
77. 1

-0.6
5.5

-4.4
-6.3

. 1
-0.6

-0.4
.7

-5.3
-1.1

81.8
75.9

80.2
72.7

C L A Y , G L A S S , AMD STONE
Flat glass
Pressed and blown g l a s s
Ceaent
S t r u c t u r a l clay p r o d u c t s
Concrete products

32
321
322
324
325
327

31.4
1.3
6.8
10.2
1.5
3.6

104.9
101-0
102.4
98.3
100.0
109.4

105-3
106.2
102.3
97.4
98.5
111.7

106.7
107.1
104.8
100.7
102.9
113.5

105-7
107.6
106.2
97.4
100.3
111.8

104.2
105-5
101.9
98.6
101.1
111.2

104.5
99.2
103.3
97.8
103.7
112.8

1.3
.9
2.5
3.4
4.5
1.7

-1-0
.4
1-3
-3.4
-2.6
-1.5

-1.4
-1.9
-4.0
1.3
.9
-0.5

.3
-6.0
1.3
-0.8
2.5
1.4

-0.8
-6.6
.9
.4
5.3j
1.1

106.0
96.2
104.9
100.5
102.8
111.9

10 5.3
103.8
100.2
98.6
106.5
113.9

PRIMARY M E T A L S
Basic s t e e l and a i l l prod.
Iron and s t e e l f o u n d r i e s

33
331
332

171.3
65.7
12.0

80.2
74.6
7 8.6

79.3
76.9
76-9

78.4
73.9
71.b

71.5
67.9
67.8

73.3
68.0
71.8

-1.2
-3.9
-6.8

-3.9
-4-8
-3.5

-5.1
-3.5
-2.0

2.5
.2
6.0

-7.7
-11.5
-6.5

74.0
69.1
71.7

73.9
68-3
73.0

3334
336

78-1
70.3
2.1

89.2
78.5
115.4

86.3
76-2
110.0

84.2
80.2
115.6

85.5
73.2
115.3

88.9
64.9
115.8

85.4
71.5
113.2

-2.4
5.3
5.1

1.6
-8.7
-0.3

3.9
-11.4
-5

-3.9
10.3

-1.0
-6.1
2.9

88.0
70.3
111.1

85.9
73.0
111.1

34
341
342
344
345
346

26.4
2.2
2.3
.6
1.6
6.2

114.4
112-3
102.7
112.2
102.7
113-2

114.7
116.1
102.0
111.8
99.1
114.9

114.9
115.8
100.7
107.9
102.9
116.4

115.5
120-5
103.2
110.6
104.3
110.5

115.0
119.2
106.1
113.1
105.9
104.2

117.1
122.5J
104.0
114.0
104.8
113.7,

.2
-0.3
-1.3
-3.5
3.8
1.3

.6
4.1
2.5
2-7
1.3
-5.1

-0.5
-1-0
2.9
2.0
1.5
-5-7

-2,0
.8
-1.0
9.1

2.1
5.5
1.9
1.9
5.7
-1.1

115-9
120.0
103.0
114.2
104. 1
110-7

116.9
125.4
101.1
109.6
100.0
116.8

N O N E L E C T R I C A L MACHINERY
E n g i n e s and t u r b i n e s
Farm e q u i p m e n t
Construction eguxpment

35
351
352
353

28.6
2.4
2. 1
5. 1

115-1
70.2
57.6
86.4

116.1
65.6
54-2
87.J

115.8
63.5
52-0
82.2

113- 9
63.3
49.8
78.7

113.7
63.2
51-9
77. 1

113- 1
61.6
52.1
74.8

-0-3
-3.1
-4.0
-5.8

-1-6
-0.4
-4.2
-4.3

-0. 1
-0.1
4.1
-2.0

-0.5
-2.5
-5
-3.0

-2.5
-6.0
-3.8
-14.3

112.9
59.9
51.7
73-4

112.1
62.0
52.8
73-8

Metalworkxng aachinery
S p e c i a l i n d u s t r y aachinery
General industrial aach.
O f f i c e and c o a p u t i n g a a c h .
Service xndustry aachxnery

