Full text of G.12.3 Industrial Production : March 15, 1983
The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.
.vpj^^ FEDERAL RESERVE °$Au£&yy Industrial Production For release at 9:30 a.m. March 15, 1983 G.12.3 Industrial production increased 0.3 percent in February after an upward revised gain of 1.3 percent in January. In February, large increases again occurred in the output of motor vehicles and durable materials, particularly steel. At 137.3 percent of the 1967 average, industrial output in February was nearly 2 percent above its low in November 1982 but still about 11 percent below the high in July 1981. Market Groupings Production of consumer goods increased one half percent in February. Automotive output rose for the third consecutive month; home goods output declined somewhat after a large January advance; total nondurable consumer goods output remained about unchanged. Autos were assembled at an annual rate of 6.3 million units, up substantially from the January rate of 5.6 million units and somewhat above recent sales levels; industry assembly schedules indicate some decrease for March. Output of business equipment declined again in February; the 1.2 percent decrease was due mainly to reduced oil and gas well drilling activity. Defense and space equipment production continued to rise. Output of construction supplies advanced moderately after a sharp gain in January. Materials production increased 0.5 percent in February. Output of durable materials rose 1.1 percent as output of basic metals and parts for consumer durables advanced sharply. Production of nondurable materials and total energy materials was essentially unchanged. INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: MAJOR MARKET GROUPINGS (Seasonally Adjusted) Index, 1967=100X 1 I Item 1 1 Jan. '83|Feb. * 831 i Monthly percent chan ge Feb. from year ago, 1 1 1 1 Oct. | Nov. |Dec. I Jan. I Feb. percent 136.9 137.3 -1.2 -.6 .2 1.3 .3 -3.9 I Products, total 140.9 141.1 -1.1 -.2 .7 .6 .1 -2.4 I I | | | | Final Products Consumer Goods Durable Nondurable Business Equipment Defense and Space 140.1 143.7 131.4 148.6 146.7 115.9 140.2 144.4 134.0 148.6 145.0 116.3 -.9 -.8 -.3 -.6 -1.5 .2 .1 .5 2.0 .0 -1.1 -1.2 -15.5 2.2 -.4 -.5 1.5 .4 1.1 4.1 .1 -2.7 -3.7 .9 .6 1.3 .4 1.3 1.2 .8 .3 9.2 I I 143.7 Intermediate Products Construction Supplies 125.6 144.4 126.2 -1.5 -2.4 .1 .7 .1 -.5 1.3 2.3 .5 .5 -1.3 -1.0 130.8 131.5 -1.5 -1.2 -.5 2.3 .5 -6.3 I Total I Materials Note: Latest -2.3 month estimated, prior month preliminary. 1.8 6.4 .3 Industry Groupings Manufacturing output increased 0.6 percent in February. Production in durable manufacturing rose 1.1 percent due largely to increases in the output of primary metals and transportation equipment. Output of nondurable manufactures edged down as petroleum products declined sharply while most other industries showed little change. Mining activity was reduced markedly with coal mining and oil and gas extraction registering particularly sharp decreases. Output of utilities increased in February following a January decline that was associated with milder weather. INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: MAJOR INDUSTRY GROUPINGS (Seasonally Adjusted) ~ Item T f I n d e x , 1967=100 T |J an. 1 '83|Feb. 1 '83| Monthly p e r c e n t 1 O c t . | Nov.l Dec. change Jan.| 1 Feb. Feb. from year ago, percent Manufacturing Durable Nondurable 136.3 122.1 156.9 137.1 123.A 156.8 -1.5 -2.6 -.3 -.7 -.8 -.6 .4 .4 .3 1.3 1.9 .7 .6 1.1 -.1 -2.7 -4.6 -.6 Mining Utilities 121.2 162.4 116.2 164.5 1.0 .2 .8 -.7 1.6 -1.3 2.1 -1.3 -4.1 1.3 -18.4 -3.5 Note: Latest month estimated, prior month preliminary. . • • < & % & • • FEDERAL RESERVE Industrial Production INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION SEASONALLY ADJUSTED, RATIO SCALE, FEBRUARY DATA 1967=100 190 CONSUMER GOODS: BUSINESS SUPPLIES 170 / ^ '^,\ l \ NONDURABLE V 150 /' \i A ' DURABLE \'/ 130 \' CONSTRUCTION SUPPLIES \ \ J \ ^ 110 ANNUAL RATE, MILLIONS OF UNITS 1969-70=100 180 AUTOS: 140 / ^ 18 ___ / 1967=100 A ^ ^ 10 8 — MANUFACTURING: RIGHT SCALE 14 STOCKS ^ ^ - ^ l I S V NONDURABLE v ^ ^ "\ S 4 30 3 1977 1979 AUTOS: SALES AND STOCKS 1981 INCLUDE IMPORTS 1983 DURABLE , 170 150 s'~\ S j 40 — 190 V . ^ \ '. 130 \.' 110 1977 1979 1981 1983 Table 1A INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: MARKET GROUPINGS Seasonally adjusted, 1967=100 1967 PROPCRTION HA JOB MARKET GROUPINGS 1982 FEB. APRs_ HAY JUNE_ JULY,. AUG. SEP. OCT. NOV i _ DEC. JA!U_ FEB. 141.7 140-2 139.2 138.8 138.4 137.3 135.7 134-9 135.2 136.9 137.3 144.6 144.1 141.8 147-3 143.7 143.3 141.5 145.9 142-9 142.6 142.1 143.4 142-3 142.2 143.6 140.4 142-1 142.1 144-8 138.4 142.6 142.5 145.8 138.0 142.0 141.2 144.1 137.3 140.8 140.0 143.4 135.2 139.3 138.7 142.2 134.0 139.0 138.3 141.3 134.2 140.0 139.5 142. 1 135.9 140.9 140. 1 143.7 135.2 141.1 140.2 144.4 134.3 12.89 143.3 146.3 39.29 133.7 140.4 145.2 138.5 143.7 136.2 142.6 134.3 141.9 133.5 142.8 133.0 144.7 132.8 143.7 132.0 141.6 130-0 141.8 128.4 141.9 127.8 143.7 130.8 144.4 131.5 7.89 129.3 125.9 2.83 129.5 117,5 2.03 99.0 82-0 1.90 86.6 70.5 .80 206.9 207.8 128.1 125.0 93.6 79.8 204.5 130.7 129.9 100.5 87.2 204.6 132-6 138.9 111.8 96.1 207.6 134.6 143.0 117.1 101.9 208.6 137.3 149.7 127.7 114.6 205.4 132.9 135.5 107.1 93.3 207.6 131.3 135.5 105.8 94.3 210.7 126-5 123.6 89.6 79.5 210.0 124.6 120.7 86.9 77.7 206.6 126.2 128.7 | 99.0 87.9 204.0 131.4 134.0 134.3 143.2 107.0 119.2 97.1 107.2 203.5 204.0 5.06 1.40 1.33 1.07 2.59 130.6 103.5 104- 1 147.8 138. 1 129.9 97.0 97.4 151.3 138.9 131.1 102.7 103.1 151.8 138.0 129.1 100.5 101.5 145.9 137.7 129.9 106.4 108.8 149.0 134.9 130.4 102.7 106.1 151.4 136.7 131.4 104.5 108.6 152.5 137.2 128.9 99.4 104.1 153.3 134.9 128.1 106. 1 110.5 151.9 130.1 126.8 104.8 108.4 151.4 128.6 124.9 94.5 98.6 152.2 130.1 129.7 110.1 113.5 151.2 131.5 130.6 19.79 148.0 148. 1 4.29 15.50 159.0 159.2 8.33 149.7 151. 1 146.8 146.6 147.9 148.8 149.1 148.6 148.2 148.5 147.9 148.5 148.6 148.6 158.1 149.6 158.3 148.1 159.0 149.9 159.9 150.9 159.7 149.9 159.4 149.6 158.8 148.6 159.1 150.2 158.1 149.0 158.8 149.9 158.9 159.0 60.71 | 47.82 27.68 20.14 INTERUEDIATE PRODUCTS MATERIALS 1983 MAR. 138.7 100.00 138.6 142.9 TOTAL INDEX PRODUCTS, TOTAL FINAL PRODUCTS CONSUMER GOODS EQUIPMENT 1982 AVG. 141-8 141.5 142.6 139.8 CONSUMER GOODS DURABLE CONSUMER GOODS AUTOMOTIVE PRODUCTS AUTOS & UTILITY VEHICLES AUTOS, TOTAL AUTO PARTS 6 ALLIED GOODS HOME GOODS APPLIANCES, AIR COND & TV APPLIANCES AND TV CARPETING AND FURNITURE MISC. HOME GOODS NONDURABLE CONSUMER GOODS CLOTHING CONSUMER STAPLES CONSUilEB FOODS & TOBACCO 128.9 108.4 169.7 219.9 127.7 150.2 170.8 168.7 218.2 130.2 147.2 171.6 168.0 217.8 127.8 147.6 170.4 170.0 218.3 128.7 151.9 174.5 169.5 216.6 126.7 153.6 173.7 170.4 219.8 126.7 152.8 171.1 171.2 170.8 222.3 222-4 128. 1 129-4 151.4 149.3 167.7 169.7 170.7 221.7 128.2 150-6 169.5 169.5 220.0 125.3 151.1 169.1 168.7 218.9 125.1 150.2 171.5 169-2 220.9 127.4 148.0 169.3 169.2 223.0 129.2 144.4 169.0 157.9 135.0 214.2 107.2 130.0 171.6 155-9 274.9 116.8 141.1 169.0 151.2 256.9 116.3 139.0 164.9 145.9 242.2 114.0 134.8 159.9 138.9 224.4 109.7 131.5 156.7 134.0 209.0 107-5 129-9 154.9 131-3 200.4 106.0 129.6 153.9 128.4 190.8 104.4 130.1 150.5 123-8 182-1 101-6 124.7 147.1 118.3 169.3 98.0 121.0 146.4 117.2 165.7 97.5 121.0 148.3 118.3 172.7 97.0 120.7 146.7 117.9 173.3 96.7 118.9 145.0 113.9 156.7 95.9 119.0 5-86 184-4 189.9 3.26 253.5 256.4 1.93 103,8 110.4 .67 80.6 95-1 189.5 257.8 110.5 84.9 186.9 253.1 110.9 83.5 184. 1 183-0 247.7 247.5 110.9 108.3 85-8 84.1 182.2 248.8 106.3 76.9 183.3 253.5 102.0 75.8 181.4 254.0 95.5 76.1 180.5 253.5 93.2 76.8 180.2 254.8 92.3 70.7 182.9 258.6 95.2 66.8 180. 1 181.0 256.0 255.5 94.4 91.1 67.0 7.51 107.0 107.2 107.7 107.6 109.5 109.5 109.5 111.9 113.6 115.0 115.9 116.3 125.6 164.6 184.5 123.6 163.7 183.5 122.2 162.8 180.3 123.1 160.6 178.3 124.1 161.4 179.8 127.1 162.1 178.1 125.5 161.8 179.2 122.5 160.5 180.4 123.4 160.1 182-4 122.8 160.9 183.5 125.6 161.7 183.1 126.2 7.17 2.631 1.92 2.62 1.45 NONFOOD STAPLES CONSUMER CHEMICAL PROD CONSUMER PAPER PRODUCTS CONSUMER ENERGY PROD RESIDENTIAL UTILITIES 129.2 102.6 104.6 149.8 135.1 EQUIPMENT 12.63 6.77 1.44 3.85 1.47 BUSINESS EQUIPMENT INDUSTRIAL EQUIPMENT BUILDING AND MINING EQUIP MANUFACTURING EQUIPMENT POWER EQUIPMENT COM'L, TRANSIT, FARM EQ COMMERCIAL EQUIPMENT TRANSIT EQUIPMENT FARM EQUIPMENT DEFENSE AND SPACE EQUIPMENT 109.4 106.5 INTERMEDIATE PRODUCTS 6.42 124.3 127.5 6.47 162.2 165.1 1.14 181.2 184. 1 CONSTRUCTION SUPPLIES BUSINESS SUPPLIES COMMERCIAL ENERGY PRODUCTS MATERIALS DURABLE GCOCS MATERIALS DURABLE CONSUMER PARTS EQUIPMENT PARTS DURABLE MATERIALS NEC BASIC METAL MATERIALS 20.35 125.0 132.4 4.58 95.3 92.2 5-44 166.8 180.1 10.34 116.1 125.1 5.57 79.8 94.3 130.7 94.1 177.5 122.2 88.6 128.1 94.7 173.9 118.8 82-3 126.6 98.9 170.0 116-1 79.4 126.6 103- 1 168-3 115.1 77.4 126.0 103.8 166.1 114.8 75.7 125. 1 123.0 101.0 97.1 164. 1 158.3 115.4 115.8 76.1 77.7 118-5 91.4 155.4 111.1 73-0 116-4 90.0 155.1 107.7 69. 1 116.2 91.1 155.0 106.8 67.9 120.5 94.8 157.1 112.7 75,8 121.8 97.1 157.6 114.0 NONDURABLE GOODS MATERIALS TEXTILE, PAPER, 6 CflEM MAT TEXTILE MATERIALS PAPER MATERIALS CHEMICAL MATERIALS 10.47 7.62 1.85 1.62 4.15 157.5 161.1 102.2 145.6 193.5 164.2 167.9 102.2 148.5 204-9 162.0 166.6 104.5 146.7 202.2 160.3 164.4 104.5 143.5 199.3 156.6 160.4 101-8 141.8 193.9 153-5 156.7 99. 1 140-7 188-7 152.3 155.3 99.6 142. 1 185.4 154.5 157.7 103-2 146.6 186.5 158.5 162-2 103-3 148-9 193-7 158.2 161.5 104.4 148.9 192.0 157.3 161.0 102.5 149.7 191.6 155.9 160.4 102.1 144.8 192.6 157,7 161.6 100.6 147-6 194.4 157.9 162.1 1.70 1.14 8-48 4.65 3.82 161.4 127.9 125.2 116.0 136.3 166.7 136.0 130.3 119.5 143.4 161.3 132.4 128.2 119.2 139.1 159.8 134.2 125.8 117.3 136-1 157.2 130.6 125-4 116.9 135-7 158.5 124.8 125.4 116.6 136.0 158.1 123.4 126.0 117.2 136.7 162.8 120.1 124.5 113.8 137.4 167.3 121-1 121-0 111.1 133.0 164.9 125.5 122.6 114.4 132.6 160.8 127.4 121-4 113-7 130.8 155.2 127.2 121.0 114.0 129.4 159.5 128.4 122.4 116.2 130-0 119.5 120.1 135.7 J138.9 159.6 1158.4 125.2 1130.3 118.9 137.6 158.8 128.2 118.9 136.7 161.5 125-8 119.5 136.5 161.7 125.4 120.2 136.2 160.5 125.4 121.4 136.4 160.0 126.0 121.3 134.8 158.0 124.5 120.1 132-7 159.3 121,0 119.9 134. 1 160.0 122.6 119.6 133.3 160.0 121.4 118.5 132.6 158.7 121.0 121.4 132-8 156.2 122.4 CONTAINERS, NONDURABLE NONDURABLE MATERIALS NEC ENERGY MATERIALS PRIMARY ENERGY CONVERTED FUEL MATERIALS 122.4 SUPPLEMENTARY GROUPS 9.35 12.23 3.76 8.48 HOME GOODS AND CLOTHING ENERGY, TOTAL PRODUCTS MATERIALS J DATA FOR THE CURRENT MONTH ARE ESTIMATED. DATA FOR THE PRECEDING MONTH ARE PRELIMINARY, 4 120.7 132.6 122.4 Table 1B INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: MARKET GROUPINGS Not seasonally adjusted, 1967=100 19671 MAJOR MARKET GROUPINGS PRO-I 1982 PCfi-J AVG. TIONj j PHODOCTS, TOTAL FINAL PRODUCTS CONSUMER GOODS EQUIPMENT MAR. . APR. JULY_ AUG. SEP. OCT. NOV.._ DEC. J*H. FEB. __MI_ __il&£5_ 142.0 139.4 138.5 141.8 136.2 140.5 141.2 138.5 134.8 131.3 133.0 137.3 143.6 143.8 140.9 147.7 143.0 143.0 141.0 145.7 140.8 140.5 140.2 140.9 140.7 140-3 141.1 139.1 145.4 145.2 148.2 141.0 141.4 140.8 143.3 137.4 145.6 144.6 149.4 137.9 146.7 145.8 151.0 138.6 143.1 142.5 147.7 135.4 138.9 138.2 140.5 135.1 135.0 134.61 134.3| 135.1 135.6 135.3 137.7 131.9 140.1 139.7 143.6 134.4 12.89 143.3 143.2 39.29 133.7 141.5 143.2 140.3 142-1 137.2 142.2 135.3 146.3 136.3 143.5 128.3 149.6 132.5 150.1 132.6 145.3 131.4 141.5 128.5 136.6 125.5 136.8 128.9 141.7 132.9 7.89 129.3 127.9 2.83 129.5 121.5 2.03 99.0 85.5 1.90 86.6 73.2 .80 206.9 212.9 131.6 133.1 104.7 90.0 205.4 134.2 138.0 112-6 98-2 202-4 134.8 145.9 123.9 108.6 201.7 139.6 151.9 131.3 114.7 204.4 126.0 129.8 104-8 92.1 193.1 128.5 120.2 84.2 72.6 211.6 134.0 131.7 97.1 85.2 219.6 134.0 133.0 99. 1 87-8 219.3 126.4 124.2 91.3 82.3 207.7 118.7 117.1 83.2 74.1 203.0 126.0 129.9 102.5 92.8 199.5 136.4 147.0 123.1 110.2 207.7 129.2 131.5 102.6 109.5 104.6 109.2 149.8 1151.2 135.1 135.4 130.8 102.4 100.2 154.4 136.5 132.0 111.7 109.9 150.6 135.4 128.6 103.6 103.0 143.4 136.0 132.7 110.3 112-4 149.4 138.0 123.9 93.7 97. 1 135.8 135.4 133.1 101.5 106.5 153.6 141.8 135.2 103.9 109.4 161.8 141.2 134.6 116-1 121.5 159.5 134.3 127.7 101.6 105.6 155.6 130.3 119.7 79.9 | 83.5 150.6 128.5 123.9 107.1 110.0 145.2 124.1 130.4 114.4 19.79 148.0 146.0 144.7 4-29 15.50 159.0 155.8 154.1 8.33 149.7 I 146.5 146.6 142.5 143.6 151.7 150.2 157.8 157.8 153.2 146.1 140.5 142.4 146.4 152.3 144.4 153-2 146.8 162- 1 153.4 163.6 148.8 169.8 158.3 169.3 159.6 163-9 158.4 156-6 150.2 153.0 142.0 153.2 155.2 169-7 166.6 162.7 219.9 I207.0 208.4 127-7 |126.1 123.2 145.9 150.2 1155.8 170.8 I 187.4 169.8 161.5 209.6 124.0 140.6 158.5 160.6 211.5 123.2 137.0 146.8 172.2 230.8 127.7 146.1 158.0 180.8 236.9 134.2 158.6 180.5 183.3 235.9 141.4 161.1 189.2 180.6 238.5 137.0 154.3 175.6 170.3 229.0 128.8 141.8 154.6 164.0 216.0 123.7 141.5 153.5 165.7 210.9 121.6 152.7 173.2 166.7 207.4 121-7 159.0 167.0 168.5 151-2 254.8 117.0 138.9 161.5 143.8 238.1 112.6 132.8 157.8 136.8 219.9 107.9 130.6 160.2 135.4 208.2 108.9 133.3 154.7 129.4 197.5 104.4 127.9 155.3 128-7 191.4 104.9 129.5 155.9 127.0 186.7 104.4 127.8 149.5 120-1 170.5 99.7 123.8 147.1 118.7 168.6 98.4 122.9 145.6 117.6 175.9 94.9 119.8 141.7 114.9 169.7 93.8 116.2 145.0 114.9 157.5 97.6 118.0 5.86 184.4 190.0 3.26 253.5 1252.0 1.93 103.8 1115.3 .67 80.6 102.8 188.4 250.9 117.1 90.0 181.9 243.8 110.9 85.3 182.1 242.7 112.6 87.0 188.9 255-4 111.2 88.7 183.9 258.0 98.4 69.5 186.0 264.9 94.1 66.9 189.3 268.0 94.4 80.0 183.4 257.1 94-9 80.3 180.0 254.9 92.8 66.6 177.9 250.7 94.3 64.1 172.7 243.7 90.0 65.7 179.8 250.9 97.2 7.51 109.4 1106-7 107.5 106.2 107.8 108.7 108.3 108.7 109.6 111.8 114.7 117.4 115.6 116.5 6.42 124-3 I 125.8 125.1 6.47 | 162.21160.4 161.2 1.14 181-2 I 180.8 176.9 125.1 159.0 170.0 124.4 159.7 169.7 128.0 164.4 181.9 122.7 164.2 193.5 127.7 171.2 197.1 128.9 171.1 192.6 125.9 164.5 180. 