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-&MM&

FEDERAL RESERVE statistical release
^ WLRES?:- -

For release at 9:15 a.m. (EST)
February 15,1995

G.17(419)

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION AND CAPACITY UTILIZATION

Industrial production rose 0.4 percent in January, about half as much as in November and December. The
slowing was widespread in manufacturing. In contrast, with the arrival of more normal winter temperatures, the output at
utilities rose after some recent weakness. Industrial production in January was at 121.9 percent of its 1987 average and
6.2 percent higher than it was in January 1994. Capacity utilization edged up 0.1 percentage point, to 85.5 percent, its
highest level since October 1979.
Market Groups
The output of both durable and nondurable consumer goods slowed noticeably. The production of durable
consumer goods rose 0.6 percent, compared with 2.2 percent in December; the production of automotive products, which
had risen a total of more than 5 percent over the preceding two months, advanced 0.7 percent. The output of other
consumer durables rose 0.6 percent, half as much as in December; in particular, the output of appliances fell back. The
(over)

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION AND CAPACITY UTILIZATION: SUMMARY
Seasonally adjusted
Index, 1987=100
1994
1994
1995
Industrial Production
Oct/
Nov/
Oct/
Jan.P
Dec/

Percent chanae
Nov/

Dec/

1995 Jan. 94 to
Jan.P
Jan. 95

Total index
Previous estimates

119.5
119.4

120.4
120.3

121.4
121.4

121.9

.4
.4

.8
.7

.9
1.0

.4

6.2

Major market groups:
Products, total
Consumer goods
Business equipment
Construction supplies
Materials

116.9
113.0
150.9
109.7
123.4

117.6
113.9
151.4
109.7
124.6

118.5
115.0
153.1
110.6
125.9

118.9
115.4
154.5
110.7
126.4

.4
.0
1.0
1.1
.4

.6
.8
.3
.0
1.0

.8
1.0
1.1
.8
1.1

.4
.3
.9
.1
.4

5.1
3.6
10.1
7.5
7.9

Major industry groups:
Manufacturing
Durable
Nondurable
Mining
Utilities

121.5
128.0
114.2
99.2
117.2

122.6
129.2
115.3
98.4
116.9

123.8
131.0
115.9
99.9
116.0

124.2
131.9
115.7
100.2
117.6

.5
.6
.4
-.9
.5

1.0
.9
1.0
-.8
-.2

1.0
1.4
.5
1.5
-.7

.3
.6
-.2
.3
1.3

7.3
9.0
5.2
2.4
-2.2

Capacity Utilization
Total industry
Previous estimates
Manufacturing
Advanced processing
Primary processing
Mining
Utilities




Average
1967-94

1982
Low

Percent of Capacity
1994
1994
1988-89
High
Jan.
Oct/

Nov/

Dec/

Capacity
growth
1995 Jan. 94 to
Jan.P
Jan. 95

82.0

71.8

84.9

82.7

84.4
84.3

84.8
84.7

85.4
85.4

85.5

2.8

81.3
80.7
82.5
87.4
86.7

70.0
71.4
66.8
80.6
76.2

85.2
83.5
89.0
86.5
92.6

81.8
80.1
85.9
87.7
89.5

83.8
82.1
88.3
89.0
86.4

84.4
82.4
89.4
88.3
86.1

85.0
83.0
90.2
89.6
85.4

85.1
83.2
89.7
89.9
86.4

3.1
3.6
2.1
.0
1.2

production of consumer nondurables gained 0.3 percent as declines in clothing, paper products, and gasoline partly offset
gains in residential utilities, foods and tobacco products, and drugs and medicines.
The production of business equipment increased 0.9 percent, a growth rate roughly in line with those of the
past few months and the past year. With the notable exception of the commercial aircraft industry, the advances in
business equipment continued to be quite broadly based. The output of defense and space equipment, which had
recovered a bit in November and December, edged down 0.1 percent; the cumulative drop over the past twelve months
was 7.3 percent.
The output of construction supplies edged up, while that of business supplies fell 0.4 percent because paper
business supplies and job printing had weakened somewhat. The production of materials, which had risen about
1 percent in November and again in December, increased 0.4 percent. The output of durable goods materials and energy
materials rose roughly 0.7 percent, while nondurable materials declined nearly as much. Within durable goods materials,
the production of semiconductors and inputs for consumer goods rose again, but the output of steel fell.
Industry Groups
Manufacturing output rose 0.3 percent, to a level 7.3 percent higher than that of January 1994. The
production in nondurable manufacturing industries declined 0.2 percent; among these, the output of only the chemicals
and tobacco products industries rose noticeably. The strength in durable manufacturing continued to be centered in
machinery, equipment, and motor vehicles. The output of steel and lumber fell back after gains in December, while the
long decline in aerospace and miscellaneous transportation equipment resumed.
Factories operated at 85.1 percent of capacity, still just below the recent cyclical peak reached in January
1989. Although the utilization rate in the primary-processing industries fell 0.5 percentage point, to 89.7 percent, it
remained above the cyclical high reached in January 1989 and equaled the high of November 1978. Utilization for
advanced-processing industries rose 0.2 percentage point, to 83.2 percent, but remained 0.3 percentage point below the
January 1989 high.
With the end of unusually mild weather, operating rates at utilities rebounded 1 percentage point, to
86.4 percent, still below the 1994 average of 87.2 percent. Operating rates at mines rose, with gains in coal, metal ores,
stone and earth minerals, and oil and gas well drilling.




INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION AND CAPACITY UTILIZATION
January data

Seasonally adjusted
Industrial production indexes

Twelve-month percent change

Twelve-month percent change

5 h

H

5

0 h

H

0

-5 \-

H

-5
-10

-10
Durable
manufacturing

10 I -

10

/-'

5

5

0

~i °

-5

-I -5

Products

-10

-10
1990

1994

1992

1990

1992

1994

Manufacturing

Total industry

Ratio scale, 1987 production = 100

Ratio scale, 1987 production = 100

Percent of capacity




Percent of capacity

1985

1990

1995

3

1985

1990

1995

Table 1A
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: MARKET GROUPS

AUG.

Sept.

Oct/

Nov/

Index. 1987=100
M ^ M — n ' l l I11 Mil IHM MW H N * ^ * * — • " •
1995 1994
1995
AUQ.
Dec/ Jan.P
Sept. Oct/ Nov/ Dec/ Jan.P

107.6

119.1

119.0

119.5

120.4

121.4

121.9

121.9

122.1

121.3

119.6

119.1

119.8

60.9
46.6

106.5
109.0

116.7
119.2

116.4
118.9

116.9
119.2

117.6
119.9

118.5
121.1

118.9
121.7

120.8
123.1

120.9
123.4

119.5
122.1

116.5
118.9

115.6
118.1

116.1
119.0

Consumer goods
Durable
Automotive products
Autos and trucks
Autos
Trucks
Auto parts and allied goods
Other durable goods
Appliances, TVs, and air-cond.
Carpeting and furniture
Miscellaneous
Nondurable
Foods and tobacco
Clothing
Chemical products
Paper products
Energy products
Fuels
Utilities

28.5
5.5
2.5
1.6
.9
.7
.9
3.0
.7
.8
1.5
23.0
10.3
2.4
4.5
2.9
2.9
.9
2.1

105.9
102.6
99.9
95.1
77.5
125.6
107.8
105.0
111.5
97.3
106.2
106.9
105.6
96.4
120.2
101.7
108.2
104.6
109.6

113.8
120.7
124.9
126.0
91.7
189.0
120.0
117.1
135.1
106.9
114.6
112.2
111.2
95.9
129.8
105.9
113.1
105.8
116.1

113.0
119.1
123.8
122.5
90.2
181.5
123.9
115.2
130.2
104.1
114.6
111.7
111.9
95.5
127.5
105.2
110.5
107.4
111.8

113.0
119.4
124.5
122.3
92.9
175.5
126.6
115.2
124.9
107.4
114.9
111.5
112.2
96.2
127.2
103.6
109.8
103.9
112.2

113.9
120.6
127.1
126.5
94.0
185.8
125.7
115.1
127.5
105.8
114.5
112.4
112.6
96.0
129.9
104.6
110.8
109.8
111.0

115.0
123.3
131.3
131.5
100.5
187.3
128.3
116.5
131.2
107.2
114.9
113.1
113.3
96.3
132.0
105.6
109.8
109.2
110.0

115.4 118.4
124.1 121.0
132.2 125.6
132.7 125.9
103.6
88.0
184.6 I 196.4
128.4 122.5
117.2 I 117.0
130.5 1 129.1
108.0 110.3
116.3 115.0
113.4 117.9
113.8 119.5
95.0 100.8
133.7 143.0
104.1 106.2
110.9 105.5
108.6 107.4
111.7 104.5

117.8
123.1
129.0
128.1
95.3
188.0
128.3
118.1
133.7
107.9
116.7
116.7
119.9
100.4
140.9
105.2
98.5
108.1
94.2

116.0
128.3
138.5
140.4
106.1
202.5
131.8
119.5
130.6
110.6
119.3
113.1
119.1
98.8
129.7
101.6
93.9
105.6
88.7

112.4
120.3
125.2
125.2
94.1
181.8
122.6
116.1
121.0
106.4
119.3
110.6
112.0
95.3
125.6
103.5
106.4
112.9
103.4

111.2
113.8
115.6
111.9
88.1
154.3
120.9
112.3
114.0
103.1
116.6
110.7
105.6
92.8
125.1
106.2
131.0
113.9
138.2

113.7
116.9
122.6
120.3
93.6
168.0
125.0
112.0
126.1
99.8
112.5
113.0
108.6
88.7
123.4
103.7
146.7
106.4
164.0

Equipment, total
Business equipment
Information processing & related
Computer and office
Industrial
Transit
Autos and trucks
Other
Defense and space equipment
Oil and gas well drilling
Manufactured homes

18.1
14.0
5.7
1.5
4.0
2.6
1.2
1.7
3.4
.5
.2

113.4
124.1
138.6 !
172.8
105.6
138.4)
117.0
104.0
86.5
79.9
94.5

127.5
148.9
179.7
288.9
122.3
137.9
149.4
133.5
69.2
89.6
134.5

128.0
149.5
181.1
295.8
123.0
136.8
147.7
133.3
68.8
93.9
138.4

128.8
150.9
183.2
300.5
124.4
137.1
149.2
134.3
68.7
88.3
142.0

129.2
151.4
185.1
306.1
124.3
137.5
151.7
133.1
68.9
86.0
143.1

130.5
153.1
188.1
312.2
125.5
138.5
152.6
132.7
69.1
86.0
153.6

131.5
154.5
189.8
318.6
126.5
140.2
157.2
134.0
69.1
86.7
155.7

130.2
153.0
186.9
310.1
125.9
136.1
147.5
137.0
67.8
90.2
148.3

132.0
154.7
187.6
307.7
127.7
140.2
151.6
138.3
69.2
95.2
146.4

131.6
154.0
186.4
310.9
125.1
147.3
166.2
134.2
69.0
97.3
156.7

129.0
150.2
183.6
296.0
123.5
137.4
148.8
130.5
69.8
98.7
138.8

128.8
149.8
185.7
300.0
124.6
129.5
132.4
128.5
71.0
96.9
125.7

127.3
148.4
182.3
299.9
122.2
133.4
144.9
128.6
69.8
89.1
138.9

14.3
5.3
9.0

98.8
95.0
101.3

109.2
108.2
109.9

108.6
108.6
108.7

109.9
109.7
110.1

110.7
109.7
111.5

110.7
110.6
111.0

110.5
110.7
110.5

113.6
111.5
115.1

113.3
112.4
114.0

111.6
112.9
111.0

109.1
108.5
109.7

107.9
104.9
110.0

107.0
103.3
109.5

39.1

109.2

122.8

122.9

123.4

124.6

125.9

126.4

123.6

123.9

123.9

124.5

124.6

125.7

136.0
135.8
150.7
124.6
123.3
121.4
110.3
122.1
125.5
119.5
105.1
100.8
113.7

138.3
139.3
152.4
126.8
126.0
121.3
109.2
120.8
125.4
120.9
105.8
102.1
113.1

139.1
140.1
154.3
126.8
124.1
120.6
109.1
118.1
125.2
120.7
106.6
102.6
114.6

133.2
132.5
144.3
124.6
117.6
120.6
108.3
121.8
124.0
120.1
107.6
101.1
120.8

135.6
136.3
147.0
126.2
122.4
120.8
107.2
121.7
125.2
119.4
103.8
99.2
112.9

135.6
136.4
148.6
124.8
121.4
122.5
109.5
120.8
125.0
126.7
102.4
98.1
110.8

136.4
137.6
151.5
124.0
122.0
121.0
108.3
122.8
125.5
117.9
104.3
100.6
111.4

137.3
137.5
154.8
123.6
122.7
115.7
99.3
116.8
122.5
111.3
107.7
103.2
116.6

135.9
136.1
153.8
121.9
122.1
119.7
108.8
120.6
122.9
119.1
110.9
105.8
121.1

1992
Item

"iV"

I

Value1
I added

Index

100.0

Seasonally Adiusted
1994

I

Total index
Products, total
Final products

!

Intermediate products
Construction supplies
Business supplies
Materials

20.6
3.9
7.5
9.1
3.0
8.9
1.1
1.8
4.0
2.0
9.6
6.3
3.3

111.8 132.6
107.1 133.2
118.3 145.2
108.6 122.3
110.0 119.3
110.2 120.3
100.7 105.7
111.0 122.5
112.7 | 124.8
110.2 118.1
103.7 106.1
100.5 100.9
110.1 116.3

133.3
133.1
146.7
122.8
121.1
119.8
105.9
121.5
124.0
118.2
105.6
100.8
115.1

134.2
133.8
149.0
122.7
121.3
120.3
106.9
120.5
124.6
119.5
105.2
100.3
115.1

Total excluding:
Autos and trucks
Motor vehicles and parts
Computer and office equip.

97.2
95.2
98.3

107.7
107.6
106.0

118.7
118.2
116.4

118.6
118.0
116.1

119.1
118.5
116.6

119.9
119.3
117.4

120.9
120.3
118.4

121.3
120.6
118.8

121.6
121.2
118.9

121.7
121.2
119.1

120.4
119.9
118.3

119.2
118.6
116.8

119.1
118.4
116.2

119.5
118.9
116.9

Consumer goods excluding:
Autos and trucks
Energy

26.9
25.6

106.7
105.7

113.0
113.8

112.4
113.3

112.4
113.3

113.1
114.2

114.0
115.6

114.3
115.9

117.9
119.8

117.2
120.0

114.4
118.5

111.6
113.1

111.2
109.0

113.3
110.0

Business equipment excluding:
Autos and trucks
Computer and office equipment

12.8
12.5

124.7
115.9

148.8
132.7

149.5
132.7

151.0
133.8

151.3
134.0

153.0
135.2

154.1
136.2

153.4
135.3

154.9
137.2

152.7
136.3

150.3
133.5

151.3
132.7

148.6
131.3

Materials excluding:
Energy

29.5

111.3

128.8

129.2

129.9

131.6

133.1

133.5

129.3

131.0

131.6

131.7

130.7

131.0

Durable
Consumer parts
Equipment parts
Other
Basic metals
Nondurable
Textile
Paper
Chemical
Other
Energy
Primary
Converted fuel

I

SPECIAL AGGREGATES

1. Proportion as a share of the value added for the total index.




Table 1B
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: MARKET GROUPS
Percent change

Item

__

| 1993Q4
to
- 1994Q4

Total index
Products, total
Final products
Consumer goods
Durable
Automotive products
Autos and trucks
Autos
Trucks
Auto parts and allied goods
Other durable goods
Appliances, Tvs, and air-cond.
Carpeting and furniture
Miscellaneous
Nondurable
Foods and tobacco
Clothing
Chemical products
Paper products
Energy products
Fuels
Utilities

I
i
j

f
I
|

Equipment, total
Business equipment
Information processing & related
Computer and office
Industrial
Transit
Autos and trucks
I
Other
Defense and space equipment !
Oil and gas well drilling
Manufactured homes
|
intermediate products
Construction supplies
Business supplies
Materials

Seasonally adjustec I
annual rate
1994
Q2
Q3
Q4r
Q1

geasonatlYaflusted
1994
1995
Oct/
Nov.r Dec/ JauL

Nots
1994
Oct/ Nov/

.4

.8

.9

.4

-.7

-1.4

-.4

.6

6.2

.6
.6

.8
1.0

.4
.5

-1.1
-1.0

-2.6
-2.7

-.8
-.7

.4
.8 |

5.1
5.0

.8
1.0
2.1
3.5
1.3
5.9
-.7
-.1
2.1
-1.5
-.4
.8
.3
-.2
2.1
1.0
.8
5.6
-1.1

1.0
2.2
3.3
3.9
6.9
.8
2.0
1.2
2.8
1.3
.3
.7
.6
.3
1.6
.9
-.8
-.5
-1.0

.3
.6
.7
.9
3.1
-1.4
.1
.6
-.5
.7
1.2
.3
.4
-1.3
1.3
-1.4
1.0
-.5
1.6

-1.5
4.2
7.4
9.6
11.3
7.7
2.8
1.2
-2.3
2.5
2.2
-3.0
-7
-1.6
-7.9
-3.4
-4.7
-2.3
-5.9