354
355
356
357
358

3.8
2.0
4.6
2.8
2.8

110.5
101.2
109.5
203.4
95.3

112-9
100.1
108-7
204.4
94.2

114.2
101.9
106.2
207.9
95.5

114.7
99.9
108.7
195.6
98.7

115.3
103.3
109.1
200-7
101.2

115.5
99.7
107.0
200.6
102.0

1.1
1.8
-0.5
1.7
1.4

.5
-1.9
-5
-5.9

.5
3.4
-3
2.6
2.6

.2
-3.4
-1-9
-0
.7

2.3
-0.4
-1.5
-1.9
8.3

114.2
99.9
104.1
205.3
99.6

112.9
98.5
104.6
196.2
103-0

E L E C T R I C A L MACHINERY
Elect, distribution eguip.
Elect, indust. apparatus
Household appliances

36
361
362
363

25-0
1.5
4.3
2.7

123.8
100.1
80.6
93.8

123.3
101.9
75.7
92.2

124.1
98.6
78.0
89.0

127.0
99.8
79.0
94.0

126.9
95.7
80.8
95.1

127.2,
94.9
78.4
93.3

.7
-3.3
3.1
-3.5

2.3

-0. 1
-4.0
2.3
1-2

.2
-0.8
-2.9
-2.0

3.2
-6.9
3.6
1.2

127.6
94.4
77.1
94.0

127.3
94.8
79-0
91.6

L i g h t i n g and wiring prod.
R a d i o and TV s e t s
Coaaunication equipment
Electronic components

364
365
366 I
367

100.2
99.6
115.7
116.5
166.1 | 1b7.2
168.3
169.5

101.6
122.7
169.5
176.2

101.3
117.7
167.4
180.0

99.9
115.7
163.5
180.7

97.5
119-6
170.4
179-4

2.0
5.3
1.3
3-9

-0.4
-4.0
2.2

-1-3
-1.7
-2.3
-4

-2.2
-2.5
2.7
3.3
4.2 1
1-9
-0.8
5.8

95.3
117.3
169.6
183.3

95.3
123.2
176.8
177.7

TRANSPORTATION EQUIPMENT
Motor v e h i c l e s and p a r t s
A i r c r a f t and p a r t s
S h i p s and b o a t s

37
371
372
373

31.4
19.3
b.5
2.1

110.5
98.3
137.6
118.7

112.1
99.3
140.9
116.6

114.5
103.2
143.7
113.0

112-2
98.9
149.0
106.2

112.1
96.9
154.1
109.0

116.3
102.4
151.2|
114.4

2.2
3.9
2.0
-3.0

-2- 1
-4.1
3-7
-6. 1

.0
-2.1
3.4
2.7

3.7
3.7
5.6 |
3.1
-1.9
7.3
-1.8 i
5.0

115.4
101.1
150.6
113.8

116.3
102.3
151.5
112.1

INSTRUMENTS
C o p i e r s and r e l a t e d

eguip.

38
386

5.5
1.4

141.9
123.9

146.5
12e.9

149.2
136.9

149.5
134.0

150.4
135.5

148.9
130. 1

1.9
6.2

-2.1

.6
1.1

-1.0
-4.0

1.6
.9

149.3
129.0

14 5.7
127.6

MANUFACTURES

39

4. 1

100.1

99-6

102.4

102.9

100.9

102.2

2.8

-5

-1.9

1-3

2-7

102-2

102.5

740.7

104.2

104.0

104.7

102.9

103.3

104.2

.6

-1.7

.3

.9

.2

103.5

104.3

715.7

101.4

100.6

100.7

98.9

99-4

100.5

.1

-1.8

.6

1.1

-0.1

99.7

101.0

83.4

84.9

86.2

83.2

81.7

86.3

1.5

-3.5

-1.7

5.6

1.6

85.7

86.4

AND

PRODUCTS

Prxnary u o n f e r r o u s a e t a l s
Aluminum
Nonferrous foundries
FABRICATED METAL
Metal c a n s
Hardware
Structural metal
Fasteners
Metal stampings