1 123.9 158.9 172.9 117.1 155.9 176.3 118.7 154.7 183.1 124.8 132.5 95.4 177.9 125.0 94.0 129.5 95.8 172.7 121-7 87.8 128.9 100.8 170.9 119.3 85.1 129.5 104.3 169.6 11.9.6 81-4 121.7 97.9 162.2 110.9 70.7 123.4 97.6 160.6 115.2 72.6 124.2 96.6 159.8 117.6 76.6 120.4 93.3 157.3 112.9 72.1 116.8 91.5 156.7 107.1 65.9 114.9 92.6 158.0 102.0 62.9 117. 1 93.4 156.0 107.1 74.9 122. 1 97.7 157.8 114.1 165.1 169.9 104.6 155.1 204.8 162.4 167.2 106.0 147.8 202.2 157.2 161.6 105.0 144.5 193.6 157.8 161.7 104.8 147-4 192.7 144.3 147.3 85.6 130.5 181.5 155.4 159.4 158.7 162.7 108.6 106-5 149. 1 146.2 184.8 194.2 161.4 163.1 111.4 150.1 191.3 158.2 161.4 102.6 150.5 191.9 149.5 154. 1 94.0 130.0 190.4 154.1 157.6 96.9 146.7 189.0 160.3 164.5 1.70 161.4 170.4 1.14 127.9 J134.9 8.48 125.2 I 132-6 4.65|116.0 1 120.3 3.82 136-3 I 148.2 166.5 131.1 128.7 120.3 139.2 162.7 130.0 124.4 118.5 131.4 157.6 127.3 123.5 118.0 130.2 165.0 120.8 125-8 118.3 134.9 152.3 111.8 124.4 113.2 138.1 168.9 113.5 126.3 113.8 141.3 172.3 118-0 120-0 111.6 130.3 170.7 136.5 120.7 113.9 128.8 157.2 138.7 119.7 113.2 127.6 137.9 136.1 121.2 112.8 131.2 153.1 131-9 126.0 115.8 138.4 I 9.35 119.5 I 122.0 I 12.23 J135.7 I 142.1 I 3.76 1159.6 1163-4 ! 8.48 1125.2 132.6 121.5 136.8 155.3 128.7 120.6 132.1 149.6 124.4 119.5 130.7 146-9 123.5 124.1 135.4 157.0 125.8 113.7 138.2 169.2 124.4 124.5 140.3 172.0 126.3 126.6 134.1 165.9 120.0 125.3 130.7 153.4 120.7 118.6 129.3 151.0 119.7 108.6 133.0 159.9 121.2 114.4 138.4 166.3 126.0 100-00 138.6 142.7 TOTAL INDEX 1983 1982 FEB. 60.71 141.8 | 47.82J 141.5 27.68| 142.6 20.14 139.8 INTERMEDIATE PRODUCTS MATERIALS CONSUHEITGOODS" DURABLE CONSUMER GOODS AUTOMOTIVE PRODUCTS AUTOS & UTILITY VEHICLES AUTOS, TOTAL AUTO PARTS & ALLIED GOODS 5.06 1.40 1.33 1.07 2.59 HOME GOODS APPLIANCES, AIR COND & TV APPLIANCES AND TV CARPETING AND FURNITURE MISC. HOME GOODS NONDURABLE CONSUMER GOODS CLOTHING CONSUMER STAPLES CONSUMER FOODS 6 TOBACCO NONFOOD STAPLES CONSUMER CHEMICAL PROD I CONSUMER PAPER PRODUCTS | CONSUMER ENERGY PROD } RESIDENTIAL UTILITIES | 7.17 2.63 1.92 2.62 1.45 128.7 EQUIPHENT BUSINESS EQUIPHENT 12.63 157.9 172.2 6.77 135.0 1156.8 INDUSTRIAL EQUIPMENT BUILDING AND MINING EQUIP I 1.44 214.2 I 276.3 MANUFACTURING EQUIPMENT | 3.85 107.2 1118.7 POHER EQUIPMENT I 1.47 130.0 I 139. 1 COM'L, TRANSIT, FARM EQ COMMERCIAL EQUIPMENT TRANSIT EQUIPMENT FARM EQUIPMENT | DEFENSE AND SPACE EQUIPMENT INTERMEDIATE PRODUCTS CONSTRUCTION SUPPLIES I BUSINESS SUPPLIES 1 COMMERCIAL ENERGY PRODUCTS MATERIALS DURABLE GOODS MATERIALS DURABLE CONSUMER PARTS EQUIPMENT PARTS DURABLE MATERIALS NEC BASIC METAL MATERIALS 20.35 125-0 132.3 4.58 95-3 I 92.6 I 5.44 166.8 1179-9 I 10.34 116.1 1124.8 5.57 79.8 I 95.3 NONDURABLE GOODS MATERIALS TEXTILE, PAPER, 6 CHEM MAT TEXTILE MATERIALS PAPER MATERIALS CHEMICAL MATERIALS CONTAINERS, NONDURABLE NONDURABLE MATERIALS NEC ENERGY MATERIALS PRIMARY ENERGY CONVERTED FUEL MATERIALS 10.47 7.62 1.85 1-62 4.15 | | 157.5 166.5 161.1 1170.3 102.2 103.2 145.6 1153.7 193.5 206.9 125.0 SUPPLEMENTARY GROUPS HOME GOODS AND CLOTHING ENERGY, TOTAL PRODUCTS MATERIALS DATA FOR THE CURRENT MONTH ARE ESTIMATED. DATA FOR THE PRECEDING HONTH ARE PRELIMINARY. 5 123.2 136.1 125.0 Table 2A INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDUSTRY GROUPINGS Seasonally adjusted, 1967=100 MAJOR INDUSTRY GROUPINGS SIC CODE 1967 PROPORTION 1982 AVG. 1982 ._FEBi_ 1983 MAR. APR. MAY JUNE_ JULY_ AUG. SEP. u OCT. NOV. DEC. JAM. FEB. HIKING AND UTILITIES MINING UTILITIES 12.05 146.3 155.6 6.36 126.2 142.4 5.69 168.8 170.4 153.1 138.1 170.0 151.6 134. 1 171.0 148.8 128.9 170.9 145.2 123.5 169.4 142-6 120.1 167.7 141.3 116.9 168.5 139.7 114.7 167.5 140.4 115.9 167.8 140.4 116.8 166.7 140.3 118.7 164.5 140.7 121.2 162.4 139.0 116.2 164.5 HANUFACTUB1NG NCNDUBABLE DURABLE 87.95 137.6 140-9 35.97 156,2 157.8 51-98 124.7 129.3 140.1 157.3 128.2 138.7 156.1 126-7 137.9 155.0 126.1 137.7 155.3 125.5 138. 1 155.7 125.9 138.0 156-9 124.9 137.1 156.7 123.5 135.0 156.2 120.3 134.0 155.3 119.3 134.5 155.8 119.8 136.3 156.9 122.1 137.1 156.8 123.4 HINiNG METAL MINING 10 11, 12 COAL OIL AND GAS EXTRACTION 13 14 STONE AND EAPTH MINERALS .51 82.3 120-8 .69 142.7 156.0 4.40 131.1 146.6 .75 112.1 120.5 109.9 155.6 141.4 121-6 108.8 146.2 137.7 119.6 90.0 149.2 132.7 114.6 71.8 144.4 129.1 106.6 58.1 140-3 127.0 103.8 53.4 135.8 123.3 105.7 55.4 127.9 121-0 106.3 63.1 143.2 119.1 108.5 70.4 134.1 120.3 111.9 74.0 78.1 129.7 144.8 123.3 | 124.0 111-9 112.7 NONDURABLE MANUFACTURES FOODS 20 TOBACCO PRODUCTS 21 TEXTILE MILL PRODUCTS 22 APPAREL PROEUCTS 23 PAPER AND PRODUCTS 26 8.75 ,67 2.68 3.31 3.21 151.1 118.0 124.6 108.7 150.8 151.7 126.7 125.8 108.3 151.5 150.8 126.7 126-0 108.0 150.6 149.7 116. 1 126.3 105.9 149.8 150.5 118.6 123.5 151.0 123.6 123.7 151.0 121.4 124.3 150.7 120.6 125.9 149.0 113.3 126.1 151.5 110.6 125.9 152,0 113.0 123,1 152.4 109.9 122.6 120.0 146.5 146.8 147.0 152.5 154-3 155.0 154.5 151. 1 156. 1 155.3 27 28 29 30 31 4.72 7.74 1.79 2,24 .86 144.2 196.1 121.8 254-7 60.9 146.4 201.3 119.5 251.8 64.0 145.9 200.3 121.3 253.4 61-2 144.2 198.6 120.8 255.1 60.6 143.8 193.6 122.2 257.0 61.1 142.6 193.2 124.3 258.9 62.3 143.9 194.1 124.7 256.8 62.9 145.3 195.6 121.4 261.1 60.8 144.3 196.4 122.6 262-0 60.9 142.0 194.1 123.8 256.3 59.5 141.7 192.8 120.0 250.2 57.7 144.2 196.0 119.0 249.7 56.0 146.0 197.2 118.6 250.6 59.5 145.8 DURABLE MANUFACTURES ORDNANCE, PVT 5 GOVT 19,91 LUMBER AND PRODUCTS 24 FURNITURE AND FIXTURES 25 CLAY, GLASS, STONE PROD 32 3-64 86.9 83.8 1.64 112.6 104.9 1.37 151.9 148.4 2.74 128.2 135.0 83-8 103-5 150.2 131.5 85.2 106.2 151.8 127.0 86.3 110.6 151.1 125.0 86.5 112.2 152.5 126.1 87.1 116.9 154.5 126.9 86.5 120.3 156.7 128.8 86.9 119.9 155.7 130-4 89.5 117.2 154.3 128.1 91.9 119.1 152.4 127.3 92.5 121.4 153.0 125.4 93.3 125-0 153.4 127.8 93.1 33 PRIMARY METALS IRON AND STEEL 331,2 FABRICATED METAL PROD 34 MONELECTRICAL MACHINERY 35 ELECTRICAL MACHINERY 36 6.57 75-2 88.5 4.21 61.7 78.5 5.93 114.8 121-4 9.15 149.0 160,0 8.05 169.3 172.9 83.0 73.0 121.1 157.3 172.6 76.4 65.1 119.1 153.7 172.2 75-2 62.4 115.8 150.0 170.9 72.8 58.0 115.0 147.4 170.8 72.9 58.1 115.5 147.1 170.3 72-9 57.4 114.3 147.2 169.7 73.2 56.4 112.3 144.9 167.0 69.6 54.1 107.6 140.4 165.4 63.6 47.5 107.0 139.6 165.5 62.9 46.7 107.3 139.0 165.3 71.2 57.3 108.1 137.9 169.2 75.8 108.1 136.9 169.9 TRANSPORTATION EQUIP MOTOR VEHICLES & PTS AEROSPACE & MISC INSTRUMENTS MISCELLANEOUS MFRS 9-27 4.50 4.77 2.11 1-51 102.0 98.6 105.3 164.5 144.5 104.4 105.6 103.2 163.0 145.3 105.9 110.7 101.3 162.8 144.6 110.0 119.8 100.8 163.8 141.7 111.6 124.0 99.9 164.8 136.8 112-7 127.2 99.0 165.2 134.7 107.0 116.7 97.8 165.5 133.9 105.3 113.5 97.6 161.9 132.9 100,8 103.0 98.6 157.4 129.6 100.2 101.7 98.7 155.8 129.5 103.7 108.8 98.9 155.2 129. 1 105.7 113.5 98.3 156.0 131.3 110.2 123.3 97.8 156.0 130.8 3.88 190.5 192.5 191.7 193. 1 193.4 191.6 189.2 189.9 188.2 188.4 188.3 185.6 182.9 185.9 PRINTING AND PUBLISHING CHEMICALS AND PRODUCTS PETROLEUM PRODUCTS RUBBER & PLASTICS PRODUCTS LEATHER AND PRODUCTS 37 371 372-9 38 39 UTILITIES ELECTRIC 104.9 109-8 100.4 161-9 137.1 136.6 117.8 115.5 Table 3A INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: PERCENT CHANGES Based on seasonally adjusted indexes 1982 1 1 1983 FEB. .3 .1 .5 2.0 .0 -1.2 .5 .5 1.1 .1 JULY_ AUG. SEP. OCT. NOV. ., DEC. 1 JAN. -1.2 -.9 -.8 -3-7 .2 -2.3 -1.5 -1.5 -3.7 -.2 -.6 -.3 -.6 -1-5 -.4 -.5 .1 -1-2 -1-8 -.6 1 .21 -9J -61 1.3| .4| 1.3J .11 -.51 -.21 --9| 1.3 .4 1.1 4.1 .1 -1.1 1.3 2.3 3.7 1.2 -1.5 -.3 -2.6 .5 -.7 -.6 -.8 .0 MAR. APR. MAY JUNE TOTAL INDEX FINAL PRODUCTS CONSUMER GOODS DURABLE CONSUMER GOODS NONDURABLE CONSUMER GOODS BUSINESS EQUIPMENT INTERMEDIATE PRODUCTS MATERIALS DURABLE GCODS MATERIALS NONDURABLE GOODS MATERIALS -.8 -.6 -.2 1-7 -.9 -1.5 -.8 -1.4 -1.3 -1.3 -1.1 -.5 .4 2.0 -.1 -2.4 -1.0 -1-7 -2-0 -1.1 -.7 -.3 1.1 1.5 .9 -3.0 -.8 -1.4 -1.2 -2.3 -.4 -.1 .8 1.5 -6 -2.0 -.5 -.6 .0 -2.0 .1 .3 .7 2.0 .2 -1.1 .6 -.4 -.5 -.8 -.3 -.9 -1.2 -.3 -.6 1-3 -.2 -.7 1.4 -.8 -.9 -.5 -1.2 -.3 -2.2 -.7 -.6 -1.7 2.6 MANUFACTURING NONDURABLE DURABLE MINING AND UTILITIES -.6 -.3 -.9 -1.6 -1-0 -.8 -1.2 -1.0 -.6 -.7 -.5 -1.8 -.1 .2 -.5 -2.4 .3 .3 .3 -1.8 -.1 .8 -.8 -.9 -.7 -.1 -1.1 -1.1 CHANGE FRCM~PREVIOUS_MONTH -3.2 1 -41 -31 .4] 1.3 .7 1.9 .3 .6 -.1 1. 1 -1.2 1 CHANGE FROM SAME MONTH A YEAR AGO -6.8 -3.8 -4.6 -10,8 -2.2 -5-7 -7.6 -10.3 -14.1 -8.7 TOTAL INDEX FINAL PRODUCTS CONSUMER GOODS DURABLE CONSUMER GOODS NONDURABLE CONSUMER GOODS BUSINESS EQUIPMENT INTERMEDIATE PRODUCTS MATERIALS DURABLE GOODS MATERIALS NONDURABLE GOODS MATERIALS MANUFACTURING NONDURABLE DURABLE MINING AND UTILITIES ,L -7.6 -4.8 -9.8 -1-1 -8.6 -12.5 -17.1 -12.5 -9.3 -6.1 -3.7 -9.0 -1-6 -14.7 -8.4 -13.3 -16.9 -13.2 -9.8 -6.3 -3,3 -6-3 -2. 1 -16-2 -8.6 -14-4 -18.0 -13.7 -9.9 -6.8 -3.7 -6.7 -2-6 -16.5 -7.7 -14.4 -18.9 -11.9 -9.4 -6.7 -3.0 -6.5 -1.7 -17.6 -7.1 -13.4 -18.2 -9.7 -9.0 -6.9 -2.9 -7.2 -1.3 -18.5 -6.5 -12.5 -18.6 -7.3 -7.8 -6.0 -1.9 -3.9 -1.2 -18.2 -4.6 -11.2 -17.4 -4.5 1 1 -5.7| -4.61 .11 2-41 --71 -17.2J -2.71 -8-11 -13.3} -1.5J -8.8 -9.8 -5.9 -6.9 -11.1 -12.1 .7 .-^2.2 -9.6 -6.3 -12.4 -7.1 -9.9 -6.8 -12.3 -10.4 -9.9 -6.2 -12.9 -10.7 -9.3 -5.5 -12.4 -10.3 -8.8 -4.1 -12.7 -10.1 -7.6 -3.1 -11.2 -9.7 -5.31 -1.0J -8.8| -9.31 -7.7 -4.9 -4.6 -9.4 -2.7 -8.9 -8.1 -10.9 -15.6 -10.6 -8.8 -6.0 -4.7 -10.0 -2.8 -U.t 6 -2.7 -1.9 2.9 9.4 .8 -14.8 .2 -4.7 -7.1 .6 -3.9 -2.7 1.8 6.4 .3 -15.5 -1.3 -6.3 -8.0 -3.8 -1.6 1.2 -3.9 -10.6 -2.7 -.6 -4.6 -10.7 Table 2B INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDUSTRY GROUPINGS Not seasonally adjusted, 1967=100 MAJOR INDUSTRY GROUPINGS 1967J I PBO-1 19821 1982 P O R - | AVG.I TION1 I FEB. SIC CODE MINING AND UTILITIES MINING UTILITIES MANUFACTURING NONDURABLE DURABLE MINING METAL MINING 10 COAL 11,12 OIL AND GAS EXTRACTION 13 STONE AND EARTH MINERALS 14 NONDURABLE MANUFACTURES FOODS 20 TOBACCO PRODUCTS 21 TEXTILE MILL PRODUCTS 22 APPAREL PRODUCTS 23 PAPER AND PRODUCTS 26 PAINTING AND PUBLISHING CHEMICALS AND PRODUCTS PETROLEUM PRODUCTS RUBBER S PLASTICS PRODUCTS LEATHER AND PRODUCTS 27 28 29 30 31 DURABLE MANUFACTURES ORDNANCE, PVT 6 GOVT 19,91 LUMBER AND PRODUCTS 24 FURNITURE AND FIXTURES 25 CLAY, GLASS, STONE PROD 32 PRIMARY METALS IRON AND STEEL FABRICATED METAL PROD NONELECTRICAL MACHINERY ELECTRICAL MACHINERY 33 331,2 34 35 36 TRANSPORTATION EQUIP MOTCR VEHICLES S PTS AEROSPACE & MISC INSTRUMENTS MISCELLANEOUS MFRS 37 371 372-9 38 39 UTILITIES ELECTRIC I 12.05J146. 31159-7 6.36J126. 2| 141.3 5.69}168. 81180.6 I 1 87.95J137- 6| 140.7 35.97|156. 21156.6 51.981124. 71129.7 1 .1 I I .511 82. 31113,2 .69J142. 7J 157.4 4.40J131. 11147.2 .75*112. 11111.1 I I I I 1|147. 1 8.75|151. 01136.0 .671118. 61122.7 2.68J124. 71 113.5 3.31|108. 8J157.7 3.21J150. I I 2|138,0 4.72|144, 11 198.4 7.74) 196. 81 116-1 1.79J 121. 7|264.9 2.24J254. ,91 66.2 .86| 60. I I 1 3.64J 86 ,9| 84.3 1.641112,,6J 105.2 1.37|151 ,9|156.6 .21127.3 2.74| 128, I I 6.571 75 ,2| 89.8 4 . 2 1 | 61 .7| 78.2 5.931 114,.81 123-3 9-151149 .01160.8 8.051 169,.31 173.6 1 9-271104 .9}102.9 4.501109 .81 100.5 4.77| 100 . 4 | 105-0 2.1 11 161. 91 162.2 1.51| 137 11 142.0 I I ! I 3.88| 190, 5I200.6 _1 1 1983 JUHE SEP. OCT. DEC. JAB. MAR. APR. 152.7 138.1 169.1 146.7 134.5 160.3 142-4 129.9 156-5 143.9 124.3 165-7 144.6 117.2 175.2 146.8 117.2 179.7 140.1 115.6 167.3 136.7 118.1 157.5 136.4 118.1 156.9 141.0 118.1 166.5 146.4 118.4 177.5 143.4 115.1 175.0 140-7 156-6 129.7 138.4 154.7 127.1 138.0 154.5 126-6 141.6 159.9 128-9 135.1 152.9 122.7 139.3 161.9 123.7 141.2 164.1 125.4 138.8 162.4 122.5 134.5 155.7 119.9 129.7 147.9 117.1 131.2 149.2 118.7 137.0 155.4 124.2 106.1 166.0 141.3 116-1 108.8 155.5 136.7 120-1 94.5 157.4 131-8 117-5 76.8 151.4 128.1 109.8 58.6 119.8 125.9 103.4 56.5 135-6 123.2 106.8 59.0 130.1 121.1 109.1 64.6 150.2 119.9 114.5 68.5 131.9 122.1 115.5 72.8 68.1 119.8 132.0 124.6! 123.6 112.1 106.5 135.1 118.3 146.5 130.3 125.6 113.1 158.9 145.8 108.2 127.3 108.3 153.2 147.7 113.3 126.4 152.6 128.7 130.5 149.6 106.0 113.3 157.7 127.8 132.6 159.9 122.4 132.7 161.4 120.2 136.2 153.6 118.5 124.3 147.8 88.2 112.6 148.9 152.5 136.7 154.1 153.6 159.0 153.6 135.1 137.8 199.1 116-2 261.9 64.0 138.2 198.7 116.1 257.3 60.8 141.1 195.1 120-3 253.9 64.6 147.3 200.4 127.2 261.7 62.5 152.1 195.9 128.0 238.7 54.4 158.5 197.9 123.9 258.3 60.9 157.5 203.2 125.3 265.6 61.8 148.5 196.7 123.8 262.6 62.5 141.2 192.1 123.1 253.5 58.1 138.9 132.7 188.1 188.5 121.4 115.9 2*3.2 242-3 59.1 53. 1 84.8 104.9 153.2 127.1 85-1 107.2 151.2 128.0 86.6 111.1 146.4 126-2 86.9 116.2 151.3 133.7 86.3 114.6 140.6 127.9 86.3 123.8 158.3 134.1 86-7 123.0 160.1 134.9 88.6 121.7 155.2 131.9 91.5 118.8 153.8 130.1 91.8 111.7 153.8 119.3 93.4 118.1 151. 1 117.7 88.7 78.1 122.5 157.7 172.5 82.1 70.7 118.5 151.9 170.6 76.9 80.2 61-8 67.5 116-7 115.1 147.7 151.5 170. 1 173.3 68.0 55.8 112.2 148.2 166.0 72.4 69.9 54.8 55.4 114. 1 113.9 147.8 150.3 168.2 169.3 68.0 52.7 109.4 142.9 170.5 60.6 44.7 108.1 139.1 167.7 58.5 42.8 106.2 135.2 164.3 70.1 56.2 105.2 132.8 167.0 110.0 137.9 171.1 108.0 111.7 104.4 161.6 144.6 108.8 116.4 101-7 160.2 140-5 113.3 125.6 101.7 163.0 139.6 116.2 132.2 101. 1 168. 1 138.2 105.6 114.8 97.0 165.5 131.8 99-4 103-6 95.5 166.1 140.3 103.4 108-9 98.1 165.9 141.2 103. 