-3.1
-6.2
-9.6
-10.8
-11.3
-10.2
-7.0
-2.8
-7.3
-3.8
.0
-2.3
-6.0
-3.5
-3.2
1.8
13.3
6.9
16.7

-1.0
-5.4
-7.7
-10.6
-6.4
-15.1
-1.4
-3.3
-5.8
-3.1
-2.3
.2
-5.7
-2.6
-.4
2.6
23.2
1.0
33.6

2.2
2.7
6.1
7.5
6.3
8.9
3.4
-.3
10.6
-3.2
-3.5
2.0
2.9
-4.4
-1.3
-2.3
12.0
-6.6
18.6

-2.0
-2.4
-1.5
-^.8
-1.2
-6.8
-10.5
-2.7
1.2
1.4
-11.4

-.2
-.3
1.1
1.4
.9
-5.7
-11.0
-1.6
1.7
-1.8
-9.4

-1.1
-.9
-1.8
.0
-1.9
3.0
9.5
.1
-1.6
-8.0
10.5

7.1
10.1
13.5
20.0
10.4
.1
5.4
10.6
-7.3
-2.5
17.6

-1.5
.4
-2.6

-2.2
-3.9
-1.2

-1.1
-3.3
.3

-.8
-1.5
-.4

5.6
7.5
4.4

°

.4

.1

.8

7.9

-1.0
-1.0
-.7
-1.4
-.5
3.5
9.5
3.3 I
.4
6.9
3.0
2.5
3.9

11.2
.7.9
15.1
9.3
8.4
5.2
7.2
3.8
4.8
6.4
2.7
5.4
-2.0

5.9

7.1

6.0

4.9

5.0
4.5

6.7
7.0

4.9
3.5

3.9
3.6

3.2
5.1
7.4
6.1
5.8
6.4
10.2
3.1
-1.6
5.7
4.1
2.7
6.2
1.5
1.8
-.2
-3.9
-1.7
-4.8

6.8
15.9
35.3
I 41.4
49.5
33.0
22.6

2.1
-7.1
-18.6
-26.7
-28.5
-24.7
2.2
5.5
10.2
3.2
4.4
4.6
10.0
9.0
2.7
6.2
-13.3
6.6
-20.0

1.9
6.5
3.3
2.1
-10.5
17.5
5.7
9.6
18.0
10.7
4.8
.7
2.6
-2.8
-.8
-.2
.1
-3.8
1.7

.4
4.4
2
4.0 I
.0
2.2
6.4
.3
16.9
.6
19.8
-.2
31.3
2.9
8.8 I -3.3
11.2
2.1
-2.5 !
.0
-11.1
-4.0
1.4 |
3.2
-.1 I
.3
1.1
-.1
5.4
.3
.8
.7
.7
-.2
-3.2
-1.6
-8.6
-.6
4.9
-3.2
-13.6
.4

6.6
9.8
13.8
20.3
9.1

5.8
7.3
j 10.4
8.2
14.5
8.2
22.8
7.6
I
7.2
14.0
10.2 -11.1
18.8 -19.8
4.4
24.0
-10.2
-7.9
11.9
13.9
31.7
6.0

6.4
11.4
18.4
25.8
7.8
-2.0
7.4
13.4
-16.1
-6.6
.8

6.9
9.4
14.5
25.9
7.6
5.8
17.8
.7
-2.2
-22.3
36.0

.6
1.0
1.2
1.6
1.2
.2
1.1
.7
-.1
-6.0
2.6

.3
.3
1.0
1.9
-.1
.3
1.7
-.9
.3
-2.6
.8

1.0
1.1
1.7
2.0
1.0
.7
.6
-.3
.2
.0
7.4

.8
"3
.9
-.5
.9
-.6
2.0
1.0
.8
-2.1
1.2
5.1
3.0
9.6
.9
-3.0
-.1
-.4
.9
2.2
1.3 !
7.0

•4

4.8

10.3
-9.3
-2.0
17.6

I -18.9
-2

7.8
7.5
4.5
7.2
-.8
4.5
-3.3
i
7.5
-13.1
16.8

5.7

Dec/

Jan. 94
T55T
to
Jan.P Jan. 95

6.3
8.1
5.2

5.5
4.6
6.1

9.6
11.4
8.5

4.6
9.7
1.5

5.6
6.7
4.9

1.2
1.1
1.3

.8
.0
1.2

.0
.8
-.4

-.2
.1
-.4

7.4

7.9

7.7

.6.5

7.7

.4

1.0

1.1

.4

12.3
12.8
16.0
8.9
13.3
4.9
13.1
2.1
3.6
5.7
-.8
1.6
-4.9

.6
.5
1.6
-.1
.2
.4
1.0
-.8
.5
1.1
-.3
-.5
.1

1.4
1.5
1.2
1.6
1.6
.9
3.1
1.3
.7
-.1
-.1
.5
-1.2

1.7
2.6
1.1
1.8
2.2
-.1
-1.0
-1.0
.0
1.2
.6
1.2
-.6

.6
.6
1.3
.0
-1.5
-.6
.0
-2.3
-.2
-.2
.8
.5
1.3

.0
.1
1.2
-1.1
-.9
1.4
2.1
-.7
-.2
6.1
-1.4
-1.1
-1.8

.6
.9
1.8
-.7
.5
-1.2
-1.1
1.7
.5
-7.0
1.9
2.6
.6

.7
.0
2.2
-.3
.6
-4.4
-8.2
-4.9
-2.5
-5.6
3.3
2.5
4.6

i

i
i
!
|
!

3.6
4.6
4.4
3.4
4.9
1.7
6.6
4.9
5.2
5.5
4.3
3.3
6.9
1.5
4.7
.1
-6.3
2.6
-9.6

10.6
9.8
14.3
7.8
6.9
5.1
6.9
3.9
5.9
3.9
2.1
2.9
.6

11.6
21.6
12.8
6.3
2.7
1.9
4.2
-2.1
6.3
-3.9
5.0
3.7
7.4

10.1
-2.0
15.1
12.0
12.4
6.2
6.5
6.5
8.2
1.9
3.3
5.8
-1.1

8.4
8.1
13.4
4.2
-.1
7.6
3.9
9.5
5.4
12.6
.9
.6
1.3

Total excluding:
Autos and trucks
Motor vehicles and parts
Computer and office equipment

5.9
5.8
5.6

6.4
5.9
6.8

7.2
7.8
6.0

4.9
4.9
4.4

5.3
4.9
5.2

.4
.4
.4

.7
.7
.7

.8
.8
.9

.3
.3
.3

-1.0
-1.1
-.7

-1.0
-1.1
-1.3

-.1
-.1
-.5

.4
.4
.6

6.3
6.3
5.9

Consumer goods excluding:
Autos and trucks
Energy

3.0
4.0

4.6
6.7

4.6
4.0

1.9
2.1

1.0
3.4

.0
.0

.6
.8

.8
1.2

.3
.3

-2.4
-1.3

-2.5
-4.6

-.3
-3.6

1.8
.9

3.6
4.7

10.4
8.2

9.8
8.6

11.5
8.3

11.8
9.1

8.6
6.7

1.0
.9

.2
.1

1.1
.9

.7!
.7

-1.4
-.7

-1.6
-2.0

.7
-.6

-1.8
-1.1

10;5
8.4

9.0

8.7

9.0

8.1

10.2

.6

1.3

1.2

.3

.4

.1

-.7

.2

9.5

Durable
Consumer parts
Equipment parts
Other
Basic metals
Nondurable
Textile
Paper
Chemicai
Other
Energy
Primary
Converted fuel
SPECIAL AGGREGATES

Business equipment excluding:
Autos and trucks
Computer and office equipment
materials excluding:
Energy

Note—Percent changes shown in the first and last columns are based on seasonally adjusted data




5

Table 2A
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDUSTRY GROUPS
Index. 1<187=100
Item

1992
Value1
SIC added
Index

1994
Aug.

Sept.

Oct/

Nov/

Dec/

1995
Jan.P

1994
Aug.

Sept.

Oct/

Nov/

Dec/

| 100.0

107.6

119.1

119.0

119.5

120.4

121.4

121.9

121.9

122.1

121.3

119.6

119.1

119.8

85.5

108.0

120.9

120.9

121.5

122.6

123.8

124.2

124.2

125.1

124.5

122.0

120.0

119.8

26.5
59.0

104.6
109.7

116.3
123.1

116.2
123.1

116.6
123.8

118.3
124.7

119.5
125.9

119.0
126.7

117.9
127.2

118.5
128.3

119.2
127.1

118.0
123.9

115.3
122.3

115.8
121.8

45.1
2.0
1.4
2.1

109.3
95.8
99.1
95.3

127.0
105.5
115.5
105.8

127.2
107.6
112.4
105.8

128.0
106.7
114.8
105.4

129.2
106.5
112.9
106.9

131.0
108.3
114.0
108.6

131.9
107.1
115.2
109.0

128.5
109.8
120.6
110.4

130.4
110.9
118.4
108.4

130.8
112.3
116.3
110.1

128.8
105.0
112.7
107.5

128.1
100.8
112.4
102.9

127.5
102.8
110.3
101.9

Total index
Manufacturing
Primary processing
Advanced processing
Durable
Lumber and products
Furniture and fixtures
Stone, clay, and glass products

24
25 i
32

SeasonallvAdiusted

Not seasonally adjusted

"7555"
JanrP

Primary metals
33
Iron and steel
331,2
Raw steel
Nonferrous
333-6,9
Fabricated metal products
34
industrial machinery
and equipment
35
Computer and office equip
357
Electrical machinery
36

3.1
1.7
.1
1.4
5.0

101.9
105.1
101.2
97.6
98.8

113.5
113.0
107.0
113.6
112.4

116.0
118.2
109.9
112.7
111.6

115.9
118.8
109.0
111.8
112.2

119.2
121.9
114.2
115.2
113.3

123.4
130.2
121.9
114.6
114.4

120.7
125.8
118.9
114.0
115.7

111.6
110.6
104.2
112.2
114.9

117.3
119.8
108.8
113.7
115.1

116.9
119.9
109.7
112.5
114.4

117.8
121.3
111.9
112.9
114.0

117.4
122.7
114.4
110.5
113.6

119.2
122.7
119.4
114.3
110.7

7.9
1.7
7.3

124.6
172.8
121.9

162.6
288.9
164.1

164.6
P95.8
165.0

166.5
300.5
166.9

167.6
306.1
168.9

169.3
312.2
172.2

171.5
318.6
174.6

167.8
310.1
164.8

169.3
307.7
168.2

167.1
310.9
169.2

163.1
296.0
170.6

164.1
300.0
173.3

183.7
299.9
171.1

Transportation equipment
Motor vehicles and parts
Autos and light trucks
Aerospace and misc.
Instruments
Miscellaneous

372-6,9
38
39

9.6
4.8
2.5
4.8
5.4
1.3

105.1
107.4
101.9
103.0
106.3
106.3

109.5
138.1
131.9
82.3
108.7
117.1

108.8
137.4
128.4
81.4
108.0
117.0

109.0
138.4
128.6
80.8
108.2
118.4

110.4
141.5
132.8
80.7
108.4
118.6

112.1
144.5
138.4
81.0
108.8
117.8

112.6
146.3
140.0
80.4
109.4
118.4

107.9
136.4
131.2
80.6
110.2
118.2

110.8
141.0
134.5
81.9
111.5
119.6

114.6
149.0
147.6
81.6
109.2
122.9

110.5
140=4
131.6
82.0
108.4
122.6

107.8
133.4
118.3
83.3
108.3
119.1

109.0
138.6
126.9
80.7
107.2
114.9

20
21
22
23
26

40.5
9.4
1.6
1.8
2.2
3.6

106.5
107.0
96.5
103.9
95.0
108.9

114.0
113.7
96.2
109.0
96.8
120.2

113.7
114.6
96.1
108.3
96.8
118.7

114.2
113.4
104.5
110.6
96.9
118.9

115.3
114.2
101.2
111.7
96.8
121.3

115.9
114.8
102.9
111.8
96.8
121.4

115.7
115.0
103.8
111.8
96.0
119.1

119.2
120.6
106.5
113.8
100.1
120.7

119.2
122.2
103.1
112.3
100.1
118.9

117.5
119.3
117.2
115.1
98.8
121.4

114.4
114.4
100.7
109.7
97.5
120.0

111.0
111.0
79.8
100.6
96.1
114.4

111.4
109.1
105.6
104.9
92.2
121.2

27
28
29
30
31

6.8
9.9
1.4
3.5
.3

97.2
114.7
102.1
115.6
89.0

101.5
124.7
105.2
134.5
85.5

100.9
123.7
105.3
134.7
85.4

101.4
123.8
104.0
136.7
85.6

102.1
125.7
107.6
138.3
85.1

102.4
126.3
108.3
139.9
84.9

101.5
127.2
107.3
139.8
83.4

107.2
131.0
109.9
135.2
87.3

106.9
130.5
109.4
136.9
87.5

102.2
125.3
106.3
139.2
87.4

100.6
123.0
109,5
138.3
86.8

100.4
120.7
108.6
138.0
85.3

96.9
121.1
100.3
137.6
81.7

10
12
13
14

6.8
.4
1.0
4.7
.6

98.9
163.8
108.2
93.2
99.0

100.0
156.6
111.4
93.5
106.6

100.1
160.0
110.7
93.7
106.7

99.2
158.9
110.2
92.2
109.3

98.4
154.3
110.1
91.4
109.8

99.9
156.5
117.8
91.8
110.3

100.2
157.2
119.2
91.8
111.0

100.0
157.3
116.3
91.7
115.2

100.5
161.9
113.9
92.6
115.2

101.2
154.2
114.6
93.6
116.3

101.1
153.1
113.1
94.3
112.0

100.6
154.6
112.4
94.4
105.9

100.0
151.5
119.7
93.7
93.8

491,3pt
492,3pt

7.7
6.1
1.6

111.9
111.7
112.7

118.8
118.4
120.4

116.5
117.1
114.2

117.2
117.9
114.4

116.9
117.5
114.3

116.0
116.6
113.9

117.6
118.1
115.7

118.5
130.9
69.7

109.4
120.1
67.1

104.6
109.6
84.8

111.6
109.7
118.7

127.9
118.0
167.0

140.0
125.4
197.6

80.7
83.8

108.1
106.2

119.8
117.6

119.9
117.5

120.5
118.1

121.5
119.2

122.6
120.3

122.9
120.6

123.4
120.6

124.2
121.7

123.1
121.0

120.9
118.6

119.2
116.6

118.7
116.4

12.2
6.4
5.9
5.5
0.3

11.9
6.3
5.7
5.3
0.4

11.9
6.4
5.5
5.1
0.4

12.3
6.5
5.8
5.4
0.4

12.7
7.0
5.8
5.5
0.3

12.9
7.2
5.7
5.4
0.3

13.0
6.5
6.5
6.1
0.4

12.6
6.7
5.9
5.6
0.3

13.2
7.1
6.1
5.7
0.4

12.4
6.6
5.7
5.4
0.3

11.1
6.2
4.9
4.6
0.3

11.9
6.6
5.3
5.0
0.3

37
371

Nondurable
Foods
Tobacco products
Textile mill products
Apparel products
Paper and products
Printing and publishing
Chemicals and products
Petroleum products
Rubber and plastics products
Leather and products
Mining
Metalmining
Coal mining
Oil and gas extraction
Stone and earth minerals
Utilities
Electric
Gas

SPECIAL AGGREGATES
Manufacturing excluding:
Motor vehicles and parts
Computer and office equipment
Memo: Motor vehicle assemblies 2
Total
Autos
Trucks
Light
Heavy and medium

1. Proportion as a share of the value added for the total index.
2. Millions of units at an annual rate.
Note—Primary processing manufacturing includes textile mill products, paper and products, industrial chemicals, synthetic materials, and fertilizers,
petroleum products, rubber and plastics products, lumber and products, primary metals, fabricated metals, and stone, clay, and glass products.
Advanced processing manufacturing includes foods, tobacco products, apparel products, printing and publishing, chemical products and other agricultural
chemicals, leather and products, furniture and fixtures, industrial and commercial machinery and computer equipment, electrical machinery, transportation
equipment, instruments, and miscellaneous manufactures.




6

Table 2B
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: IMDUSTFtY GROUPS
change
"^Seasonally adfu stelT

1 £93 Q4 I
to
f~f§94"
*"M

~"~*~""
.*v»

Tots? Sftdex
Manufacturing

6.1
7.1

Priwsary processilnp
Advanced processing
Durable
Lumber and products
Furniture and fixtures
Stone, clay, and glass prodt sts

24
25
32

33
Primary metals
331,2
Imi and steel
Raw steel
33:3-6,9
Nonferrous
34
Fabricated metal products
Industrial machinery
35 I
and equipment
357 j
Computer and office equip.
36
Electrical machinery
Transportation equipment
Motor vehicles and parts
Autos and light trucks
Aerospace and misc.
'nstrjrhents
Miscellaneous

37
371
372-6,3 j
38!
39 !

