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FEDERAL RESERVE statistical release
G.17 (419)

For release at 9:15 a.m. (EDT)
October 17, 2006

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION AND CAPACITY UTILIZATION

Industrial production decreased 0.6 percent in September after having been unchanged in August. For the
third quarter as a whole, industrial production rose at an annual rate of 3.6 percent, down from the rapid pace of
gains in the previous three quarters. Nonetheless, production at the end of the quarter was about 5-1/2 percent
above its year-earlier level. Output in the manufacturing sector declined 0.3 percent in September, a decrease that
(over)

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION AND CAPACITY UTILIZATION: SUMMARY
Seasonally adjusted

2002=100

Percent change

Industrial production

2006
Juner

2006
Juner

Julyr

Aug.r

Sept.p

Julyr

Aug.r

Sept.p

Total index
Previous estimates

113.4
113.4

113.8
113.9

113.8
113.7

Major market groups
Final Products
Consumer goods
Business equipment
Nonindustrial supplies
Construction
Materials

115.1
107.9
133.7
112.3
113.4
112.1

115.3
107.5
136.4
112.7
114.1
112.5

Major industry groups
Manufacturing (see note below)
Previous estimates
Mining
Utilities

115.1
115.1
101.3
109.2

113.1

1.1
1.1

.3
.4

.0
-.1

-.6

5.6

115.7
107.9
136.7
112.0
113.8
112.5

114.9
106.9
136.4
111.4
113.3
111.9

1.4
1.5
1.3
.6
.1
.9

.2
-.4
2.0
.3
.6
.4

.3
.3
.2
-.5
-.3
.0

-.7
-.9
-.2
-.6
-.4
-.5

5.1
.4
18.5
2.8
3.2
7.1

115.5
115.5
101.1
109.9

115.8
115.5
100.6
108.9

115.4

.9
.9
.9
2.9

.4
.4
-.2
.6

.2
.0
-.5
-.9

-.3

5.9

.7
-4.4

12.2
-3.6

Average
1972–2005

1994-95
high

Percent of capacity
2001-02
2005
2006
low
Sept.
Juner

Total industry
Previous estimates

81.0

85.0

73.9

79.1

Manufacturing (see note below)
Previous estimates
Mining
Utilities

79.8

84.5

72.0

78.2

87.3
86.7

89.0
93.7

85.6
83.7

Stage-of-process groups
Crude
Primary and semifinished
Finished

86.4
82.1
77.9

89.4
88.1
80.5

83.2
74.6
70.8

Capacity utilization

101.3
104.1

Sept. ’05 to
Sept. ’06

Capacity
growth
Sept. ’05 to
Sept. ’06

Julyr

Aug.r

Sept.p

82.5
82.5

82.6
82.7

82.5
82.4

81.9

2.0

81.2
81.2
91.2
89.2

81.2
81.0
90.9
88.3

80.8

2.5

80.7
88.0

81.1
81.1
91.2
88.7

91.6
84.4

-1.2
.5

78.2
81.9
76.6

88.8
83.6
79.9

88.9
83.9
79.9

88.8
83.6
80.0

89.0
82.6
79.6

-1.0
2.2
2.5

r Revised. p Preliminary.
Note. The statistics in this release cover output, capacity, and capacity utilization in the U.S. industrial sector, which is defined by the Federal Reserve to comprise
manufacturing, mining, and electric and gas utilities. Mining is defined as all industries in sector 21 of the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS);
electric and gas utilities are those in NAICS sectors 2211 and 2212. Manufacturing comprises NAICS manufacturing industries (sector 31-33) plus the logging industry
and the newspaper, periodical, book, and directory publishing industries. Logging and publishing are classified elsewhere in NAICS (under agriculture and information
respectively), but historically they were considered to be manufacturing and were included in the industrial sector under the Standard Industrial Classification (SIC)
system. In December 2002 the Federal Reserve reclassified all its industrial output data from the SIC system to NAICS.

1

slightly more than reversed its upwardly revised gain of 0.2 percent in August. The output of utilities plunged
4.4 percent in September, while the output at mines expanded 0.7 percent.
Capacity utilization for total industry declined 0.6 percentage point, to 81.9 percent. Even so, this rate of
capacity utilization was higher than the rates recorded from mid-2000 to early 2006.
Market Groups
Production in all major market groups declined between August and September. The output of consumer
goods fell 0.9 percent; the decrease was led by a weather-related pullback in the output of consumer energy
products and by a drop of 1.8 percent in the output of consumer durables. Among durable consumer goods, the
production indexes for automotive products and for appliances, furniture, and carpeting both fell about
2-1/2 percent. The production of miscellaneous durable goods edged down, while the output of home electronics
rose 1.0 percent. The output of non-energy nondurable consumer goods posted a small gain, as a step-up in the
production of foods and tobacco slightly more than offset lower output of chemical products and a second month
of declines in the output of clothing and of paper products.
The output of business equipment slipped 0.2 percent in September. The production of industrial and
other equipment fell 1.2 percent, which more than offset increases in the output of transit equipment and of
information processing equipment. For the third quarter as a whole, business equipment rose 11.7 percent
(annual rate), the fourth consecutive quarterly gain in excess of 10 percent. The output of defense and space
equipment moved higher in September, but the increase for the quarter—a gain of 3.9 percent (annual
rate)—marked a third quarter of decelerating production.
The output of construction supplies declined for a second month, to a level about the same as that of four
months earlier. The production of business supplies also moved lower for a second month. Materials output
turned down in September after having been unchanged in August; outside of equipment parts, which continued
to climb steeply, all major categories of materials declined.
Industry Groups
The declines in manufacturing production during September were broadly based. Durable manufacturing
production decreased 0.4 percent. Industries for which output fell 1 percent or more included wood products,
nonmetallic mineral products, machinery, motor vehicles and parts, furniture and related products, and electrical
equipment, appliances, and components. Primary metals declined 0.5 percent, and fabricated metal products
edged down 0.1 percent. In contrast, the output of computer and electronic products increased 1.1 percent, and
the output indexes for aerospace and miscellaneous transportation equipment and for miscellaneous
manufacturing both posted gains of 0.5 percent. Nondurable manufacturing edged down 0.2 percent, as the
output of chemicals, plastics and rubber products, textile and product mills, and apparel and leather all decreased
significantly. However, the output of petroleum and coal products turned up sharply, and the production of food,
beverage, and tobacco products advanced.
Mining output also turned up in September and increased 1.8 percent (annual rate) for the third quarter as
a whole. The increase in September reflected a higher rate of crude oil extraction as well as a pickup in mined
construction supplies, such as stone, sand, and gravel.
In September, the manufacturing utilization rate declined 0.4 percentage point, to 80.8 percent, a rate that
is 1 percentage point above its 1972–2005 average. By stage of process, the operating rate for industries at the
crude stage climbed 0.2 percentage point, to 89.0 percent. In contrast, the operating rate for industries at the

2

primary and semifinished stages fell 1 percentage point, to 82.6 percent, just 0.5 percentage point above the
long-run average for this group. The operating rate for industries at the finished stage moved down
0.4 percentage point, to 79.6 percent.

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

Industrial Production: Market and Industry Group Summary; percent change
Industrial Production: Special Aggregates and Selected Detail; percent change
Motor Vehicle Assemblies
Industrial Production: Market and Industry Group Summary; indexes
Industrial Production: Special Aggregates and Selected Detail; indexes
Diffusion Indexes of Industrial Production
Capacity Utilization
Industrial Capacity
Gross Value of Products and Nonindustrial Supplies
Gross-Value-Weighted Industrial Production: Stage-of-Process Groups
Historical Statistics: Total Industry
Historical Statistics: Manufacturing
Historical Statistics: Total Industry Excluding Selected High-Technology Industries
Historical Statistics: Manufacturing Excluding Selected High-Technology Industries

Further detail is available on the Board’s website (www.federalreserve.gov/releases/G17/).

Revision of Industrial Production and Capacity Utilization
The Federal Reserve Board plans to issue an annual revision to the index of industrial
production (IP) and the related measures of capacity and capacity utilization late this year; the
publication date is yet to be determined and is conditional on the date of issuance of the 2005
Annual Survey of Manufactures. The revised IP indexes will incorporate data from the 2004 and
2005 Annual Surveys of Manufactures and from selected editions of the 2004 and 2005 Current
Industrial Reports, all from the U.S. Census Bureau. Annual data from the U.S. Geological Survey
regarding metallic and nonmetallic minerals (except fuels) for 2004 and 2005 will also be incorporated. The updating will include revisions to the monthly indicator for each industry (either
product data or input data) and to seasonal factors.
Capacity and capacity utilization will be revised to incorporate preliminary data from the
Census Bureau’s 2005 Survey of Plant Capacity, which covers manufacturing, along with new data
on capacity from the U.S. Geological Survey, the Department of Energy, and other organizations.
Once the revision is published, it will be available on the Board’s website at
www.federalreserve.gov/releases/G17. The revised data will also be available through the website of the Department of Commerce. Further information on these revisions can be obtained from
the Board’s Industrial Output Section (telephone number 202-452-3197).

3

1. Industrial production, capacity, and utilization
160

Ratio scale, 2002 output = 100
Total
Manufacturing

135

160

135

110

Capacity

110

85

85

Production

Detail: 2002 to present

118

60

60

114
110
106

Production

102

2002 2003 2004 2005 2006

35

1970

1975

1980

1985

1990

1995

2000

98

2005

Percent of capacity

100
95

35

100
95

Utilization
85

85

75

75

65

1970

1975

1980

1985

1990

1995

2000

2005

65

Notes: The shaded areas are periods of business recession as defined by the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER).
See note on cover page.

4

2. Industrial production and capacity utilization
Consumer goods

Ratio scale, 2002=100

Equipment

Ratio scale, 2002=100

115

115

140

140

110

110

130

130

105

105

100

Nondurable

120

100

95
90

Durable

95

110

110

90

100

100

85

85

80

80

90

75

80

120

120

120

115

115

75

1998

2000

2002

Nonindustrial supplies

110

2004

2006

Ratio scale, 2002=100

105

105

100

100

95

95

1998

2000

2002

85

Other business

1998

2000

2002

Capacity utilization

2004

2006

85

Primary and

80

115

Non-energy

110

110

105

105

100

100

95

95
90

Energy

85

85

90

80

80

85

75

1998

2000

2002

Capacity utilization
90

90

85

85

semifinished

2004

2006

75

Percent of capacity
90

85
Finished processing

processing

80

2006

120

115

Percent of capacity

90

2004

Ratio scale, 2002=100

90

90

90

Defense and Space

Industrial materials

110

Construction

120

Business

75

80

80

80

75

75

75

70

70

Excluding utilities
70

1998

2000

2002

2004

2006

5

1998

2000

2002

2004

2006

70

3. Industrial production and capacity utilization, high-technology industries
Industrial production

Ratio scale, 2002 = 100

125
115

125
115

Excluding
high-technology
industries

95

95

75

75

Total IP

55

35

1970

1975

1980

1985

55

1990

1995

Industrial production

2000

2005

35

Percent change from year earlier

15

15
Total IP

10

10

5

5

0

0
Excluding the
contribution
of high-technology
industries

-5
-10
-15

1970

1975

Industrial production

1980

1985

1990

Ratio scale, 2002 = 100

Capacity utilization

400
300

400
300

200
150

200
150

Communications eq.

100

Computers

-10

2000

2005

95

100

100
95

Excluding
high-technology
industries

85

85

75

75

65

65
Semiconductors
10

1998

2000

2002

-15

Percent of capacity

100

50

50

1995

-5

High-technology industries
2004

2006

10

55

1990

1995

2000

2005

55

Notes: High-technology industries are defined as semiconductors and related electronic components (NAICS 334412-9),
computers (NAICS 3341),and communications equipment (NAICS 3342).
The shaded areas are periods of business recession as defined by the NBER.