5 108.4 98.9 158.1 135.0 101.7 104.1 99.6 158.3 130.7 101.1 102.0 100.3 156.7 125.6 103.6 110.5 97.0 151-5 122-5 111.2 125.4 97.8 154.1 129.5 186.1 176.2 174.2 190-0 204.8 210.6 192.2 176.7 174.4 185.2 198.3 195.1 QM QTZ ANNUAL 153.8 Table 3B INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: HISTORICAL DATA Seasonally adjusted, 1967=100 JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUNE JULY AUG SEPT OCT NOV DEC Q I 99.8 103.7 109.5 109.1 99.0 104.3 110.2 108.8 98.5 104.7 110.8 108.8 99.2 104.9 110.6 108.6 98.7 106.2 110.3 108-3 98.4 106-6 111-2 108.1 98.7 106-5 111.8 108-4 100.0 107.1 112.3 108.3 100.3 107.1 112-3 107.6 101-2 107.4 112.5 105.4 102.6 108.6 111.4 104-8 103.5 108.8 111.2 107.2 99.1 104.2 110.2 108-9 98.8 105-9 110.7 108.3 99.7 106.9 112.1 108.1 102.4 108.3 111.7 105.8 100.0 106.3 111.1 107.8 108.1 114.6 126.3 129.9 115-2 108-0 115-3 127.8 129-6 112-7 108.0 116.5 128.5 130.0 111-7 108.5 117.7 128.5 129.9 112-6 109. 1 118-1 129.6 131-3 113.7 109.6 118.7 129.9 131.9 116.4 109.8 119.3 130-4 131.8 118.4 108.9 120.7 130-4 131.7 121.0 110.3 121.8 131. 1 131.8 122- 1 110.9 123.4 131-4 129-5 122-2 111.3 12*1.4 131.6 124.9 123.5 112.3 125.8 131.3 119.3 129.4 108.0 115.5 127.5 129.8 113.2 109.1 118.2 129-3 131.0 114.2 109.7 120.6 130.6 131.8 120.5 111-5 124.5 131.4 124.6 123.4 109.6 119.7 129.8 129.3 117.8 79 80 126-1 133.7 140.0 152.0 153.0 128-1 134.5 140.3 152.5 152.8 128-7 136.3 142. 1 153-5 152. 1 129.0 137.1 144.4 151.1 148.2 130.1 138.0 144-8 152-7 143.8 130.7 138.9 146.1 153.0 141.4 131.2 139.0 147.1 153.0 140.3 132.0 139.3 148.0 152. 1 142-2 131.3 139-6 148.6 152.7 144.4 131.3 140.1 149-7 152.7 146.6 132.6 1*0.3 150-6 152-3 149.2 133.6 140.5 151-8 152.5 150.4 127.6 134.9 140.8 152.6 152.7 129.9 138.0 145-1 152.2 144.5 131.5 139.3 147.9 152.6 142.3 132.5 140.3 150.7 152-5 148.8 130.5 138.1 146.1 152.5 147.1 81 82 151-4 140-7 151.8 142.9 152. 1 141.7 151.9 140.2 152- 7 139-2 152.9 138.7 153.9 138-8 153-6 138.4 151.6 137.3 1*9.1 135.7 146.3 134.9 143.4 135.2 151.8 141.7 152.5 139.4 153.0 138.2 146-3 135.2 151.0 138.6 0.2 0.2 0.6 -0.8 -0.5 0.6 0.6 0.4 0.5 0.0 1.3 0.6 0.4 0.3 0.0 0.0 0-9 0.3 0.2 2.7 1.3 69 2.2 6.3 4.5 -3.0 YEAR Q I INDEX 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 CHANGE* 67 68 70 -1.9 -0.3 71 72 73 0-8 2.0 0.4 -0.1 74 -1.1 -3-4 -0.2 -2.2 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 0.6 1.2 0.1 0-3 -0.1 -0-2 0.5 1.0 0.0 0.6 0.3 0.9 1.1 1.0 0.5 0.5 0.2 0.5 2.4 0-8 -0.5 0.3 1.6 0.2 -1.9 0.3 0.4 0.8 -0-1 -0.1 0.7 -0.3 1.2 -0.9 0.5 1.3 1.3 0.7 -0-4 -0.5 -0.3 -0.3 0.0 1.0 0.5 0.3 1.6 0.6 0.2 0.3 9.4 0.1 0.7 0.2 -0.2 -0-2 -0.8 0.2 0.6 1.6 -1.6 -2.6 -0.1 -1.1 0.9 0-2 -0.6 -0.3 -0.2 1.8 1.8 1-6 0.5 0.9 0.9 1.3 2.3 -2.5 -0.6 -0.2 0.9 1.1 2.1 3.6 2-4 1.0 2.3 1-4 0.9 0.9 0.5 2.0 1.0 0.6 5.5 1.8 2-3 3.1 1.2 0.9 1.9 0.3 -0.1 -0.6 -2.0 0.2 0.5 0.4 -0-8 0.5 1-3 0.2 0.4 0.8 0.2 -0.1 -0.1 -1.7 -3-6 -0.2 -4.5 1.7 2.2 1.3 0.9 0.5 0.1 0.9 0-1 1.1 0.7 -1.2 -9.1 0.0 0.4 0.7 0.0 1.5 1.0 0.1 0.6 0.8 0.1 0.8 0-1 0.8 3.4 1.8 0.4 1.3 0.1 -0.3 -5.4 -1.5 4.6 10.8 5.8 5.8 4.4 -3.5 -1.6 -1.2 -2.0 2.0 0.5 0.3 0.2 -3.1 -1.6 -0.9 -4.4 -2-2 2.7 -8.2 1-2 0-0 -0.5 0.9 0.7 0-3 1.1 0.5 0.7 0.9 0.2 0.4 0.1 0-7 0-0 -3-0 -1.7 -0-8 1.4 0.2 0.4 0.4 1.5 0.5 0.1 -0.7 -0.4 0-7 0.1 -0.2 -0.3 -1.3 -0.8 0.6 0.2 0.6 -0-6 * CHANGE IS THE PERCENT CHANGE FROM THE PRECEEDING LIKE PERIOD. 1.4 1.1 -1.0 -0.6 0.5 0.3 7 -0-3 1.8 -1.9 -0.6 -0.4 -2.1 1.6 3.2 0.6 -5.5 2.4 0.8 0.7 1.9 -0.1 1.7 9.2 8.4 -0.4 -8.9 160-6 93.6 77.2 Table 4A INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIVIDUAL SERIES Seasonaly adjusted, 1967=100 INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIVIDUAL SERIES 1967] SIC ! PRO-, 1982; 1982 CODE PCR- AVG.i JANi TION, 1983 APR- __MAY JUNE JULY AUG. SEP- OCT. NOV. 58.7 108.8 126.0 83-0 34.0 105.5 122.5 84.6 13.2 117.1 144-2 76-8 14.7 97.4 117.8 87.9 12.8 101.7 106.3 84.6 28.7 96.7 113-7 86.9 36. 1 102.5 122.5 84.4 46.4 51.4 96.01 100.2 109.4] 83.5 55.4 156-4 51.7 148.4 50.1 143.1 47-1 143.7 44.2 143-2 41.6 119.3 36.1 138.4 30.6 131.3 37.0 136.1 37.0 163.2 96.7 94.2 263.7 82-7 69.0 98-0 95.9 272.2 81.8 71.1 96.6 95.2 271.4 81.8 69.9 97.0 95.7 266.1 83.4 71.0 97.1 95.7 265.4 82.4 71.7 95-8 95.0 257.3 81.9 72-2 96.1 94.9 260.7 81.4 71.8 95.9 93.9 259.4 80-5 70-9 96.2 94.6 257.1 82.3 71.3 96.1 95.0 263.5 81.4 71.5 97.3 96.4 269.1 82.5 72.2 108.8 107-8 107.2 102.8 102-1 102-8 99.5 101.3 104.2 103.5 531.1 493.2 453.6 414.9 372.1 349.9 327.5 306.5 294.2 303.8 328-2 325.5 FEB. MAS- 51.9 117.3 109.81 128-6 130.2] 154.9 81.7 81.3 102-5 127.5 154.6 74.8 87.4 119.6 147.9 74.9 87.4 116.9 142.8 79.3 11 12 .03 46.5 54.2 .66 146.7 169-7 61.2 169.0 53.9 168.8 13 OIL AND GAS EXTRACTIOI CRUDE OIL S NATURAL GAS 131 CRUDE OIL, TOTAL ALASKA, CALIF. CRUDE TEXAS CRUDE LA. AND OTHER CRUDE 4.40{ 3.61 96.8 99-0 2.94 95.1 96.2 .31 263.71 262.4 1-07 82.21 83.5 1-57 71.0 72.6 97.3 94-7 264.9 83.1 69.3 10 METAL MINING IRON ORE 101,6| NONFERROOS ORES 102 -5,8,9 102 COPPER ORE 103 LEAD AND ZINC ORES ANTHRACITE BITUMINOUS COAL NATURAL GAS NATURAL GAS LIQUIDS LP PROPANE LP MATERIALS OIL AND GAS DRILLING 132 138 20 201 .51 .241 .27J .14 .03 .67 111.3 .30 .04 .26 -50 392.4 550.7 8.75 1-17j -40 .55 .22 120.5 109.8 121.0 138.2 119.6 108.3 116.3 147.9 119.4 108-0 116.1 147.7 1.14 .04 .07 .12 .13 136.5 108.0 314.0 68.8 139.4 137.1 106.0 309.6 68.8 147.0 136.7 106.7 305.9 68-2 144.1 CANNED AND FROZEN FOODS 203 204 GRAIN MILL PRODUCTS FLOUR & CORN MILL- 2041,6 1.18 176.9 172.0 .95 160.2 160.4 .28 115.8 125.0 173.8 162.6 121.7 174.9 160.9 116-9 171.4 160.9 108.1 167.4 157.4 114-0 177.0 158.5 112.6 181.7 160.4 115.4 188.2 159.6 113.9 174.2 161.7 114.2 205 206 207 1.15 124.0 123.1 125.3 .21 .41 97.4 90.2 124.4 122.2 99.2 122-6 121.4 124.8 124.8 122.5 124.1 96.7 94.7 94.3 98.3 109.2 90.9 193.2 200.6 167.4 180.6 261.8 124.8 113.0 225.8 237-8 210.3 181.4 287.3 127.9 250.8 199.8 177.8 249.1 118.7 237.4 195.9 164.9 279.9 125.3 233.4 194.5 173-2 295.3 127.0 222.6 186.3 160.0 265.0 122.7 218.7 181.0 150.3 277.9 121.9 213.3 .97 161.7 157-9 -30j 150. 1]144-3 -67 167.1 164.1 156.1 150.5 158.6 156-0 140.8 163-0 154.4 141.9 160. 1 161-2 147.9 167.3 160.8 149.2 166.1 .67 .54 121.4 117. 1 .07 53-9 62-8 129.2 63.3 136-4 62.1 114.2 52.9 118.6 57.3 79-4 58.4 85.9 60.2 86.8 59-2 89.4 63.5 .63 172.5 176.1 .21 1212.5 J242.3 .42 152.1 142.5 168.4 198.5 153.2 168.8 199-5 153-2 .23 [117.7 1117-9 .201182.0 1165-5 .57 I 116.6 103.5 129.2 180.6 115.6 126.3 200.8 117.6 99.9 100.0 24 t 1.64 LUMBER AND PRODUCTS 80.5 241,2 I .82 | 86.3 | 75.6 LOGGING AND LUMBER 70.2 242 1 -59 | 78.4| 70.6 LUMBER LUMBER PRODUCTS 243,4,9 | -821138.8 §121.2 128.8 MILLHORK AND PLYWOOD 243 I .50 J 153.81130.0 137-4 PLYWD,PREFAB PROD 2432,3 I .29 1186.0 I 1 5 1 . 4 163.7 25 I 1.37 FURNITURE AND FIXTURE;5 HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE 251 l .87 I 142.91133.2 FIXTURES, OFF- FURN. 252,4,9 I -42 | 178.81173-1 FOODS HEAT PRODUCTS BEEF PORK MISC. MEATS DAIRY PRODUCTS BUTTER CHEESE CONCENTRATED MILK FROZEN DESSERTS BAKERY PRODUCTS SUGAR CONFECTIONERY BEVERAGES BEER AND ALE NINES AND BRANDY LIQUORS SOFT DRINKS 202 2021 2022 2023 2024 208 2082,3 2084 2085 2086,7 MISC. FOOD PREPARATIONS 209 FATS AND OILS 2091-4,6 COFFEE, MISC-FOOD 2095,7-9 TOBACCO PRODUCTS CIGARETTES CIGARS TEXTILE HILL PRODUCTS FABRICS COTTON FABRICS MAN-MADE FABRICS HOOL FABRICS KNIT GOODS HOSIERY KNIT GARMENTS FABRIC FINISHING CARPETING YARN & MISC.TEXTILES 21 211 212 2.69 22 90-9 221-4 1.05 221,4 .60 60.2 222 \ .30 172.1 223 .14 47.7 225 2251,2 2253-9 226 227 | 228,9 23 APPAREL PRODUCTS MEN'S OUTERNEAR 231 # 2 I HEN'S SUITS AND COATS 231 1 MEN'S FURNISHINGS 232 I 233 1 MOMEN'S OUTERWEAR MISC. APP.G ALLIED GDS 234-9 I 1.58 .52 -07 .24 .74 3.33 1-06 .34 .69 1.05 1.20 I 93-7 140.3 179.3 DEC, JAN. 1 180.1 158.8 118.8 178.9 158.1 114.4 181.7 164.21 114.5 180.5 164.9 126.0 124.0 123.2 125.3 127.8 129.1 90.9 105.6 102.9 99.4 88.7 186.4 162.6 295.5 114.4 217.1 186.5 164.1 248.5 131-5 214.7 196.4 172.8 355.4 139-8 217-5 196.0 169.4 191.2 158.4 194.9 127.9 227.3 121.7 230.8 119.5 232.7 162.1 145.5 169.6 162.5 142.7 171.5 167-8 158-4 172.1 167.8 156.4 173.0 168.2 163.2 170.5 166.5 158.7 170.1 163.3 152.2 120.8 52.2 128.8 54.6 125.2 49.4 123.1 49.3 112.2 46.4 120.0 47.3 109.9 51.4 89.1 60.1 92.4 57.0 97-9 60.6 96.1 60.9 97.8 61.2 96.8 63.5 90.3 60.4 91.3 57.9 81.8 62.3 166.0 194.4 151.6 171.4 214.3 149.6 171.2 203.1 155.0 179.0 232.9 151-7 175-2 215.0 155.1 170.9 204.4 153.8 181.0 236.9 152.7 170.4 208.8 151.0 172.0 206.8 154.3 174.1 226.3 147.7 139.3 180.9 114.0 116.2 176.9 115.4 111.6 181.8 114.4 111.0 185-0 114.1 113.0 186.1 122.4 109.0 189-0 125.0 114.5 183.8 125.4 116.5 183.9 116.9 105.5 167.0 115.2 105.4 179.4 108.1 79.9 70.9 128-8 139.0 168-7 78.6 73-8 132-0 142.4 171-9 88.5 81.5 131.3 141.8 167.1 87.9 79.9 138.1 152.9 182.5 92.4 85.2 143-4 162.6 196-7 94.8 88.4 145.9 165.0 204-1 90.9 80.7 148.0 167.1 205.4 88.2 79.9 146.0 164.8 202.0 91. 1 82-4 150.1 170.5 208-5 85.6 I 94.3 77.1 153-1 I 1 5 3 . 4 174.4 214.5 143-0 175.1 140.9 179.6 138.9 180.1 142.3 176.0 145.9 185-4 144.7 191.2 146.6 182.3 144.8 175-3 145.9 171.5 148.5 | 1 4 5 - 1 177.5 I 1 7 7 . 8 8 Table 4B INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIVIDUAL SERIES Not seasonally adjusted, 1967=100 SIC CODE 1967 PROPORTION METAL MINING 10 IRON ORE 101 r 6 NONFERROUS ORES 102-5,8,9 COPPER ORE 102 LEAD AND ZINC ORES 103 .51 -24 .27 .14 .03 ANTHRACITE BITUMINOUS COAL .03 .66 INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIVIDUAL SERIES I 19821 1982 AVG.J \ JAN. I 1 51.9| 95.5 109.8*129.0 130.2J 155.5 81.7| 78.7 1 46.5| 47.7 146.7|141.5 \ 4.40 3.61 96.81 98.7 2.94 95.11 95.4 .31 263.7|262-7 1.07 82.2] 82.6 1.57 71.OJ 71.7 I .67 J113.3 .30 I .04 J .26 I .50 392.41 558.4 OIL AND GAS EXTRACTION CRUDE OIL S NATURAL GAS CRUDE OIL, TOTAL ALASKA, CALIF- CRUDE TEXAS CRUDE LA. AND OTHER CRUDE NATURAL GAS NATURAL GAS-LIQUIDS LP PROPANE LP MATERIALS OIL AND GAS DRILLING 20 201 8.75 1.17 .40 .55 .22 202 2021 2022 2023 2024 1.14 .04 .07 .12 .13 CANNED AND FROZEN FOODS 203 GRAIN MILL PRODUCTS 204 FLOUR S CORN RILL. 2041,6 1.18 .95 .28 BAKERY PRODUCTS SUGAR CONFECTIONERY 205 206 207 1.15 .21 .41 208 2082,3 2084 2085 2086,7 1.58 .52 .07 .24 .74 MISC. FOOD PREPARATIONS 209 FATS AND OILS 2091-4,6 COFFEE, MISC.FOOD 2095,7-9 -97 -30 .67 TOBACCO PRODUCTS CIGARETTES CIGARS 21 211 212 .67 .54 .07 22 221-4 221,4 222 223 2.69 1.05 .60 .30 .14 225 2251,2 2253-9 .63 .21 .42 226 227 228,9 .23 .20 .57 APPAREL PRODUCTS 23 MEN*S OUTERWEAR 231,2 MEN'S SUITS AND COATS 231 MEN'S FURNISHINGS 232 WOMEN'S OUTERWEAR 233 MISC. APP-S ALLIED GDS 234-9 3.33 1.06 .34 .69 1.05 1.20 LUMBER AND PRODUCTS 24 LOGGING AND LUMBER 241,2 LUMBER 242 LUMBER PRODUCTS 243,4,9 MILLWORK AND PLYWOOD 243 PLYWD,PREFAB PROD 2432,3 1-64 .82 .59 .82 .50 .29 FURNITURE AND FIXTURES 25 HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE 251 FIXTURES, OFF. FURN. 252,4,9 1-37 \ .87 142.91131.0 .42 178.81172.1 I FOODS MEAT PRODUCTS BEEF PORK MISC. MEATS DAIRY PRODUCTS BUTTER CHEESE CONCENTRATED MILK FROZEN DESSERTS BEVERAGES BEER AND ALE WINES AND BRANDY LIQUORS SOFT DRINKS TEXTILE MILL PRODUCTS FABRICS COTTON FABRICS MAN-MADE FABRICS WOOL FABRICS KNIT GOODS HOSIERY KNIT GARMENTS FABRIC FINISHING CARPETING YARN 6 MISC.TEXTILES 1 1119.2 1112.8 J 121.2 1125.5 I 1130.6 J127.3 1290-8 I 61.0 1 104.0 I 176,,9|154.6 160,.21158.6 115 ,8|121.0 1 .01115.4 I 145.3 .41 80.4 1 193..2J183.1 167..41159.8 J 250.0 124,.81 105.1 .81219-0 225. I 161,.7J164.8 150,.11156.1 167..1J168.7 I I .4J119.0 .91 58.8 1 1 9 0..91 d2.5 6 0..21 59.8 172..11 47,.71 i 172,.5J151.1 212,.51212-0 152,.11120.2 1 117.,7| 119. 1 182 .OJ 144.1 116,.6(103.8 I I 1 I I 1 85.6 I I 86.31 69.2 78.41 66.1 138.81117.1 153.81125.1 186.0J146.8 I _H£I- JUHE JULY AUG. SEP. OCT- J^U DEC ? 96.7 131.5 162.0 80.0 84.8 125.1 156.0 81.0 91.7 124.1 154.6 83-6 73-5 113.3 133-9 82.0 43.4 106.7 124.3 85.8 14.4 98.0 112.5 69.3 15.4 93.3 111.9 85.0 12.8 100.3 103.9 83.3 24.9 100.0 119.5 87.7 29.8 103.1 123.5 83.3 39.4 93.7 104.8 81.2 53.9 161.6 56.5 170.5 53-0 159.7 53.8 161.6 52.3 155.5 41.2 123.0 48.7 139.2 45.9 133.5 39.1 154.7 33.5 135.9 32.6 123.4 98.7 94.9 264.4 83.2 69.9 97.2 94-3 262.4 83.2 69.1 97.3 95-1 264.6 82-0 70.9 96.3 95.1 265.4 81.9 70.9 96.6 95.5 258.9 83.3 71.9 96.7 95.5 264.3 82.2 71.6 95.5 95.2 263.0 81.6 71.7 95.5 94.9 264.6 81.2 71.2 95.8 94.6 265.4 80.8 70.8 96.7 95.3 263.5 82.5 71.2 96.5 95.0 264.6 81.6 71.1 115.0 109-7 107-3 101.6 101.8 102.0 97.0 98.3 101.0 102-9 523.7 480.4 435.5 400.0 366.1 345.7 329.8 312.6 302.4 314.7 339.4 117.7 111.7 117.1 130.0 120.7 107.4 124.3 135.6 134.8 123.8 302-8 66.3 128.3 137.9 115.1 316.3 69.4 145.4 161.3 161.3 124.7 162.0 157.0 116.3 158.2 153.2 108.2 158.5 150.3 110.4 174.0 155.3 108.2 180.4 158.6 111.5 201.4 165.9 118.8 211.0 166.6 116.6 209.5 168.0 125.9 184.4 162.1 114.9 167.9 165.9 112.7 115.3 108.0 112.2 114.2 114.5 119.8 128.6 132.9 135.6 136.4 128.3 123.8 123.0 97.2 83.5 81.0 83.4 75.8 106.3 129.1 123.5 108.7 87.1 186.7 168.5 256.0 115.5 216.7 190.2 174.6 264.0 123.5 216.5 193.1 181.5 255.3 122.3 218.9 198.4 191.6 281.7 122.6 220.6 203.7 187.4 261.8 130.2 234.0 195.3 173.3 217.0 97.8 240.6 204.4 180.3 263.9 109.0 247.1 199.4 161.1 247.5 138.4 242-0 203.1 158.5 427.9 169.2 225.8 186.8 140.6 174.4 131.6 144.0 217.3 120.0 211.2 166.7 165.6 167.2 158.0 150.3 161.5 156.6 140.6 163.8 157.8 140.8 165-6 154.1 140.4 160.3 150.3 124.7 162.0 156.0 128.8 168.4 160.6 144.2 168.0 167.8 161.1 170.9 173.8 174.7 173.4 174.4 173.4 174.9 139.1 68.0 133.8 63.9 110.7 51-8 116-5 59.0 134.6 54.7 110.4 41.2 132.5 52.3 126.2 54.3 122,0 55.9 124.0 50.0 88.0 37.2 89.8 63.0 90.2 62.4 90.8 64.8 93.0 62.0 94.7 58.2 79.5 50-2 96.7 61-1 96.3 60.0 99.1 65.8 91.9 61.8 86.3 53.8 163.1 203.3 142.7 165.0 208.9 142.7 170.4 216.8 146.8 173.1 212.2 153-3 189.0 223.4 171.5 177.2 231.0 149.9 189.3 218.0 174.7 186.6 213.6 172.9 185.6 235.5 160.3 167.1 202.5 149.2 152.0 172.9 141.4 132.5 170.5 117.9 134.2 197.6 118.8 144.0 189.8 118.4 123.0 178.4 119.6 120.0 185.0 117.0 80.6 169.7 98-8 115.6 177.6 127.6 109.7 206.1 124.0 117.6 211.6 131.4 115.9 191.3 116.7 100.6 161.7 105.3 79.8 72.5 130.3 138.4 168.7 77.1 80.7 71.6 79.5 132.6 133.6 144. 