Foods
Tobacco products
Textile mill products
Apparel products
P'aper and products

20
21
po
23
26

Printing and publishing
Chemicals and products
Petroleum products
Rubber and plastics products
Leather and products

27
28
29
30
31

Mining
Metal mining
Coal mining
Oi! and gas extraction
Stone and earth minerals?
Utilities
Electric
Gas

10
12
«o
14 f
491,3pt|
492,3pt j

8,5
3.4
7.7
5,1
8.9
7.8

4,1)
S.6

8.2

9,5
O 7

!

4^9

I

3.1

6.4

2.3
8.3
7.2

10.3
7.3

r\o

Q4

Oct/

4.9

5.9 i

3.9
14.3
10.2
14.7
21.5
4.5
6.3

9.6

.8

5.5

7.3

1.0

4.5
5.9

7.8
7.1 |

1.5

3.0
4.9
12.4
1.2
-1.3
-14.0

5.6
18.0
7.3

20.5
30.2
32,5
9.1
5.2

-.1
.5

S

N.3
22.8
14.0

15.3
7,6
18.5

13.5
25.8
18.4

13.4
25.9
15.0

2.5
7.9
6.1
—5.5

13.5
30,2
42.4
-8.2

-10.5
-17.8
-26.9
2.1
.8
7.5

-.8
5.1

9.6
20.6
21.1

2.6
5,2
-8.6
.6
.6
9.2

4.7
.8
35.5
9.4

1.9 j
3.0|
6.6!
11.5 |
-2.5 '

/.u
7.4

6.1

?i

4.8
3,7
24.7
5.2
2.6
3.8

4.5
2,9
49.5
3,3
1.5
--3.3

7,5
5.8
30.6
7 5
8.9

2.9

1.6
5.8
-8.5

10.1
5.0
10..4
9.1
-.3

-1.6
2.5
-5.2

5.7
-11.6
15,1

4.1
.5
10,0
-1.1

3.'7

,8
-5.0
8.2

2.6

6.6

S.6

11.7

HB.7
1.4
-32.6

3.1
.5
14.1

-4.7 I
-2.8 I
11.8 I

9.3
7.3

5.5
4.9

6.8 !

4.9

I

-3.6
-5.2
9.3

23.5

-7.8
10.5

1.0
1.0

-•4 1

.6 1

2.8
2.6
4.7
3.1
1.0

3.6
6.8
6.7
-.5
9

-2.2!
-3.4
-2.4

1.0
2.0
2.Q

1 2

1.3
2.2
3.2
-.1

1.5
2.2
4.3

-.6
.4
-1.1
8.7
2,2
?

1,0

.7
-3.1
1.0
2.1

.5
.5
1.6
.1
.0
1

-1.2 \

i!6 j
.4 j

1.1

.5
-.9

-1.0

3
1.2
-1.8
1.5

-6.5
-.2
.-4.9

.8
1.1
1.9
.3
-.3

-.3
1.1

-2.4

1,2
-,7
.6
.5

3.4
5.7
9.8
-4
-2.0
2.7

-3.5
-5.8
-10.9

-.2
.1

-1.5
-2.4

.9
.0
-.8

13,7
2.5
—1.4
2.2

-2.7
-4.1
-14.0
-4.6
-1.3
-1.2

-4.4
-4.0
-2.8
1.7

-1.6
-1.8
3.0
—.7

-1.9

-SI

T.2

-.4
1
.8
-1.1
-.6

-3.1
-2.4

-4.8
.8

-.4
-1.5
2.4
.5
.6

1.5

- 1

-2.9

"s . 4

-."9

7.0
-4
.4

-.8
-1.3
.7

.0
1.1
1.0

-.2
o

.5
1 4
1.6
-2.5
-5.0
-10.1
1.6
-.1
-2.8

-2.9
-3.0
-20.8
-8.3

.3 I

-4.4
-8.8
28.3

-3.7
6.7
40.0

8.9
11.8
13.5

'9.6
-2.6 1

'V 0.

-3 I

14.1
20.0
17.8

.Of
-1 3 i

' I

1.7

1.2 j

5 5

3.9 !
-1.0
-3.5

.3
-1.7
32.3
4.2
-4.0
5.9
.3 |
-7.6 5

-1.7

-.6

-9

P3
-2.1
-.3

-1 9 I

-.3 1

5!e
-4.4
6.2.
5.2
4.6
19.3
5,5
£ 7
4.5
4.9
3.2
9.0
-4.0

-.6
-2.0
6,5

2.4
-4.3
174

-5.5

-11.4

7.2

14 7
76
40.6

9.4
6.2
18.3

-2.2
.0
-10.3

-1.4
-1.7

-.4
-.1!

7.4
6.9

1.0

-.6
.1

I

SBECIAL-ASfifiESAIES

:*5. /

6.4

6.7

.9

Note—Percent changes shown in the first"" and last columns are based on seasonally aajusted data.




Jsp.P ? Jan,95
.6 I

-1.3
1 n

1—
Manufacturing excluding:
Motor vehicles and parts
Computer and office equipment

J^SXi.-.-P-^.

2.6

-I I

1.6
-1.2
1.5

.6 1

1.4
1.7
1.0
1.6

1.2

7.'l

-2.3
0
-13.7
-.4
2.0

31.0

..6
1.9

8.1
-2.8

.4 I

.9
-.2
-1.7
1.4

1.2
1.6

-6.2
.2
2.4

— 1

.9

| jan.S4

I

9.6 I
2.1
—.2
6.5

13.4
20.3
16.4

3J3

J M § e a s q n a l ! v *a\u;^q

^SS§°J23l!^Sdiii§lgd.,
1994

r

•2 |
0 \

-1.8
-2.0

Table 3
CAPACITY UTILIZATION MANUFACTURING, MINING, AND UTILITIES
Percent of capacity, seasonally adjusted
, . _ « « « = » « - » — = •
™ ^ ™ H 196719781988- 1 9 9 0 - ;
1994
1994 1973 1980 1982 1989
1991
Hem
_ _ _ L_^___ SICJ Proportion i Ave. _High_ High ___Low_,__ H j j f l h _ Low_

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

1994i 1994
Jan^ .^&y£L- Sept. J 3 c U _ 'Nov/

Dec/

1995

Total Industry

100.0

82.0

89.2

87.3

71.8

84.9

78.0

82.7

84.5

84.2

84.4

84.8

85.4

85.5

manufacturing

87.1

81.3

88.9

87.3

70.0

85.2

76.6

81.8

83.8

83.6

83.8

84.4

85.0

85.1

25,5
61,6

82.5
80.7

92.2
87.5

89.7
86.3

66.8
71.4

89.0
83.5

77.9
76.2

85.9
80.1

88.3
82.1

88.2
81,8

88.3
82,1.

89,4
82.4

90,2
83.0

89.7
83.2

47.7
1.8
1.4
2.1

79.3
83.4
81.8
78.0

88.8
90.1
96.8
89.2

86.9
87.6
86.6
87.0

65.0
60.9
68.9
63.1

84.0
93.3
86.8
83.8

73.7
76.3
71.0
71,5

81.5
91.6
79.6
79.3

83.7
91.0
85.4
81.6

83.6
92.6
82.0
81.5

83.9
91.7
84.5
81.1

84.4
91.5
82.9
82.1

85.3
92.9
83.5
83.4

85.6
91.7
84.2
83,6

80.4
80.2
79.7
81.1
73.0
88.9

100.6
105.8
102.7
92.9
92.1
95,7

102.4
110.4
95.7
90.5
80.8
97.6

46.8
38.3
35.2
62.2
42.1
58.6

92.8
95.7
92.7
88,7
85,9
100.4

74,0
72.1
71.4
75.0 •:
73.6
97.3

86.6
87.0
85.8 !
86.3 i
87.2
82.3

90.7
88.0
90.9
94.2
89.1
77.8

92.6
92,0
93.6
93.5
85.3
78.2

92.5
92.4
93.0
92.7
84.0
77.9

95.0
94,7
97.5
95.6
.81.9
77.9

98.3
101.0
104.3
95.1
86.6
79.0

96.1
97,4

33^-6,9!
3331
3334!

2,9
1.6
0.1
1.3
0.1
0.1

34!

5.2

77.5

87.8

83.9

62.9

82.0

71.8

80.8

84.2

83.5.

83.9

84.7

85.4

86.3

84,0
84,4
84.9

72.5
84.5
76.6

85.6
88.4
84.9

89.5
88.2
89.2

90.2
89.2
88.9

90.9
89.6
89.3

91.0
90.2
89.7

91.5
91.0
90,8

92.2
91.6
91,3

Primary processing
Adwaneed processing
Oyrafele
Lumber and products
Furniture and fixtures
Stone, clay, and glass products
Primary metals
Iron and steel
Raw steel
Nonferrous
Primary copper
Primary aluminum
Fabricated metal products
Industrial machinery
and equipment
Computer and office equip
Electrical machinery

24
25
32

33
331,2

|
!
!

94.6
85.2

35
357
36

8.8
2.4
8.3

81.2
80.8
80.6

96.4
90.9
87.8

92.1
93.5
89.4

64.9
63.1
71.1

37
371

75.0
76.1

83.8
93.4

372-6,9
38
39

10.1
5.5
2.8
4.6
5.5
1.5

75.3
81.9
75,5

77.0
89,9
82.9

82.7
93.0
92.2
81.1
92.5
78.7

56.7
44.5
40.1
66.9
79.0
66.1

84.4
85.1
89.1
88.4
81.2
80,1

70.2
57.6
53,3
79.4
76.7
73.5

77.6
88.9
92.7
64.6
75.3
74.2

75.8
86.1
87.8
63.6
76.6
75.6

75.2
85.3
85.1
62.9
76.0
75.3

75.2
85.7
84.9
62.S
78.1
75.9

76.1
87.2
87.3
62,6
78,1
75.9

77.1
88.8
90.7
62.8
76.3
75.2

77.3
89.6
91.4
62.4
76,7
75.3

20
22
23
26
261-3
27

39.3
9.3
1.6
2.1
3.2
1.3
6.8

83.5
82.3
86.2
81.1
89.8
92.4
86.1

87.9
86.0
92.0
84.2
96.9
97.1
89.7

87.0
84.3
91.7
86.0
94.2
98.2
92.2

76.9
78.8
73.8
78.9
82.0
82.1
83.0

86.7
83.3
92.1
84,2
94.8
98.1
92.3

80.4
80.5
- 78.9
75.1
86.5
89.6
78.7

82.2
80.6
88.4
78.4
90.6
92.8
77.8

84.1
82.4
89.8
80.9
94.6
97.4
79.9

83.8
82.9
89.0
80,9
93.2
95.8
79.4

83.9
81.9
90.8
80.9
93.2
94.8
79.7

84.6
82.4
91.5
80.8
95.0
96.3
80.2

84.9
82.7
91.5
80.8
94.9
95.2
80.3

84,6
82.6
91.3
80.1
93.0
93.0
79.6

Chemicals and products
28
Plastics materials
2821
Synthetic fibers
2823,4
Petroleum products
29
Rubber and plastics products
30
Leather and products
31

10.1
0.7
0.4
1.2
3.4
0.2

80.0
86.2
85.0
85.7
84.1
82.0

87.9
102.0
93.8
96.7
94.0
81.3

85.1
90.9
98.5
89.5
90.4
92.4

70.1
63.4
64.4
68.2
73.5
78.1

85.9
97.0
99.7
88.5
90,5
83.8

78.9
74.8
76.8
83.7
78.4
74.7

80.9
92.5
90.7
90.0
88.6
83.4

81.4
97.3
96.4
91.4
90.4
83.2

80.4
95.7
91.1
91,4
90.2
83.2

80.2
93,3
92.5
90.4
91.2
83.5

81.3
98.5
90,6
93.5
91.9
83.2

81.4

81.7

90.9
94.1
92.6
83.1

93.3
92.2
81.8

10
12
13
138
14

5.8
0.4
1.0
4.0
0.6
0.5

87.4
78.4
86.9
88.1
72.7
84.5

94.4
90.3
90.8
96.6
93.0
93.7

96.6
87.6
95.7
96.9
104.3
93.3

80.6
43.4
75.4
82.5
50.8
63.3

86.5
87.9
91.4
86.1
60.7
90.0

86.0
80.6
82.9
86.8
53.6
79.4

87.7
84.5
78.1
90.3
74.4
87.4

89.7
80.5
85.1
91.5
75.3
90.1

89.8
82.2
84.5
91.7
78.9
90.2

89.0
81.6
84.1
90.3
74.2
92.4

88.3
79.2
83.9
89.5
72.3
92,8

89.6
80.3
89.7
89.9
72.3
93.2

89.9
80.6
90.7
90.0
73.0
93.9

4&1,3pt
492,3pt

7.1
5,6
1.5

' 86.7
88.8
I 82.5

95.6
99.0
93.2

88.3
88.3
93.6

76.2
78.7
70.8

92.6
94.8
85.5

83.2
86.5
68.3

89.5
89.5
89.5

87.8
89.0
83.4

86.0
87.9
79.1

86.4
88.3
79.2

86.1
88.0
79.1

85.4
87.1
78.9

86,4
88.2
80.1

Transportation equipment
Motor vehicles and parts
Autos and light trucks1
Aerospace and misc.
Instruments
Miscellaneous
Nondurable
Foods
Textile m i products
Apparel products
Paper and products
Pulp and paper
Printing and publishing

Hiininq
Metalmining
Coal mining
Oil and gas extraction
Oil and gas well milling
Stone and earth minerals
Utilities
Electric
Gas

1. Series begins in 1977.
Note—Primary processing manufacturing includes textile mill products, paper and products, industrial chemicals, synthetic materials, and fertilizers,
petroleum products, rubber and plastic products, lumber and products, primary metals, fabricated metals, and stone, clay, and glass products. Advanced
processing manufacturing includes foods, tobacco products, apparel products, printing and publishing, chemical products and other agricultural chemicals,
feather and products, furniture and fixtures, industrial and commercial machinery and computer equipment, electrical machinery transportation equipment,
instruments, and miscellaneous manufactures.




8

Table 4
INDUSTRIAL CAPACITY: MANUFACTURING, MINING, AND UTILITIES
A n n u a l rate

Pi rcent change

"mm.

Capacity indexes
Percent of 1987 mitni it

Decemberto December

1&67- 1 3 6 7 ^ 1 3 7 5 ^
Item

SIC

1994 1975 1994
Ave- ^ A v e ^ . Ave.

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1994 | 1994
Jan. Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

1995
Jan.

2.8

3.7

2.4

1.9

1.9

2.1

2.1

2.8

138.7

140.9

141.3

141.6

141.9

142.2

142.6

3.2

3.9

2.9

2.1

2.1

2.4

2.4

3.1

141.6

144.2

144.5

144.9

145.3

145.6

146.0

Primary processing
Advanced processing

2.1
3.8

4.0
3.9

1.3
3.7

1.7
2.2

1.2
2.6

1.4
2.9

1.4
2.8

2.0
3.5

130.1
146.9

131.6
150.0

131.8
150.4

132.1
150.8

132.3
151.3

132.5
151.7

132.8
152.2

Durable
24
Lumber and products
Furniture and fixtures
25
Stone, clay, and glass products 32

3.5
1.7
3.1
1.4

3.7
2.9
4.5
2.5

3.4
1.1
2.4
.8

2.1
.6
2.2
.6

2.5
-.4
.8
.2

2.6
.4
1.7
.5

2.6
.7
2.4
1.0

3.7
1.6
2.9
1.6

148.4
114.9
133.0
128.4

151.6
116.0
135.2
129.6

152.1
116.2
135.5
129.8

152.6
116.3
135.9
129.9

153.0
116.5
136.2
130.1

153.5
116.6
t36.5
130.3

154.0
116.8
136.8
130.5

333-6,9
3331
3334

-.1
-.9
-1.3
1.3
.3
1.3

1.7
.7
.3
3.6
1.8
5.2

-.9
-1.6
-2.1
.2
-.4
-.4

.6
.8
-.2
.1
.3
.4

-.7
-1.4
-1.7
.4
6.5
.6

-1.1
-2.4
-2.7
.7
8.0
.3

-.5
-.8
-3.8
-.1
5.1
.5

.7
1.2
-2.0
.0
1.2
.0

124.7
127.4
119.0
120.6
158.8
125.0

125.2
128.4
117.7
120.5
159.7
125.0

125.3
128.5
117.5
120.5
159.9
125.0

125.3
128.6
117.3
120.5
160.0
125.0

125.4
128.8
117.1
120.5
160.1
125.0

125.5
128.9
116.9
120.5
160.3
125.0

125.6
129.1
116.9
120.6
160.6
125.0

34

1.6

3.1

.9

.3

.4

.9

.9

1.0

132.8

133.5

133.6

133.7

133.8

133.9

134.1

35
357
36

6.4
20.0
5.6

4.7
12.0
6.1

7.2
24.0
5.5

4.9
15.8
3.5

5.5
15.3
5.9

4.7
15.6
6.6

4.3
14.3
7.6

5.8
15.5
9.5

175.6
300.5
174.4

181.6
327.6
184.1

182.4
331.5
185.5

183.3
335.4
186.9

184.1 185.0
339.2 343.1
188.3 189.7

186.0
348.0
191.2

37
371

2.5
3.2

3.0
4.5

2.3
2.5

372-6,9
3d
39 [

1.8
5.0
2.3

1.3
7.6
4.4

2.0
3.8
1.3 j

.9
1.4
.6
.6
1.2
1.6

1.4
3.1
1.1
-.3
1.2
1.5

1.5
3.2
2.5
-.3
1.2
3.7

.5
2.4
.7
-1.7
1.3
3.1

2.0
4.6
4.9
-1.1
1.4
3.6

142.8
156.0
145.9
130.2
140.8
151.7

144.5
160.3
150.2
129.4
141.9
154.9

144.7
161.0
150.8
129.3
142.0
155.4

145.0
161.6
151.4
129.2
142.2
155.9

145.2
162.2
152.1
129.1
142.4
156.3

145.4
162.8
152.7
129.0
142.5
156.8

145.7
163.4
153.2
128.8
142.7
157.2

i
20
22 |
23
26
261-3
27 I

2.9
2.5
2.0
1.3
2.7
2.4
3.1

4.3
3.0
4.3
2.3
3.9
3.0
3.0

2.2
2.3
1.0
.8
2.1
2.1
3.2

2.1
1.4
1.6
.1
3.0
2.7
2.9

1.7
1.9
.4
-.4
2.3
2.9
1.1

2.3
2.2
1.3
1.1
1.9
2.2
1.8

2.2
2.2
1.8
-.1
1.6
1.6
1.7

2.3
2.0
2.1
.5
1.8
2.0
1.1

133.7
136.3
119.9
119.3
125.8
123.2
126.2

135.5
138.0
121.4
119.6
127.1
124.7
127.0

135.8
138.2
121.6
119.7
127.3
124.9
127.1

136.0
138.4
121.8
119.8
127.5
125.1
127.2

136.3 136.5
138.7 138.9
122.0 122.3
119.8 119.9
127.7 127.9
125.3 125.5
127.3 127.4