6

Table 1
I NDUSTRIAL P RODUCTION : M ARKET AND I NDUSTRY G ROUP S UMMARY
Percent change, seasonally adjusted

Fourth quarter to
fourth quarter
Item

Annual rate
2006
Q1
Q2r

2005
proportion1

2003

2004

2005

2005
Q4

100.00

1.5

4.3

3.0

5.3

5.1

57.59
29.69
8.35
4.55
.25
1.35
2.19
21.35
16.93
9.15
.68
4.69
1.90
4.42

1.7
1.3
4.3
6.5
18.5
2.2
-.7
.1
.6
2.1
-9.3
1.0
-3.5
-1.9

4.3
2.0
1.3
.4
-3.7
2.4
3.0
2.3
2.5
1.8
-2.8
3.0
5.9
1.7

4.8
2.4
3.1
2.5
17.2
2.2
3.1
2.1
2.2
2.9
-1.2
.3
3.7
1.6

8.3
1.8
2.8
-3.1
68.1
-1.2
12.7
1.4
3.9
6.0
4.3
-.3
4.6
-7.8

Business equipment
Transit
Information processing
Industrial and other
Defense and space equipment

10.15
1.99
2.82
5.35
2.05

2.8
3.6
6.5
.4
5.4

10.8
9.7
14.6
9.2
9.7

10.5
15.0
19.4
4.4
9.3

Construction supplies
Business supplies

4.45
10.63

1.7
.9

4.6
3.9

42.41
29.43
18.76
3.54
6.68
8.53
10.67
.61
2.30
4.42
12.98

1.2
1.7
3.8
-1.2
11.8
.0
-1.7
-6.5
-6.5
1.6
-.1

321
327
331
332
333
334

80.78
76.36
42.89
1.54
2.28
2.44
5.76
5.33
7.87

Total IP
M ARKET G ROUPS
Final products and nonindustrial supplies
Consumer goods
Durable
Automotive products
Home electronics
Appliances, furniture, carpeting
Miscellaneous goods
Nondurable
Non-energy
Foods and tobacco
Clothing
Chemical products
Paper products
Energy

Materials
Non-energy
Durable
Consumer parts
Equipment parts
Other
Nondurable
Textile
Paper
Chemical
Energy

Monthly rate

Sept. ’05
to
Sept. ’06

Q3p

2006
Juner

Julyr

Aug.r

Sept.p

6.6

3.6

1.1

.3

.0

-.6

5.6

1.8
-1.1
-1.8
-1.4
4.3
-2.8
-2.7
-.8
1.7
3.5
8.8
-1.6
-2.1
-10.2

5.7
3.7
1.2
2.9
2.3
-3.0
.4
4.6
3.5
-.7
7.1
9.5
6.8
9.2

3.5
1.9
-5.5
-12.2
15.1
-3.1
5.5
4.8
3.5
4.1
-.2
3.8
1.3
10.0

1.2
1.5
2.3
4.4
1.8
-1.3
.4
1.2
.3
-.1
-.6
.9
.7
4.7

.2
-.4
-3.1
-6.2
1.1
-.3
1.2
.6
.8
1.0
2.0
.3
.7
.0

.1
.3
1.5
2.2
.5
2.2
.1
-.1
.0
.4
-2.1
.3
-1.1
-.5

-.6
-.9
-1.8
-2.6
1.0
-2.4
-.1
-.6
.1
.6
-1.2
-.4
-.2
-3.3

4.5
.4
-4.0
-7.8
21.8
-5.0
2.3
2.2
3.1
3.5
2.6
2.4
2.5
-1.4

24.6
82.1
24.4
8.5
8.1

11.1
26.6
15.5
3.1
6.8

14.2
7.2
22.6
12.6
5.0

11.7
14.0
10.0
11.8
3.9

1.3
1.6
1.6
.9
1.2

2.0
1.4
1.1
2.8
.6

.2
1.3
-.5
.2
-.5

-.2
.9
.8
-1.2
.3

18.5
60.0
16.6
8.0
7.4

6.6
3.7

17.4
6.0

3.2
.7

-1.0
6.0

.8
1.0

.1
.8

.6
.2

-.3
-.7

-.4
-.6

3.2
2.6

4.3
6.0
7.6
2.0
14.1
4.9
3.2
-6.4
4.6
5.3
-.2

.7
3.3
7.0
2.1
16.2
2.0
-3.1
-4.5
-.8
-8.6
-5.4

1.2
8.3
13.4
3.3
20.9
11.8
-.3
-5.1
5.2
-7.4
-14.3

9.8
8.8
7.9
3.3
11.4
7.0
10.6
2.5
5.0
19.2
12.3

7.8
5.4
7.4
4.1
14.6
3.2
1.9
-10.1
-.9
6.4
13.4

3.9
4.7
7.2
-7.6
25.1
.2
.1
-6.9
2.6
1.6
2.2

.9
.7
.9
1.2
1.6
.2
.3
.1
1.2
.0
1.5

.4
.6
.8
-2.2
2.9
.3
.2
.3
-.1
.6
.1

.0
.3
.6
.6
1.9
-.5
-.2
-1.6
.3
-.4
-.7

-.5
-.3
-.1
-1.1
.6
-.3
-.8
-2.1
-.4
-1.0
-1.0

7.1
7.0
7.7
-1.1
17.7
3.6
5.8
-6.4
2.9
12.7
7.3

1.7
2.0
4.0
4.0
2.2
1.0
-.7
1.0
15.7

5.1
5.2
7.1
3.0
5.1
3.9
5.2
11.5
16.1

4.2
4.3
7.8
7.4
2.9
-1.7
4.0
6.3
23.0

9.1
9.5
15.2
34.0
14.5
21.8
9.2
17.8
27.0

5.3
5.8
5.3
-12.9
9.1
9.5
6.3
-1.7
11.0

5.1
5.2
7.4
-11.4
-4.1
9.7
5.7
7.7
16.9

3.8
4.3
5.3
-8.8
-5.3
-4.7
5.8
16.8
20.9

.9
1.0
1.2
-2.0
.5
.1
.6
.7
2.1

.4
.4
.3
.8
-.5
-1.5
.9
4.5
1.6

.2
.3
.7
-1.7
-.4
-.8
.5
.3
1.5

-.3
-.3
-.4
-1.1
-1.2
-.5
-.1
-1.0
1.1

5.9
6.3
7.6
-4.4
1.4
4.4
6.6
8.7
18.4

I NDUSTRY G ROUPS
Manufacturing
Manufacturing (NAICS)
Durable manufacturing
Wood products
Nonmetallic mineral products
Primary metal
Fabricated metal products
Machinery
Computer and electronic products
Electrical equip., appliances,
and components
Motor vehicles and parts
Aerospace and miscellaneous
transportation equipment
Furniture and related products
Miscellaneous

335
3361–3

2.10
7.09

-.7
4.7

5.2
2.6

7.0
2.3

12.6
-2.3

9.8
-.2

12.1
2.2

8.0
-12.0

-.3
3.2

2.2
-5.2

.4
1.9

-1.7
-2.1

8.2
-6.9

3364–9
337
339

3.66
1.63
3.18

-.4
.3
.6

5.3
2.2
3.9

12.0
-2.0
4.8

44.0
-2.2
4.1

19.6
-.5
1.7

11.4
6.7
6.6

13.5
-3.8
3.3

1.1
.3
.8

1.7
-2.0
.5

.8
1.7
-.7

.5
-1.9
.5

37.0
-1.9
3.2

Nondurable manufacturing
Food, beverage, and tobacco products
Textile and product mills
Apparel and leather
Paper
Printing and support
Petroleum and coal products
Chemical
Plastics and rubber products

311,2
313,4
315,6
322
323
324
325
326

33.47
10.67
1.09
.73
2.68
2.01
2.51
10.19
3.59

-.4
1.7
-4.2
-9.4
-6.0
-3.0
.3
.7
-.2

2.8
1.7
-3.9
-2.2
4.5
1.5
6.2
4.2
3.2

.0
3.4
-.3
-.4
-.7
1.7
-6.0
-3.5
3.9

2.4
6.2
-2.6
5.6
8.6
2.8
-11.4
-2.4
10.7

6.4
5.1
-3.5
7.8
1.5
10.3
16.8
8.1
3.1

2.4
-.3
-9.3
5.6
-3.9
6.2
-3.0
7.9
5.1

2.9
3.4
-3.9
-.2
.5
.0
10.7
2.6
2.5

.7
.0
-.1
-.8
1.5
.7
3.0
.6
1.1

.5
.9
.7
2.2
-.9
-.2
-1.1
.4
1.4

-.2
.3
-1.5
-2.3
.5
-.1
-.1
-.2
-1.2

-.2
.4
-1.1
-1.1
-.9
.2
1.8
-.7
-1.0

4.5
3.8
-6.5
2.3
1.1
4.6
8.4
7.4
2.4

1133,5111

4.42

-3.0

3.7

1.9

3.3

-2.5

3.0

-3.9

-.1

.0

-1.2

-.2

-.2

21
2211,2
2211
2212

9.75
9.47
7.73
1.73

.5
.7
1.9
-5.5

-.4
1.2
2.0
-2.9

-6.8
2.9
3.8
-1.6

-15.0
-5.7
-4.1
-13.9

26.3
-14.3
-11.9
-24.4

10.3
16.3
13.8
28.9

1.8
4.3
3.3
8.7

.9
2.9
2.3
5.5

-.2
.6
1.1
-1.2

-.5
-.9
-1.1
.0

.7
-4.4
-5.2
-.9

12.2
-3.6
-4.5
-.1

Other manufacturing (non-NAICS)
Mining
Utilities
Electric
Natural gas

r Revised. p Preliminary.
NOTE. Under the industry groups, the figures to the right of the series descriptions are 2002 North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) codes. The abbreviation pt denotes part of
a NAICS code. Additional industry detail is available on the Board’s web site (www.federalreserve.gov/releases/G17). Under market groups, in the products category, miscellaneous consumer
nondurables, oil and gas drilling, and manufactured homes are not shown separately; in the nondurable materials category, containers and miscellaneous nondurable materials are not shown
separately.
1. The proportion data are estimates of the relative contribution of each series to the growth of total industrial production in the following year.

7

Table 2
I NDUSTRIAL P RODUCTION : S PECIAL AGGREGATES AND S ELECTED D ETAIL
Percent change, seasonally adjusted

Fourth quarter to
fourth quarter
Item

Annual rate
2006
Q1
Q2r

2005
proportion

2003

2004

2005

2005
Q4

100.00

1.5

4.3

3.0

5.3

5.1

20.38
4.42
2.49
.49
3.81
9.17

.5
-1.9
5.1
21.2
.6
-.4

.7
1.7
2.4
8.3
1.6
-1.0

-2.5
1.6
2.9
11.8
-2.2
-6.8

-10.5
-7.8
1.4
7.5
-14.9
-14.1

79.62

1.7

5.1

4.4

3341
3342

4.80
.79
1.21

21.1
5.8
9.9

18.4
4.6
22.3

334412–9

2.79

34.1

74.83

Monthly rate

Sept. ’05
to
Sept. ’06

p

2006
Juner

July

Aug.

6.6

3.6

1.1

.3

.0

-.6

5.6

4.1
-10.2
-10.6
17.1
-6.5
21.1

12.7
9.2
11.2
32.0
27.2
8.4

4.0
10.0
1.6
10.3
10.2
-.8

2.1
4.7
1.5
1.2
2.2
1.2

.0
.0
-.4
-.9
1.3
-.4

-.6
-.5
-1.1
3.4
-.6
-.7

-1.5
-3.3
-1.3
.2
-2.8
-.2

4.6
-1.4
-.5
17.2
3.6
8.9

9.5

5.4

5.1

3.6

.8

.4

.2

-.4

5.8

25.7
12.0
25.4

27.1
14.5
33.1

15.2
10.6
30.5

20.3
16.3
39.2

28.9
18.0
7.3

2.0
1.4
1.6

2.1
1.3
.5

2.5
1.4
-1.5

1.9
1.4
2.5

22.7
15.4
25.6

21.4

29.9

28.1

10.0

13.4

44.0

2.5

3.2

4.8

1.7

23.6

.5

4.2

3.0

8.3

4.7

4.1

2.0

.7

.3

.1

-.5

4.7

7.09
3.53
3.09

4.7
10.4
-1.5

2.6
1.6
2.2

2.3
-.2
3.3

-2.3
-13.0
2.0

-.2
.8
1.0

2.2
2.9
7.0

-12.0
-19.6
-3.9

3.2
5.2
1.4

-5.2
-8.5
-2.0

1.9
2.8
1.1

-2.1
-3.3
-1.2

-6.9
-12.8
-.2

67.74
21.02
8.01
4.41
7.75
24.41

.0
.7
.5
1.7
-1.6
-.8

4.4
2.3
9.0
4.6
3.3
4.7

3.1
2.3
9.6
6.5
2.7
.6

9.5
4.8
27.5
17.3
6.4
6.9

5.3
.9
8.4
3.1
3.7
9.7

4.3
2.7
13.4
-1.2
3.7
4.3

3.5
3.4
14.0
.7
-.8
2.3

.5
.3
1.4
.1
.6
.4

.9
.8
2.5
.7
.2
.6

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

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

6.0
2.6
20.4
3.1
2.5
6.2

Measures excluding selected
high-technology industries
Total industry
Manufacturing1
Durable