MISCELLANEOUS

SUPPLEMENTARY
TOTAL,

LESS

PRODUCTS

products

2-3
-9
4.6
6.0

3,3
1.2
1.2
5.7

-%.2

-2.3
1.9
2.7

GROUPINGS

NUCLEAR

UTILITY S A L E S TO
INDUSTRIAL

333

75.4
70.4
69. 1

NONDEFENSE

INDUSTRY

GENERATION

70. 1

I

JI

J

Note- The electric power use data by industry, shown xa billions ot kilowatt hours for 1977, are froa the Census of Manufactures of
that year and froa other sources. They are provided for iaforaation and are aot used as weights to coapile the electric power use
indexes. All index aggregations, wxth their detaxxed components, are calculated froa the Kilowatt hour data collected in the
Federal Reserve survey of electric power use by industry. The electric pqwer total includes only those aajor divisions of
industries—ainiag and manufacturxng—for which data are collected xa this Federal Reserve survey. The total does not include gas
or electric utility kilowatt hour use. The supplementary grouping, "Total, less nondefense, nuclear*' is shown separately because
the nondefense nuclear aaterials series (part of SIC 2819) accounts for a disproportionally large part of total electric power ose.
Since the value added proportion for this industry is a considerably saalier part of total IP than xts share of total electric
power use, excluding this coaponent froa total power use facilitates coaparisons with total IP.




18

Table 9B—continued

ELECTRIC POWER USE BY INDUSTRIES
Not seasonally adjusted, 1977 = 100

__

Ifide xe£

Percentage
previous

1977
SIC
(bii.
c o d e _KMfiL_

Series
PETROLEUM PRODUCTS

1985

1985
__iii

1986
ill

__i&

__Q,3

.04

1986
._Q1

29

34.7

112.9

112.8

112.2

115.6

124.0

121.7

-0.5

RUBBER 6 P L A S T I C S PRODUCTS
Tires
Rubber p r o d u c t s , nee
P l a s t i c s p r o d u c t s , aec

30
301|
306
307

23.1
5.4
2.2
14.2

126.3
77.4
94.0
164.1

127.8
76.31
94.9
167.1

126.0
68.8
96.2
167.1

128.7
68.0
94.4
173.2

133.6
74. 1
97.9
177.5

131.8
69.31
96.91
176.8

-1.4
-9.9
1.4
-0.1

LEATHER AND PRODUCTS
Shoes

31
314

1.4
-7

88.4
79.4

8b.0
75.2

86.8
82. 1

83-5
76. 1

85.9
80.4

81.6
74.5

.9
9.1

C L A Y , G L A S S , AND STONE
Flat glass
P r e s s e d and i>lown g l a s s
Cement
Structural clay products
Concrete products

32
3211
322|
324
3251
327

31-4
1.3
6.8
10.2
1.5
3.6

104.9
101.0
102.4
98.3
100.0
109.4

1Q7.0
105.8
102.7
102.3
100.8
112.2

99.5
104.9
101.3
84.4
98.8
108.6

10b. 7
107.2
10b. 1
99.9
100-7
113-3

108.4
108.1
105.1
10b.9
102.2
113.9

106. 1
98.9,
103.7
102.71
106.2
113.4

PRIMARY METALS
B a s i c s t e e l and a i l l
prod.
I r o n and s t e e l f o u n d r i e s

33
331J
332

171.3
65.7
12.0

80.2
74.6
78.6

77.5
72.7
75.1

79.3
7 5-7
71-4

77.4
74.9
71-8

70.3
65.5
66.8

71.6
64.4
70-2

78.1
70.3j
2. 1

89.2
78.5
115.4

88.8
75.2
110.7

82.9
78-4
116.2

85.3
74.0
115.5

87.2
66.0
114.2

34
341J
342
344
345
346

26.4
2.2
2.3
.8
1.6
6.2

114.4
112.3
102.7
112.2
102.7
113.2

113.0
112.1
101.0
110.8
97.3
112.5

114-4
111.7
100.2
110.8
103.7
116.7

115.5
122.3
102.9
108.8
103.9
112.0

NONELECTRICAL MACHINERY
E n g i n e s and t u r b i n e s
Far a equipment
Construction equipment

35
351
352
353

28.6
2.4
2.1
5.1

115.1
70.2
57.6
86.4

113.7
64.6
52.1
86.1

112.9
63.1
54.4
81.0

Metalworkrng machinery
S p e c i a l i n d u s t r y Machinery
General i n d u s t r i a l aach.
O f f i c e and c o a p u t i n g a a c h .
Service industry
machinery