136.8
139.1
122.5
119.9
128.1
125.7
127.6

3.9
6.5
4.2
1.5
5.5
-3.3

6.8
12.7
9.7
4.2
8.6
-1.5

2.6 I 2.5
3.8 | 2.5
1.8
1,2
.2
1.0
4.1 I 4.0
-4.1
-3.5

2.6
1.0
1.5
-1.0
3.4
-3.8

3.6
1.1
5.0
-1.3
4.5
-2.3

3.3
1.8
1.5
-.5
4.4
-2.8

3.8
2.5
3.6
-.4
4.7
-2.1

150.0 153.3
128.9 I 130.8
129.0 131.8
115.5 115.2
144.8 148.8
104.1 102.8

153.8
131.1
132.2
115.1
149.3
102.6

154.3
131.3
132.6
115.1
149.9
102.5

154.7
131.6
133.0
115.1
150.5
102.3

155.2
131.9
133.4
115.0
151.0
102.1

155.7
132.2
133.9
115.0
151.6
101.9

.0
2.5
-.6
.3
.8

-.1
.7
2.5
-1.0
.8
2.6

.1
-1.1
1.7
4.6
2.5
2.1
-.4 I -2.5
.1
-9.5
.0
-- 1

-.2
2.1
2.1
-.9
-5.5
-.5

-1.2
2.5
.9
-2.3
-8.2
.6

-1.4
1.6
1.1
-2.4
-9.4
-.1

-.1 111.5 111.5
.4 194.2 194.6
1.1 130.1 130.9
- . 4 102.4 102.2
-1.0 j 119.5 119.1
-.2 I 118.5 118.4

111.5
194.7
131.0
102.1
119.0
118.3

111.5 111.4 111.4
194.8 194.8 194.9
131.1 131.3 131.4
102.1 102.1 102.1
118.9 118.9 118.8
118.3 118.3 118.3

111.4
195.0
131.5
102.0
118.8
118.3

2.9
4.0
.3

6.0
7.8
2.3

1.2
1.6
.0

1.2
1.5
.0

1.0
1.3
.0

1.2 134.4 135.4
1.5 I 132.0 133.1
.3 144.0 144.3

135.5
133.3
144.4

135.7
133.4
144.4

135.9
133.8
144.5

136.1
133.9
144.5

Total industry
Manufacturing

Primary metals
Iron and steel
Raw steel
Nonferrous
Primary copper
Primary aluminum
Fabricated metal products
Industrial machinery
and equipment
Computer and office equip
Electrical machinery
Transportation equipment
Motor vehicles and parts
Autos and light trucks1
Aerospace and misc.
Instruments
Miscellaneous
Nondurable
Foods
Textile mill products
Apparel products
Paper and products
Pulp and paper
Printing and publishing

33
331,2

Chemicals and products
28
Plastics materials
2821
Synthetic fibers
2823,4
Petroleum products
29
Rubber and plastics products
30
Leather and products
31
Mlnino
Metalmining
Coal mining
Oil and gas extraction
Oil and gas well drilling
Stone and earth minerals
Utilities
Electric
Gas
1. Series begins in 1977




10 I
12
13
138
14
491,3pt
492,3pt

1.4

1.5
2.3
-.6

2.6
3.4
.0

135.8
133.6
144.4

Table 5A
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION, CAPACITY AND UTILIZATION FOR TOTAL INDUSTRY: HISTORICAL DATA
Seasonally adjusted

P-

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Q1

Q2

Q3

.8
1.0
.3
-.9
.4

1.2
.6
.4
.2
.5

1.1
.7
.2
.0
.6

.6
.5
-.3
-.5
.9

1.8
.4
-.3
.5
.4

1.4
.1
.5
.2
.3

1.7
-.1
.5
.1
-.2

.8
-.7
-.8
.7
1.3

.2
.0
.4
.7
.1

.5
-.6
1.0
.6
.7

5.7
11.2
2.4
2.4
5.5

11.1
7.7
3.8
-3.4
8.1

17.8
4.0
.1
1.3
5.2

11.2
-3.4
1.2
5.8
6.5

3.7
9.3
1.7
.9
4.9

.2
-.5
.5
-.9
.9

.0
.9
.3
-1.0
.6

.8
.0
-.7
.5
.5

-.3
-.3
.7
.8
.5

.0
-.3
.2
.9
-.3

.6
-1.0
-.2
.3
.9

.6
.5
.3
.1
-.1

-.5
-.4
.0
.9
.2

.3
-.4
-.5
-.1
.6

.6
.4
-1.3
.0
1.0

.6
.7
-.4
-.4
.5

3.8
3.9
2.1
-8.1
.9

3.0
.3
1.1
1.7
5.8

2.9
-4.4
1.6
6.3
3.4

3.0
-.2
-5.2
1.5
6.2

4.4
1.5
.0
-1.7
3.2

.2
.0
.4

.6
.8

.1
.9

.0
.1

-.2
.5

.3
.6

.4
.2

.2
.8

.3
-.1

.1
.4

.9
.8

.9
.9

5.1
7.1

.7
6.0

3.3
4.9

5.3
5.7

4.1
5.4

80.8
91.0
93.1
96.1
96.5

80.7
90.9
93.8
95.5
97.9

81.3
91.9
94.1
94.6
98.2

82.3
92.4
94.5
94.8
98.8

83.2
93.0
94.7
94.7
99.4

83.7
93.5
94.4
94.3
100.3

85.3
93.9
94.1
94.8
100.6

86.5
94.0
94.5
94.9
100.9

87.9
93.9
95.0
95.0
100.7

88.6
93.2
94.2
95.6
102.1

88.8
93.3
94.6
96.3
102.2

89.2
92.8
95.6
96.8!
102.8

80.9
91.3
93.6
95.4
97.5

83.1
93.0
94.5
94.6
99.5

86.6
93.9
94.6
94.9
100.8

88.9
93.1
94.8
96.2
102.3

84.9
92.8
94.4
95.3
100.0

1988
1989
1990
1991
1992

103.2
106.6
105.5
104.0
104.9

103.4
106.2
106.1
103.1
105.8

103.4
107.1
106.4
102.1
106.4

104.3
107.1
105.7
102.6
106.9

104.0
106.7
106.5
103.5
107.5

104.0
106.4
106.7
104.4
107.2

104.6
105.3
106.5
104.7
108.1

105.2
105.8
106.8
104.8
108.0

104.7
105.4
106.8
105.7
108.2

105.0
105.0
106.3
105.6
108.8

105.6
105.4
105.0
105.6
109.9

106.3
106.1
104.5
105.2
110.4

103.3
106.6
106.0
103.1
105.7

104.1
106.7
106.3
103.5
107.2

104.8
105.5
106.7
105.1
108.1

105.6
105.5
105.3
105.5
109.7

104.4
106.0
106.0
104.3
107.6

1993
1994
1995

110.6
114.7
121.9

111.3
115.6

111.4
116.6

111.4
116.7

111.1
117.4

111.5
118.0

112.0
118.2

112.2
119.1

112.5
119.0

112.7
119.5

113.7
120.4

114.7
121.4

111.1
115.7

111.3
117.4

112.2
118.8

113.7
120.4

112.0
118.1

Capacity
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987

110.7
113.3
116.0
119.2
121.6

110.9
113.5
116.2
119.4
121.8

111.1
113.7
116.5
119.6
122.0

111.3
113.9
116.8
119.8
122.2

111.6
114.2
117.1
120.0
122.4

111.8
114.4
117.3
120.2
122.6

112.0
114.6
117.6
120.4
122.8

112.2
114.8
117.9
120.6
123.0

112.4
115.0
118.2
120.8
123.2

112.6
115.3
118.4
121.0
123.4

112.8
115.5
118.7
121.2
123.6

113.1
115.7
119.0
121.4
123.8

110.9
113.5
116.2
119.4
121.8

111.6
114.2
117.1
120.0
122.4

112.2
114.8
117.9
120.6
123.0

112.8
115.5
118.7
121.2
123.6

111.9
114.5
117.5
120.3
122.7

1988
1989
1990
1991
1992

123.9
125.7
128.1
130.5
133.0

124.1
125.9
128.3
130.7
133.3

124.2
126.1
128.5
130.9
133.5

124.4
126.3
128.7
131.1
133.7

124.5
126.5
128.9
131.3
134.0

124.7
126.7
129.1
131.5
134.2

124.8
126.9
129.3
131.7
134.4

125.0
127.1
129.5
132.0
134.7

125.1
127.3
129.7
132.2
134.9

125.3
127.5
129.9
132.4
135.1

125.4
127.7
130.1
132.6
135.4

125.5
127.9
130.3
132.8
135.6

124.1
125.9
128.3
130.7
133.3

124.5
126.5
128.9
131.3
134.0

125.0
127.1
129.5
132.0
134.7

125.4
127.7
130.1
132.6
135.4

124.7
126.8
129.2
131.6
134.3

1993
1994
1995

135.8
138.7
142.6

136.1
139.0

136.3
139.3

136.5
139.7

136.8
140.0

137.0
140.3

137.2 : 137.5
140.6 140.9

137.7
141.3

137.9
141.6

138.2
141.9

138.4
142.2

136.1
139.0

136.8
140.0

137.5
140.9

138.2
141.9

137.1
140.5

73.0
80.4
80.3
80.6
79.3

72.8
80.1
80.7
79.9
80.3

73.2
80.8
80.7
79.1
80.5

73.9
81.1
80.9
79.1
80.8

74.6
81.5
80.9
78.9
81.2

74.9
81.8
80.5
78.4
81.8

76.1
81.9
80.0
78.7
81.9

77.1
81.8
80.2
78.7
82.0

78.2
81.6
80.4
78.7
81.8

78.7
80.9
79.6
79.1
82.7

78.7
80.8
79.7
79.4
82.7

78.9
80.2
80.4
79.8
83.1

73.0
80.4
80.6
79.9
80.1

74.5
81.4
80.7
78.8
81.3

77.2
81.8
80.2
78.7
81.9

78.8
80.6
79.9
79.4
82.8

75.8
81.1
80.3
79.2
81.5

1988
1989
1990
1991
1992

83.2
84.8
82.4
79.7
78.8

83.3
84.3
82.7
78.9
79.4

83.2
84.9
82.8
78.0
79.7

83.8
84.8
82.1
78.3
80.0

83.5
84.3
82.6
78.8
80.3

83.4
83.9
82.6
79.4
79.9

83.8
83.0
82.4
79.5
80.4

84.2
83.3
82.5
79.4
80.2

83.7
82.8
82.4
80.0
80.2

83.8
82.3
81.8
79.8
80.6

84.2
82.5
80.7
79.6
81.2

84.6
82.9
80.2
79.2
81.5

83.3
84.7
82.6
78.9
79.3

83.6
84.3
82.5
78.8
80.0

83.9
83.0
82.4
79.6
80.3

84.2
82.6 ;
80.9
79.6
81.1

83.7
83.7
82.1
79.2
80.2

1993
1994
1995

81.5
82.7
85.5

81.8
83.2

81.7
83.7

81.6
83.6

81.2
83.8

81.4
84.1

81.6
84.1

81.6
84.5

81.7
84.2

81.7
84.4

82.3
84.8

82.9
85.4

81.7
83.2

81.4
83.8

81.6
84.3

82.3
84.9

81.7
84.0

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Industrial
Production,
P@re@nt
Crssng©1
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987

1.9
2.0
.4
.5
-.3

.0
-.1
.7
-.7
1.4

1988
1989
1990
1991
1992

.3
.3
-.5
-.5
-.3

1993
1994
1995

Year

industrial
Production
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987

Utilization
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987




A r

10

Q4J

Annual

Table 5B
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION, CAPACITY AND UTILIZATION FOR MANUFACTURING: HISTORICAL DATA
Seasonally adjusted
Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

Annual

Industrial
Production,
Percent
Change 1
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987