95.20
75.99
38.29

.5
.4
1.7

3.6
4.2
5.6

1.9
2.8
5.5

4.2
8.0
13.6

4.6
4.7
4.0

5.9
4.2
5.8

2.4
2.3
2.5

1.0
.8
1.1

.2
.2
.1

-.1
.1
.4

-.7
-.5
-.8

4.7
4.9
5.7

Measures excluding motor vehicles
and parts
Total industry
Manufacturing1
Durable

92.91
73.69
36.00

1.3
1.4
3.8

4.5
5.4
8.0

3.1
4.4
8.8

5.9
10.3
18.8

5.5
5.9
6.4

6.9
5.4
8.4

4.9
5.4
8.7

.9
.7
.8

.7
.9
1.3

-.1
.1
.4

-.5
-.2
-.2

6.6
7.2
10.6

Measures excluding selected
high-technology industries
and motor vehicles and parts
Total industry
Manufacturing1

88.11
68.90

.1
.0

3.6
4.4

1.8
2.9

4.7
9.1

5.0
5.2

6.2
4.4

3.6
3.8

.9
.6

.6
.8

-.2
-.1

-.6
-.3

5.7
6.2

Stage-of-process components
of non-energy materials,
measures of the input to
Finished processors
Primary and semifinished processors

13.13
16.30

3.6
.2

7.9
4.3

8.3
-.7

12.0
5.3

7.8
9.8

7.9
3.4

10.6
.0

1.3
.1

1.0
.3

1.1
-.4

-.1
-.6

8.9
5.5

Total industry
Energy
Consumer products
Commercial products
Oil and gas well drilling
Converted fuel
Primary materials

213111

Non-energy
Selected high-technology industries
Computers and peripheral equipment
Communications equipment
Semiconductors and related
electronic components
Excluding selected high-technology
industries
Motor vehicles and parts
Motor vehicles
Motor vehicle parts
Excluding motor vehicles and parts
Consumer goods
Business equipment
Construction supplies
Business supplies
Materials

3361–3
3361
3363

Q3

r

r

Sept.

p

r Revised. p Preliminary.
1. Refer to note on cover page.

Table 3
M OTOR V EHICLE A SSEMBLIES
Millions of units, seasonally adjusted annual rate

2005
average

2005
Q4

2006
Q1

Q2

Q3

2006
June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Total
Autos
Trucks
Light
Medium and heavy

11.95
4.32
7.63
7.21
.42

11.78
4.38
7.40
6.98
.42

11.71
4.54
7.18
6.69
.48

11.56
4.33
7.23
6.78
.45

10.90
4.27
6.62
6.15
.47

11.61
4.10
7.51
7.11
.40

10.74
4.07
6.67
6.17
.51

11.07
4.30
6.77
6.33
.44

10.88
4.46
6.42
5.95
.47

Memo
Autos and light trucks

11.53

11.36

11.23

11.10

10.43

11.21

10.23

10.63

10.41

Item

NOTE. Seasonal factors and underlying data for auto, light truck, and medium and heavy truck production are available on the Board’s web site, www.federalreserve.gov/releases/G17/mvsf.htm

8

Table 4
I NDUSTRIAL P RODUCTION I NDEXES : M ARKET AND I NDUSTRY G ROUP S UMMARY
2002 = 100, seasonally adjusted

2005
proportion

2006
Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

Juner

Julyr

Aug.r

Sept.p

100.00

110.3

110.7

111.2

112.1

112.2

113.4

113.8

113.8

113.1

57.59
29.69
8.35
4.55
.25
1.35
2.19
21.35
16.93
9.15
.68
4.69
1.90
4.42

111.5
105.4
110.2
112.3
132.7
105.6
106.2
103.6
105.3
107.3
87.8
103.1
106.3
97.0

111.8
105.8
109.9
112.0
131.7
105.2
105.8
104.2
104.6
106.5
87.4
102.9
104.1
103.0

112.5
106.6
110.7
113.6
130.5
106.1
105.4
104.9
105.2
106.6
88.4
104.7
104.6
103.9

113.1
106.5
110.2
112.5
129.9
105.8
106.1
105.0
106.2
107.5
89.3
105.6
106.4
100.5

113.0
106.3
109.5
111.5
132.5
105.1
105.7
105.0
105.6
106.2
89.7
105.6
106.5
102.7

114.4
107.9
112.0
116.4
134.8
103.7
106.1
106.3
105.9
106.2
89.2
106.6
107.2
107.5

114.6
107.5
108.6
109.2
136.3
103.4
107.3
106.9
106.8
107.3
91.0
106.9
108.0
107.6

114.7
107.9
110.3
111.6
136.9
105.6
107.4
106.8
106.8
107.6
89.1
107.2
106.7
107.0

114.0
106.9
108.3
108.7
138.3
103.1
107.3
106.2
106.9
108.2
88.0
106.7
106.6
103.6

Business equipment
Transit
Information processing
Industrial and other
Defense and space equipment

10.15
1.99
2.82
5.35
2.05

127.6
134.0
146.6
115.9
129.7

128.2
134.5
148.9
115.6
131.8

129.4
133.3
151.3
117.2
131.1

132.5
136.3
154.9
120.1
132.4

132.0
135.2
156.4
119.0
131.7

133.7
137.4
158.9
120.1
133.3

136.4
139.2
160.6
123.4
134.1

136.7
141.0
159.9
123.7
133.4

136.4
142.3
161.1
122.1
133.8

Construction supplies
Business supplies

4.45
10.63

114.1
109.3

113.7
109.1

113.6
109.9

114.0
110.3

113.3
110.9

113.4
111.8

114.1
112.0

113.8
111.3

113.3
110.6

42.41
29.43
18.76
3.54
6.68
8.53
10.67
.61
2.30
4.42
12.98

108.8
114.4
122.9
103.4
155.5
109.2
101.0
84.6
99.2
101.5
95.5

109.3
114.3
123.4
103.4
156.7
109.5
100.1
84.1
97.7
100.8
97.2

109.5
114.5
123.5
104.3
157.9
108.7
100.3
83.6
98.2
101.3
97.5

110.7
115.6
125.1
105.5
160.6
109.7
100.8
82.6
98.0
101.9
98.8

111.0
115.7
125.1
103.7
161.6
110.0
100.8
81.5
97.6
103.2
99.6

112.1
116.4
126.2
104.9
164.1
110.3
101.2
81.6
98.8
103.2
101.1

112.5
117.1
127.2
102.6
169.0
110.6
101.4
81.9
98.7
103.8
101.2

112.5
117.5
128.0
103.3
172.2
110.0
101.1
80.6
99.0
103.4
100.5

111.9
117.1
127.9
102.2
173.3
109.6
100.3
78.9
98.6
102.3
99.5

321
327
331
332
333
334

80.78
76.36
42.89
1.54
2.28
2.44
5.76
5.33
7.87

113.1
113.8
122.3
111.5
112.6
106.8
109.8
119.7
172.4

112.8
113.6
122.5
109.4
112.5
106.1
110.4
119.1
173.8

113.3
114.1
123.2
107.7
112.1
104.4
111.4
120.7
175.3

114.3
115.1
124.6
107.6
112.2
106.2
112.5
123.7
178.0

114.1
114.8
124.3
106.7
110.5
109.2
111.5
120.8
180.3

115.1
115.9
125.8
104.6
111.0
109.3
112.3
121.7
184.1

115.5
116.4
126.2
105.4
110.5
107.7
113.3
127.1
187.0

115.8
116.7
127.0
103.6
110.1
106.8
113.9
127.5
189.8

115.4
116.3
126.4
102.5
108.7
106.3
113.8
126.2
191.9

335
3361–3

2.10
7.09

113.3
112.3

112.5
111.3

114.2
112.9

116.2
112.6

117.0
111.1

116.6
114.6

119.2
108.7

119.7
110.7

117.7
108.3

3364–9
337
339

3.66
1.63
3.18

119.6
99.3
112.0

122.3
99.7
113.0

121.0
100.6
113.0

123.8
100.7
113.8

123.8
101.8
114.3

125.2
102.1
115.2

127.4
100.1
115.8

128.4
101.8
114.9

129.0
99.8
115.5

311,2
313,4
315,6
322
323
324
325
326

33.47
10.67
1.09
.73
2.68
2.01
2.51
10.19
3.59

103.7
107.8
91.5
88.9
100.8
100.2
105.0
102.5
108.0

103.1
107.1
90.9
88.5
98.3
100.7
103.9
102.2
108.0

103.4
107.3
89.7
89.2
97.4
101.4
101.9
103.3
108.4

103.9
108.2
89.1
90.0
97.3
102.5
99.4
104.1
110.0

103.7
106.8
88.3
90.5
97.3
101.8
103.0
104.6
108.6

104.4
106.8
88.2
89.8
98.8
102.5
106.1
105.3
109.8

104.9
107.8
88.8
91.8
97.9
102.3
104.9
105.7
111.4

104.8
108.1
87.5
89.7
98.4
102.2
104.9
105.5
110.1

104.6
108.6
86.6
88.7
97.5
102.4
106.7
104.8
109.0

1133,5111

4.42

102.0

100.3

100.6

101.8

101.7

101.6

101.6

100.4

100.1

21
2211,2
2211
2212

9.75
9.47
7.73
1.73

97.7
98.3
102.4
80.2

98.4
103.9
106.9
89.9

98.2
105.6
107.2
97.4

100.0
104.2
106.5
93.2

100.4
106.2
109.0
93.3

101.3
109.2
111.4
98.5

101.1
109.9
112.6
97.3

100.6
108.9
111.4
97.3

101.3
104.1
105.6
96.4

Item
Total IP
M ARKET G ROUPS
Final products and nonindustrial supplies
Consumer goods
Durable
Automotive products
Home electronics
Appliances, furniture, carpeting
Miscellaneous goods
Nondurable
Non-energy
Foods and tobacco
Clothing
Chemical products
Paper products
Energy

Materials
Non-energy
Durable
Consumer parts
Equipment parts
Other
Nondurable
Textile
Paper
Chemical
Energy
I NDUSTRY G ROUPS
Manufacturing
Manufacturing (NAICS)
Durable manufacturing
Wood products
Nonmetallic mineral products
Primary metal
Fabricated metal products
Machinery
Computer and electronic products
Electrical equip., appliances,
and components
Motor vehicles and parts
Aerospace and miscellaneous
transportation equipment
Furniture and related products
Miscellaneous
Nondurable manufacturing
Food, beverage, and tobacco products
Textile and product mills
Apparel and leather
Paper
Printing and support
Petroleum and coal products
Chemical
Plastics and rubber products
Other manufacturing (non-NAICS)
Mining
Utilities
Electric
Natural gas
r Revised. p Preliminary.
NOTE. Refer to notes on table 1.