354
355
356
357
358

3.8
2.0
4.6
2.8
2.8

110.5
101.2
109.5
203.4
9 5-3

110. 1
98.8
106.3
202.6
91.3

E L E C T R I C A L MACHINERY
Elect, d i s t r i b u t i o n equip.
Elect, inctust. apparatus
Household a p p l i a n c e s

36
361
362
363

25.0
1.5
4.3
2.7

123.8
100. 1
80«b
93.8

L i g h t i n g and w i r i n g p r o d .
R a d i o a n d TV
set.s
Coaaunication equipment
E l e c t r o n i c components

364
365
36b
367

2.3
.9
4.-6
6.0

TRANSPORTATION EQUIPMENT
Motor v e h i c l e s and p a r t s
A i r c r a f t and p a r t s
S h i p s and b o a t s

37
371
372
373

INSTRUMENTS
C o p i e r s and r e l a t e d

equip.

38
J86

MANUFACTURES

39

Primary nonferrous metals
Aluminum
Nonierrous foundries
FABRICATED METAL
Metal cans
Hardware
Structural aetal
Fasteners
Metal staapings

MISCELLANEOUS

SUPPLEMENTARY
TOTAL,
UTILITY

LESS

PRODUCTS

products

NONDEFENSE

GENERATION




Indexes
year
ago
1985

i>2
3. 1

__QJ

L>4

ua

1986
NQy

PJ£

7.3

-1.9

7.9

116.5

123,3

2.2
-1.0
-1.9
3.7

3.8
8.9
3.7
2.4

-1.4
-6.5
-1-0
-0.3

3.1
-9.2
2.1
5.8

133.2
71.0
97.5
178.5

125.4
63.8
92.7
169.1

-3.7
-7.3

2.8

5-7

-5.1
-7.41

-5.2
-1.0

79.8
72-9

76.4
67.5

-2.1
-8.5
-1.3
-3.9
3.8
-0.4

-0.8
-6.5
1.0
.4
5.3
1.1

108.9
97.8
107.1
107.8
105.9
114.7

102.8
98.7
96.9
9 7.2
108. 1
110.5

7.2
2. 1
4.7
18.3
1-9
4-3

1.b
-9
-0.9
7.0
1.5
.5

2-2
4. 1
-4.9

-2.3
-1. 1
.b

-9.2
-12.5
-7.0

1.9,
-1.71
5.0

-7.7
-11-5
-6.5

72.0
66.0
70.3

72.1
63. 1
68.0

87.9
70.7
114.0,

-6.7
4.2
4.9

3.5
-5.b
-0.6

1.6
-10.9
-1.1

.9
7. 1
-0.2

-1.0
-to.O
2-9

89.6
68.5
113.b

90.3
73. 1
108-2

117.0
125.5
107.8
112.9
107.0
104.6

115.4
118.2
103.01
112.9
103. U
111.2

1.2
-0.3
-0.8
. 1
6.6
3.7

1-0
9.5
2.1
-1.8
.2
-4.0

1.3
2.7
4.7
3.7
3.0
-6.6

-1.4
-5.8
-4.4
• 0
-3.7
b.4

^. 1
5.5
2.0
1.9
5.9
-1. 1

J 14. 5
117. 1
102.7
113.5
103.3
109.2

11 1.8
115.5
96.8
108.0
9 4.4
110.4

113.4
62.3
50. 1
77.9

119.2
65.4
50.9
80.0

110.9
bO. 7
50.2
73.81

-0.7
-2.3
4.4
-5-9

.4
-1-3
-7-9
-3.8

5. 1
4.9
1.6
2-7

-6.9
-7. 1
-1.5
-7.8

-2.4
-6.0
-3.8
-14-3

110.7
59.9
49.9
72.6

105.8
59.6
50.6
72-2

114.^
101. 1
106.6
197.3
92.6

113.9
99.8
109.5
191.9
99-3

118.6
105.4
112.0
215.9
106.6

112.8
98.5
104.8
199. 1
98.9

3.9
2.3
.3
-2.6
1.4

-0.5
-1.3
2.7
-2.7
7.2

4. 1
5.6
2.3
12.5
7.4

-4.9
-6.5
-b-5
-7.8
-7.3

2.4
-0.3
-1-5
-1.7
8.3

111.5
99.3
103.9
204. 1
9 7.3

106.9
94.9
99.3
18 5 . 6
95.7

121.6
100.9
74.2
90.0

120.3
96.8
77.2
89.8

126.3
99.3
80.4
95.5

133.0
98.8
81.6
94.8

125.5
94.0
76.9
91.2

-1.1
-4.1
4.1
-0.3

5.0
2.0
4.2
6.4

5.3
-0.5
1.4
-0.8

-5.b
-4.8
-5.7
-3. a

3.2
-6.8
3.6
1.3

126.2
93.2
7*. 8
92.8

120.5
91. 1
74.7
82.3

100.2
115.7
166.1
168.3

99.b
113.7
164.3
168.4

101.0
116.4
158.4
1b7.3

101.2
116. 1
165-0
178.5

100.4
125.9
179-1
192.3

97.6
116.8
167.2
178.1

1.3
2.3
-3.6
-0.7

.3
-0.2
4.2
6.7

-0.8
8.4
8-b
7.7

-2.8
-7.2
-b. 6
-7.4

-2.1
2.7
1-8
5.8

9b. 9
114.9
169.2
180.4

9 1.4
115.6
162.4
169.8

31.4