2.2
2.3
.1
1.3
-.6

A
.6
.6
-.4
1.7

1.4
.9
.7
-1.0
.5

1.0
.4
.3
.9
.4

1,4
.5
.6
.0
.7

.8
.6
-.5
-.3
.9

1.5
.4
-.2
.6
.4

1.3
.2
.8
.5
.0

2.2
-.1
.2
.3
.2

.8
.0
-.7
.7
1.0

.5
.0
1.3
.5
.4

.1
-.4
.1
1.0
.6

10.4
13.3
1.7
4.6
6.3

13.8
6.9
5.1
.1
8.6

17.5
4.7
1.0
3.5
5.6

12.5
-.3
2.4
7.2
6.8

5.6
10.4
2.6
2.9
6.0

1988
1989
1990
1991
1992

.2
.8
-.1
-.8
-.2

.1
-.9
.9
-.9
1.0

.2
.6
.4
-1.1
.7

.7
.2
-.9
.6
.4

-.1
-.5
.5
.7
.5

.0
-.2
.0
1.0
-.2

.5
-1.2
-.3
.4
.9

.4
.4
.5
.2
.0

.0
-.4
-.1
1.1
.1

.1
-.5
-.6
-.1
.5

.9
.3
-1.2
-.1
1.1

.6
.2
-.5
-.2
.4

3.6
4.3
3.7
-9.3
2.4

3.3
-.3
.2
1.3
6.0

3.0
-5.3
1.0
7.6
4.1

4.4
-1.3
-5.5
2.1
6.0

4.7
1.6
-.3
-2.0
3.9

1993
1994
1995

.5
-.3
.3

.5
.8

.1
1.1

.1
.3

-.2
.5

.2
.3

.5
.4

.1
.9

.4
.0

.1
.5

1.1
1.0

1.1
1.0

6.1
7.2

1.3
7.3

2.9
5.5

6.4
7.3

4.5
6.0

Industrial
Production
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987

76.2
87.1
89.9
94.0
96.2

76.5
87.6
90.4
93.6
97.8

77.6
88.3
91.1
92.7
98.3

78.3
88.7
91.4
93.5
98.7

79.4
89.1
92.0
93.6
99.4

80.0
89.7
91.5
93.3
100.3

81.2
90.1
91.3
93.9
100.7

82.3
90.3
92.0
94.4
100.7

84.1
90.2
92.3
94.6
100.9

84.7
90.2
91.6
95.3
102.0

85.1
90.2
92.8
95.8
102.4

85.2
89.8
92.8
96.7
103.0

76.8
87.7
90.5
93.5
97.4

79.3
89.2
91.6
93.5
99.4

82.5
90.2
91.9
94.3
100.8

85.0
90.1
92.4
95.9
102.5

80.9
89.3
91.6
94.3
100.0

1988
1989
1990
1991
1992

103.2
107.7
105.5
103.6
105.1

103.4
106.7
106.5
102.7
106.1

103.6
107.3
107.0
101.6
106.9

104.3
107.6
106.0
102.1
107.3

104.2
107.1
106.6
102.8
107.8

104.2
106.8
106.6
103.9
107.7

104.7
105.5
106.3
104.4
108.6

105.1
106.0
106.9
104.5
108.6

105.2
105.6
106.8
105.7
108.7

105.3
105.1
106.2
105.5
109.3

106.2
105.4
104.9
105.4
110.5

106.8
105.6
104.4
105.3
110.9

103.4
107.2
106.3
102.6
106.0

104.2
107.2
106.4
103.0
107.6

105.0
105.7
106.6
104.9
108.7

106.1
105.4
105.1
105.4
110.3

104.7
106.4
106.1
103.9
108.0

1993
1994
1995

111.5
115.8
124.2

112.0
116.7

112.2
118.0

112.3
118.4

112.1
119.0

112.3
119.3

112.9
119.8

112.9
120.9

113.4
120.9

113.6
121.5

114.8
122.6

116.1
123.8

111.9
116.8

112.3
118.9

113.1
120.5

114.8
122.7

112.9
119.7

Capacity
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987

106.7
109.4
113.1
117.6
121.2

106.9
109.7
113.4
117.9
121.5

107.2
110.0
113.8
118.2
121.7

107.4
110.3
114.2
118.5
121.9

107.6
110.6
114.6
118.8
122.2

107.8
110.9
115.0
119.1
122.4

108.0
111.2
115.3
119.3
122.7

108.3
111.5
115.7
119.6
122.9

108.5
111.8
116.1
119.9
123.2

108.7
112.1
116.5
120.2
123.4

108.9
112.4
116.9
120.5
123.7

109.1
112.7
117.2
120.8
123.9

106.9
109.7
113.4
117.9
121.5

107.6
110.6
114.6
118.8
122.2

108.3
111.5
115.7
119.6
122.9

108.9
112.4
116.9
120.5
123.7

107.9
111.1
115.2
119.2
'122.6

1988
1989
1990
1991
1992

124.1
126.5
129.4
132.1
134.9

124.3
126.7
129.6
132.3
135.2

124.5
127.0
129.8
132.5
135.5

124.7
127.2
130.1
132.8
135.7

124.9
127.4
130.3
133.0
136.0

125.1
127.7
130.5
133.2
136.3

125.3
127.9
130.7
133.5
136.6

125.5
128.2
130.9
133.7
136.8

125.7
128.4
131.2
133.9
137.1

125.9
128.7
131.4
134.2
137.4

126.0
128.9
131.6
134.4
137.7

126.2
129.2
131.8
134.6
137.9

124.3
126.7
129.6
132,3
135.2

124.9
127.4
130.3
133.0
136.0

125.5
128.2
130.9
133.7
136,8

126.0
128.9
131.6
134.4
137.7

125.2
127.8
130.6
133.4
136.4

1993
1994
1995

138.2
141.6
146.0

138.5
142.0

138.8
142.3

139.1
142.7

139,3
143.1

139.6
143.4

139.9
143.8

140.2
144.2

140.4
144.5

140,7
144.9

141.0
145.3

141.3
145.6

138.5
142.0

1.39.3
143.1

140.2
144.2

141.0
145.3

139.7
143.6

71.4
79.6
79.5
80.0
79.3

71.5
79.9
79.7
79.4
80.5

72.4
80.3
80.0
78.5
80.7

73.0
80.4
80.0
79.0
80.9

73.8
80.6
80.3
78.8
81.3

74.2
80.9
79.6
78.4
81.9

75.2
81.0
79.2
78.7
82.1

76.0
80.9
79.5
78.9
81.9

77.5
80.7
79.5
78.9
81.9

77.9
80.5
78.6
79.3
82.6

78.1
80.3
79.4
79.5
82.8

78.0
79.7
79.2
80.0
83.1

71.8
79.9
79.8
79.3
80.2

73>
80.6
80.0
78.7
81.4

78.2
80.9
79.4
78.8
82.0

78.0
80.2
79.1
79.6
82.8

74.9
80.4
79.5
79.1
81.6

1988
1989
1990
1991
1992

83.2
85.2
81.6
78.4
77.9

83.1
84.2
82.2
77.6
78.5

83.2
84.6
82.4
76.6
78.9

83.6
84.6
81.5
76.9
79.0

83.4
84.0
81.8
77.3
79.3

83.3
83.7
81.7
78.0
79.0

83.6
82.5
81.3
78.2
79.5

83.8
82.7
81.6
78.2
79.4

83.7
82.2
81.4
78.9
79.3

83.7
81.7
80.8
78.7
79.6

84.3
81.8
79.7
78.4
80.3

84.6
81.8
79.2
78.2
80.4

83.2
84.6
82.0
77.6
78.4

83.5
84.1
81.7
77.4
79.1

83.7
82.5
81.4
78.4
79.4

84.2
81.7
79.9
78.4
80.1

83.6
83.2
81.3
78.0
79.2

1993
1994
1995

80.7
81.8
85.1

80.9
82.2

80.8
82.9

80.8
83.0

80.5
83.2

80.5
83.2

80.7
83.3

80.6
83.8

80.8
83.6

80.7
83.8

81.4
84.4

82.2
85.0

80.8
82.3

80.6
83.1

80.7
83.6

81.4
84.4

80.9
83.4

Year

Utilization
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987




11

Tables
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIVIDUAL SERIES
_ 1 2 2 2
Item

5IC

_

Value
.42
.06
.37
.10

12
13
131

Index

1994

Aug

??PtT

W

NQV/

Dec/

July

Aug.

Seot.

Dec/

154.2
127.6
158.8
1503

153.1
134.2
1558
136.6

154.6
133.0
158 0
138.0

113.9

114.6

113.1

112.4

92.6
90.2
78.1
111.2
116.2
95.2

93.6
91.3
78.5
113.4
112.8
97.3

94.3
91.7
77,9
115.7
116.1
98.7

94.4
925
79.6
114.0
96.9

115.2

115.2

116.3

112.0

105.9

115.5
119.4
105.8
110.4
145.7
68.6
112.1
79.0
122.4
124.4
152.7
92.1

120.6
126.5
108.7
119.8
156.7
75.1
106.8
76.3
116.4
115.2
140.5
90.8

122.2 119.3 114.4
128.0 133.4 124.7
109.2 110.5 101.1
128.7 139.3 137.0
153.8 160.7 147.9
75.3
82.3
80.2
106.2 105.3 104.8
81.1
92.7
91.1
129.7 127.8 129.1
110.0 114.6 114.5
117.6 106.7 99.6
90.7
89.8
90.0

111.0
123.1
1015
134.4
144.4
85.1
108.5
103.9
128.5
134.0
92.3
90.8

113.1
114.6
111.9
103.7
113.8
122.0
130.5
130.8
119.0
87.6

133.0
119.2
110.5
112.5
121.4
125.0
130.5
135.4
122.2
88.2

138.6 128.9 117.7
119.2 117.3 118.4
112.4 103.8 98.4
124.6 139.5 137.4
126.2 133.6 136.9
122.7 115.9 109.1
113.3 110.7
139.7 124.5 116.4
121.8 116.0 111.3
84.6
90.0
88.3

108.4
119.7
96.0
129.8
133.3
100.6

102.9

79.3

106.5

103.1

117.2

100.7

79.8

111.7
104.6
104.1
111.1
120.9
120.6
95.1
100.8
122.2
121.8

111.8
104.0
102.9
113.4
123.0
123.6
94.7
102.3
119.5
118.1

106.9
90.7
88.4
106.3
126.8
129.3
79.4
112.9
112.8
108.8

113.8
102.2
102.5
114.4
131.8
139.8
91.4
105.9
121.3
121.4

112.3
100.2
100.6
115.8
132.5
139.4
91.4
98.2
120.7
119.0

115.1
103.7
104.5
113.9
131.8
129.8
93.6
110.4
121.8
121.7

109.7
102.7
102.9
112.5
116.7
115.8
93.9
103.1
119.7
1.17.0

100.6
97.0
94.9
117.0
109.9
113.0
84.3
88.7
107.6
96.3

96.9

96.8

96.8

95.2

100.1

100.1

98.8

97.5

96.1

106.7
97.4
77.7
113.4
101.0
87.6
142.0

106.5
95.8
80.8
114.4
102.1
89.2
143.1

108.3 105.8
97.7
98.3
82.3
86.0
115.9 111.3
101.9 102.2
91.4 E 86.9
153.6 124.9

109.8
100.9
88.9
116.4
104.6
92.6
148.3

110.9 112.3
104.3 105.4
87.9
84.4
115.8 117.3
103.4 103.4
93.1 92.1
146.4 156.7

156.6
124.3
162.5
148.6

160.0
135.5
164.0
146.0

158.9
132.0
163.4
150.6

154.3
141.6
155.8
136.8

156.5 159.3
136.8 1 126.8
159.5 165.3
138.31 150.8

157.3
129.5
162.2
148.4

161.9
135.6
166.4
148.1

1.03

108.2

108.6

111.4

110.7

110.2

110.1

117.8

100.8

116.3

93.2
93.8
85.9
107.5
109.4
79.9

93.9
92.2
79.0
115.1
113.8
93.7

93.5
92.3
79.1
115.2
114.2
89.6

93.7
91.7
78.6
114.3
116.9
93.9

92.2
91.1
77.9
113.9
110.8
88.3

91.4
90.3
77.3
112.8
115.5
86.0

91.8

132
138

4.74
3.94
2.29
1.65
.25
.55

91.6
90.6 I 89.9
78.9 | 77.8
110.9
116.8 113.6
86.0
90.6

91.7
90.0
78.0
110.8
114.3
90.2

14

.57

99.0

107.9

106.6

106.7

109.3

109.8

110.3

115.7

20
201

202
2021
2022
2023
2024
2026

9.43
1.13
.43
.29
.40
.01
.96
.01
.27
.20
.13
.36

107.0 113.4
114.5 123.7
97.8 104.9
119.7 125.9
132.9 148.2
88.2 74.8
103.8 109.3
104.4 100.2
122.2 125.0
102.7 122.8
121.9 125.2
91.1 91.8

113.7
124.0
103.1
125.7
151.7
77.4
110.3
102.4
120.8
133.3
120.2
92.3

114.6
124.4
105.1
124.9
151.0
75.5
114.5
103.5
133.7
139.8
116.5
92.9

113.4
126.4
105.7
129.3
153.0
81.3
113.5
104.9
128.0
137.6
123.1
93.1

114.2
125.0
103.6
127.7
152.8
80.0
115.4
100.4
129.2
140.9
129.6
93.5

114.8
128.4
108.8
129.1
155.1
84.0
112.6
97.2
127.2
132.2
125.6
93.7

203
204
205
206
207
208
2082,3
2086,7
209
2095

1.32
1.27
1.07
.71
.23
1.74
.64
.87
1.01
.16

108.1
108.9
93.6
115.8
115.7
107.2
115.2
106.4
105.7
88.2

110.4
116.9
103.2
116.8
122.1
114.0
122.2
116.7
113.4
101.8

113.3
115.8
100.1
116.6
127.5
114.0
121.7
118.2
113.4
93.2

113.9
115.1
102.5
116.0
127.2
115.4
118.0
123.1
113.2
87.8

110.4
114.3
100.6
116.2
127.3
113.0
117.5
118.3
110.1
82.3

115.5
115.7
100.4
114.9
129.2
113.7

116.7
117.7
101.2
116.5
130.9
113.1

120.0
110.7
82.7

119.0
110.7

21

1.63

96.5

93.7

96.2

96.1

104.5

101.2

22
Textile mill products
Fabrics
221-4
221,2
Cotton and synthetic
Narrow fabrics
224
Knit goods
225
Knit garments
2253,4,7-9
Fabric finishing
226
Carpeting
227
228,9
Yams and miscellaneous
Cotton and synthetic yams 2281,2,4

1.79
.47
.39
.04
.48
.35
.17
.21
.46
.25

103.9
99.5
99.1
103.5
115.6
115.0
95.2
97.0
104.0
102.2

109.4
98.4
97.0
113.0
123.2
123.1
88.3
106.8
118.0
115.0

109.0
99.7
99.2
113.4
120.8
122.2
86.5
103.6
119.4
118.3

108.3
100.8
100.6
114.3
119.8
122.1
90.7
96.4
117.9
116.1

110.6
102.2
101.4
114.6
123.4
125.0
90.4
103.1
118.8
117.4

Apparel products

23

2.18

95.0

97.0

96.8

96.8

24
241,2
241
243-5,9
243
2435,6
245

2.00
.84
.31
1.16
.66
.18
.15

95.8 I 106.8 105.5 107.6
94.3 98.9
968 100.7
83.0 81.0
82.0
80.7
96.8 112.7 111.9 112.7
89.5 100.7 100.6 100.7
86.2 89.4
89.8
89.9
94.5 133.3 134.5 138.4

Coal mining
Oil and gas extraction
Crude oil and natural gas
Crude oil, total
Natural gas
Natural gas liquids
Oil and gas well drilling
Stone and earth minerals
Foods
Meat products
Beef
Pork
Poultry
Miscellaneous meats
Dairy products
Butter
Cheese
Concentrated milk
Frozen desserts
Milk and misc. dairy products
Canned and frozen food
Grain mill products
Bakery products
Sugar and confectionery
Fats and oils
Beverages
Beer and ale
Soft drinks
Coffee and miscellaneous
Roasted coffee
Tobacco products

Lumber and products
Logging and lumber
Logging
Lumber products
Millwork and plywood
Plywood
Manufactured homes

1. Proportion as a share of the value added for the total index.




12

Qct f

;

