Full text of Survey of Current Business : April 1995
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APRIL 1995 ^ VOLUME 75 NUMBER IN THIS ISSUE . I, . Mid^ecade Strategic Review \ of SEA 3s Economic Accounts;: An Update ; i ; ; J ;| . ; iU;S.' DEPARTMINT OF iGOMMERCE ^ iECONOMlOS ANE» STATISTICS ADMINISTRATION : : v ; '." - " • : . ; i ; '""; ^ BUREAU OF ECONOMIC ANALtsis , : :'; '•• !' i APRIL 1995 VOLUME 75 NUMBER 4 SURVEY of CURRENT BUSINESS SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS. Published monthly by the Bureau of Economic Analysis of the U.S. Department of Commerce. Editorial correspondence should be addressed to the Editor-in-Chief, SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS, Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. Department of Commerce, Washington, DC 20230. Subscriptions to the SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS are maintained, and their prices set, by the Government Printing Office, an agency of the U.S. Congress. Postmaster: Send address changes to: Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402. U*S. Department of Commerce Ronald H, Brown, Secretary ECONOMICS AND STATISTICS ADMINISTRATION Economics and Statistics Administration Everett M. Ehrlich, Under Secretary for Economic Affairs Bureau of Economic Analysis Carol S. Carson, Director J» Steven Landefeld, Deputy Director The GPO order desk number is (202) 512-1800. The subscription complaint desk number is (202) 512-1806. Subscription and single-copy prices: Second-class mail: $34.00 domestic, $42.50 foreign. First-class mail: $71.00. Single copy. $9.00 domestic, $11.25 foreign. Make checks payable to the Superintendent of Documents. Second-class postage paid at Washington, DC and at additional mailing offices. (USPS 337-790). The Secretary of Commerce has determined that the publication of this periodical is necessary in the transaction of the public business required by law of this Department. Editor-in-Chief Executive Editor Douglas R. Fox Leland L Scott Publication Staff: W. Ronnie Foster, M. Gretchen Gibson, Ernestine Ti Gladden, Erk B, Manning THIS ISSUE of the SURVEY went to the printer on May % 1995* It Incorporates data from the following monthly BEA news releases: Gross Domestic Product (April 28), Personal Income and Outlays (May i), and Composite Indexes of Leading, Coincident, and Lagging Indicators (May 3). April 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS TABLE OF CONTENTS (Special in this issue 48 Mid-Decade Strategic Review of BEA's Economic Accounts: An Update As part of its Mid-Decade Strategic Review, BEA has updated the draft plan for maintaining and improving the performance of its national) international, and regional accounts that was published in the February 1995 SURVEY. On March 21,1995, BEA held a conference that provided leading users of the economic accounts with the opportunity to comment on the plan; BEA'S final version of the plan reflects those and other comments. In addition, BEA has outlined the first steps in implementing the plan. l\egularfe eatures 1 Business Situation U.S. economic growth slowed in the first quarter 0/1995. Real GDP increased 2.8 percent, down from 5.1 percent in the fourth quarter of 1994. Inflation remained moderate. In 1994, corporate profits increased $56.9 billiony down from an $80.7 billion increase in 1993. 58 Total and Per Capita Personal Income by State and Region In the fourth quarter of 1994, personal income picked up in 45 States; the largest pickups were in States that had sharp upswings in farm income. For the year i994t increases in per capita personal income in all States exceeded or equaled the increase in U.S. prices. l\eports and statistical presentations 11 National Income and Product Accounts 11 Selected NIPA Tables 30 24 Errata NIPA Charts 32 Selected Annual NIPA Tables, 1993-94 — Continued on next page— H SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 44 Selected Monthly Estimates 46 Gross Product by Industry, 1993 67 Local Area Personal Income, 1991-93 C-1 Business Cycle Indicators C-l C-6 C-7 C-28 C-29 C-30 Data tables Footnotes for pages C-1 through C-5 Charts Business cycle expansions and contractions Cyclical leads and lags for selected indicators Titles and sources of series LOOKING AHEAD 0 National Income and Product Accounts Revision. The upcoming comprehensive, or benchmark, revision of the national income and product accounts (NIPA'S) is scheduled for release at the end of this year (see the box on page 10). The annual NIPA revision covering 1992-94, which would usually have been released this July, will be combined with the comprehensive revision. Twenty-three of the detailed "annual only" tables that usually appear in the July SURVEY as part of the annual revision are published in this issue. # Composite Indexes. BEA has announced that it will seek a private organization to produce and disseminate its monthly cyclical indicators-—including the leading economic indicators—in order to free resources to begin to address the most pressing problems facing the Nation's economic accounts. 0 Gross State Product by Industry. New estimates of gross State product by industry for 1992 and revised estimates for 1991 will be presented in the May SURVEY. These Statelevel estimates are consistent with the national estimates of gross product by industry published in the October 1994 SURVEY. 0 Price Increase for the SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS. The Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, has informed BEA that subscription and single-copy prices for the SURVEY will increase effective June i, 1995. The new prices, which partly reflect the recent increase in U.S. postal rates, are as follows: Domestic second-class mail, $41.00; foreign second-class mail, $51.25; domestic first-class mail, $89.00; single-copy domestic, $11.00; and single-copy foreign, $13.75. April 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April THE BUSINESS SITUATION This article was prepared under the direction of Daniel Larkins. CONOMIC GROWTH slowed in the first quarter of 1995, according to the "advance" estimates of the national income and product accounts (NIPA'S). Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased 2.8 percent in the first quarter after increasing 5.1 percent in the fourth quarter of 1994 and about 4 percent in the second and third quarters of 1994 (chart i).1 The slowdown was evident in the output of goods, services, and structures; within goods, motor vehicle output turned down, and the output of other goods increased less than in the fourth quarter (table i). Real gross domestic purchases increased 3.7 percent after increasing 4.2 percent (table 2). The slowdown in purchases was much smaller than the slowdown in GDP because net exports, which turned down sharply, are included in GDP but not in gross domestic purchases. Personal consumption expenditures slowed sharply, mainly reflecting a downturn in purchases of durable goods. Residential investment decreased after increasing. In contrast, nonresidential fixed investment, which had increased substantially in the fourth quarter, increased even more in the first, and inventory investment swung up sharply, as the rate of accumulation increased to $63.0 bit- lion. Government purchases decreased less than in the fourth quarter. The fixed-weighted price index for gross domestic purchases increased 2.8 percent after increasing 2.6 percent. The fixed-weighted price index for GDP increased 3.1 percent after increasing 2.6 percent. Motor vehicles.—Both output and sales of motor vehicles decreased in the first quarter; inventories increased for the fourth consecutive quarter,, Output decreased 3.9 percent after increasing 13.0 percent (table 3). Final sales to domestic purchasers decreased 11.6 percent after increasing i. Quarterly estimates in the national income and product accounts are expressed at seasonally adjusted annual rates, and quarterly changes are differences between these rates. Quarter-to-quarter percent changes areannualized. Real, or constant-dollar, estimates are expressed in 1987 dollars. Table 1.-Real Gross Domestic Product, by Major Type of Product [Seasonally adjusted at annual rates] Billions of 1 987 dollars Percent change from preceding quarter Change from preceding quarter Level 1995:1 Gross domestic product ... 5,471.7 Goods Motor vehicles Other 2,320.1 233.0 2,087.1 Services Structures 1994 1994 II IV III II III IV 53.0 52.9 66.8 37.9 4.1 4.0 5.1 32.5 34.2 51.4 33.2 -2.3 35.5 6.1 -19.2 9.6 6.4 8.9 6.1 9.5 -12.2 4.8 44.7 29.4 2,667.0 10.0 18.1 484.5 10.4 .7 GROSS DOMESTIC PURCHASES PRICE INDEX (FIXED WEIGHTS) 1995 1995 7.1 44.3 I 13.0 9.1 8.5 4.6 1.5 2.8 1.3 6.9 o 9.2 .6 5.9 I 2.8 5.9 -3.9 7.1 .7 0 NOTE.—Most series are found in NIPA table 1.4. Output of motor vehicles is the sum of auto output and truck output (from tables 8.4 and 8.6, respectively). lllili.iilln SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 2 • April 1995 12.6 percent Autos accounted for most of the decrease in output and all of the decrease in sales. Final sales to consumers decreased 18.8 percent after increasing 21.6 percent; both autos and trucks contributed to the decrease. Factors frequently considered in analyses of consumer spending were mixed in the first quarter: The growth of real disposable personal income slowed, but the unemployment rate decreased, and the Index of Consumer Sentiment (prepared by the University of Michigan's Survey Research Center) reached its highest level in 6 years. Factors specific to motor vehicles purchases also were mixed: Interest rates on new-vehicle loans increased for the fourth consecutive quarter, but manufacturers offered more sales-incentive programs during the first quarter. Final sales to businesses increased 2.2 percent after increasing 14.5 percent. Trucks more than accounted for the first-quarter increase. Nearly all of the first-quarter increase in inventories was accounted for by autos. The Table 2.—Real Gross Domestic Product, Real Gross Domestic Purchases, and Real Final Sales to Domestic Purchasers Percent change from preceding quarter Billions of 1987 dollars Change from preceding quarter Level 1994 1995:1 Gross domestic product Less: Exports of goods and services Plus'. Imports of goods and services Equals: Gross domestic purchases Personal consumption expenditures . . . . Nonresidential fixed investment Residential investment . Government purchases . . . II 52.9 66.8 37.9 696.9 816.6 24.3 32.0 22.6 27.9 31.4 21.5 -1.0 11.6 5,591.4 60.7 58.2 56.9 50.5 33.8 -2.1 -7.7 13.6 5,528.4 26.9 60.3 64.6 36.9 2.0 3,642.0 740.1 227.6 918.6 11.5 14.3 44.9 28.2 12.4 31.9 -3.9 -3.6 1.3 9.2 7.0 3.9 -2.8 26.9 22.1 -3.6 14.9 I IV III I IV 53.0 63.0 1995 1995 III 5,471.7 Less: Change in business inventories Equals1. Final sales to domestic purchasers II 1994 1.3 -9.8 4.0 4.1 16.6 18.9 14.8 15.6 5.1 4.2 3.7 4.6 4.8 2.7 3.1 5.1 14.1 -6.0 6.7 -1.2 -.6 5.9 20.2 11.4 4.4 4.6 2.8 17.6 2.3 -4.1 14 19.3 -6.6 -1.6 NOTE.—Dollar levels are found in NIPA tables 1.2 and 1.6. Percent changes are found in table Table 3.—Motor Vehicle Output, Sales, and Inventories [Seasonally adjusted at annual rates] Billions of 1987 dollars Change from preceding quarter Level 1994 1995:1 Output Autos Trucks . 233.0 128.8 104.2 .. Less1 Exports Autos Trucks . .. .... 22.8 16.4 6.4 Plus' Imports Autos Trucks 68.3 57.6 10.7 Equals: Gross domestic purchases Autos Trucks 278.5 170.0 108.5 Less* Chance in business inventories Autos Trucks 14.1 13.8 Equals: Final sales to domestic purchasers Autos Trucks .3 . NOTE.—Dollar levels for autos and trucks are found in NIPA tables 8.4 and 8.6, respectively. Percent change from preceding quarter 264.4 156.2 108.2 II II IV III -12.2 -9.2 -3.0 4.8 2.4 2.4 -.7 -.6 .1 1.5 1.8 .3 7.7 7.5 .2 3.2 2.7 .5 -3.8 1.1 -2.7 5.4 4.6 .8 -9.2 -5.7 -3.5 6.5 3.3 3.2 4.4 1.9 2.5 2.1 1.4 .7 1995 1994 1995 I IV III I 7.1 2.5 4.6 -19.2 -24.6 8.9 7.8 -.3 11.4 10.2 19.7 -3.9 -6.0 -1.1 13.3 15.5 -7.2 34.9 62.2 -30.4 -51.3 107.4 138.3 .8 3.8 3.2 .6 -20.8 81.1 48.3 2.2 1.2 1.0 .9 .6 .3 70.0 83.9 22.3 21.9 24.4 14.2 -1.8 -2.6 11.1 6.3 4.8 3.1 6.8 -3.7 8.0 -0.5 8.5 -2.3 -2.0 -5.2 -4.6 -.6 9.5 -5.5 10.1 2.6 -10.0 13.3 8.2 13.0 8.0 8.9 5.4 4.3 49.8 12.0 17.3 15.8 19.7 7.1 -10.1 12.6 -1.2 38.7 -11.6 -18.7 0 -2.2 3.1 3.7 -.6 -3.3 -8.3 0 -12.9 -12.8 -13.0 3.2 3.5 2.9 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS inventory-sales ratio for new domestic autos, which is calculated from units data, increased from 2.4 to 2.9, the highest it has been since the fourth quarter of 1989; the traditional industry target is about 2.4. April 1995 Prices of PCE increased 2.6 percent after increasing 2.5 percent. Food prices increased 1.6 percent after increasing 2.8 percent; the deceleration was accounted for by fresh vegetables and nonalcoholic beverages (mainly coffee), both of which changed little after large increases in the fourth quarter. Energy prices increased slightly after almost no change. Prices for PCE other than food and energy increased 3.0 percent after increasing 2.6 percent; most major categories contributed to the step-up. Prices of nonresidential fixed investment increased 1.3 percent after increasing 1.4 percent. Structures increased 2.7 percent, about half as much as in the fourth quarter. Producers' durable equipment increased 0.4 percent after decreasing 0.7 percent; prices of information Prices The fixed-weighted price index for gross domestic purchases increased 2.8 percent in the first quarter after increasing 2.6 percent in the fourth (table 4 and chart 2). Prices of personal consumption expenditures (PCE) and of nonresidential fixed investment increased at about the same rates as in the fourth quarter; prices of government purchases stepped up, and prices of residential investment slowed. First-Quarter 1995 Advance GDP Estimate: Source Data and Assumptions Net exports of goods and services: Exports and imports of goods and services (2); Government purchases: Military outlays (3), other Federal outlays (3), State and local construction put in place (2), and State and local employment (3); GDP prices: Consumer Price Index (3), Producer Price Index (3), price indexes for nonpetroleum merchandise exports and imports (3), and values and quantities of petroleum imports (2). The Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) made assumptions for the source data that were not available. Table A shows the assumptions for key series; a more comprehensive listing of assumptions is available on the Department of Commerce's Economic Bulletin Board or from BEA. The advance GDP estimate for the first quarter is based on the following major source data, some of which are subject to revision. (The number of months for which data were available is shown in parentheses.) Personal consumption expenditures: Sales of retail stores (3) and unit auto and truck sales (3); Nonresidential fixed investment Unit auto and truck sales (3), construction put in place (2), manufacturers' shipments of machinery and equipment (3), and exports and imports of machinery and equipment (2); Residential investment Construction put in place (2) and single-family housing starts (3); Change in business inventories: Manufacturing and trade inventories (2) and unit auto and truck inventories (3); Table A.—Summary of Major Data Assumptions for Advance Estimates, 1995:1 [Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates] 1994 1995 October November December January Fixed investment: Nonresidential structures: Buildings, utilities, and farm: Value of new nonresidential construction put in place Producers' durable equipment: Manufacturers' shipments of complete civilian aircraft Residential structures: Value of new residential construction put in place: 1-unit structures 2-or-more-unit structures Change in business inventories nonfarm: Change in inventories for manufacturing and trade (except nonmerchant wholesalers) for industries other than motor vehicles and equipment in trade Net exports: Exports of merchandise: U S exports of merchandise balance-of-payments basis Imports of merchandise: U S imports of merchandise balance-of-payments basis . .. Net merchandise trade (exports less imports) Government purchases: State and local: Structures: Value of new construction put in place . 1. Assumed. . „ ...... February March 1 141 0 1466 146.6 1467 1470 149.8 13.2 21.2 21.4 18.3 22.0 13.3 153.2 153.1 154.0 152.8 151.8 147.0 15.0 16.3 17.0 17.1 17.0 15.5 80.5 59.0 29.3 96.9 83.4 54.1 5195 537.8 557.9 531.6 5460 5638 700.9 181 4 719.8 712.6 -1547 733.8 -2022 716.3 -1703 736.6 1820 1208 1165 119.8 1179 1163 117.0 1728 4 * April 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS processing equipment were unchanged after decreasing, as computer prices decreased less than in the fourth quarter. Prices of residential investment increased 1.8 percent after increasing 4.5 percent. Prices of government purchases increased 4.5 percent after increasing 3.3 percent. Prices paid by the Federal Government increased 4.5 percent after increasing 3.9 percent; prices of national defense purchases stepped up, and prices of nondefense purchases slowed. These increases reflected a first-quarter pay raise for all Federal i Total Alternative measures :;, Less Food and Energy Table 4.—Fixed-Weighted Price Indexes [Percent change at annual rates; based on seasonally adjusted index numbers (1987=100)] 1994 II Gross domestic product Less* Exports of goods and services . Plus' Imports of goods and services . Equals: Gross domestic purchases Less: Change in business inventories III 1995 IV Personal consumption expenditures Food Energy Other personal consumption expenditures Nonresidential fixed investment Structures Producers' durable equipment Residential investment Government purchases I 2.9 3.0 2.6 3.1 Table 5.—Fixed-Weighted and Alternative Quantity and Price Indexes 2.7 5.8 3.1 8.2 5.4 4.3 6.8 2.6 [Percent change at annual rates; based on seasonally adjusted index numbers (1987=100)] 3.2 3.5 2.6 2.8 3.2 3.5 2.6 2.8 2.8 1.3 -.8 3.4 27 20 31 2.7 4.9 3.6 5.5 2.5 2.8 .1 2.6 1.4 5.2 .7 4.5 3.3 2.6 1.6 .8 3.0 13 2.7 .4 1.8 4.5 3.3 50.0 -18.3 5.9 5.5 4.2 7.7 . 79.6 3.4 10.4 2.8 2.7 4.6 17 6.3 3.0 8.9 17.3 3.1 1995 1994 II NOTE.—Percent changes in major aggregates are found in NIPA table 8.1. Most index number levels are found in tables 7.1 and 7.2. For the first quarter of 1995, BEA'S chaintype annual-weighted measure of real GDP increased 2.1 percent, 0.7 percentage point less than the featured fixed-1987-weighted measure; the benchmark-years-weighted alternative measure increased 2.2 percent (table 5). Most of the difference between the fixed-weighted and alternative measures was accounted for by a strong increase in purchases of computers, a product whose prices have decreased steadily since 1987. In the fourth quarter of 1994, the chain-type measure increased 4.0 percent, 1.1 percentage point less than the fixed-weighted measure; the benchmark-years measure increased 4.1 percent. Almost all of the difference between the fixed- . Equals: Final sales to domestic purchasers .... Addenda: Merchandise imports . Petroleum and products Other merchandise employees; excluding the pay raise, prices paid by the Federal Government would have decelerated instead of accelerating. Prices of State and local government purchases increased 4.4 percent after increasing 2.8 percent. The price index for GDP, which measures prices paid for goods and services produced in the United States, increased 3.1 percent after increasing 2.6 percent. This index, unlike the index for gross domestic purchases, includes the prices of exports and excludes the prices of imports. Export prices increased 6i8 percent after increasing 5.4 percent. Import prices increased 2.6 percent after increasing 4.3 percent The price of imported petroleum and petroleum products turned up sharply, but prices of "other" merchandise imports—especially of foods, feeds, and beverages and of automotive components—slowed. Gross domestic product: Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Gross domestic purchases: Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights 4.1 III IV I 4.2 41 4.0 3.6 36 5.1 4.0 41 2.8 2.1 22 29 2.7 27 30 2.8 27 26 2.5 26 31 3.1 31 3.2 3.1 3.1 3.5 3.2 32 2.6 2.4 2.5 2.8 2.7 2.8 NOTE.—Percent changes are found in NIPA table 8.1. Index number levels are found in tables 7.1 and 7.2. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS weighted and alternative measures was also due to a strong increase in purchases of computers. The chain-type measure of gross domestic purchases prices increased 2.7 percent in the first quarter, o.i percentage point less than the fixedweighted measure; the benchmark-years measure increased 2.8 percent, the same as the fixedweighted measure,, In the fourth quarter of 1994, both of the alternative measures had increased less than the fixed-weighted measure: The chaintype measure had increased 2.4 percent—0.2 percentage point less than the fixed-weighted measure—and the benchmark-years measure had increased 2.5 percent. Personal income April 1995 a 9.2-percent increase; the slowdown mainly reflected smaller increases in wages and salaries and in farm proprietors' income. The personal saving rate (saving as a percentage of current-dollar DPI) jumped from 4.6 percent to 5.2 percent—the highest rate in more than 2 years. Personal income increased $106.5 billion after increasing $122.1 billion (table 6). Wage and salary disbursements increased $46.8 billion after increasing $62.5 billion. The service and distributive industries accounted for most of the slowdown; manufacturing and other commodityproducing industries also slowed, while government and government enterprises accelerated. In most private industries, the first-quarter slow- Real disposable personal income (DPI) increased 4.4 percent in the first quarter after increasing 7.5 percent in the fourth (chart 3). Currentdollar DPI slowed to a 7.o-percent increase after Table 6.—Personal Income and Its Disposition Level Change from preceding quarter 1994 1995: 1 Wage and salary disbursements Commodity-producing industries Manufacturing Other Distributive industries Service industries Government and government enterprises Selected Personal Income and Saving Measures Other labor income Proprietors' income Farm Nonfarm . . . . ... ... . ... Rental income of persons Personal dividend income .... Personal interest income , Transfer payments to persons Less: Personal contributions for social insurance Personal income • Parent 18 Less: Personal tax and nontax payments 110.6 CHANGE IN REAL DPI Equals: Disposable personal income .. Less: Personal outlays Equals: Personal saving 8 , 1995 I II III IV 3,403.2 848.8 638.8 210.0 778.8 1,160.0 615.6 48.9 9.7 3.4 6.3 13.9 19.2 6.2 36.7 10.2 5.5 4.7 11.0 13.1 2.5 62.5 15.5 11.2 4.3 16.1 26.2 4.6 46.8 11.5 9.3 2.2 9.2 19.5 6.6 399.6 5.2 5.3 5.0 10.9 493.8 45.1 448.7 .3 -7.9 8.1 -4.3 -9.5 5.2 18.7 11.9 6.9 8.1 3.4 4.7 25.6 205.5 724.5 18.8 6.0 18.3 -1.5 5.2 24.8 -3.6 5.8 26.9 -3.4 2.8 23.4 1,004.6 10.2 11.4 10.7 24.9 293.7 3.6 3.0 3.7 7.1 5,963,1 104.1 74.6 122.1 106.5 774.3 23.4 -2.3 10.6 19.6 5,188.8 80.7 76.8 111.6 86.9 4,918.8 55.1 74.6 82.3 49.5 270.0 25.6 2.2 29.3 37.4 1.5 -2.1 15 0 .8 3.0 2.9 2.7 Addenda: Special factors in personal income: -H5 In wages and salaries: Federal Government and Postal Service pay adjustments, including "buyouts" Profit sharing and bonus pay ..' -10 In other labor income: Employer pension contributions 0 0 0 6.3 In farm proprietors' income: Agricultural subsidy payments -2.9 -7.3 7.2 2.2 .1 0 0 -.1 0 0 1.2 0 0 -1.2 10.2 5.1 0 0 0 3.9 In transfer payments to persons: Social security retroactive payments Cost-of-living increases in Federal transfer payments Earned Income Tax Credit payments 1992 1993 oKte^^ 1994 199S , In personal contributions for social insurance: Social security rate and base changes and increase in premium for supplementary medical insurance and in medicare taxable wage base NOTE.-Most dollar levels are found in NIPA table 2.1. IVA Inventory valuation adjustment CCAdj Capital consumption adjustment SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 BEA Estimates of Wages and Salaries for 1994 The annual change from 1993 to 1994 in the national income and product accounts (NIPA'S) estimate of wage and salary disbursements is about $14 billion more than the change in the U.S. total of the State estimates that appear in this issue of the SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS. As explained below, the difference mainly reflects the incorporation in the State estimates of newly available source data that are more accurate and more comprehensive; these data will be incorporated into the NIPA'S in the upcoming comprehensive revision. The NIPA estimate for 1994, which appears in table 2.1 of the "Selected NIPA Tables," is based primarily on national data on (i) total employment and (2) average weekly hours and average hourly earnings of production and nonsupervisory workers; the data are from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) monthly establishment survey. The State estimates for 1994 are based primarily down was the result of a modest downturn in average weekly hours and a slowing in average hourly earnings. In government, a pay raise for Federal civilian and military employees more than accounted for the acceleration. Farm proprietors' income increased $3.4 billion after increasing $11.9 billion. Farm subsidies increased $2.2 billion after increasing $7.2 billion; the slowdown reflected smaller payments made under the Conservation Reserve Program. Other farm income increased $1.2 billion after increasing $4.7 billion; the slowdown reflected downturns in crop output and crop prices. Personal interest income and nonfarm proprietors' income increased somewhat less than in the fourth quarter. Rental income decreased about as much as in the fourth quarter. Other labor income increased $10.9 billion after increasing $5.0 billion; the first-quarter increase reflected the inclusion of a $6.3 billion pension plan contribution by a motor vehicle manufacturing firm. Transfer payments to persons increased $24.9 billion after increasing $10.7 billion. The stepup reflected cost-of-living adjustments to benefits under social security and other Federal retirement and income support programs, increases in veterans compensation and benefits, and increases in Earned Income Tax Credit program payments. Personal tax and nontax payments increased $19.6 billion after increasing $10.6 billion. The first-quarter step-up primarily reflected 1995 payments for 1994 income tax liabilities, which had been increased by provisions of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993 on BLS tabulations of wages and salaries of employees covered by unemployment insurance tabulations for the first three quarters and on BEA estimates for the fourth quarter. (The U.S. total of the State estimates for the first three quarters of 1994 published in the January 1995 SURVEY was based primarily on the monthly national establishment survey data.) In July, as part of the regular quarterly revision of State personal income, the 1994 State estimates will be revised to incorporate the fourth-quarter 1994 unemploymentinsurance tabulations. In December, as part of the comprehensive revision of the NIPA'S, the 1994 national estimate will be revised to incorporate the four quarters of unemployment-insurance tabulations. i. These tabulations would usually be incorporated into the NIPA estimates in July as part of the annual NIPA revision; however, this year's annual revision will be combined with the comprehensive NIPA revision. Corporate Profits and Property Income in 1994 Profits from current production increased $56.9 billion in 1994, to $542.7 billion, after increasing $80.7 billion in 1993 (table 7). 