19.3
6.5
2. 1

110.5
98.3
137.6
118.7

109.J
9b. 5
141.0
1I/.9

110.7
99.1
137.5
118-7

113.4
101.4
148. 1
104. 1

117.2
100.7
161.5
108.9

113.4
99.5
151.3
110.8

1.3
2.7
-2.5
5. 1

2.4
2-4
7. 7
-12-3

3.3
-U.8
9.1
4.6

-3.2
-1. 1
-b. 3
i.a

3.8
3.2
7.3
-1.9

113.4
99.5
152.4
111.4

108.8
94.7
146.8
110.4

5.5
1.4

141.9
123.9

143-1 i 143.1
127.7
132.8

148- 1
133-9

161.2
141. 1

145.6
129.0

.0
4.0

3.5
.9

8.9
5.4

-9.7
-8.6

1.7
1.0

144.4
127.3

137.8
124.6

4. 1

100.1 I

98.2

100.3

101.3

105.8

100.9

2.0

1-0

4.4

-4.0

2.7 i

100.6

97.0

740.7

104.2 i

102.8

102.8

104.0

105.2

103.0

.0

1.2

1.1

-2. 1

101.0

7 15. 7

101.4

100.3

101.4

99.0

-0.4

Lb

1. 1

-2.3

83.5

82.1

83.9

GROUPINGS

NUCLEAR

SALES TO INDUSTRY

INDUSTRIAL

333
3334
33b

-6.9
-0.8
-1.4
-17.5
-2-0
-3.2

change f r o a

quarter

70.1

83.4 |

99.1 1
82.6

98.7
87.7

19

6. 1

-4.8

-1.7

2.3

.2

102.3

-0. 1

9 8. 4

97. 1

1.6

82.5

85.5

Explanatory Note
mary table and in tables 1 and 2 are reviewed monthly. The seasonally
adjusted total index is aggregated from the seasonally adjusted market groupings of the index and may not precisely equal an aggregation of the seasonally adjusted industry groupings. A simple aggregation of the seasonally adjusted individual series within groupings
may not precisely equal the seasonally adjusted groupings, primarily because aggregates are adjusted independently.

Coverage. The index is a measure of industrial production expressed
as a percentage of output in a reference period (currently 1977). The
changes in the physical output of the nation's factories, mines, and
electric and gas utilities are represented by 252 individual series in
the index, covering 27 pertinent two-digit codes of the Standard Industrial Classification (SIC). For each individual series, index series
relatives are calculated first and are then aggregated in the following two ways: (1) market groupings, such as consumer goods, equipment, intermediate products, and materials, from which the
seasonally adjusted total index is derived (tables 1A and 1B), and
(2) industry groupings, such as SIC two-digit industries, and major
aggregates of these groupings, such as durable and nondurable
manufacturing, mining, and utilities (tables 2A and 2B).

Weights. The total index and the various groupings of the component series are currently aggregated on the basis of 1977 value-added
weights, which are shown in the first column of the index tables under the heading proportions. Value-added weights for 1972 are used
for the 1972-77 period, while 1967 weights are used for the 1967-72
period. The weight years for earlier periods after World War II are
1963,1958,1954, and 1947. The indexes for the various periods are
linked to provide the continuous final results expessed in relation
to the 1977 comparison year taken as 100. The gross-value-weighted
product series are expressed in terms of 1982 dollars.