Nov/

163.8 159.5
116.3 121.1
173.3 166.8
141.9 153.6

Metal mining
Iron ore
Nonferrous ores
Copper

10
101
102-4,8,9
102

Inckx.iy^in/T•
Not seasonally ariii retort
j

Seasonalivadiusiea

mmSmmmmtm

nwiii 1.1 hr¥Vt —

109.9
1115

105.0 100.8
94.3
89.9
81.3
79.7
112.8 108.7
102.3 99.7
87.7
82.3
138.6 125.7

Table 6 (continued)
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIVIDUAL SERIES
~~~~~
SeasonalryadiMStea

•

item

SIC

,1992
Value
added1 _jn.dex_
99.1
97.4

1994
Juiv ... Aug. , Sept.

_SsLL

rnQJxTTSgT^lTO"""^
—.—-^—-^^
" _ Z — i — Hill 111 Mil III1! Mill II ' i — —
1994
Nov/ Pec/
J d V . Aug. Sect. ^QsLL Nov/ Dec/
'

114.0
108.9

115.5
107.9

112.4
106.7

114.8
108.8

112.9
107.4

114.0
108.8

110.4
99.1

120.6
111.8

118.4
111.1

116.3
110.7

112.7
1.07.5

112.4
107.9

25
251

1.37
.63

26
261-3
261
282
263
265,7
265
267

3.58
1.53
.15
,89
.49
2.05
.74
1.31

108.9 116.6
110.4 116.0
109.9 •110.9
109.8 113.9
111.8 121.6
107.7 116.6
112.3 128.3
105.0 110.3

120.2
121.4
114.2
120.5
125.5
119.3
126.5
115.4

118.7
119.6
114.5
116.7
126.6
117.6
125.6
113.2

118.9
118.8
114.9
11.5.2
126.2
118.7
130.7
112.3

121.3
120.6
112.8
120.1
124.2
121.7
129.3
117.5

121.4
119.5
111.4
119.6
121.9
122.9
133.5
117.1

114.3
114.0
112.4
111.2
119.9
114.3
127.9
107.0

120.7
120.0
111.2
119.3
124.0
121.0
128.9
116.7

118.9
119.5
111.2
117.2
126.5
118.2
127.2
113.3

121.4
119.1
113.7
117.2
124.3
123.0
142.4
112.5

120.0
121.1
112.7
121.0
124.0
119.1
122.4
117.1

114.4
116.3
112.6
114.8
120.2
112.9
114.5
111.9

27
Printing and publishing
271
Newspapers
Periodicals, books, and cards 272,3,7
Job printing
I£74-6,8,9

6.77
1.63
2.03
3.12

97.2
77.0
102.9
105.6

102.1
73.9
105.7
117.6

101.5
74.1
106.8
115.3

100.9
74.1
106.0
114.5

101.4
74.1
103.9
117.0

102.1
74.6
104.1
118.2

102.4
74.1
105.6
118.2

106.4
73.0
105.0
129.1

107.2
71.2
106.9
130.7

106.9
73.2
105.5
129.7

102.2
74.7
100.9
120.6

100.6
76.1
102.6
114.6

100.4
75.4
107.3
111.6

28

9.88

114.7

124.7

124.7

123.7

123.8

125.7

126.3

129.5

131.0

130.5

125.3

123.0

120.7

281,2,6
281
2812
2816
2819

3.84
1.00
.08
.12
.67
.39

113.4
117.1
105.4
114.2
121.1
118.2

123.9
121.6
113.2
118.7
122.7
128.8

125.4
122.1
115.5
126.5
121.7
128.6

124.8
122.7
118.7
127.4
122.1
128.4

124.3
122.1
118.6
120.9
122.4
128.9

125.9
123.3
121.3
123.0
123.6
129.1

125.7
121.1

122.7
118.3
114.1
117.3
117.8
124.3

124.5
122.7
117.1
123.3
122.9
131.3

125.9
124.4
117.7
127.8
124.5
133.8

125.2
123.4
118.5
114.8
125.8
133.0

125.8
123,1
121.2
120.5
123.5
131.2

122.9
117.9

282
2821
2823,4
286

1.27
.78
.38
1.57

110.4
112.0
105.9
113.9

124.7
127.8
118.0
125.1

128.1
127.3
127.1
125.5

125.3
125.5
120.5
126.0

123.4
122.5
122.6
126.8

127.3
129.7
120.5
126.7

127.7
121.3
127.2

123.1
125.9
117.6
125.4

125.9
125.5
124.8
124.8

127.2
127.8
121.4
126.2

125.2
124.6
124.0
126.8

126,0 119.9
128.2
119.2 115.7
127.8- 128.8

283-5,9
283
284
285
287

5.53
2.92
1.59
.43
..52

115.2
128.6
109.3
95.0
119.7

124.8
145.1
111.7
102.9
129.2

123.9
142.3
112.7
103.4
133.0

122.4
141.2
108.5
103.9
131.9

122.3 124.7
142.9 146.0
104.9 107.2
106.2 107.6
134.5 .136.6

126.1
147.3
110.5
108.0
135.1

134.5
157.8
120.4
110.3
127.0

135.7
157.5
123.0
112.0
130.1

133.7 124.5
158.2 146.7
116.5 105.7
108.7 107.9
131.9 135.4

11-9.8 118.0
140.8 139.6
104.1 104.6
79.7
93.3
136.9 135.0

29
Petroleum products
Petroleum refining and misc.
291,9
Miscellaneous petroleum products
Distillate fuel oil
Residual fuel oil
Aviation fuel and kerosene
Automotive gasoline
Paving and roofing materials
295

1.42
1.25
.25
.23
.04
.12
.61
.18

102.1
104.3
105.1
109.0
100.8
101.0
103.2
90.4

104.3
105.0
103.7
116.0
95.1
104.6
102.3
100.2

105.2
106.1
104.7
118.2
98.0
113.8
101.4
99.5

105.3
106.4
105.1
119.3
95.3
106.4
103.1
98.9

104.0
104.7
109.4
111.4
88.3
106.1
101.3
100.5

107.6
108.5
108.7
112.1
90.2
104.5
109.1
103.2

108.3
109.1
109.3
115.8
90.2
113.3
107.0
105.0

109.0
108.9
118.9
117.7
89.4
107.3
103.4
111.0

109.9
110.0
119.9
116.9
93.6
113.0
104.1
110.5

109.4
109.3
117.5
120.5
91.4
106.1
103.8
111.5

106.3
105.7109.9
117.5
85.4
104.2
101.4
111.6

109.5
109.4
101.0
120.0
94.5
106.1
110.5
112.0

108.6
110.1
94.6
121.8
97.3
117.8
111.4
100.8

Rubber and plastics products
30
Tires
301
Other rubber products
302,5,6
Plastics productss nee
308

3.50
.39
.58
2.53

115.6
120.5
105.7
117.3

134.5
139.7
120.1
137.2

134.5
126.2
122.9
138.7

134.7
123.2
121.3
139.5

136.7
133.9
122.3
140.4

138.3
136.7
123.3
141.9

139.9
139.1
125.2
143.4

129.9
116.3
119.7
134.4

135.2
125.9
126.5
138.5

136.9
125.0
127.0
141.0

139.2
143.7
125.4
141.9

138.3
129.4
123.2
143.2

138.0
117.8
121.9
144.9

31
314

.27
.12

89.0
81.8

86.3
76.8

85.5
77.7

85.4
77.4

85.6
77.4

85.1
76.1

84.9
77.4

81.5
74.2

87.3
80.5

87.5
79.2

87.4
78.2

86.8
77.1

85.3
78.2

Sion®, day, and glass products 32
Pressed and blown glass
322
Glass containers
3221
Cement
324
Structural clay products
325
Concrete and miscellaneous
326-9

2.07
.35
.18
.13
.10
1.18

95.3
100.2
93.5
91.7
87.8
92.3

104.3
97.4
89.1
101.6
103.6
101.1

105.8
99.4
90.6
105.2
103.3
101.7

105.8
100.8
93.6
104.1
102.6
101.1

105.4
97.3
88.2
102.9
102.5
101.5

106.9
101.4
95.2
103.7
102.1
102.0

108.6
101.0
93.6

105.7
100.9
94.0
116.4
98.1
100.8

110.4
103.7
95.6
126.0
108.3
104.4

108.4
99.6
90.9
124.0
106.8
102.1

110.1
101.1
92.7
125.5
108,5
104.4

107.5
99.0
89.3
102.4
103.9
104.0

102.9
85.6
68.7

Fyrnfture and fixtures
Household furniture
Pmpm and products
Pulp and paper
Wood pulp
Paper
Paperboard
Paper products
Paperboard containers
Converted paper products

Ct&®m8e@S8 and products
Industrial chemicals and
synthetic materials
Basic chemicals
Alkalies and chlorine
Inorganic pigments
Inorganic chemicals, nee
Acids and other
Synthetic materials
Plastics materials
Synthetic fibers
Industrial organic chemicals
Chemical products
Drugs and medicines
Soap and toiletries
Paints
Agricultural chemicals

Leather and products
Shoes

•1. Proportion as a share of the value added for the total index.




13

114.6
122.0
129.1

101.6
104.2

111.8
118.2
121.6

95.4
104.2

Table 6 (continued)
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIVIDUAL SERIES
'^^inHexTTg 8 7 = 1 Q 0 ~ " ™ ~ ^
1992 '
- • ... Seasonally adjusted,
,
_"
«-«^^^^S^^
1994
1
Aug, ^Seet^ J2CLL Nov/ J ^ e c i ,
Index
SIC added
.
,
...-•.
JjgfjjL^.
July
—Aug. .....Sept._
Primary metals
Iron and steel
Basic steel and mill products
Basic iron and steel
Pig iron
Raw steel

33
331,2
331

3.10
1.75
1.33
.30
.18
.09

101.9
105.1
106.9
102.4
106.9
101.2

112.7
116.1
118.0
103.9
110.6
104.7

113.5
113.0
114.1
104.9
110.2
107.0

116.0
118.2
120.0
105.3
108.9
109.9

108.4
98.0
9.3.6
108.8
93.4
116.3
99.0

122.4
117.6
106.0
134.9
84.8
128.9
109.5

116.9
121.0
94.0
121.8
91.1
122.4
1.09.1

124.5 125.8
128.4 120.9
107.9 112.0
137.1 135.3
95.2
97.3
127.4 131.3
112.5 111.0

115.9
118.8
121.2
106.5
111.5
109.0

119.2 123.4
121.9 130.2
124.6 134.3
110,2 116,6
115.5 122.9
114.2 121.9

12ZZ
Oct/

Wjgyf

Dec/

109.1
114.2
117.2
103.0
110.1
102.6

111.6
110,6
112.2
102.9
108.4
104.2

117.3
119.8
121.5
105.0
108:8'
108.8

116.9
119.9121.7
106.6
111.2
109.7

117.8
121.3
123.0
110.0
"116.3"
1.11.9'

117.4
122.7
125.4
112.9
120.1
114.4

129.0
132.1
113.7
142.2
107.3
131.1
113.4

139.8 121.7
159.1 •101.4
117.6 100.7
155.1 140.5
137.2 : 92.9
138.2 131.8
.118.2 104.7

115.1
117.1
89.4
124.2
95,8
120,4
105,3

126.6
131.3
105.9
142.8
93.8
129.8
114.1

126,3
127.5
109.6
142.5
-87.6:
130.3
114.T

127.0:
131.0'
111.8
144.7
97.0
128.7
115.6

129.3
125.6
109.9
140.5
155.3
130.3
113.8

Steel'mill-products
Consumer durable steel
Equipment steel
Construction steel
Can and closure steel
Miscellaneous steel
Iron and steel foundries

332

1.03
.16.
.11
,11
.05
.61
.41

Nonferrous metals
Primary nonferrous metals
Copper
Aluminum

333-6,9
333
3331
3334

1.35
,20
.06
.09

97.6
117.1
124.8
120.5

108.0
119.2
141.7
96.7

113.6
117.0
142.4
97.2

112.7
115.7
136.4
97.8

111.8
114.8
134.3
97.4

115.2
114.4
131.2
97.4

114.6 • 102.2 112.2
116.4 112.7 113.2
138.7 133.5 141.4
98.8
96.9
96.6

11-3.7 112.5: 112,9
115.9 116.2 115.3
138.4 134.8 134,6
97.t
97*6
98.1

110.5
116.2
138.1
98.7

Nonferrous products
Nonferrous mill products
Aluminum
Nonferrous foundries

335,6
335
3353-5
336

.96
.73
.28
.23

89.2
89.0
88.5
89.9

100.2
98.0
90.7
106.9

108.1
107.9
114.8
108.7

107.0
105.7
110.0
110.8

106.1
104.5
102.4
111.0

110.3
109.5
117.2
113.0

108.9
107.3
109.4
114.0

'94.9
92.5
86.9
102.7

107.2
107.3
114.4
106.9

107.8 106.5 106.9
106.7 104.8 104.7
109.1 103.3 "103.2
111.2 112.0 114.1

104.3
100.4
93.3
116.6

Fabricated metal prodyets
34
Metal containers
341
Hardware, tools, and cutlery
342
Hardware and tools
3423,5,9
Structural metal products
344
Other fabricated metal products 345-9
Fasteners, stampings, etc.
345-7

5.02
.22
.54
.47
.1.28
2.79
1.55

98.8
107.9
94.3
92.2
94.8
101.2
102.8

111.7
106.6
104.6
102.0
107,6
116.0
121.6

112.4 111.6
110.8 •108.8
103.4 102.0
101.3 99.7
107.8 107.9
117.4 116.1
123.1 120.8

114.4
110.9104.1
101.5.
11.0.6'
119.1
125.0

111.5
117.4
105.4
103.7
109.0
113.9
120.5

114.9
129.9
107.4
105.6
110.2
118.2
125.7

115.1
114.7
107.6
105.7
111.0
118.8
125.7

114.4
100.9
103.6
101.2
112.1
119.0
125,1

114.0
97.9
102.7
99.6
11-2.4
118.7
122.8

113.6
95.5
101.3
97.8
114.0
118,0
119,8

industrial machinery
and equipment
35
7.91
Engines and turbines
351
.45
Farm
352
.44
353
.76
Construction and allied
fvletalworking
354
.99
Special industry machinery
355
.69
General industrial machinery
356 . 1.07
3562,6,8
.31
Bearings and gears
Equipment'
3561,3-5,7,9
.76
Computer and office equip.
.357
1.72
Service industry machines
358
.80
Miscellaneous machinery
359
.99

124.6
99.9
114.3
99.6
106.0
102.7
1-09.0
96.0
115.3
172.8
106.7
112.4

160.6 162.6 164.6 166.5
117.0 117.8 117.5 117.9
156.8 154.3 159.7 157.6
118.6 119.8 •119.3 120.7
129.0 129.5 130.3 131.9
•125.4 128.6 127.3 130.0.
115.5 115.5 117.6 120.3
98.3
99.5
99.3 100.1
123.7 123.2 126.3 130.1
.282.6 288.9 295.8 300.5
141.9 145.0 •147.0 149.6
126.0 128.4 128.1 127.0

167.6
121.1
154.2
120.9
130.9
132.5
118.6
98.8
128.1
306,1
1.48.6
130.0'

169.3 164.6
119.5 116.1
154.1 145.5
120.7 117.5
132.8 134,6
135.4 121.5
120.0 117.6
101.7
95.2
128.8 128.4
312.2 297.4
142.6 149.3
134.6 132.7

167.8
113.9
141.9
118.2
139.0
124.1
120.0
96.9
131.1
310.1
142.9
139.7

169.3
117.4
152.0
118.9
139.3
127.9"
123.6
99.1
135.4
307.7"
145.6
138.9

167.1
118.5
151.0
120.8
132.8"
129.5
120.4
'99.3
130,5
310=9
140.8128.7

163,1
123.3
150.8120.3
128.5
133.0
117.4
1005
125.7
296.0
132.4
126.8

164.1
125.4
154.5
124.0
126.5
140.0
116.9
104,9
122.7
300.0
125.5
127.4

Electrical machinery
Major electrical and parts
Electric distribution equip.
Household appliances
Cooking equipment
Refrigerators and freezers
Laundry
Miscellaneous
Electrical housewares
Appliances, nee

.36.
361,2
361:
3633631
3632
3633
3634,5,9
3634
3639

•7.30
.94...31
.47
.07
.10
.09
.21
.08
.06

121.9 •161.5
103.2 112.4
...98.7 1.10.0
106.6 130.8"
,'95.7- 126.6.
112.4 135.8
108.3 133.9
107.5 .129.1
. 98.5 111.2
102.3 .;;; 126.9

165.0
112.6
105.9
128.6
1.25.0
134.6.
122.5
125.8
110.8
120.4

166.9"
112.1
101.4
120.1
110.8
114.3'
119.9
126.4
113,3
121.7

168.9
112.3.
100.2'
120,1
120.6
115,3
108.8
127.2113.4
125.3

172.2111.5
100.7
128.1
132.7
129.3
118.6
130.3
113.2
135.5

164.8119.3
116.5
128.3
114.1
135.9
130.0
129.6
111.5
119.4

168.2118.0
113.6
131.1
125.1
140.5123.2
133.0
118.6'
120.2

169.2
112.7
104.1
130.2
132.2
122.4129.8
133.3
124.4"
132.7'

170.6
109.8
98.4
116.8
126.5
"98.8
106.1
126.2
124.9118.9'

173.3
108.0
97.5
110.5
108.4
90.2
98.1
126.0
117.1
123.8

Audio and .video equipment
Communication equipment
Electronic components
Misc. electrical supplies
Storage batteries

365
366
367
369
3691

.21
1.61
2.71
".68
.11

128.4 120.7 .133.7 •127.9
122.4 .152.2 155.9 156.7
146.4 230.8 235.1 239.2
109.9 135.1 131.6 135.7
98.4 121.3
92.7 119.6

118.6
159.8
244 J
135.6.
115.7

125.3
163.7
247.9
134.0
107.5

121.2 ' 100.1
168.6 150.1
251.4 226.2
139.0 129.5
122.4 110.6

148.6
154.8
234.1
133.5
108.8

151.7 1 3 2 J : 132.4 119.3
156.3 159.9 167.0 175.4
239.1 '245.4 ; 250.9 256.4
142.2 141,3 139.9 142.7
148.2 135.8 120.5 125.0

Transportation eqyipnieiit
Motor vehicles and parts
Autos
Trucks and truck trailers
Trucks and buses
Consumer trucks
Business vehicles
Motor vehicle parts
Motor homes

37
371

3714
3716

9.64
4.82
1.56
1.28
1.22
.71
.51
1.93
.04

105.1
107.4
89.5
121.1
123.1
125.6
120.1
114.4
87.8

105.7
129.6
98.4
159.6
182.9
166.6
158.3
138.7
131.0

109.5
138.1
104.3
178.0
182.7
189.0
174.7
143.9
122.9

108.8
137.4
102.8
174.9
177.9
181.5
173.4
145.2
135.8

109.0
138,4
105.6
171.5
173.9
175.5
172.0
146.9
146,1

110.4
141.5
106.9
178.6
181.2
185.8
175.5
149.5
129.3

112.1
144.5
114.3
175.4
177.7
187.3
165.2
152.0
138.2

89.0
97.1
57.7
102.8
102.9
100.7
106.0
130.0
136.0

107.9
136.4
100.1
183.1
188.0
196.4
177.3
140.6
122.1

110.8 114.6
141.0 149.0
108.4 120.6
178.4 192.1
181.4 195.5
188.0 202.5
172.9 186.5
146.8 146.3
132.1 154.7

372-6,9
372
373
374-6,9

4.82
2.95
.51
1.36

103.0
108.3
97.2
95.2

82.8
77.1
93.2
90.0

82.3
76.6
93.0
89.4

81.4
75.7
92.8
88.7

80.8
75,9
91,9
86.5

80.7
75.7
93,4
86.2

81.0 j 81.1
78.0 t 75.2
95.2 I 92.0
85.7
88.8

80.6
74.9
90.4
87.9

Aerospace and miscellaneous
transportation equipment
Aircraft and parts
Ships and boats
Railroad and miscellaneous

•164.1
114.0
107.5
131.6
112.1
163.4
128.5
126.3
110.5
1.22.3

1. Proportion as a share of the value added for the total index.




14

112.2 113.3
111.6 112.1
100.9 '103.0
98.4 100.3
109.1 109.9
116.6 117.7
121.0 121.9

.158.0
115.6111.6
115.4
100.9
133.3
98.2
.120.6
. 104.8
; 101.9

81.9
76.5
91.7
88.9

81.6
75.8
92.4
88.9

110.5
140.4
106.9
173.1
176.1
181.8
168.7
150.9
105.9

107.8
133.4
100.1
147.6
148.7
154.3
141.6
155.3
101.9

82.0
76.7
93.9
87.8

83,3
78.3
96,6
88,0

Table 6 (continued)
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: INDUSTRY SUBTOTALS AND INDIVIDUAL SERIES
"

38
381-4
384

5.37
4.34
1.55

106.3
106.4
137.5

108.5
109.2
163.0

108.7
108.8
162.6

108.0
108.0
160.3

108.2
108.4
159.8

Index. 198/ = 100 —
'
—
'
1
™wra444:kMi?:i!r7rr;rTTnnT;H«
1994
Nov/ „PSP/
Julv Aua. Sept -JQSLL Noy,r J2S&L
108.4 108.8 109.7 110.2 111.5 109.2 108.4 108.3
108.6 109.5 111.0 111.1 112.2 109.6 108.5 108.7