1 143.9 179.5 175.8 87.9 82.2 134.2 145.7 173.9 91.6 81.4 140.6 156.6 185.5 93.7 82.8 135.3 151.2 174.8 98.7 89.2 148.8 171.3 211.7 96.9 85.2 149.0 169.7 207.6 94.8 85.1 148.5 168.9 207.8 88.1 78.3 149.4 168.1 204.3 77.2 66.8 146.0 163.1 195.1 148.1 187.6 144.6 178.8 141.7 178.7 135.5 176.0 142.6 175.6 128.1 171.7 148.2 187.0 151.8 187.0 147.7 179.7 147.5 174.9 148.1 176.1 L 9 Table 4A—continued INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIVIDUAL SERIES Seasonally adjusted, 1967=100 INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIVIDUAL SERIES PAPER AND PRODUCTS PULP AND PAPER 800D PULP PAPER PAPERBOARD 1967" PRO- 1982 SIC CODE l POR- AVG. 1982 ,_II2». JAN. FEB. 142. 1 130.8 151.3 144.2 147.8 141.6 151.9 150.4 26 261-3 261 262 263 3.21 1.38 .50 .54 .34 142.6 134.4 149.6 143.5 1983 BAR., APR. MAY JUNE JULY AUG. SEP. OCT. NOV. DEC. JAM. 146.7 142.0 151.3 146.5 138.6 133.2 142.7 139.8 137.2 132.5 140.1 139.7 137.5 131.1 144.4 136.4 137.0 127.6 146.9 135.5 143.3 133.7 154.6 139.8 148.8 138.9 155.6 152.5 142.9 133.0 154.5 139.6 146.9 138.3 154.2 148.4 142.6 129.4 149.2 151.5 145.8 154.6 CONVERTED PAPER PROD264 SANITARY PAPER PROD. 2647 PAPERBOARD CONTAINERS 265 BUILDING PAPER AND BOARD 266 -93 175.4 170.5 .18 .84 143.9 149.4 .06 65.2 173.3 175.3 170.1 166- 1 171.1 173.6 181.7 184.5 182.6 181.0 176.5 181.6 145.2 62.2 145.9 61.8 141.7 136.5 142.8 142.4 147.7 147.6 147.5 141.3 138.6 161.1 PRINTING AND PUBLISHING 27 NEWSPAPERS 271 PERIOD.,BOOKS,CARDS 272,3,7 JOB PRINTING 274-6,8,9 4.72 1.38 105.7 105. 1 1.38 132.5 136.2 1.96 179.3 181.3 109.0 138.5 183.0 107.2 132.9 184.0 104.6 133.1 180.8 103.5 131.4 181.4 102.5 128.2 179.0 104.6 133.1 177.6 104.2 135.3 179.6 106.7 131.0 177.0 105.4 128.5 175.0 105.1 128.9 174.3 109.9 134.2 180.6 110.9 136.9 180.8 CHEflXCALS AND PRODUCTS 28 CHEHICALS S SYN. MAT. 281,2 BASIC CHEMICALS 281 ALKALIES S CHLORINE 2812 GASES,ETC2813,5,6 BASIC ORG. CHEM. 2818 7.74 3.79 2.54 .14 .48 1,18 196.7 157.1 99.2 160.0 192.9 202-4 172.5 104.4 169.2 219.0 213.2 176.4 107.8 190.9 214.6 204.8 168.3 102.3 165.0 211.5 199.7 162.5 105.2 156.9 208.2 193.5 156.2 100.0 156.7 196.6 190.2 152.6 101.6 146.9 188.9 188.8 189.7 149.7 147.6 92.4 101.7 156. 1 161.1 178.2 172.6 194.7 147.2 90.8 164.8 170.4 192.7 148.6 95.7 152.7 178.3 194.9 152.8 95.9 154.0 186.4 198.2 153.4 92.3 146. 9 193.6 202.5 160.0 104.5 INCPG- CHEH. NEC 2819 ACIDS £ FERTILIZER MAT SULFURIC ACID, ETC. FERTILIZER MATERIALS ERDA NUCLEAR MATLS .75 .55 .41 .14 .15 110.1 116-3 108.2 139-7 83.3 114.7 122.4 114,2 146.1 85.0 120.2 127.4 119.1 151.6 94.0 115.0 122.6 114.4 146.1 85.3 105.1 109.6 101.5 133.0 83.1 103.3 107.4 99.3 130.7 82.3 108.9 113.4 104.5 139.1 88.3 110.0 114.2 106.5 136.7 90.5 110.2 114.6 107.1 136.3 89.8 110.2 117.3 109.0 141.4 80.8 109-5 117.5 111-1 136-1 74.4 109.9 117.5 110.0 139.1 76.4 106. 1 112.7 102.9 141.0 74.7 118.1 126.7 116.3 1.25 277.4 263.2 -54 403-6 365.5 .13 85-3 86.4 .58 204.2 208.7 288.1 413.5 92.4 216.5 279.2 404.8 100-4 203.4 275.5 398.4 90.5 203.6 269.4 393.5 93.7 194.2 266.9 384.3 91.0 198.0 268.3 395.4 77.5 193.8 275.5 407.4 77.9 198.2 291.4 425.2 79.7 215.6 282.5 403.5 81.4 216-2 280.8 418.5 76.3 199.8 289.5 435.0 74.1 203-6 289.0 CHEMICAL PRODUCTS 283-7,9 DRUGS AND MEDICINES 283 SOAP AND TOILETRIES 284 PAINTS 285 AGRICULTURAL CHEMICALS 287 3.95 1.34 1.29 .43 .33 195.8 266.8 171.5 115.3 208.7 198.1 269.0 173.8 114.3 221.7 195-8 263.6 174.6 1.07.6 216.7 195.3 264.7 171.3 107.1 223.6 195.2 264.3 169.1 113.3 220.9 194.5 260.3 170.3 123.7 210.5 196.3 265.0 172.2 118.2 213.3 198.8 271.6 172.3 113.8 219.3 199.2 270.7 175.2 125.4 212.9 197.8 193.7 269. 1 264.6 170.7 171.3 132. 1 115.7 204.8 187.4 189.7 259.6 169.9 105.7 190.9 195.0 279.2 167.9 102.8 182.0 199.4 281.7 168.8 117.0 193.9 PETROLEUM PRODUCTS 29 PETROLEUM REFINING 291,9 AUTOMOTIVE GASOLINE DISTILLATE FUEL OIL RESIDUAL FUEL OIL AVIATION FUEL & KEROS. 1.79 1.64] 122.5 .84| 128-5 .29 118.5 .05 141.9 .17 95.4 125.3 127.6 113.3 147.3 91.7 121.5 124.5 107.0 135.6 97.6 122.7 126.3 106.9 143.9 105.9 121.4 128. 1 114.8 158.6 99.9 123.4 129.1 125.4 155.9 89.9 125.4 132.8 125.9 151.6 91.5 124.9 132.3 125.6 144.5 93.6 119.2 125.7 113.9 140.9 93.3 122.3 130.7 121.5 139.2 91.4 123.8 130.1 126.7 136.4 96.8 121.1 126.3 125.6 131.5 101. 1 120.3 127.5 116.4 120.9 92.3 119.9 126.6 103.8 123.0 101.0 2.24 .60 137.9 120.8 .66 127.4 125.3 .98 412.7 407.0 133.2 128.6 412.9 138.1 133.2 130. 1 129.4 407.6 408.1 153.1 129.2 402.5 152-1 130.7 410.5 168.8 130-3 420.8 151.5 129.2 420.9 141.5 126.6 426.4 136.2 124.8 421.0 127.6 123.3 407.3 128.6 121.8 124.1 420.0 81.1 56.9 77.8 53.9 76.9 54.8 74.4 55.4 73.8 53.3 SYNTHETIC MATERIALS 282 PLASTICS MATERIALS 2821 SYNTHETIC RUBBER 2822 MAN-MADE FIBERS 2823,4 MISC. PETROLEUM PROD. REFINERY FUEL NEC REFINERY NONFUEL MAT. REFINERY PRODUCTS NEC RUBBER S PLASTICS PROD. 30 TIRES 301 RUB. PROD. EX. TIRES 302,3,6 PLASTICS PRODUCTS NEC 307 LEATHER AND PRODUCTS 31 PERS. LEATHER GDS. 313,5-7,9 SHOES 314 .86 .22 .53 83.8 57.5 80.7 54.5 82-8 50.5 80.8 59.0 CLAY, GLASS, S ST. PROD. 3 2 PRESSED AND BLOHN GLASS 322 GLASS CONTAINERS 3221 2.74 .49 151.3 151.4 .28 139.0 13 4-3 161-8 148.0 153.2 140.0 152.0 140.5 148.6 141.2 151.1 141.8 149.6 136.3 152.2 141.1 160.5 154.9 146.4 135.4 CEMENT 324 STRUCTURAL CLAY PRODUCTS 325 BRICK 3251 CONCRETE,MISC.CLAY MFE.326-9 .27 91.8 93.7 .20 75-7 74.9 .08 59.2 54.6 1.51 128.3 130-4 91-2 75.3 54-6 138.7 93.4 74.6 52.3 133-0 87.5 72.5 52-3 128.8 89.3 69.7 52.8 123.3 89.3 76.6 61.6 127.3 91.2 77.3 59.6 126. 1 90.5 74.3 57.7 128.7 95.3 78.5 66. 1 128.3 PRIMARY METALS 33 IRON AND STEEL 331,2 BASIC STEEL & HILL PRD 331 BASIC IRON AND STEEL PIG IRON RAW STEEL COKE AND PRODUCTS 6.57 4.21 3.34 1.34 .46 .72 .16 62.3 55.9 49.3 62. 1 46.3 85.2 74.6 64.9 82.3 67.6 78.7 73.1 61.9 81.1 68.6 77-2 68.2 60.4 75.9 55.9 65.0 60.3 51.4 68.6 48.3 60.7 54.8 48.4 61.0 44.8 56.6 51.9 46.0 57.6 42.8 56.7 51.5 46.1 56.7 43.5 57.8 4<>.8 44.4 54.6 43.8 STEEL MILL PRODUCTS CONSUMER DUR. STEEL EQUIPMENT STEEL CONSTRUCTION STEEL CAN & CLOSURE STEEL MISC. STEEL 2.01 .31 .51 .41 .13 .65 66.6 92-2 52.4 58.0 60.7 105-1 45-0 64.5 54.9 56-3 94.0 123.1 82.4 48.9 94.0 54.9 74.9 108.2 83-1 60.2 85.3 55-3 58.6 115.0 68.2 55- 1 69.7 42.7 50.3 92.9 64.7 55.9 60.0 44.0 53. 1 88.0 59.7 56.5 50.9 38.8 48.2 83.6 60. 1 54.1 45.0 40.2 46.5 90. 1 71.5 68.2 6 3.4 63.8 59.9 57.8 83.8 193.1 .28 .06 .14 .08 84.8 57.7 IRON S STEEL FOUNDRIES 332 190.6 .87 78.9 54.6 59.6 73.6 10 78.4 53. 1 1 22. 1 409.5 73.3 49.0 78.2 56.2 149.2 132.5 139. 1 118.2 144.0 128.8 91.7 76.8 61.7 124.1 91.2 77.0 66.8 127.4 101.9 80.8 68.4 123.8 79.3 71.9 127.3 57.8 49.3 45.0 54.2 39.5 53.9 47.2 42.8 52.1 37.5 47.7 44.2 39.6 49.5 33.4 49,2 43.3 39.9 48.1 31.5 62.5 51.7 46.2 57.2 42.6 63.2 55.4 48. 1 43.1 60.5 91-9 63.5 48.5 47.7 44.7 85.2 90.6 58.4 43.3 43.3 43.6 40-2 90.8 50.0 35.6 36.0 38.4 39.6 77.5 53.2 56.6 37.6 35.4 41.7 77.3 69.8 50.5 52.2 53.8 51.2 106.7 56.5 51-9 52.1 50-8 40.5 53.0 Table 4B—continued INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIVIDUAL SERIES Not seasonally adjusted, 1967=100 INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIFIDUAL SERIES SIC CODE 1967 PROPORTION 1982 AVG. 1982 JAN. APR. 26 261-3 261 262 263 3.21 1.38 142.6 141.0 . 5 0 134.4 130.4 . 5 4 149.6 151.7 . 3 4 143.5 139.9 153.4 145.0 159.9 155.5 153-0 147.6 157.4 154. 1 CONVERTED PAPER PROD. 264 SANITARY PAPER PROD. 2647 PAPERBGARD CONTAINERS 265 BUILDING PAPER AND BOARD 266 . 9 3 175-4 171-2 .18 .84 143.9 136.3 57.7 .06 180.9 149.8 64.2 PRINTING AND PUBLISHING 27 NEWSPAPERS 271 PERIOD.,BOOKS,CARDS 272,3,7 JOB PRINTING ' 274-6,8,9 4.72^ 1.38 105-7 9 6 . 5 1.38 132.5 124.4 1.96 179.3 161.2 £H EMICALS,AND,PRODUCTS 28 CHEMICALS & SYN- MAT. 281,2 BASIC CHEMICALS 281 ALKALIES & CHLORINE 2812 GASES,ETC2813,5,6 BASIC ORG. CHEM. 2818 7.74 3.79 196-7 193.0 2.54 157.1 166.1 PAPER AND PRODUCTS PULP AND PAPER HOOD PULP PAPER PAPERBGARD INORG. CHEM. NEC 2819 ACIDS 6 FERTILIZER MAT SULFURIC ACID, ETC. FERTILIZER MATERIALS ERDA NUCLEAR MATLS SYNTHETIC MATERIALS 282 PLASTICS MATERIALS 2821 SYNTHETIC RUBBER 2822 MAN-MADE FIBERS 2823,4 JUNE JULY OCT. OEC. 145.3 139.6 149.7 146.9 142- 1 136.9 145-3 144.6 143.4 138.0 147.9 144.1 126.7 119.7 134.4 124-8 145.1 135.6 155.0 143-4 141.8 131-5 148-3 146.9 146.0 135.6 157.4 143.3 146.9 138.9 153.3 148.8 182.0 176.5 171.9 176.1 158-9 180.2 178.2 185.0 180.7 163.1 149.6 65.3 146.4 140.4 147.4 133-8 151.7 157.9 139.8 123.6 105.6 130.3 166.2 107.5 126.0 167.4 109.0 127.0 166.5 107.9 126.3 174.9 103.2 132.2 189.0 94-7 142.8 197.9 97.6 151.4 206.2 106.4 145.4 202-0 112.1 132.4 183.6 115.0 126.2 170.1 112.5 126.0 166.5 211.4 171.4 109-8 187.4 206.2 209.5 169.2 102-8 170.2 209.2 206-1 166.1 109.4 167.7 207.8 196.6 157.1 101.4 162.0 195.0 195.2 153.7 103.1 153.5 189.3 183.3 147-3 100.5 154.4 178-4 187.6 147.4 90.9 157.6 175.2 196.6 148.6 90-7 163.2 174.7 192.9 150-4 97.0 148.5 182-0 195.2 154.0 96.6 151.3 189.0 193.4 154.0 91.0 146.4 193.2 110-1 108.9 116-3 114.6 108-2 107.7 139.7 134.4 84.7 83.3 118.3 128.9 121.8 118.2 126.7 117-3 154.0 86.8 110.5 116.8 106.6 146.2 83.8 105.0 108.6 98-5 138.0 86.1 107.4 113.0 104.6 137.4 82.4 103-0 106.2 98-8 127.7 85.1 107.8 112.8 106.1 132.1 85.2 109.4 116.6 109.7 136.7 79.1 112.0 118.2. 111.9 136.6 83.6 111.6 118.6 111.0 140.5 80.8 109.2 114.6 104.9 142.6 83.4 1.25 2 7 7 - 4 2 4 7 . 7 .54 403-6 335.0 .13 85.3 85.1 .58 204-2 203,8 292-8 287.5 420.2 277.0 408.4 279.7 256.5 269-6 94-2 381.0 71.2 183.3 294.4 432.0 79-6 279-5 405.6 97.0 207.9 400.6 74.9 279.0 97.8 225-0 291.7 424.8 103.2 211.2 .14! 9 9 . 2 96.9 . 4 8 160.0 157.2 1.18 192.9 2 1 4 . 6 .75 .55 .41 .14 .15 149.6 78.6 413.8 126.2 113.9 135.3 130.0 411.4 77.0 202.2 273.7 405.0 74.0 197.5 196.8 405.0 87-5 207.2 192.5 215.8 81-9 207.7 CHEMICAL PRODUCTS 283-7,9 DRUGS AND MEDICINES 283 SOAP AND TOILETRIES 284 PAINTS 285 AGRICULTURAL CHEMICALS 287 3.95 1.34 ; 1.29 .43 .33 184.7 245-1 164.9 96.6 219.3 185.9 243-8 168.8 105.6 211.9 189.1 247.2 168.2 112-4 230-1 191.5 254.0 16 3-5 123.4 230-2 193-6 255. 1 166-4 139.4 217.0 206.5 285.9 173.6 140.1 213.3 207.9 294.1 177-6 118.5 212.9 207.8 288.8 181.0 132.2 208.6 209.4 293.6 181.5 129.1 199.7 200-3 277.0 179.2 111.1 187.6 189.2 259.1 171.3 96.0 190.3 183.5 258.0 162-0 79.5 183-1 PETROLEUM PRODUCTS 29 PETROLEUM REFINING 291,9 AUTOMOTIVE GASOLINE DISTILLATE FUEL OIL RESIDUAL FUEL OIL AVIATION FUEL & KEROS. 1.79 1.64 122.51123.3 . 8 4 128.5|125-8 . 2 9 118.51118.7 . 0 5 141.9|167.5 .17 95.41 90.2 118.9 119.9 111.0 150.3 100.4 118.8 121.6 104.1 148.2 106.5 117.0 123.7 106.9 153.7 98.0 121.4 128.1 118.8 149-0 86.2 127.7 137.1 123.9 142-5 89.8 128.2 137.5 124.0 136.1 92.4 122.9 130.6 114.6 133.3 94.5 124.2 132.3 120.6 133.2 95.1 122.8 126.7 128.7 126.2 97.0 122.3 127. 1 129.9 130.8 101.2 122.3 131.1 120.8 132.0 93.2 157.1 130,4 422.2 153.5 131.1 417.1 142.7 130.0 413.8 142.5 127.9 407.6 144-9 132.6 420.8 108.6 122.0 397.6 132.6 128.5 423.3 140.2 128.9 435.1 144.8 126.8 427.0 128.1 125.5 417.1 128.5 123.4 394.7 82. 61. 81-0 58.1 80.4 53.0 81.1 59.6 81.7 55.6 76-3 46.6 79.4 55.1 78.1 56.6 77.4 58.5 77.3 51,3 73.2 44.3 123.7 94.3 MISC. PETROLEUM PRODREFINERY FUEL NEC REFINERY NONFUEL MAT. REFINERY PRODUCTS NFC RUBBER S PLASTICS PROD. 30 TIRES 301 RUB. PROD. EX. TIRES 3 0 2 , 3 , 6 PLASTICS PRODUCTS NEC 307 / LEATHER AND PRODUCTS 31 PERS. LEATHER GDS. 3 1 3 , 5 - 7 , 9 SHOES 314 195.8 266.8 171.5 115.3 208.7 .28 .06 .14 .08 2.24 .60, 137.9 131-2 .66 127.4 121-9 .98 4 1 2 . 7 3 7 6 . 2 .86 -22 .53 78.9 54.6 79.0 55-4 CLAY, GLASS, S ST. PROD. 32 PRESSED AND BLOWN GLASS 322 GLASS CONTAINERS 3221 2.74 .491 151.3 142.3 .28 139.0 128.4 159.7 151.7 156.3 144.5 153.9 142.6 151.3 143.5 158.4 151.7 148.7 136.6 160.1 152.0 159.7 150.7 154.8 145.6 147.2 126.9 CEMENT 324 STRUCTURAL CLAY PRODUCTS 325 BRICK 3251 CONCRETE,MISC.CLAY MFR.326-9 .27 91.8 49.5 75.7 7 1 . 1 .20 59-2 4 2 . 9 .08 1.51 128-3 123.5 62.0 71.0 45.8 133-0 79-1 71.9 50.1 129.6 90.3 72.5 53.1 129.3 101.3 70-7 56.0 124.2 113.3 80.1 68.6 130.4 108.3 76.7 61.7 113.1 80.4 70.7 131.1 111.5 78.7 64.9 128.1 87.8 79.2 69.8 79.5 125.5 115.1 77.0 65.1 130.3 68.9 131.6 62.2 122.6 PRIMARY METALS 33 IRON AND STEEL 331,2 BASIC STEEL 5 MILL PRD 331 BASIC IRON AND STEEL PIG IRON RAW STEEL CCKE AND PRODUCTS 6.57 79.1 73.5 62-0 82.2 66.6 79.3 71.8 62. 1 81.6 55.5 71.3 64.7 67.3 58.6 55.1 52-4 74.2 49.4 65.4 45.7 60.8 55.4 49.9 61.1 45.0 56,9 50.8 47.2 54.6 44.3 56.2 48.9 44.0 53.3 42.8 55.5 48.3 43.9 53.1 39.0 52.3 45.7 41.3 50.3 37.4 43.7 41.6 36.8 46.4 33.8 44.9 39.6 36.4 43.4 31.5 82.852-9 96.4 51.6 80.7 106.5 84.2 60-9 88.6 53.3 59.5 116.5 75-8 60.8 77.6 48.4 49.2 104.1 73.0 64.6 66.9 49.6 55.5 100.2 64.4 58.0 52-5 44.6 52.8 91.6 61-0 52-6 43.4 44.7 51.1 91.1 61.0 51.3 45.7 43.6 59-3 89.0 60.3 46.9 45.6 43.5 77.4 85.3 56.7 43.1 42.8 42.5 36.1 87.4 45.1 33-5 33.0 34.1 31-4 69-9 48-5 46.8 35-4 32.4 38.1 71.9 75.0 73.3 68.0 68.3 65.6 51.4 52-6 52.0 54.3 48.7 34.6 STEEL MILL PRODUCTS CONSUMER DUR. STEEL EQUIPMENT STEEL CONSTRUCTION STEEL CAN & CLOSURE STEEL MISC. STEEL IRON & STEEL FOUNDRIES 3 3 2 4.21 3.34 1.34 .46 .72 .16 2.01 -31 .51 .41 .13 .65 .87 62.3 55-9 49.3 62.1 46.3 80-3 71.3 60.3 79.7 64.5 86.2 66.6 57.8 52.4 6 0 . 7 100.8 45-0 51.9 54.9 67.2 9 4 . 0 113.9 59-6 70.8 11 Table 4A—continued INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIVIDUAL SERIES Seasonally adjusted, 1967=100 196 7] SIC | PRO-| 1982] 1982 CODE] PCR-I AVG.I TIONI JAN. FEB. MAR. JUNE JULY AUG. SEP. OCT. NOV. DEC] JAN. 108.9 111.3 117.6 124.3 133.5 106.7 113.5 129.2 124.1 121.6 100.7 108-8 113.1 123.3 125-9 95.9 103.0 106.2 119.6 129.0 97.0 102.8 88.6 116.3 129.8 98.9 103.5 96.3 112.5 135.2 102.9 99.3 99.1 108.2 129.2 100-3 93.6 80.1 104.9 130.5 106.2 96.0 91.4 101.5 126.0 95.5 89.6 78.6 98.3 123.7 92.2 90.3 87.8 97.0 120.5 92.5! 