2 2. Profits from current production is estimated as the sum of profits before tax, the inventory valuation adjustment (IVA), and the capital consumption adjustment (ccAdj); it is shown in NIPA tables 1.14,1.16, and 6.i6c as "Corporate profits with IVA and CCAdj." Table 7.—Corporate Profits Level Change from preceding year 1995 1994 1995 Billions of dollars Profits from current production Domestic industries . Financial Nonfinancial Rest of the world IVA . CCAdj Profits before tax Profits tax liability Profits after tax Cash flow from current production Profits by industry: Corporate profits with IVA Domestic industries Financial . . . Nonfinancial Manufacturing Trade Transportation and public utilities Other?.. Rest of the world Receipts (inflows) Payments (outflows) ..... 542.7 482.3 88.3 394.0 60.5 . .... -19.5 80.7 76.0 21.6 54.3 4.7 .2 56.9 61.8 -1.2 63.1 -4.8 -13.3 8.2 524.5 202.5 322.0 13.8 66.5 33.5 33.0 567.3 37.6 38.6 505.0 444.6 104.0 340.6 145.6 66.8 62.2 21.8 40.4 19.7 48.8 53.6 37.7 67.6 72.3 55.1 60.5 84.2 23.7 6.4 9.4 4.9 4.7 8.8 4.1 62.1 29.3 32.8 .3 53.3 31.4 6.4 7.3 8.2 -4.8 10.0 14.8 Dollars Unit price, costs, and profits of domestic nonfinancial corporations: Unit price Unit labor cost Unit nonlabor cost Unit profits from current production 1.171 .766 .278 .126 .009 .001 -.005 .013 .012 .002 .001 .014 NOTE.-Levels of these and other profits series are found in NIPA tables 1.14, 1.16, 6.16C, and 7.15. IVA Inventory valuation adjustment CCAdj Capital consumption adjustment SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS Profits from the domestic operations of nonfinancial corporations increased $63.1 billion after increasing $54.3 billion. Real gross product of these corporations increased 6.1 percent after increasing 5.0 percent, and profits per unit of real product increased substantially in both years. Profits from the domestic operations of financial corporations decreased $1.2 billion after increasing $21.6 billion. Profits from the rest of the world decreased $4.8 billion after increasing $4.7 billion in 1993. Cash flow from current production, a profitsrelated measure of internally generated funds available to corporations for investment, increased $38.6 billion, up slightly from 1993. However, cash flow as a percentage of nonresidential fixed investment—an indication of the adequacy of internally generated funds—was 81.3 percent in 1994, down from 85.8 percent in 1993 but still much higher than its /2.1-percent average in the I98o's. Industry profits show a picture similar to that shown by current-production measures. 3 Profits from domestic operations of nonfinancial corporations increased more than in 1993; profits from domestic operations of financial corporations changed little after a large increase; and profits from the rest of the world turned down. Most of the step-up in nonfinancial profits was accounted for by manufacturing industries, especially by manufacturers of electronic equipment, of food, and of "other nondurable goods." Petroleum refiners posted the biggest slowdown among manufacturing industries. In contrast to the step-up in manufacturing profits, profits in trade increased the same amount as in 1993, and profits 3. Industry profits are estimated as the sum of profits before tax and the inventory valuation adjustment; they are shown in NIPA table 6.i6c. Estimates of the capital consumption adjustment by industry do not exist. Rates of Return The rate of return discussed in the text (beginning on page 9) is measured as the ratio of property income to the value of net reproducible assets. Property income is the sum of profits from current production—corporate profits with inventory valuation adjustment and capital consumption adjustment—and net interest payments. Net reproducible tangible assets consist of fixed capital stock and inventories; both are measured at current replacement cost. A rate of return calculated in this way has several attractive features. First, by using properly income in the numerator, it captures the total return to investmentregardless of whether the investment is financed out of equity or debt. Second, because this numerator reflects the current replacement costs of inventory withdrawals and of capital used up in production, it is not distorted by inventory "profits" and spurious "profits" resulting from over- or under-depreciation of capital. Third, because the denominator is measured at current replacement cost—that is, because assets are valued at the prices that would have been paid for them if they had been purchased new in the period to which the stock estimates refer—the rate of return is an estimate of the current average profitability of investment. Rates of return are sometimes calculated in other ways; the following paragraphs describe several. The income measure in the numerator of the ratio can be defined exclusive of net interest or in terms of some measure other than the current-production variant for profits. For example, the numerator could be profits after tax or retained earnings, and these incomes can be measured with or without inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments. The denominator can include the net capital stock valued at historical cost, that is, at the prices at which the assets were purchased when new. However, historical-cost estimates are problematic because they treat a dollar of capital stock purchased in 1970 as equivalent to a dollar of capital stock purchased in 1990; the estimates do not incorporate any adjustment for changes in the price level. Moreover, for companies that use the last-in-first-out (LIFO) method of inventory accounting, historical-cost valuation of inventories is not feasible; this part of inventories can only be valued at replacement cost. If one assumes that the historical cost and replacement cost of LIFO inventories are equal, then historical-cost rates of return can be calculated. Until recently, historical cost rates have generally been substantially higher than replacement cost rates; in 1988, for example, the historical-cost rate was 5.5 percentage points higher than the replacement-cost rate of return. By 1994, however, the two rates were virtually identical at 10.2 percent. The convergence of these rates, of course, reflects a convergence of the historical-cost and replacement-cost estimates of the capital stock: In recent years, increases in the prices of many assets, which would make replacement costs higher than historical costs, have been largely offset by decreases in computer prices. The denominator need not be limited to reproducible assets. For example, land (including subsoil resources), goodwill, and intellectual property might also be included. Alternatively, rates of return on stockholders' equity and on sales can be calculated, as is done for mining, manufacturing, retail trade, and wholesale trade corporations by the Census Bureau in the Quarterly Financial Report (QFR). (QFR measures of book profits, not profits from current production, are used in the numerators.) i. The Census Bureau's Quarterly Financial Report contains estimates of fixed assets based on historical costs and total inventories based on a mixture of accounting methods. April 1995 • 7 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 8 • April 1995 in the transportation and public utilities group slowed. About two-thirds of the sharp slowdown in financial profits reflected insurance company profits. Insurance profits decreased in 1994, as a result of the earthquake that struck Northridge, California, in January of that year; that decrease came on the heels of a sharp 1993 increase that represented a rebound from the impact of Hurricanes Andrew and Iniki. Profits from the rest of the world decreased $4.8 billion after increasing $4.7 billion. This component of profits measures receipts of profits from foreign affiliates of U.S. corporations less payments of profits by U.S. affiliates of foreign corporations. Receipts increased slightly more than in 1993, but payments increased much more than in 1993, reflecting a step-up in the growth of the U.S. economy. Manufacturing affiliates dominated the receipts picture, while most of the step-up in payments was concentrated in manufacturing, wholesale trade, and banking. Related measures.—Profits before tax increased $62.1 billion. The difference between this increase and the $56.9 billion increase in profits from current production reflects a decrease in the IVA that was only partly offset by an increase in the ccAdj. The IVA is an estimate of the inventory profits (with the sign reversed) that are included in PBT. Inventory profits increased $13.3 billion in 1994. The ccAdj is the difference between the predominantly tax-based depreciation measure that underlies PBT and BEA'S estimate of the consumpCHART 4 V$^)ti6jiM &:OTpittlMB&:&fOm^^:^::~'W^' i&£. il|p^artda|'^^^^llp^vv-:^f5 tion of fixed capital. The ccAdj increased $8.2 billion in 1994. Property income Corporate property income includes net interest payments as well as profits from current production. For domestic nonfinancial corporations, net interest payments increased $9.2 billion in 1994, to $123.2 billion, after increasing only $0.5 billion in 1993= Chart 4 and table 8 provide a perspective on the recent changes in profits and net interest From 1970 to 1990, both types of property income trended up. Net interest grew at an average annual rate of 11.4 percent; this rapid growth reflected both increased use of debt by corporations and, until the early 1980*8, generally rising interTable 8—Property Income of Domestic Nonfinancial Corporations and Related Series, 1959-94 [Billions of dollars] Property income Profits from current production Year Total Total (1) 1959 1960 1961 42.6 40.0 40.8 'i 48.2 53.8 60.0 70.3 74.9 71.8 76.0 71.3 57.1 67.2 77.0 83.6 106.0 70.6 98.9 91.5 120.2 45.8 43.4 44.7 52.7 58.6 65.4 76.4 82.3 80.5 86.1 84.4 74.2 85.3 96.1 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 ............. 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 Net Interest I I I I I I I I I I I (2) .... 139.0 162.6 182.4 183.2 178.9 208.9 194.0 236.6 302.2 312.1 302.0 350.0 396.0 401.8 404.9 383.4 390.1 445.0 517.1 111.5 132.0 146.1 138.1 120.7 136.9 111.5 159.9 214.3 221.4 203.8 244.2 274.4 255.2 256.4 249.2 276.6 330.9 394.0 Net Profits Profits interest tax li- after ability tax (3) (4) (5) 20.7 19.2 19.5 20.6 22.8 24.0 27.2 29.5 27.8 33.6 33.3 27.2 29.9 33.8 40.2 42.2 41.5 53.0 59.9 67.1 69.6 67.0 63.9 46.3 59.4 73.7 69.9 75.6 93.5 101.7 99.5 93.9 83.1 87.8 116.8 144.7 21.9 20.8 21.3 27.5 31.0 36.1 43.1 45.4 43.9 42.4 37.9 29.9 37.2 43.2 43.4 28.4 50.0 58.5 72.1 79.0 68.5 53.7 73.0 65.2 100.4 140.7 151.5 128.2 150.8 172.6 155.7 162.6 166.1 188.8 214.1 249.2 3.1 3.5 4.0 4.5 4.8 5.3 6.1 7.4 8.8 10.1 13.2 17.1 18.1 19.2 22.5 28.3 28.7 27.5 30.6 36.3 45.1 58.2 71.9 82.5 76.7 87.9 90.7 98.3 105.8 121.6 146.6 148.5 134.2 113.5 114.0 123.2 Net Domestic in- reproducible assets1 come (6) 217.2 224.6 230.1 252.8 269.7 292.0 322.8 356.2 372.8 409.3 443.3 452.8 487.3 543.2 612.0 655.7 700.6 795.7 904.4 1,032.6 1,147.4 1,232.4 1,373.6 1,404.0 1,508.2 1,711.4 1,815.3 1,883.6 2,024.9 2,210.2 2,322.0 2,425.8 2,436.5 2,541.1 2,704.2 2,909.1 (7) 392.0 406.9 417.7 431.0 448.6 471.0 503.4 551.0 603.9 660.4 729.3 800.2 871.0 955.2 1,076.2 1,273.1 1,468.0 1,612.9 1,779.3 2,000.4 2,283.1 2,606.0 2,938.1 3,180.3 3,300.2 3,435.8 3,606.7 3,744.1 3,889.6 4,101.4 4,327.7 4,516.6 4,629.2 4,699.8 4,834.5 5,056.4 1. Structures, equipment, and inventories, valued at current replacement cost. Data are averages of end-of-year values for adjacent years. NOTE.—Property income is profits from current production plus net interest. Profits from current production is corporate profits with inventory valuation adjustment and capital consumption adjustment. Profits after tax; is also shown with inventory valuation adjustment and capital consumption adjustment. Current data on most series are shown in table 1.16 of the Selected NIPA Tables." The value of structures and equipment through 1993 are from Fixed Reproducible Tangible Wealth in the United States, 1925-89, (Washington DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1993) and from SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 74(August 1994): 57-58. Data on structures and equipment for 1994 and all data on inventories are unpublished BEA estimates. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS est rates. Profits grew substantially slower—-7.8 percent, on average. As a result, the share of net interest in property income rose from 23.0 percent in 1970 to 36.7 percent in 1990. In the i990Js, these trends ended: Net interest decreased substantially in 1991 and 1992 and changed little in 1993 before increasing in 1994. The weakness in net interest reflected the ebbing of the wave of leveraged buyouts that were so prominent in the 1980*8, the efforts by corporations to reduce indebtedness, and, through 1993, falling interest rates. Profits, in contrast, dipped only modestly in 1991 before increasing strongly in the 1992, 1993, and 1994. As a consequence of these different paths, the share of net interest in property income slid to 23.8 percent in 1994, only a shade higher than it was in 1970. Further perspective on recent changes in property income can be gained by examining the relationship of property income to the stock of net reproducible assets and to domestic income. Net reproducible assets consist of fixed capital stock and inventories. Measured at current replacement cost, these assets increased 4.6 percent in 1994 after increasing 2.9 percent in 1993. From April 1995 1970 to 1990, in contrast, these assets had grown much faster—at an average rate of 9.0 percent. Domestic income of corporations—which consists of property income plus compensation of employees—increased 7.6 percent in 1994 after increasing 6.4 percent in 1993. The ratio of property income to the stock of net reproducible assets is the average rate of return on these assets (see box on page 7). The use of property income, rather than profits alone, as the numerator of this ratio captures the total return to investment (profits plus interest) regardless of whether the investment was financed by equity or by debt. The ratio of property income to domestic income is property income's share of domestic income—that is, the fraction of domestic income Table 9.—Rate of Return, Income Share, and Average Product of Capital, Domestic Nonfinancial Corporations, 1959-94 [Percent] Share of domestic income Rate of return Property Income Property income Aver- Prof- prod- Profits from current production its Year from Net Profcur- Net Prof- interTotal its Total rent interest its Total tax after pro- est liabilductax ity tion CHARTS d) , Foment RATE OF RETURN la- .320- PROPERTY INCOME'S SHARE 16 1959 11.7 10.7 10.7 12.2 13.1 13.9 15.2 14.9 13.3 13.0 11.6 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 9.3 9.8 .... 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 , PRODUCT PER DOLLAR OF CAPITAL 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 197072 74 76 ?0 80 82 84 ...... 10.1 9.9 7.8 8.2 8.6 9.1 9.1 8.0 6.9 7.1 6.1 7.2 8.8 8.7 8.1 9.0 9.7 9.3 9.0 8.3 8.3 9.2 10.2 (2) 10.9 9.8 9.8 11.2 12.0 12.7 14.0 13.6 11.9 11.5 9.8 7.1 7.7 8.1 7.8 5.5 6.2 6.9 7.4 7.3 6.0 4.6 4.7 3.5 4.8 6.2 6.1 5.4 6.3 6.7 5.9 5.7 5.4 5.9 6.8 7.8 (3) 5.3 4.7 4.7 4.8 5.1 5.1 5.4 5.4 4.6 5.1 4.6 3.4 3.4 3.5 3.7 3.3 2.8 3.3 3.4 3.4 3.0 2.6 2.2 1.5 1.8 2.1 1.9 2.0 2.4 2.5 2.3 2.1 1.8 1.9 2.4 2.9 (4) 5.6 5.1 5.1 6.4 6.9 7.7 8.6 8.2 7.3 6.4 5.2 3.7 4.3 4.5 4.0 2.2 3.4 3.6 4.1 3.9 3.0 2.1 2.5 2.1 3.0 4.1 4.2 3.4 3.9 4.2 3.6 3.6 3.6 4.0 4.4 4.9 (5) 0.8 .9 .9 1.1 1.1 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.5 1.5 1.8 2.1 2.1 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.0 1.7 1.7 1.8 2.0 2.2 2.4 2.6 2.3 2.6 2.5 2.6 2.7 3.0 3.4 3.3 2.9 2.4 2.4 2.4 (6) 21.1 19.3 19.4 20.8 21.7 22.4 23.7 23.1 21.6 21.0 19.0 16.4 17.5 17.7 17.3 15.1 17.2 17.5 18.0 17.7 15.9 14.5 15.2 13.8 15.6 17.6 17.1 16.0 17.3 17.9 17.3 16.7 15.7 15.4 16.5 17.8 (7) 19.6 17.8 17.7 19.1 19.9 20.6 21.8 21.0 19.2 18.6 16.1 12.6 13.8 14.2 13.7 10.8 13.1 14.0 14.6 14.1 12.0 9.8 9.9 7.9 10.6 12.5 12.2 10.8 12.1 12.4 11.0 10.6 10.2 10.9 12.2 13.5 (8) age uct of capital (9) 1.4 0.555 1.5 .554 1.7 .552 1.8 .587 1.8 .604 1.8 .621 1.9 .641 2.1 .645 2.4 .616 2.5 .619 3.0 .611 3.8 .567 3.7 .560 3.5 .571 3.7 .572 4.3 .517 4.1 .477 3.5 .491 3.4 .506 3.5 .514 3.9 .503 4.7 .476 5.2 .467 5.9 .442 5.1 .462 5.1 .500 5.0 .509 5.2 .506 5.2 .520 5.5 .542 6.3 .538 6.1 .539 5.5 .529 4.5 .539 4.2 .558 4.2 .573 Source: Table 8. NOTE.—Columns 1-5 are percentages of the stock of net reproducible assets (structures, equipment, and inventories) valued at current replacement cost. Columns 6-8 are percentages of domestic income. Column 9 is calculated as the as the ratio of column 1 to column 6. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 1O • April 1995 that is not used to compensate labor. Property income's share is related to the rate of return by a third ratio—the ratio of domestic income to the value of net reproducible assets, which measures the average annual product per dollar of capital.4 The three ratios are plotted for 1970-94 in chart 5 and are reported, along with related ratios, for 1959-94 in table 9. Property income's rate of return (column i) and its share of do4. It should be noted that this ratio is not appropriate for use in productivity analysis; for productivity analysis, the denominator should measure capital services, not capital stock. mestic income (column 6) appear to have shifted to lower levels around 1970. The rate of return fell from an average of 12.8 percent in 1959-69 to an average of 8.6 percent in i970L94i the share of domestic income fell from an average of 21.2 percent to, an average of 16.6 percent. In 1994, property income's rate of return and its share of domestic income continued to rebound from cyclical decreases in 1991. Higher profits were responsible for the rebounds in both ratios. H Comprehensive Revision of the NIPA'S Revised and updated estimates of the national income and product accounts (NIPA'S) resulting from a comprehensive, or benchmark, revision are scheduled for release in late 1995. These estimates will incorporate statistical revisions resulting from (i) newly available source data, such as the 1987 benchmark input-output tables, the 1992 Economic Censuses, and several annual surveys for 1993 and 1994 and (2) changes in methodology. The estimates will also reflect changes in definitions and classifications. (For additional information, see "Mid-Decade Strategic Review of BEA'S Economic Accounts: An Update" in this issue.) In addition, table formats will be revised, and new series will be presented. The changes to be introduced in the comprehensive revision will be described in upcoming articles in the SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS. In general, the statistical revisions will affect the estimates back to 1983, but the changes in definitions and classifications will affect the estimates as far back as necessary. The estimates released in late 1995 will be limited to 1959 forward and will consist only of those usually shown in July SURVEY tables; estimates for earlier periods will be released during 1996. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 NATIONAL INCOME AND PRODUCT ACCOUNTS Selected NIPA Tables New estimates in this issue: "Advance" estimates for the first quarter of 1995. The selected set of NIPA tables shown in this section presents quarterly estimates, which are updated monthly. (In most tables, the annual estimates are also shown.) These tables are available on the day of the gross domestic product (GDP) news release on printouts and diskettes on a subscription basis or from the Commerce Department's Economic Bulletin Board. For order information, write to the National Income and Wealth Division .(BE-54), Bureau of Economic Analysis, Washington, DC 20230 or call (202) 606-9700. Tables containing the estimates for 1929-87 are available in the two-volume set National Income and Product Accounts of the United States', see inside back cover for order information. For 1988-93, the complete official time series of NIPA estimates can be found as follows: 1988 1989 1990 1991-93 NIPA *St Vol 2 July 1992 SURVEY Auc 1993 SURVEY Sept. 1993 SURVEY July 1994 SURVEY Tables 1.15, 1.16, and 7.15 Tables 3.15-3.20 and 9.1-9.6 ... Sept. 1992 SURVEY Sept. 1994 SURVEY Tables 7.1, 7.2, 7.3, and 8.1 ... . Aug. 1994 SURVEY Aug. 1994 SURVEY Aug. 1994 SURVEY Aug. 1994 SURVEY Tables 7.4-7.12 Apr. 1993 SURVEY Apr. 1993 SURVEY Aug. 1993 SURVEY July 1994 SURVEY Summary NIPA series back to 1929 are in the September 1994 issue of the SURVEY. Errata to published NIPA tables appear in the September 1992, April 1993, October 1993, March 1994, and November 1994 issues, and in this issue (on page 24). NIPA tables are also available, most beginning with 1929, on diskettes. For more information on the presentation of the estimates, see "A Look at How BEA Presents the NIPA'S" in the February 1995 SURVEY. NOTE.—This section of the SURVEY is prepared by the National Income and Wealth Division and the Government Division. i. National Product and Income Table 1.1.—Gross Domestic Product Table 1,2.—Gross Domestic Product in Constant Dollars [Billions of dollars] [Billions of 1987 dollars] SSeasonal!y adjusts d at anr ual rates Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 1993 1994 1993 IV Gross domestic product Personal consumption expenditures Durable goods Nondurable goods Services Gross private domestic investment . .. Fixed investment Nonresidential Structures Producers' durable equipment Residential Change in business inventories . . . . Nonfarm Farm . Net exports of goods and services Exports Imports Government purchases Federal National defense Nondefense State and local 1994 II I 1993 1995 III IV 1994 19 94 1993 I IV I 6,343.3 6,738.4 6,478.1 6,574.7 6,689.9 6,791.7 6,897.2 6,982.9 Gross domestic product II 1995 III IV I 5,134.5 5,344.0 5,218.0 5,261.1 5,314.1 5,367,0 5,433.8 5,471.7 4,378.2 4,628.4 4,469.6 4,535.0 4,586.4 4,657.5 4,734.8 4,780.8 Personal consumption expenditures 3,458.7 3,579.6 3,506.2 3,546.3 3,557.8 3,584.7 3,629.6 3,642,0 538.0 591.5 562.8 576.2 580.3 591.5 617.7 613.4 1,339.2 1,394.3 1,355.2 1,368.9 1,381.4 1,406.1 1,420.7 1,429.5 2,501.0 2,642.7 2,551.6 2,589.9 2,624.7 2,659.9 2,696.4 2,737.9 Durable goods Nondurable goods Services 5108 521 7 522.2 529.6 554.8 548.2 4899 5321 1,078.5 1,109.5 1,088.0 1,098.3 1,104.3 1,113.4 1,121.9 1,126.0 1,890.3 1,938.1 1,907.4 1,926.3 1,931.4 1,941.8 1,952.9 1,967.9 882.0 1,032.9 922.5 966.6 1,034.4 1,055.1 1,075.6 1,119.3 866.7 616.1 173.4 980.7 697.6 182.8 913.5 646.3 176.7 942.5 665.4 172.7 967.0 683.3 181.8 992.5 1,020.8 1,051.2 709.1 732.8 766.6 184.6 192.0 199.8 442.7 250.6 514.8 283.0 469.6 267.2 492.7 277.1 501.5 283.6 524.5 283.4 540.7 288.0 566.8 284.6 .1.5.4 52.2 45.9 24.1 22.3 67.4 60.4 62.6 53.4 54.8 47.4 68.1 64.7 20.1 -4.7 6.4 9.0 10.7 -1.7 1.8 7.0 9.2 7.4 3.4 -65.3 -98.2 71.2 -86.7 -97.6 -109.6 -98.9 -112.9 659.1 724.3 718.7 816.9 680.3 751.4 674.2 760.9 704.5 802.1 765.5 864.4 730.5 840.1 770.9 883.8 1,148.4 1,175.3 1,157.2 1,159.8 1,166.7 1,188.8 1,185.8 1,195.6 443.6 302.7 140.9 704.7 437.3 292.3 145.0 738.0 439.8 299.1 140.7 717.4 437.8 291.7 146.1 722.0 435.1 291.7 143.5 731.5 444.3 300.5 143.8 744.5 431.9 285.3 146.6 753.8 NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1. 433.1 284.0 149.0 762.6 Gross private domestic investment Fixed investment Nonresidential Structures Producers' durable equipment Residential Change in business inventories .... Nonfarm Farm Net exports of goods and services 819.9 951.5 862.5 898.9 950.9 967.3 989.1 1,030.8 804.6 591.6 147.7 903.8 672.4 150.6 851.7 627.2 148.7 873.4 643.6 144.1 891.7 657.9 151.0 910.2 680.0 151.6 939.7 708.2 443.9 213.0 521.9 231.3 478.5 224.5 499.4 229.9 506.9 233.8 528.4 230.2 231.5 579.3 227.6 15.3 18.5 47.8 40.7 10.8 10.7 25.4 22.1 59.2 51.7 57.1 47.4 49.4 41.7 63.0 58.3 7.7 4.7 -32 71 1 33 7.5 9.7 155.6 552.6 967.8 740.1 160.8 -1040 111.8 117.0 107.1 -119.7 6025 676.3 6570 766.9 6252 707.4 619.6 723.6 643.9 755.6 666.5 783.5 697.9 805.0 696.9 Government purchases 929.8 922.8 931.5 919.9 917.1 932.0 922.2 918.6 Federal National defense Nondefense State and local 356.6 243.7 113.0 573.1 337.6 226.7 110.9 585.2 351.1 238.7 112.4 580.4 341.7 228.5 113.2 578.3 334.7 226.1 108.7 582.4 343.5 233.0 110.5 588.5 330.4 326.5 219.1 111.3 591.8 215.1 111.4 592.1 Exports Imports -739 -1100 -822 NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1. 816.6 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 12 • April 1995 Table 1.3.—Gross Domestic Product by Major Type of Product Table 1.4.—Gross Domestic Product by Major Type of Product in Constant Dollars [Billions of dollars] [Billions of 1987 dollars] 5Seasonal y adjusteid at anr ual rates 1994 1993 19 94 1993 I IV Gross domestic product Final sales of domestic product Change in business inventories Goods t Final sales Change in business inventories Durable goods Final sales Change in business inventories Nondurable goods Final sales Change in business inventories Services 1 Structures II Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 1995 III 6,343.3 6,738.4 6,478.1 6,574.7 6,689.9 6,791.7 6,897.2 6,982.9 63279 66862 64692 65506 66225 67291 68424 69148 15.4 52.2 9.0 24.1 67.4 62.6 68.1 54.8 2,405.8 2,584.7 2,461.6 2,513.2 2,561.2 2,606.2 2,658.1 2,698.9 2,390.4 2,532.4 2,452.6 2,489.1 2,493.7 2,543.6 2,603.3 2,630.8 15.4 52.2 9.0 24.1 67.4 62.6 68.1 54.8 1,041.0 1,153.6 1,081.9 1,118.7 1,137.6 1,170.0 1,188.1 1,217.7 1,032.4 1,118.8 1,072.9 1,098.2 1,099.4 1,125.8 1,151.8 1,170.2 86 348 90 206 382 441 475 363 1 364 8 1 431 1 1 3797 1 3945 1 4235 1 4363 1 4700 1 481 2 1 3580 1 4136 13797 1 3909 13943 1 4178 1 451 5 1 4606 6.7 17.4 0 3.5 29.2 18.5 20.6 18.5 3,405.5 3,576 2 3 459.3 3,503.8 3,555 4 3,603.6 3,641.9 3,682.5 532.0 577.6 557.2 557.7 573.4 581.9 597.3 1994 1993 I IV 601.4 1993 IV Gross domestic product Final sales of domestic product Change in business inventories Goods1 . Final sales Change in business inventories . . .. .. . Durable goods Final sales Change in business inventories Nondurable goods Final sales Change in business inventories Services * Structures 1994 I II 1995 III I IV 5,134.5 5,344.0 5,218.0 5,261.1 5,314.1 5,367.0 5,433.8 5,471.7 5,119.3 5,296.2 5,207.2 5,235.7 5,254.9 5,310.0 5,384.4 5,408.7 15.3 47.8 10.8 25.4 59.2 57.1 49.4 63.0 2,081.8 2,223.1 2,135.5 2,168.8 2,201.3 2,235.5 2,286.9 2,320.1 2,066.5 2,175.4 2,124.7 2,143.3 2,142.1 2,178.4 2,237.5 2,257.1 15.3 47.8 10.8 25.4 59.2 57.1 49.4 63.0 986.0 1,092.1 1,033.6 1,061.4 1,071.9 1,102.5 1,132.5 1,160.9 977.7 1,060.9 1,024.7 1,041.7 1,038.2 1,063.2 1,100.6 1,118.2 8.3 31.2 8.9 19.7 33.7 39.3 32.0 42.7 1,095.8 1,131.0 1,101.9 1,107.4 1,129.4 1,133.0 1,154.4 1,159.3 1,088.8 1,114.4 1,100.0 1,101.7 1,103.9 1,115.2 1,136.9 1,138.9 7.0 16.6 5.7 1.9 25.5 17.8 17.4 .204 2,597.6 2,644.5 2,611.2 2,625.8 2,635.8 2,653.9 2,662.4 2,667.0 455.1 476.4 471.3 466.5 476.9 477.6 484.5 484,5 1. Exports and imports of certain goods, primarily military equipment purchased and sold by the Federal Government, are included in services. NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1. 1. Exports and imports of certain goods, primarily military equipment purchased and sold by the Federal Government, are included in services. NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1. Table 1.5.