9

Table 5
I NDUSTRIAL P RODUCTION I NDEXES : S PECIAL AGGREGATES
2002 = 100, seasonally adjusted

2005
proportion

2006
Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

Juner

Julyr

Aug.r

Sept.p

100.00

110.3

110.7

111.2

112.1

112.2

113.4

113.8

113.8

113.1

20.38
4.42
2.49
.49
3.81
9.17

98.3
97.0
107.4
149.0
94.6
95.5

100.8
103.0
108.5
154.0
99.6
95.9

101.6
103.9
111.4
158.5
100.8
95.9

101.6
100.5
109.4
163.2
101.5
97.4

103.0
102.7
112.5
164.8
104.7
97.4

105.2
107.5
114.2
166.7
107.1
98.5

105.2
107.6
113.8
165.2
108.5
98.1

104.6
107.0
112.5
170.8
107.8
97.4

103.1
103.6
111.1
171.0
104.7
97.2

79.62

113.4

113.1

113.6

114.7

114.4

115.3

115.8

116.0

115.6

3341
3342

4.80
.79
1.21

191.3
127.8
164.3

193.6
128.5
169.6

195.6
129.0
175.6

198.9
131.2
181.9

202.5
133.5
184.3

206.6
135.3
187.1

211.0
137.0
188.1

216.4
139.0
185.2

220.4
141.0
189.9

334412–9

2.79

235.6

236.7

236.8

238.6

243.5

249.5

257.5

269.8

274.3

74.83

109.2

108.9

109.2

110.3

109.8

110.6

110.9

111.0

110.4

7.09
3.53
3.09

112.3
114.7
105.5

111.3
114.9
104.5

112.9
117.1
105.8

112.6
115.9
107.1

111.1
113.7
106.3

114.6
119.6
107.8

108.7
109.4
105.6

110.7
112.5
106.8

108.3
108.8
105.5

67.74
21.02
8.01
4.41
7.75
24.41

108.9
105.3
121.9
113.8
105.8
106.7

108.6
104.6
122.2
113.5
105.1
106.7

108.9
105.1
123.1
113.3
105.3
106.8

110.0
106.0
126.1
113.6
106.4
107.8

109.6
105.4
125.5
112.9
106.0
107.7

110.2
105.8
127.2
113.0
106.7
108.1

111.1
106.6
130.4
113.8
106.9
108.8

111.0
106.7
131.0
113.5
106.1
108.6

110.6
106.6
130.1
112.9
105.5
108.1

95.20
75.99
38.29

106.9
109.0
114.7

107.2
108.6
114.7

107.7
109.0
115.2

108.5
109.9
116.4

108.4
109.5
115.9

109.5
110.5
117.1

109.8
110.7
117.2

109.7
110.8
117.7

108.9
110.3
116.8

92.91
73.69
36.00

110.2
113.2
124.3

110.7
113.0
124.7

111.1
113.3
125.2

112.1
114.4
126.9

112.2
114.3
126.9

113.3
115.1
127.9

114.1
116.2
129.6

114.0
116.2
130.2

113.5
116.1
130.0

88.11
68.90

106.4
108.6

106.9
108.3

107.2
108.6

108.1
109.6

108.2
109.4

109.1
110.0

109.8
110.9

109.6
110.8

108.9
110.4

13.13
16.30

124.7
106.3

124.8
106.1

125.7
105.8

127.1
106.7

126.8
107.0

128.5
107.2

129.8
107.4

131.2
107.0

131.1
106.4

Item
Total industry
Energy
Consumer products
Commercial products
Oil and gas well drilling
Converted fuel
Primary materials

213111

Non-energy
Selected high-technology industries
Computers and peripheral equipment
Communications equipment
Semiconductors and related
electronic components
Excluding selected high-technology
industries
Motor vehicles and parts
Motor vehicles
Motor vehicle parts

3361–3
3361
3363

Excluding motor vehicles and parts
Consumer goods
Business equipment
Construction supplies
Business supplies
Materials

Measures excluding selected high-technology
industries
Total industry
Manufacturing1
Durable
Measures excluding motor vehicles and parts
Total industry
Manufacturing1
Durable
Measures excluding selected high-technology
industries and motor vehicles and parts
Total industry
Manufacturing1

Stage-of-process components of non-energy
materials, measures of the input to
Finished processors
Primary and semifinished processors
r Revised. p Preliminary.
1. Refer to note on cover page.

Table 6
D IFFUSION I NDEXES OF I NDUSTRIAL P RODUCTION
Percent

Item
One month earlier
2004
2005
2006
Three months earlier
2004
2005
2006
Six months earlier
2004
2005
2006

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

61.0
54.7
65.5

62.7
47.3
52.2

53.0
49.7
58.0

66.7
52.7
59.7

58.7
54.0
54.0

46.3
56.7
59.8

66.0
54.3
59.5

56.0
52.0
48.3

47.0
55.3

61.0
60.0

53.7
59.3

58.7
55.8

66.0
58.3
67.0

61.3
59.0
62.3

65.0
52.0
67.0

68.3
47.3
60.7

66.7
51.8
58.0

62.3
57.0
58.3

57.7
57.0
60.3

56.3
55.0
60.0

56.3
54.3

57.7
57.7

56.7
58.5

64.3
60.7

68.3
62.0
64.0

73.3
60.0
62.0

68.0
60.7
67.3

77.0
52.3
68.0

72.0
52.7
68.3

65.3
55.0
66.0

67.3
57.0
60.7

67.0
53.3
63.3

62.0
56.3

61.3
60.0

58.7
60.0

64.0
56.0

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.

10

Table 7
C APACITY U TILIZATION
Percent of capacity, seasonally adjusted

2005
proportion

19722005
ave.

198889
high

199495
high

200102
low

2005
Q4

2006
Q1

Q2r

Q3p

2006
Juner

Julyr

Aug.r

Sept.p

100.00

81.0

85.1

85.0

73.9

80.5

81.1

82.0

82.3

82.5

82.6

82.5

81.9

82.87
78.75

79.8
79.5

85.5
85.5

84.5
84.6

72.0
71.5

79.8
79.4

80.3
80.1

80.8
80.5

81.1
80.8

81.1
80.8

81.2
80.9

81.2
81.0

80.8
80.6

321
327
331
332
333
334

45.07
1.51
2.24
2.43
6.20
5.40
8.66

78.1
80.2
79.4
80.5
77.1
78.8
78.6

84.6
88.5
85.2
94.9
81.7
85.3
81.5

84.1
88.2
84.3
94.8
85.1
87.5
83.7

68.4
71.0
75.7
68.8
68.9
63.4
59.7

79.1
87.1
83.2
83.5
76.1
83.5
78.2

79.3
84.1
84.6
85.6
77.0
83.0
77.5

80.0
81.4
83.1
87.9
77.7
84.3
78.5

80.3
79.3
81.4
87.1
78.5
87.3
80.5

80.3
80.0
82.7
88.8
77.7
83.9
79.3

80.3
80.6
82.1
87.7
78.3
87.6
80.0

80.6
79.1
81.6
87.1
78.6
87.7
80.5

80.0
78.2
80.4
86.7
78.5
86.7
80.9

335
3361–3

2.03
7.19

83.3
77.6

89.0
89.3

93.0
88.9

71.7
70.1

87.7
79.6

89.8
78.9

92.0
78.8

93.3
75.9

91.9
79.9

93.8
75.6

94.0
76.9

92.2
75.1

3364–9
337
339

4.30
1.79
3.32

72.5
78.5
76.6

87.3
82.2
82.4

68.7
83.4
81.3

62.7
69.5
70.5

71.7
73.3
78.4

74.6
73.2
78.1

76.2
74.5
78.5

78.2
73.9
78.3

76.6
74.9
78.7

77.8
73.5
78.8

78.2
74.8
78.0

78.5
73.4
78.0

311,2
313,4
315,6
322
323
324
325
326

33.67
10.72
1.17
.79
2.59
2.15
2.06
10.85
3.36

81.7
81.8
82.6
79.2
87.7
83.8
86.0
78.2
83.6

86.9
85.9
91.5
84.2
93.6
91.9
89.0
85.0
89.5

85.3
84.1
91.2
88.2
91.5
86.3
90.6
81.1
92.4

75.6
76.7
70.1
60.4
79.5
72.1
84.1
71.4
75.0

80.0
81.9
77.2
80.3
85.0
77.3
87.3
74.1
89.0

81.2
82.7
77.0
83.3
85.5
79.3
90.6
75.3
89.6

81.4
82.1
75.7
84.9
84.8
80.5
89.9
76.5
90.0

81.6
82.3
75.3
85.2
85.1
80.5
92.1
76.6
89.8

81.6
81.6
75.5
84.8
85.7
80.7
92.6
76.8
90.1

81.9
82.2
76.2
86.8
85.0
80.5
91.6
77.0
91.1

81.6
82.2
75.3
84.9
85.4
80.4
91.6
76.7
89.7

81.4
82.4
74.6
84.0
84.7
80.5
93.2
76.1
88.5

1133,5111

4.12

84.8

91.0

83.2

81.2

86.1

85.5

86.1

85.2

86.0

86.0

85.0

84.8

21
2211,2

8.32
8.82

87.3
86.7

86.1
92.7

89.0
93.7

85.6
83.7

82.7
86.9

87.9
83.5

90.4
86.6

91.2
87.3

91.2
88.7

91.2
89.2

90.9
88.3

91.6
84.4

3341
3342

5.51
.87
1.53

78.1
78.3
75.8

80.9
80.2
80.7

86.1
84.2
85.9

57.4
64.7
41.1

75.7
80.4
74.2

74.8
81.0
78.9

76.2
82.4
84.4

79.6
84.1
84.3

77.1
83.0
85.1

78.3
83.5
85.0

79.7
84.1
83.2

80.7
84.7
84.7

334412–9

3.10

80.5

82.7

91.1

58.6

75.2

71.6

71.4

76.6

72.5

74.3

77.4

78.2

Measures excluding selected
high-technology industries
Total industry
Manufacturing1

94.49
77.35

81.1
79.9

85.5
86.0

85.0
84.4

75.0
73.1

81.0
80.3

81.7
81.0

82.6
81.5

82.8
81.5

83.1
81.7

83.1
81.8

83.0
81.7

82.3
81.2

S TAGE - OF - PROCESS GROUPS
Crude
Primary and semifinished
Finished

11.50
47.44
41.06

86.4
82.1
77.9

88.3
86.7
82.8

89.4
88.1
80.5

83.2
74.6
70.8

81.3
82.6
78.3

85.8
82.3
78.9

88.2
82.9
79.7

88.9
83.4
79.8

88.8
83.6
79.9

88.9
83.9
79.9

88.8
83.6
80.0

89.0
82.6
79.6

Item

Total industry
Manufacturing
Manufacturing (NAICS)
Durable manufacturing
Wood products
Nonmetallic mineral products
Primary metal
Fabricated metal products
Machinery
Computer and electronic products
Electrical equip., appliances,
and components
Motor vehicles and parts
Aerospace and miscellaneous
transportation equipment
Furniture and related products
Miscellaneous
Nondurable manufacturing
Food, beverage, and tobacco products
Textile and product mills
Apparel and leather
Paper
Printing and support
Petroleum and coal products
Chemical
Plastics and rubber products
Other manufacturing (non-NAICS)
Mining
Utilities

Selected high-technology industries
Computers and peripheral equipment
Communications equipment
Semiconductors and related
electronic components

r Revised. p Preliminary.
1. Refer to note on cover page.

11

Table 8
I NDUSTRIAL C APACITY
Percent change

Item

197279

Average annual rate
1980198988
94

Fourth quarter to fourth quarter
19952006

2003

2004

2005

2006

2005
Q4

Annual rate
2006
Q1
Q2

Q3

Monthly rate
2006
Sept.

Total industry

3.0

1.9

2.2

3.4

-.2

.6

1.6

2.0

1.8

2.0

2.0

2.0

.2

Manufacturing1

3.2

2.2

2.5

3.8

-.1

.5

2.1

2.5

2.3

2.5

2.6

2.6

.2

Mining
Utilities

.7
4.3

.1
2.1

-.9
1.6

-.7
2.2

-1.0
3.1

-.6
2.6

-.6
.0

-1.4
.7

-.2
-.4

-.7
.2

-1.6
.7

-1.7
.9

-.2
.1

18.5

17.0

15.8

27.0

8.0

6.8

20.8

12.3

24.3

21.0

11.6

8.5

.6

2.6

1.3

1.6

1.8

-.5

.1

.6

1.7

.7

1.1

1.8

2.0

.2

1.7
3.1
3.7

.3
1.4
3.3

-.3
2.6
2.5

-.5
4.2
3.4

-2.1
-.1
.6

-1.1
.9
.8

-.9
2.5
1.2

-1.1
2.1
2.8

-.6
2.8
1.3

-.8
2.7
1.9

-1.1
2.1
2.9

-1.2
1.8
3.2

-.1
.1
.3

Selected high-technology industries
Manufacturing1 ex. selected
high-technology industries

S TAGE - OF - PROCESS GROUPS
Crude
Primary and semifinished
Finished
p Preliminary.
1. Refer to note on cover page.