88.5| 86.2J 97.11 122.1 98.4 91.4 88.8 99.2 NONFERROUS PRODUCTS 335,6 NONFERROUS MILL PROD 335 COPPER MILL PROD 1.45 102-7 111.0 1.09 114.8 126.0 .48 84.0 104.6 106.3 120.1 86.9 98-6 110-0 77.2 93.7 103.1 70.9 97.0 106.3 78.0 100.9 109.8 72.7 105.6 116.9 88.8 106.8 120.2 94.7 117.1 134. 1 106.4 102.2 115.5 88.6 98.3 107.7 62.3 99.3 108.4 113. 11 122.8 84.7 90.3 ALUMINUM MILL PROD CONSTRUCTION NONCONSTRUCTION NONFERROUS FOUNDRIES 336 .61 139.0 142.7 .13 153.1 158.1 .48 135.2 138.6 .35 65.1 64.3 146.2 165.3 141.0 63.2 135.7 139.3 134.8 63.0 128.3 141.7 124.7 64.4 128.5 143.5 124.4 67.9 139.0 148.0 136.5 73.1 138.9 157.0 134.0 70.5 140.2 148.8 137.9 65.0 155.9 155.4 156.0 63.9 136.6 153.2 132.1 60.6 143.3 164.2 137.7 69.0 135.3 170.4 125.8 56.5 148.3 168.8 142.8 63.6 INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIVIDUAL SERIES NONFERROUS METALS 333-6,9 PRIMARY NONF, METALS 333 COPPER 3331 ALUMINUM 3334 SECONDARY NONF. METALS 334 2.36| 99.5 .45 100-0 .09| 98. 1 .27 110.5 .09 127.2 1983 APR. __MAY FABRICATED,METAL PRODUCTS 34 METAL CANS 341 HDWE,PLUMB,STRUCT,MET 342-4 HARDWARE, TOOLS, CUTL 342 STRUCTURAL METAL PROD 344 OTHER FAB. MET, PROD. 345-9 FASTENERS, STAMP.ETC 345-8 5.93 .38| 113.9 2.67| 123.5 .76 112.0 1.62 131.3 2.89j 106.8 2.03 93.5 120.8 134.5 117.3 147.0 109.9 94.5 121.1 133.0 113.4 145.7 110.7 95.4 125.9 131.0 114.3 142.0 110.5 96-5 122.5 128.7 111.7 139.8 109.0 95.1 112.3 124.0 112.5 132.0 108.0 95.3 112.9 123.8 114.7 130.3 108.7 95.8 107.0 123.7 114.2 131.1 109.8 97.1 106.9 123.6 119.1 128.0 108.7 96.5 111.4 119.0 109.5 125.3 105.7 93.3 109.5 113.3 105.6 117.9 101.1 88.2 110.2 114.3 106.2 118.8 99.1 86.2 108.0 114.1 105.9 118.4 100.7 88.2 110-8 114.6 105.5 120.0 103.2 91.8 NONELECTRICAL MACHINERY 35 ENGINE AND FARM EQUIP- 351,2 FARM TRACTORS CONSTRUCTION & ALLIED EQ 353 TRACKLAYING TRACTORS 9.15 1.20 114.7 126.8 .19 53.8 52.0 1.36 120.2 146.9 .16 46.7 48.7 132.9 71.3 141.6 69.0 123.3 59-7 137.6 60.5 119.9 55.8 133.5 54.7 122.5 54.5 126.8 51.4 117.1 53.3 122.8 44.5 114.6 44.8 119.8 47.1 106.9 28.6 118.0 45.8 106.9 57.5 112.2 49.5 105.6 68.2 99.7 29.2 100.2 41.2 93.6 26.0 97.4 42.5 94.2 27.7 96.5 37.2 95.7 25.3 METALWORKING MACHINERY 354 SPEC,S GEKL IND EQ 355,6 OFFICE, SERV, S MISC. 357-9 1.67 105-9 114.7 2.30 102.7 114.8 2.63 248.0 258.5 115.8 114.1 256.0 117.0 112.3 260.3 112.5 108.5 246.8 107.9 105-2 241.6 105.5 102.4 240.5 106.1 101.2 238.4 104.8 99.8 246.0 100.4 95.0 244.2 97.1 93.0 242.6 96.5 93.3 246.2 93.3 93.3 255.0 95.0 93.1 251.3 ELECTRICAL MACHINERY 36 MAJOR ELECT. EQ.S PTS. 361,2 HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCES 363 COOKING STOVES 3631 8.05 1.74 117.4 129.4 .83 119.3 112.0 .08 102.2 90.4 130.8 117.7 104.5 131.5 108-9 76.6 123.0 117.6 103.6 121.3 112.2 90.7 119.2 121.8 100.7 112.1 122.1 107.5 114.6 126.1 101.7 109.1 121.3 100.9 104.0 128.9 120.4 108.5 128.6 125.2 107.1 117.1 109.1 109.6 134.2 139.4 REFRIGERATION APPL. 3632 LAUNDRY APPLIANCES 3633 MISC. APPLIANCES 3634-6,9 .26 97.3 86.0 -131 110.5 109.9 .36 142.7 136.8 90.7 116.8 140.8 84.4 106.7 135. 1 93.3 109.8 141.6 82-7 110-4 139-6 103.7 113.6 143.0 109.4 126.5 133.2 104.4 100.8 157.3 103.1 102.3 146.5 115.6 114.5 146.2 104.2 128.8 147.2 97.2 89.2 144.2 105.5 142.6 150.8 TV AND RADIO SETS 365 COMMUNICATION EQUIPMENT 366 ELECTRONIC COMPONENTS 367 TV TUBES 3671-3 -52 80-4 80.6 2.30 167.4 162.7 1-43 312-2 308.1 .31 34-4 34.4 85-2 167.1 321.8 34.4 77.1 169.2 321.6 32.4 87.6 168.7 319.4 34.2 78-5 167-8 317.5 34.5 86.7 167.3 313.4 34.3 93.5 171.5 321.8 43.5 82.4 166.0 310.7 36.8 74.4 165.8 302.5 28.4 78.4 166.8 301.3 35.4 72.8 166.6 301.9 36.9 72.2 169.2 308.3 28.5 79.8 172.8 316.9 MISC. ELECTRICAL SUPP. 369 STORAGE BATTERY,REPL. 3691 .49 172.6 165.1 .09 230.8 217.7 173.7 232.5 175.2 227.9 178.4 245.6 183.9 264.6 177.5 230.9 174.6 229.5 173.3 231.2 171.4 232.9 171.4 233-7 166.3 226.2 163.8 214.8 167.1 176.5 TRANSPORTATION EQUIPMENT 37 MOTOR VEHICLES AND PARTS 371 AUTOS, TOTAL LARGE AUTOS SMALL AUTOS 9.27 4.50 1.90j 86.6 61.3 1.79 54.9 42.0 .11 606.3 378.7 70.5 50.6 398.8 79.8 48.9 587.1 87.2 54.3 628.5 96.1 60.2 686.5 101.9 67.8 662.7 114.6 76.8 736.0 93.3 55.5 715.5 94.3 57.9 692.9 79.5 47.9 599.7 77.7 50.3 527.5 87.9 51.9 680.8 97.1 59.7 712.2 .53 .40 -13 .09 1.98 109.9 72.9 220-7 128.5 111.6 121.8 79.9 247.0 121.0 118.5 141.9 91.5 292-7 126.7 119.9 145.5 166.9 96.5 109.8 292-0 337.7 116. 1 124.0 123.8 129.7 165.3 108.1 336.5 115.0 134.6 153.3 98.8 316.4 100.7 133.6 146.3 93.1 305.4 114.8 131.4 121.2 71.1 271.4 103.7 130.2 111.7 70.6 234.7 99.2 123.5 108.0 70.6 219.8 110.7 122.8 128.9 85.5 258.9 145.0 121.8 116.1 AIRCRAFT AND PARTS 372 SHIPS AND BOATS 373 RAIL £ MISC TRANS EQ 374,5,9 RAILROAD EQUIPMENT 374 MOBILE HOMES 379 3.73 98.2 99.8 .56 129-2 127.2 .49 83.9 95.2 .26 39.0 54.8 .18 110.4 105.7 102.1 134.0 93.1 49.4 116.2 101.1 132. 1 90.5 46.3 113.7 99. 1 129.3 84.4 39.0 106.6 97.8 ^30. 1 89.3 49.8 114. 1 97.2 127.9 88.9 49.5 111.4 97.2 129-2 83.0 38.0 109.1 95.2 133.0 76.2 26.1 108.4 96.1 132.2 75.1 26.6 107.1 97.8 125.9 74-2 27.9 104.3 97.0 127.0 76.9 24.8 114.8 97.9 122.8 81.5 35-0 116.0 INSTRUMENTS 38 EQUIPMENT INSTR-S PTS. 38 1-4 CONSUMER 1NSTR. PROD385-7 2.11 1-07 180.5 180.8 1.04 142.7 144-9 184-2 145-8 181.3 146.4 179.3 146.4 180.4 146.7 180.6 147.4 182.2 148.6 183.1 145- 1 179.8 142.2 175-7 135.0 179.0 131.7 179.4 180.5 133.2 I 136.6 MISC. MANUFACTURES 39 MISC. CONS. GOODS 391,3,4,6 MISC- BUS. SUPPLIES 395,9 1.51 .86 142.6 | 149-7 146.9 .65 128.3 | 140.1 139.3 152-2 139-7 147.9 135.7 140.8 132.2 136.1 123.8 145.1 123. 2 145.5 122.4 138.0 122.7 137.1 119.9 135.9 121.3 137.9 | 140.3 121.4 I 123.5 3.88 190.5 ELECTRIC UTILITIES ELEC UTIL GENERATION | 1.90 182.3 1189.5 184.8 | 1-54| 164.7| 175.5 169.7 FOSSIL FUEL GENERATION .36 257.8 1249.9 249.7 HYDRO & NUCLEAR GENERAT. 182-7 165-5 256.6 182.6 164.5 260.2 186.0 168.2 262.5 184.8 166.8 262.1 182-7 164-4 261.1 183-6 166.9 255-5 179.4 160.7 259.9 181.4 163.1 259.9 178.1 159.2 259.4 173.1 153.6 256.7 1200.7 199.9 J216.9 216.1 188-4 J189.1 | 139.4 136.0 1223.1 223.3 200.4 214.4 190.4 135.1 227.2 203.3 221.6 190.2 133.3 228.5 200.6 220.2 186.4 131.2 224.1 198.1 215.7 185.5 131.0 223.3 195.4 209-3 185-4 132.5 222.3 195.9 212.5 184.0 132.9 219.8 196.6 211.8 185.7 130.3 224.6 195.2 211.0 183.9 127.8 223.0 198.1 215.3 185.8 126.8 226.5 TRUCKS AND BUSES BUSINESS VEHICLES UTILITY VEHICLES TRUCK TRAILERS MOTOR VEHICLE PARTS I 1.98 ELEC UTIL SALES | .83 RESIDENTIAL KWH NONRESIDENTIAL KWH i 1.15 I -47 SIC KWH COMMERCIAL & OTHER KWH i .65 GAS UTILITIES GAS TRANSMISSION GAS SALES RESIDENTIAL GAS INDUSTRIAL GAS COM'L & OTHER GAS 134.9 87.2 277.7 117-0 125.0 I 1.81 .65 I 1.17 | .62 I -35 I -20 12 113.4 128.6 96.4 126.0 89.4 31.4 Table 4B—continued INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIVIDUAL SERIES Not seasonally adjusted, 1967=100 INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIVIDUAL SERIES SIC CODE 1967 PBOPORTIONi 1982 AVG. 1982 1983 JAN. FEB. NONFERROUS METALS 333-6,9 PRIMARY NONF. METALS 333 COPPER 3331 ALUMINUM 3334 SECONDARY NONF. METALS 334 2.36 99.5 106.3 .45 100.0 113.9 .09 98.1 117.9 .27 110.5 126.3 .09 127.2 127.9 110.4 115.8 135.2 124.2 131.0 107.6 109.5 121.7 121. 1 134.4 102.4 105.2 116.6 118.6 136.3 NCNFERBOUS PRODUCTS 335,6 NONFEHROUS MILL PROD 335 COPPER MILL PROD 1.45 1102.7 106-6 1.09 1114.8 119.7 .48 I 84.0 101.4 110.4 123-5 88.8 108.2 121.2 93.0 ALUMINUM MILL PROD CONSTRUCTION NONCONSTRUCTION NONFEBROUS FOUNDRIES 336 .61 139.0 134.1 .13 153-1 141.9 .48 135-2 132.0 .35 65.1 65.7 150.7 165.2 146-8 69.7 MAR. APR_._ MAY , JULY AUG. SEP. OCT. NOV. 103-0 103.8 96.0 115.6 133.2 103-8 101.5 94.8 111.6 142.7 89.8 91.8 75.3 107.0 107.1 95.7 90.0 71.9 103.4 128.1 104.8 93.9 88.6 100.9 124.9 95.2 91.3 80.4 99.2 127.1 88.9 92.4 91.3 99. 1 122.5 86.6 95.8 90.4 | 93-8 86.9 | 89.1 99.1 100.8 111.7 103-3 114.7 84.1 105.9 117.2 89.1 108.4 118.3 75.6 92.1 103.6 69.7 101.3 114.3 83.1 115.0 131.5 102.0 100.5 112.5 86.3 91.6 99.2 58.0 89-5 I 104.0 102-0 | 116.5 76.7 I 87.5 143.3 147.7 142.1 67.9 138.8 153.7 134.7 67.6 139.2 155.7 134.7 70.7 151.8 164.9 148.3 77.3 130.2 149.0 125.1 56.3 138-8 155.5 134.2 60.9 154.7 155.1 154.6 63.4 133.0 152.4 127.7 63.1 131.6 152.2 126.0 67.7 121.8 143.6 115-9 50-6 139.3 151.5 136.0 65.0 JUNE. DEC. I JAN. FABRICATED HETAL PBODUCTS 34 METAL CANS 341 HDWE,PLUMB,STBUCT,HET 342-4 HARDWARE, TOOLS, CUTL 342 STRUCTURAL METAL PROD 344 OTHER FAB. MET. PROD. 345-9 FASTENERS, STAMP-ETC 345-8 5.93 .38 113.9 2-67 1123.5 -76 112.0 1.62 131.3 2.89 106.8 2.03 93-5 113.4 131.6 114.0 144.3 105.4 90.0 119.0 135.5 115.4 148.2 112.5 97.0 123. 1 133.0 116.4 143.9 112.7 98.4 119.6 127.9 111.9 138.4 109.5 95.8 111.7 122.8 112.2 130.6 108.4 95.7 117.1 123.8 114.9 130.2 110.7 97.7 114.4 118.8 110.2 125.6 106.0 93.2 114.9 121.8 115.5 127.4 107.0 94.6 117.2 120.5 112.2 125.8 107.2 94.8 110.5 115.5 108.9 119.5 102.5 89.9 106.0 116.7 108.2 121-5 100.3 87.6 99.9 114.3 104.0 120.0 99.5 87.1 104.0 112.0 102.5 117.8 99.0 87.4 NONELECTRICAL MACHINERY 35 ENGINE AND FARM EQUIP. 351,2 FARM TRACTORS CONSTRUCTION 6 ALLIED EQ 353 TRACKLAYING TRACTORS 9-15 1.20 114-7 127.5 .19 53.8 55.9 1.36 120-2 140.3 -16 46-7 48.0 137.3 82.2 142,7 78.3 127.0 68.0 135-9 65.0 120.4 63-8 131.7 59.0 120.6 57.8 124.4 53.2 118.6 60.8 123.7 47.9 107.6 29.3 116.6 39.6 101.9 22.8 115.8 38.4 109.7 59.8 117.2 51.0 107.4 74.3 102.4 30.2 99.6 35.4 96.4 24.3 98.5 36.0 95.8 26.0 97.0 40-0 91.5 25.0 HETALHORKING MACHINERY 354 SPEC,6 GENL IND EQ 355,6 OFFICE, SERV, 5 MISC. 357-9 1-67 105-9 111.4 2-30 102.7 111.2 2.63 248.0 240.8 117.2 114.4 249.3 117.2 111.7 248.9 112.5 107.8 240.5 105.6 104.7 236.7 107.0 104.7 250.0 104.6 99.2 253.7 104.7 99.4 259.1 104.0 98.7 260.5 99.4 94.2 250.2 96.4 94.5 245.3 91.1 91.6 240.6 92.2 90.1 233.7 ELECTRICAL MACHINERY 36 MAJOR ELECT, EQ.S PTS. 361,2 HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCES 363 COOKING STOVES 3631 8.05 1.74 117.4 123.9 .83 119.3 109.3 .08 102.2 87.8 127.6 123.7 110.4 130.2 114.6 79.9 123.4 125.4 111.7 121.4 115.9 99.1 123.0 128.7 111.0 113.8 112.9 87.6 114.9 117.5 99.2 113.1 124.3 101.7 108.2 139.8 133.0 107.1 122.7 117.0 102.7 96.6 88.2 104.8 131.3 138.4 REFRIGERATION APPL. 3632 LAUNDRY APPLIANCES 3633 MISC- APPLIANCES 3634-6,9 -26 97.3 89.2 -13 110.5 102.8 -36 142.7 131.5 96.7 120.8 147.8 94.0 115.4 137.4 108.0 120.8 143.1 95.2 119.9 133.5 123.9 116.4 141.0 116. 1 101.1 120.8 72.4 98.0 117.4 104.2 154.9^ 156.3 117.3 128.7 162.0 89.2 112.8 152.4 67.1 65.8 131.7 109.4 133.4 145.0 TV AND RADIO SETS 365 COMMUNICATION EQUIPMENT 366 ELECTRONIC COMPONENTS 367 TV TUBES 3671-3 .52 80.4 75.0 2.30 167.4 162.0 3.43 1312.2 303.0 .31 34.4 33.3 83.9 167.1 315.7 34.0 76.3 169.2 315.1 33.0 83.9 164.6 312.6 36.0 82.1 165.7 315.4 38.0 86.0 167.8 318.8 34.0 72.7 166.7 310.8 33.0 88.8 165.0 314.0 39.9 85.0 166.4 308.3 33.1 90.5 168.2 308.4 41.1 77.4 170.5 309.3 35-9 74.7 62.6 175.1 | 172.1 314.6 I 311-7 21.0 MISC. ELECTRICAL SUPP. 369 STORAGE BATTERY,REPL- 3691 .49 !172.6 165.8 .09 230.8 245-0 171.5 236.2 164.9 185.0 166.2 182.2 170.4 189.7 170.1 184.2 163.4 183.9 173.8 241.1 185.4 295.8 184.4 301.9 177.9 267.0 177.5 257.9 166.6 198.6 TRANSPORTATION EQUIPMENT 37 MOTOR VEHICLES AND PARTS 371 AUTOS, TOTAL LARGE AUTOS SMALL &UTOS 9.27 4.50 1.90 86.6 59-9 1-79 54.9 42.8 .11 606.3 340.8 73.2 54-1 386.8 90.0 55.8 651.7 98.2 61.4 703.9 108.6 68.0 775.8 114.7 75.9 752.2 92.1 60.3 614.6 72.6 41.6 581.7 85.2 51.0 647.8 87-8 52-7 665.7 82.3 52.3 575.0 74.1 43.3 580.0 92.8 59.7 637.4 109,7 75-1 213.4 112-1 110-2 134.6 91.9 262-4 132.4 116.3 158.0 105.2 316.1 139.9 119.0 157.6 103.3 320.0 128.0 122.4 170.2 112.0 344.5 128.5 130.0 180.2 116.8 370-1 123.2 136.6 134.3 83.0 287.9 92.8 132.3 118.9 74.5 251.6 114.4 128.9 121.6 72.5 268.7 100.2 128.7 123.5 77.7 260.5 97.4 124.7 105.4 66.4 222.0 107.0 124.5 105.1 68.4 214.9 128-0 126.9 113.1 AIRCRAFT AND PARTS 372 SHIPS AND BOATS 373 RAIL 6 HISC TRANS EQ 374,5,9 RAILROAD EQUIPMENT 374 MOBILE HOMES 379 3.73 98.2 100.4 .56 1129.2 123.6 .49 I 83-9 79.9 -26 39.0 53.8 .18 110.4 79.4 102.8 133.5 89.2 47.9 103-3 101-5 132.5 94-5 52.5 115.5 98.2 132.7 92.8 41.6 122.0 98.1 132.2 94.4 49.6 124.9 97.2 129.9 97.3 49.0 129.6 95.3 126.9 76. 1 32.5 106-5 92.7 126.6 80.8 24.0 122.0 95.9 129.1 79.7 26.1 116.6 97.3 127.2 79. 1 27.1 117.4 98.6 129.0 73.4 26.0 103.5 100.2 127.3 69.8 38.1 83-9 96.9 122-5 72.3 30.8 INSTRUMENTS 38 EQUIPMENT INSTR.S PTS- 381-4 CONSUMER INSTR. PROD385-7 2.11 1.07 180.5 172-5 1.04 142.7 141.3 180.4 143.4 178-4 144.2 176.3 143.7 179.1 146.3 185.8 149.8 182.9 147.6 185.7 145.9 186.8 144-2 178.9 136.7 181.5 134.3 177.6 135.2 172.0 133.2 MISC. MANUFACTURES 39 MISC. CONS. GOODS 391,3,4,6 MISC. BUS- SUPPLIES 395,9 1.51 .86 142.6 136.6 .65 128-3 134.4 145.0 138-0 148.0 140-2 145.7 133.7 140.0 130-0 140.6 125.7 139-4 121.8 151.7 125.4 152.0 126.9 143.8 123.5 137.4 121.9 131.0 118.6 128.0 118.5 ELECTRIC UTILITIES ELEC UTIL GENERATION FOSSIL FUEL GENERATION HYDRO 6 NUCLEAR GENERAT. 3.88 1.90 182.3 204-7 1.54 164.7 188-2 .36 257.8 275.5 190.3 172.6 266.2 176.2 155.4 265.6 168.3 146.8 260.5 172.8 152.4 260.4 190.4 171.2 272.8 197-5 181.4 266.8 200.3 187.3 256.1 176.0 161.7 237.3 168.5 155.3 225.3 169.0 151.6 243.8 173.4 152.5 263. 