—Relation of Gross Domestic Product, Gross Domestic Purchases, and Final Sales to Domestic Purchasers Table 1.6.—Relation of Gross Domestic Product, Gross Domestic Purchases, and Final Sales to Domestic Purchasers in Constant Dollars [Billions of dollars] Gross domestic product Less: Exports of goods and services Plus: Imports of goods and services Equals: Gross domestic purchases 1 Less: Change in business inventories Equals: Final sales to 2 domestic purchasers 6,343.3 [Billions of 1987 dollars] 6,738.4 6,478.1 6,574.7 6,689.9 6,791.7 6,897.2 6,982.9 659.1 718.7 680.3 674.2 704.5 730.5 765.5 770.9 7243 8169 751 4 7609 8021 8401 8644 8838 6,408.6 6,836.6 6,549.3 6,661.4 6,787.5 6,901.3 6,996.1 7,095.7 15.4 52.2 9.0 24.1 67.4 62.6 54.8 68.1 6,393.2 6,784.4 6,540.3 6,637.3 6,720.1 6,838.7 6,941.3 7,027.6 5,134.5 5,344.0 5,218.0 5,261.1 5,314.1 5,367.0 5,433.8 5,471.7 602.5 657.0 625.2 619.6 643.9 666.5 697.9 696.9 676.3 766.9 707.4 723.6 755.6 783.5 805.0 816.6 5,208.4 5,454.0 5,300.2 5,365.1 5,425.8 5,484.0 5,540.9 5,591.4 153 478 108 254 592 571 494 630 5,193.1 5,406.2 5,289.4 5,339.7 5,366.6 5,426.9 5,491.5 5,528.4 1. Purchases by U.S. residents of goods and services wherever produced. 2. Final sales to U.S. residents of goods and services wherever produced. NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1. 1. Purchases by U.S. residents of goods and services wherever produced. 2. Final sales to U.S. residents of goods and services wherever produced. NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1. Table 1.7.—Gross Domestic Product by Sector Table 1.8.—Gross Domestic Product by Sector in Constant Dollars [Billions of dollars] [Billions of 1987 dollars] Gross domestic product Business Nonfarm Nonfarm less housing .... Housina Farm Statistical discrepancy Households and institutions Private households Nonprofit institutions General government Federal State and local Addendum: Gross domestic business product less housing MVUOIIiy Gross domestic product Less: Exports of goods and services Plus: Imports of goods and services Equals: Gross1 domestic purchases Less: Change in business inventories Equals: Final sales to 2 domestic purchasers 6,343.3 6,738.4 6,478.1 6,574.7 6,689.9 6,791.7 6,897.2 6,982.9 5,371.4 5,723.2 5,494.4 5,575.7 5,677.9 5,771.8 5,867.2 5,940.4 52938 56692 5431 7 55247 56187 5710.7 5,822.6 5,894.2 4,771.0 5,118.4 4,899.5 4,975.0 5,075.0 5,159.7 5,264.1 5,329.0 5227 5507 5322 5496 5438 551 0 558.5 565.1 753 849 79.2 87.1 87.0 88.6 2.3 -30.9 -16.5 -36.1 -24.0 -21.1 -42.4 -42.4 285.3 302.7 291.0 295.7 300.1 304.7 310.1 313.8 10.8 11.4 10.9 11.1 11.3 11.5 11.6 11.8 274.5 291.3 280.0 284.5 288.8 293.2 298.5 302.0 82.3 686.6 712.6 692.7 703.3 711.8 715.2 719.9 728.7 203.6 483.0 206.2 506.4 202.5 490.2 206.3 497.1 208.4 503.4 205.4 509.8 204J 515.2 206.8 521.9 48440 83.2 Gross domestic nroduct Business Nonfarm Nonfarm less housing .... Housing Farm Statistical discrepancy Households and institutions Private households Nonprofit institutions General government Federal State and local Addendum: Gross domestic business product less housing 5,134.5 5,344.0 5,218.0 5,261.1 5,314.1 5,367.0 5,433.8 5,471.7 4,409.4 4,613.4 4,491.7 4,532.6 4,583.6 4,635.4 4,702.1 4,739.1 4,336.4 4,556.1 4,433.2 4,486.1 4,521.3 4,567.9 4,649.2 4,685.7 3,925.5 4,137.4 4,017.9 4,070.6 4,103.5 4,148.1 4,227.3 4,261.8 421.9 423.9 410.9 418.8 415.3 415.5 417.8 419.8 82.2 72.0 75.9 81.6 84.4 86.9 87.2 1.9 -24.9 -13.5 -29.3 -19.3 -17.0 -34.0 -33.8 215.6 223.0 218.1 220.1 222.5 223.8 225.6 227.0 9.0 206.5 9.2 213.7 9.0 209.1 9.1 211.0 9.2 213.3 9.3 214.5 9.3 216.2 9.4 217.6 509.6 507.6 508.2 508.4 508.0 507.9 506.1 505.5 146.0 363.6 138.8 368.8 143.2 365.1 141.9 366.5 139.9 368.1 137.9 369.9 135.5 370.6 134.0 371.5 71.0 3,994.9 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • 13 Table 1.9.—Relation of Gross Domestic Product, Gross National Product, Net National Product, National Income, and Personal Income Table 1.10.—Relation of Gross Domestic Product, Gross National Product, Net National Product, and National Income in Constant Dollars [Billions of dollars] [Billions of 1987 dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 1993 1994 IV Gross domestic product Plus: Receipts of factor income from the rest of the world l , Less: Payments of factor income2 to the rest of the world Equals: Gross national product Less: Consumption of fixed capital Capital consumption allowances Less: Capital consumption adjustment Equals: Net national product Less: Indirect business tax and nontax liability Business transfer payments Statistical discrepancy Plus: Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises . Equals: National income Less: Corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments Net interest Contributions for social insurance Wage accruals less disbursements Plus: Personal interest income Personal dividend income Government transfer payments to persons Business transfer payments to persons Equals: Personal income Addenda: Net domestic product Domestic income Gross national income 1994 1993 I II Seasonally adjusted at annual rates IV 136.6 167.1 141.3 145.4 162.1 176.7 184.2 132.1 178.6 143.3 146.1 169.5 188.8 210.1 6,347.8 6,726.9 6,476.2 6,574.0 6,682.5 6,779.6 6,871.3 715.3 674.0 734.1 698.1 709.9 719.3 730.1 635.1 680.3 650.3 683.2 669.8 679.4 688.9 697.9 -33.9 -35.0 -23.8 -50.9 -28.3 -30.5 -30.5 -32.2 5,678.7 6,011.5 5,802.2 5,840.0 5,984.5 6,069.8 6,152.0 525.3 554.0 539.7 544.7 550.3 557.2 564.0 565.1 28.7 30.7 28.6 30.1 30.3 30.8 31.4 31.5 -30.9 -16.5 -36.1 -24.0 -21.1 -42.4 -8.0 .4 2.3 9.0 .7 11.7 7.4 3.0 IV Gross domestic product ...... Plus: Receipts of factor income from the rest of the world 1 Less: Payments of factor income to the rest of the world2 Equals: Gross national product Less: Consumption of fixed capital Equals: Net national product Less: Indirect business tax and nontax liability plus business transfer payments less subsidies plus current surplus of government enterprises Statistical discrepancy Equals: National income Addenda: Net domestic product Domestic income Gross national income 1994 1993 I II 1995 ill I IV 5,134.5 5,344.0 5,218.0 5,261.1 5,314.1 5,367.0 5,433.8 5,4717 109.1 130.8 112.4 114.8 127.1 137.8 143.2 103.4 137.5 111.7 113.2 130.7 144.9 161.0 5,140.3 5,337.3 5,218.7 5,262.7 5,310.5 5,359.9 5,416.0 599.5 628.5 602.0 648.1 614.8 621.9 629.4 637.4 4,540.8 4,708.8 4,616.7 4,614.6 4,695.7 4,738.0 4,786.6 421.2 1.9 438.0 -24.9 428.3 -13.5 432.7 -29.3 434.9 -19.3 439.2 -17.0 445.2 -34.0 448.8 4,117.7 4,295.7 4,201.8 4,211.3 4,280.2 4,315.8 4,375.4 4,535.1 4,715.5 4,616.0 4,613.0 4,699.3 4,745.2 4,804.4 4,834.3 4,112.0 4,302.4 4,201.1 4,209.7 4,283.8 4,322.9 4,393.2 5,138.4 5,362.2 5,232.2 5,292.1 5,329.8 5,376.9 5,450.0 '............ -2.6 1. Consists largely of receipts by U.S. residents of interest and dividends and reinvested earnings of foreign affiliates of U.S. corporations. 2. Consists largely of payments to foreign residents of interest and dividends and reinvested earnings of U.S. affiliates of foreign corporations. 5,131.4 5,458.4 5,262.0 5,308.7 5,430.7 5,494.9 5,599.4 Table 1.11.—Command-Basis Gross National Product in Constant Dollars 485.8 399.5 542.7 409.7 533.9 389.1 508.2 394.2 546.4 399.7 556.0 415.7 560.3 429.2 585.6 626.0 597.2 614.7 623.5 628.9 636.7 648.0 20.0 637.9 0 664.0 0 627.7 0 631.1 0 649.4 0 674.2 0 701,1 0 724.5 181.3 194.3 184.1 185.7 191.7 196.9 202.7 205.5 892.6 939.9 908.3 924.2 934.3 945.4 955.8 980.7 22.8 23.5 22.7 23.2 23.4 23.6 23.8 24.0 5,375.1 5,701.7 5,484.6 5,555.8 5,659.9 5,734.5 5,856.6 5,963.1 5,674.2 6,023.0 5,804.1 5,840.7 5,991.8 6,081.8 6,177.8 6,252.8 5,126.9 5,469.9 5,264.0 5,309.4 5,438.1 5,506.9 5,625.3 6,345.5 6,757.8 6,492.7 6,610.1 6,706.5 6,800.8 6,913.7 1. Consists largely of receipts by U.S. residents of interest and dividends and reinvested earnings of foreign affiliates of U.S. corporations. 2. Consists largely of payments to foreign residents of interest and dividends and reinvested earnings of U.S. affiliates of foreign corporations. 1994 I 6,343.3 6,738.4 6,478.1 6,574.7 6,689.9 6,791.7 6,897.2 6,982.9 ,669.1 1993 1995 III [Billions of 1987 dollars] Gross national product Less: Exports of goods and 5,140.3 5,337.3 5,218.7 5,262.7 5,310.5 5,359.9 5,416.0 sprvirp^ flnri rp^pinte nf factor income from the rest of the world 711.6 787.7 737.6 734.5 771.0 804.3 841.1 Plus: Command-basis exports of goods and services and 7244 804.7 752.2 756.2 790.6 818.6 853.8 receipts of factor income1 Equals: Command-basis gross national product .... 5,153,1 5,354.3 5,233.3 5,284.5 5,330.1 5,374.2 5,428.7 Addendum: 1025 101 8 101 5 1020 1030 101 8 1022 Terms of trade 2 1. Exports of goods and services and receipts of factor income deflated by the implicit price deflator for imports of goods and services and payments of factor income. 2. Ratio of the implicit price deflator for exports of goods and services and receipts of factor income to the corresponding implicit price deflator for imports with the decimal point shifted two places to the right. NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 14 • April 1995 Table 1.14.—National Income by Type of Income Table 1.16.—Gross Domestic Product of Corporate Business in Current Dollars and Gross Domestic Product of Nonfinancial Corporate Business in Current and Constant Dollars [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 1993 1994 1993 IV 1994 I II Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 1995 III IV 1993 I 1994 1993 IV National income Compensation of employees Wages and salaries Government Other Supplements to wages and salaries Employer contributions for social insurance ... Other labor income Proprietors' income with IVA and CCAdj Farm Proprietors' income with IVA CCAdi Nonfarm Proprietors' income IVA CCAdi Rental income of persons with CCAdj Rental income of persons .. CCAdj Corporate profits with IVA and CCAdj ....... Corporate profits with IVA .. Profits before tax Profits tax liability Profits after tax Dividends Undistributed profits IVA . . . . CCAdi Net interest Addenda: Corporate profits after tax with IVA and CCAdj Net cash flow with IVA and CCAdj Undistributed profits with IVA and CCAdj Consumption of fixed capital Less1 IVA Equals: Net cash flow 1994 I 1995 II III IV I 5,131.4 5,458.4 5,262.0 5,308.7 5,430.7 5,494.9 5,599.4 3,780.4 4,004.6 3,845.8 3,920.0 3,979.3 4,023.7 4,095.3 4,157.0 3,100.8 3,279.0 3,148.4 3,208.3 3,257.2 3,293.9 3,356.4 3,403.2 583.8 602.8 587.8 595.7 601.9 604.4 609.0 615.6 2,517.0 2,676.2 2,560.7 2,612.6 2,655.4 2,689.6 2,747.4 2,787.6 679.6 725.6 697.4 711.7 722.0 729.7 738.9 753.8 324.3 355.3 344.6 381.0 330.6 366.8 338.5 373.2 343.6 378.4 346.0 383.7 350.2 388.7 354.2 399.6 441.6 473.7 462.9 471.0 471.3 467.0 485.7 493.8 37.3 39.5 44.4 47.2 39.3 29.8 41.7 45.1 44.5 -7.2 46.8 -7.3 51.5 -7.0 54.5 -7.3 46.6 -7.3 37.2 -7.4 49.0 -7.3 52.3 -7.3 404.3 390.2 -.8 434.2 420.1 418.5 403.7 -.9 423.8 409.3 -.6 431.9 417.5 437.1 423.1 444.0 430.5 448.7 435.8 15.7 15.2 -1.1 15.5 -1.1 15.2 -1.7 15.1 -1.7 14.6 30.3 15.3 34.1 32.6 29.0 25.6 14.9 -1.2 15.3 24.1 27.7 86.3 98.9 92.4 98.8 96.3 93.3 -71.1 -62.1 101.7 -86.4 98.6 -62.2 -64.5 -66.2 -67.3 -67.7 485.8 542.7 533.9 508.2 546.4 556.0 560.3 97.5 -6.2 505.0 524.5 202.5 322.0 205.2 116.9 -19.5 29.5 37.7 38.8 37.0 37.4 37.5 38.8 399.5 409.7 389.1 394.2 399.7 415.7 429.2 456.2 462.4 173.2 289.2 191.7 -6.5 471.2 483.5 184.1 299.4 196.3 103.0 -12.3 509.0 523.1 201.7 321.4 202.5 118.9 -14.1 518.5 538.1 208.6 329.5 207.9 121.6 -19.6 521.4 553.5 215.6 337.9 ............ 213.9 124.0 -32.1 "-36.5 312.5 340.2 342.4 324.1 344.8 347.4 344.7 528.7 567.3 558.9 559.9 568.2 572.1 568.8 120.9 135.1 147.9 127.7 142.3 139.5 130.7 407.8 -6.2 534.9 CCAdj Capital consumption adjustment IVA Inventory valuation adjustment 495.1 501.7 191.5 310.2 194.6 115.6 432.2 -19.5 586.8 41.1.1 -6.5 565.5 432.2 -12.3 572.2 425.9 141 582.3 432.6 -19.6 591.7 438.0 -32.1 600.9 38.1 445.3 -36.5 Billions of dollars Gross domestic product of corporate business Consumption of fixed capital .. Net domestic product Indirect business tax and nontax liability plus business transfer payments less subsidies Domestic income Compensation of employees Wages and salaries ... Supplements to wages and salaries .... Corporate profits with IVA and CCAdj .-. Profits before tax Profits tax liability .. Profits after tax Dividends Undistributed profits IVA , CCAdj Net interest Gross domestic product of financial corporate business .. Gross domestic product of nonfinancial corporate business .. Consumption of fixed capital .. Net domestic product Indirect business tax and nontax liability plus business transfer payments less subsidies Domestic income Compensation of employees Wages and salaries ... Supplements to wages and salaries Corporate profits with IVA and CCAdj Profits before tax Profits tax liability .. Profits after tax Dividends Undistributed profits IVA CCAdj ..... Net interest 3,796.2 4,064.7 3,904.8 3,957.0 4,036.0 4,096.0 4,169.9 407.8 432.2 411. 432.2 425.9 432.6 438.0 445.3 3,388.4 3,632.5 3,493.7 3,524.8 3,610.0 3,663.4 3,731.8 377.5 400.8 388.3 393.5 397.8 403.9 408.2 407.8 3,010.9 3,231.7 3,105.4 3,131.3 3,212.2 3,259.6 3,323.6 2,471.6 2,622.6 2,513.8 2,564.0 2,603.3 2,635.4 2,687.7 2,728.9 2,045.6 2,170.7 2,079.6 2,121.1 2,154.2 2,180.8 2,226.8 2,258.2 426.1 451.9 434.2 442.9 449.0 454.6 460.9 420.5 397.2 173.2 223.9 177.2 482.3 464.1 202.5 261.6 182.6 472.2 440.0 191.5 248.5 180.2 447.1 422.4 184.1 238.3 177.0 485.7 462.3 201.7 260.7 183.6 495.7 477.8 208.6 269.1 177.1 500.6 493.8 215.6 278.2 192.6 79.0 37.7 68.3 -6.5 38.8 118.8 126.8 386.5 407.9 46.7 -6.2 29.5 -19.5 470.7 61.3 77.1 92.0 85.6 -12.3 -14.1 -19.6 -32.1 -36.5 37.0 37.4 37.5 38.8 38.1 119.4 120.2 123.3 128.5 135.4 405.5 388.4 409.3 416.6 417.1 3,409.7 3,656.9 3,499.3 3,568.6 3,626.7 3,679.4 3,752.8 361.5 382.2 363.7 383.7 376.3 382.0 386.6 392.5 3,048.2 3,274.7 3,135.6 3,184.8 3,250.3 3,297.5 3,366.2 344.0 365.6 354.3 358.9 362.9 368.4 372.4 371.9 2,704.2 2,909.1 2,781.3 2,825.9 2,887.5 2,929.0 2,993.9 2,259.2 2,392.0 2,293.9 2,337.1 2,373.1 2,405.1 2,452.4 2,490.8 1,866.2 1,975.8 1,893.8 1,929.4 1,959.8 1,986.2 2,027.8 2,057.0 393.0 416.1 400.1 407.7 413.4 418.9 424.6 330.9 293.5 116.8 176.7 159.8 394.0 360.1 144.7 215.4 163.3 371.6 325.4 130.8 194.6 162.3 372.2 332.8 132.5 200.3 159.5 394.7 355.9 143.4 212.5 164.3 399.1 365.2 147.1 218.1 157.3 409.8 386.6 155.9 230.7 172.1 16.9 -6.2 43.6 52.1 48.1 60.8 123 141 196 53.4 32.2 -6.5 52.7 40.8 -19.5 51.7 52.9 53.6 55.3 123.2 115.8 116.6 119.6 124.8 131.6 114.0 433.8 58.6 -32.1 "-36!5 55.5 Billions of 1987 dollars Gross domestic product of nonfinancial corporate business .. Consumption of fixed capital .. Net domestic product Indirect business tax and nontax liability plus business transfer payments less subsidies Domestic income 2,942.9 3,121.9 3,019.5 3,062.6 3,098.9 3,131.2 3,195.0 325.3 339.1 327.0 342.4 333.9 337.8 342.1 2,617.6 2,782.9 2,692.5 2,720.2 2,765.0 2,793.3 2,852.9 346.6 285.8 290.6 272.4 284.8 277.3 280.6 282.1 2,345.2 2,498.1 2,415.2 2,439.6 2,482.9 2,507.6 2,562.3 293.0 CCAdj Capital consumption adjustment IVA Inventory valuation adjustment April 1995 • IJ SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 2. Personal Income and OutlaysTable 2.2.—Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product Table 2.1—Personal Income and Its Disposition [Billions of dollars] [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 1993 1994 1993 IV Personal income Wage and salary disbursements Commodity-producing industries Manufacturing Distributive industries Service industries Government Other labor income Proprietors' income with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments , Farm Nonfarm Rental income of persons with capital consumption adjustment . Personal dividend income Personal interest income Transfer payments to persons Old-age, survivors, disability, and health insurance benefits Government unemployment insurance benefits Veterans benefits , Government employees retirement benefits Other transfer payments Aid to families with dependent children Other Less: Personal contributions for social insurance Less: Personal tax and nontax payments Equals: Disposable personal income Less: Personal outlays Personal consumption expenditures Interest paid by persons .... Personal transfer payments to rest of the world (net) Equals: Personal saving Addenda: Disposable personal income: Total, billions of 1987 dollars Per capita: Current dollars 1987 dollars Population (mid-period, millions) Personal saving as percentage of disposable personal income 1994 II I Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 1995 III IV 1993 I 1994 1993 IV 1994 I II 1995 III I IV 5,375,1 5,701.7 5,484.6 5,555.8 5,659.9 5,734.5 5,856.6 5,963.1 3,080,8 3,279.0 3,148.4 3,208.3 3,257.2 3,293.9 3,356.4 3,403.2 791.0 801.9 811.6 821.8 837.3 848.8 773.8 818.2 588.4 617.5 601.7 609.4 612.8 618.3 629.5 638.8 701.9 748.5 712.6 728.6 742.5 753.5 769.6 778.8 1,021.4 1,109.5 1,057.0 1,082.0 1,101.2 1,114.3 1,140.5 1,160.0 583.8 602.8 587.8 595.7 601.9 604.4 609.0 615.6 355.3 381.0 366.8 373.2 378.4 383.7 388.7 399,6 441.6 473.7 462,9 471.0 471.3 467.0 485.7 493.8 37.3 39.5 44.4 47.2 39.3 29.8 41.7 45.1 404.3 434.2 418.5 423.8 431.9 437.1 444.0 448.7 24.1 27.7 30.3 15.3 34.1 32.6 29.0 25.6 181.3 194,3 184.1 185.7 191.7 196.9 202.7 205.5 637.9 664.0 627.7 631.1 649.4 674.2 701.1 724.5 915.4 963.4 931.0 947.4 957.6 969.0 979.7 1,004.6 444.4 473.5 452.1 463.8 470.7 476.5 483.1 496.2 33.9 20.1 23.3 20.1 32.7 20.0 27.9 20.0 23.5 19.8 21.4 20.3 20.5 20.1 20.4 20.7 118.7 298.3 126.9 319.6 121.1 305.1 122.8 312.9 126.2 317.4 128.5 322.3 130.2 325.8 132.4 335.0 23.9 24.2 24.1 24.2 24.3 24.3 24.2 23.8 274.4 295.3 281.0 288.7 293.1 298.0 301.6 311.1 Personal consumption expenditures Durable goods Motor vehicles and parts .... Furniture and household eauiDment Other Nondurable goods Food Clothing and shoes Gasoline and oil ... Fuel oil and coal Other . Services Housing Household operation Electricity and gas Other household operation Transportation Medical care Other . 4,378.2 4,628.4 4,469.6 4,535.0 4,586.4 4,657,5 4,734.8 4,780.8 538.0 591.5 562.8 576.2 580.3 591.5 617.7 613.4 228.0 251.2 241.4 253.0 245.8 245.5 260.4 253.3 208.9 101.1 229.7 110.6 217.7 103.7 218.1 105.1 225.3 109.3 233.7 112.3 241.7 115.6 241.7 118.4 1,339.2 1,394.3 1,355,2 1,368.9 1,381.4 1,406,1 1,420.7 1,429.5 649.7 235.4 105.6 679.6 246.5 107.2 660.8 240.7 104.4 667.9 241.9 103.2 675.5 243.9 103.7 683.7 247.8 110.6 691.2 252.6 111.3 696.2 251.7 113.6 14.0 13.7 13.9 15.5 13.1 13.4 12.6 13.1 334.4 347.3 335.4 340.4 345.2 350.5 353.0 354.9 2,501.0 2,642.7 2,551.6 2,589.9 2,624.7 2,659.9 2,696.4 2,737.9 629.0 256.3 112.8 660.0 264.2 113.0 638.8 261.3 115.1 648.2 261.1 116.3 655.2 265.9 115.2 663.9 265.3 111.9 672.8 264.5 108.8 680.8 268.6 110.3 143.5 170.6 680.5 764.7 151.1 179.6 727.1 811.8 146.2 173.6 697.3 780.7 144.8 175.4 707.4 797.8 150.7 178.5 720.9 804.3 153.5 180.5 733.2 817.0 155.6 184.0 746.8 828.3 158.3 186.3 760.0 842.2 Table 2,3.—Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product in Constant Dollars [Billions of 1987 dollars] 261,3 281.4 266.6 276.3 279.9 282.9 286.6 293.7 686.4 742.1 707.0 723.0 746.4 744.1 754.7 774.3 4,688.7 4,959.6 4,777.6 4,832.8 4,913.5 4,990.3 5,101.9 5,188.8 4,496.2 4,756.5 4,588.2 4,657.3 4,712.4 4,787.0 4,869.3 4,918.8 4,378.2 4,628.4 4,469.6 4,535.0 4,586.4 4,657.5 4,734.8 4,780.8 108.2 117.6 108.7 124.0 127.3 115.5 119.3 111.7 9.9 10.5 9.8 10.5 10.5 10.3 10.5 10.7 192.6 203.1 189.4 175.5 201.1 203.3 232.6 270.0 3,704.1 3,835.7 3,747.8 3,779.2 3,811.5 3,840.9 3,911.0 3,952.9 18,153 19,003 18,421 18,588 18,853 19,095 19,473 19,765 14,341 14,696 14,451 14,535 14,625 14,697 14,927 15,057 258.3 261.0 259.4 260.0 260.6 261.3 262.0 262.5 4.1 4.1 4.0 3.6 4.1 4.1 4.6 5.2 NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1. Personal consumption expenditures Durable aoods Motor vehicles and parts .... Furniture and household equipment Other Nondurable goods Food Clothing and shoes Gasoline and oil Fuel oil and coal Other Services Housing Household operation Electricity and gas Other household operation . . . . Transportation Medical care Other 3,458.7 3,579.6 3,506.2 3,546.3 3,557.8 3,584.7 3,629,6 3,642.0 489.9 532.1 510.8 521.7 522,2 529.6 554.8 548.2 196.1 208.2 204.7 213.7 205.3 202.0 211.9 201.9 214.1 797 238.7 852 224.6 81 5 225.9 820 232.5 844 241.7 860 254.5 884 256.3 900 1,078.5 1,109.5 1,088.0 1,098.3 1,104.3 1,113.4 1,121.9 1,126,0 524.0 197.8 535.6 208.8 528.1 202.4 531.9 203.8 536.1 204.9 535.7 210.2 538.5 216.4 540.1 215.9 86.5 12.1 87.2 11.9 86.6 12.2 86.1 13.4 86.7 11.4 88.0 11.7 88.2 11.1 89.7 11.6 258.2 265.9 258.8 263.1 265.1 267.8 267.6 268.7 1,890.3 1,938.1 1,907.4 1,926.3 1,931.4 1,941.8 1,952.9 1,967.9 492.6 225.3 501.3 228.3 495.4 226.9 507.4 229.4 99.6 500.0 229.1 100.2 505.0 227.1 98.2 497.7 228.7 101.1 502.6 228.1 98.6 97.2 94.5 95.8 1267 1300 127.9 4664 5782 132.7 4790 5969 127.2 129.8 4704 584.9 127.7 130.9 4732 595.9 128.9 131.8 477.4 593.1 130.9 132.4 481 0 597.7 132.6 135.7 4844 600.7 133.6 136.5 487.9 606.6 l6 • April SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 3. Government Receipts and Expenditures. Table 3.2.—Federal Government Receipts and Expenditures Table 3.3.—State and Local Government Receipts and Expenditures [Billions of dollars] [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 1993 1993 1994 IV Receipts Personal tax and nontax receipts Income taxes Estate and gift taxes Nontaxes .... Corporate profits tax accruals Federal Reserve banks Other .... Indirect business tax and nontax accruals Excise taxes Customs duties Nontaxes Contributions for social insurance Expenditures Purchases National defense Nondefense Transfer payments (net) To persons To rest of the world (net) ... Grants-in-aid to State and local governments Net interest paid Interest paid To persons and business To rest of the world (net) Less: Interest received by government Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises . Subsidies Less: Current surplus of government enterprises .. Less: Wage accruals less disbursements Surplus or deficit (-), national income and product accounts Social insurance funds Other 1,265,7 1,379.0 1994 II I 1,313.6 1993 1995 IV ill IV 1,337.4 1,380.7 1,388.8 1,408.8 520.3 505.9 565.6 548.9 536.8 521.4 550.2 533.6 571.1 552.5 566.9 550.8 574.2 558.5 591.5 576.2 12.9 15.0 13.8 14.8 16.9 14.3 13.8 13.5 1.6 1.8 1.7 1.7 1.8 1.8 1.8 143.0 167.1 157.8 151.8 166.3 172.4 178.1 16.0 17.3 15.8 16.0 16.9 18.0 18.2 127.0 149.9 142.0 135.8 149.4 154.4 159.9 1.9 84.6 48.5 19.9 16.3 91.2 53.4 21.3 16.5 90.7 53.9 20.2 16.6 90.4 53.1 20.2 17.1 90.4 52.9 21.5 15.9 91.9 54.0 21.1 16.8 91.9 53.6 22.2 16.2 89.1 54.5 18.4 16.2 517.8 555.1 528.3 545.1 553.0 557.6 564.6 575.0 1,507.0 1,538.1 1,533.7 1,513.7 1,525.9 1,542.8 1,569.9 1,591.9 443.6 302.7 140.9 437.3 292.3 145.0 439.8 299.1 140.7 437.8 291.7 146.1 435.1 291.7 143.5 444.3 300.5 143.8 431.9 285.3 146.6 433.1 284.0 149.0 658.0 642.2 682.5 666.6 674.1 649.8 671.5 659.9 676.2 663.5 683.0 668.5 699.2 674.5 706.3 695.0 11.3 11.6 12.7 14.4 24.7 197.0 190.0 194.4 200.3 205.5 215.5 19.1.5 220.5 173.5 183.5 213.9 171.4 179.3 208.3 165.1 188.8 217.7 172.8 194.4 223.2 175.8 203.5 232.9 180.3 210.0 238.8 181.8 41.6 47.0 42.4 43.2 44.9 47.3 52.6 56.9 30.7 29.0 30.4 29.1 28.9 28.8 29.4 28.8 35.7 37.4 29.2 33.1 39.3 41.6 35.1 37.7 31.3 34.6 20.9 25.9 29.8 34.2 27.0 36.2 15.7 15.9 186.1 197.6 183.6 214.3 172.7 24.3 1.7 3.9 2.3 2.6 3.3 5.0 4.4 9.1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 -241.4 -159.1 34.0 53.1 2201 1762 1451 39.3 49.3 53.5 -154.0 -161.1 54.1 55.5 -275.4 -212.2 -259.4 -225.5 -198.7 -208.1 -216.6 1993 1994 I 72.9 Receipts Personal tax and nontax receipts Income taxes Nontaxes Other .. Corporate profits tax accruals Indirect business tax and nontax accruals Sales taxes Property taxes Other Contributions for social insurance Federal grants-in-aid Expenditures Purchases Compensation of employees Other Transfer payments to persons Net interest paid Interest paid Less: Interest received by government Less: Dividends received by government Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises . Subsidies ..... Less: Current surplus of government enterprises .. Less: Wage accruals less disbursements Surplus or deficit (-), national income and product accounts Social insurance funds Other 1994 I 1995 III II I IV 891.0 943.2 918.8 919.1 935.6 950.3 967.8 166.1 123.3 176.5 131.5 170.2 126.6 172.9 128.7 175.3 130.6 177.3 132.0 180.6 134.8 182.7 136.4 22.7 20.1 23.8 21.2 23.2 20.4 23.5 20.7 23.7 21.1 23.9 21.4 24.1 21.7 24.3 22.0 30.3 35.4 33.7 32.3 35.4 36.2 37.5 440.7 212.4 184.0 462.9 226.2 190.8 449.0 217.8 186.4 454.2 220.7 188.0 460.0 224.2 189.8 465.3 227.8 191.6 472.1 231.9 193.6 476.0 232.8 196.4 44.3 46.0 44.9 45.6 46.0 45.8 46.5 46.9 67.8 70.9 68.9 69.7 70.5 71.3 72.1 73.0 186.1 197.6 197.0 190.0 194.4 200.3 205.5 215.5 864.7 917.0 884.3 893.9 908.6 926.4 939.0 951.3 704.7 738.0 717.4 722.0 731.5 744.5 753.8 762.6 483.0 .221.7 506.4 231.6 490.2 227.2 497.1 224.9 503.4 228.1 509.8 234.7 515.2 238.6 521.9 240.7 250.4 273.3 258.6 264.3 270.7 276.8 281.3 285.6 -53.4 -54.8 -53.6 -54.1 -54.6 -55.1 -55.6 -55.6 65.1 65.5 65.2 65.3 65.5 65.6 65.7 65.9 118.4 120.4 118.8 119.4 120.1 120.7 121.3 121.5 10.4 10.9 10.5 10.7 10.8 10.9 11.3 11.6 -26.7 .4 -28.6 ,4 -27.6 .4 -27.7 .4 -28.3 .4 -28.9 .4 -29.3 .4 -29.6 .4 27.1 28.9 27.9 28.1 28.7 29.2 29.7 30.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 26.3 26.2 34.5 25.2 66.3 65.6 66.2 -40.0 -39.3 -31.7 65.9 ^0.7 27.0 23.9 28.8 65.9 65.3 65.1 -38.9 -41.4 -36.4 65.1 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 17 Table 3.7B.—Government Purchases by Type Table 3.8B.—Government Purchases by Type in Constant Dollars [Billions of dollars] [Billions of 1987 dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 1993 1993 1994 IV Government purchases Federal National defense Durable goods Nondurable goods Services Compensation of employees Military Civilian Other services Structures Nondefense Durable goods Nondurable goods Commodity Credit Corporation inventory change ... Other nondurables Services Compensation of employees Other services Structures State and local Durable goods Nondurable goods Services Compensation of employees Other services Structures 1994 I Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 1993 1995 II III IV 1994 443.6 437.3 439.8 437.8 435.1 444.3 431.9 433.1 302.7 292.3 299.1 291.7 291.7 300.5 285.3 284.0 70.6 61.9 66.6 64.6 63.1 64.1 55.9 58.3 9.5 218.1 8.0 217.6 9.2 219.1 7.9 214.5 7.2 217.3 8.5 222.8 b.5 216.0 8.6 211.0 135.8 134.9 134.4 135.3 135.6 135.1 133.5 134.5 88.3 47.5 82.4 86.3 48.5 82.7 86.4 48.0 84.6 87.1 48.2 79.2 87.0 48.5 81.7 86.3 48.8 87.6 84.9 48.6 82.4 85.4 49.1 76.5 4.5 4.7 4.4 4.7 4.1 5.2 5.0 6.1 140,9 7.2 7.2 145.0 7.4 7.1 140.7 7.3 7.2 146,1 7.4 7.5 143.5 7.2 7.2 143.8 7.4 6.5 146.6 7.6 7.1 149.0 7.6 8.2 -.3 7.6 114.8 -.5 7.6 118.9 .3 6.9 114.3 -.2 7.7 119.2 -.2 7.4 118.5 -1.0 7.5 118.6 -.6 7.7 119.3 .2 8.0 120.8 67.9 47.0 71.3 47.6 71.0 48.2 12.0 72.9 45.6 10.7 70.3 48.3 11.2 71.2 48.1 12.6 72.3 48.4 12.5 1.1.7 1.1.6 68.1 46.2 11.9 704.7 738.0 717.4 722.0 731.5 744.5 753.8 762.6 36.9 62.6 38.5 65.7 37.3 62.6 38.0 64.3 38.4 65.0 38.8 66.5 38.9 67.1 39.3 69.4 505.7 530.0 512.5 520.5 526.7 533.3 539.4 546.7 483.0 506.4 490.2 497.1 503.4 509.8 515.2 521.9 22.6 99.6 23.6 22.3 23.6 24.2 24.8 105.0 23.5 99.2 23.3 103.8 101.5 105.9 108.5 107.2 I IV I 1,148.4 1,175.3 1,157.2 1,159.8 1,166,7 1,188.8 1,185.8 1,195.6 1994 1993 Government purchases Federal National defense Durable goods Nondurable goods Services Compensation of employees .... Military Civilian Other services Structures Nondefense Durable goods Nondurable goods Commodity Credit Corporation inventory change ... Other nondurables Services Compensation of employees Other services Structures State and local Durable goods Nondurable goods .... Services ... Compensation of employees Other services Structures II 1995 III IV 929.8 922.8 931.5 919.9 917.1 932.0 922.2 918,6 337,6 351.1 341.7 334.7 343.5 330.4 326.5 243.7 226.7 238.7 228.5 226.1 233.0 219.1 215.1 64.8 55.4 61.4 57.9 55.8 57.8 50.2 51.8 8.6 166.9 7.4 160.5 8.4 165.7 7.4 159.8 6.7 160.6 7.9 163.6 7.6 157.8 7.9 151.1 96.5 63.0 33.4 70.4 90.8 59.2 31.6 69.7 93.7 61.3 32.4 72.0 92.5 60.5 32.0 67.3 91.5 59.7 90.4 58.9 31.5 73.2 88.7 57.8 31.0 69.1 87.6 57.1 30.5 63.5 3.1.8 69.1 3.4 3.4 3.1 3.4 2.9 3.7 3.5 4.3 113.0 8.0 6.4 110.9 8.0 6.0 112.4 8.5 6.4 113.2 7.5 6.5 108.7 7.5 6.0 110.5 8.4 5.3 111.3 8.7 6.0 111.4 8.2 7.1 -.3 6.8 -.7 6.7 .3 6.1 -.2 6.8 -.5 6.6 -.7 6.7 .2 6.9 -1.3 6.6 88.5 87.2 87.4 88.9 86.1 87.4 86.2 85.9 49.6 38.9 10.1 48.1 39.1 49.4 38.0 10.2 49.4 39.5 10.2 48.5 37.6 47.5 39.9 9.0 9.4 46.8 39.4 10.4 46.4 39.5 10.2 573.1 585.2 580.4 578.3 582.4 588.5 591.8 592.1 32.1 53.6 32.9 55.9 32.4 54.4 32.7 55.2 32.8 55.6 33.0 56.2 33.2 56.8 33.3 57.3 9.7 399.1 407.2 401.2 404.0 405.9 408.7 410.2 411.7 363.6 368.8 365.1 366.5 368.1 369.9 370.6 371.5 35.5 88.3 38.4 89.2 36.2 92.4 37.5 86.4 37.8 88.1 38.7 90.6 39.6 91.7 40.2 89.8 Table 3.11.