Table 9
G ROSS VALUE OF F INAL P RODUCTS AND N ONINDUSTRIAL S UPPLIES
Billions of 2000 dollars at annual rate, seasonally adjusted

2000

2005

2005
Q3

Q4

2006
Q1

Q2r

Q3p

2006
Juner

Julyr

Aug.r

Sept.p

2,815.1

2,990.6

2,988.2

3,039.9

3,063.4

3,097.0

3,123.5

3,126.7

3,126.5

3,130.1

3,113.9

2,114.0
1,480.7
471.7
279.5
192.1
1,009.1

2,264.1
1,593.2
538.1
339.9
198.5
1,056.7

2,262.4
1,597.5
540.7
343.2
197.9
1,058.7

2,299.7
1,600.9
544.8
341.1
203.9
1,058.4

2,321.2
1,605.9
543.0
340.8
202.4
1,064.6

2,346.9
1,614.8
543.1
341.7
201.6
1,072.9

2,372.1
1,624.2
533.5
330.5
203.1
1,089.5

2,372.6
1,637.3
550.0
349.0
201.3
1,088.5

2,370.1
1,621.9
530.2
327.6
202.7
1,090.0

2,379.3
1,631.2
540.1
336.0
204.2
1,090.8

2,367.0
1,619.5
530.1
327.8
202.5
1,087.8

Equipment, total
Business and defense
Business
Defense and space

633.2
616.9
558.7
58.1

675.0
658.0
578.7
78.3

668.2
651.8
571.8
78.7

705.3
684.9
604.4
80.0

723.3
705.4
623.9
81.2

741.4
723.7
641.9
82.0

758.8
741.6
659.9
82.4

743.9
726.2
644.0
82.4

759.2
742.6
660.5
82.8

758.6
741.1
659.8
82.2

758.5
741.0
659.5
82.3

Nonindustrial supplies
Construction supplies
Business supplies
Commercial energy products

701.2
198.0
503.2
136.0

726.8
205.9
520.8
151.5

726.2
205.7
520.4
151.9

740.4
214.1
526.0
152.0

742.6
215.0
527.3
149.3

750.5
214.5
535.7
152.6

752.0
214.6
537.1
152.9

754.7
214.1
540.4
155.2

756.9
215.5
541.2
154.8

751.5
214.8
536.5
152.4

747.6
213.6
533.7
151.5

Item
Final products and nonindustrial
supplies
Final products
Consumer goods
Durable
Automotive products
Other durable goods
Nondurable

r Revised. p Preliminary.

Table 10
G ROSS -VALUE -W EIGHTED I NDUSTRIAL P RODUCTION : S TAGE - OF -P ROCESS G ROUPS
Percent change, seasonally adjusted

Fourth quarter to
fourth quarter
Item

Finished
Semifinished
Primary
Crude

2005
gross value1

2003

2004

1932.2
1747.0
945.8
391.7

3.0
1.6
-.2
-1.6

4.8
5.0
2.8
3.7

2005

2005
Q4

Annual rate
2006
Q1
Q2r

5.4
6.3
-2.4
-10.2

9.9
9.2
-1.5
-14.3

5.5
.2
6.0
26.1

r Revised. p Preliminary.
1. Billions of 2000 dollars.

12

5.5
4.9
5.5
10.3

Monthly rate
p

2006
Juner

July

Aug.

3.0
4.7
4.4
1.3

1.1
1.1
2.0
.6

.0
.9
-.6
-.1

.5
.0
-.5
-.2

Q3

r

r

Sept.

p

-.4
-1.2
-.4
-.1

Sept. ’05
to
Sept. ’06
5.9
3.0
4.7
13.8

Table 11
H ISTORICAL S TATISTICS FOR I NDUSTRIAL P RODUCTION , C APACITY, AND U TILIZATION : Total Industry
Seasonally adjusted

Year

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

Annual

IP (percent
change)1
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988

2.1
-.3
.5
-.3
.1

.5
.4
-.8
1.2
.3

.5
.2
-.6
.2
.3

.6
-.2
.0
.6
.5

.5
.1
.2
.7
.0

.4
.0
-.3
.5
.2

.3
-.6
.6
.6
.2

.1
.5
-.2
.7
.5

-.2
.4
.2
.3
-.3

-.1
-.4
.4
1.5
.6

.4
.3
.5
.5
.2

.1
1.0
.9
.5
.4

12.4
1.1
2.3
5.4
3.4

6.4
.6
-2.4
7.0
3.2

2.9
-.6
1.7
7.1
2.1

.4
2.5
4.5
9.9
3.3

9.0
1.3
1.0
5.1
5.0

1989
1990
1991
1992
1993

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

-.5
.9
-.7
.7
.3

.3
.5
-.5
.7
.0

-.1
.0
.2
.7
.3

-.7
.1
1.0
.4
-.4

.0
.3
1.0
.0
.3

-.9
-.1
.0
.8
.3

.9
.3
.2
-.5
.0

-.3
.2
.9
.2
.5

-.1
-.7
-.2
.7
.7

.3
-1.2
-.1
.4
.4

.7
-.7
-.3
.1
.5

1.5
2.9
-7.6
-.3
3.7

-1.9
2.9
2.7
6.9
1.0

-2.5
1.3
5.7
2.8
2.4

1.8
-5.9
1.0
3.9
6.1

.9
.9
-1.5
2.9
3.3

1994
1995
1996
1997
1998

.5
.3
-.8
.2
.4

.0
.0
1.5
1.2
.1

1.0
.2
-.2
.8
.1

.5
.0
.9
-.1
.5

.6
.2
.7
.6
.6

.7
.3
.8
.5
-.5

.2
-.4
-.2
.5
-.3

.5
1.4
.7
1.2
2.2

.2
.4
.6
.9
-.2

.9
-.2
.0
.7
.7

.6
.3
1.0
.9
-.1

1.1
.4
.7
.4
.3

5.3
5.3
1.8
8.5
4.4

7.5
1.1
8.4
5.7
3.1

5.3
3.7
5.1
8.9
3.6

7.9
3.5
6.2
10.6
5.6

5.4
4.8
4.2
7.3
5.9

1999
2000
2001
2002
2003

.5
.2
-.8
.6
.5

.5
.4
-.7
-.1
.0

.2
.4
-.3
.9
-.2

.2
.7
-.1
.4
-.8

.8
.3
-.8
.4
-.1

-.1
.1
-.5
.9
.3

.7
-.3
-.4
-.3
.5

.5
-.3
-.3
.1
.1

-.4
.4
-.4
.0
.7

1.3
-.3
-.5
-.4
.1

.6
.0
-.4
.3
.9

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

4.1
5.4
-6.6
2.9
.8

4.2
5.2
-4.9
6.1
-3.3

4.3
-.9
-5.1
1.7
3.6

7.7
-1.3
-4.5
-1.6
5.1

4.5
4.3
-3.5
.1
.6

2004
2005
2006

.4
.2
-.1

.8
.4
.4

-.3
.0
.5

.8
-.1
.8

.9
.2
.1

-.6
.8
1.1

.6
.0
.3

.3
.3
.0

-.2
-1.3
-.6

.7
1.1

.2
.9

.7
1.0

5.3
3.8
5.1

5.2
1.6
6.6

2.6
1.4
3.6

4.2
5.3

4.1
3.3

IP (2002=100)
2004
2005
2006

102.7
106.9
110.3

103.5
107.4
110.7

103.2
107.3
111.2

104.0
107.2
112.1

105.0
107.4
112.2

104.4
108.3
113.4

105.0
108.3
113.8

105.3
108.6
113.8

105.1
107.2
113.1

105.8
108.4

106.0
109.4

106.7
110.4

103.1
107.2
110.8

104.4
107.6
112.6

105.1
108.0
113.6

106.2
109.4

104.7
108.2

Capacity
(percent of
2002 output)
2004
2005
2006

133.0
134.0
136.3

133.0
134.2
136.6

133.0
134.3
136.8

133.1
134.5
137.0

133.1
134.7
137.2

133.2
134.9
137.5

133.3
135.1
137.7

133.4
135.3
137.9

133.5
135.5
138.1

133.6
135.7

133.7
135.9

133.9
136.1

133.0
134.2
136.6

133.1
134.7
137.2

133.4
135.3
137.9

133.7
135.9

133.3
135.0

Utilization
(percent)
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988

79.5
79.9
79.7
79.0
83.4

79.7
80.1
79.0
79.8
83.6

80.0
80.0
78.4
79.8
83.7

80.4
79.7
78.3
80.1
84.1

80.7
79.6
78.4
80.6
84.0

80.8
79.4
78.0
80.8
84.2

80.9
78.7
78.4
81.2
84.3

80.9
78.9
78.2
81.6
84.6

80.6
79.1
78.3
81.7
84.3

80.3
78.6
78.5
82.8
84.7

80.5
78.8
78.7
83.1
84.8

80.3
79.4
79.3
83.4
85.0

79.7
80.0
79.0
79.6
83.6

80.7
79.6
78.2
80.5
84.1

80.8
78.9
78.3
81.5
84.4

80.4
78.9
78.9
83.1
84.8

80.4
79.4
78.6
81.2
84.2

1989
1990
1991
1992
1993

85.1
82.4
79.7
79.1
81.2

84.6
82.9
79.1
79.5
81.4

84.7
83.2
78.6
80.0
81.3

84.5
83.0
78.6
80.4
81.4

83.8
82.9
79.3
80.6
81.0

83.6
82.9
80.0
80.5
81.1

82.7
82.7
79.9
81.0
81.2

83.3
82.8
79.9
80.4
81.1

82.8
82.8
80.5
80.5
81.4

82.6
82.0
80.2
80.9
81.8

82.7
80.9
80.0
81.0
82.0

83.1
80.2
79.7
81.0
82.3

84.8
82.8
79.1
79.6
81.3

84.0
82.9
79.3
80.5
81.1

82.9
82.7
80.1
80.6
81.2

82.8
81.1
80.0
81.0
82.0

83.6
82.4
79.6
80.4
81.4

1994
1995
1996
1997
1998

82.5
85.0
82.1
83.3
84.2

82.3
84.7
83.0
83.9
83.7

83.0
84.5
82.5
84.1
83.3

83.2
84.1
82.9
83.6
83.1

83.5
83.9
83.1
83.6
83.1

83.8
83.8
83.5
83.5
82.2

83.8
83.1
83.0
83.5
81.5

83.9
83.9
83.2
84.0
82.8

83.8
83.8
83.3
84.3
82.3

84.2
83.3
82.9
84.3
82.5

84.5
83.2
83.3
84.6
82.1

85.0
83.2
83.5
84.4
81.9

82.6
84.7
82.5
83.7
83.7

83.5
83.9
83.2
83.6
82.8

83.8
83.6
83.1
83.9
82.2

84.6
83.2
83.3
84.4
82.2

83.6
83.9
83.0
83.9
82.7

1999
2000
2001
2002
2003

82.0
82.5
79.2
74.3
75.5

82.0
82.5
78.4
74.1
75.6

81.8
82.5
77.9
74.7
75.4

81.7
82.7
77.6
74.9
74.9

82.0
82.7
76.9
75.2
74.9

81.7
82.5
76.3
75.8
75.1

81.9
82.0
75.9
75.6
75.4

82.0
81.4
75.4
75.6
75.5

81.3
81.5
75.0
75.6
76.0

82.1
80.9
74.5
75.3
76.1

82.2
80.7
74.0
75.5
76.8

82.6
80.1
73.9
75.2
76.9

81.9
82.5
78.5
74.4
75.5

81.8
82.6
76.9
75.3
74.9

81.7
81.6
75.4
75.6
75.6

82.3
80.6
74.2
75.3
76.6

81.9
81.8
76.3
75.1
75.7

2004
2005
2006

77.2
79.8
80.9

77.8
80.0
81.1

77.6
79.9
81.3

78.1
79.7
81.8

78.8
79.8
81.7

78.4
80.3
82.5

78.8
80.2
82.6

79.0
80.3
82.5

78.7
79.1
81.9

79.2
79.9

79.3
80.5

79.7
81.1

77.5
79.9
81.1

78.4
79.9
82.0

78.8
79.8
82.3

79.4
80.5

78.6
80.0

1. Quarterly changes are at annual rates. Annual changes are calculated from annual averages.

13

Table 12
H ISTORICAL S TATISTICS FOR I NDUSTRIAL P RODUCTION , C APACITY, AND U TILIZATION : Manufacturing1
Seasonally adjusted