1 224.4 268.8 192.5 135.6 232-6 210.5 243.7 186.7 131.2 224.1 195.7 213.3 183.0 134.6 215.6 183.9 193.6 177.0 133.0 206.4 175-5 173.1 177.2 133-0 206.9 189.6 192.8 187.3 132-8 224.4 211.8 231.7 197-5 130-5 243.3 220.5 246.5 201.8 133.4 248.9 207.8 222.3 197.4 132.8 243.3 184.5 185.6 183-8 131.9 219.9 179.6 183.8 176.5 128.7 210.0 TRUCKS AND BUSES BUSINESS VEHICLES UTILITY VEHICLES TRUCK TRAILERS MOTOR VEHICLE PARTS ELEC UTIL SALES RESIDENTIAL KHH NONRESIDENTIAL KWH SIC K8H COMMERCIAL & OTHER KHH GAS UTILITIES GAS TRANSMISSION GAS SALES RESIDENTIAL GAS INDUSTRIAL GAS COfl'I & OTHER GAS ,53 134.9 .40 I 87.2 -13 277.7 -09 1117-0 1.98 125-0 99.0 127.4 - 1.98 .83 1.15 .47 .65 1.81 .65 1.17 .62 .35 .20 13 Table 6 INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: GROSS VALUE OF PRODUCTS Table 5 INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDEXES; 1967=100 Billions of 1972 dollars at annual rates, seasonally adjusted Quarterly averages, seasonally adjusted 1 1 | 1 1 1982 1981 J 1981 | 1 1 IV 1III 1 SDBHARY GROUPINGS III 584.1 454.1 304.0 584.1 456.2 310.7 579.9 450-9 311.1 570.3 443.0 306.4 74.5 32.8 41.7 71.0 30.3 40.7 77.7 36.8 40-9 79.0 37.8 41.2 72.7 32.6 40.1 236.5 31.2 205.3 42.5 76.7 236. 1 29.7 206.5 43.0 71.4 233.0 233.0 2 32.1 233.7 205.7 42.4 68.0 205.8 43-7 68.2 203.8 43.3 69.5 205.2 43.0 68.6 134.7 147.3 117-9 181.2 113.5 156.8 113.7 54.0 59.7 43.1 155.2 111.0 52.8 58.2 44.2 150.1 105.8 49.4 56.4 44.4 145.4 100.6 44.3 56-3 44-9 139.8 94.2 40.5 53.8 45-6 136.6 89.1 37.1 52.1 47.5 143.7 125.6 161.8 179.0 141.8 122.9 160.5 182.1 139.3 60.6 78.8 19.3 132.6 54-9 77.7 19.3 130.0 53.2 76.8 19.9 128.0 52.1 75.8 19.7 129-0 53.6 75.4 19.4 127.3 52-0 75.3 19.9 134.7 127-1 79.7 156.8 160.5 101.8 142.0 194.0 125.5 132.6 124.7 76.5 155.1 158.4 102.0 145-9 188.5 123.8 128.7 117.0 70.0 157.1 161.0 103.0 147.8 192.1 121.7 139.8 128-2 156-7 138.1 126.1 155.5 137.7 124.8 156.4 134.5 119.8 155.8 155.4 141.7 170-7 148.5 128-8 170.4 141.2 117.2 167.9 140.4 117.1 166.3 AUG. SEP. OCT. NOV. DEC. 1983 JAN. 578.5 449-2 309.1 575.3 446.3 309.3 570.0 442.8 306.6 568.4 441.3 305.6 572.7 445.0 307.0 575.5 445.9 308.3 580.4 450.4 IV 153.0 152-2 151.2 149.4 146.3 147.7] 147.5 144.2 141.8 143.7 143.4 141.0 139.4 142.4 142.3 143-5 138.2 141.8 141-2 144.4 135.3 139.4 138.8 141.9 DURABLE CONSUMER GOODS AUTOMOTIVE PRODUCTS HOME GOODS 143.1 141.4 144.1 129.7 124.6 132.6 124.7 117.2 128.9 132.6 137.3 130.0 133.8 140.2 130.2 125.8 124.3 126.6 83.9 38.4 45.5 NONDURABLE CONSUMER GOODS CLOTHING CONSUMER STAPLES CONSUMER ENERGY (HOME GOODS AND CLOTHING) 151-9 121.3 160-3 148.9 133-6 149.9 115.9 159.3 148.9 124.9 147.4 147.8 148.6 148.3 158.7 147.9 118.7 159.1 152.8 119.5 159.3 150.4 120.9 158.7 149.8 119.3 153.7 184.0 169.5 200.6 102.8 151.9 179.5 165.3 I 195.8 | 105.6 146.8 170.9 155.1 189.3 106.2 140.7 160.5 139.6 184.7 107.5 136.8 153. 1 127-8 182.3 109.5 155.9 142.7 169.0 176-9 148.7 130.8 166-4 I 176-2 145.0 125-8 164.0 183.4 142.7 123.0 162.4 180.7 MATERIALS DURABLE GOODS MATERIALS BASIC METAL MATERIALS NONDURABLE GOODS MATERIALS TEXTILE, PAPER AND CHEMICAL MAT TEXTILE MATERIALS PAPEB MATERIALS CHEMICAL MATERIALS ENERGY MATERIALS 154.3 152.8 115-0 175.8 182.8 115.5 152.2 224.9 131.6 144.0 140-2 | 101.0 164.5 169.4 106.8 147.0 206-2 127.9 138.7 130.9 92.5 161.0 164.5 101.3 146. 1 200.0 129-8 MANUFACTURING DURABLE NONDURABLE 152.5 142.6 166.8 145-0 134.5 160.2 MINING AND UTILITIES MINING UTILITIES 157.7 145.8 170.9 155.4 143.7 168.4 EQUIPMENT BUSINESS EQUIPMENT INDUSTRIAL EQUIPMENT COMMERCIAL, TRANSIT, FARM EQ. DEFENSE AND SPACE EQUIPMENT INTERMEDIATE PRODUCTS CONSTRUCTION SUPPLIES BUSINESS SUPPLIES COMMERCIAL ENERGY PRODUCTS 1 II III TOTAL INDEX PRODUCTS, TOTAL FINAL PRODUCTS CONS0HER GOODS 1 1982 I II__ __III__ IVJ 616.4 598.5 477. 1 465.9 320.3 310.7 I IVI Table 7 INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: GROSS VALUE OF PRODUCTS Billions of 1972 dollars at annual rates, seasonally adjusted I I 1 MAJOR flARKET GROUPINGS 1972 ] j DOLS-j 1982 1982 LABS j AVG. .FEB. HAB. I MAY 507.4] 579.6 588.1 586.8 390.91 451. 1 457. 1 456.6 277.5 308-1 306.3 306.9 582.1 453-5 306.7 586.1 458.3 312.3 71.6 30.3 41.3 74.0 32.9 41.2 75.7 34.4 41.3 77-9 37.4 40.6 79.5 38.6 40.9 82.6 41.0 41.6 77.7 36.3 41.4 76.6 36.2 40.5 72.7 32.3 40.4 71.9 31.5 40.3 73.6 34.0 39.6 76.8 35.9 40.9 79.7 38.9 40.9 NONDURABLE CONSUMER GDS 195.5 233.0 234.6 28.51 CLOTHING 167.0J 205.1 207.0 CONSUMER STAPLES CONSUMER ENERGY PROD 39.2 43.1 42.2 69.4 68.5 69.0 (HOME GOODS S CLOTHING) 232.8 231.0 234.4 233.7 232.3 231.3 232.7 233.9 233.7 233.4 231.5 233.3 205.6 42.3 68.3 204.3 43-3 68.0 206.8 43.8 68.1 206.2 44.0 68.3 203.9 43.7 70.0 203.1 42.8 69.6 204.4 43.3 68.8 205.6 43.3 68.6 204.9 43.1 69.1 205-0 42.6 68.0 203.1 41.6 69.3 204.8 143.0 150.8 97.4 106.3 42-8 49.6 54.6 56-7 45.6 44.5 149.7 105.0 48.1 56-9 44.7 146.8 102-0 46-3 55.7 44-7 146.0 101.1 44.2 56.9 44.9 143.5 98.6 42.5 56.1 44.9 142.3 96.6 41.7 54.9 45.7 140. 1 94.9 40.9 54.0 45.3 137.0 91.2 38.9 52.4 45.7 136.2 89-5 37.3 52.3 46.7 135.7 88.3 36.8 51.5 47.4 138.0 89.6 37. 1 52.4 48.4 137.6 89.1 37-0 52.1 48.5 137.4 89.2 35.8 53.4 48.2 116.6 128.6 131.1 | 57-8 52.7 | 53.9 | 58.8] 75.9 I 77.2 l 15.61L 19.7 L 19.9 130-2 53.1 77.1 20.2 128.6 52.0 76.7 20-0 127.8 52.0 75.8 19-5 127.4 52.4 75.1 19.5 128.7 53.5 75.1 19.4 129.3 53.8 75.5 19.3 129.0 53-4 75.6 19.5 127.2 52.1 75.1 19.7 127.1 52.3 74.8 19.9 127.7 129.5 51.6 I 53-4 76.1 ! 76.1 20.1 | 19.8 PRODUCTS, TOTAL FINAL PRODUCTS CONSUMER GOODS DURABLE CONSUMER GOODS AUTOMOTIVE PRODUCTS HOME GOODS EQUIPMENT BUSINESS EQUIPMENT INDUSTRIAL EQUIPMENT COM»L,TRANSIT,FARM EQ DEFENSE & SPACE EQUIP. INTERMEDIATE PRODUCTS CONSTRUCTION SUPPLIES BUSINESS SUPPLIES COMMERCIAL ENERGY PROD 82.0] 75.1 41. 11 34-4 4 0.9] 40.7 113.4 80-6J 34.4J 46.2 32.7 14 _JUNE JULY \ APR. 584.1 585.8 456.7 457.2 313. 1 314.9 PEB.1 3M,0 69.3 130.0 53.7 Table 8 INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: DIFFUSION INDEXES Percent of component series higher than in earlier months ONE MONTH EARLIER THREE MONTHS EARLIER SIX MONTHS EARLIER 1967-82 AVERAGE HIGH LOW 53-7 71.7 22.6 56.3 78.7 15.7 58.0 82.8 14.7 1981 JANUARY FEBRUARY MARCH 58.1 52.8 53.4 69.4 63.0 61.7 78.1 76.6 75.7 APRIL MAY JUNE 44.5 50.9 50.4 47.4 52.8 48.3 67.7 57.0 52.1 JULY AUGUST SEPTEMBER 67.4 46.6 31.9 59.1 58.9 45.3 56.0 53.2 43.2 OCTOBER NOVEMBER DECEMBER 31.5 33.0 32.8 25.3 24.7 25.7 36.0 28.9 25.1 1982 JANUARY FEBRUARY MARCH 38.7 64.3 37.9 24.9 35.5 45.5 21-1 26.4 21.9 APRIL MAY JUNE 36.2 44.3 46.4 46.6 34.0 44.0 23.6 30.2 39.8 JULY AUGUST SEPTEMBER 53.0 45.5 45.5 48.9 53.8 44.7 46.2 40.4 42.8 OCTOBER NOVEMBER DECEMBER 35.1 48.1 49.1 39.6 39.8 39.6 43.8 43.8 38.3 JANUARY 63.4 63.0 45.7 NOTE: THE DIFFUSION INDEXES SHOtf THE PERCENT OF THE INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION INDEX'S 235 SEASONALLY ADJUSTED COMPONENT SERIES THAT IN THE MONTH INDICATED WERE HIGHER THAN THEY HERE ONE MONTH EARLIER, THREE MONTHS EARLIER, AND SIX MONTHS EARLIER. IN CALCULATING THE DIFFUSION INDEXES HALF OF THE UNCHANGED COMPONENTS ARE COUNTED AS BEING HIGHER AND NO ALLOWANCE IS HADE POR THE RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF THE INDIVIDUAL COMPONENTS IN TOTAL INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION. DIFFUSION INDEXES BASED ON CHANGES OVER A SIX-MCNTH PERIOD GENERALLY SHOW MORE PRONOUNCED CYCLICAL PATTERNS THAN DIFFUSION INDEXES BASED ON CHANGES OVER SHORTER PERIODS. 15 Table 9A ELECTRIC POWER USE BY INDUSTRIES Seasonally adjusted indexes, 1967=100 SERIES SIC [1967) BIL. KWH. 1967 1982 AVG. 1981 Q 4 1982 Q 1 560.4 120.8 130.3 125.4 122.1 120.3 115.4 136.1 101.4 | 67.4 34.0 34.7 145.2 144.5 150.6 128.8 147.5 147.5 146.4 151.2 134.2 151.0 145.8 144.5 149.3 132. 1 149.7 144.7 144. 4 150-6 128.6 145-7 42 4-3 237.7 133.0 23.. 8 112.6 101.2 125.4 178.5 124.6 122.4 131.6 180.5 118.9 112.8 128.4 180.3 114.6 110-7 106.6 103-5 96.2 92.6 127.0 124.2 122.3 182. 1 174.4 177.0 34.7 519.2 254.1 265.1 6.5 151.5 119.5 109.7 128.9 140. 1 171.8 128.1 124.9 131.3 176.0 123. 1 117.0 129.1 154.5 120.4 111.2 129-3 Q 2 Q 3 Q 4 1982 AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC 1983 JAN PERCENT CHG. FROM PREV: MO. YR. 1PL_. (P) TOTAL 120.9 119.6 115.0 115.1 116.1 115.9 iPJ -.1 -7.5 144.1 142.9 150.0 125.4 146.5 .5 .7 1.7 -1-8 -.9 -1. 1 -1.2 .4 -5.5 -1.4 111.3 110-2 106.2 106.3 107.2 106.7 97.9 95.7 92-6 92.2 92.9 92.4 123.1 124.2 122.6 121.8 122.6 121.2 171.7 174.8 173.7 180.3 176.9 174.4 -.4 -.5 -1.1 -1-4 -10.2 -18.7 -4.4 -4. 1 153.3 114.1 101.4 126.7 2.6 -.7 -1.0 .1 -13.6 -6.9 -13.4 -.9 69.0 80-2 87.2 101.1 113.8 38.2 53.4 63.3 85.2 108.6 99.8 118. 1 124.0 128.2 128.4 12.5 27-5 .2 -26.5 -38.7 1.4 MAJOR MARKET GROUPINGS PRODUCTS, TOTAL FINAL PRODUCTS CONSUMER GOODS EQUIPMENT INTERMEDIATE PRODUCTS MATERIALS DURABLE NONDURABLE ENERGY, EX. ERDA 148.1 147.9 155.1 129.5 148.8 141.9 140.7 146.7 125.4 145.7 149.1 149.5 156.5 131.7 148.0 146.1 145.1 151.7 127.8 149.5 141.0 140.0 146.2 124.0 144.3 141.4 140.2 146.5 124.5 144.9 143.4 141.9 147.5 127.7 147.8 MAJOR INDUSTRY DIVISIONS MINING 10-14 MANUFACTURING DURABLE 19,24-25 32-39 20-23 ( 26-31 NONDURABLE UTILITIES, OWN USE 491,2 131.0 144. 1 120-2 114-3 108.4 102.1 131.. 2 126.0 129-9 120.8 110.2 131.4 134.8 119.3 106.9 130.3 139.5 114.0 102-1 125.2 143.3 114. 1 101.8 126.0 149.4 114.9 102.5 126.6 INDUSTRY GROUPS AND SERIES 9-9 105.5 5.0 j 97-7 116-9 3.0 151.9 152-6 116-1 6 2 . 4 89.5 151.3 173.2 117.4 3 1 . 7 67.3 160.4 126.9 114.2 102.. 6 123.4 58.3 27-8 104-5 11,2 5.9 197.9 214.5 218.2 193.2 189.0 188.3 186.3 192.8 185.7 196.5 182.6 190.0 4.0 -15.3 OIL AND GAS EXTRACTION CRUDE OIL AND NAT, GAS NATURAL GAS LIQUIDS 13 131 132 11-9 8.9 2.5 193.6 219.2 122.3 188.9 192.3 194.0 191.2 197.1 212.8 216.7 219.0 215.6 225.7 125.8 125.2 126.3 124.6 113.3 190.2 193.3 195. 1 192.4 203.6 192.6 207.3 219.3 222.6 223.2 231.2 229.8 134.8 111.7 112.9 107.6 119.4 108.5 -5.4 -.6 -9. 1 -.9 5.7 -15.0 STONE AND EARTH MINERALS CRUSHED STONE SAND AND GRAVEL CHEMICAL MINERALS 14 142 144| 147 6.9 1-5 1.1 3.4 132.6 142.3 101.9 138.0 144-2 146.1 128.2 145-6 121.2 142-3 104.2 119.0 4-1 97.9 102.4 98.7 95.8 103.1 99.7 98.6 94.0 94.9 95.1 159.9 26.8 163.8 4.. 2 4.1 , 141.4 3., 2 205.2 4.8 140.1 159.5 164.3 144.2 398.2 142.0 160.6 166.0 144.1 197.5 138.7 159.3 165-2 139-1 196-9 139.1 160.. 6 161-9 138.5 214-2 141.5 159-4 162.5 144.9 210-9 141.0 160-7 162.4 138.4 219.4 139.4 161.3 163.3 140-1 210-4 144.5 159.8 161.4 142.7 210.2 141.4 157.5 161.7 142.5 208.6 138.3 16 0.8 164.3 149.6 213.9 143.4 161.6 170.7 151.4 204.2 145.0 .5 3.9 1.2 -4.5 1. 1 144.6 249.7 157.5 211.2 130.8 144.9 317.3 138.2 195.1 133.5 145.2 336.6 133.9 191.0 136-1 148.0 224.0 154.5 195.1 128.5 145.7 333.6 131.8 191.6 137.9 145.0 350-9 129.6 190.3 134.5 145.2 240.0 141.5 191.3 133.3 145.6 220.8 155.6 195.3 125.2 153.3 211.3 166.4 198.8 127.1 148.3 213.3 176.4 204.6 122.9 -3.3 .9 6.0 2.9 ! -3.3 3.9 9.9 8.3 -2. 1 -2.1 124.4 114.6 115.2 113.6 123.2 120.2 -2.4 -5.0 92.1 69.8 127.3 127.2 127.1 105.8 -9-9 -13. 1 -6.4 -8.0 -10-1 -14. 1 -1.9 -2.7 1.9 -3.6 -3.5 -7.0 3.6 | 159-9 i 162.6 167.6 156-9 157.3 159.5 1.0 | 148.5 | 144.3 151.7 146.9 148.6 147.4 1-0 i 198-9 201.6 212.1 195.9 193.7 197.9 158.8 156.1 156. 1 156.4 166.1 164.4 148.5 146.6 145.5 144.3 152.4 197.0 190.1 190.9 195. 1 207.8 217.7 -1. 1 -.8 4.8 6.2 178.2 184-0 180.0 180.9 188.4 183.7 183.1 187.8 179.3 183.5 191.2 186.8 164.3 175.9 177.7 177.9 188.6 182.9 -2.5 | -2.3 -3.0 | 150.1 | 158.8 154.3 147.7 150-2 148.2 I 165-0 | 168.2 163.8 160-8 167-5 168.2 150.4 150.6 149.0 145. 1 150.6 147.7 166.4 169.6 166.2 166.8 171-5 165.9 -3.3 -1.5 4.4 121.3 119-3 121.5 122.9 123.4 49- 1 I 121.7 3-5 | 104.8 | 111.7 102.4 107-6 103-9 105.3 123.9 123.6 124.8 124-7 126.4 24-5 | 124.8 119.3 124.. 6 121.6 122-9 125.8 121.1 99.4 1 0 7 . 6 102.6 106.4 106.9 94.7 118.9 1 2 6 . 8 122.4 126.7 129.9 124.8 -3.7 -11.4 -4.0 3.3 -4.5 .6 -5.3 -3 .3 -9.4 10.6 4.8 -2.3 32.7 METAL MINING IRON ORE COPPER ORE COAL ORDNANCE 10| 101| 102 19 FOODS MEAT PRODUCTS DAIRY PRODUCTS CANNED AND FROZEN FOODS GRAIN MILL PRODUCTS 20 201 202 203 204 BAKERY PRODUCTS SUGAR CONFECTIONERY BEVERAGES MISC. FOOD PRODUCTS 205 206 207 208 209 TOBACCO PRODUCTS 21 I TEXTILE MILI PRODUCTS FABRICS KNIT GOODS FABRIC FINISHING YARN AND THREAD MISC. TEXTILES 22 221-4 | 225 | 226 228 229 APPAREL PRODUCTS MEN'S OUTERWEAR WOMEN'S OUTERWEAR 23 | 231,2 | 233 1.8 1.2 1.0 2.4 4. 1 | I | § 145.7 145.7 265.7 236.7 145.2 143.3 197.4 | 205.8 132.2 | 131.5 | | | | | I 97-1 100..0 125.0 131.3 127.0 122.5 117.4 -9 I 124.1 20.8 11.7 1-7 1.5 3.9 1.4 150.1 132.8 122.0 127.0 153.9 140.8 141.4 135.8 111.3 96.5 101.6 100.2 157.9 139.3 121.5 133.4 102.1 79.7 134.0 136.8 143-2 128-1 | | | | | 107-1 64.8 136.1 141.9 149.3 137.6 100.2 77.5 133-2 133.8 142.0 126-0 102.4 80.3 135-6 136.2 144-4 124.1 103.1 80.6 134.3 140.8 142-6 134-8 102.0 80-1 132.6 136.6 142-7 127.3 LUMBER AND PRODUCTS LUMBER MILLWORK AND PLYWOOD 24 I 242 | 243 8.0 | 177.6 | 173-6 172.7 174.8 180.0 183. 1 3.9 | 180-9 | 173.7 179.1 175-9 184.2 184.7 169.6 155.5 159-2 169.8 181-4 2.2 | 166.2 FURNITURE AND FIXTURES HOME FURNITURE 25 251 2.5 1-7 PAPER AND PRODUCTS WOOD PULP PAPER 26 I 261 | 262 j PAPERBOARD CONVERTED PAPER PAPERBOARD CONTAINERS BUILDING PAPER AND BOARD 263 | 264 | 265 | 266 14.8 2-5 2-3 1-4 | 123-0 | 143-9 | | 135.4 I I 157.9 I PRINTING AND PUBLISHING NEWSPAPERS COMMERCIAL PRINTING 2? 271 275 5.8 1.7 2-4 170.8 145-5 185.0 [ JI 119.0 139.7 144.3 145.1 118.8 142.1 134.9 137.0 121.7 141-8 135.7 156-7 126.6 148-5 137.7 161..4 125- 1 143.3 133.3 176.5 168.3 175.1 170.7 168.. 9 169.4 144.4 149.2 147.7 140-8 145.6 182.5 190.8 181-4 185-9 182.7 105.0 81.2 134.7 133.9 149.0 140.3 126.4 150.9 139.9 139.6 123.5 139-9 102.4 122-1 104.6 81.8 133.8 143.6 145.2 141.3 125.9 127.9 127.3 129.0 136.4 133.7 137.2 148.3 100.3 98.5 101.7 106.0 131.0 134-5 134.7 134.0 105.4 83.3 132.8 138.4 149.5 134.0 120.4 140.5 133. 1 181.. 7 180.2 124.3 145-3 136.4 J NOTE: THE 1983 SEASONAL FACTORS FOR THE MAJOR MARKET AND INDUSTRY GROUPINGS HAVE BEEN UPDATED. 16 124.2 143.7 134.6 166.2 102.2 80.3 136.1 138.2 141.4 123.2 130.6 145.7 132.2 183.2 123.7 146. 1 132.6 165.9 171.2 168-0 165.1 166.6 176.5 175. 1 140.6 141.8 140. 1 142.4 154.3 186.5 185-5 179.5 183.0 18 5-7 189.4 P—PRELIMINARY 98.3 76.8 129.0 133.0 137.3 124.6 1.4 -11.6 -4.3 8.0 4. 