—National Defense Purchases in Constant Dollars [Billions of dollars] [Billions of 1987 dollars] ;.... 302.7 292.3 299.1 291.7 291.7 300.5 285.3 284.0 70.6 61.9 66.6 64.6 63.1 64.1 55.9 58.3 65.8 57.3 18.5 61.8 60.4 20.4 58.8 59.0 50.9 53.1 171 9.6 201 82 10.3 10.5 164 83 8.7 15 5.2 135 5.1 18 4.7 11 0 5.0 163 7.9 8.9 23 21 7 30 8.9 9.7 18 6.4 134 4.8 21 5 9.8 21 9.5 9.3 20 5.5 129 4.7 5.6 128 4.8 6.2 131 4.2 19 5.9 139 4.3 9.5 8.0 9.2 7.9 7.2 8.5 8.5 8.6 32 35 30 2.3 29 3.7 25 3.0 34 1.7 35 1.9 27 2.8 26 2.9 105 10.9 10.0 5.4 123 5.2 2.8 2.7 2.5 2.4 2.2 3.1 3.0 3.1 218.1 217.6 219.1 214.5 217.3 222.8 216,0 211.0 1358 88.3 134.9 134.4 135.3 135.6 135.1 133.5 134.5 86.3 86.4 87.1 87.0 84.9 85.4 475 824 485 480 482 491 84.6 79.2 485 817 486 82.7 86.3 48.8 87.6 82.4 76.5 27.4 25.3 25.4 28.1 27.6 25.1 24.5 26.8 26.6 28.1 26.2 29.1 24.3 28.4 22.4 26.4 8.0 14.7 8.1 8.3 16.4 15.5 7.2 15.6 7.9 16.3 9.6 17.0 7.9 16.8 6.2 15.7 46 43 5.3 4.6 4.3 4.3 4.2 4.2 44 -20 39 4.1 3.9 3.4 43 4.1 4.2 -3.6 '< -1.3 -3.3 -4.8 -2.8 -3.3 -2.7 4.5 4.7 4.4 4.7 4.1 5.2 5.0 6.1 3.1 1.3 3.1 1.6 3.0 1.4 3.0 1.7 2.5 1.5 3.6 1.6 3.2 1.7 4.2 1.9 1. Includes utilities, communications, rental payments, maintenance and repair, and payments to contractors to operate installations. 2. Includes depot maintenance and contractual services for weapons systems, other than research and development. 3. Includes compensation of foreign personnel, consulting, training, and education. National defense purchases ... . Durable goods Military equipment Aircraft ... Missiles Ships Vehicles Electronic equipment Other Other durable goods Nondurable goods .. . Petroleum products Ammunition Other nondurable goods .... Services Compensation of employees Military Civilian Other services Contractual research and development Installation support2 1 Weapons support 3 Personnel support Transportation of material Travel of persons Other Structures Military facilities Other ..... I 356.6 Table 3.10.—National Defense Purchases National defense purchases Durable goods Military equipment .... Aircraft Missiles Ships Vehicles Electronic equipment Other Other durable goods Nondurable goods Petroleum products Ammunition Other nondurable goods .... Services Compensation of employees Military Civilian Other services Contractual research and development Installation support2 * Weapons support 3 Personnel support Transportation of material Travel of persons Other Structures Military facilities Other • 243.7 226.7 238.7 228.5 226.1 233.0 219.1 215.1 64.8 55.4 61.4 57.9 55,8 57.8 50.2 51.8 589 184 553 533 51 3 438 18.0 11.1 16.8 10.5 509 137 165 9.0 8.5 13.3 9.1 25 498 150 9.5 7.8 15 5.9 11 4 5.9 5.0 109 5.6 18 5.2 109 6.1 456 132 8.4 6.8 18 8.6 7.4 2.8 3.3 2.8 2.2 11.6 8.3 7.7 16 10.2 8.3 4.6 4.9 6.4 14 4.3 9.4 6.5 8.4 7,4 6,7 7.9 7.6 7,9 2.6 3.6 2.5 2.7 3.1 1.7 3.2 1.9 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.5 5.6 11.1 16 5.3 11,8 12 4.7 8.5 6.9 11.4 5.0 10.4 6.2 2.4 2.3 2.2 1.9 2.8 2.7 2.8 160.5 165.7 159.8 160.6 163.6 157.8 151,1 96.5 63.0 33.4 70.4 90.8 59.2 31.6 69.7 93.7 61.3 32.4 72.0 92.5 60.5 32.0 67.3 91.5 59.7 31.8 69.1 90.4 58.9 73.2 88.7 57.8 31.0 69.1 87.6 57.1 30.5 63.5 240 222 242 21 6 21.7 23.6 21.5 22.9 23.2 23.8 22.8 24.2 21.1 23.7 19.4 21.7 2.5 166,9 6.4 11.0 5.0 3.7 -14 6.4 12.2 4.4 3.4 -2.5 6.6 11.4 5.8 3.5 -1.0 5.6 11.6 4.7 3.3 -2.3 6.2 12.2 4.2 2.9 -3.3 •31.5 7.6 12.5 4.4 3.7 -1.9 6.2 12.3 4.5 3.6 -2.3 4.9 11.4 4.3 3.5 -1.8 3.4 3.4 3.1 3.4 2.9 3.7 3.5 4.3 2.4 1.0 2.2 1.1 2.2 1.0 2.2 1.2 1.8 1.1 2.6 1.1 2.3 1.2 3.0 1.3 1. Includes utilities, communications, rental payments, maintenance and repair, and payments to contractors to operate installations. 2. Includes depot maintenance and contractual services for weapons systems, other than research and development. 3. Includes compensation of foreign personnel, consulting, training, and education. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS l8 » April 1995 4. Foreign Transactions. Table 4.1.—Foreign Transactions in the National income and Product Accounts Table 4.2.—Exports and imports of Goods and Services and Receipts and Payments of Factor Income in Constant Dollars [Billions of dollars] [Billions of 1987 dollars] Se<isonally adjusts5d at ar nual rates Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 1993 1993 1994 1994 IV Receipts from rest of the world Exports of goods and services . Merchandise * Durable Nondurable Services ] .... Receipts of factor income2 Capital grants received by the United States (net) Payments to rest of the world Imports of goods1 and services . Merchandise Durable Nondurable Services 1 Payments of factor income3 .... Transfer payments (net) From persons (net) From government (net) From business Net foreign investment 1995 II I 885.8 821.6 819.6 866.6 907.2 949.7 659.1 461.0 314.8 146.2 198.1 718.7 512.1 350.6 161.5 206.6 680.3 480.3 329.2 151.1 200.0 674.2 476.0 329.4 146.6 198.3 704.5 499.5 346.0 153.5 205.0 730.5 521.3 355.2 166.2 209.1 765.5 551.5 371.7 179.8 214.0 136.6 167.1 141.3 145.4 162.1 176.7 184.2 0 0 795.6 0 885.8 0 0 821.6 819.6 0 907.2 866.6 816.9 677.2 454.3 223.0 139.7 751.4 613.3 407.8 205.6 138.1 760.9 622.3 418.1 204.2 138.6 802.1 665.3 445.3 220.0 136.8 840.1 700.0 464.1 235.9 140.1 864.4 721.2 489.5 231.8 143.2 132.1 178.6 143.3 146.1 169.5 188.8 210.1 31.5 .9.9 15.7 33.5 10.5 15.9 40.1 29.0 10.5 11.6 30.1 10.5 12.7 31.9 10.3 14.4 42.8 10.5 24.7 5.9 7.2 24.3 5.9 6.9 6.9 7-2 770.9 558.4 373.4 185.0 212.5 0 7.6 883.8 737.5 497.5 240.0 146.3 Exports of goods and services Merchandise * Durable Nondurable Services1 Receipts of factor income2 Imports of goods and services Merchandise 1 Durable Nondurable Services * Payments of factor income3 ... ....... 19 94 1993 1995 I II 602.5 657.0 625.2 446.0 496.9 468.1 3125 3563 3306 133.4 140.6 137.5 619.6 464.4 3326 131.7 643.9 484.6 3485 136.1 1565 1600 1571 1552 1592 109.1 130.8 112.4 114.8 127.1 676.3 5727 3809 191.8 766.9 6585 4536 204.9 707.4 723.6 755.6 5999 615 2 648 3 4434 4051 4177 194.8 1975 204.9 1036 1085 1076 1085 1074 4631 2115 1089 103.4 137.5 111.7 113.2 130.7 144.9 161.0 IV 949.7 724.3 592.1 385.5 206.6 132.2 9.8 1994 I IV III 795.6 0 1993 III IV I 666.5 697.9 696.9 505.1 533.6 534.4 3612 3830 3855 144.0 150.6 148.9 161 3 1643 1625 137.8 143.2 783.5 805.0 816.6 6746 6959 7045 4901 4963 2058 208.2 1091 1121 1. Exports and imports of certain goods, primarily military equipment purchased and sold by the Federal Government, are included in services. 2. Consists largely of receipts by U.S. residents of interest and dividends and reinvested earnings of foreign affiliates of U.S. corporations. 3. Consists largely of payments to foreign residents of interest and dividends and reinvested earnings of U.S. affiliates of foreign corporations. 29.6 10.7 11.3 7.6 -92.3 -143.2 -113.2 -116.4 -135.1 -153.6 -167.7 1. Exports and imports of certain goods, primarily military equipment purchased and sold by the Federal Government, are included in services. 2. Consists largely of receipts by U.S. residents of interest and dividends and reinvested earnings of foreign affiliates of U.S. corporations. 3. Consists largely of payments to foreign residents of interest and dividends and reinvested earnings of U.S. affiliates of foreign corporations. Table 4.3.—Exports and Imports of Merchandise by End-Use Category Table 4.4.—Exports and imports of Merchandise by End-Use Category in Constant Dollars [Billions of dollars] [Billions of 1987 dollars] Exports of merchandise Foods feeds and beverages Industrial supplies and materials Durable goods Nondurable goods Capital goods, except automotive Civilian aircraft, engines, and parts ... Computers, peripherals, and parts .... Other Automotive vehicles, engines, and parts Consumer goods, except automotive Durable goods Nondurable goods Other Durable goods Nondurable goods imports of merchandise Foods, feeds, and beverages Industrial supplies and materials, except petroleum and products Durable goods Nondurable goods Petroleum and products Capital goods, except automotive Civilian aircraft, engines, and parts ... Computers, peripherals, and parts .... Other . .. Automotive vehicles, engines, and parts Consumer goods, except automotive Durable goods Nondurable goods Other . . . . Durable goods Nondurable goods Addenda: Exports of agricultural products 1 Exports of nonagricultural products ... Imports of nonpetroleum products 461.0 512.1 407 42.0 4803 476.0 4995 521.3 5515 42.5 39.7 378 102.7 115.9 103.4 104.1 111.8 379 39.6 37.5 376 41.3 651 746 659 662 721 558.4 41 8 488 477 120.8 126.8 137.9 43.4 44.3 48.2 774 825 897 182.2 205.6 192.4 194.7 204.3 207.4 216.0 211.7 32.7 29.3 1202 52.4 54.7 28.4 26.2 28.3 14.1 31.6 33.2 34.5 30.6 34.2 31.3 140.7 127.3 1291 34.1 31.9 1383 55.9 58.3 30.5 28.6 33.8 29.5 36.0 24.1 36.2 145.0 150.5 151.3 62.2 64.8 32.8 16.5 63.9 62.8 32.4 30.3 34.6 17.3 17.3 592.1 677.2 613.3 622.3 665.3 700.0 721.2 737.5 31.9 34.2 141 57.6 60.0 30.6 29.4 31.0 15.5 15.5 55.0 56.9 29.3 ?77 301 151 15.1 54.3 55.4 28.6 26.8 27.8 13.9 13.9 27.9 31.0 28.9 29.4 88.9 43.0 45.9 105.6 92.3 53.9 51.6 4R7 97.6 48.7 48.8 45.7 ?7R 314 157 15.7 30.5 58.0 61.4 30.5 31.0 32.0 16.0 16.0 32.2 3?1 3? 9 165 103.1 107.4 114.2 118.1 52.9 50.2 51.4 55.3 52.1 60.6 5RR 553 59.9 58.2 51.8 51.2 51 5 512 476 416 152.4 184.7 163.2 170.5 179.0 187.9 201.4 205.1 9.9 9.8 11.9 12.3 11.3 11.3 11.3 12.4 38.0 46.1 40.3 41.8 44.3 47.1 51.2 50.6 130.9 138.3 144.6 103.1 127.2 110.6 117.4 122.3 102.4 11.8.7 105.9 108.1 116.5 123.4 126.8 129.6 134.0 146.3 137.9 137.8 144.5 148.5 154.4 159.2 R17 83.0 7RR 77.6 72.1 77.0 73.2 70.2 69.2 647 65.7 677 70.9 7? 7 76.1 63.8 35.1 17.5 39.8 19.9 37.5 175 199 1RR 188 43.7 47.1 45.4 40.1 20.0 41.4 202 200 20.7 39.6 19.8 19.8 43.8 46.8 54.1 55.7 37.4 18.7 40.4 187 43.7 ?n? ?07 417.3 465.0 435.0 432.2 455.7 474.6 497.4 502.8 540.6 626.0 565.7 580.7 613.9 639.4 670.1 685.7 1. Includes parts of exports of foods, feeds, and beverages, of nondurable industrial supplies and materials, and of nondurable consumer goods. Exports of merchandise . . . . Foods feeds and beverages Industrial supplies and materials Durable goods Nondurable goods Capital goods, except automotive Civilian aircraft, engines, and parts ... Computers, peripherals, and parts .... Other Automotive vehicles, engines, and parts Consumer goods, except automotive Durable goods Nondurable goods Other Durable goods Nondurable goods imports of merchandise Foods feeds and beverages Industrial supplies and materials, except petroleum and products Durable goods .. Nondurable goods Petroleum and products Capital goods, except automotive Civilian aircraft, engines, and parts ... Computers, peripherals, and parts .... Other Automotive vehicles, engines, and parts Consumer goods, except automotive Durable goods .. Nondurable goods Other Durable goods Nondurable goods Addenda: Exports of agricultural products * Exports of nonagricultural products ... Imports of nonpetroleum products 446.0 496.9 468.1 464.4 484.6 505.1 533.6 534.4 356 947 31.0 637 357 1005 33.1 674 362 964 330 954 320 997 31.0 30.8 32.2 654 645 676 363 1034 34.8 68.6 41 7 1034 34.5 688 400 1062 36.2 70.0 197.6 232.5 211.9 216.7 226.9 235.1 251.4 250.8 25.9 66.6 24.4 84.5 27.0 74.0 105.1 123.6 110.9 46.3 46.9 25.2 21.7 24.8 12.4 12.4 50.4 51.0 27.0 24.1 26.7 13.4 13.4 48.6 48.6 25.9 22.7 26.4 13.2 13.2 26.8 76.9 26.5 79.3 21.9 85.9 22.4 95.8 18.2 99.6 113.0 121.0 127.2 133.2 133.0 47.7 47.3 25.2 22.1 24.2 12.1 12.1 49.0 49.8 26.9 22.9 27.2 13.6 13.6 50.7 52.1 ?fiR 25.3 27.5 13 R 13.8 54.2 54.9 28.9 26.0 27.9 14.0 14.0 55.6 53.0 28.5 24.5 28.8 14.4 14.4 572.7 658.5 599.9 615.2 648.3 674.6 695.9 704.5 256 260 257 262 262 78.2 37.1 41.1 56.5 90.1 45.1 45.1 59.5 81.1 40.0 41.1 58.1 85.5 41.8 43.8 56.5 89.6 44.8 44.8 60.3 26.2 25.3 27.2 91.4 94.0 47.6 46.4 57.1 93.8 47.2 46.6 55.5 252.5 9.0 128.9 114.5 103.1 129.8 256.9 7.5 129.8 119.6 105.2 133.6 70.8 62.7 32.4 16.2 16.2 45.9 480 453 84 3 180.9 227.8 197.3 207.8 219.0 231.7 7.6 9.6 9.7 8.7 8.8 8.9 115.4 106.9 99.7 94.6 83.9 112.7 930 992 102.6 108.8 880 1063 96.7 101.7 87.4 90.3 97.9 88.9 123.7 116.7 116.9 122.2 125.7 113.9 RRR 65.7 60.4 61.9 62.8 66.1 32.0 16.0 16.0 56.5 34.2 17.1 17.1 58.9 33.6 1RR 69.9 59.9 34.2 17.1 17.1 36.6 37.5 40.7 45.9 535 576 539 550 30.3 15.1 15.1 33.5 16.7 16.7 32.0 16.0 16.0 38.6 40.2 39.1 16 R 407.4 456.7 429.1 427.8 447.1 464.4 487.6 488.5 516.3 598.9 541.8 558.6 587.9 610.3 638.9 649.0 1. Includes parts of exports of foods, feeds, and beverages, of nondurable industrial supplies and materials, and of nondurable consumer goods. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April ipp5 5. Saving and Investment. Table 5.1—Gross Saving and Investment [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 1993 1994 1993 1994 Gross saving Gross private saving Personal saving Undistributed corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments Undistributed profits Inventory valuation adjustment Capital consumption adjustment Corporate consumption of fixed capital Noncorporate consumption of fixed capital . Wage accruals less disbursements Government surplus or deficit (-), national income and product accounts Federal State and local Capital grants received by the United States (net) Gross investment Gross private domestic investment Net foreion investment Statistical discrepancy 787.5 920.6 II I IV 825.8 886.2 1995 III 923.3 I IV 922.6 950.3 1,002.5 1,053.5 1,011.4 1,037.3 1,041.4 1,052.7 1,082.7 189.4 175.5 201.1 192.6 203.1 203.3 232.6 97.5 135.1 116.9 147.9 115.6 103.0 142.3 118.9 139.5 121.6 130.7 124.0 -6.2 -19.5 -6.5 -12.3 -14.1 -19.6 -32.1 120.9 127J 270.0 -36.5 29.5 37.7 38.8 37.0 37.4 37.5 38.8 38.1 407.8 432.2 411.1 432.2 425.9 432.6 438.0 445.3 261.2 283.1 263.0 301.8 272.1 277.3 281.3 284.8 0 20.0 0 0 0 0 o 0 -215.0 -132.9 -185.6 -151.1 -118.1 -130.1 -132.3 -241.4 -159.1 -220.1 -176.2 -145.1 -154.0 -161.1 26.2 26,3 0 0 789.8 34.5 0 0 889.7 809.3 882.0 1,032.9 -92.3 -143.2 922.5 2.3 -30.9 25.2 1132 -16.5 850.2 27.0 0 899.3 23.9 0 901.5 28.8 0 0 907.9 966.6 1,034.4 1,055.1 1,075.6 1,119.3 -116.4 -135.1 -153.6 -167.7 -36.1 -24.0 -21.1 -42.4 Table 5.4.—Fixed Investment by Type Table 5.5.—Fixed Investment by Type in Constant Dollars [Billions of dollars] [Billions of 1987 dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 1993 1994 1993 IV Fixed investment Nonresidential Structures . . . . II III 182.8 172.7 181.8 184.6 192.0 199.8 117.6 127.6 122.3 119.0 127.2 128.6 135.7 142.6 34.4 36.3 34.4 34.7 35.6 36.7 38.3 38.9 9.2 10.7 11.4 1,020.8 1,051.2 665.4 683.3 709.1 732.8 766.6 11.1 11.2 10.7 10.0 10.0 8.6 8.0 8.3 469.6 492.7 501.5 524.5 540.7 566.8 8.6 8.1 442.7 514.8 942.5 967.0 992.5 7.9 7.9 192.6 54.2 56.2 56.8 126.2 112.9 116.7 123.5 113.1 102.9 107.0 111.0 128.3 115.8 136.4 118.5 142.3 126.8 118.6 112.1 101.5 97.8 121.3 104.9 125.2 104.4 129.8 111.0 283.6 283.4 288.0 284.6 242.8 274.7 259.2 269.1 275.3 274.9 133.3 154.0 143.2 152.5 156.2 154.4 279.2 153.1 275.7 150.1 180.3 47.0 54.1 104.5 96.7 104.2 90.4 164.4 169.3 177.0 199.2 182.5 151.5 51.5 119.3 107.9 102.1 94.4 52.6 250.6 283.0 267.2 277.1 10.8 98.8 7.7 13.7 11.1 11.4 13.0 14.2 16.1 16.5 107.0 105.0 105.2 106.2 106.4 110.1 109.1 8.4 8.0 8.0 8.3 8.5 8.8 8.8 1. Includes new computers and peripheral equipment only. 53.4 Fixed investment Nonresidential Structures . Nonresidential buildings, including farm ...... Utilities Mining exploration, shafts, and wells Other structures Producers' durable equipment Information processing and related equipment Computers and peripheral eauioment * other!.!..!.. :.::::.:..:.: Industrial equipment Transportation and related eQuioment Other Residential Structures Single family Multifamily Other structures Producers' durable equipment . 804.6 903.8 851.7 591.6 1994 1993 IV 173.4 12.2 1994 I IV 913.5 646.3 176.7 866.7 980.7 616.1 697.6 Nonresidential buildings, including farm Utilities Mining exploration, shafts, and wells Other structures Producers' durable equipment Information processing and related equipment Computers and peripheral equipment1 Other Industrial equipment Transportation and related eauiDment Other Residential Structures Single family Multifamily Other structures Producers' durable equipment 1995 1994 I Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 1993 I II 873.4 891.7 1995 III 910.2 IV I 939.7 967,8 672.4 627.2 643.6 657.9 680.0 708.2 740.1 147.7 150.6 148.7 144.1 151.0 151.6 155.6 160.8 100.0 104.8 102.7 105.4 105.1 109.5 114.3 28.8 29.5 28.5 99.2 28.4 29.0 29.7 10.7 8.2 9.3 7.0 443.9 521.9 9.9 7.6 9.6 6.9 9.8 6.8 9.3 7.3 30.7 8.5 6.8 31.0 8.5 7.0 478.5 499.4 506.9 528.4 552.6 579.3 200.9 249.1 225.2 233.2 242.2 251.2 269.9 281.1 105.4 134.8 95.5 114.3 122.5 127.2 102.7 106.0 130.3 111.8 135.1 146.5 152.3 116.1 123.4 128.8 79.2 90.3 83.6 86.4 88.9 92.1 87.8 76.1 98.3 84.2 90.9 78.9 98.5 81.3 92.3 83.6 99.1 86.1 213.0 231.3 93.6 99.7 103.4 107.7 85.7 90.8 224.5 229.9 233.8 230.2 231.5 227.6 205.7 223.5 216.9 222.4 226.0 222.3 223.3 219.4 112.1 124.4 118.3 125.1 127.6 123.8 121.0 118.5 12.1 9.6 11.7 9.7 10.0 11.3 13.5 13.8 84.1 7.4 87.4 7.8 1. Includes new computers and peripheral equipment only. 88.9 7.6 87.3 7.5 87.2 7.8 86.5 7.9 88.8 8.2 87.1 8.2 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 2O • April 1995 Table 5.10.—Change in Business Inventories by Industry Table 5.11.—Change in Business Inventories by Industry in Constant Dollars [Billions of dollars] [Billions of 1987 dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 1993 1993 1994 1994 IV Change in business inventories Farm Nonfarm Change in book value Inventory valuation adjustment Manufacturing Durable goods Nondurable goods Wholesale trade Durable goods Nondurable goods Merchant wholesalers Durable poods Nondurable goods Nonmerchant wholesalers Durable goods Nondurable goods Retail trade Durable goods . Automotive Other Nondurable goods Other Durable goods Nondurable goods 15,4 9.0 52,2 6.4 -4.7 20.1 28.4 -8.3 45.9 73.0 10.7 18.4 -7.7 -27.2 .3 -2.2 4.9 2.2 2.8 14.0 11.8 5.0 2.1 2.9 -.1 .1 -.2 12.5 10.3 10.3 5.3 -.1 5.4 5.1 6.9 3.5 3.4 2.2 1.5 1.5 0 6.2 5.8 5.8 67.4 62.6 54.8 68.1 9.2 7.0 -23.8 -26.2 8.3 5.3 2.9 1.1 .7 .4 -2.0 .1 2 .3 1.0 .9 .1 -3.2 -.1 1.1 6.9 14.7 9.2 5.5 47.4 87.7 3.1 6.7 -2.2 -3.6 20.7 19.9 18.8 15.1 18.5 12.2 22 17.3 12.8 1.1 2.1 -1.0 23.7 18.8 26.1 7.2 9.6 9.2 4.9 -2.4 9.6 -3.5 18.9 13.3 12.6 13.1 11.6 1.5 22.1 16.1 6.0 20.4 15.9 6.2 1.6 1.6 0 18.6 15.7 14.4 7.2 4.3 2.9 4.2 8.4 9.1 4.2 16.9 10.7 4.4 1.6 2.3 -.7 -.8 1.8 .1 1.6 -1.0 64.7 6.3 3.7 18.9 19.8 3.4 114.1 -40.3 -49.4 3.7 5.9 .8 2.7 6.2 3.0 3.2 7.4 -5.9 -2.0 9.9 1.1 4.8 5.3 24.1 -18.3 -5.4 10.1 I 53.4 79.6 5.7 4.6 17.8 12.0 IV 60.4 84.2 -5.2 2.2 III 22.3 40.6 4.0 -10.8 6.2 -5.5 -2.0 -2.3 II 1.8 -1.7 1993 1995 I 4.6 1.7 .2 1.5 23.3 15.4 11.5 1.3 2.9 3.9 7.9 7.2 1.7 5.5 6.2 4.4 1.8 1993 1994 1994 IV Change in business inventories Farm Nonfarm Manufacturing Durable goods Nondurable goods . Wholesale trade . Durable goods Nondurable goods Merchant wholesalers Durable goods Nondurable goods Nonmerchant wholesalers Durable goods Nondurable goods Retail trade Durable goods .... Automotive Other Nondurable goods Other Durable goods Nondurable goods 15.3 10.8 47.8 ,1 7.1 -3.2 18.5 -.8 -1.3 .5 12.3 10.5 4.4 1.9 2.5 0 .1 -.2 10.8 9.1 4.7 0 4.7 4.4 14.9 10.0 5.9 2.9 3.0 .7 .8 0 -.4 -.3 -.1 1.1 1.0 .1 1.8 9.0 1.9 1.5 1.5 0 I 25.4 59.2 57.1 49.4 63.0 7.5 8.5 1.1 17.7 17.3 -.1 1.0 2.2 2.0 5.0 2.5 2.5 15.2 11.4 22.3 19.9 15.8 6.2 7.9 7.9 4.1 6.1 3.5 2.6 -1.9 8.1 16.1 11.3 11.0 3.5 7.5 7.5 3.7 4.1 6.9 15.8 10.8 5.0 14.1 9.1 5.0 1.7 1.7 0 15.6 12.9 11.8 Inventories l Farm Nonfarm Durable goods , Nondurable goods Manufacturing Durable goods Nondurable goods Wholesale trade Durable goods . . . . Nondurable goods Merchant wholesalers Durable goods Nondurable goods Nonmerchant wholesalers Durable goods Nondurable goods Retail trade Durable goods . . Automotive . Other Nondurable goods Other Final sales of domestic business2 Final sales of goods and structures domestic business2 III IV 1995 1993 I IV 1,138.4 1,145.7 1,163.7 1,185.2 1,221.0 1,251.2 97.6 99.1 93.8 94.0 98.4 99.2 1,040.8 1,046.6 1,070.0 1,091.2 1,122.5 1,151.9 582.9 588.0 602.2 617.8 633.9 651.2 457.9 458.6 467.8 473.4 488.7 500.7 394.6 395.9 400.2 405.1 414.0 422.6 245.2 246.3 249.8 253.8 259.6 264.8 149.4 149.6 150.5 151.3 154.4 157.9 259.9 260.0 266.2 272.9 280.5 289.5 161.7 162.4 167.6 172.5 177.1 182.4 100.4 103.4 107.0 97.7 98.5 98.2 232.2 231.8 237.7 243.8 251.0 258.8 144.1 144.1 149.5 153.7 157.7 162.8 88.0 27.7 17.5 10.2 87.8 28.2 18.3 88.3 28.5 18.2 10.3 90.1 29.1 18.8 10.3 93.2 29.5 19.4 10.2 96.0 30.6 19.6 11.0 282.0 135.4 9.9 283.0 136.6 292.2 140.5 299.2 145.3 310.1 153.0 317.8 157.8 .. . 66.8 68.6 67.5 69.2 68.5 72.0 70.9 74.4 76.6 76.4 80.3 77.5 .. . . 146.6 104.4 457.1 146.4 107.7 462.6 151.7 111.3 467.5 153.9 114.0 475.8 157.1 117.8 484.4 159.9 122.1 489,4 250.8 253.9 255.6 260.5 266.7 269,4 of 2.49 2.28 2.48 2.26 2.49 2.29 2.49 2.29 2.52 2.32 2.56 2.35 4.15 4.12 4.19 4.19 4.21 4.28 1. Inventories are as of the end of the quarter. The quarter-to-quarter change in inventories calculated from current-dollar inventories in this table is not the current-dollar change in business inventories (CBI) component of GDP. The former is the difference between two inventory stocks, each valued at their respective end-of-quarter prices. The latter is the change in the physical volume of inventories valued at average prices of the quarter. In addition, changes calculated from this table are at quarterly rates, whereas CBI is stated at annual rates. 2. Quarterly totals at monthly rates. Final sales of domestic business equals final sales of domestic product less gross product of households and institutions and general government and includes a small amount of final sales by farm. Inventories l Farm Nonfarm Durable goods Nondurable goods Manufacturing Durable goods Nondurable goods Wholesale trade Durable goods Nondurable goods Merchant wholesalers . . . Durable goods Nondurable goods Nonmerchant wholesalers Durable goods Nondurable goods Retail trade Durable goods Automotive Other Nondurable goods Other Final sales of domestic business2 Final sales of goods and structures of domestic business2 1994 I II 1995 III IV I 1,003.8 1,010.2 1,025.0 1,039.2 1,051.6 1,067.3 85.5 86.3 88.2 90.6 92.5 93.7 918.3 517.0 401.3 359.7 226.5 133.2 223.9 140.9 923.8 521.9 401.9 362.1 228.2 133.9 223.7 140.9 936.8 530.3 406.4 362.3 229.9 132.4 228.1 145.3 948.6 540.2 408.4 363.4 231.5 132.0 232.3 148.7 959.0 548.2 410.9 364.5 233.2 131.3 236.2 151.4 973.6 558.8 414.8 367.9 236.3 131.7 241.2 154.9 83.0 82.7 82.8 83.6 84.9 86.3 199.2 125.3 198.7 124.8 202.7 129.1 206.6 132.0 210.1 134.2 214.6 137.7 74.0 24.7 15.6 73.9 24.9 16.1 73.6 25.3 16.1 74.6 25.7 16.7 75.8 26.2 17.1 76.9 26.6 17.2 9.1 242.7 115.9 8.8 243.2 117.1 9.2 248.7 118.6 9.0 253.7 122.6 9.0 257.6 125.8 9.4 262.4 129.0 57.6 58.2 58.3 58.9 57.8 60.9 59.7 62.9 62.7 63.1 65.0 64.0 126.8 126.1 130.1 131.1 92.1 94.9 97.7 99.2 373.4 375.6 377.0 381.5 131.8 100.7 387.7 133.4 102.0 389.7 216.3 217.5 218.3 221.3 226.8 228.5 2.69 2.46 2.69 2.46 2.72 2.48 2.72 2.49 2.71 2.47 2.74 2.50 4.24 4.25 4.29 4.29 4.23 4.26 Ratio of inventories to final sales of domestic business Ratio of inventories to final sales of domestic business Inventories to final sales Nonfarm inventories to final sales Nonfarm inventories to final sales of goods and structures . .. 19.3 12.6 Seasonally adjusted quarterly totals Seasonally adjusted quarterly totals II 4.3 1.7 .3 1.4 5.1 3.5 1.6 [Billions of 1987 dollars] IV 5.7 18.2 13.9 6.2 1.4 4.8 [Billions of dollars] I 1.6 19.9 14.2 9.2 3.4 6.7 Table 5.13.—Inventories and Final Sales of Domestic Business by Industry in Constant Dollars 1994 13.9 12.3 1.1 2.7 Table 5.12.—Inventories and Final Sales of Domestic Business by Industry 1993 4.7 58.3 -2.8 3.9 1.7 2.3 -.6 1.6 0 1.6 -3.0 41.7 3.2 16.0 17.2 -1.2 -1.2 7.7 5.0 16.9 13.6 .4 -2.0 -1.8 12.7 4.5 6.3 18 -6.0 .3 -4.5 47.4 .7 6.8 -1.3 7.7 9.7 51.7 -1.0 5.0 4.0 5.1 4.9 5.0 8.7 4.0 4.7 IV 9.9 6.8 3.1 -3.5 -4.2 -1.9 4.3 2.0 2.4 III 22.1 -77 4.8 6.7 II 3.3 10.7 40.7 1995 I Inventories to final sales Nonfarm inventories to final sales Nonfarm inventories to final sales of goods and structures 1. Inventories are as of the end of the quarter. Quarter-to-quarter changes calculated from this table are at quarterly rates, whereas the constant-dollar change in business inventories component of GDP is stated at annual rates. 2. Quarterly totals at monthly rates. Final sales of domestic business equals final sales of domestic product less gross product of households and institutions and general government and includes a small amount of final sales by farm. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • 21 6. Income, Employment, and Product by Industry. Table 6.1C.—National Income Without Capital Consumption Adjustment by Industry Table 6.16C.