Market groupings. For purposes of analysis the individual industrial
output series are grouped into materials, intermediate products, and
final products; together, the latter two form the products category.
Materials are industrial output requiring further processing within
industry; intermediate products are expected to become inputs in
nonindustrial sectors such as construction, farming, and services;
and final products are assumed to enter final use as items of private consumption, government use, or capital formation. In the index,
final products are subdivided into consumer goods and equipment.

Formula. The symbolic expression for the total index (I) is
/f = x

Timing. A first estimate of output for a month is published about the
15th of the following month. This estimate may be revised in each
of the next three months as new data become available. After the
fourth month, indexes are not revised further until the time of an
annual revision or a benchmark revision. The last three benchmark
revisions were published in 1971,1976, and 1985. Such revisons are
derived mainly from the quinquennial Census of Manufactures, the
quinquennial Census of Mineral Industries, and the Annual Survey
of Manufactures, all prepared by the Bureau of the Census, and the
Minerals Yearbook of the Bureau of Mines.

. loA . 100
\q77J

=

^iEiL .

100j

IQ77P77

where q is quantity, p is Census value added per unit of output, t
represents the fth period, and 77 denotes base-year values.
Reliability. The median of the revisions in total industrial production,
without regard to sign, between the 'irst and fourth estimates is 0.3
percent: that is, in about half of the cases the absolute value of the
revision from the first to the fourth estimate was less than 0.3 percent. (This calculation used data for the period from January 1972
to January 1985.) Over the same period, positive changes in the first
estimate were confirmed in the fourth estimate (available three
months later) about 94 percent of the time. Negative changes in the
first estimate were confirmed in the fourth estimate about 85 percent of the time. Thus the likelihood is high that the first estimate
for a month will indicate the direction of change in the total index
in a reliable manner. However, the magnitude of change as first estimated typically is revised during the next three months; these revisions are based on revised and more complete data sources. The
estimates for the higher aggregates generally are considered more
reliable than the estimates for their individual components. Revisions
to the components often offset each other and thereby reduce the
size of revisions to the aggregates.

Source data. The indexes of industrial production are constructed
from monthly data of two types: (1) directly measured output in physical units; and (2) estimates of output derived from data on input,
expressed in physical units, adjusted by conversion factors that relate these inputs to physical output. The data on directly measured
physical product (pounds, yards, barrels, and the like) are obtained
from reports of the Bureau of the Census, the Bureau of Mines, other
government agencies, and trade associations. When suitable monthly
data on physical product are unavailable, estimates of physical output based on input data (kilowatt hours, production-worker hours)
are used. The hours worked by production workers are collected in
the monthly establishment survey of the Bureau of Labor Statistics,
while data on the kilowatt hours used in industry are collected from
electric utilities by the Federal Reserve Banks. The estimates of input
conversion are based mainly on historical relationships that were
derived from censuses and annual surveys and, when appropriate,
on more recent cyclical, technological and statistical developments.
Users of the index should bear in mind that, especially for the first
and second estimates of a given month's indexes, the available
source data are limited and are subject to change in the months fol' lowing their initial receipt as well as in benchmark revisions.

Rounding. Changes shown for index components may not aggregate
to changes for totals because of independent rounding. Percentage
changes are calculated from indexes expressed in more digits following the decimal point than shown in their rounded form in the
present release. Therefore, percentage changes calculated from the
rounded indexes may not entirely coincide with the percentage
changes calculated from unrounded indexes.
Literature. The Handbook of the Industrial Production Index contains
a more detailed description of the index and the procedures used
in compiling it, plus a history of its development, a glossary of terms,
and a bibliography. The Handbook is scheduled to be published in
late 1986. Selected data on industrial production are also published
monthly in the Financial and Business Statistics section of the Federal Reserve Bulletin.

Seasonal adjustment. Individual series are seasonally adjusted by
the X-11 Method II of the Bureau of the Census with the intervention
analysis technique applied to the series. The seasonal factors currently being used are based on data through 1985. The individual
series and the major aggregate series are seasonally adjusted independently, and the factors for the aggregate series in the sum-




I^TTPTA
\Lq77p77J

20