1 -12.0 -.5 -10.4 | .2 -1.9 I -5.4 2.5 3.7 2.1 6.5 5.5 9.7 7.0 21.7 -.8 -1.3 2.0 -2.4 Table 9B ELECTRIC POWER USE BY INDUSTRIES Not seasonally adjusted, 1967=100 SIC j ( 1967) j BIL., KWH„ 1967 j | | 3982 AVG. | | 1981 560.4 | 120.8 j 131.5 124.1 PRODUCTS, TOTAL F I N A L PRODUCTS CONSUMER GOODS EQUIPMENT I N T E R M E D I A T E PRODUCTS 136.1 101.4 67.4 3 4.0 34.7 j | | | i 145-2 144.5 150.6 128.8 147.5 | I | | 148.8 147.5 152.8 133.9 153.0 MATERIALS DURABLE NONDURABLE ENERGY, E X . 4 2 4.. 3 237.7 133.0 23.8 | J | i 112.6 101.. 2 125.4 178.5 125.7 122.2 132.6 180.4 j 151.5 119- 5 109-7 128.9 140.1 SERIES TOTAL MAJOR MARKET GROUPINGS 1982 Q 1 Q 3 Q <* 1982 AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC 1983 JAN i J (P) I 122.9 119.7 116.4 120.9 119.8 118.2 116.3 114.7 114.4 140.4 138.8 143.0 128.2 145.0 144.7 144. 1 150.2 128.7 146.7 152.5 153.2 160.9 133.4 15C-6 143.2 141.8 148.3 125. 1 147.5 153.6 154.6 162.6 134-4 150.6 153.8 153-9 161.4 134.8 153.6 146.8 145.9 152.8 128. 1 149.7 144.2 142.9 149.5 126-0 148.3 138.5 136.5 142.5 121.3 144.7 137.6 136.2 142.8 119.3 142.0 118.6 112.5 125.7 190.9 115-7 105.4 127.9 179.7 108.7 94.7 124.9 166.4 107.5 92.4 123.2 176.9 110.0 108.5 108.6 96. 1 9 4-2 93.6 1 2 6 . 0 12 5 - 6 1 2 5 . 8 165.7 168.1 ^67.6 107.1 91.8 123.1 178.5 106.7 91.9 120.8 184.7 106.7 92.6 119.2 190.1 0.0 .8 -1.3 2.9 -10.5 -18.4 -4.0 -4.8 172.9 176.7 129.3 121.2 125. 1 115.9 1 3 3 - 3 126., 3 156.7 121.4 112.8 129.6 127.8 120.0 107.7 131-6 145.0 115.4 102.3 127.9 126.1 121.5 109.4 133.0 134.6 119.9 107.2 131.9 140. 1 118.0 104-4 131.0 14*.3 115.2 102.2 127.6 150.6 113-0 100-3 125.0 156.5 112.2 99-8 123.9 4.0 -.7 -.5 -.8 -13.3 -6.9 -13.2 -1.5 Q <» Q 2 PERCENT CHGFROM _£REY_L MO. YR. IPL_. in -.2 -7.7 -.7 -.2 .2 -1.7 -1.9 -.4 -.6 .9 | ERDA | | | | | -5.0 . 1 i?AJOR_INDUSTRy_DIJ[ISIONS 34.7 519.2 254-1 265.1 6.5 MINING 10-14 MANUFACTURING DURABLE 19,24-25, 32-39 NONDURABLE 20-23,26-31 U T I L I T I E S , OWN USE 491,2 INDUSTRY GROUPS AND SERIES 10 101 102 9.9 5.0 3.0 1C5.5 97.7 116.9 152.1 151.9 160.8 152.5 171.9 128.9 118.9 120-2 118-2 60.9 31.1 96.9 89.6 67.5 123.8 56.0 26.7 95-8 68.4 37.4 99.8 80.9 54.0 120.0 86.4 62.8 121.6 101.4 85.7 129.7 116.2 109.8 133.8 14-6 28.1 3.2 -26.5 -38.7 11,2 5„9 197.9 214.9 238.3 197.4 167.3 188.4 174.0 180-7 181.6 19 5 . 2 188.5 203.9 8-2 -14.5 O I L AND GAS E X T R A C T I O N CRUDE O I L AND N A T . GAS NATURAL GAS L I Q U I D S 13 131 132 11.9 8.9 2-5 193.6 219.2 122.3 189.6 192. 1 193.2 213.8 217.8 218.0 125-9 121.8 125.2 191.4 214.3 128.9 197.8 226.8 113.3 187.6 202-7 140.0 195.8 220-7 114.9 194.9 194.4 221.3 225.7 114. 3 108.2 204.1 233.3 117.5 199.6 240.6 108-0 | -2.2 3-1 -8.1 -15.0 STONE AND EARTH MINERALS CRUSHED STONE SAND AND GRAVEL CHEMICAL MINERALS 14 | 142 144 147 148.1 141.9 154.8 128.5 94.5 136.2 147.7 157.2 135-4 147.2 99.7 140.2 122.7 149-8 107.0 119.3 130-4 143.6 106.4 135.3 122.7 152.5 110.6 116.8 125.3 148.3 108.2 124.2 131-5 132.2 148.8 148. 1 110. 1 107.6 134.0 136.2 127.6 134.0 101.5 135.8 123.8 123.2 89.0 135.1 -3-0 | -8-0 1-12.3 I ~-5 -10.4 -4.3 -12.0 -10.4 METAL H I K I N G I R O N OKE COPPER ORE COAL 6-9 1.5 1.1 3.4 19 4. 1 FOODS 3EAT PRODUCTS D A I S Y PRODUCTS CANNED AND FROZEN FOODS G R A I N M I L L PRODUCTS 20 201 202 203 204 26.8 4.2 4. 1 3.2 4.8 3AKEBY PRODUCTS SUGAR CONFECTIONERY BEVERAGES M I S C . FOOD PRODUCTS 205 206 | 207 | 208 209 ORDNANCE | | 132.6 | 142.3 | 101.9 | 138.0 102. 1 94.7 96.7 104-6 95.6 110.2 105.1 102-0 94.2 90.7 90.3 159.9 163.8 | 141.4 | 205.2 | 140.1 163.4 165.2 138.9 203.5 146.3 151-3 151.4 129.4 185-2 138.4 154.6 162.0 14C.3 188.6 134.0 170.5 178-1 156-3 229.9 142.7 163.3 163.4 139.6 217. 1 145.3 171-9 182.0 156.4 231-9 143.2 173.5 177.0 155-9 250-5 145.7 168.9 169.5 145.4 242.3 145.9 163.0 163.8 137.5 213.8 145.0 157.9 156.9 136.0 195.1 144.9 155.3 157.4 136.7 189.1 146.1 145.7 | 265.7 | 145.2 | 197.4 | 132-2 | 145.2 319.2 148.3 201.7 135.7 134.4 278.5 140-6 190.5 124., 7 142.2 235.6 138.0 195. 1 130.5 158-7 246-8 142.6 213.1 141.2 147.4 302.0 159.7 191.1 132.5 159.4 249.5 143.3 216.5 142-1 160.4 255.8 148-0 212.0 141.3 150.8 277.4 155.8 197.8 138.3 145.6 312-6 163.9 190.4 131.7 145.7 315.9 159.4 185.1 127.5 139.3 328.5 150.8 187.8 119.6 97.9 | | 1.8 1.2 i 1.0 | 2.4 | 4., 1 | 2. 1 6.5 5.5 -4.4 4.0 -5.4 1-5 -6-2 3.9 9.9 8.3 -2.1 -2.1 133.7 121.3 140.5 137.1 128.6 119.2 116.1 105.7 -8.9 -3.9 105-7 102.4 82-1 80.2 145.8 131.4 136.. 3 1 3 7 . 8 147.8 143.8 135„0 127.7 113.1 87.7 153-6 135.9 162.2 148.2 112. 1 110. 1 87.1 87.1 151.7 140.4 146.9 140.7 157.3 154.3 141.7 141.5 100.7 78.5 130.4 137.2 142.0 122.8 96.4 75.1 123.4 135.6 135.0 118.9 82.5 64.1 108.6 121-2 112.3 100.9 -14.4 1-14-6 -12-0 1-10.6 1-16.9 [-15.1 -2.6 -2.7 159.9 | 148.5 J 198.9 I 158.3 147.3 142.3 131.4 192.4 183.4 155.0 144.7 193.1 182.2 172-9 230.5 155. 1 145.0 188.6 189.9 178.5 244.3 187.9 181.0 230.0 168.1 159.4 204.9 152.5 142.3 185.2 144.9 133.2 175.8 141.3 ! 181.8 183.7 185.9 179.5 173.4 178.1 158.7 181.7 186.1 172.0 181. 1 185. 1 185.0 183.9 186.4 187.4 172.7 182.5 183-3 182.3 186.0 183.1 129.4 121.7 20-8 11-7 1.7 1-5 3.9 1.. 4 | | | | | | 102.1 79.7 134.0 136.8 143.2 128-1 | J | | f | 107.6 85.0 135. 1 143.3 150.5 138.0 APPAREL PEOEUCTS M E N ' S OUTERWEAR WOMEN'S OUTERWEAR 23 | 231,2 | 233 3-6 1., 0 1.0 | | | .9 2.5 3.7 105.3 82.6 138.9 140.2 148.5 126.8 | | | 1 | I | 21 | -5.4 119.8 124.1 22 221-4 225 226 228 229 PRODUCTS | -1-7 -3 .5 -3.1 .8 -.5 5.7 94.8 73.9 120.0 132.7 132., 6 123.0 | T E X T I L E M I L L PRODUCTS FABRICS K N I T GOODS FABRIC F I N I S H I N G YARN AND THREAD MISC. TEXTILES TOBACCO -.4 I I 1.4 -2.4 1.9 -3.6 -3.5 -7.0 .5 3.4 6.2 I I -1.5 ~-7 --1 21.7 10.0 LUMBER AND PRODUCTS LUMBER M I L L K O R K AND PLYWOOD 24 | 242 | 243 i 8.0 | 3.9 1 2-2 | 177.6 180.9 166.2 | | | 174.2 175.5 174.8 181.8 167.7 159-3 177. 1 174.0 178.3 177.6 163.2 162-9 F U R N I T U R E AND F I X T U R E S HOME F U R N I T U R E 25 | 251 1 2.,5 1„7 | | 150.1 | 165.0 | 159.9 154.9 169.2 166.5 147.9 161.2 148.4 163.3 149.2 169. 1 153.9 169.6 156.1 173.7 151.4 169.0 148.7 168.8 147.4 169.5 143-4 163.3 | | -2.7 -3.7 PAPER AND POOD PULP PAPER 26 | 261 | 262 | 4 9., 1 | 3-5 f 2 4.5 I 121.7 | 104.8 | 124.8 | 121-2 1T8.6 112-2 1C1.6 123.1 123.6 123.1 108.2 126.8 122-0 103.7 123.3 123.3 105.7 125.5 121.3 97.9 122.0 123.8 109-0 123.7 126.0 107.9 127.6 123.3 120-5 105.6 103.5 126. 1 122.8 120.3 94.6 125.3 I | | --2 -8.5 2.0 PAPERBOAED CONVERTED PAPER PAPERBOARD CONTAINERS B U I L D I N G PAPER AND BOARD 263 | 264 | 265 | 266 1 14.8 | 2., 5 | 2.3 | 1-4 { 123.0 | 143-9 | 135-4 | 157.9 | 117.7 142.2 143.6 145.9 120. 1 136.7 132.5 132.7 124.2 143.0 137. 1 157.5 124.0 150-1 139.2 163-9 123.5 145.8 132.7 177.4 127.3 152.8 144.8 148.7 122.2 151.4 140.4 181.7 122.6 149.1 136.8 184.2 123.8 145.3 135.3 173.5 124.1 142.9 126.1 174.5 125.0 138.5 124.9 163.1 1 | I -3 -3.1 --9 -6-5 P R I N T I N G AND P U B L I S H I N G NEWSPAPERS COMMERCIAL P R I N T I N G 27 | 271 1 275 J 5.8 | 1-7 | 2*4 | 170.8 | 145.5 | 185.0 | 166..2 1 5 6 - 4 1 4 1 . 5 131..9 182.6 169.3 167-6 145.8 177.1 191.9 161.7 210.7 167.2 142.5 182.9 196.8 163.4 213.3 192.7 161.6 215.0 175.4 146.8 194.0 163.8 139.4 182.1 162.4 141.4 172.5 157.8 I -2.8 .6 164.9 | -4.4 -2.4 PRODUCTS i P—PRELIMINARY 17 7.0 -1.2 4.4 3.0 -4.5 .6 10.6 4.8 -2.3 32.7 Table 9A—continued ELECTRIC POWER USE BY INDUSTRIES Seasonally adjusted indexes, 1967=100 SIC (1 9b7) SERIES BIL. KWH. 1967 1982 AVG. 1981 Q 4 1982 0 1 Q 2 Q 4 1982 AUG 116.6 121.2 102.4 105.8 130.0 | 138.4 125.2 136.8 118.9 104.. 2 138.9 135-6 118.6 103.7 133.5 122.7 1 1 8.. 5 110.9 104.. 4 97.7 1 2 4 . 3 123.9 116.. 2 127.1 119.6 104.9 127.5 111.3 80. 1 84. 4 76.. 9 84.2 82-2 85.8 89.9 82.7 95.. 9 77.2 79.6 76.0 90.4 81.2 98.0 178.9 187.6 175-0 223.2 143. 1 155.0 171.7 183.0 165.3 228.. 5 152.. 4 156.. 2 163.6 164.4 162.3 229. 1 146. 1 138.1 182- 1 192.6 172.0 1 7 2 . 5 97„6 100.5 118-6 1 1 5 . 4 249-6 2 5 2 - 7 Q 3 SEP OCT NOV DEC 111 j CHEMICALS AND PRODUCTS 28 BASIC C H E M I C A L S 281 2812 A L K A L I E S AND C H L O R I N E BASIC ORGANIC CHEM.NEC 2818 2819 INORGANIC CHEM. NEC ACID AND F E R T . MAT'LS ERDA SYNTHETIC MATERIALS PLASTICS MATERIALS OTHER S Y N T H E T I C S DRUGS SOAP AND T O I L E T R I E S FARM C H E M I C A L S PETROLEUM 282 2821 2822-4 283] 284j 287 29 PRODUCTS 30 RUBBER AND PLASTICS PROD. TIRES 301 306 RUBBER PRODUCTS NEC 307 PLASTICS PRODUCTS NEC LEATHER StiQIS AND PRODUCTS 116.8 96.4 12.3 24.8 1 82.5 82.2 j 82.6 4 8.. 6 18.. 8 29.8 81.3 88.5 77.3 12.. 1 4.4 7.. 7 2.0 1.0 2.7 186.. 8 172.2 180.2 | 199.3 167.8 178.9 222.4 226.8 147.4 147.5 153.2 1/3.2 22.3 185. 1 174.6 186.3 163.8 226.7 148.2 163.8 181. 4 178.5 10.8 170-4 3.. 2 | 9 9 . 0 2.3 115.3 4-8 248.1 107.8 95.3 .6 -. 1 1.9 2.2 1.3 -1.2 -1.2 2.6 111.0 100.4 5.3 8. 1 -1. 5 .8 128.5 133.7 127.7 123.8 100.5 88.4 98.3 98.9 186.7 201.4 191.0 180.1 91.1 95.5 102.0 87.6 82.9 78.2 84.7 79.2 153.6 158.9 154.5 158.6 -3.0 -10.6 | -5.7 | -3.8 -6.5 2.6 -9.4 -12.5 -6.2 -15.5 -6.9 -3.7 80.7 66.4 133.4 -.7 6.0 5.6 -21.2 -25.5 -22.5 113.5 107.0 107.. 6 103.2 93.4 97.6 91.8 98-2 110.6 103.3 104.6 103.2 101.0 105.4 93.7 94.8 92.6 92.9 133.5 104.2 196.5 98.0 80.9 155.5 134.5 103.6 199.. 5 100.0 83.6 158.6 9 0 . 2 , 112.6 76.9 97.9 1 4 8 . 7 | 181.7 86.4 100.9 92.2 81.0 81- 1 71.. 4 64.9 89.5 167.2 147.6 150.3 130.3 1 3 3 . 3 130.0 104.2 99.2 195-2 193.0 99.3 96.2 82.9 81.9 157-7 155.6 59.5 95.9 88.9 85.0 80.7 87.6 112.2 80.7 73.7 53.6 | 78.2 106.8 88.6 70.0 8.4 1 0 5 . 2 | 116.7 108.7 105.7 102.1 104.5 1..4 146-3 172.9 160.8 145-0 143-4 135.6 34 341J 342J 344 345| 346 14.8 1.0 1-6 | 3-5 1-2 3. 1 149.5 196.9 133.3 129.0 137-8 132.8 160.2 155.5 149.6 210. 1 204.0 200.3 144.7 137. 1 133.2 132.9 136. 1 127.7 156.3 144.9 137.6 149.6 136.7 135.3 35 351 352 353 17-3 1-4 1., 2 3.0 148. 1 126. 1 82.9 146.2 162.9 158.8 150.0 147.0 137.0 136.0 133.9 128.9 126.3 115.7 82.7 97.7 79.8 71.7 98.6 184.8 168.7 152.6 145.6 119.0 354 METALWORKING MACHINERY SPECIAL INDUSTRY MACH. 355 356 GENERAL INDUSTRIAL MACH. O F F I C E A N D C O M P U T I N G MACri .357 358 SERVICE INDUSTRY MACH. 2.8 1-5 2.7 1. 4 1-2 117.7 126.0 133.7 279.3 126.0 128.0 141.5 144.8 271. 1 132. 3 1 9.. 2 1.. 8 3., 5 2„2 132.0 109.5 95.5 90.3 139.7 135.4 132.5 132.7 127.5 121.0 117. 1 109. 1 107-6 104.8 88.0 83.9 121.6 109.9 100.3 100.7 91. 1 93.2 89. 1 87.9 37 | 371 | 372 | 373 INSTRUMENTS PHOTOGRAPHIC 38 ! 386. MISC. EQUIPMENT 39 | MANUFACTURES SUPPLEMENTARY TOTAL, 134.4 140.6 1-5 -8 | 1 1 6 . 3 | 121.3 3.9 | 1 5 7 . 9 | 151.1 187.3 182.1 4.2 127.0 134.1 140. 7 285.3 132.0 143. 1 122.5 143.7 187.9 120.6 125.0 137.3 266-6 127.7 134.7 114.8 154.6 186.8 150.5 191.0 137.5 128.9 141.4 134.1 116.9 123.9 131.5 273.4 122.7 133.3 114-6 170.3 188.6 142.7 192.8 126.2 123.7 127. 1 125.6 106.4 121.7 125.6 293.6 122. 1 127.0 114.0 161.8 186.2 23.6 1 1 2 . 5 1 113-2 110.7 116.2 116.6 106.6 12„8 | 1 1 1 . 3 | 112.6 107.5 117.0 118-0 102.7 99.4 99.0 97.0 98.2 97.6 8.4 | 9 8 . 2 | 157.7 164.9 157.2 161-2 152.8 1-3 159.0 3.. 1 1.. 4 175-2 171.1 2.5 142.5 53 0.. 6 123.4 | 186. 1 78.1 78.4 77.8 114.8 95. 1 132.0 54.4 5.9 TRANSPORTATION EQUIPMENT MOTOR VEHICLES AND PARTS AIRCRAFT AND PARTS SHIPS AND BOATS -8.2 -3. 1 -10.9 5.0 -2.9 -15.9 190.6 182.8 33, 331 332 364 365 I 366 | 367 -1.5 4-0 -3.0 -.2 3.6 4.8 192.4 191.2 PRIMARY METALS BASIC STEEL & MILL PROD. IRON & STEEL FOUNDFIES LIGHTING & WIRING PROD. R A D I O A N D TV S E T S COMMUNICATION EQUIP. ELECTRONIC COMPONENTS 163.1 160.6 162.2 168.7 161.5 156.6 244.2 243.7 142.9 148.1 134.2 140.6 171.3 171.8 165.8 165.6 167.4 168.5 96.4 98.3 93.6 98.2 97.4 97.2 115.0 112.9 109.5 109.3 11 1.2 113.3 250.4 252.. 2 243.5 238.1 243.5 249.0 138- 1 101.9 197.1 100.4 83.9 169.3 36 | 361 | 362 | 363 -3.6 186.5 133-5 142.3 1 0 1 . 8 | 110.9 194.2 195.8 9 9 . 3 | 112.0 82. 1 j 93.5 171.5 159.3 ELECTRICAL MACHINERY ELECT. DISTRIBUTION EQ. ELECT. INDUST. APPARATUS HOME APPLIANCES -1. 1 166.3 96.4 110.0 241.7 88.5 84.6 90.9 170.9 101.3 117.3 24 8.. 5 20.8 1.2 3.-5 8.4 1-3 2.3 NONELECTRICAL MACHINERY ENGINES AND TURBINES FARM E Q U I P M E N T CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT 77.3 165.0 168.3 162.. 7 221.6 146. 1 141.8 32 321 322 324 325 327 PROD. -4.2 -5-2 -3.0 -6.6 172.9 164.5 162.7 187.5 167.3 162.8 163.3 163.5 162.7 229.2 226.0 221.6 156.8 150..0 149.4 156.3 151.1 138.4 CLAY,GLASS,STONE PRODUCTS FLAT GLASS PRESSED AND BLOWN GLASS CEMENT S T R U C T U R A L CLAY P R O D U C T S CONCRETE PRODUCTS PRODUCTS 111 2.0 .6 | 5-7 -1.2 175.6 105. 1 122. 1 254.2 133.0 102.0 191.8 101.6 79.9 155.4 __JPi_ 77.4 80.4 76.. 8 1.3 .6 FABRICATED METAL METAL CANS HARDWARE STRUCTURAL METAL FASTENERS METAI STAMPINGS 116.8 110.2 111.2 111. 1 113.4 103.. 8 96.7 98.3 97.9 98.5 119.4 128.6 120.9 122.2 129.2 124.4 125.2 128.7 127.5 125.9 PERCENT CHG. FROM P R E V : MO. YR. 76.2 80. 1 73.4 31 314 P R I M A R Y N O N F E R R O U S M E T A L S 333 3334 ALUMINUM 335| N O N F E R R O U S MILL P R O D U C T S 336 NONFERROUS FOUNDRIES 1983 JAN 2.4 187.2 3.3 88.8 84-7 74.1 70.4 150.7 1 4 4 . 9 81.7 80. 1 81.2 67.7 62.7 64.3 134.9 129.6 126.4 86.6 74.4 103.4 145.8 82.4 70-0 102.6 144.7 79.6 79.4 83.0 78-8 67.8 69.0 73.2 70.0 102.2 103.0 108.2 99.7 134.3 135.7 136.8 127.8 -5. 1 ( -4.3 | -7.8 -6.6 -21.9 -25.1 -6.1 -21.1 152.0 196.8 146.1 127.9 143.4 132.9 14 8.3 197.3 131.2 129.9 140.9 131.7 141.9 192.0 124.3 119.0 130.8 121.9 143.6 190. 1 126.8 127.4 125.8 131.9 142.9 187.6 125.7 129.2 128.3 134.9 -.5 -1.3 | -.9 1.4 2.0 2.3 -7.5 -4.3 -10.2 -6.4 -10.1 -1.7 148.7 1 4 3 . 2 137.0 134.7 139.3 133.4 117.4 112.8 113.3 121.0 71. 1 72.2 72.9 70.9 85.5 147.7 138.1 124.2 114.0 118.7 137.2 119.4 74.3 118.0 -1.5 -1.3 4.4 -.6 -14.2 -10. 1 -24.3 -35.4 117.6 112.7 107.0 106.8 10 5.4 104.8 125.5 120-8 118.9 120.0 126.1 123.7 132.6 127.2 123.0 126. 