—Corporate Profits by Industry [Billions of dollars] [Billions of dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 1993 1994 1993 IV National income without capital consumption adjustment Domestic industries Private industries Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries Mining Construction Manufacturing Durable goods Nondurable goods Transportation and public utilities Transportation Communications Electric, gas, and sanitary services .... Wholesale trade Retail trade Finance, insurance, and real estate Services Government Rest of the world 1994 I II III IV 5,151.9 5,495.5 5,278.7 5,351.0 5,457.0 5,527.8 5,646.0 4,386.7 4,702.0 4,507.0 4,567.5 4,664.6 4,732.0 4,843.9 95.1 40.4 101.9 103.8 107.9 101.0 40.9 39.7 38.7 92.8 41.5 105.7 40.2 215.4 238.3 222.7 227.9 238.9 241.5 244.8 911.9 514.3 397.6 979.7 562.4 417.4 945.5 539.1 406.4 967.1 554.9 412.2 970.3 554.9 415.4 979.6 1,001.9 560.8 578.8 418.8 423.1 384.8 166.1 107.6 407.5 177.5 113.4 392.2 170.2 107.7 391.0 169.3 110.1 404.8 175.9 112.6 412.1 180.3 113.0 422.0 184.6 118.0 111.1 116.5 114.3 111.6 116.3 118.8 119.4 288.6 444.9 310.2 475.6 294.3 451.4 300.2 455.8 312.6 472.2 311.7 482.3 316.4 492.2 40.8 846.0 894.2 865.2 860.7 885.0 903.0 928.3 1,159.6 1,254.4 1,190.9 1,217.2 1,241.1 1,267.5 1,291.7 4.5 793.4 -11.5 771.7 -1.9 783.5 -.7 1994 1995 5,156.4 5,483.9 5,276.7 5,350.3 5,449.6 5,515.8 5,620.1 765.2 1993 792.4 795.8 802.1 -7.4 -12.0 -25.9 I IV Corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments Domestic industries Financial Nonfinancial Rest of the world Receipts from the rest of the world ... Less: Payments to the rest of the world Corporate profits with inventory valuation adjustment Domestic industries . . .. Financial 1 Federal Reserve banks Other Nonfinancial Manufacturing Durable goods Primary metal industries Fabricated metal products .... Industrial machinery and equipment Electronic and other electric equipment Motor vehicles and eauioment Other Nondurable goods Food and kindred products ... Chemicals and allied products Petroleum and coal products Other Transportation and public utilities .. Wholesale and retail trade Other Rest of the world 1994 1993 I II 1995 III I IV 485.8 542.7 533.9 508.2 546.4 556.0 560.3 420.5 482.3 472.2 447.1 485.7 495.7 500.6 90.8 96.6 90.9 100.6 74.9 330.9 394.0 371.6 372.2 394.7 399.1 409.8 89.5 88.3 65.3 74.2 60.5 84.2 74J 61.1 77.6 60.7 79.1 60.3 89.9 59.7 90.0 23.7 13.0 16.6 18.4 29.6 30.3 8.9 61.7 456.2 505.0 495.1 471.2 509.0 518.5 521.4 391.0 444.6 433.4 410.1 448.2 458.1 461.7 103.7 104.0 114.6 89.6 106.4 112.6 107.2 16.0 87.7 17.3 86.7 15.8 98.8 16.0 73.6 16.9 89.6 18.0 94.6 18.2 89.0 287.3 340.6 318.8 320.5 341.8 345.5 354.5 114.2 145.6 134.2 145.1 143.0 143.3 150.9 49.4 72.1 64.0 71.4 .2 6.8 .5 9.3 1.8 7.8 .2 9.0 7.4 9.1 7.6 9.3 11.9 4.1 19.0 64.9 16.9 17.5 4.7 25.8 65.0 61.2 46.9 65.3 69.4 .9 9.0 9.0 19.8 14.9 16.6 17.9 10.5 23.0 73.5 20.2 10.3 21.5 70.2 15.9 14.4 21.8 73.8 20.9 22.9 73.5 20.3 19.2 6.1 28.1 72.3 67.6 55.1 60.5 18.8 9.1 26.4 69.7 63.7 51.3 61.7 18.4 5.5 29.0 63.4 59.0 53.0 61.1 9.7 19.1 4.6 29.5 73.2 72.0 53.6 60.7 70.3 .6 9.0 7.9 21.4 8.8 22.6 73.0 20.3 18.4 6.6 27.8 74.4 70.1 57.7 60.3 77.3 .2 10.0 10.2 23.1 9.2 24.6 73.6 19.1 21.0 7.5 26.0 78.2 69.2 56.2 59.7 ::: SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 22 • April 1995 7. Quantity and Price Indexes. Table 7.1.—Fixed-Weighted and Alternative Quantity and Price Indexes for Gross Domestic Product [Index numbers, 1987=100] Seasonally adjusted Seasonally adjusted 1993 1994 1993 IV Gross domestic product: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights .... Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights .... Benchmark-years weights Implicit price deflator Personal consumption expenditures: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fiypd 1QR7 wpinhte Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Implicit price deflator Durable goods: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixea 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Implicit price deflator Nondurable goods: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Implicit price deflator Services: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts I 139.7 148.4 142.7 144.8 II III IV 114.9 115.9 117.1 118.2 119.7 113.6 114.5 115.6 116.7 117.8 113.4 114.3 115.5 116.5 117.7 125.5 124.6 124.8 123.5 126.6 125.6 125.8 124.1 120.5 118.4 118.3 130.3 129.2 129.4 126.9 131.3 130.1 130.4 127.6 143.4 151.6 146.4 148.6 150.3 152.6 155.1 156.6 127.5 126.6 126.8 125.0 128.5 127.5 127.7 125.9 129.4 128.4 128.5 126.5 . 128.1 127.5 127.5 126.6 131.2 129.1 129.8 130.7 131.8 130.7 128.6 129.2 130.2 131.3 130.7 128.6 129.2 130.2 131.3 129.3 127.5 127.9 128.9 129.9 132.6 132.1 132.1 130.5 133.5 132.9 132.9 131.3 133.3 146.5 139.4 142.7 143.7 146.5 153.0 151.9 121.4 131.8 126.5 129.2 129.3 131.2 137.4 135.8 118.8 127.7 123.3 125.7 125.5 126.9 132.4 130.3 118.9 127.9 123.4 125.9 125.7 127.1 132.7 130.6 113.9 112.2 112.1 109.8 1-17.0 115.0 115.5 114.9 113.1 113.6 114.7 113.0 113.4 111.2 110.2 110.5 132.4 137.9 ,. 116.7 114.6 114.4 111.1 117.8 115.6 115.4 11f.7 118.1 115.8 115.6 111.3 119.3 116.9 116.8 111.9 134.0 135.4 136.6 139.1 140.5 141.4 106.7 109.7 107.6 108.6 109.2 110.1 111.0 111.4 106.3 109.3 107.2 108.2 108.8 109.7 110.5 110.9 106.3 109.2 107.1 108.1 108.7 109.6 110.4 110.8 125.0 124.6 124.6 124.2 126.6 126.2 126.3 125.7 125.4 125.0 125.1 124.6 125.4 125.2 125.2 124.6 125.9 125.6 125.6 125.1 127.3 126.9 126.9 126.3 127.8 127.3 127.3 126.6 128.1 127.6 127J 127.0 152.7 161.4 155.8 158.2 160.3 162.4 164.7 167.2 115.4 118.4 116.5 117.6 118.0 118.6 119.3 120.2 114.8 117.7 115.8 116.9 117.3 118.0 118.6 119.5 114.8 117.7 115.8 116.9 117.3 117.9 118.6 119.5 133.5 133.0 133.0 132.3 137.6 137.2 137.2 136.4 117.7 137.9 135.0 134.5 134.5 133.8 135.9 135.5 135.5 134.4 137.0 136.6 136.7 135.9 138.1 137.7 137.7 137.0 139.2 138.8 138.8 138.1 140.4 139.9 140.0 139.1 123.1 129.0 138.1 140.8 143.5 149.4 109.4 127.0 115.1 120.0 126.9 129.1 132.0 137.6 105.4 120.8 109.6 114.1 121.3 123.0 125.0 130.0 105.4 120.8 109.6 114.1 121.2 122.9 125,0 130.1 .. 119.9 135.6 126.4 130.4 133.7 137.3 141.2 145.4 111.3 125.0 117.8 120.8 123.3 125.9 130.0 133.9 106.6 118.2 111.8 114.6 116.9 119.1 122.3 125.8 107.2 118.8 112.4 115.1 117.4 119.7 122.9 126.5 114.4 112.4 111.9 107.7 117.5 114.9 114.4 108.5 115.3 113.0 112.4 107.3 116.2 113.8 113.3 107.9 117.0 114.6 114.0 108.4 118.1 115.5 114.9 109.0 118.8 115.8 115.3 108.6 1994 119.2 116.0 115.6 108.6 1993 IV I 147.4 149.6 151.9 153.8 113.1 117.7 112.2 116.1 112.0 116.0 128.9 127.9 128.1 126.1 1993 1995 113.3 117.3 114.9 116.2 116.6 117.4 118.9 119.3 112.5 116.1 113.9 115.1 115.5 116.3 117.5 117.9 112.5 116.1 113.8 115.1 115.5 116.3 117.6 117.9 Gross private domestic investment: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Implicit price deflator Fixed investment: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixeo 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Imolicit orice deflator 1994 Nonresidential: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fivorl 1Qft7 u/ainhtQ Chain-type annual weights .... Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights .... Benchmark-years weights Implicit price deflator Structures: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights . Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual: weights Benchmark-years weights . Implicit price deflator Producers' durable equipment: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights . Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights . Implicit price deflator Residential: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights .... Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights .... Benchmark-years weights Implicit price deflator Exports of goods and services: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights . . Implicit price deflator Imports of goods and services: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Implicit price deflator 1994 I II 1995 III IV I 123.8 140.2 118.8 112.1 112.9 135.1 126.0 129.3 132.2 136.6 142.3 148.7 125.3 117.4 120.3 122.8 126.9 131.3 137.4 126.1 118.1 121.1 123.6 127.7 132.2 138.3 129.8 133.7 137.3 142.5 113.0 115.5 113.7 114.4 115.2 110.4 112.0 110.7 111.3 111.9 109.7 111.4 109.9 110.5 111.2 104.1 103.8 103.0 103.4 103.9 116.0 112.5 111.8 104.3 147.2 154.0 116.4 112.5 111.9 103.5 116.7 112.5 112.0 103.6 103.1 100.8 106.1 107.8 112.1 116.6 101.2 106.7 86.2 87.9 86.8 84.1 88.1 88.5 90.8 93.9 86.2 87.9 86.8 84.2 88.2 88.5 90.9 94.0 86.2 87,9 86.8 84.2 88.2 88.5 90.9 93.9 117.3 117.4 117.4 117.4 121.2 121.3 121.3 121.4 118.8 119.7 118.8 119.7 118.8 119.7 118.8 119.8 120.3 120.4 120.4 120.4 121.7 121.7 121.7 121.8 123.2 123.2 123.2 123.4 124.0 124.1 124.1 124.3 135.6 157.7 143.8 150.9 153.6 160.7 165.6 173.6 136.0 159.9 146.6 153.0 155.3 161.9 169.3 177.5 154.0 161.7 126.5 146.2 134.4 140.5 142.1 148.3 127.4 147.2 135.3 141.4 143.1 149.3 155.1 162.8 110.7 107.2 106.5 99.7 112.5 111.1 108.0 107.1 107.3 106.3 98.7 98.1 111.7 112.5 113.0 1-12.8 112.9 107.5 108.2 108.5 107.9 107.7 106.7 107.5 107.8 107.3 107.1 98.7 98.9 99.2 97.9 97.8 111.2 125.7 118.6 123.0 125.9 125.8 127.9 126.3 102.1 103.8 102.2 102.8 101.1 102.2 102.8 101.1 102.1 103.9 102.2 103.9 102.3 102.8 101.1 94.6 94.6 94.7 102.7 102.8 102.8 117.4 117.6 117.5 117,6 122.0 122.3 122.2 122.3 118.8 120.2 121.0 119.0 120.4 121.3 118.9 120.3 121.2 119.0 120.5 121.3 122.8 123.1 123.0 123.1 181.1 197.5 186.9 185.3 193.6 200.7 210.3 211.8 99.7 99.7 99.8 124.2 124.4 124.3 124.4 124.7 125.0 124.9 125.0 165.5 180.5 171.8 170.2 176.9 183.1 191.8 191.5 173.9 180.9 179.7 159.7 171.5 164.8 162.4 168.7 160.8 172.6 165.8 163.5 169.8 175.0 182.2 181.0 116.7 114.2 113.5 108.8 117.5 114.9 114.2 109.4 118.4 115.7 115.0 109.6 119.9 116.9 116.3 109.7 121.9 118.6 118.0 110.6 115.3 113.4 112.6 109.4 118.1 115.4 114.7 109.4 142.9 161.1 148.2 150.1 158.2 165.7 170.5 174.3 115.6 113.5 112.7 108.8 158.8 161.0 149.0 154.5 133.4 151.3 139.5 142.7 144.3 147.3 149.7 126.7 141.5 131.7 134.4 139.9 148.7 151.0 127.9 142.8 132.9 135.6 141.2 145.6 115.2 117.2 112.8 114.0 111.7 112.9 107.1 106.5 115.3 112.5 111.4 106.2 114.5 111.6 110.5 105.2 116.2 113.1 112.1 106.1 118.5 115.1 114.1 107.2 119.8 116.1 115.1 107.4 120.5 116.9 115.9 108.2 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • 23 Table 7.1.-Fixed-Weighted and Alternative Quantity and Price Indexes for Gross Domestic Product—Continued Table 7.2.—Fixed-Weighted and Alternative Quantity and Price Indexes for Gross Domestic Product, Final Sales, and Purchases [Index numbers, 1987=100] [Index numbers, 1987=100] Seasonallj1 adjusted Seasonall){ adjust ed 1993 Government purchases: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Implicit price deflator Federal: Current dollars ...-: -.. Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Implicit price deflator National defense: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights .... Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights . . Chain-type annual weights .... Benchmark-years weights ..... Implicit price deflator ..... Nondefense: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights .... Benchmark-years weignts Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights .... Benchmark-years weignts Implicit price deflator State and local: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Implicit price deflator 1994 1994 1993 IV I II III IV I 130.3 133.3 1313 131.6 132.3 1349 1345 135.6 105.5 105.3 104.7 104.6 1057 104.0 104.1 1057 1046 1042 105.3 104.4 104.4 105.6 104.4 104.1 1051 1044 1051 1042 1038 1053 1042 1039 124.5 123.7 124.0 125.4 1267 1283 127.7 124.6 126.1 127.3 127.9 124.9 126.3 127.6 1292 128.1 128.3 130.2 129.2 129.4 131 7 130.7 130.9 1235 1274 1276 1286 1302 114.2 113.7 113.0 115.4 112.2 112.5 1286 115.2 113.6 1242 1261 1272 927 877 91 2 888 870 892 858 848 92.5 92.1 87.9 87.6 90.9 90.5 89.2 88.9 87.4 87.1 89.3 89.0 85.8 85.5 85.0 84.6 131 1 1270 129.7 125.7 130.1 126.2 1285 1309 124.6 125.1 127.5 128.0 129.6 130.0 131 9 1332 130.1 131.5 130.5 131.9 133.1 133.5 1244 1295 1253 1281 1300 1293 1307 1326 103.7 100.1 102.4 999 99.9 102.9 977 97.3 83.4 82.8 82.7 77.6 77.4 77.4 81.7 80.9 80.8 78.2 78.2 78.1 77.4 77.3 77.3 79.8 79.5 79.4 75.0 74.7 74.7 73.7 73.6 73.5 1266 131.5 129.9 129.9 1261 125.3 125.3 124.2 151.7 1347 1279 1290 1334 1348 130.7 130.6 1?90 127.8 127.9 127.7 131.1 129.5 129.5 1?flO 1325 126.6 126.7 125.3 131.7 131.6 130.2 133.1 133.1 132.0 156.1 151.4 157.3 154.5 154.8 157.8 160.5 1?90 121 7 1194 123.4 121.4 122.0 120.0 121 0 121 8 1170 122.6 124.4 119.5 121.2 122.9 118.0 1190 124.3 122.9 124.4 124.7 130.1 128.8 130.3 130.7 124.4 123.5 125.0 125.1 127.2 126.5 127.9 129.1 130.5 129.4 130.9 132.0 130.1 128.5 130.0 130.1 132.4 130.8 132.3 131.7 141.9 148.6 144.5 145.4 147.3 149.9 151.8 1536 115.4 115.1 115.2 117.8 117.5 117.5 116.9 116.5 116.5 116.4 117.3 116.2 116.9 116.2 117.0 118.5 119.2 118.1 118.8 118.1 118.8 119.2 118.8 118.9 1271 1294 1198 120.8 121.1 119.4 119.7 1234 1266 1241 1253 1262 123.3 123.2 123.0 126.5 126.4 126.1 124.0 124.0 123.6 125.2 125.2 124.9 126.0 126.9 126.0 126.9 125.6 126.5 1280 1199 121.4 120.0 134.3 132.7 134.3 133.8 127.8 129.2 127.8 129.2 127.4 128.8 NOTE.—The quantity and price indexes in this table are calculated from weighted averages of the detailed output and prices used to prepare each aggregate and component. The fixed-weighted measures use as weights the composition of output in 1987. For the alternative indexes, the chain-type indexes with annual weights use weights for the preceding and current years, and the indexes with benchmark-years weights use weights of 1959, 1963, 1967, 1972, 1977, 1982, 1987, 1992, and the most recent year. Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1. 1993 1995 Gross domestic product: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weignts Benchmark^years weignts Implicit price deflator Final sales of domestic product "' : Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Implicit price deflator Gross domestic purchases 2 : Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights ... Benchmark-years weignts Implicit price deflator Final sales to domestic purchasers3: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights ..... Benchmark-years weignts Implicit price deflator 1994 1994 1993 IV I 1448 II 1995 II! IV I 1397 1484 142.7 1474 149.6 1519 153.8 1131 1177 1197 116.1 116.0 117.1 115.6 115.5 1182 112.2 112.0 114.9 1159 113.6 114.5 113.4 114.3 116.7 116.5 117.8 117.7 120.5 118.4 118.3 1255 1289 1266 1275 124.6 127.9 125.6 126.6 128.5 127.5 1248 1281 1258 1268 1277 123.5 126.1 124.1 125.0 125.9 140.2 148.1 143.3 145.1 146.7 1294 130.3 128.4 129.2 128 5 1294 126.5 126.9 131.3 130.1 149.1 151.6 153.2 1198 1304 127.6 1134 1173 1154 1160 1164 1176 1193 112,4 112.3 115.8 115.7 114.0 113.9 114.6 114.5 115.0 114.9 116.1 116.0 117.4 117.8 117.4 117.8 1256 1290 1267 1277 1286 1295 124.7 124.8 128.1 128.1 125.8 125.9 126.8 126.9 127.6 127.7 128.5 128.6 130.4 131 4 129.3 130.3 129.4 130.4 1236 1262 1242 1251 1260 1267 1271 1368 1460 1399 1422 1449 1474 1494 1515 116.5 113.2 114.6 115.9 117.1 11R3 111 5 1128 1140 1151 1160 1145 1100 110.0 114.5 111.5 112.8 114.0 115.1* 116.0 119.4 111.2 1252 1285 1262 1270 127.6 127.7 125.4 125.4 125.5 123.6 126.2 127.2 1?fV3 127.2 124.2 125.1 129.1 128.2 128.2 125.8 1299 124.4 124.5 123.0 137.3 145.7 140.4 142.5 144.3 146.9 149.1 1136 1146 1280 111.5 110.2 116.1 114.1 1103 1142 114.7 115.2 111.9 112.9 113.4 111 9 1129 1135 125.3 124.6 124.5 123.1 128.6 127.8 127.7 125.5 126.3 125.6 125.5 123.6 127.1 126.4 126.3 124.3 128.1 127.3 127.3 125.2 1278 1169 116.9 130.9 129.0 129.8 1990. 129.9 1?R3 126.9 150.9 116.5 117.9 118.7 114.5 115.6 116.3 1157 116.4 129.2 128.3 128.3 126.0 130.0 129.1 129.1 126.4 130.9 130.0 129.9 127.1 1. Equals GDP less change in business inventories. 2. Equals GDP less net exports of goods and services or equals the sum of personal consumption expenditures, gross private domestic investment, and government purchases. 3. Equals gross domestic purchases less change in business inventories or equals the sum of personal consumption expenditures, gross private domestic fixed investment, and government purchases. NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 24 • April 1995 Table 7.3.—Fixed-Weighted and Alternative Quantity and Price Indexes for Gross National Product and Command-Basis Gross National Product Table 7.6,—Price Indexes for Fixed Investment by Type, Fixed 1987Weights [Index numbers, 1987=100] [Index numbers, 1987=100] Se asonalht adjust ed Seasonally adjusted 1993 1994 Gross national product: Current dollars . . . . . Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights ..... Benchmark-years weignts Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Implicit price deflator Less: Exports of goods and services and receipts of factor income: Current dollars Quantity index, fixed 1987 weights ... Plus: Command-basis exports of goods and services and receipts of factor income: Current dollars Quantity index, fixed 1987 weights ... Equals: Command-basis gross national product: Current dollars Quantity index, fixed 1987 weights ... 1994 1993 IV 1993 I II 1995 III 126.5 125.6 125.8 124.1 127.5 126.6 126.8 124.9 128.4 127.4 127.6 125.8 129.4 128.3 128.5 126.5 130.2 129.1 129.3 126.9 169.6 188.9 175.2 174.8 184.8 193.4 202.5 151.7 168.0 157.3 156.6 164.4 171.5 179.3 169.6 188.9 175.2 174.8 184.8 193.4 202.5 154.5 171.6 160.4 161.2 168.6 174.5 182.0 139.7 148.0 142.5 144.7 147.0 149.2 151.2 113.4 117.8 115.2 116.3 117.3 118.3 119.5 Table 7.4.—Price Indexes for Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type of Product, Fixed 1987 Weights [Index numbers, 1987=100] Nondurable goods Food Clothing and shoes Gasoline and oil Fuel oil and coal Other Services Housing Household operation Electricity and gas . . Other household operation Transportation Medical care Other Addenda: Price indexes for personal consumption expenditures: Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts 117.0 115.0 115.5 116.7 117.8 118.1 119.3 1178 1183 1197 121 5 1227 1245 105.7 104.9 105.3 105.9 106.1 105.5 105.7 130.1 127.1 128.3 129.9 131.2 131.0 132.1 1205 125.0 126.6 125.4 125.4 125.9 127.3 127.8 128.1 124.4 1273 125.6 125.9 126.3 128.0 128.9 129.4 1192 1191 1183 1189 1193 1181 1169 1168 122.1 122.8 120.5 119.9 119.5 125.7 126.2 126.6 1142 1331 1160 1318 1136 1153 1144 131.7 131.6 1327 1145 1335 1129 1124 134.6 134.7 II 1995 III IV I 115.3 116.2 117.0 118.1 118.8 119.2 115.5 113.7 114.4 115.2 116.0 116.4 116.7 Structures Nonresidentiai buildings, including farm Utilities Mining exploration, shafts, and wells Other structures ... ..< 117.3 121.2 118.8 119.7 120.3 121.7 123.2 124.0 1127 1160 Producers' durable equipment Information processing and related equipment Computers and peripheral equipment l Other Industrial equipment Transportation and related eauiDment .1 Other 110.7 112.5 111.1 111.7 113.0 121 8 1192 120.0 1207 1224 118.9 122.9 120.3 121.7 122.7 1231 1175 1240 1242 1248 1250 114.3 115.4 114.7 115.8 114.4 114.6 116.7 117.4 91 7 51.5 1097 1223 91 1 46.5 1111 1250 1135 91 2 48.5 1103 1232 1143 91 1 47.7 1106 1238 1154 1167 1178 1190 112.5 113.0 112.8 112.9 91 3 91 1 907 907 47.4 46.0 44.8 44.3 111 0 111 2 111 4 111 5 1246 1255 1263 1271 119.2 122.5 119.6 121.2 122.9 123.8 122.3 121.6 1194 1220 1203 1209 121 9 1226 1228 1233 120.2 121.0 122.8 124.2 124.7 117.4 122.0 1188 Structures Single family Multifamily Other structures .;........................... 117.7 118.9 112.8 117.5 122.4 123.9 1 16.7 122.1 Producers' durable equipment 105.5 108.0 106.3 106.8 107.8 108.8 108.6 109.0 Addenda: Price indexes for fixed investment: Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts 112.4 114.9 113.0 113.8 114.6 115.5 115.8 116.0 111.9 114.4 112.4 113.3 114.0 114.9 115.3 115.6 119.2 121 0 114.0 118.2 120.5 121.9 114.9 120.3 121.3 123.2 124.6 1224 1247 126.5 115.3 117.5 119.1 121.7 122.8 123.5 125.1 126.7 119.4 124.7 Table 7.9.—Price indexes for Exports and Imports of Goods and Services and for Receipts and Payments of Factor Income, Fixed 1987 Weights [Index numbers, 1987=100] Exports of goods and services Merchandise 1 .... Durable Nondurable Services 1 ... 115.3 118.1 110.3 110.6 109.8 127.3 115.6 116.7 117.5 118.4 119.9 121.9 110.6 111.8 110.7 1154 110.4 130.1 127.8 1132 111 8 111.2 112.9 128.4 1124 1132 1151 Receipts of factor income2 125.1 127.7 125.7 126.6 127.5 128.2 128.6 127.9 131.9 129.2 130.5 131.3 132.3 133.4 134.4 Imports of goods and services 115.2 1154 1144 1175 1150 1167 1156 1170 1150 116.3 134.3 147.3 134.5 119.7 136.4 153.5 138.3 117.7 134.5 149.8 135.8 118.8 135.1 151.2 136.5 1174 1177 1179 1187 115.0 119.5 136.4 152.7 137.7 115.1 120.0 137.3 154.2 138.8 115.0 120.3 137.0 156.1 140.1 115.1 121.8 137.8 157.7 141.3 127.5 130,7 128.6 129.2 130.2 131.3 132.1 132.9 127.5 130.7 128.6 129.2 130.2 131.3 132.1 132.9 Errata In table 7.3, the estimates shown in line 11, "Command-basis exports of goods and services and receipts of factor income: Current dollars," have been incorrect since the December 1991 issue of the SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS. The estimates in line 11 should have been the same as those in line 9, "Exports of goods and services and receipts of factor income: Current dollars/* The presentation of command GNP will be reviewed in the upcoming comprehensive revision. Merchandise l Durable Nondurable Services J Payments of factor income3 Addenda: Price indexes for exports of goods and services: Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Price indexes for imports of goods and services: Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts 117.2 115.3 1178 111.5 111.9 112.7 113.9 114.0 115.4 119.4 124.4 129.7 130.9 131.5 132.0 133.5 137.6 135.0 135.9 137.0 138.1 139.2 140.4 NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1. I 1. Includes new computers and peripheral equipment only. NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table .8.1. 128.1 131.2 129.1 129.8 130.7 131.8 132.6 133.5 Durable goods 113.9 Motor vehicles and parts 1161 Furniture and household equipment ... 104.3 Other 126.8 114.4 117.5 Residential NOTE.—Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1. Personal consumption expenditures IV Fixed investment Nonresidentiai 113.1 117.4 114.8 115.8 116.9 117.9 119.2 112.2 115.9 113.5 114.4 115.4 116.4 117.3 112.0 115.7 113.3 114.2 115.3 116.2 117.2 128.9 127.9 128.0 126.0 1994 1993 I IV 139.7 148.0 142.5 144.7 147.0 149.2 151.2 125.4 124.5 124.7 123.5 1994 114.5 116.2 118.5 119.8 120.5 111.8 114.0 111.7 110.9 113.0 115.5 116.4 117.6 114.0 116.6 115.1 115.4 116.1 116.9 118.3 118.8 1079 1092 1056 1032 1077 1129 1131 1154 130.7 132.0 131.9 130.8 130.4 132.1 134.9 133.7 128.0 130.7 128.7 129.6 130.5 131.2 131.6 113.4 115.4 113.5 114.2 114.9 115.7 116.9 118.6 112.6 114.7 112.7 113.5 114.2 115.0 116.3 118.0 112.8 114.0 112.5 111.6 113.1 115.1 116.1 116.9 111.7 112.9 111.4 1105 112.1 114.1 115.1 115.9 1. Exports and imports of certain goods, primarily military equipment purchased and sold by the Federal Government, are included in services. 2. Consists largely of receipts by U.S. residents of interest and dividends and reinvested earnings of foreign affiliates of U.S. corporations. 3. Consists largely of payments to foreign residents of interest and dividends and reinvested earnings of U.S. affiliates of foreign corporations. NOTE.— Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • Table 7.10.—Price Indexes for Exports and Imports of Merchandise by End-Use Category, Fixed 1987 Weights Table 7.11.—Price Indexes for Government Purchases by Type, Fixed 1987 Weights [Index numbers, 1987x100] [Index numbers, 1987=100] Seasonall\/ adjust ed Seasonally adjusted 1993 1994 IV Exports of merchandise Foods feeds and beverages Industrial supplies and materials Durable goods .. Nondurable goods Capital goods, except automotive Civilian aircraft, engines, and parts ... Computers, peripherals, and parts .... Other Automotive vehicles, engines, and, parts Consumer goods, except automotive ..... Durable goods ..... Nondurable goods Other Durable goods Nondurable goods ". .....;.. imports of merchandise Foods feeds and beverages Industrial supplies and materials, except petroleum and products Durable goods Nondurable goods Petroleum and products Capital goods, except automotive Civilian aircraft, engines, and parts ... Computers, peripherals, and parts .... Other Automotive vehicles, engines, and parts Consumer goods, except automotive Durable goods ... Nondurable goods . Other . ..... Durable goods Nondurable goods Addenda: Exports of agricultural products l ....... Exports of nonagricultural products ... Imports of nonpetroleum products ..... 1994 1993 I II IV 120.4 116.7 130.5 110.5 106.0 129.7 120.2 108.4 125.1 100.9 105.8 127.6 125.8 110.6 127.8 102.8 105.8 127.9 122.4 113.6 128.7 106.7 105.9 128.6 115.8 118.5 130.5 113.1 106.0 130.4 117,8 124.2 134.7 119.5 106.1 131.8 119.9 131.6 139.7 127.9 106.6 132.3 50.6 45.7 47.7 46.9 46.5 45.1 44.0 43.3 117.9 113.2 119.7 114.9 123.8 113.8 113.8 113.8 118.9 114.3 120.0 115.4 124.1 116.1 116.0 116.0 118.6 113.3 119.8 114.7 124.2 114.1 114.1 114.1 118.8 113.8 120.0 115.2 124.2 114.8 114.8 114.8 118.8 114.0 120.0 115.4 124.1 115.4 115.3 115.3 119.0 114.3 119.8 115.2 123.9 116.3 116.3 116.3 119.0 115.0 120.2 115.6 124.2 117.8 117.8 117.8 119.9 115.2 120.7 115.9 124.9 120.1 120.1 120.1 111.8 114.0 111.7 110.9 113.0 115.5 116.4 117.6 108.0 119.7 110.8 110.8 113.1 116.6 112.7 113.5 114.6 118.7 114.7 115.9 111,5 114.4 110.5 110.9 115.0 125.6 127.5 127.3 114.9 117.4 112.2 117.0 118.8 115.2 121.0 122.5 119.5 125.4 125.7 125.0 85.7 81.9 73.6 85.2 94.3 89.7 93.3 107.8 109.5 126.1 129.7 108.6 127.6 108.3 127.9 109.0 128.6 110.0 130.4 110.6 131.8 110.6 132.3 91.1 54.3 49.0 51.1 50.0 49.6 48.8 47.6 47.1 118.4 116.9 119.7 118.8 120.7 115.9 115.9 115.9 121.5 120.9 120.7 119.8 121.7 119.0 118.9 118.9 120.1 119.0 120.3 119.5 121.3 117.3 117.2 117.2 119.9 119.5 120.1 119.6 120.7 117.2 117.1 117.1 120.8 120.3 120.4 119.7 121.3 118.2 118.1 118.1 122.1 121.0 120.9 119.9 122.1 119.4 119.4 119.4 123.1 122.8 121.3 120.1 122.7 121.2 121.1 121.1 123.2 123.0 121.5 120.5 122.8 122.1 122.1 122.1 113.3 109.9 114.2 119.0 116.7 122.6 112.4 109.8 110.5 117.3 115.2 115.3 120.0 111.4 116.3 115.2 112.9 118.0 118.2 114.7 119.5 121.8 117.2 120.5 1. Includes parts of exports of foods, feeds, and beverages, of nondurable industrial supplies and materials, and of nondurable consumer goods. 1994 I 110.3 113.2 110.6 111.8 112.4 113.2 115.1 117.8 116.2 109.2 125.3 102.0 105.7 126.0 1993 1995 III 25 Government purchases Federal National defense Durable goods Nondurable goods . . . Services . . . . Compensation of employees Military Civilian ..... Other services ..... Structures Nondefense Durable goods Nondurable goods Commodity Credit Corporation inventory change Other nondurables Services Compensation of employees Other services Structures State and local Durable goods Nondurable goods ... Services . Compensation of employees Other services Structures Addenda: Price indexes for government purchases: Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Price indexes for Federal national defense purchases: Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights . Price indexes for Federal nondefense purchases: Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Price indexes for State and local purchases: Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights 1994 1993 IV I 125.4 II 1995 III IV I 126.7 128.3 129.2 130.2 131.7 126.1 131.1 127.0 128.5 130.9 131.9 133.2 134.7 131.5 127.9 121 3 1167 1128 111.9 1 37 1 133.7 140.8 148.2 143.3 140.3 145.7 141.2 141.8 1534 147 R 119.1 121.3 120.2 132.4 1393 137.2 131.1 132.5 121 0 1226 124.5 128.6 133.4 134.8 1117 1367 1155 1379 1242 1169 1385 1247 1125 1406 146.0 147.9 143.8 145.7 150.4 152.4 120.2 120.9 138.0 138.7 149.1 146.4 154.6 122.0 139.6 150.0 146.9 156.4 122.2 140.9 153.0 149.3 1fi05 123.1 141.3 126.6 129.0 1167 1138 1319 1176 1073 1353 124.3 130.1 124.4 127.2 130.5 130.1 132.4 134.3 930 931 90? 9? 4 9? 4 931 947 95.5 106.7 107.9 109/1 136.8 139.3 1417 147.9 152.1 155.9 121.3 121.5 122.0 1203 121 4 1226 148.5 121.4 105.5 130.7 137.7 120.9 105.9 134.4 143.7 121.5 105.6 138 2 150.3 121.3 1163 1198 1174 1182 1191 m4 1?6fi 124.1 m'ft 1?6 ? 127.1 128.0 1151 1172 1153 1164 1172 116.2 117.1 114.5 126.9 130.5 128.0 133.0 137.4 134.4 116.2 129.1 135.8 116.4 117.9 117.8 120.8 130.1 130.8 131.8 133.2 136.9 137.9 139.1 140.6 106.3 129.9 136.9 120.1 60.4 106.5 1372 54.3 57.3 56.4 55.6 1179 53.0 1174 52.0 129.4 1181 51.8 112.8 116.5 113.9 115.0 115.6 117.1 123.7 124.0 127.7 127.9 124.6 124.9 126.1 126.3 127.3 127.6 128.1 128.3 129.2 129.4 130.7 130.9 125.3 125.3 129.9 129.9 126.6 126.7 127.8 127.9 129.5 129.5 130.7 130.6 131.7 131.6 133.1 133.1 122.9 124.4 128.8 130.3 123.5 125.0 126.5 127.9 129.4 128.5 130.9 130.0 130.8 132.3 132.7 134.3 123.3 126.5 123.2 126.4 124.0 125.2 124.0 125.2 126.0 126.0 126.9 126.9 118.4 119.4 127.8 129.2 127.8 1292 26 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS » April 1995 Table 7.12.