Year

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

Annual

IP (percent
change)2
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988

1.9
-.4
1.2
-.3
-.2

1.1
-.3
-.7
1.4
.1

.5
.8
-.3
.1
.3

.5
-.3
.4
.5
.8

.2
.1
.2
.7
-.1

.4
.1
-.4
.4
.1

.5
-.6
.5
.7
.1

.2
.6
.3
.5
.1

-.2
.1
.2
.6
.3

.4
-.3
.3
1.6
.7

.3
.6
.5
.6
.3

.3
.4
.9
.6
.4

12.8
.1
4.4
6.0
2.4

6.3
1.1
-.1
6.7
4.1

3.7
.1
2.5
6.9
1.4

2.8
2.3
4.9
11.3
5.0

9.9
1.8
2.2
5.5
5.2

1989
1990
1991
1992
1993

.8
-.2
-.8
-.5
1.0

-1.0
1.4
-.7
.9
.1

-.1
.4
-.6
.9
-.1

.1
-.1
.3
.5
.5

-.8
.0
.7
.7
-.1

.1
.2
1.1
.3
-.1

-1.1
-.2
.3
.8
.3

.9
.3
.3
-.4
-.1

-.3
.0
1.0
.0
.6

-.2
-.8
-.2
.6
.8

.2
-1.1
-.2
.4
.4

.2
-.8
-.1
-.1
.6

1.7
4.4
-9.1
.7
4.6

-3.4
2.7
2.2
7.9
1.5

-3.0
.6
7.4
3.9
1.6

.5
-6.5
1.8
2.7
6.9

.8
.7
-2.0
3.7
3.5

1994
1995
1996
1997
1998

.3
.4
-1.0
.2
.7

.1
-.1
1.5
1.4
.1

1.3
.3
-.3
1.2
-.1

.8
-.1
1.2
-.3
.6

.7
.0
.7
.8
.5

.3
.4
1.0
.7
-.6

.5
-.6
.2
.3
-.4

.7
1.2
.7
1.5
2.6

.3
.9
.7
.9
-.3

1.0
-.1
.0
.7
1.0

.8
.1
1.0
1.2
.1

1.1
.4
.9
.5
.5

5.2
5.7
.8
10.1
6.0

9.5
.6
9.5
6.8
2.5

6.2
3.0
7.5
9.9
3.9

9.6
4.4
6.5
11.4
7.8

6.0
5.3
4.6
8.5
6.7

1999
2000
2001
2002
2003

.3
.3
-.8
.5
.4

.8
.3
-.7
-.1
-.2

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

.4
.7
-.1
.1
-.9

1.0
.0
-.8
.5
-.1

-.2
.2
-.6
1.0
.6

.5
-.1
-.2
-.4
.3

.7
-.7
-.7
.3
-.1

-.4
.4
-.3
.0
.9

1.5
-.3
-.6
-.6
.1

.7
-.3
-.2
.3
1.1

.8
-.7
.3
-.5
.1

4.6
6.1
-7.5
3.5
.3

4.8
5.0
-5.1
5.3
-2.7

4.0
-1.2
-5.6
2.2
3.3

9.3
-2.9
-4.2
-2.1
6.1

5.2
4.6
-4.2
.1
.5

2004
2005
2006

.3
.5
.8

.9
.5
-.3

.2
-.3
.4

.8
.0
.9

.8
.4
-.2

-.6
.3
.9

.8
.1
.4

.7
.4
.2

-.4
-.5
-.3

.8
1.8

.0
.8

.5
.4

5.7
4.5
5.3

6.6
1.3
5.1

4.1
2.0
3.8

4.0
9.1

4.8
4.0

IP (2002=100)
2004
2005
2006

102.6
108.1
113.1

103.6
108.6
112.8

103.7
108.2
113.3

104.6
108.3
114.3

105.5
108.7
114.1

104.9
109.0
115.1

105.7
109.1
115.5

106.4
109.5
115.8

106.0
108.9
115.4

106.9
110.9

106.9
111.7

107.5
112.2

103.3
108.3
113.1

105.0
108.6
114.5

106.1
109.2
115.6

107.1
111.6

105.4
109.6

Capacity
(percent of
2002 output)
2004
2005
2006

136.3
137.4
140.4

136.3
137.6
140.7

136.3
137.8
141.0

136.4
138.1
141.3

136.4
138.3
141.6

136.5
138.6
141.9

136.5
138.8
142.2

136.6
139.1
142.5

136.7
139.3
142.8

136.9
139.6

137.0
139.9

137.2
140.1

136.3
137.6
140.7

136.4
138.3
141.6

136.6
139.1
142.5

137.0
139.9

136.6
138.7

Utilization
(percent)
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988

78.1
79.1
78.9
78.9
83.2

78.9
78.6
78.2
79.8
83.2

79.1
79.0
77.9
79.7
83.4

79.4
78.6
78.1
79.9
84.0

79.5
78.5
78.2
80.4
83.9

79.6
78.4
77.8
80.5
84.0

79.8
77.7
78.1
80.9
84.0

79.8
78.0
78.2
81.1
84.0

79.4
77.9
78.3
81.5
84.2

79.5
77.6
78.4
82.6
84.7

79.6
77.9
78.7
83.0
84.8

79.6
78.1
79.2
83.4
85.0

78.7
78.9
78.4
79.5
83.3

79.5
78.5
78.0
80.3
84.0

79.7
77.9
78.2
81.2
84.1

79.6
77.9
78.8
83.0
84.8

79.4
78.3
78.3
81.0
84.0

1989
1990
1991
1992
1993

85.5
81.5
78.4
78.1
80.5

84.5
82.4
77.7
78.6
80.4

84.3
82.6
77.1
79.2
80.2

84.2
82.3
77.3
79.4
80.4

83.3
82.1
77.7
79.8
80.2

83.2
82.2
78.5
79.8
80.0

82.1
81.8
78.6
80.3
80.1

82.7
81.9
78.7
79.8
79.9

82.2
81.7
79.4
79.7
80.3

81.9
81.0
79.1
80.0
80.7

81.9
79.9
78.9
80.1
80.9

81.8
79.2
78.7
79.8
81.2

84.8
82.2
77.7
78.6
80.4

83.6
82.2
77.8
79.7
80.2

82.4
81.8
78.9
79.9
80.1

81.9
80.0
78.9
79.9
81.0

83.1
81.6
78.3
79.6
80.4

1994
1995
1996
1997
1998

81.3
84.5
80.8
82.2
83.4

81.1
84.1
81.6
82.8
82.9

82.0
83.9
81.0
83.3
82.2

82.4
83.4
81.5
82.5
82.1

82.8
83.0
81.7
82.7
81.9

82.8
82.9
82.1
82.7
80.9

82.9
82.0
81.9
82.4
80.1

83.2
82.6
82.1
83.1
81.7

83.1
82.9
82.2
83.3
81.0

83.6
82.4
81.8
83.3
81.4

84.0
82.1
82.1
83.6
81.1

84.5
82.0
82.4
83.4
81.1

81.4
84.1
81.1
82.8
82.8

82.6
83.1
81.8
82.6
81.7

83.1
82.5
82.1
83.0
80.9

84.0
82.2
82.1
83.4
81.2

82.8
83.0
81.8
83.0
81.7

1999
2000
2001
2002
2003

80.9
81.3
77.0
72.5
73.5

81.1
81.2
76.2
72.3
73.4

80.7
81.4
75.7
72.9
73.5

80.6
81.6
75.4
73.0
72.9

81.1
81.2
74.6
73.3
72.8

80.5
81.0
74.0
74.0
73.2

80.6
80.6
73.7
73.7
73.4

80.8
79.8
73.1
73.9
73.4

80.1
79.8
72.7
73.9
74.0

80.9
79.2
72.2
73.4
74.1

81.2
78.7
72.0
73.6
75.0

81.5
77.8
72.1
73.3
75.1

80.9
81.3
76.3
72.6
73.5

80.7
81.3
74.7
73.4
73.0

80.5
80.0
73.2
73.8
73.6

81.2
78.6
72.1
73.4
74.7

80.8
80.3
74.1
73.3
73.7

2004
2005
2006

75.3
78.6
80.5

76.0
78.9
80.2

76.1
78.5
80.3

76.7
78.4
80.9

77.3
78.6
80.5

76.9
78.7
81.1

77.4
78.6
81.2

77.9
78.8
81.2

77.5
78.2
80.8

78.1
79.4

78.0
79.9

78.3
80.1

75.8
78.7
80.3

77.0
78.5
80.8

77.6
78.5
81.1

78.2
79.8

77.1
78.9

1. Refer to note on cover page.
2. Quarterly changes are at annual rates. Annual changes are calculated from annual averages.

14

Table 13
H ISTORICAL S TATISTICS FOR I NDUSTRIAL P RODUCTION , C APACITY,
High-Technology Industries1