1 127.8 126.3 275.2 281.7 278.0 289.6 313.2 300.9 123.8 118.0 119. 3 121.4 125.6 126. 1 -.5 -1.8 -1.2 -3.9 .5 -17.2 -9.3 -9.3 5. 1 -3.4 133.4 130.2 125.3 127.2 130.1 114.3 106.0 100.3 106.5 107.5 87.6 86.3 80.9 86-7 84.2 87.. 6 88.5 90.6 87.5 87.6 -2.8 -1.0 4.1 0.0 -6.0 -7.0 -20.3 -3.0 4.2 -.2 .3 -4.1 -6.6 -6.6 14.0 .4 133.6 112.4 171.9 186.7 142.6 196.3 127.5 124.6 124.7 122.9 126.4 106-4 87.6 87.6 128-0 127.2 125.6 128.3 133.6 112.4 112.4 114.5 115.2 114.9 166.6 154.5 167.2 163.8 164.3 18 5..6 181.7 183.9 193.0 185.1 117.8 111.. 3 104.2 106.4 109.1 119.7 109.. 9 100. 1 103.9 104.1 96„9 96.9 97.5 97.7 103.6 164.1 163.. 0 152.5 144.9 160.9 110.0 108.3 99.3 160.9 I | | .8 4.0 -4. 1 0.0 2.7 5.9 3.9 -3.6 172.4 178.9 174.2 175-3 173.2 169.8 177.0 170.3 168.. 9 169. 1 179.2 170.6 173.2 170.4 172.7 176.6 168.2 165. 1 169. 1 173.2 175.5 173.3 -.6 0.0 -2.1 -2. 1 153.3 157.8 141.5 137„6 133.8 137.2 136.4 132.0 133.3 136.2 139.0 2.0 -10.9 134.3 129.0 124.7 121.9 122.5 121.3 118. 1 118.3 118.7 118.6 -. 1 -8.0 127.5 127.5 127.8 127..5 127.2 127.6 .3 -4 -6.7 -6-9 GROUPINGS EXCLUDING ERDA ELECTRIC UTILITIES 462-6 | 457.. 1 | SALES TO INDUSTRY | 5.5 | OWN U S E | 10 2.. 9 | INDUSTRIAL GENERATION SALES TO ELECTRIC U T I L I T I E S I 5. 1 | 9 7.. 8 OWN USE 133.3 133.2 140.9 74.7 103.6 73.1 118.4 | 142.8 137.8 134.5 133.7 127.5 | 142.9 137.8 134-3 133.7 127.3 134.2 132.. 9 127.5 134.3 132.8 127. 1 I | 83.0 78.7 74-9 72.0 73.3 72.2 71„3 70.9 72.5 76.5 72.0 | -5.9 -10.5 | 81.1 78-5 73-1 70„3 70.8 71.6 68.. 5 68.6 69.9 73.9 71.4 -3.3 -11.1 L P—PRELIMINARY NOTE: TOTALS EXCLUDE INDUSTRIAL GENERATION POWER SALES TO ELECTRIC UTILITIES. ERDA (PART OF SIC 2819) IS THE FORMER ENERGY RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT ADMINISTRATION. ERDA USE DATA ARE INCLUDED IN TOTAL MATERIALS, ALTHOUGH EXCLUDED FROM THE ENERGY COMPONENT. ALL INDEXES ARE COMPILED FROM SAMPLE REPORTS TO THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM AND THE 2-DIGIT GROUP TOTALS INCLUDE SOME DATA THAT ARE UNALLOCATED AT THE 3-DIGIT LEVELS. THE 1967 DATA ARE FROM COMPREHENSIVE CENSUS, EEI, AND FPC SOURCES AND ARE PROVIDED FOR REFERENCE. THEY ARE NOT USED AS WEIGHTS TO COMBINE SERIES. THE AGGREGATE INDEXES ARE KWH TOTALS CONVERTED TO A 1967 COMPARISON BASE. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION IS PROVIDED IN THE JANUARY 1976 BULLETIN. DATA AND PERCENT CHANGES ARE ROUNDED INDEPENDENTLY. 18 Table 9B—continued ELECTRIC POWER USE BY INDUSTRIES Not seasonally adjusted, 1967=100 SIC | (1 9 6 7 ) | SERIES BIL. KWH. 1967 : 1982 AVG. 1981 Q 4 1982 Q 1 Q 2 Q 3 Q <* 116.6 102-4 130.0 125.2 124. 1 109.6 141.4 139., 8 118.0 104.3 135.0 130.7 118.7 103. 1 133.2 121. 1 116-3 100.9 125.1 119.2 113-5 101.1 126.6 129.9 86. 1 89.0 84.3 82.6 83.9 81.8 83. 1 83.2 83.0 82-4 81-7 82.9 170.0 180.4 164.4 207.8 143.8 162.5 181.9 189-0 178.0 224.4 144.1 161. 1 177.4 187.8 171-7 248.6 154.9 1982 AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC 1983 JAN in CHEMICALS AND PRODUCTS BASIC CHEMICALS ALKALIES AND CHLORINE BASIC ORGANIC CHEM,NEC 28 116.8 281| 96.4 12.3 28121 24.8 2818 117.2 101.8 129.2 114. 1 114.7 100-0 118-5 128.. 6 115.2 101.8 129-5 129.9 112.9 100.5 124.0 131.0 112.5 101. 1 126.4 128.8 112.5 100.7 126.5 124.5 0-0 -.4 .1 -3.3 -5.6 -5.2 -3.0 -6.6 81.8 80. 1 82.8 83.9 80.8 85.8 80.2 81-5 79.4 82.5 80.9 83.4 80.7 80-3 81.0 8 2-1 79.1 84.0 81.7 -.5 -3.6 159-5 163.7 157.1 226.3 146.8 1 52 . 3 137.0 179.6 194.1 171.8 245.2 155.7 153.4 169.. 7 172.9 168.. 0 251.1 163.5 165.7 162-3 235.5 156.. 3 154.5 1 4 6 - 9 137.9 160.2 165.6 157.3 220.5 147.8 139.4 154.6 159.8 151-8 222.7 138.2 133.6 156.9 167.0 151.4 218.8 138.5 136. 1 1.5 4.5 -.2 -1.7 ..2 1.9 -8.2 -3. 1 -10.9 5.0 -2.9 -15.9 INORGANIC CHEM. NEC 28191 i A C I D A N D FERT-. M A T ' L S ERDA 48.6 18.8 29.8 82.5 82.2 82.6 282' 2821| 283( 284| 287 12.1 4.4 7.7 2.0 1.0 2.7 172.. 2 180.2 167.8 226-8 147.4 153.2 182.1 198.4 173-3 219.8 148.2 171.7 29, 22.3 185.1 182.6 172-9 180.3 199.6 187.7 200.9 196.. 6 190.8 191. 1 181.3 187.2 10.8 3.2 2.3 4.8 170.4 99.0 115.3 248.1 177.7 105.2 12 5.0 257.8 172.7 97.2 117.5 251.4 31 314 1.3 -6 107.8 95.3 115.3 111.0 107-5 108.8 103.6 94.8 95.. 1 91.9 101.1 93. 1 CLAY^GLASS^STONE PRODUCTS FLAT GLASS PRESSED AND BLOWN GLASS CEMENT STRUCTURAL CLAY PRODUCTS CONCRETE PRODUCTS 32 321 322 324 325 327 2 0.8 1.2 3.5 8-4 1.3 2.3 PRIMARY METALS BASIC STEEL & MILL PROD. IRON & STEEL FOUNDRIES 33 331 332 132-0 54.4 5.9 SYNTHETIC MATERIALS PLASTICS MATERIALS OTHER SYNTHETICS DRUGS SOAP AND TOILETRIES FARM C H E M I C A L S PETROLEUM 2822-4] PRODUCTS RUBBER AND PLASTICS PROD. TIRES RUBBER PECDUCTS NEC PLASTICS PRODUCTS NEC LEATHER SHOES 30 301 306| 307 AND PRODUCTS P R I M A R Y N O N F E R R O U S M E T A L S 333 3334 ALUMINUM N O N F E R R O U S HILL PRODUCTS 335 NONFERROUS FOUNDRIES 336 FABRICATED METAL METAL CANS HARDWARE STRUCTURAL METAL FASTENERS METAL STAMPINGS PRODUCTS PROD. 169„ 1 100.9 116-4 244.9 144.5 129.8 133.5 101.8 111.2 99.5 194.2 | 196.6 191.5 99.3 114.9 88-7 82- 1 94.8 83.. 6 174.6 1 6 1 - 6 159.3 173.1 171.2 168. 1 101.2 97.4 96.4 118-0 114.2 112.6 252-3 250.1 245.0 135.3 102.0 193.6 105.0 80.3 157.2 136.8 131.9 106.3 99.6 197.8 193.9 104.7 98.7 81.6 83-0 160.1 158.5 90.2 112.0 1 0 1 - 7 94. 1 84.3 80.6 83.4 68.7 64.0 76.9 | 96.5 9 1 - 4 148.7 184.8 1 6 8 . 2 152.8 141-4 132.5 59-5 | 87.6 | 112.2 9 5-6 89.8 84.3 80-6 106.7 8 7 . 5 53.6 81.2 74.2 70.0 78.2 8,. 4 105.2 | 115-2 1 1 0 - 0 108.5 99.4 103. 1 1.4 173.0 1 6 4 . 7 146.3 138.6 135.7 146.3 160.6 1 5 5 . 4 | 202.6 1 9 9 . 2 | 147.3 1 3 7 . 8 | 134-5 1 3 6 . 8 156.1 1 4 6 . 9 150-0 1 3 6 . 2 132,. 8 149-0 143. 1 202-3 186.0 133.7 128.4 126.. 4 125. 1 138.1 126.9 132.1 125.7 34 34^ 342 344 345 346 14-8 1.0 1.6 3.5 1.2 3.. 1 149.. 5 196-9 133.3 129.0 137.8 35 351 3 52 353 17.3 1-4 1-2 3-0 148-1 162.4 1 5 5 - 3 150-2 150.3 136.6 126-1 | 136-5 1 3 1 - 9 130-3 126.1 116.0 85.9 77.4 71.6 82.9 | 98.6 9 6 - 5 146.2 I 185.7167-2 152.4 145-7 119.6 NONELECTRICAL MACHINERY ENGINES AND TURBINES FARM E Q U I P M E N T CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT 150.6 200.2 133.5 127.9 139.2 137.1 354 355 356 .357 358 127.8 128.1 120.4 116.1 106.3 2.. 8 117.7 1-5 | 126.0 | 141.3 132.2 125.5 125.0 121.4 2.7 | 133.7 | 145.1138.4 137.8 132-7 125.8 1-4 | 279-3 | 269.8 267.0 263. 1 294.9 292. 1 1.2 126.0 | 129.1.26.1 129.7 129.0 119.1 ELECTRICAL MACHINERY ELECT. DISTRIBUTION EQ. ELECT.. I N D U S T . A P P A R A T U S HOME APPLIANCES 36 361 362 363 19.2 132.0 | 139.6130.5 133.4 136-7 127.3 1.8 | 109.5 | 119.8 113-5 110.3 110-6 103-7 3-5 | 95-5 | 121.0 108.4 101.6 88.4 83-4 90.3 99.7 89.9 94. 1 90-4 86.8 2-2 LIGHTING £ HIRING PROD. RADIO AND TV SETS COMMUNICATION EQUIP. ELECTRONIC COMPONENTS 364 365 366 367 TRANSPORTATION EQUIPMENT MOTOR VEHICLES AND PARTS AIRCRAFT AND PARTS SHIPS AND BOATS 37 371 | 372 | 373 INSTRUMENTS PHOTOGRAPHIC 38 386 3-1 1.4 39 2.5 METALWORKING MACHINERY SPECIAL INDUSTRY MACH. GENERAL INDUSTRIAL MACH. O F F I C E A N D C O M P U T I N G MACK SERVICE INDUSTRY MACH. MISC. EQUIPMENT MANUFACTURES 134-4 1-5 141.5 141..7 -8 | 116.3 | 120.2 113.4 3.9 | 157.9 | 153.3 134.5 4.2 187.3 180.5 177.2 23-6 12.8 d-4 1-3 129.9 124.8 179.3 200.5 127.7 113-0 164-0 134.6 | 112.5 | 114.6107.8 117.4 117.0 107.7 | 111-3 | 114.7 105.0 119-3 116.5 104-4 | 93.2 | 97.6 93.5 98.9 101-7 98-7 | 159.0| 157.2167.6 155-3 160.8 152.3 3.3 4.4 173-6 169.0 161.7 158.7 99.3 96.3 93.5 93.4 114.4 113.6 109.6 107.4 253.0 246.7 235.2 230. 1 -1.9 0.0 -2.0 -2.2 1.7 -1.2 -1.2 2.6 116.2 111.. 0 105.7 102.7 102.6 106.4 111.5 100.. 5 96.6 92.9 89.8 94.8 3.7 5.5 -.7 .8 138.5 108.2 200.0 105.1 80.4 159.1 176., 6 101.. 6 116.. 9 257-2 134.0 106. 1 195. 1 101.3 82-2 83.3 162.9 159.1 138.. 3 106.. 0 201.5 105.. 4 136.7 12 5.1 116.9 98.0 94.6 88.4 203.4 183.2 169.7 104.7 90.2 79.2 80.7 85.1 79-6 165.5 150.8 151.0 -6.6 -8.5 -6.6 -12.5 -7.4 -6.2 -12.2 -15.5 -6.4 -6.9 . 1 -3.7 86.4 82.6 82. 1 79.2 80.4 81.7 71.9 67.6 67. 1 62.8 61.9 68.2 141.8 144.. 6 141.4 132.7 123.4 126.6 1.6 10.2 2.5 -21-2 -25.5 -22.5 85.5 80.9 80.5 78.5 83.0 79.6 74.7 69.5 68.6 68.0 73.3 71.0 102.3 100-8 103.8 102.6 102.9 99.5 139.1 145.0 138.2 138.2 130.7 127.9 -4- 1 -3.2 -3.3 -2.1 -21.9 -25.1 -6.1 -21.1 150. 1 201-2 137.2 127.5 13e.8 132.4 151.. 1 145.9 194.9 130-2 122.4 133.6 127.3 206.. 0 133.7 128-5 143. 1 133.. 8 144.0 187.7 130.3 127.2 125.6 125.2 139-3 175.3 124.6 125-6 121.5 124.8 137.8 180.9 122-7 126.0 122.7 126.6 151.1 1 5 1 - 0 141.3 136.4 132.1 130.6 128.2 1 2 1 . 2 118.2 116.7 113.1 113.6 78.6 ^ 7 . 8 76.2 71.2 67.5 68.8 145.5 1 4 6 . 0 126.0 117.7 115.1 111.7 116.3 126.5 132.7 297.5 126.4 115.6 125.4 133.6 304-8 125-7 110.5 121.8 126.8 293.0 123-0 107. 1 121.6 128.6 292.2 119.6 101.3 120.9 121.9 291.3 114.6 102.4 118.9 119.8 278-0 115.8 136.1 1 3 8 . 5 131.3 128.2 122.6 120.6 112.8 1 1 1 . 0 106.2 105.5 99.2 101.3 84.4 84. 1 81.7 85.8 88.0 8 7 . 6 88.3 9 3 . 1 92- 1 87.6 80.8 84.1 | -7.5 -1. 1 -4.3 3.2 -1.6 -10.2 -6.4 .3 1.0 -10. 1 1.4 -1.7 -1. 1 .4 1.9 -3.0 -13.9 -10.1 -24.3 -35.4 1.1 -1.6 -1.7 -4.6 1.0 -17.2 -9.3 -9.3 5.1 -3.4 -5.2 -1.6 2. 1 -7.0 4.9 -20.3 4. 1 -3.0 125.. 5 1 3 5 . 5 124.1 125.5 180-0 182.6 198.1 2 0 3 - 0 132.6 117.5 167.3 190. 1 125- 1 106-4 150.8 173. 1 2.5 -.2 -1-8 -4.0 -6.6 -6.6 14.0 .4 118.5 118.4 101.8 165.0 110.2 108.8 104.1 103.0 105.8 107.2 100.2 101. 1 100.4 99. 1 96.5 92.5 154.2 147.6 155.0 153.5 -1.1 .9 -4-2 2.3 2.7 5.9 3.9 -3.6 115.3 113.6 102-4 163.3 128.5 114.8 171.0 183.5 122.0 106.6 153.6 180.2 175.2| 171.3167.7 173.5 187-6 172.2 171.1 169.1 167-0 170.9 177.8 168.6 190.9 1 8 9 . 4 178.4 172.5 165.6 163.0 181.7 177.1 172.8 167.3 165.6 164.1 -1-6 -.9 -1.9 -2- 1 153.9 152.0 140.8 142-8 134.3 144.6 146.2 133.9 134-6 129.4 129.7 .2 -10.6 134.8 127.0 125.7 122.2 118.7 123.4 122.7 120.6 113.8 116.8 116.5 -.2 -8.0 133.3 144.2 135.9 135.8 132.9 128.7 I 133.2 | 144.3135.7 135.7 132.9 128.5 | 140.9 | 74.7 | 83.6 77.7 74.6 72-7 73.9 | 103.6 I 73.1 | 81.1 77-8 73.6 70-3 70.8 134.1 133.7 131.4 128.9 125.7 125.5 134.2 133.8 131.6 123.7 125.3 124.9 -.1 -.3 -6.7 -6.9 | 142.5 L SUPPLEMENTARY 138. 1 113.9 153.9 186.9 PERCENT CHG. FROM PREV: MO. YP,. .__!?]__ ill L GROUPINGS T O T A L , EXCLUDING ERDA ELECTRIC UTILITIES SALES TO INDUSTRY OWN USE INDUSTRIAL GENERATION SALES TO ELECTRIC UTILITIES OWN U S E 53 0.6 462.. 6 457.1 5-5 102.9 5.1 97.8 123.4 P—PRELIMINARY 19 73.9 70.6 72.4 72.0 77.3 73-2 -5.2 -10.5 72.1 68.0 69.7 69.2 73.5 72.6 -1.3 -11. 1 Explanatory Note Coverage. The industrial production index is a measure of the physical output of the Nation's factories, mines, and electric and gas utilities expressed as a percentage of production in a base period, currently 1967. The 235 individual series representing Standard Industrial Classification (SIC), 1967 edition, codes 10-14, 19-39, 49, and 91 (part) are calculated first as index series relatives. These relatives are aggregated into: (1) market groupings (such as consumer goods, equipment, intermediate products, and materials) from which the total is derived and (2) industry groupings (for example, SIC 2-digit industries) and major aggregates of these groupings, such as manufacturing, mining, and utilities. Seasonal adjustment. Individual series are seasonally adjusted by the X-l 1 version of the Method II seasonal adjustment procedure developed by the Bureau of the Census. The seasonal adjustment factors for the basic aggregate series in the summary table and in Tables 1 and 2 are reviewed and edited monthly. The seasonal factors currently being used were developed from data through 1978, edited to minimize the effect of the sharp cyclical decline and recovery in industrial production in 1974 and 1975. Weights. The total index and various groupings of component series are combined on the basis of 1967 valueadded weights (shown in the first column of the index tables). The gross-value-weighted product series are expressed in terms of 1972 dollars. Timing. A first estimate of output for a month is published about the 15th of the following month. This estimate may revise in each of the next 3 months as new data become available. After the fourth month, indexes are not further revised until an annual or a benchmark revision. Formula. The symbolic expression for the total index (/) is: It = Source data. The monthly indexes of industrial production are built up from data of two types: (1) directlymeasured physical product data, (2) estimates of physical product output derived from input data adjusted by conversion factors that relate these inputs to physical output. The directly measured physical product data (lbs., tons, etc.) are obtained from reports of the Bureau of the Census, Bureau of Mines, other Government agencies, and trade associations. Estimates of physical output based on input data are used when appropriate monthly physical product data are not available. The major input data are (1) hours worked by production workers as indicated by the monthly establishment survey of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and (2) industrial electric power use as ascertained from utilities by the Federal Reserve Banks. The input conversion estimates are based mainly on their historical trends and recent developments. /JWV \ 467^67/ . /jt\ \«6l/ . 100 __ V67_ . , 00 ; ^67/ 67 where q is quantity, p is Census value-added per unit of output, and t represents the M h period. Reliability. The median of the revisions in total IP, without regard to sign, between the first and fourth estimates is 0.25 per cent; that is, in about half of the cases, the absolute value of the revision from the first to the fourth estimate was less than 0.25 per cent. (Calculated on the basis of data for the August 1971 to July 1976 period.) Rounding. Changes shown for index components may not aggregate to changes for totals due to independent rounding. 20