™Price Indexes for National Defense Purchases, Fixed 1987 Weights Table 7.14.—Implicit Price Deflators for Gross Domestic Product by Sector [Index numbers, 1987=100] [Index numbers, 1987=100] Se asonalty adjust ed 1993 National defense purchases ....... Durable goods Military equipment Aircraft Missiles Ships , Vehicles Electronic equipment . . . Other Other durable goods Nondurable goods Petroleum products Ammunition Other nondurable goods Services Compensation of employees .... Military Civilian Other services Contractual research and development Installation support1 Weapons support23 Personnel support Transportation of material Travel of persons .... Other , Structures Military facilities Other Addenda: Price indexes for national defense purchases: Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights 1994 Se asonally adjust Bd 19 94 1993 IV I II 129.0 1995 III IV 126.6 131.5 127.9 131.1 132.5 133.4 134.8 116,7 121.3 116.7 117.6 121.0 122.6 124.2 124.7 124.3 117.9 122.9 117.9 118.8 122.5 1246 95.7 1243 1257 1333 126.0 126.7 1391 112.5 1372 92.6 1051 1054 1051 1054 1382 99.1 1245 125.8 1280 131 5 1355 1344 111 1 1102 1099 120.0 119.9 1201 1055 1053 1053 113,8 112.8 111.9 107.3 111.7 113.1 112.6 109.2 109.5 114.9 112.1 95.1 107.1 116.5 117.9 101.4 113.0 113.7 115.3 117.4 121.5 1156 1149 1142 1150 1147 1146 1152 1158 131.9 137.1 133.7 135.3 136.7 137.9 138.5 140.6 140.8 148.2 147.9 149.1 150.0 153.0 1457 143.3 141 2 147.6 120.2 146.0 1403 1438 1504 1457 1524 1464 1546 1469 1564 1493 1605 120.2 120.9 122.0 122.2 123.1 1139 1143 1336 121.7 954 95.8 95.3 125.4 122.1 123.3 1282 1328 109.5 1103 118.4 119.7 141 8 153.4 119.1 121.3 1135 1141 1285 1097 1299 1101 118.7 1189 946 115.5 116.9 973 1317 1345 1107 1206 1049 1142 1133 1147 1152 117.3 120.2 124.4 127.2 1366 141 5 105.3 105.3 116.5 117.4 118.1 126.1 118.6 119.6 121 3 121.3 127.7 126.8 127.1 127.3 122.8 127.1 1380 1054 1185 1374 1053 1406 1055 119.5 132.4 139.3 137.2 131 0 1393 135.1 1393 1378 136.2 125.3 1253 1?99 1299 1447 1054 1144 1455 1050 117.8 1433 1051 1181 138.0 138.7 139.6 140.9 141.3 1383 1393 1402 1404 137.3 137.7 1395 1399 142.1 142.8 1307 1306 131.7 1331 131 6 1331 126.6 127.8 129.5 1267 1279 1295 118.5 1. Includes utilities, communications, rental payments, maintenance and repair, and payments to contractors to operate installations. 2. Includes depot maintenance and contractual services for weapons systems, other than research and development. 3. Includes compensation of foreign personnel, consulting, training, and education. Table 7.13.—Implicit Price Deflators for the Relation of Gross Domestic Product, Gross National Product, Net National Product, and National Income [Index numbers, 1987=100] Gross domestic product Plus: Receipts of factor !income from the rest of the world Less: Payments of 2factor income to the rest of the world Equals: Gross national product Less: Consumption of fixed capital Equals: Net national product Less: Indirect business tax and nontax liability plus business transfer payments less subsidies plus current surplus of government enterprises .... Statistical discrepancy Equals: National income Addenda: Net domestic product Domestic income 123.5 126.1 124.1 125.0 125.9 126.5 126.9 125.1 127.8 125.7 126.6 127.5 128.2 128.6 1278 129.9 1283 1291 129.7 130.2 130.4 123.5 126.0 124.1 124.9 125.8 126.5 126.9 111.6 113.8 112.0 113.3 113.6 114.2 114.3 125.1 127.7 125.7 126.6 127.4 128.1 128.5 129.4 133.3 121.8 1241 130.0 122.3 131.1 123.0 132.8 123.9 135.7 124.5 133.6 124.8 124.6 1?71 1?5? 1?fi,1 1?6,9 1?7,3 mo 125.1 124.7 127.7 127.1 1?57 1963 126.6 126.1 128.2 12ft fi 1976 1969 1974 127.6 114.5 133.5 1993 1280, 1. Consists largely of receipts by U.S. residents of interest and dividends and reinvested earnings of foreign affiliates of U.S. corporations. 2. Consists largely of payments to foreign residents of interest and dividends and reinvested earnings of U.S. affiliates of foreign corporations. 1993 1994 I Gross domestic product Business Nonfarm Nonfarm less housing Housina nvuoiiiy Farm Statistical discrepancy Households and institutions Private households Nonprofit institutions General government . Federal State and local Addendum: Gross domestic business product less housing 123.5 126.1 19 94 1993 1995 IV I II III 124.1 125.0 125.9 126.5 I IV 126.9 127.6 ..... 121.8 124.1 122.3 123.0 123.9 124.5 124.8 125.3 122.1 121.5 124.4 122.5 123.7 121.9 131 5 1282 1232 1243 122.2 123.7 1302 1019 125.0 124.4 1252 1258 124.5 125.0 1333 1016 1033 1101 1323 1149 121.8 124.1 122.3 123.0 123.9 1324 974 1001 1245 1248 132.3 135.7 133.4 134.3 134.9 136.1 137.5 138.2 ... 119.4 123.1 121.1 121.8 122.5 123 5 1244 1272 1061 1312 125.3 136.3 133.9 134.9 1354 1367 1380 1256 1388 134.7 140.4 136.3 138.4 140.1 140.8 142.2 144.1 132.9 ... 139.4 148.5 141.4 145.4 148.9 1489 151.1 154.3 ..... 132.9 137.3 134.3 135.6 136.8 137.8 139.0 140.5 121 3 Table 7.15.—Current-Dollar Cost and Profit Per Unit of ConstantDollar Gross Domestic Product of Nonfinancial Corporate Business [Dollars] Current-dollar cost and profit per unit of constant-dollar 1.159 1.171 1.159 1.165 1.170 1.175 1.175 gross domestic product1 .123 .122 .125 .121 ,122 =121 Consumption of fixed capital ,120 1.036 1.049 1.038 1.040 1.049 1.053 1.054 Net domestic product Indirect business tax and nontax liability plus business transfer .117 .117 .117 .117 .117 .118 .117 payments less subsidies Domestic income •.. .919 .932 .921 .923 .932 .935 .937 .768 .768 .766 .760 .763 .766 .768 Compensation of employees Corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital .128 .112 .123 .122 .127 .127 consumption adjustments 1?fi 040 046 043 043 046 047 049 Profits tax liability Profits after tax with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments .073 .080 .080 .078 .081 .080 .079 .041 Net interest .039 .038 .038 .039 .040 .039 1. Equals the deflator for gross domestic product of nonfinancial corporate business with the decimal point shifted two places to the left. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 8. Supplementary Tables^ Table 8.1.—Percent Change From Preceding Period in Selected Series [Percent] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 1993 1994 IV Gross domestic product: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights . Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights . Personal consumption expenditures: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weiohts Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Phpin-tvnp flnni isl wpinhte Benchmark-years weights Durable goods: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights .... Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Nondurable goods: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights ... Benchmark-years weights Services: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Gross private domestic investment: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights .... Benchmark-years weights Fixed investment: Current dollars .. Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Nonresidential: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights .... Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights .... Benchmark-years weights 1994 1993 I II Seasonally adjusted at annual rates III 6.2 7.7 6.1 7.2 6.2 6;4 5.1 3.1 2.5 2.5 4.1 3.6 3.6 6.3 5.1 5.1 3.3 3.2 3.2 4.1 4.2 4.1 4.0 3.6 3.6 5.1 4.0 4.1 2.8 2.1 2.2 3.0 2.8 2.8 2.7 2.7 2.7 2.4 2.5 2.4 3.1 3.2 3.2 2.9 2.7 2.7 3.0 2.8 2.7 2.6 2.5 2.6 3.1 3.1 3.1 5.8 5.7 6.4 6.0 4.6 6.3 6.8 3.9 3.3 2.9 2.9 3.5 3.2 3.2 4.0 3.4 3.4 4.7 4.3 4.3 1.3 1.4 1.4 3.1 2.9 2.9 5.1 4.4 4.5 1.4 1.3 1.3 2.8 2.8 2.8 2.5 2.5 2.5 2.8 2.8 2.8 1.9 2.0 2.0 2.8 2.9 2.9 3.6 3.5 3.5 2.5 2.4 2.4 2.6 2.6 2.6 9.2 9.9 16.3 9.9 2.9 7.9 18.9 -2.8 8.2 7.4 7,4 8.6 7.5 7.5 15.5 13.9 13.9 8.8 8.2 8.1 .4 -.6 -.4 5.8 4.5 4.5 20.4 18.4 18.6 -4.7 -6.2 -6.2 2.1 1.7 1.7 2.7 2.4 2.4 2.5 2.3 2.2 1,9 1.5 1.5 4.1 3.7 3.7 3.9 3.5 3.6 .9 .7 .7 4.0 3.9 3.9 3.4 4.1 4.6 4.1 3.7 7.3 4.2 2.5 2.0 1.8 1.8 2.9 2.8 2.8 2.4 2.2 2.2 3.8 3.8 3.8 2.2 2.2 2.2 3.3 3.4 3.4 3.1 3.0 3.0 1.5 1.5 1.5 1.6 1.5 1.5 1.3 1.3 1.3 2.2 2.3 2.2 .2 .3 .3 1.5 1.5 1.5 4.4 4.0 4.0 1.6 1.4 1.4 .9 1.0 1.0 6.5 5.7 5.3 6.1 5.5 5.5 5.6 6.3 2.8 2.6 2.6 2.5 2.5 2.5 2.0 1.9 1.9 4.0 3.8 3.8 1.1 1.4 1.3 2.2 2.2 2.2 2.3 2.3 2.3 3.1 3.0 3.0 3.7 3.7 3.7 3.1 3.1 3.1 3.2 3.2 3.2 2.9 2.9 2.9 3.3 3.4 3.4 3.1 3.1 3.1 3.3 3.2 3.3 3.3 3.3 3.3 13.0 10.4 10.4 17.1 16.1 14.7 14.6 19.6 21.3 18.0 17.9 20.5 18.0 17.3 17.4 31.1 8.2 8.0 17.3 25.2 27.8 27.5 7.1 5.6 5.8 9.3 6.6 6.8 18.0 17.3 17.3 13.2 22.5 13.3 11.3 12.3 10.9 10.9 23.0 21.2 20.9 10.6 10.2 8.8 8.8 2.1 1.4 1.4 9.7 12.5 9.0 9.0 1.6 .6 .6 2.8 2.2 2.2 13.2 13.7 11.8 11.8 2.2 1.5 1.5 2.0 1.2 1.2 18.8 21.1 18.4 18.0 1.6 .6 .6 10.3 3.1 2.9 2.9 12.4 10.9 10.2 10.4 2.5 2.1 2.2 10.8 11.0 8.6 8.1 8.2 8.6 7.8 7.9 2.7 2.6 2.6 3.9 3.2 3.3 11.2 9.2 8.6 8.7 2.7 2.5 2.5 11.9 12.5 13.6 11.2 11.3 12.5 12.0 12.1 2.4 1.2 1.5 1.4 .7 ,8 16.0 14.1 19.8 14.1 13.9 13.9 17.6 14.9 15.0 19.3 19.7 19.6 2.7 2.0 2.1 1.4 0 .3 1.3 .2 .3 1994 1993 IV Structures: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights . Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights . Producers' durable equipment: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights . Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights . Residential: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights .... Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights .... Benchmark-years weights Exports of goods and services: Current dollars Quantity indexes: PiypH 1Q87 u/pinhtQ Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Rpnrhrnflrk-vpsr^ wpinhte Imports of goods and services: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Government purchases: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-vears weiohts Price indexes: PiypH 1Qft7 \wpinhtQ Phflin-tvnp anniisl wpinhte 10.4 1994 I IV 5.4 11.9 1993 1995 Benchmark-years weights Federal: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights National defense: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights .... Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights .... Benchmark-years weights I II 1995 III IV 1 1.3 5.4 6.6 -8.8 22.8 6.3 17.0 17.3 -1.4 -1.4 -1.4 2.0 2.0 2.0 3.3 -11.8 3.2 -11.6 3.2 -11.7 20.6 20.4 20.4 1.6 1.6 1.6 11.0 11.2 11.1 14.1 14.1 14.1 2.8 2.8 2.8 3.3 3.3 3.3 3.3 3.3 3.3 3.2 3.2 3.2 2.0 2.1 2.1 4.6 4.5 4.5 5.2 5.2 5.2 2.7 2.8 2.8 13.4 16.3 23.9 21.2 7.3 19.6 12.9 20.8 18.0 13.7 13.7 17.6 15.6 15.6 27.5 24.7 24.2 18.6 19.3 19.4 6.1 4.8 4.9 18.1 18.6 18.5 19.6 16.1 16.3 20.8 21.6 21.5 .9 -.2 -.2 12.0 1.6 .7 .8 12.9 .7 -.5 -.5 2.1 1.7 1.8 3.1 2.6 2.7 1.7 1.0 1.1 -.3 32.0 15.7 9.7 28.2 28.4 28.4 10.0 10.2 10.1 7.0 6.9 6.9 -7 -2JQ -1.7 6.7 -4.6 2.3 2.2 2.2 -6.6 -6.6 -6.6 8.2 8.3 8.3 8.6 8.6 8.6 3.3 3.4 3.4 4.0 4.0 4.0 3.3 9.0 20.7 -3.5 19.2 1.5.6 20.6 4.1 2.7 2.7 9.0 7.3 7.4 21.7 20.5 20.3 -3.5 -5.6 -5.5 16.6 16.5 16.5 14.8 12.8 12.8 20.2 17.1 17.3 1.2 .5 .5 2.5 1.8 1.9 8.4 10.7 8.9 8.9 2.9 2.8 2.8 .6 .2 .1 3.8 2.6 2.8 2.7 2.8 2.8 2.7 2.3 2.4 -.6 -2.6 -2.5 6.8 5.9 6.1 20.3 12.1 9.3 13.4 11.7 11.6 16.0 14.9 14.5 9.5 8.3 8.3 18.9 17.4 17.5 15.6 13.1 13.2 11.4 8.7 8.7 5.9 6.5 6.5 2.3 1.5 -.8 -.9 -.9 -.8 -.6 -.6 -.1 -.2 -.2 3.1 2.9 2.9 3.3 3.2 3.2 1.6 1.7 1.8 -2.7 -3.0 -2.9 .9 -4.9 -3.4 -3.4 4.3 4.6 4.6 5.8 5.5 5.6 8.2 7.3 7.6 4.3 3.3 3.4 2.6 2.8 2.8 2.4 7.8 10 3.3 -1.2 -1.4 -1.4 4.9 4.1 4.1 -1.2 -1.4 -2.6 -1.8 -2.4 -4.5 -4.6 -4.6 -5.3 -4.9 -4.9 -5.0 -4.6 -4.8 103 -7.0 -7.0 -7,9 -8.0 -7.9 3.7 3.4 3.4 2.9 23.5 2.1 -6.8 -6.9 -6.9 5.4 4.4 4.5 1.8 2.0 1.9 5.2 1.1 -.3 -.2 -3.7 3.1 2.8 2.9 4.5 4.3 4.3 14.7 1.8 1.1 1.1 3.7 3.5 3.5 6.3 6.1 6.1 12.8 -.7 -.2 _7 4.5 4.8 4.8 -6.0 -6.1 -6.1 .4 -.8 -.7 4.0 4.0 4.0 -3.4 -7.0 -6.4 -6.5 3.8 3.7 3.7 1.7 2.2 2.3 ,1 -3.6 -3.0 -3.4 2.9 3.4 3.5 4.8 5.8 5.7 -9.5 -16.0 -12.6 -12.6 3.5 4.0 3.9 7.7 6.6 6.5 6.7 5.9 5.9 3.0 2.4 2.4 -4.1 -4.4 -4.4 -1.6 -1.2 12 3.3 3.5 3.5 4.5 4.7 4.7 8.7 -10.7 1.1 10.9 14.4 9.1 -14.9 9.1 -14.8 3.0 1.5 1.5 3.9 4.5 4.5 -4.6 -3.8 -3.8 4.5 5.0 5.0 0 12.6 -18.7 -1.8 -4.1 -4.4 12.8 11.4 11.2 -21.8 -21.7 -21.7 -7.1 -6.1 -6.1 -43 6.7 5.3 5.1 4.3 3.6 3.5 2.9 3.2 3.2 4.1 4.5 4.5 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 28 • April 2995 Table 8.1.—Percent Change From Preceding Period in Selected Table 8.2.—Selected Per Capita Product and Income Series in Current and Constant Dollars and Population of the United States Series—Continued [Percent] [Dollars] Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 1993 1994 IV Nondefense: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights .... Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: * Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights .... Benchmark-years weights State and local: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Addenda: Final sales of domestic product: ; Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights 4 Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Gross domestic purchases: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Final sales to domestic purchasers: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Gross national product: Current dollars Quantity indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weights Price indexes: Fixed 1987 weights Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts Command-basis gross national product: Quantity index, fixed 1987 weights ... Disposable personal income: Current dollars 1987 dollars 4.5 .7 .8 .8 2.9 -1.9 -1.6 -1.6 1994 1993 I II IV III -6.9 .8 8.0 -7.8 -7.9 -7.7 2.9 -15.0 6.0 -14.8 5.8 -14.8 6.8 4.5 4.7 2.9 .9 1.1 -2.0 -.2 -.4 9.1 9.8 9.9 2.6 -7.8 3.7 3.7 3.7 4.6 4.7 4.7 4.2 4.7 4.1 1.7 1.6 1.6 2.1 2.1 2.0 2.9 2.7 2.7 2.5 2.5 2.5 2.7 2.6 2.6 1.5 1.4 1.4 16.3 -1.4 -1.1 -1.2 3.9 3.8 3.8 10.9 9.4 9.5 Seasonally adjusted at annual rates -1.1 -2.7 -2.7 1994 4 'g /n 1<u 7.2 7.4 7.3 59 6;2 cM4 5.4 7.3 5.1 4.8 2.9 2.7 2.7 4.3 4.1 4.1 2.3 2.2 2.2 2.7 2.6 2.6 2.9 3.0 3.0 2.8 2.8 2.8 .2 .2 .2 44 35 5.2 5.7 8.0 5.1 4.5 6.6 6.9 4.3 2.9 2.3 2.3 3.5 3.0 3.0 6.4 5.5 5.4 2.2 2.2 2.2 1.5 1.5 1.5 4.3 3.9 3.9 5.7 4.6 4.7 1.8 1.3 1.3 3.0 2.8 2.8 2.7 2.7 2.7 2.5 2.5 2.4 3.2 3.2 3.2 2.9 2.7 2.7 3.0 2.7 2.7 2.7 2.5 2.6 3.1 3.1 3.1 5.9 6.7 7.2 7.0 7.8 6.9 5.6 58 3.9 3.2 3.2 4.7 4.1 4.1 5.8 4.7 4.7 5.0 4.7 4.7 4.6 4.4 4.4 4.4 3.8 3.8 4.2 3.2 3.3 3.7 3.2 33 2.8 2.6 2.6 2.7 2.6 2.6 2.4 2.4 2.4 2.5 2.5 2.6 3.2 3.1 3.1 3.5 3.2 3.2 2.6 2.4 2.5 2.8 2.7 2.8 5.7 6.1 7.5 6.1 5.1 7.2 6.1 5.1 3.7 3.0 3.0 4.1 3.5 3.5 6.0 5.1 5.0 3.9 3.7 3.7 2.0 1.8 1.8 4.6 4.1 4.1 4.8 3.8 3.9 2.7 2.4 2.4 2.8 2.6 2.6 2.7 2.6 2.6 2.4 2.4 2.4 2.5 2.5 2.6 3.2 3.1 3.1 3.5 3.2 3.2 2.6 2.4 2.5 2.8 2.7 2.8 5.3 6.0 7.0 6.2 6.8 5.9 5.5 3.1 2.5 2.5 3.8 3.3 3.3 5.6 4.4 4.4 3.4 3.2 3.2 3.7 3.7 3.7 3.8 3.3 3.4 4.3 3.1 3.3 3.0 2.8 2.8 2.7 2.7 2.7 2.4 2.5 2.4 3.1 3.2 3.2 2.9 2.7 2.7 3.0 2.8 2.7 2.6 2.5 2.6 3.3 3.9 5.6 4.0 3.5 3.4 4.1 4.1 1.5 5.8 3.6 6.7 4.3 4.7 3.4 6.8 3.5 6.4 3.1 9.2 7.5 7.0 4.4 1993 IV I NOTE—Except for disposable personal income, the quantity and price indexes in this table are calculated from weighted averages of the detailed output and prices used to prepare each aggregate and component. The fixedweighted measures use as weights the composition of output in 1987. For the alternative indexes, the chain-type indexes with annual weights use weights for the preceding and current years, and the indexes with benchmarkyears weights use weights of 1959, 1963,1967,1972, 1977, 1982,1987,1992, and the most recent year. 1993 1995 Current dollars: Gross domestic domestic product Gross national product Personal income incorr . Disposable Disposable personal income Personal Personal consumption expenditures ... expenditures Durable goo goods Nondurable goods .... Services .... Constant (1987) dollars: Gross domestic domestic product Gross national product Disposable personal personal income Personal Personal consumption expenditures ... expenditures Durable goo goods Nondurable goods goods .... Services .... Population (midperiod, thousands) .... 1994 I II 1995 II! IV I 24,559 25,818 24,978 25,288 25,669 25,988 26,325 24,576 20,810 25,774 21,846 24,970 21,147 25,285 21,369 25,640 21,717 25,942 21,943 26,226 22,354 18,153 19,003 18,421 18,588 18,853 19,095 19,473 19,765 16,951 2,083 17,734 2,266 17,233 2,170 17,443 2,216 17,598 2,227 17,821 2,263 18,072 2,358 18,211 2,337 5,185 9,683 5,342 10,126 5,225 9,838 5,265 9,961 5,300 10,071 5,380 10,178 5,423 10,292 5,445 1.0,429 19,879 20,476 20,119 20,235 20,390 20,537 20,740 20,843 19,901 20,450 20,122 20,242 20,376 20,509 20,672 14,341 14,696 14,451 14,535 14,625 14,697 14,927 15,057 13,391 1,897 13,716 2,039 13,519 1,970 13,640 2,007 13,651 2,004 13,717 2,026 13,853 2,118 13,873 2,088 4,176 7,318 4,251 7,426 4,195 7,354 4,224 7,409 4,237 7,410 4,260 7,430 4,282 7,454 4,289 7,496 26,599 ;.„.., „„ 22,714 258,290 260,991 259,356 259,997 260,627 261,340 261,999 262,526 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 Table 8.3.—Auto Output Table 8.4.—Auto Output in Constant Dollars [Billions of dollars] [Billions of 1987 dollars] jSetisonally adjust*Jdatan nual rates 1993 144.5 Auto outouf Final sales 142.2 Personal consumption expenditures .. 139.3 New autos 93.4 Net purchases of used autos 45.9 Producers' durable equipment 388 New autos 683 Net purchases of used autos -29.6 -37.7 Net exports Exports 145 Imports 522 Government purchases 1.9 Change in business inventories of 2.2 new and used autos New 1.9 Used .3 Addenda: Domestic output of new autos * 112.6 Sales of imported new autos2 65.1 1994 1994 1993 IV I II 158.5 151.0 162.7 154.3 153.1 148.3 146.5 101.3 164.2 154.7 100.1 45.2 54.6 98.7 54.4 III IV I 153.4 158.2 159.9 162.1 150.1 149.6 153.1 151.4 145.0 154.5 99.1 50.5 94.4 57.1 149.9 156.7 101.3 91.6 62.9 440 388 434 439 464 424 367 682 788 791 860 812 78.6 81.3 -37.3 -29.5 -35.4 -35.2 -39.6 -38.8 -41.8 -44.8 -38.6 -35.8 -45.4 -46.8 -51.0 -48.1 167 152 167 163 184 154 193 61 5 538 525 61 7 652 664 675 17 21 2.1 2.0 2.0 1.8 1.9 4.2 3.2 1.0 2.7 1.6 1.1 -1.5 .3 -1.8 3.3 1.3 2.0 5.1 4.5 .5 10.0 6.5 3.5 29 Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 1993 1995 55.4 • 17.1 16.1 10 131.6 119.9 133.7 126.6 133.6 132.5 138.6 68.5 65.3 66.2 69.3 68.0 70.4 65.5 Auto output 121.6 Final sales 121.1 Personal consumption expenditures .. 119.3 New autos 81.3 Net purchases of used autos 38.0 Producers' durable equipment 34.4 New autos 59.5 Net purchases of used autos -25.1 Net exports -34.2 Exports 12.8 Imports 47.0 Government purchases 1.6 Change in business inventories of new and used autos .5 New .. .6 Used -.1 Addenda: Domestic output of new autos l 97.6 Sales of imported new autos2 56.7 1994 1993 1994 IV I II 1995 III IV I 130.1 127.2 135.1 125.9 128.3 130,8 128.8 127.1 125.5 125.2 123.2 138.3 124.5 129.8 123.8 125,0 122.9 120,7 125.3 115,0 119.5 83.1 42.3 38.5 68.4 87.2 36.0 34.6 58.7 83.8 40.0 38.1 66.9 78.9 44.0 40.4 71.9 84.3 41.0 37.7 67.6 76.0 43.5 35.1 65.2 -29.9 -38.5 -24.2 -34.0 -29.4 -28.8 -31.0 -39.1 -31.5 -40.0 -29.8 -43.8 14.4 52.9 13.3 47.3 85.6 44.2 38.0 67.4 14.6 45.6 14.0 53.1 15.8 55.8 1.6 1.4 1.6 1.7 1.7 2.9 2.1 .8 2.0 1.5 .5 -3.2 -1.7 1.4 3 1.6 3.3 2.9 A 15 13.2 57.0 1.5 10.1 7.4 2.7 -30.1 -41.2 16.4 57.6 1.5 13,8 13.1 .7 110.9 104.3 112.9 106.4 111.6 112.7 115.4 57.7 56.2 56.6 58.7 56.8 58.6 54.3 1. Consists of final sales and change in business inventories of new autos assembled in the United States. 2. Consists of personal consumption expenditures, producers' durable equipment, and government purchases. 1. Consists of final sales and change in business inventories of new autos assembled in the United States. 2. Consists of personal consumption expenditures, producers' durable equipment, and government purchases. Table 8.5.—Truck Output Table 8.6.—Truck Output in Constant Dollars [Billions of dollars] [Billions of 1987 dollars] 101.9 126.9 110.8 124.3 123.0 127.9 132.3 133.2 Truck output l 102.1 124.0 112.5 122.7 120,2 121.8 131.2 132.8 Final sales Personal consumption expenditures .. 52.3 58.1 57.3 58.9 56.9 54.5 62.1 58.3 74.7 69.7 58.4 54.7 48.7 Producers' durable equipment 63.6 62.2 63.5 -5.6 -6.0 -38 -4.1 -46 -5.6 -55 -5.1 Net exports 8.1 7.2 6.4 6.7 6.7 6.7 Exports 6.8 5.8 13.7 13.2 10.7 11.2 12.0 11.3 10.6 11.8 Imports 5.3 44 Government purchases 5.3 94 96 56 75 65 .4 1.1 ^.2 6.1 1.6 2,9 -1.7 2.8 Change in business inventories ......... 1. Includes new trucks only. Truck output1 Final sales Personal consumption expenditures .. Producers' durable equipment Net exports . Exports Imports Government purchases Change in business inventories 1. Includes new trucks only. 83.9 100.6 84.1 984 90.4 100.5 97.5 99.9 104.5 104.2 91 A 46.7 44.6 -3.1 95.4 45.3 46.2 -3.6 95,3 42.6 49.7 -4.4 1036 48.5 55.5 -4.7 103.8 46.0 50.4 -4.0 99.2 47.7 50.2 -3.3 43.3 39.9 -4.5 4.7 92 5.4 5.4 94 5.9 -.1 2.2 5.5 86 3.6 -1.4 58 45.5 58.6 -4.3 R4 5.4 87 4.5 53 89 7.6 50 9.4 7.3 10.4 4.3 4.2 1.3 2.1 4.6 .9 ,3 10.7 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 3O • April 1995 NIPA Charts Dec. Nov. P T 1967 68 69 70 71 Nov. P 72 73 74 Mar. T 75 Jan. July July P T P 76 77 78 79 80 81 July Mar. P T Nov. T 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 90 91 92 93 94 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS REAL GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT' April 1995 • 31 GROSS DOMESTIC PURCHASES PRICE INDEX (FIXED WEIGHTS)1 , *w REAL GROSS DOMESTIC PURCHASES' ,.-: '- - '' c DRPORATE F3ROFITS WITH IV'A AND CJCA( j•1)- 2 / - '' ,' '.- '-- 't!|v.';'!'v'.; -5 - A t- ; ': != • 'JSAA Oi^ - < Af\f\ - ;400 300 '- >br«V ! . I REAL DISPOSABLE PERSONAL INCOME I li.M.liiill ii^^^ ^•f^-r-! i 5 ' | | 1-w-m.mf^ ; ' *' "•" "'-J" *;;' •: SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 32 • April 1995 Selected Annual NIPA Tables, 1993-94 The 23 tables in this section present detailed annual estimates for 1993 and 1994 other than those that appear each month in the "Selected NIPA Tables"; the estimates for 1993 are the same as those shown in the July 1994 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS. The complete set of NIPA tables is usually published in the July issue of the SUR- VEY in conjunction with the annual revision of the NIPA'S. This year, the annual revision covering 1992-94 will be combined with the upcoming comprehensive revision scheduled for release in late 1995 (see box on page 10). (Additional estimates for 1994 will not be available until the comprehensive revision.) Table 1.12.—-Net Domestic Product and Domestic Income by Sector Table 1.13.—Net Domestic Product and Domestic Income by Sector in Constant Dollars [Billions of dollars] [Billions of 1987 dollars] Line Net domestic product Business Nonfarm Nonfarm less housing Housing Farm Statistical discrepancy Households and institutions General government Domestic income Business Nonfarm Nonfarm less housing Housing Farm Households and institutions General government . 1 2 1993 1994 5,674.2 6,023.0 4,702.3 5,007.8 3 4 5 6 7 4,646.2 4,269.6 376.6 4,975.7 4,585.8 389.9 53.8 2.3 63.0 -30.9 8 285.3 302.7 9 686.6 712.6 10 5,126.9 5,469.9 11 4,155.0 4,454.7 12 13 14 15 4,093.8 3,807.5 286.3 4,389.0 4,092.6 296.4 61.2 65.7 16 285.3 302.7 17 686.6 712.6 Line Net domestic product Business Nonfarm Nonfarm less housing Housing Farm Statistical discrepancy Households and institutions General government Domestic income Business Nonfarm Nonfarm less housing Housing Farm Households and institutions General government ........ ..... 1993 1994 1 4,535.1 4,715.5 2 3,809.9 3,984.9 3 4 5 6 3,754.9 3,468.2 286.7 3,945.0 3,657.9 287.2 7 1.9 53.1 64.8 -24.9 8 215.6 9 509.6 507.6 10 4,112.0 4,302.4 11 3,386.8 3,571.8 12 13 14 15 3,322.8 3,103.2 219.6 3,494.4 3,274.5 220.0 64.0 77.4 16 215.6 223.0 17 509.6 507.6 223.0 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • 33 Table 2.4.—Personal Consumption Expenditures by Type of Expenditure [Billions of dollars] Line Persona! consumption expenditures ...... Food purchased for off-premise consumption (n.d.) Purchased meals and beverages * (n.d.) Food furnished to employees (including military) (n d ) Food produced and consumed on farms (n d) . Tobacco products (n d ) . . Addenda* Food excluding alcoholic beverages (n.d.) .. Alcoholic beverages purchased for off-premise consumption (n.d.) Other alcoholic beverages (n d ) Clothing, accessories, and jewelry Shoes (n.d.) Clothing and accessories except shoes2 Women's and children's (n.d.) Men's and boys' (n d.) Standard clothing issued to military personnel (n.d) Cleaning, storage, and repair of clothing and shoes (s.) . . Jewelry and watches (d ) .. Others.) l l l l . . l l l l . " . l l " Personal care . . . . . . Toilet articles and preparations (n d ) . . . . Barbershops, beauty parlors, and health clubs (s.) Housing Owner-occupied nonfarm dwellings—space rent4 (s.) Tenant-occupied nonfarm dwellings— rent5 (s.) Rental value of farm dwellings (s.) Other6 (s) Household operation Furniture, including mattresses and bedsprings (d.) Kitchen and other household appliances ? (do .'. ..... China, glassware, tableware, and8 utensils (d.) Other durable house furnishings9 (d.) Semidurable house furnishings (n d) . . Cleaning and polishing preparations, and miscellaneous household supplies and paper products (n.d) Stationery and writing supplies (n.d.) Household utilities Electricity (s ) Gas(s.) ... Water and other sanitary services (s.) Fuel oil and coal (n d ) . ... . . . . Telephone and telegraph (s.) Domestic service (s ) Other 10'(s.) Medical care . Drug preparations and sundries ll (n d ) Ophthalmic products and orthopedic appliances (d.) Physicians (s ) . Dentists (s ) Other professional services 12 (s.) Hospitals and nursing homes . . . . Hospitals Nonprofit (s ) . . Proprietary (s ) Government (s.) Nursing homes (s) Health insurance Medical care15and hospitalization 14 (s ) Income loss (s ) . . . . . Workers' compensation 16 (s ) Line 1994 1993 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 4,378.2 4,628.4 700.3 726.9 422.2 215.2 438.7 228.2 50.5 47.3 8 9 10 573.7 600.9 48.2 _7.9 49.4 29.3 11 293.9 307.8 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 12.0 .4 12.3 .3 33.0 34.1 202.1 135.6 212.1 140.0 66.5 72.1 .3 .3 10.5 36.2 11.7 10.8 37.6 12.9 20 65.8 68.5 21 22 41.1 24.6 43.1 25.4 23 629.0 660.0 24 25 26 27 438.3 160.2 5.6 461.0 166.8 5.7 25.0 26.4 28 508.2 530.9 29 30 31 32 33 42.5 31.3 22.1 47.2 25.2 45.4 34.0 23.6 50.5 27.1 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 56.1 13.4 58.5 13.9 159.3 161.3 80.4 32.4 32.5 14.0 68.2 11.5 31.4 81.2 31.9 34.5 13.7 72.7 12.2 3-1.8 760.5 811.2 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 69.0 11.1 72.0 12.2 165.6 174.9 38.6 83.2 40.9 94.6 346.8 300.2 206.0 366.5 316.5 216.7 32.8 61.4 46.5 46.2 37.1 34.6 65.3 50.0 50.1 39.5 2.4 6.6 2.6 8.0 1. Consists of purchases (including tips) of meals and beverages from retail, service, and amusement establishments, hotels, dining and buffet cars, schools, school fraternities, institutions, clubs, and industrial lunchrooms. Includes meals and beverages consumed both on and off-premise. 2. Includes luggage. 3. Consists of watch, clock, and jewelry repairs, costume and dress suit rental, and miscellaneous personal services. 4. Consists of rent for space and for heating and plumbing facilities, water heaters, lighting fixtures, kitchen cabinets, linoleum, storm windows and doors, window screens, and screen doors, but excludes rent for appliances and furniture and purchases of fuel and electricity. 5. Consists of space rent (see footnote 5) and rent for appliances, furnishings, and furniture. 6. Consists of transient hotels, motels, clubs, schools, and other group housing. 7. Consists of refrigerators and freezers, cooking ranges, dishwashers, laundry equipment, stoves, room air conditioners, sewing machines, vacuum cleaners, and other appliances. 