159.4 160.8 174.3 174.4 174.9 165.2 157.5 153.1

Misc. manufactures
Consumer goods
Business supplies

39
391,3,4,6
395,9

1.32
.67
.65

106.3
105.2
107.5

118.6
112.4
125.1

117.1
110.7
124.0

117.0
110.4
124.0

118.4
111.2
125.9

118.6
111.7
126.0

117.8
111.7
124.3

114.0
105.2
123.3

118.2
110.7
126.1

119.6
112.8
126.9

122.9
116.9
129.2

122.6
117.6
127.8

119.1
112.6
126.0

Electric utilities
Generation
Fossil fuel
Hydro and nuclear

491,3pt

6.14
2.63
1.32
1.31

111.7
111.3
103.6
121.4

119.0
115.6
107.8
125.9

118.4
116.6
108.6
127.0

117.1
116.2
106.0
129.3

117.9
117.4
107.7
130.0

117.5
117.5
103.5
135.1

116.6
116.5

133.8
128.8
124.4
135.3

130.9
126.8
123.0
132.6

120.1
114.8
108.6
123.1

109.6
105.9
101.5
112.0

109.7
110.8
98.7
126.2

118.0
119.2

3.51
1.43
2.08
1.21
.87

112.0
109.9
113.4
112.8
114.2

121.5
122.2
120.9
123.0
117.9

119.8
118.5
120.6
121.5
119.3

117.8
114.9
119.8
119.3
120.4

118.2
115.8
119.9
120.1
119.4

117.6
114.2
119.9
120.7
118.8

116.6

137.5
145.9
131.4
138.1
122.1

133.9
136.3
132.1
136.3
126.3

124.2
120.3
126.9
129.2
123.4

112.4
101.0
120.4
119.5
121.6

108.9
100.2
115.0
113.0
117.6

117.1

1.57
.64
.28
.46

112.7
108.7
115.4
114.5

118.9
108.1
134.8
121.6

120.4
110.5
129.0
124.3

114.2
104.7
119.4
119.2

114.4
104.2
122.1
119.0

114.3

113.9

70.3
35.9
69.2
96.4

69.7
34.4
64.5
97.8

67.1
36.8
61.8
91.1

84.8
61.5
85.0
101.8

118.7

167.0

W

__L222
Value
SIC added1
•no'ex

item
instruments
Scientific and medical
Medical instalments

Sales
Residential
Nonresidential
Commercial and other
Industrial
Gas utilities
Residential
Commercial and other
Gas transmission

492,3pt

II

II

,

J

V

Seasonallvadiusted

1994
Julv_ Aug.

Sept.

Oct/

119.1

115.5

1. Proportion as a share of the value added for the total index.

Table 7
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION: GROSS VALUE OF PRODUCTS
Billions of 1987 dollars at annual rates, seasonally adjusted
I T993
1987
1994
Q3
Item
Products, total
Rnai products

1707.0 2006.5
1314.6

1908.5

Q4

1994
Q1

Q2

f
Q4r !

Q3

1994
Aug.

Sept.

Oct/

Nov/

Dec/

Jan.P

1944.8 1975.9 1993.0 2012.6 2038.6 2020.2 2015.6 2020.4 2039.0 2056.4 2062.3

1576.6 1501.3 1531.7 1556.9 1564.2 1580.0 1600.0 1586.6

1584.2

1584.4

1600.0 1615.8

1623.2

Consumer goods
Durable
Automotive products
Other durable goods
Nondurable

866.6
226.1
114.9
111.2
640.5

982.6
272.5
143.2
129.3
710.1

949.9
251.0
120.6
130.3
699.0

964.9
266.1
135.9
130.2
698.8

977.8
274.7
146.4
128.3
703.1

978.7
268.5
138.7
129.8
710.2

982.6
271.0
139.9
131.0
711.6

988.3
274.6
145.4
129.3
713.7

987.3
275.5
143.2
132.3
711.7

981.5
270.6
141.1
129.5
710.8

977.0
270.3
141.6
128.7
706.7

989.1
274.0
145.1
128.9
715.1

998.8
279.6
149.5
130.2
719.1

999.8
280.5
150.4
130.0
719.4

Equipment, total
Business and defense
Business
Defense and space

448.0
430.5
335.4
95.1

594.0
575.1
509.9
65.2

551.4
533.8
462.8
71.0

566.7
548.9
479.5
69.4

579.1
560.4
493.0
67.4

585.5
566.4
499.9
66.5

597.4
578.5
514.7
63.7

611.8
592.7
529.3
63.4

599.3
580.7
517.0
63.7

602.7
583.4
520.1
63.3

607.3
588.4
525.1
63.4

610.9
592.2
528.8
63.4

617.0
597.6
534.2
63.4

623.3
603.7
540.6
63.1

392.5
162.7
229.8
60.3

429.9
174.3
255.5
70.3

407.2
162.4
244.8
67.5

413.1
166.6
246.5
68.0

419.0
168.4
250.6
70.0

428.8
173.1
255.7
70.3

432.6
176.4
256.2
70.5

438.6
179.4
259.2
70.1

433.5
176.0
257.5
71.1

431.4
177.5
253.9
69.1

436.0
178.9
257.2
69.8

439.0
178.7
260.3
69.9

440.6
180.6
260.1
70.6

439.2
180.3
258.8
70.1

intermediate products
Construction supplies
Business supplies
Commercial energy products

Table 8
DIFFUSION INDEXES OF INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION
Percent
Year
One Month Eariier
1992
1993
1994
Three Months Eariier
1992
1993
1994
Six Months Earlier

1992
1993
1994

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

47.2
60.8
47.8

58.0
60.4
58.0

60.4
47.5
69.0

49.4
51.0
55.5

60.8
48.2
66.7

48.6
56.5
56.5

57.6
57.3
58.0

51.0
54.9
51.8

53.7
55.3
47.3

54.5
52.9
57.6

64.7
61.2
61.8

50.2
62.0
67.8

52.0
59.2
62.0

56.0
61.6
59.2

58.7
59.2
64.3

62.0
50.6
67.8

61.2
44.3
71.8

53.3
53.3
64.7

62.0
58.0
65.5

52.9
60.0
60.4

57.6
56.5
61.2

46.7
55.7
59.2

64.7
58.4
57.3

59.2
66.7
71.0

57.5
58.8
60.0

59.1
70.6
66.3

58.7
63.1
71.8

61.1
63.9
67.8

64.3
56.9
71.0

60.7
58.4
66.3

65.9
58.0
72.9

62.7
52.5
69.4

58.4
56.1
65.9

60.8
62.4
65.9

63.5
64.3
65.1

60.4
69.0
69.8

Note—The diffusion indexes are calculated as the percentage of series that increased over the indicated span (one, three, or six months) plus one-half
the percentage that were unchanged.



15

Tabfe S
ELECTRIC POWER USE: MANUFACTURING AND MINING
Item

|
1987 l~^Z
Billion
1994
KWH
July
850.7 113.8

1987 SIC

Total
MAJOR INDUSTRY GROUPS
Manufacturing
Durable
Nondurable
Mining
INBMJSTHY GROUPS and SERIES
10
Metal mining
101
Iron ore
102
Copper ore
C®al mining

Aug.
115.4

Sept.
115.5

Oct/
115.5

Index. 1987 = 100
,"
tJbt seasons Hv adjusted
j 1994
Nov/ Dec.P
July
Auo. Sept.
Oct/
Nov/
116.7 116.8 115.1 119.8 119.5 117.4 115.4

114.1
108.2
119.4
110.2

115.7
109.5
121.3
111.8

115.8
109.4
121.5
111.4

115.9
109.5
121.7
109.1

117.3
110.3
123.4
109.6

117.4
111.3
122.8
108.7

115.8
109.2
121.6
105.5

120.5
112.9
127.3
109.8

120.1
112.8
126.5
110.9

117.9
111.1
124.0
109.4

115.8
109.4
121.6
109.7

114.9
108.4
120.7
112.4

14.6 .136.4
6.3 119.0
4.8 147.4

138.1
112.9
155.4

145.1
137.3
145.0

136.6
134.7
146.2

144.9
147.0
150.8

141.1
147.6
139.1

136.7
120.8
148.0

140.0
121.6
150.1

145.5
134.7
149.1

137.7
139.6
145.0

143.2
142.9
149.6

144.1
146.5
147.5

13.4

104.3

103.9

102.6

101.4

98.4

100.8

84.7

95.5

95.7

98.6

101.1

107.1

776.5
351.3
425.2
74.2

I

12

'
?easonallvadju$ted

Dec?
114.7

Oil and gas extraction
Crude oil and natural gas
Natural gas liquids

13
131
132

33.0 100.7
27.7 I 102.5
3.7
89.6

102.4
103.9
86.1

98.8
101.4
81.8

99.5
101.4
90.3

97.4
96.6
85.0

95.9
95.9
91.2

100.2
101.2
90.8

100.1
101.3
84.8

99.9
101.2
82.6

99.6
101.5
86.0

95.4
95.4
82.3

99.8
100.2
92.0

Stone and earth minerals
Crushed stone
Sand and gravel
Chemical and fertilizer materials

14
142
144
147 |

12.3
3.5
2.9
3.9

111.8
140.8
125.8
90.9

114.8
136.1
131.4
94.8

116.0
122.7
125.8
106.1

111.7
138.8
120.3
93.3

114.6
142.1
119.2
95.4

114.0
138.9
118.8
102.0

111.6
143.4
131.8
88.8

118.9
146.0
144.2
96.7

119.7
134.3
135.2
105.3

116.0
150.0
131.1
93.6

118.7
153.7
129.0
95.1

114.3
140.5
118.4
102.0

Foods
Meat products
Dairy products
Canned and frozen food
Grain mill products
Bakery products
Sugar and confectionery
Fats and oils
Beverages
Coffee and miscellaneous

20
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209

52.9 120.9
8.7 ; 136.3
6.5 ! 112.0
6.6
119.4
10.9 129.5
3.3 128.9
3.7 135.3
3.4 143.3
5.9 108.5
3.9 103.6

121.2
133.8
110.0
123.4
129.3
127.9
139.3
148.5
108.2
106.5

122.2
135.8
109.8
123.1
128.4
131.1
138.3
136.8
112.6
107.3

120.9
136.7
108.5
119.5
127.8
128.9
138.6
142.5
105.7
104.7

123.8
138.3
110.5
125.9
131.9
128.9
149.0
137.7
109.5
105.1

124.1
139.6
113.5
128.0
131.9
130.1
146.8
133.3
108.6
105.1

127.3
147.0
123.1
122.1
128.6
139.8
127.4
128.6
119.1
112.7

132.0
146.6
119.8
144.6
133.2
141.2
135.5
141.1
123.6
117.4

134.1
148.6
117.7
149.6
134.0
143.8
138.7
136.4
127.3
117.5

126.6
139.8
107.3
139.3
132.6
133.0
148.9
141.1
111.0
109.6

123.9
136.0
105.3
128.0
135.1
126.3
173.2
143.8
106.0
104.5

120.3
133.8
106.8
118.7
132.7
123.5
168.6
143.4
100.0
100.4

Tobacco products

21

I

1 7

'

78.5

83.8

81.6

81.8

84.3

86.6

78.2

92.5

90.9

88.9

81.2

82.2

Textile mill products
Fabrics
Knit goods
Fabric finishing
Yam and thread
Miscellaneous textiles

22
221-4
225
226
228
229

29.9
11.6
3.4
2.2
8.4
2.9

110.3
97.5
142.1
124.1
104.6
129.1

116.9
106.2
141.1
125.4
118.6
124.8

115.3
104.0
141.1
122.5
116.4
127.3

118.1
105.5
144.6
121.2
124.6
124.8

119.5
108.0
139.5
125.8
123.0
131,0

118.3
104.0
144.6
121.5
124.3
130.3

111.5
98.8
149.0
123.5
105.7
127.1

131.5
119.9
161.2
132.0
134.6
140.8

127.4
114.5
160.8
131.2
128.6
139.9

122.8
109.5
149.9
126.1
130.2
129.7

115.0
103.6
133.8
123.7
117.6
127.2

111.1
97.4
132.0
119.0
116.5
123.5

Apparel products
Men's outerwear
Women's outerwear

23
231,2
233

6.6
1.9
1.9

105.8
111.2
89.9

101.3
105.5
85.9

101.4
105.2
84.7

103.9
113.7
87.0

107.6
120.7
86.1

109.5
124.0
91.9

115.5
124.0
100.4

120.1
127.8
103.0

120.1
128.5
101.2

107.8
118.1
90.2

101.9
113.4
80.6

98.5
108.9
81.9

Lumber and products
Lumber
Milfwork and plywood

24
242
243

21.6
7.9
5.7

118.6
108.9
108.2

119.7
106.9
111.6

119.6
108.5
109.9

118.9
109.0
109.9

121.3
113.9
110.1

119.7
110.4
109.5

115.1
104.6
104.9

119.0
105.5
109.9

120.9
109.3
111.1

117.8
108.3
109.2

121.6
114.9
111.5

120.3
111.4
109.8

Furniture and fixtures
Household furniture

25
251

5.7
3.2

123.2
117.7

120.8
111.7

119.4
111.8

121.5
113.5

122.6
114.3

122.0
114.5

119.0
107.4

128.3
117.5

127.0
116.8

124.1
116.4

120.7
113.1

119.9
113.6

Paper and products
Wood pulp
Paper
Paperboard
Paperboard containers
Converted paper products

26
261
262 |
263
265 !
267

97.0
7.1
51.6
26.0
4.5
7.6

119.9
103.4
116.5
129.3
125.3
124.2

122.4
104.0
120.8
129.9
129.3
122.7

120.5
95.9
119.8
127.1
126.7
119.0

120.9
96.5
119.4
127.2
125.2
125.4

120.0
98.6
117.6
130.8
131.9
117.7

121.4
103.4
118.6
134.4
128.2 |
120.5

119.8
102.2
115.8
129.0
126.4
125.3

124.7
104.6
122.5
130.4
133.8
127.3

121.5
95.9
118.6
128.3
132.8
125.9

121.5
99.3
119.4
129.0
125.4
127.6

120.4
102.4
118.2
129.7
129.9
118.0

121.0
101.9
118.8
135.8
125.5
118.0

Printing and publishing
Newspapers
Commercial printing

27
271
275

15.7
3.4
8.2

135.4
122.7
140.3

134.2
121.1
138.5

132.7
120.7
136.7

136.1
120.4
138.8

136.5
122.8
140.6

136.3 148.3
124.5 i 134.5
140.9 153.0

151.3
135.5
156.5

149.0
132.9
154.7

139.8
122.8
143.3

131.8
117.0
136.8

129.2
118.8
133.4

Chemicals and products
28
Basic chemicals
281
Alkalies and chlorine
2812
Inorganic chemicals, nee
2819
Acid and fertilizer materials
Nuclear materials, nondefanse

146.2
61.8
14.1
29.1
10.9
18.2

120.9
123.9
102.9
143.1
100.2
173.6

123.3
126.7
106.7
147.9
104.5
178.8

124.4
128.8
104.9
157.1
105.0
194.0

124.6
129.8
110.7
155.3
102.5
192.8

127.7
134.0
108.2
158.6
104.6
196.9

125.9
131.6
110.8
158.4
105.9
195.7

122.2
123.1
105.0
137.5
101.6
163.0

126.6
128.4
106.8
148.1
106.9
177.3

126.4
128.4
105.7
151.8
103.9
185.7

126.5
132.4
109.2
158.6
102.4
198.4

125.1
131.2
106.5
155.0
103.5
191.6

124.9
131.7
110.5
158.8
106.7
195.8




16

Table 9 (continued)
ELECTRIC POWER USE: MANUFACTURING AND MINING
Item

1994
Julv

Auo.

Sept.

Oct/

Index. 1S 87=100
I
1994
Nov/ Dec.P
July

112.9
119.6
128.5
114.1
36.0 I 108.7
8.5 122.7

116.6
121.4
125.1
116.0
112.4
127.3

116.4
121.0
124.0
111.7
114.7
125.6

115.2
118.4
127.0
108.1
108.7
127.3

115.9
118.3
131.5
110.5
114.1
128.8

114.7
118.7
131.7
113.9 !
114.5 i
126.3 !

116.8
122.2
141.0
123.0
108.0
122.2

120.8
124.2
139.7
126.7
115.5
125.6

120.4
126.1
140.2
120.0
121.0
125.7

115.2
118.3
129.0
108.9
113.4
127.6

113.6
1.18.0
125.5
107.3
112.7
128.2

112.3
116.9
123.5
107.8
113.3
128.3

40.1

105.8

106.0

107.2

105.7

106.2

104.2

109.2

111.5

110.9

105.8

104.0

105.6

1987
Billion
1987SICJ KWH

Chemicals and Products (cont)
282
Synthetic materials
2821
Plastics materials
283
Drugs and medicines
284
Soap and toiletries
286
Industrial organic chemicals
287
Agricultural chemicals
29

Petroleum products

SeasonaHvadiusted

26.5
14.2
5.5
3.1

"

-*

Mot g^a?^nal'tv'' l a^it'8gtS
AUG.

—

Sept. •J2SIL. N9Y,r

J2i^L.

Rubber and plastics products
Tires
Rubber products, nee
Plastics products, nee

30
301
306
308

33.1
3.6
3.1
24.9 |

138.8
119.0
113.9
144.3

139.9
114.2
115.2
146.8

139.9
113.2
116.0
147.6

139.6
115.6
116.6
145.9

141.3
119.2
116.2
147.5

142.7
122.2
119.5
148.3

139.1
119.7
113.4
144.6

145.8
124.9
119.0
151.8

147.0
123.2
121.1
154.1

143.9
120.1
119.4
150.3

141.2
118.9
116.1
147.4

137.3
111.2
116.6
143.6

Leather and products
Shoes

31
314

1.0
.4

107.9
104.7

97.4
89.7

99.6
93.4

98.1
94.3

97.3
93.2

98.9
99.6

106.0
104.7

105.7
102.1

107.6
103.0

98.1
93.7

95.4
90.6

94.7
91.9

Stone, clay, & glass products
Rat glass
Pressed and blown glass
Cement
Structural clay products
Concrete products

32
321
322
324
325
327

33.8 j 103.4
1.7
115.3
6.7 102.4
10.1
99.9
111.3
1.6
5.1
93.6

106.9
112.0
104.9
104.8
113.0
94.4

106.3
104.4
102.3
105.4
111.9
91.8

105.0
110.9
102.7
102.8
111.6
94.9

108.2
112.9
106.1
109.2
113.8
94.8

108.1
112.1
104.4
108.6
112.0
98.3

105.4
116.2
103.5
105.4
112.6
94.2

111.0
116.3
108.9
111.1
115.0
97.5

109.9
109.5
104.7
111.2
116.9
94.8

109.6
112.2
105.7
112.6
112.7
98.1

109.8
113.2
105.3
113.5
114.9
97.5

107.6
110.5
101.1
109.7
114.2
98.6

33
331
332
333
3334
336

137.9
54.4
9.9
55.8
51.2
2.7

106.0
114.3
11-8.5
86.1
76.6
126.5

107.1
117.8
116.4
84.5
75.7
124.7

107.5
118.9
121.6
83.5
75.1
122.0

108.1
119.1
121.3
84.9
75.5
121.2

107.5
119.4
124.5
82.9
75.2
122.6

109.6
120.8
128.5
85.3
77.9
124.5

104.9
111.5
113.3
87.1
79.5
121.9

107.5
117.4
114.7
85.6
76.5
125.4

107.5
118.8
124.4
82.7
73.8
125.6

109.4
120.0
124.6
86.1
77.1
124.5

107.7
120.0
126.4
82.6
74.3
123.9

108.7
118.2
124.6
86.6
78.3
121.6

Fabricated metal products
Metal containers
Hardware, tools, and cutlery
Structural metal products
Fasteners
Metal stampings

34
341
342
344
345
346

31.5
2.5
2.7
5.6
1.7
7.1

114.3
127.7
118.8
104.8
113.9
126.1

115.2
130.0
115.6
106.2
111.0
130.6

115.3
131.1
113.6
106.1
110.5
127.6

115.0
135.4
110.7
113.1
111.2
126.4

115.5
134.5
114.4
112.8
109.3
127.0

118.1
129.6
115.8
115.7
116.1
132.8

115.8
133.6
120.7
106.3
115.1
123.5

118.2
134.2
120.5
106.9
117.2
131.5

120.3
135.7
120.5
110.9
116.3
132.7

116.8
134.4
113.8
112.7
115.5
130.7

115.0
130.3
113.5
113.3
108.7
128.2

113.3
121.9
111.6
112.4
109.5
127.5

Industrial machinery
and equipment
Engines and turbines
Farm
Construction and allied
Metalworking
Special industry
General industrial
Computer and office equip.
Service industry machines

35
351
352 I
353
354
355
356
357
358

33.4
2.5
1.6
4.2
4.2
2.5
4.8
6.1
3.3

114.2
115.8
145.0
97.3
133.9
117.0
113.0
92.2
145.0

114.4
122.8
137.0
93.9
131.9
112.5
112.6
92.4
145.3

113.8
116.9
138.7
94.3
134.6
110.6
115.4
92.6