AND

U TILIZATION : Total Industry Excluding Selected

Seasonally adjusted

Year

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

Annual

IP (percent
change)2
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988

2.0
-.3
.6
-.5
.0

.3
.5
-.8
1.2
.3

.4
.2
-.7
.2
.2

.5
.0
.0
.5
.4

.4
.1
.1
.6
-.1

.2
.0
-.2
.4
.2

.2
-.5
.3
.5
.1

.0
.5
-.2
.6
.5

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

-.2
-.4
.4
1.4
.6

.3
.3
.4
.5
.2

.1
1.1
.8
.4
.4

11.4
.9
2.3
4.5
3.1

5.0
1.2
-2.7
6.3
2.6

1.6
-.2
.6
6.0
1.5

-.3
2.6
4.0
9.1
2.9

7.9
1.0
.9
4.2
4.4

1989
1990
1991
1992
1993

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

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

.4
.4
-.6
.7
.0

-.1
-.1
.2
.6
.2

-.7
.0
1.0
.3
-.4

.0
.2
1.0
-.2
.2

-1.1
-.2
.0
.7
.3

.9
.3
.1
-.5
-.1

-.4
.1
.9
.1
.4

-.2
-.8
-.2
.6
.6

.3
-1.2
-.2
.3
.3

.7
-.8
-.5
.0
.5

1.8
2.2
-8.1
-1.9
3.0

-2.1
2.4
2.2
6.1
.4

-3.3
1.0
5.4
1.7
1.6

1.0
-6.5
.3
3.0
5.2

.6
.3
-2.0
1.9
2.5

1994
1995
1996
1997
1998

.4
.2
-1.0
-.1
.1

-.1
-.2
1.4
.8
.0

.8
-.1
-.4
.5
-.1

.3
-.2
.8
-.4
.2

.4
.0
.5
.3
.5

.6
.1
.7
.3
-.9

.1
-.5
-.5
.3
-.8

.3
1.2
.4
1.0
2.0

.0
.1
.4
.8
-.6

.7
-.4
-.2
.6
.5

.4
.1
.8
.7
-.3

.9
.2
.4
.1
.1

4.2
3.0
-.3
4.9
1.6

5.3
-1.4
6.1
2.1
1.0

3.4
1.3
2.1
6.1
-.3

5.5
.5
3.5
8.3
2.3

4.0
2.4
1.7
4.2
3.1

1999
2000
2001
2002
2003

.2
-.3
-.8
.8
.4

.2
.0
-.6
-.1
-.2

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

-.2
.4
.0
.4
-.8

.6
-.1
-.7
.4
-.1

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

.3
-.5
-.2
-.3
.4

.4
-.5
-.3
-.1
.0

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

1.2
-.5
-.5
-.5
.0

.3
-.2
-.5
.2
.9

.6
-.5
.0
-.6
.2

.9
.7
-6.7
3.4
-.6

.3
1.7
-4.0
6.2
-4.3

1.2
-3.0
-4.0
1.3
2.6

5.6
-2.9
-4.8
-2.4
4.4

1.2
1.1
-4.1
.3
-.3

2004
2005
2006

.3
.0
-.1

.7
.3
.3

-.4
-.1
.4

.8
-.2
.7

.9
.1
.0

-.7
.8
1.0

.5
-.1
.2

.2
.1
-.1

-.3
-1.5
-.7

.8
1.1

.2
.8

.6
.9

4.3
2.4
4.6

4.6
.8
5.9

1.6
.1
2.4

3.8
4.2

3.2
2.3

IP (2002=100)
2004
2005
2006

101.2
104.5
106.9

101.9
104.9
107.2

101.6
104.8
107.7

102.4
104.6
108.5

103.3
104.7
108.4

102.6
105.5
109.5

103.1
105.4
109.8

103.3
105.5
109.7

103.0
104.0
108.9

103.8
105.2

104.0
106.0

104.6
107.0

101.6
104.7
107.3

102.7
104.9
108.8

103.1
105.0
109.5

104.1
106.1

102.9
105.3

Capacity
(percent of
2002 output)
2004
2005
2006

130.1
130.5
131.1

130.1
130.5
131.3

130.1
130.6
131.4

130.1
130.6
131.6

130.2
130.7
131.7

130.2
130.7
131.9

130.2
130.8
132.0

130.3
130.8
132.2

130.3
130.9
132.4

130.4
130.9

130.4
131.0

130.4
131.0

130.1
130.5
131.3

130.2
130.7
131.7

130.3
130.8
132.2

130.4
131.0

130.2
130.7

Utilization
(percent)
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988

79.2
79.6
80.1
79.2
83.7

79.4
79.9
79.3
80.0
84.0

79.7
79.8
78.7
80.1
84.1

80.1
79.7
78.7
80.4
84.4

80.3
79.6
78.7
80.8
84.3

80.4
79.4
78.5
81.1
84.5

80.5
78.9
78.7
81.4
84.5

80.4
79.1
78.4
81.9
84.9

80.1
79.3
78.5
81.9
84.5

79.9
78.9
78.7
83.1
84.9

80.1
79.0
79.0
83.4
85.0

80.0
79.7
79.6
83.7
85.3

79.5
79.8
79.4
79.8
83.9

80.3
79.6
78.6
80.8
84.4

80.4
79.1
78.5
81.7
84.6

80.0
79.2
79.1
83.4
85.1

80.0
79.4
78.9
81.4
84.5

1989
1990
1991
1992
1993

85.5
82.7
80.1
79.0
81.3

85.0
83.2
79.3
79.5
81.5

85.2
83.5
78.8
80.0
81.3

84.9
83.3
78.8
80.5
81.5

84.2
83.2
79.5
80.6
81.0

84.1
83.3
80.2
80.4
81.2

83.0
83.0
80.1
81.0
81.3

83.6
83.1
80.1
80.5
81.2

83.2
83.1
80.7
80.5
81.4

82.9
82.4
80.5
80.9
81.9

83.0
81.2
80.2
81.1
82.1

83.4
80.5
79.7
81.0
82.4

85.2
83.1
79.4
79.5
81.4

84.4
83.2
79.5
80.5
81.2

83.3
83.1
80.3
80.6
81.3

83.1
81.4
80.1
81.0
82.1

84.0
82.7
79.8
80.4
81.5

1994
1995
1996
1997
1998

82.6
85.0
82.1
83.4
84.2

82.5
84.6
83.1
83.8
83.9

83.1
84.4
82.6
84.0
83.6

83.2
84.0
83.1
83.4
83.6

83.5
83.8
83.3
83.4
83.7

83.9
83.7
83.7
83.3
82.8

83.8
83.1
83.1
83.2
81.9

83.9
83.8
83.3
83.8
83.3

83.8
83.7
83.5
84.1
82.6

84.2
83.2
83.1
84.3
82.8

84.4
83.1
83.5
84.6
82.3

85.0
83.1
83.7
84.4
82.2

82.7
84.6
82.6
83.7
83.9

83.5
83.8
83.4
83.4
83.4

83.8
83.5
83.3
83.7
82.6

84.5
83.1
83.4
84.5
82.5

83.6
83.8
83.2
83.8
83.1

1999
2000
2001
2002
2003

82.2
81.9
78.9
75.6
76.7

82.1
81.8
78.4
75.4
76.6

81.9
81.8
78.0
76.1
76.4

81.5
82.0
78.0
76.3
75.8

81.9
81.8
77.3
76.6
75.8

81.4
81.7
76.9
77.3
76.0

81.4
81.2
76.7
77.0
76.3

81.6
80.7
76.4
77.0
76.3

81.0
80.9
76.0
76.9
76.8

81.9
80.4
75.5
76.6
76.8

82.0
80.2
75.1
76.8
77.5

82.3
79.7
75.0
76.3
77.6

82.1
81.8
78.4
75.7
76.6

81.6
81.9
77.4
76.7
75.9

81.4
80.9
76.4
77.0
76.4

82.1
80.1
75.2
76.6
77.3

81.8
81.2
76.9
76.5
76.5

2004
2005
2006

77.8
80.1
81.5

78.4
80.3
81.7

78.1
80.3
81.9

78.7
80.1
82.4

79.3
80.1
82.3

78.8
80.7
83.1

79.2
80.6
83.1

79.3
80.7
83.0

79.0
79.5
82.3

79.6
80.3

79.7
80.9

80.2
81.6

78.1
80.2
81.7

78.9
80.3
82.6

79.2
80.2
82.8

79.8
81.0

79.0
80.4

1. Selected high-technology industries are computers, communications equipment, and semiconductors and related electronic components.
2. Quarterly changes are at annual rates. Annual changes are calculated from annual averages.

15

Table 14
H ISTORICAL S TATISTICS FOR I NDUSTRIAL P RODUCTION , C APACITY, AND U TILIZATION : Manufacturing1 Excluding Selected
High-Technology Industries2
Seasonally adjusted

Year

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

June

July

Aug.

Sept.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

Annual

IP (percent
change)3
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988

1.8
-.5
1.3
-.4
-.2

.9
-.3
-.7
1.4
.1

.4
.9
-.3
.1
.2

.4
-.1
.4
.4
.7

.1
.1
.1
.7
-.2

.3
.1
-.2
.3
.0

.4
-.4
.2
.5
.0

.1
.6
.2
.3
.1

-.3
.2
.2
.5
.3

.4
-.3
.3
1.5
.6

.3
.6
.4
.5
.3

.3
.4
.8
.5
.4

11.4
-.2
4.7
4.8
2.0

4.4
1.8
-.3
5.8
3.4

2.0
.7
1.2
5.5
.6

1.9
2.4
4.2
10.4
4.7

8.4
1.4
2.2
4.6
4.4

1989
1990
1991
1992
1993

.9
-.3
-.8
-.8
1.0

-1.0
1.4
-.8
.9
.0

.0
.3
-.7
.9
-.2

.0
-.2
.3
.4
.5

-.8
.0
.7
.6
-.1

.1
.2
1.1
.1
-.2

-1.3
-.2
.3
.7
.2

.9
.3
.2
-.5
-.2

-.3
-.1
1.1
-.1
.5

-.3
-.8
-.2
.4
.7

.1
-1.2
-.3
.3
.3

.1
-.8
-.3
-.2
.5

2.1
3.7
-9.8
-1.1
3.8

-3.7
2.1
1.5
6.9
.8

-4.0
.2
7.1
2.5
.5

-.4
-7.2
1.0
1.5
5.8

.4
.0
-2.6
2.6
2.6

1994
1995
1996
1997
1998

.1
.2
-1.2
-.2
.4

.0
-.3
1.3
1.0
-.1

1.1
-.1
-.5
.9
-.3

.5
-.4
1.0
-.7
.4

.6
-.3
.4
.5
.4

.2
.2
.8
.4
-1.1

.3
-.8
-.1
.1
-.9

.5
.9
.4
1.3
2.4

.0
.5
.5
.7
-.7

.8
-.4
-.4
.5
.7

.6
-.1
.8
.9
-.1

.9
.2
.6
.2
.2

3.9
2.9
-1.8
6.0
2.8

7.0
-2.4
6.9
2.6
.1

4.0
.1
4.1
6.7
-.7

6.8
.9
3.3
8.8
4.1

4.4
2.5
1.5
4.9
3.5

1999
2000
2001
2002
2003

-.1
-.3
-.7
.7
.3

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

-.5
.3
-.4
.9
.1

-.1
.4
.1
.1
-.9

.8
-.5
-.8
.5
-.2

-.7
.0
-.4
1.0
.5

.0
-.3
.0
-.4
.1

.7
-.9
-.7
.1
-.3

-.6
.3
-.3
-.1
.9

1.4
-.4
-.7
-.7
.0

.4
-.6
-.2
.1
1.2

.4
-.9
.2
-.6
.0

.8
.6
-7.8
4.2
-1.5

.3
.8
-4.1
5.3
-3.9

.4
-3.7
-4.3
1.7
2.1

7.1
-4.9
-4.5
-3.2
5.3

1.4
.9
-4.9
.3
-.6

2004
2005
2006

.1
.3
.9

.8
.4
-.3

.1
-.4
.4

.9
-.1
.8

.7
.3
-.3

-.7
.2
.8

.8
.0
.2

.5
.2
.1

-.5
-.7
-.5

.9
1.8

.0
.6

.4
.3

4.4
2.8
4.7

6.0
.3
4.2

2.9
.5
2.3

3.6
8.0

3.8
2.8

IP (2002=100)
2004
2005
2006

100.9
105.2
109.0

101.7
105.6
108.6

101.8
105.2
109.0

102.7
105.1
109.9

103.5
105.4
109.5

102.7
105.7
110.5

103.5
105.6
110.7

104.1
105.9
110.8

103.5
105.2
110.3

104.5
107.1

104.5
107.7

104.9
108.0

101.5
105.3
108.8

103.0
105.4
110.0

103.7
105.6
110.6

104.6
107.6

103.2
106.1

Capacity
(percent of
2002 output)
2004
2005
2006

133.0
133.2
134.2

133.0
133.3
134.4

133.0
133.4
134.5

133.0
133.5
134.8

133.0
133.5
135.0

133.0
133.6
135.2

133.0
133.7
135.4

133.0
133.8
135.7

133.1
133.8
135.9

133.1
133.9

133.1
134.0

133.2
134.1

133.0
133.3
134.4

133.0
133.5
135.0

133.0
133.8
135.7

133.1
134.0

133.0
133.6

Utilization
(percent)
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988

77.7
78.6
79.3
79.1
83.6

78.4
78.2
78.6
80.1
83.6

78.6
78.7
78.3
80.0
83.8

78.9
78.5
78.5
80.2
84.4

78.9
78.4
78.5
80.7
84.3

79.0
78.3
78.3
80.8
84.3

79.2
77.8
78.4
81.2
84.3

79.1
78.2
78.5
81.4
84.3

78.7
78.2
78.6
81.7
84.5

78.9
77.8
78.7
82.9
85.0

79.0
78.2
79.0
83.3
85.1

79.1
78.4
79.5
83.7
85.4

78.3
78.5
78.7
79.7
83.7

78.9
78.4
78.5
80.6
84.3

79.0
78.1
78.5
81.4
84.4

79.0
78.1
79.1
83.3
85.2

78.8
78.3
78.7
81.3
84.4

1989
1990
1991
1992
1993

86.0
81.8
78.7
78.0
80.5

85.0
82.8
78.0
78.6
80.4

84.8
82.9
77.3
79.2
80.2

84.7
82.6
77.4
79.4
80.5

83.8
82.5
77.9
79.8
80.3

83.7
82.5
78.6
79.8
80.0

82.5
82.2
78.8
80.3
80.1

83.1
82.3
78.8
79.8
79.9

82.6
82.1
79.6
79.7
80.2

82.2
81.3
79.3
79.9
80.7

82.2
80.2
79.0
80.1
80.9

82.1
79.5
78.7
79.8
81.2

85.3
82.5
78.0
78.6
80.4

84.1
82.5
78.0
79.7
80.2

82.7
82.2
79.1
79.9
80.1

82.2
80.3
79.0
79.9
81.0

83.6
81.9
78.5
79.5
80.4

1994
1995
1996
1997
1998

81.3
84.4
80.6
82.2
83.4

81.2
84.0
81.6
82.7
83.1

82.0
83.7
80.9
83.1
82.5

82.3
83.2
81.6
82.2
82.5

82.7
82.8
81.8
82.3
82.5

82.7
82.8
82.3
82.3
81.4

82.9
81.9
82.0
82.1
80.4

83.2
82.5
82.2
82.8
82.1

83.0
82.7
82.4
83.1
81.3

83.5
82.2
81.8
83.2
81.6

83.9
81.9
82.3
83.6
81.3

84.4
81.8
82.5
83.4
81.3

81.5
84.0
81.0
82.7
83.0

82.6
82.9
81.9
82.3
82.1

83.0
82.3
82.2
82.6
81.3

83.9
81.9
82.2
83.4
81.4

82.8
82.8
81.8
82.7
81.9

1999
2000
2001
2002
2003

81.0
80.6
76.5
73.8
74.7

81.2
80.3
76.0
73.7
74.4

80.6
80.4
75.6
74.3
74.5

80.3
80.6
75.6
74.4
73.9

80.8
80.1
75.0
74.8
73.8

80.1
80.0
74.6
75.5
74.2

79.9
79.6
74.5
75.2
74.3

80.2
78.8
74.0
75.3
74.1

79.6
78.9
73.7
75.3
74.8

80.6
78.4
73.2
74.8
74.8

80.8
77.9
73.1
74.9
75.7

81.0
77.1
73.3
74.5
75.8

80.9
80.4
76.0
73.9
74.6

80.4
80.2
75.0
74.9
73.9

79.9
79.1
74.1
75.3
74.4

80.8
77.8
73.2
74.8
75.4

80.5
79.4
74.6
74.7
74.6

2004
2005
2006

75.9
78.9
81.2

76.5
79.2
80.8

76.6
78.9
81.0

77.2
78.8
81.5

77.8
79.0
81.2

77.3
79.1
81.7

77.8
79.0
81.8

78.2
79.2
81.7

77.8
78.6
81.2

78.5
80.0

78.5
80.4

78.8
80.6

76.3
79.0
81.0

77.4
78.9
81.5

78.0
78.9
81.5

78.6
80.3

77.6
79.3

1. Refer to note on cover page.
2. Selected high-technology industries are computers, communications equipment, and semiconductors and related electronic components.
3. Quarterly changes are at annual rates. Annual changes are calculated from annual averages.