8. Includes such house furnishings as floor coverings, comforters, quilts, blankets, pillows, picture frames, mirrors, art products, portable lamps, and clocks. Also includes writing equipment and hand, power, and garden tools. 9. Consists largely of textile house furnishings including piece goods allocated to house furnishing use. Also includes lamp shades, brooms, and brushes. 10. Consists of maintenance services for appliances and house furnishings, moving and warehouse expenses, postage and express charges, premiums for fire and theft insurance on personal property less benefits and dividends, and miscellaneous household operation services. 11. Excludes drug preparations and related products dispensed by physicians, hospitals, and other medical services. 12. Consists of osteopathic physicians, chiropractors, private duty nurses, chiropodists, podiatrists, and others providing health and allied services, not elsewhere classified. 13. Consists of (1) current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) of nonprofit hospitals and nursing homes, and (2) payments by patients to proprietary and government hospitals and nursing homes. 14. Consists of (1) premiums, less benefits and dividends, for health, hospitalization, and accidental death and dismemberment insurance provided by commercial insurance carriers, and (2) administrative expenses (including consumption of fixed capital) of Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans and of other independent prepaid and self-insured health plans. 15. Consists of premiums, less benefits and dividends, for income loss insurance. 16. Consists of premiums, less benefits and dividends, for privately administered workers' compensation. 17. Consists of (1) operating expenses of life insurance carriers and private noninsured pension plans, and (2) Personal business Brokerage charges and investment counseling (s.) Bank service charges, trust services, and safe deposit box rental (s.) Services furnished without payment by financial intermediaries except life insurance carriers and private noninsured pension plans (s.) Expense of handling life insurance 17 (s.) Legal services (s.) Funeral and burial expenses (s.) Other 18(s.) Transportation User-operated transportation New autos (d.) Net purchases of used autos (d.) Other motor vehicles (d.) Tires, tubes, accessories, and other parts (d.) Repair, greasing, washing, parking, storage, rental, and leasing (s.) Gasoline and oil (n.d ) Bridge, tunnel, ferry, and road tolls (s.) Insurance 19 (s.) Purchased local transportation Mass transit systems (s.) Taxicab (s.) Purchased intercity transportation Railway (s ) Rue Is \ BUS (S.) Airline (s.) Other 20(s.) Recreation Books and maps (d.) Magazines newspapers and sheet music (n d ) Nondurable toys and sport supplies (n d ) Wheel goods, sports and photographic equipment, boats, and pleasure aircraft (d.) ... Video and audio products, computing equipment, and musical instruments (d.) Radio and television repair (s.) Flowers, seeds, and potted plants (n.d.) Admissions to specified spectator amusements Motion picture theaters (s.) . Legitimate theaters and opera, and entertainments of nonprofit institutions (except athletics) (s ) Spectator sports21 (s.) Clubs and fraternal organizations22 (s.) Commercial participant amusements23 (s.) Pari-mutuel net receipts (s.) .... 24 60 61 62 373.3 390.5 34.8 35.6 63 64 65 66 67 146.2 : 68 504.2 538.0 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 461.9 495.0 93.4 98.7 2.5 2.6 86 339.9 371.2 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 20.8 21.9 (s\ 96 97 98 99 100 101 Education and research Dthpr Higher education 25 (s.) Nursery, elementary, and secondary schools26 (s.) 1994 1993 31.2 35.0 149.0 72.6 77.0 56.1 58.4 10.4 11.8 21.9 23.9 45.9 54.4 62.4 69.2 26.4 28.8 98.4 105.6 2.5 105.5 107.2 2.6 27.5 28.6 9.3 5.9 3.4 33.0 .7 1.3 28.5 9.5 6.1 3.5 33.5 .7 1.1 29.0 26.8 28.5 37.4 40.9 33.0 39.0 65.7 76.2 3.9 4.0 12.4 14.0 16.8 18.0 5.6 5.5 5.7 9.5 28.0 3.7 5.8 6.3 5.9 10.3 29.7 3.8 81.9 84.9 102 105.5 113.3 103 104 105 56.1 60.0 22.1 24.0 27.2 29.3 Religious and welfare activities28 (s.) 106 123.0 135.9 Foreign travel and other, net 107 -25.4 -25.7 108 109 110 111 40.8 44.3 Foreign travel by U.S. residents (s.) Expenditures abroad by U.S. residents (n.d.) Less* Expenditures in the United States by nonresidents (s ) Less* Personal remittances in kind to nonresidents (n d ) 3.2 68.5 .8 2.8 72.1 .8 premiums, less benefits and dividends, of fraternal benefit societies. Excludes expenses allocated by commercial carriers to accident and health insurance. 18. Consists of current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) of trade unions and professional associations, employment agency fees, money order fees, spending for classified advertisements, tax return preparation services, and other personal business services. 19. Consists of premiums, less benefits and dividends, for motor vehicle insurance. 20. Consists of baggage charges, coastal and inland waterway fares, travel agents' fees, and airport bus fares. 21. Consists of admissions to professional and amateur athletic events and to racetracks. 22. Consists of dues and fees excluding insurance premiums. 23. Consists of billiard parlors; bowling alleys; dancing, riding, shooting, skating, and swimming places; amusement devices and parks; golf courses; sightseeing buses and and guides; private flying operations; casino gambling; and other commercial participant amusements. 24. Consists of net receipts of lotteries and expenditures for purchases of pets and pet care services, cable TV, film processing, photographic studios, sporting and recreation camps, video cassette rentals, and recreational services, not elsewhere classified. 25. For private institutions, equals current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) less receiptssuch as those from meals, rooms, and entertainments—accounted for separately in consumer expenditures, and less expenditures for research and development financed under contracts or grants. For government institutions, equals student payments of tuition. 26. For private institutions, equals current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) less receiptssuch as those from meals, rooms, and entertainments—accounted for separately in consumer expenditures. For government institutions, equals student payments of tuition. Excludes child day care services, which are included in religious and welfare activities. 27. Consists of (1) fees paid to commercial, business, trade, and correspondence schools and for educational services, not elsewhere classified, and (2) current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) by research organizations and foundations for education and research. 28. For nonprofit institutions, equals current expenditures (including consumption of fixed capital) of reliojous, social welfare, foreign relief, and political organizations, museums, libraries, and foundations, the expenditures are net of receipts—such as those from meals, rooms, and entertainments-accounted for separately in consumer expenditures, and excludes relief payments within the United States and expenditures by foundations for education and research. For proprietary and government institutions, equals receipts from users. NOTE.— Consumer durable goods are designated (d.), nondurable goods (n.d.), and services (s.). SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 34 • April 1995 Table 2.5.—Personal Consumption Expenditures by Type of Expenditure in Constant Dollars [Billions of 1987 dollars] Line Personal consumption expenditures Food snd tobacco Food purchased for off-premise consumption (n.d.) Food furnished to employees (including military) (n.d.) .......... Food produced and consumed on farms (n.d.) Tobacco products (n d ) Addenda1 Food excluding alcoholic beverages (n.d.) ... Alcoholic beverages purchased for off-premise consumption (n.d.) Clothing, accessories, and jewelry Shoes (n d ) . . Clothing and accessories except shoes 2 .-. Women's and children's (n d) Men's and boys' (n d ) Standard clothing issued to military personnel (n d) Cleanino storaoe and repair of clothino and shoes (s) Jewelry and watches (d ) Other (s.) Personal care ..... Toilet articles and preparations (n.d.) Barbershops, beauty parlors, and health clubs (s.) Houslno Owner-occupied nonfarm dwellings—space5 rent4 (s.) Tenant-occupied nonfarm dwellings—rent (s.) Rental value of farm dwellings (s.) Other6 (s.) Household operation Furniture including mattresses and bedsprings (d.) Kitchen and other household appliances' (d!) China glassware tableware and8 utensils (d ) Other durable house furnishings9 (d.) .>.............,.;.. Semidurable house furnishings (n.d.) Cleaning and polishing preparations, and miscellaneous household supplies and paper products (n.d) Stationery and writing supplies (n.d.) .. Household utilities Electricitv (s.) .. Gas(s) Water and other sanitary services (s.) Fuel oil and coal (n d.) Telephone and telegraph (s.) Domestic service (s.) Other 10(s.) Medical care Drug preparations and sundries11 (n.d.) Ophthalmic products and orthopedic appliances (d ) ... Physicians (s ) Dentists (s ) Other professional services 12 (s ) Hospitals and nursing homes 1 . .. . . Nonprofit (s.) Proprietary (s ) ... Government (s.) Nursing homes (s ) NOTE.—See footnotes to table 2.4. Line 1994 1993 1 3,458.7 3,579.6 2 553.6 564.3 3 4 5 6 7 340.4 173.5 9.8 .3 344.5 180.9 9.9 .3 29.6 28.7 8 9 10 465.8 476.0 37.7 20.5 38.5 21.1 11 241.5 253.4 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 27.6 28.4 169.9 113.1 180.1 11.8.0 56.8 62.1 .3 8.3 26.3 9.2 .3 8.2 26.4 9.9 20 53.7 54.8 21 22 33.8 19.9 34.9 19.9 23 492.6 501.3 24 25 26 27 340.3 131.2 4.2 346.5 133.3 4.1 17.0 17.4 28 449.1 461.5 29 30 31 32 33 37.7 38.9 34.0 20.5 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 31.8 19.6 41.3 22.5 43.8 23.1 47.8 11.0 49.9 11.2 132.6 132.4 69.7 70.4 28.9 21.9 12.1 68.7 27.9 9.6 222 11.9 71.0 9.9 26.5 26.9 44 523.0 537.2 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 47.8 48.7 8.8 113.0 9.5 114.1 26.4 62.7 26.8 68.6 238.1 202.9 149.4 242.8 206.3 152.7 18.7 18.6 35.0 36.5 26.7 34.9 35.1 26.2 Medical care15and hospitalization Income loss (s.) 14 (s.) Personal business . Brokerage charges and investment counseling (s) Bank service charges, trust services, and safe deposit box rental (s.) Services furnished without payment by financial intermediaries except life insurance carriers and private noninsured pension plans (s.) Expense of handling life insurance 17 (s.) Legal services (s) ...... ... Funeral and burial expenses (s ) . Other 18 (s.) . ...... User-operated transportation New autos (d.) Net purchases of used autos (d.) Other motor vehicles (d.) Tires tubes accessories and other parts (d ) . Repair, greasing, washing, parking, storage, rental, and leasing (s.) Gasoline and on (n d ) Bridge tunnel ferry and road tolls (s ) Insurance 19 (s.) ....!.... .... Mass transit systems (s.) Taxicab(s) . . . Purchased intercity transportation ... . Railway (s ) Bus (s ) Airline2 (s ) Other °(sj Recreation Books and maps (d ) Maoazines newspapers and sheet music (n d ) Nondurable toys and sport supplies (n d ) Wheel goods, sports and photographic equipment, boats, and pleasure aircraft (d.) ... Video and audio products, computing equipment, and musical instruments (d.) Radio and television repair (s.) Flowers seeds and potted plants (n d ) Admissions to specified spectator amusements Motion picture theaters (s ) Legitimate theaters and opera, and entertainments of nonprofit institutions (except athletics) (s ) Spectator sports21 (s) .... Clubs and fraternal organizations 22 (s23) Commercial participant amusements (s ) .... Pari-mutuel net receipts (s ) Other 24 (s) Education and research Higher education 25 (s ) Nursery elementary and secondary schools26 (s) Other 2^'(s) ' . Religious and welfare activities28 (s) .. Foreign travel and other net Foreign travel by U S residents (s ) Expenditures abroad by U S residents (n d ) Less' Expenditures in the United States by nonresidents (s ) Less* Personal remittances in kind to nonresidents (n d ) 1994 1993 57 58 59 21.6 1.9 2.7 1.9 2.8 60 271.1 275.1 61 62 38.2 21.2 38.2 63 64 65 66 67 91.9 54.5 41.1 16.5 17.0 68 410.5 428.1 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 377.0 392.9 81.3 83.1 42.3 55.4 1.8 1.9 86 304.1 333.9 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 16.6 20.4 32.2 28.1 83.7 17.0 21.0 34.7 96 97 98 99 100 101 7.8 38.0 51.9 24.9 77.5 86.5 1.9 15.0 7.2 4.6 2.6 26.2 .5 1.1 22.7 22.0 21.9 92.4 56.0 41.3 8.4 27.3 80.3 87.2 1.9 15.2 7.3 4.7 2.6 27.9 .5 1.0 24.5 3.1 10.5 12.5 32.3 101.5 3.2 11.7 12.8 4.2 4.1 4.1 4.2 7.9 4.5 4.2 8.4 22.0 2.9 64.2 22.7 2.9 65.8 102 78.6 81.0 103 104 105 38.6 17.6 22.4 39.5 18.2 23.3 106 100.6 108.1 107 -19.6 -19.1 108 109 110 111 29.1 3.1 51.2 .7 31.6 2.7 52.7 .6 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • 35 Table 2,6.—Personal Consumption Expenditures by Type of Product [Billions of dollars] Line Personal consumption expenditures ...... Durable goods New autos (70) Net purchases of used autos (71) Other motor vehicles (72) Tires tubes accessories, and other parts (73) .. . . . .. 1 4,378.2 4,628.4 2 3 4 5 6 7 g 538.0 000 fl China glassware, tableware, and utensils (31) .. .. ^ Video and audio products, computing equipment, and musical instruments (91) Other Ophthalmic products and orthopedic appliances (46) Wheel goods, sports and photographic equipment, boats, and pleasure aircraft Jewelry and watches (18) , Nondurable goods Food . Food purchased for off-premise consumption (3) Purchased meals and beverages (4) Food furnished to employees (including military) and food produced and consumed on farms (5+6) Alcoholic beverages purchased for off-premise consumption (9) Other alcoholic beverages (10) ... . ... .. 14 15 16 17 1ft 20 21 22 98.7 54.4 69.2 28.8 2089 2297 1C * o-t q I\A n 22.1 65,7 23.6 76.2 50.5 101.1 110.6 11.1 12.2 330 390 36.2 on o 37.6 21 9 649.7 4222 215.2 679.6 438.7 228.2 23 12.3 o/ cyq 7 finno 25 26 48.2 279 49.4 29.3 28 29 30 31 rtOC A 12.7 OAR ^ 33.0 34.1 135.6 140.0 66.8 72.4 1056 1072 32 140 137 33 334.4 347.3 34 35 36 50.5 41.1 25.2 47.3 43.1 27.1 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 56.1 69.0 37.4 13.4 58.5 72.0 40.9 13.9 2.4 26.8 12.4 2.0 28.5 14.0 44 2,501.0 2,642.7 45 NOTE.—The figures in parentheses are the line numbers of the corresponding items in table 2.4. OC1 0 19 1,3392 1 394.3 yj Shoes (12) Women's and children's clothing and accessories except shoes (14) Men's and boys' clothing and accessories except shoes (15+16) Gasoline and oil (75) , Fuel oil and coal (40) .. .. . . Other . .. Tobacco products (7) Toilet articles and preparations (21) .. Semidurable house furnishings (33) . Cleaning and polishing preparations, and miscellaneous household supplies and paper products (34) ^. Drug preparations and sundries (45) Nondurable toys and sport supplies (89) Stationery and writing supplies (35) -.. Net foreign remittances (109 less 111) Magazines, newspapers, and sheet music (88) ;..... Flowers seeds, and potted plants (93) Services . ... Housing 591.5 93.4 45.9 62.4 26.4 A9 K m 11 12 13 Line 1994 1993 6290 6600 46 47 Tenant-occupied nonfarm dwellinos—rent (25) Afl Other (27) Household operation . Electricity (37) . . . . . .. ... .. .. Gas (38jI Water and other sanitary services (39) Telephone and telegraph (41) Domestic service (42) .........; Other (43) ........... Transportation User-operated transportation Repair, greasing, washing, parking, storage, rental, and leasing (74) Other user-operated transportation (76+77) . . Mass transit systems (79) ... . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. .. Taxicab(80) Purchased intercity transportation Railway (82) ... Bus (83) Airline (84) .. , Other (85) Medical care .. Physicians (47) ;.;. Dentists (48) Other professional services (49) Hospitals and nursing homes (50) . . ...... Health insurance (56) .... . .... . .. Other .. . ...... Personal care Cleaning, storage, and repair of clothing and shoes (17) Rarharcnrinc haantu narlnrc anri haatth Hiihe /99\ Other (19) Personal business .. .. •'. Brokerage charges and investment counseling (61) Bank service charges, trust services, and safe deposit box rental (62) Services furnished without payment by financial intermediaries except life insurance carriers and private noninsured pension plans (63) Legal services (65) Funeral and burial expenses (66) ... Recreation Admissions to specified spectator amusements (94) Other (92+98+99+1QO+101) Higher education (103) Nursery, elementary, and secondary schools (104) Other (105) Dalininne anH u/alfara ortivfitiae /1flft\ Net foreign travel Foreign travel by U.S residents (108) Less: Expenditures in the United States by nonresidents (110) .... , 4383 1602 461 0 166 8 49 25.0 26.4 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 256.3 264.2 80.4 32.4 32.5 68.2 11.5 31.4 81.2 31.9 34.5 72.7 12.2 31.8 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 1706 1796 128.3 136.6 105.5 98.4 29.9 9.3 59 3.4 31.1 9.5 61 3.5 33.0 33.5 .7 1.3 285 2.5 .7 1.1 290 2.6 69 70 71 72 73 74 680.5 165.6 727.1 174.9 46.2 50.1 75 76 77 764.7 811.8 46.8 10.5 9 A ft 11.7 49.0 10.8 3733 3905 34.8 31.2 35.6 35.0 7P. 79 80 81 82 38.6 83.2 40.9 94.6 346.8 366.5 OC A 12.9 146.2 70 e 149.0 QA 85 86 56.1 10.4 58.4 11.8 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 143.8 83 07 . 1994 1993 QC 96 97 98 0"i Q 16.8 77 n nn n 150.8 18.0 127.0 105.5 132.8 113.3 56.1 22.1 27.2 60.0 24.0 29.3 •mo A -27.8 40.8 68.5 J(JC Q -27.7 443 72.1 36 • April 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS Table 2.7.—Personal Consumption Expenditures by Type of Product in Constant Dollars [Billions of 1987 dollars] Line Personal consumption expenditures .... . . . Durable goods Motor vehicles and parts New autos (70) Net purchases of used autos (71) Other motor vehicles (72) Tires, tubes, accessories, and other parts (73) Line 1994 1993 1 34587 3 579.6 2 489.9 532.1 3 4 196.1 81 3 208.2 831 5 6 7 38.0 51.9 24.9 42.3 55.4 27.3 Furniture and household equipment Furniture, including mattresses and bedsprings (29) Kitchen and other household appliances (30) China, glassware, tableware, and utensils (31) Video and audio products, computing equipment, and musical instruments (91) ..... Other durable house furnishings (32) ... 8 9 10 11 12 13 214.1 238.7 37.7 31.8 19.6 83.7 38.9 34.0 20.5 101.5 41.3 43.8 Other Ophthalmic products and orthopedic appliances (46) ... Wheel goods, sports and photographic equipment, boats, and pleasure aircraft (90) Jewelry and watches (18) Books and maps (87) 14 15 79.7 85.2 16 17 18 28.1 32.3 263 264 16.6 17.0 Nondurable goods Food Food purchased for off-premise consumption (3) Purchased meals and beverages (4) Food furnished to employees (including military) and food produced and consumed on farms (5+6) Addenda: Food excluding alcoholic beverages(8) Alcoholic beverages purchased for off-premise consumption (9) Other alcoholic beverages (10) Clothing and shoes Shoes (12) Women's and children's clothing and accessories except shoes (14) Men's and boys' clothing and accessories except shoes (15+16) 88 95 19 1,078.5 1,109.5 20 21 22 23 5240 340.4 5356 344.5 1735 1809 10.1 10.2 24 25 26 465.8 476.0 37.7 20.5 38.5 21.1 27 28 197.8 208.8 27.6 28.4 29 30 113.1 118.0 57.1 62.4 Gasoline and oil (75) 31 86.5 87.2 Fuel oil and coal (40) 32 12.1 11.9 Other Tobacco products (7) Toilet articles and preparations (21) , Semidurable house furnishings (33) Cleaning and polishing preparations, and miscellaneous household supplies and paper products (34) Drug preparations and sundries (45) Nondurable toys and sport supplies (89) Stationery and writing supplies (35) Net foreign remittances (109 less 111) Magazines, newspapers, and sheet music (88) Flowers seeds and potted plants (93) 33 34 35 36 258.2 265.9 296 287 33.8 22.5 34.9 23.1 Services Housing Owner-occupied nonfarm dwellings—space rent (24) 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 32.2 11.0 2.5 20.4 10.5 499 487 347 45 46 492.6 340.3 Household operation Electricity (37) Gas (38) Water and other sanitary services (39) Telephone and telegraph (41) Domestic service (42) Other (43) Transportation User-operated transportation Repair, greasing, washing, parking, storage, rental, and leasing (74) Purchased local transportation Mass transit systems (79) Taxicab (80) ... Purchased intercity transportation Railway (82) ... Bus (83) Airline (84) Other (85) 2.0 47 48 131 2 4.2 4.1 50 225.3 228.3 69.7 70.4 27.9 22.2 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 fin 28.9 21.9 68.7 9.6 71.0 9.9 26.5 26.9 127.9 132.7 94.4 77.5 61 62 7.2 4.6 63 64 2.6 65 66 1333 26.2 .5 1.1 97.5 80.3 7.3 4.7 2.6 27.9 .5 1.0 22.7 1.8 1.9 Medical care Physicians (47) ... Dentists (48) Other professional services (49) ... Hospitals and nursing homes (50) Health insurance (56) 69 70 71 4664 113.0 4790 114.1 264 268 72 73 62.7 68.6 238.1 242.8 74 26.2 26.7 Other Personal care Cleaning, storage, and repair of clothing and shoes (17) 75 76 5782 596.9 37.3 38.1 Personal business Bank service charges, trust services, and safe deposit box rental (62) Services furnished without payment by financial intermediaries except life insurance carriers and private noninsured pension plans (63) Expense of handling life insurance (64) Funeral and burial expenses (66) Other (67) Admissions to specified spectator amusements (94) Education and research 77 8.3 8.2 1Q Q 7Q iQ Q Q 9 80 271.1 275.1 n 81 flfl 82 21.2 83 84 91.9 54.5 07 oo 119 A 89 12.5 QC on 91 ifi ^ inn 1 Q Q (}fl 0 21.9 92.4 56.0 41 a 17 n 1 1£ 7 12.8 mo Q nn c 17 fi 40 0 oo A «pn e mfl 1 QC oo r> 91 1 97 98 29.1 51.2 31.6 52.7 Q4 QC Foreign travel by U.S. residents (108) Less: Expenditures in the United States by nonresidents (110) 24.5 7ft QO rVhor MfW 21.0 11.7 501.3 3465 1994 67 68 11.2 44 1,890.3 1,938.1 NOTE.—The figures in parentheses are the line numbers of the corresponding items in table 2.5. 47.8 478 Tenant-occupied nonfarm dwellings—rent (25) Rental value of farm dwellings (26) 1993 OO <2 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • 37 Table 3.1.—Government Receipts and Expenditures Table 3.4—Persona! Tax and Nontax Receipts [Billions of dollars] [Billions of dollars] Line Line 1994 1993 1 1,970.6 2,124.6 2 3 4 5 686.4 173.2 525.3 585.6 742.1 202.5 554.0 626.0 Expenditures 6 2,185.6 2,257.5 Purchases Compensation of employees Other . 7 8 g 1 148.4 686.6 461.7 1,175.3 712.6 462.7 Transfer payments (net) ... To persons JjO rest of the world (net) 10 11 12 908.4 892.6 955.8 939.9 15.7 15.9 Net interest paid Interest paid To persons and business To rest of the world (net) Less: Interest received by government 13 14 15 16 17 130.2 279.3 237.8 136.7 286.1 239.1 41.6 47.0 149.1 149.4 Receipts Personal tax and nontax receipts Corporate profits tax accruals Indirect business tax and nontax accruals Contributions for social insurance Less: Dividends received by government 18 10.4 10.9 Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises Subsidies Less: Current surplus of government enterprises 19 20 21 9.0 378 .7 335 28.8 32.8 Less* Wage accruals less disbursements 22 0 Surplus or deficit (-), national income and product accounts Social insurance funds Other 0 23 -215.0 -132.9 24 25 1003 -3153 1187 -251 6 Indirect business tax and nontax accruals . 1993 1994 1 525.3 554.0 2 3 34.6 91.2 48.5 53.4 Excise taxes Liquor Tobacco Windfall profit tax Other 4 5 6 7 35.3 403 Customs duties 8 19.9 21.3 9 10 11 12 16.3 16.5 Nontaxes Outer Continental Shelf royalties Deposit insurance premiums Other1 7.6 5.6 2.6 7.2 6.5 7.5 5.6 2.5 7.1 6.9 13 440.7 462.9 Sales taxes State General Gasoline Liquor ... Tobacco Public utilities Insurance receipts Other Local General Public utilities Other 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 212.4 176.1 117.6 226.2 187.7 127.3 24.0 24.5 6.3 4.7 6.7 4.8 Property taxes Motor vehicle licenses Severance taxes Other taxes2 27 28 29 30 184.0 3.9 4.5 190.8 4.1 4.4 18.6 19.1 Nontaxes Rents and royalties Special assessments Fmes Other3 31 32 33 34 35 17.2 18.4 State and local 1. Consists largely of fines, fees, and royalties other than Outer Continental Shelf. 2. Consists largely of business licenses and documentary and stamp taxes. 3. Consists largely of donations. 742.1 565.6 Income taxes Withheld Declarations and settlements Less: Refunds 3 4 505.9 432.3 149.2 548.9 466.3 159.3 75.6 76.7 Estate and gift taxes Nontaxes x 7 8 12.9 15.0 1.6 1.8 9 166.1 176.5 Income taxes Estate and gift taxes Motor vehicle licenses Property taxes Other taxes2 .. 10 11 12 13 14 123.3 5.0 9.0 3.4 2.7 131.5 5.4 9.3 3.6 3.0 Nontaxes Fines Other3 15 16 17 22.7 23.8 5 6 State and local 3.6 6.3 7.8 8.0 9.0 36.3 25.2 4.9 29 2.8 6.6 3.4 6.6 7.9 8.1 9.8 38.5 27.0 8.4 14.3 1. Consists largely of fines and immigration fees. 2. Consists largely of hunting, fishing, and other personal licenses. 3. Consists largely of donations and unclaimed bank deposits. Table 3.6.—Contributions for Social Insurance [Billions of dollars] Line 1993 1994 1 585.6 626.0 2 324.3 344.6 3 276.8 294.9 4 5 6 •194.5 156.3 38.2 210.1 168.8 -41.3 Unemployment insurance State tax Federal tax Railroad employees Federal employees 7 8 9 10 11 28.0 21.3 28.7 22.1 Federal employee retirement Civilian Military 12 13 14 47.1 20.8 26.3 Railroad retirement . Pension benefit guaranty Veterans life insurance Workers' compensation Military medical insurance1 15 16 17 18 19 Federal social insurance funds Line Federal 686.4 520.3 Employer contributions [Billions of dollars] 1994 2 Personal tax and nontax receipts Federal Contributions for social insurance Table 3.5.—Indirect Business Tax and Nontax Accruals 1993 1 Old-age, survivors, disability, and hospital insurance Old-age, survivors, and disability insurance Hospital insurance 5.5 0 1.2 2.7 .9 0 1.8 1.8 5.8 0 .8 48.9 21.6 27.3 2.6 1.0 0 2.0 1.7 State and local social insurance funds 20 47.5 49.6 State and local employee retirement Temporary disability insurance Workers' compensation 21 22 23 36.8 38.3 0 0 10.7 11.3 24 261.3 281.4 Federal social insurance funds Old-age, survivors, disability, and hospital insurance Employees , Old-age, survivors, and disability insurance Hospital insurance Self-employed Supplementary medical insurance State unemployment insurance Federal civilian employee retirement Railroad retirement . Veterans life insurance 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 241.0 218.7 195.1 156.3 260.1 235.7 210.9 168.8 38.8 23.7 15.2 42.1 24.8 17.4 State and local social insurance funds State and local employee retirement Temporary disability insurance 36 37 38 20.3 17.2 Personal contributions .. .2 4.7 1.3 .8 3.2 .2 4.8 1.2 .8 21.3 17.9 3.4 1. Consists of payments for medical services for dependents of active duty military personnel for medical care at nonmilitary facilities. 3 8 • April 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS Table 3.9B.—Government Purchases Gross and Net of Sales by Type Table 3.12.—Government Transfer Payments to Persons [Billions of dollars] , [Billions of dollars] Line Line Government purchases Federal National defense Durable goods Gross purchases Less: sales Nondurable goods Gross purchases Less: sales Services .. Gross purchases Less: Sales Structures l Nondefense . Durable goods Gross purchases Less: Sales Nondurable goods Commodity Credit Corporation inventory change Gross purchases Less: Sales Other Gross purchases Less: sales Services Gross purchases Less- Sales Structures1 State and local Durable goods Gross purchases Less* Sales . . . . . ......... Nondurable goods . Gross purchases Less- Sales Services Gross purchases Less' Sales . . . . . . . Tuition and related educational charges Health and hospital charges Other sales Structures1 .. ... .. 