146.8

114.2
117.5
146.7
93.6
135.0
110.8
118.8
89.7
148.9

115.3
117.9
152.0
95.5
133.9
111.1
117.0
92.2
149.6

115.6
119.1
153.8
96.2
135.8
113.2
117.7
92.0
148.2

118.5
118.5
137.2
101.2
139.6
122.4
117.2
97.1
153.4

121.2
130.4
137.1
97.5
141.5
120.8
119.7
99.2
156.5

121.5
122.4
146.6
100.9
143.7
118.3
123.5
96.4
157.2

115.6
117.3
143.1
95.9
135.8
111.6
119.1
92.8
150.9

112.8
115.0
147.3
95.0
131.4
109.8
114.7
89.1
145.0

110.3
113.0
142.9
93.2
129.3
108.8
112.1
88.4
138.8

Electrical machinery
Electrical distribution
Electrical industrial
Household appliances
Lighting and wiring products
TV and radio sets
Communication equipment
Electronic components

36
361
362
363
364
365
366
367

31.3
1.4
4.1
2.5
2.9
.6
3.1
12.8

107.8
83.0
110.7
99.3
110.4
150.6
89.0
113.8

111.9
83.8
113.1
99.4
113.0
147.9
91.0
122.7

109.6
82.5
111.5
96.2
109.9
146.4
90.6
119.4

110.4
78.9
113.1
98.7
113.6
146.1
91.4
120.9

110.5
77.8
113.8
99.0
113.1
151.3
91.5
119.6

111.2
78.1
111.2
98.0
117.4
146.1
96.1
121.1

112.9
84.1
114.6
99.4
112.2
154.2
97.0
121.8

118.7
90.8
116.1
105.2
112.9
159.1
99.0
130.6

117.9
88.4
115.6
103.4
116.7
157.0
99.5
128.5

112.3
80.9
112.5
99.9
115.2
150.8
92.9
122.5

108.4
76.3
111.0
94.7
111.9
149.9
88.7
117.0

107.2
75.6
107.6
90.0
112.6
143.5
92.0
117.1

Transportation equipment
Motor vehicles and parts
Aircraft and parts
Ships and boats

37
371
372
373

38.3
21.9
10.1
2.1

101.4
96.7
97.7
109.6

101.6
98.7
96.4
103.9

102.6
100.9
92.4
104.0

102.9
102.7
92.1
105.4

105.9
105.2
96.1
100.5

104.6
107.2
89.3
104.1

103.3
97.2
101.6
107.7

108.9
106.3
102.4
105.4

108.2
107.1
97.0
104.4

104.8
104.9
94.2
101.0

103.1
102.6
93.5
100.0

99.1
100.5
85.6
104.2

Instruments
Photographic equip. & supplies

38
386

13.1
1.7

114.2
97.3

111.3
105.1

110.5
97.2

107.2
92.8

107.8
93.6

108.5
92.4

122.7
102.3

121.2
112.5

119.7
102.4

109.8
92.7

105.7
89.4

104.2
90.5

4.6

133.9

135.2

139.4

137.6

138.7

142.7

139.4

145.9

150.2

140.9

136.2

134.6

832.5
765.4
85.3

112.0
112.7
112.2

113.4
114.5
118.7

113.0
114.4
117.9

113.0
114.1
117.9

114.2
115.2
117.4

114.3
115.9
115.6

113.5
114.0
115.7

117.9
118.6
120.8

117.4
118.7
114.6

114.8
116.3
117.2

113.0
114.5
113.8

112.2
113.5
119.1

Primary metals
Basic steel and mill products
Iron and steel foundries
Primary nonferrous metals
Aluminum
Nonferrous foundries

Miscellaneous manufactures
SUPPLEMENTARY GROUPS
Total, excluding nuclear nondefense
Utility sales to industry
Industrial generation




39 L

17

Explanatory Note
The statistical release of Industrial Production and Capacity Utilization reports
measures of output, capacity, and capacity utilization in manufacturing, mining, and
the electric and gas utilities industries. It also includes survey data on the use of
electric power in manufacturing and mining. Data in the release are available on-line
on me day of issue through the Economic Bulletin Board of the Department of
Commerce. For information, call (202) 482-1986. Diskettes containing historical
rfptfl and the data published in this release are available from the Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System, Publications Services, (202) 452-3245.
Industrial

Production

Coverage. The industrial production (IP) index measures output in the
manufacturing, mining, and electric and gas utilities industries. For the period since
1987, the total IP index has been constructed from 255 individual series based on the
1987 Standard Industrial Classification (SIC). These individual series are classified
and grouped in two ways: (1) market groups (shown in table 1), such as consumer
goods, equipment, intermediate products, and materials; and (2) industry groups
(shown in tables 2 and 6), such as two-digit SIC industries and major aggregates of
these industries—for example, durable and nondurable manufacturing, mining, and
utilities.
Market groups. For purposes of analysis, the individual IP series are grouped into
final products, intermediate products, and materials. Final products are assumed to be
purchased by consumers, businesses, or government for final use. Intermediate
products are expected to become inputs in nonindustrial sectors, such as
construction, agriculture, and services. Materials are industrial output requiring
further processing within the industrial sector. Total products comprise final and
intermediate products, and final products are divided into consumer goods and
equipment.
Timing. The first estimate of output for a month is published around the 15th of the
following month. The estimate is preliminary (denoted by the superscript "p" in
tables) and subject to revision in each of the subsequent three months as new source
data become available. (Revised estimates are denoted by the superscript "r" in
tables.) After the fourth month, indexes are not revised further until the time of an
annual revision or a benchmark revision. The last three benchmark revisions were
published in 1990,1985, and 1976. In 1993, a revision that converted the indexes to
the 1987 SIC from 1987 forward was published.
Source data. In annual or benchmark revisions, the individual IP indexes are
constructed from a variety of source data, such as the quinquennial Censuses of
Manufactures and Mineral Industries and the Annual Survey of Manufactures,
prepared by the Bureau of the Census; the Minerals Yearbook, prepared by the
Bureau of Mines; and publications of the Department of Energy. On a monthly basis,
the individual indexes of industrial production are constructed from two main types
of source data: (1) output measured in physical units and (2) data on inputs to the
production process, from which output is inferred. Data on physical products, such as
tons of steel or barrels of oil, are obtained from private trade associations as well as
from government agencies including those listed above; data of this type are used to
estimate monthly IP where possible and appropriate. When suitable data on physical
product are unavailable, estimates of output are based on either production-worker
hours or electric power use by industry. Data on hours worked by production workers
are collected in the monthly establishment survey conducted by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics. The data on electric power use are described below. The factors used to
convert inputs into estimates of production are based on historical relationships
between the inputs and the comprehensive data used to benchmark the IP indexes;
these factors also may be influenced by technological or cyclical developments.
Especially for the first and second estimates for a given month, the available source
data are limited and subject to revision.
Weights. In the index, series that measure the output of ah individual industry are
weighted according to their proportion in the total value-added output of all
industries. The industrial production index, which extends back to 1919, is built in
chronological segments that ar-- ^ k e d together to form a continuous index
expressed as a percentage of output in a comparison base year (currently 1987). Each
segment, which usually spans five years, is a Laspeyres quantity index showing
changes in quantities with prices (Census value added per unit of output) held at
base-year values for the segment. For the period from 1992 to the present, IP is
aggregated on the basis of 1992 value-added weights. The aggregation of the index
for the 1987-91 period is based on 1987 weights, whereas 1982 weights are used for
the 1982-86 period. The other weight years in the postwar period are 1977, 1972,
1967,1963,1958,1954, and 1947. The 1992 value-added weights used to aggregate
the index are shown in the first column of tables 1, 2, and 6, in the "Value added"
column under the heading "1992."
Seasonaladjustment Individual series are seasonally adjusted by the X-l 1ARIMA
method, developed at Statistics Canada. For series based on production-worker
hours, the current seasonal factors were estimated with data through October 1994;
for other series, the factors were estimated with data through at least June 1994. In
some cases, series were preadjusted for the effects of holidays or the business cycle
before using X - l l ARIMA. The seasonally adjusted total index is calculated by
aggregating the seasonally adjusted major market groups, and may not precisely
equal an aggregation of the seasonally adjusted industry groups.



18

Reliability. Theaverage revision to the level of the total IP index, without regard to
sign, between die preliminary estimate and its third revision (or from the first and the
fourth estimates) was 0.35 percent during the 1972-92 period. The average revision
to the percent change in total IP, without regard to sign, from the first to the fourth
estimates was 0.26 percentage point during the same period. In most cases (about 85
percent), the direction of change in output indicated by the first estimate for a given
month is the same as that shown by the fourth estimate.
Rounding. In some cases, components may not add to totals because of independent
rounding. In addition, the published percent changes are calculated from unrounded
indexes, and may not be the same as percent changes calculated from the rounded
indexes shown in the release.
References. Industrial Production—1986 Edition contains a more detailed
description of the methods used to compile the index, plus a history of its
development, a glossary of terms, and a bibliography. To obtain Industrial
Production—1986 Edition ($9.00 per copy), write to Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, Publications Services, Washington, IX! 20551. The 1990
and 1993 revisions were described in the Federal Reserve Bulletin, vol. 76 (April
1990), pp. 187-204 and vol. 79 (June 1993), pp. 590-605, respectively. The early
1994 revision to the index was described in the Federal Reserve Bulletin, vol. 80
(March 1994), pp. 220-6. The later 1994 revision to the index was described in the
Federal Reserve Bulletin, vol. 81 (January 1995), pp. 16-26.

Capacity Utilization
Definition. Capacity utilization is calculated for the manufacturing, mining, and
electric and gas utilities industries. For a given industry, the utilization rate is equal to
an output index divided by a capacity index. Output is measured by seasonally
adjusted indexes of industrial production. The capacity indexes attempt to capture
the concept of sustainable practical capacity, which is defined as the greatest level of
output that a plant can maintain within the framework of a realistic work schedule,
taking account of normal downtime, and assuming sufficient availability of inputs to
operate the machinery and equipment in place. The 75 individual capacity indexes
are based on a variety of data, including capacity data measured in physical units
compiled by trade associations, surveys of utilization rates and investment, and
estimates of growth of the capital stock.
Groups. Estimates of capacity and utilization are available for a variety of groups,
including primary and advanced processing industries within manufacturing,
durable and nondurable manufacturing, total manufacturing, mining, utilities, and
total industry. Component industries of the primary and advanced processing groups
within manufacturing are listed in the note on tables 2 and 3 of the release.
Weights. Value-added proportions are used to weight the individual capacity
indexes in aggregations in the same manner as individual IP series are aggregated to
the total index of industrial production. Although each utilization rate is the result of
dividing an IP series by a corresponding capacity index, aggregate utilization rates
are equivalent to combinations of individual utilization rates aggregated with
proportions that reflect current capacity levels of output valued in base-period
value-added per unit of actual output. The implied proportions of individual industry
operating rates in the rate for total industry for the most recent year are shown in the
first column of table 3.
Perspective. The historical highs and lows in capacity utilization shown in the tables
above are specific to each series and did not all occur in the same month. Industrial
plants usually operate at capacity utilization rates that are well below 100 percent:
none of the broad aggregates has ever reached 100 percent. For total industry and
total manufacturing, utilization rates as high as 90 percent have been exceeded only
in wartime.
References. The basic methodology used to estimate capacity and utilization is
discussed in the Federal Reserve Bulletin, vol. 71 (October 1985), pp. 754-66. The
1990 and 1993 revisions were described in the Federal Reserve Bulletin, vol. 76
(June 1990), pp. 412-35 and vol. 79 (June 1993), pp. 590-605, respectively. The
early 1994 revision to the index was described in the Federal Reserve Bulletin, vol.
80 (March 1994), pp. 220-6. The later 1994 revision to the index was described in the
Federal Reserve Bulletin, vol. 81 (January 1995), pp. 16-26.
ElectricPower
Data on electric power (expressed in kilowatt hours) are collected by the Federal
Reserve District Banks from electric utilities and also from manufacturing and
mining establishments that generate electric power for their own use (cogenerators).
The indexes of power use shown in table 9 are sums of kilowatt hours used by an
industry or industry group expressed as a percentage of that industry's or group's
usage in 1987. The first column of the table shows, for reference, electric power use
in billions of kilowatt hours as reported by manufacturing and mining industries in
the 1987 censuses of those industries. The supplementary group, "Total, less nuclear
nondefense," is shown separately because the nondefense nuclear material series
(part of SIC 2819) accounts for a disproportionately large part of total electric power
use. Because the value-added proportion for this industry in total IP is considerably
smaller than its share of total electric power use, excluding this component from total
power use facilitates comparisons with total IP.

Release Schedulefor 1995
At 9:15 am. on January 17, February 15, March 15, April 14, May 16, June 15, July
14, August 15, September 15, October 17, November 15, and December 14.