16

Aggregation Methodology and Weights. The aggregation method
for the IP index is a version of the Fisher-ideal index formula. (For a
detailed discussion of the aggregation method, see Federal Reserve
Bulletin February 1997 and March 2001.) In the IP index, series that
measure the output of an individual industry are combined using
weights derived from their proportion in the total value-added output
of all industries. The IP index, which extends back to 1919, is built as
a chain-type index since 1972. The current formula for the growth in
monthly IP (or any of the sub-aggregates) since 1972 is the geometric
mean of the change in output (I), and, as can be seen below, is
computed using the unit value added estimate for the current month
(pm ) and the estimate for previous month:

E XPLANATORY N OTE
The Industrial Production and Capacity Utilization statistical
release, which is published around the middle of the month, reports
measures of output, capacity, and capacity utilization in
manufacturing, mining, and the electric and gas utilities industries.
More detailed descriptions of industrial production and capacity
utilization are available at www.federalreserve.gov/releases/G17 at
the Board’s World Wide Web site. In addition, files containing data
shown in the release, more detailed series that were published in the
G.17 prior to December 2000, and historical data are available at the
Board’s Web site. Instructions for searching for and downloading
specific series are provided as well. For paid access to the data files
through the Department of Commerce’s Economic Bulletin Board or
World Wide Web site, please call STAT-USA at 1-800-STAT-USA or
202-452-1986. Diskettes containing historical data and the data
published in this release also are available from the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Publications Services,
202-452-3245.

A
Im
A
Im−1

s P
P
I p
I p
P m m−1 × P m m
=
Im−1 pm−1

Im−1 pm

The IP proportions (typically shown in the first column of the relevant
tables in the G.17 release) are estimates of the industries’ relative
contributions to overall growth in the following year. For example, the
relative importance weight of the motor vehicles and parts industry is
about 8 percent. If output in this industry increased 10 percent in a
month, then this gain would boost growth in total IP by 8/10
percentage point (0.08 x 10% = 0.8%). To assist users with
calculations, the Federal Reserve’s web site provides supplemental
monthly statistics that represent the exact proportionate contribution
of a monthly change in a component index to the monthly change in
the total index (www.federalreserve.gov/
releases/G17/ipdisk/ipweights.sa).

I NDUSTRIAL P RODUCTION
Coverage. The industrial production (IP) index measures the real
output of the manufacturing, mining, and electric and gas utilities
industries; the reference period for the index is 2002. Manufacturing
consists of those industries included in the North American Industry
Classification System, or NAICS, definition of manufacturing plus
those industries-logging and newspaper, periodical, book and
directory publishing-that have traditionally been considered to be
manufacturing and included in the industrial sector. For the period
since 1997, the total IP index has been constructed from 300
individual series based on the 2002 North American Industrial
Classification System (NAICS) codes. These individual series are
classified in two ways: (1) market groups, and (2) industry groups.
Market groups consist of products and materials. Total products are
the aggregate of final products, such as consumer goods and
equipment, and nonindustrial supplies (which are inputs to
nonindustrial sectors). Materials are inputs in the manufacture of
products. Major industry groups include three-digit NAICS industries
and aggregates of these industries—for example, durable and
nondurable manufacturing, mining, and utilities. A complete
description of the market and industry structures, including details
regarding series classification, relative importance weights, and data
sources, is available on the Board’s web site
(www.federalreserve.gov/releases/G17/About.html). Changes in
output for the market and industry groups are summarized in table 1
and the levels of output (in index form) are shown in table 4. Special
aggregates, that highlight the relative importance and contributions of
several key industries, such as high-technology and motor vehicles,
are summarized in tables 2 and 5. For a detailed description of the
contents of the statistical tables, see below.

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.) For
the first estimate of output for a given month, about 70 percent of the
source data (in value-added terms) are available; the fraction of
available source data increases to about 85 percent for estimates in the
second month that the estimate is published, 96 percent in the third
month, and 97 percent in the fourth month. Data availability by data
type is summarized in the table below:
Availability of Monthly IP Data in Publication Window
(Percent of value added in 2004)
Month of estimate

Source data. 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 and from government agencies; data of this
type are used to estimate monthly IP wherever possible and
appropriate. Production indexes for a few industries are derived by
dividing estimated nominal output (calculated using unit production
or sales and unit values) by a corresponding Fisher price index; the
most notable of these fall within the high-technology grouping and
include computers, communications equipment, and semiconductors.
When suitable data on physical product are not available, estimates of
output are based on production-worker hours by industry. Data on
hours worked by production workers are collected in the monthly
establishment survey conducted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The factors used to convert inputs into estimates of production are
based on historical relationships between the inputs and the
comprehensive annual data used to benchmark the IP indexes; these
factors also may be influenced by technological or cyclical
developments. The annual data used in benchmarking 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 United States
Geological Survey of the Department of the Interior; and publications
of the Department of Energy.

Type of data

1st

2nd

3rd

4th

Physical product

25

40

51

52

Production-worker hours

45

45

45

45

IP data received

70

85

96

97

IP data estimated

30

15

4

3

The physical product group includes series based on either monthly or
quarterly data. As can be seen in the first line of the table, in the first
month, a physical product indicator is available for about half of the
series (in terms of value added) that ultimately are based on physical
product data (25 percent out of total of 52 percent). Of the 25 percent,
about two-thirds (17 percent of total IP) include series that are derived
from weekly physical product data and for which actual monthly data
may lag up to several months. On average, quarterly product data are
received for the third estimate of industrial production. Specifically,
quarterly data are available for the second estimate of the last month
of a quarter, the third estimate of the second month of a quarter, and
the fourth estimate of the first month of a quarter. About 3 percent of
the source data for monthly IP—all physical product measures—are
available too late for direct inclusion in the current index and are
incorporated at the time of an annual historical revision.
Seasonal adjustment. Individual series are seasonally adjusted using
Census X-12 ARIMA. For series based on production-worker hours,
the current seasonal factors were estimated with data through April

17

2006; for other series, the factors were estimated with data through at
least June 2005. Series are pre-adjusted for the effects of holidays or
the business cycle when appropriate. For the data since 1972, all
seasonally adjusted aggregate indexes are calculated by aggregating
the seasonally adjusted indexes of the individual series.

related capacity index.
Consistency. A major aim is that the Federal Reserve utilization rates
be consistent over time so that, for example, a rate of 85 percent
means about the same degree of tightness that it meant in the past. A
major task for the Federal Reserve in developing reasonable and
consistent time series of capacity and utilization is dealing with
inconsistencies between the movements of the industrial production
index and the survey-based utilization rates. The McGraw-Hill/DRI
Survey, now discontinued, was the primary source of manufacturing
utilization rates for many years. This was a survey of large companies
that reported, on average, higher utilization rates than those reported
by establishments covered by the SPC (currently the primary source
of factory operating rates) for the fourteen years they overlapped.
Adjustments have been made to keep the industry utilization rates
currently reported by the Federal Reserve roughly in line with rates
formerly reported by McGraw-Hill. As a consequence, the rates
reported by the Federal Reserve tend to be higher than the rates
reported in the SPC.

Reliability. The average revision to the level of the total IP index,
without regard to sign, between the first and the fourth estimates was
0.27 percent during the 1987–2004 period. The average revision to
the percent change in total IP, without regard to sign, from the first to
the fourth estimates was 0.21 percentage point during the 1987–2004
period. In most cases (about 86 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. 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.
C APACITY U TILIZATION

Perspective. Over the 1972–2005 period, the average total industry
utilization rate is 81.0 percent; for manufacturing, the average factory
operating rate has been 79.8 percent. 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 have exceeded 90 percent
only in wartime. The highs and lows in capacity utilization shown in
table 7 are specific to each series and do not all occur in the same
month.

Overview. The Federal Reserve Board constructs estimates of
capacity and capacity utilization for industries in manufacturing,
mining, and electric and gas utilities. For a given industry, the
capacity utilization rate is equal to an output index (seasonally
adjusted) divided by a capacity index. The Federal Reserve Board’s
capacity indexes attempt to capture the concept of sustainable
maximum output—the greatest level of output a plant can maintain
within the framework of a realistic work schedule, after factoring in
normal downtime and assuming sufficient availability of inputs to
operate the capital in place.

R EFERENCES AND R ELEASE DATES
References. The annual revision published in November 2005 is
described in an article published in the Federal Reserve Bulletin, vol.
92, pp. A39–A58. A description of the aggregation methods for
industrial production and capacity utilization is included in an article
in the Federal Reserve Bulletin, vol. 83 (February 1997), pp. 67-92.
The Federal Reserve methodology for constructing industry-level
measures of capital is detailed in “Capital Stock Estimates for
Manufacturing Industries: Methods and Data” by Mike Mohr and
Charles Gilbert (1996), which can be obtained at:
www.federalreserve.gov/releases/g17/capital stock doc-latest.pdf.

Coverage. Capacity indexes are constructed for 85 detailed industries
(67 in manufacturing, 16 in mining, and 2 in utilities), which mostly
correspond to industries at the three- and four-digit NAICS level.
Estimates of capacity and utilization are available for a variety of
groups, including durable and nondurable manufacturing, total
manufacturing, mining, utilities, and total industry. Manufacturing
consists of those industries included in the North American Industry
Classification System, or NAICS, definition of manufacturing plus
those industries—logging and newspaper, periodical, book and
directory publishing—that have traditionally been considered to be
manufacturing and included in the industrial sector. Also, special
aggregates are available, such as high-tech industries and
manufacturing excluding high-tech industries.

Industrial Production—1986 Edition contains a more detailed
description of the other methods used to compile the industrial
production index, plus a history of its development, a glossary of
terms, and a bibliography. The major revisions to the IP indexes and
capacity utilization since 1990 have been described in the Federal
Reserve Bulletin (April 1990, June 1990, June 1993, March 1994,
January 1995, January 1996, February 1997, February 1998, January
1999, March 2000, March 2001, March 2002, April 2003, Winter
2004, Winter 2005).

Source Data. The monthly rates of capacity utilization are designed
to be consistent with both the monthly data on production and the
periodically available data on capacity and utilization. Because there
is no direct monthly information on overall industrial capacity or
utilization rates, the Federal Reserve first estimates annual capacity
indexes from the source data. Capacity data reported in physical units
from government sources (primarily from the U.S. Geological Survey
and the Department of Energy’s Energy Information Administration)
and trade sources are available for portions of several industries in
manufacturing (e.g., paper, industrial chemicals, petroleum refining,
motor vehicles), as well as for electric utilities and mining; these
industries represent about 21 percent of total industrial capacity.
When physical product data are unavailable for manufacturing
industries, capacity indexes are based on responses to the Bureau of
the Census’s Survey of Plant Capacity (SPC); these industries account
for a bit less than 75 percent of total industry capacity. In the absence
of utilization data for a few mining and petroleum series, capacity is
based on trends through peaks in production (roughly 4 percent of
total industry capacity). A detailed description of the methodology
used to construct the capacity indexes is available on the Board’s web
site (www.federalreserve.gov/releases/G17/cap notes.html).

Release Schedule
At 9:15 a.m. on
2006: January 17, February 15, March 17, April 14, May 16, June 15,
July 17, August 16, September 15, October 17, November 16, and
December 15.

Aggregation Methodology. Monthly capacity aggregates are
calculated in three steps: (1) utilization aggregates are calculated on
an annual basis through the most recent full year as capacity-weighted
aggregates of individual utilization rates; (2) the annual aggregate
capacity is derived from the corresponding production and utilization
aggregates; (3) the monthly capacity aggregate is obtained by
interpolating with a Fisher index of its constituent monthly capacity
series. Utilization rates for the individual series and aggregates are
calculated by dividing the pertinent monthly production index by the

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