1993 1994 1 1,148.4 1,175.3 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 443.6 437.3 302.7 292.3 70.6 70.7 61.9 62.0 0 9.5 9.5 0 218.1 220.5 2.4 4.5 .1 8.0 8.0 0 217.6 221.5 3.9 4.7 140.9 7.2 8.5 1.4 7.2 -.3 16 1.9 7.6 82 6 114.8 145.0 7.4 8.9 1.5 7.1 -.5 20 2.5 7.6 83 7 118.9 1171 1189 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 o 23 11.7 11.6 29 704.7 738.0 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 36.9 38.9 38.5 40.5 19 20 65.7 76.3 62.6 72.7 101 505.7 6333 106 530.0 668.3 1277 28.1 72.6 1383 269 99.6 103.8 1. Separate estimates of gross purchases and sales of structures are not available. Table 3.13.—Subsidies Less Current Surplus of Government Enterprises [Billions of dollars] Line Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises Federal Subsidies Agricultural Maritime Air carriers . Other1 Less' Current surplus of government enterprises Postal Service Federal Housing Administration State and local Subsidies . . Water and sewerage Gas and electricity Toll facilities Liouor stores Air and water terminals Housing and urban renewal Public transit 1994 1993 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 g 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 9.0 35.7 .7 134 331 76 23.0 .3 0 2.0 1.7 -1.1 2.7 .2 -.1 -26.7 .4 27.1 10.2 892.6 642.2 666.6 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 554.9 297.9 146.5 575.8 312.1 161.4 34.6 21.5 23.7 21.2 19 20 21 22 17.5 16.8 23 24 25 26 27 28 22.2 16.2 10.4 16.4 29 250.4 273.3 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 68.4 56.6 75.2 62.5 2.5 9.3 170.7 133.2 186.0 147.4 23.9 24.2 .1 1.2 11.8 62.1 35.7 26.3 7.8 .4 1.9 1.8 1.8 939.9 .1 .8 1.7 64.5 37.2 27.3 8,0 .5 1.9 2.0 1.7 17.7 17.0 .7 .6 1.4 20.7 £4' 3.9 3.3 1.6 4.7 6.8 1.1 3.4 22.8 1.3 22.2 2.5 10.3 3.8 3.4 1.6 5.6 7.3 1.2 3.7 1. Consists of civil service, foreign service, Public Health Service officers, Tennessee Valley Authority, and several small retirement programs. 2. Includes the Coast Guard. 3. Consists of payments for medical services for dependents of active duty military personnel at nonmilitary facilities. 4. Consists of mustering out pay, terminal leave pay, and adjusted compensation benefits. 5. Consists largely of payments to nonprofit institutions, aid to students, payments for medical services for retired military personnel and their dependents at nonmilitary facilities. 6. Consists of emergency assistance and medical insurance premium payments paid on behalf of indigents. 7. Consists largely of foster care, veterans benefits, Alaska dividends, and crime victim payments. Table 3.14.—Social Insurance Funds Receipts and Expenditures [Billions of dollars] .3 0 2.1 3.9 Line 3.2 2.1 .8 -28,6 .4 28.9 9.5 2.5 .6 3.3 .8 -9.3 9.5 1994 1993 Federal -2.2 1. Consists largely of subsidies to railroads and mass transit systems. 2. Consists largely of Bonneville Power Administration, other electric power agencies, and insurance agencies other than those insuring deposits in financial institutions. 3. Consists of lotteries, off-track betting, local parking, and miscellaneous activities. off* !!__ 1 2 29.2 21.7 37.4 Government transfer payments to persons Federal Benefits from social insurance funds Old-age, survivors, and disability insurance Hospital and supplementary medical insurance Unemployment insurance State Railroad employees ... Federal employees .... Special unemployment benefits Federal employee retirement Civilian l2 Military Railroad retirement Pension benefit guaranty Veterans life insurance .. Workers' compensation . 3 Military medical insurance Veterans benefits Pension and disability .... Readjustment Other4 Food stamp benefits Black lung benefits Supplemental security income Direct relief Earned income credit Other5 State and local Benefits from social insurance funds State and local employee retirement Temporary disability insurance Workers' compensation . Public assistance Medical care ... Aid to families with dependent children Supplemental security income . General assistance Energy assistance Other6 Education Emolovment and trainino. 1994 1993 Receipts Contributions for social insurance Personal contributions Employer contributions Government Other Interest received Expenditures Administrative expenses (purchases) Transfer payments to persons Surplus or deficit (-) 1 2 599.2 517.8 555.1 3 4 5 6 241.0 276.8 260.1 294.9 640.7 84.8 88.3 192.0 206.7 7 81.4 85.6 8 565.2 587.6 9 10 10.3 11.8 554.9 575.8 11 34.0 53.1 147.4 State and local Receipts Contributions for social insurance Employer contributions Government Other Interest and dividends received Expenditures Transfer payments to persons r Surplus or deficit (—) . ••• • 12 140.3 13 67.8 70.9 14 15 16 17 20.3 47.5 38.9 21.3 49.6 40.5 18 72.4 76.5 19 74.0 81.8 20 21 8.6 5.6 9.1 6.6 75.2 68.4 . . . . 22 66.3 65.6 - . . •• • . . NOTE.—In this table interest and dividends received is included in receipts; in tables 3.1, 3.3, 3.15, 3.17, 3.19, and 9.4, interest received and dividends received are netted against expenditures. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • 39 Table 5.2.—Gross Private Domestic Investment, Consumption of Fixed Capital, and Net Private Domestic Investment by Major Type of Investment Table 5.3.—Gross Private Domestic Investment, Consumption of Fixed Capital, and Net Private Domestic Investment by Major Type of Investment in Constant Dollars [Billions of dollars] [Billions of 1987 dollars] Line Gross private domsstic investment Less* Consumption of fixed capital Equals1 Net private domestic investment . Fixed investment Less: Consumption of fixed capital Equals' Net fixed investment Nonresldentlai Less: Consumption of fixed capital Equals' Net nonresidential * Structures Less: Consumption of fixed capital Equals* Net structures Producers' durable equipment Less1 Consumption of fixed capital Equals' Net producers' durable equipment Residential Less* Consumption of fixed capital Equals: Net residential Change in business inventories 1 . . 882.0 669.1 10329 715.3 2130 3176 4 5 6 866.7 669.1 980.7 715.3 2653 7 8 9 616.1 10 11 12 1734 1828 161.9 170.3 11.4 12.5 13 14 15 442.7 3568 860 514.8 3787 16 17 18 250.6 283.0 1504 1664 100.2 116.6 19 15.4 52.2 2 3 . Line 1994 1993 1976 5187 974 697.6 549.0 1487 1361 Gross private domestic investment Less: Consumption of fixed capital Equals: Net private domestic investment Fixed investment Less: Consumption of fixed capital Equals: Net fixed investment Nonresidentiai Less: Consumption of fixed capital Equals: Net nonresidential Structures Less: Consumption of fixed capital Equals: Net structures Producers' durable equipment Less: Consumption of fixed capital Equals: Net producers' durable equipment Residential Less: Consumption of fixed capital Equals: Net residential Change in business inventories 1993 1 819.9 .-< 2 3 599.5 220.4 951.5 628.5 323.0 4 5 6 804.6 599.5 205.1 903.8 628.5 275.2 7 8 9 591.6 471.6 120.0 672.4 493.2 179.2 10 11 12 147J 150.6 138.6 10.8 12.0 13 14 15 443.9 334.7 109.2 521.9 354.6 167.2 16 17 18 213.0 127.9 231.3 135.3 85.2 96.0 19 15.3 47.8 ..... 136.9 Table 5.6.—Purchases of Structures by Type Table 5.7.—Purchases of Structures by Type in Constant Dollars [Billions of dollars] [Billions of 1987 dollars] Une 1 2 3 4 5 6 Purchases of structures * Private Nonresidential New Nonresidential buildings, excluding farm Industrial Commercial Religious Educational Hospital a n d institutional . . . Other2 Utilities Railroads Telecommunications Electric light and power Gas Petroleum pipelines Farm Mining exploration, shafts, and wells Petroleum and natural gas Other Other3 Brokers' commissions on sale of structures Net purchases of used structures Residential New New housing units Single family structures Multifamily structures Mobile homes Improvements Other4 . Brokers' commissions on sale of structures Net purchases of used structures Government structures and new construction force-account compensation New Buildings excluding military Residential Industrial Educational Hospital Other5 Highways and streets Military facilities Conservation and development Sewer and water systems Sewer systems Water suoolv facilities ahe?6 . ... .! Net purchases of used structures ..... ... 581.2 173.4 182.8 182.9 173.5 114.4 457.4 124.1 37.7 52.7 36 4.5 151 104 36 4.8 143 11.0 12 13 14 15 16 17 34.4 36.3 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 31 122 36 94 14.1 63 1.0 11.2 43 101 15.3 57 1.0 35 10.7 9.6 11 8.2 11 94 .7 -.9 242.8 274.7 2183 248.7 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 151 4 144.1 133.3 1774 -23 28.3 -2.4 119.2 123.7 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 116.0 120.5 46.1 46.7 25 26 . 1994 535,4 416.2 34.1 46.7 7 8 g 10 11 ... . Line 1993 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 10.8 74 66.4 .4 26.9 44 1.7 18.5 33 18.2 33.3 3.1 5.8 17.3 9.6 7.7 10.3 3.2 .8 -.9 167.7 154.0 13.7 9.7 70.9 .5 5.0 1.4 19.3 3.5 17.6 36.4 3.1 6.1 17.9 10.1 7.8 10.2 3.2 1. In this table, purchases of structures includes compensation of government employees engaged in new forceaccount construction. In tables 1.3, 3.1, and 3.7, this compensation is classified as a service and is included as part of government compensation of employees. 2. Consists of hotels and motels, buildings used primarily for social and recreational activities, and buildings not elsewhere classified, such as passenger terminals, greenhouses, and animal hospitals. 3. Consists of streets, dams and reservoirs, sewer and water facilities, parks, airfields, etc. 4. Consists of dormitories, fraternity and sorority houses, nurses' homes, etc. 5. Consists of general office buildings, police and fire stations, courthouses, auditoriums, garages, passenger terminals, etc. 6. Consists of electric and gas facilities, transit systems, airfields, etc. Purchases of structuresi Private Nonresidential New Nonresidential buildings, excluding farm Industrial Commercial Religious Educational Hospital and institutional Other2 Utilities Railroads Telecommunications Electric light and power Gas Petroleum pipelines Farm ........ Mining exploration, shafts, and wells Petroleum and natural gas Other ... Other3 Brokers' commissions on sale of structures Net purchases of used structures Residential New New housing units Permanent site Single family structures Multifamily structures Mobile homes Improvements Other4 Brokers' commissions on sale of structures Net purchases of used structures Government structures and new construction force-account compensation New Buildings, excluding military Residential Industrial .. Educational Hospital ... Other5 Highways and streets Military facilities Conservation and development Sewer and water systems Sewer systems Water supply facilities Other6 Net purchases of used structures 1994 1993 1994 1 457.6 2 353.4 147.7 478.9 374.1 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 150.6 147.8 150.6 97.4 29.1 39.7 101.9 3.0 3.8 12.9 8.8 28.8 3.0 8.2 11.6 5.2 .8 2.7 10.7 9.8 .9 8.3 .6 -.8 205.7 31.0 43.3 3.0 4.0 11.8 9.0 29.5 3.4 8.5 12.2 4.5 .8 2.9 9.3 8.4 .9 7.0 .6 -.7 223.5 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 184.3 127.6 121.6 112.1 9.6 6.0 201.9 143.4 136.1 124.4 56.3 58.2 15.5 14.5 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 31.0 33.0 51 .4 11.7 7.3 .4 23.3 -1.9 23.5 -2.0 104.2 101.5 104.8 102.2 39.1 38.2 3.5 1.4 15.7 2.9 2.4 4.9 15.1 3.8 1.2 15.8 2.9 2.2 5.0 15.0 8.4 6.7 9.0 8.4 6.5 8.8 2.7 2.7 1. In this table, purchases of structures includes compensation of government employees engaged in new forceaccount construction. In tables 1.4 and 3.8, this compensation is classified as a service and is included as part of government compensation of employees. 2. Consists of hotels and motels, buildings used primarily for social and recreational activities, and buildings not elsewhere classified, such as passenger terminals, greenhouses, and animal hospitals. 3. Consists of streets, dams and reservoirs, sewer and water facilities, parks, airfields, etc. 4. Consists of dormitories, fraternity and sorority houses, nurses' homes, etc. 5. Consists of general office buildings, police and fire stations, courthouses, auditoriums, garages, passenger terminals, etc. 6. Consists of electric and gas facilities, transit systems, airfields, etc. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 4O • April 1995 Table 5.8.—Private Purchases of Producers' Durable Equipment by Type Table 5.9.—Private Purchases of Producers' Durable Equipment by Type in Constant Dollars [Billions of dollars] [Billions of 1987 dollars] Line Private purchases of producers' durable equipment Nonresidentiai equipment Information processing and related equipment Office computing and accounting machinery Computers and peripheral equipment x Other1 Communication equipment Instruments .... Photocopy and related equipment Industrial equipment Fabricated metal products Engines and turbines Metalworking machinery Special industry machinery, n.e.c General industrial including materials handling, equipment Electrical transmission, distribution, and industrial apparatus Transportation and related equipment . Trucks buses and truck trailers Autos Aircraft Ships and boats Railroad equipment Other equipment Furniture and fixtures Tractors Agricultural machinery except tractors Construction machinery, except tractors Mining and oilfield machinery Service industry machinery Electrical equipment ne.c Less1 Sale of equipment scrap, excluding autos Residential equipment Addenda: Private purchases of producers' durable equipment Net purchases of used equipment from government Plus* Net sales of used equipment Net exports of used equipment Sale of equipment scrap Equals* Private purchases of new equipment 1993 6 7 8 9 . .... , 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 6.7 641 8.0 21.6 12.1 81.4 23.4 13.4 967 113.1 10.5 11.3 37 55 20.7 23.0 24.6 28.1 234 263 15.5 17.2 1042 47.5 38.8 12.5 1193 61.9 44.0 1.3 41 94.3 25.0 8.1 8.1 8.9 4.2 12.4 121 15.5 6.9 1.2 53 107.6 26.8 10.0 10.1 10.7 4.9 15.4 12.0 17.9 32 3.9 5.5 33 7.7 8.4 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 450.5 4.3 1.0 523.2 4.9 1.2 32.8 41.0 1.4 40 483.3 1.7 5.5 565.3 1. Includes new computers and peripheral equipment only. Prior to 1982, all computers and peripheral equipment are included in other office, computing, and accounting machinery (line 6). n.e.c. Not elsewhere classified. Line 1994 1 450,5 523.2 2 442.7 514.8 3 151.5 180.3 4 537 621 5 47.0 54.1 Private purchases of producers' durable equipment Nonresidentiai equipment Information processing and related equipment Office computing and accounting machinery Computers and peripheral equipment1 Communication equipment Instruments Photocopy and related equipment Industrial equipment Fabricated metal products , Engines and turbines . . Metalworking machinery Special industry machinery, n.e.c '.. General industrial including materials handling equipment Electrical transmission, distribution, and industrial apparatus Transportation and related equipment Trucks buses and truck trailers Autos Aircraft Ships and boats Railroad equipment Other equipment Furniture and fixtures Tractors Agricultural machinery except tractors Construction machinery except tractors Mining and oilfield machinery Service industry machinery Electrical eauioment nee Other ~_. l..;;.l........ Less: Sale of equipment scrap, excluding autos Residential equipment ... 1993 1994 1 451.3 529.7 2 443.9 521.9 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 200.9 249.1 1121 1427 105.4 6.7 604 134.8 7.9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 792 9.0 28 90.3 17.1 18.5 19.7 22.1 20.6 14.4 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 18.1 102 188 13.1 878 38.9 34.4 9.7 11 36 79.4 21.1 6.4 6.7 72 3.6 10.3 10.8 13.2 75.9 19.3 11.2 9.5 4.0 98.3 49.2 38.5 5.2 1o 4.4 88.1 21.8 7.8 8.0 8.3 4.1 12.5 10.6 15.1 32 3.4 4.0 33 7.4 78 1. Includes new computers and peripheral equipment only. Prior to 1982, ail computers and peripheral equipment are included in other office, computing, and accounting machinery (line 6). n.e.c. Not elsewhere classified. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • 41 Table 7.5.—Price Indexes for Personal Consumption Expenditures by Type of Product, Fixed 1987 Weights [Index numbers, 1987=100] 1993 1994 1 128.1 131.2 2 113.9 116.1 114.8 121.5 120.0 105.7 117.0 104.3 112.6 98.8 112.8 88.0 114.7 105.7 116.8 100.3 115.4 126.8 126.0 117.1 137.8 125.8 130.1 128.5 120.0 142.0 128.5 125.0 126.6 124.4 124.5 124.2 127.3 127.8 126.5 Line Personal consumption expenditures Durable goods Motor vehicles and parts M t h $ 1 pH a't" e"f7iT" """ ' Other motor vehicles (72) Tires, tubes, accessories, and other parts (73) F ' '" . 't dh h Id Furniture, including mattresses and bed'springs (29) . _ Video and audio products, computing equipment, and musical instruments (91) Other durable house furnishinos (32) Other Ophthalmic products and orthopedic appliances (46) Wheel goods, sports and photographic equipment, boats, and pleasure aircraft (90) ... Jewelry and watches (18) Books and maps (87) . .... Nondurable goods . . . . . . 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 120.5 118.8 129.8 124.8 105.5 86.7 115.9 Food Food purchased for off-premise consumption (3) Purchased meals and beverages (4) ...... Food furnished to employees (including military) and food produced and consumed on farms (5+6) . 20 21 22 23 •121.7 123.1 Addenda: Food excluding alcoholic beverages (8) Alcoholic beverages purchased for off-premise consumption (9) Other alcoholic beverages (10) ..... 24 25 26 123.5 127.9 135.7 126.7 128.1 139.1 Shoes (12) Women's and children's cloifiing and accessories except siioes (14) Men's and boys' clothing and accessories except shoes (15+16) 27 28 29 30 119.2 119.8 120.0 117.2 118.3 119.9 118.9 116.3 31 122.1 122.8 .... Gasoline and oil (75) Fuel oil and coal (40) . Other Tobacco products (7) Toilet articles and preparations (21) . . . .... . Cleaning and polishing preparations, and miscellaneous household supplies and paper products (34) Drug preparations and sundries (45) of *• a e oy a spon suppi es ioa; Net loreign remittances puy less mj Flowers seeds and potted plants (93) Services Housing Owner-occupied nonfarm dwellings—space rent (24) Tenant-occupied nonfarm dwellings-—rent (25) Rental value of farm dwellings (26) Other (27) . 32 116.0 114.2 33 34 35 36 131.8 170.9 121.7 112.2 133.1 164.5 123.7 117.4 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 117.3 145.4 116.3 121.3 117.4 149.3 117.7 124.7 "isTe 117.7 'l36"l 119.5 44 133.5 137.6 45 46 47 48 49 127.9 128.8 122.2 133.6 147.7 131.9 133.1 125.2 139.8 152.3 NOTE.—The figures in parentheses are the line numbers of the corresponding items in table 2.4, Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1. Line 1993 1994 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 115.4 115.4 112.0 147.6 101.3 119.5 119.0 117.5 115.4 114.3 155.0 103.6 123.2 120.9 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 134.3 137.5 127.0 176.7 128.9 127.3 131.5. 125.5 128.7 112.7 125.5 137.7 136.4 142.0 131.3 182.2 130.6 129.1 133.3 120.1 130.2 112.5 118.4 141.8 Medical care Physicians (47) Dentists (48) Other professional services (49V Hospitals and nursino homes (50) Health insurance (56) 69 70 71 72 73 74 147.3 146.6 146.1 132.6 146.9 176.7 153.5 153.2 153.0 137.9 152.5 187.5 Other Personal care 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 134.5 125.3 127.3 123.8 127.2 141.1 138.3 128.7 130.6 127.3 130.4 145.1 Household operation Electricity (37) . Gas (38) Water and other sanitary services (39) Telephone and telegraph (41) Domestic service (42) Other (43) Transportation User-operated transportation Repair, greasing, washing, parking, storage, rental, and leasing (74) Other user-operated transportation (76+77) •. Purchased local transportation Mass transit systems (79) ;... Taxicab(80) Purchased intercity transportation Railway (82) Bus (83) Airline (84) .. Other (85) .'.. .... '.. . Barbershops, beauty parlors, and health clubs (22) Personal business Brokerage charges and investment counseling (61) ..... Bank service charges, trust services, and safe deposit box rental (62) Services furnished without payment by financial intermediaries except life insurance carriers and private noninsured pension plans (63) ,.Expense of handling life insurance (64) .. ... Legal services (65) ... Other (67) Admissions to specified spectator amusements (94) Other (92+98+99+100+101) Education and research Higher education (103) Other (105) Religious and welfare activities (106) Net foreign travel Foreign travel by U.S. residents (108) Less: Expenditures in the United States by nonresidents (110) Addenda: Price indexes for personal consumption expenditures: Chain-type annual weights Benchmark-years weignts .... ... 91.3 93.3 147.1 159.6 83 159.0 161.1 84 133.4 137.5 85 136.6 141.3 86 134.3 140.9 87 132.4 139.0 88 128.8 131.7 89 134.6 140.9 90 128.1 130.5 91 135.2 141.1 92 145.4 152.2 93 126.0 131.9 94 121.7 125.7 95 122.0 125.3 96 97 °140.4 "li'll 98 134.9 138.1 99 100 127.5 127.5 130.7 130.7 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 42 • April 1995 Table 7.7.—Price Indexes for Purchases of Structures by Type, Fixed 1987 Weights Table 7,8,—Price Indexes for Private Purchases of Producers' Durable Equipment by Type, Fixed 1987 Weights [Index numbers, 1987=100] [Index numbers, 1987=100] Line Purchases of structures Private Nonresidential New Nonresidential buildings, excluding farm Industrial Commercial Religious, educational, hospital and institutional, and other1 Utilities Railroads Telecommunications Electric light and power Gas Petroleum pipelines Farm Mining exploration, shafts, and wells Petroleum and natural gas Other Other2 Brokers' commissions on sale of structures Net purchases of used structures Residential New Single family structures Multifamily structures .. Mobile homes Improvements Other3 Brokers' commissions on sale of structures Net purchases of used structures Government structures and new construction force-account compensation New Buildings excluding military Residential Industrial educational hospital and other4 Highways and streets Military facilities Conservation and development Sewer and water systems Sewer systems .... Water suDDlv facilities Other5 !..... Net purchases of used structures Addenda: Price indexes for private nonresidential structures: Chain-type annual weights • • Benchmark-years weights Price indexes for private residential structures: Chain-type annual weights . • ..... 1993 117.1 121.4 2 117.5 121.9 3 117.3 121.2 4 117.3 121.2 5 6 7 8 117.5 117.5 117.5 117.6 121.8 121.7 121.8 121.7 g 10 11 12 13 14 118.9 120.6 115.0 121.1 121 0 121.0 122.9 124.4 118.6 125.3 1256 125.5 15 16 17 18 19 1175 114.3 114.1 117.6 112.9 121 7 115.4 114.9 121.7 116.2 20 21 115.7 117.9 120.0 121.8 22 1177 1224 23 24 25 26 27 28 1180 118.9 112.8 122.7 118.0 119.1 1226 123.9 116.7 132.7 121.8 124.0 29 30 115.2 119.0 120.4 124.2 31 115.4 119.4 32 115.4 119;4 33 34 35 119.0 130.4 1172 123.1 135.6 121 2 36 37 38 1077 131.0 118 1 1106 139.3 121 8 39 40 41 42 1145 1143 114.8 116.1 1197 119.5 119.9 118.8 43 116.2 119.3 44 45 117.4 117.4 121.3 121.3 46 47 118.0 117.9 122.8 122.7 1. Consists of hotels and motels, buildings used primarily for social and recreational activities, and buildings not elsewhere classified, such as passenger terminals, greenhouses, and animal hospitals. 2. Consists of streets, dams and reservoirs, sewer and water facilities, parks, airfields, etc. 3. Consists of dormitories, fraternity and sorority houses, nurses' homes, etc. 4. Consists of general office buildings, police and fire stations, courthouses, auditoriums, garages, passenger terminals, etc. 5. Consists of electric and gas facilities, transit systems, airfields, etc. NOTE.— Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1. Line 1994 1 Private purchases of producers' durable equipment Nonresidential equipment Information processing and related equipment Office, computing, and accounting machinery Computers and peripheral equipment1 Other1 Communication equipment .. Instruments Photocopy and related equipment Industrial equipment Fabricated metal products . Engines and turbines Metalworking machinery Special industry machinery n e.c General industrial, including materials handling, equipment Electrical transmission distribution and industrial apparatus Transportation and related equipment ......... Trucks, buses, and truck trailers Autos Aircraft Ships and boats Railroad equipment Other equipment Furniture and fixtures Tractors Agricultural machinery, except tractors Construction machinery, except tractors Mining and oilfield machinery .... Service industry machinery . Electrical equipment n.e.c Other Less: Sale of equipment scrap, excluding autos Residential equipment Addenda: Price indexes for nonresidential producers' durable equipment: Chain-type annual weights .. Benchmark-years weights ..... . .... , .... 1993 1994 1 110.7 112.4 2 110.7 112.5 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 91.7 59.3 51 5 99.6 106.8 118.7 119.0 91.1 55.2 100.3 108.0 120.6 121.1 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 122.3 1155 130.6 121.5 1247 125.2 1180 125.0 1180 135.0 125.1 1275 128.0 1195 1192 121.9 1131 128.3 120.7 115.2 1225 125.8 1155 132.4 123.1 119.9 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 1194 118.2 1258 122.4 124.4 1143 120.3 111 9 117.3 1226 123.0 1287 126.0 128.3 1188 122.5 1129 119.4 465 32 117.1 137.0 33 105.5 108.0 34 35 107.2 106.5 108.0 107.3 1. Includes new computers and peripheral equipment only. Prior to 1982, all computers and peripheral equipment are included in other office, computing, and accounting machinery (line 6). n.e.c. not elsewhere classified. NOTE.— Percent changes from preceding period for selected items in this table are shown in table 8.1. Comprehensive Information on the U.S. Economy... SURVEY of BUSINESS . . . 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SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 44 April 1995 Selected Monthly Estimates Table 1.—Personal Income [Billions of dollars; monthly estimates seasonally adjusted at annual rates] 1994 1993 1994 Feb. Persons! income .. .. Wage and salary disbursements Private industries ; Commodity-producing industries Manufacturing Distributive industries Service industries Government , Other labor income . Proprietors' income with IVA and CCAdj Farm . Nonfarm Rental income of persons with CCAdj Personal dividend income . . . Personal interest income Transfer payments to persons Old-age, survivors, disability, and health insurance benefits Government unemployment insurance benefits Other less: Personal contributions for social insurance Addenda' Total nonfarm income .. Total farm income 1 Mar. June May Apr. 1995 July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. 5,375 1 5,701 7 55760 56075 56394 56654 56749 57044 5 730 6 57684 53447 58418 58835 59322 5961 4 59956 3,080.8 2,497.0 773 8 5884 7019 1,021.4 583.8 3279.0 2,676.2 8182 6175 7485 1 109.5 602.8 32067 2610.5 8026 6106 7271 1 0808 596.2 32201 2623.2 8054 611 9 7314 1 086.3 596.9 3241 4 2,642.0 8093 611 9 7378 1 094.9 599.4 32634 2,659.1 8107 6120 7436 1 104.7 604.3 32670 2,6651 8149 6144 7460 1 1041 601.9 32826 2679.6 8179 6154 7510 1 1107 603.0 32890 33102 2 684 7 2704.4 8208 8267 621 0 6184 7523 7571 1 111 6 1 1206 6043 6058 3351 6 2 744.1 8380 631 4 7683 1 1378 607.5 33493 27405 8351 6267 7679 1 1375 6088 33683 2 757.5 8388 6304 7725 1 1461 610.8 3 392 9 2 779.0 841 5 6327 7794 1 1581 613.9 34045 27888 852 8 643 0 7777 1 1583 6157 34121 2 795.0 8521 6407 7793 1 1636 617.2 355.3 381.0 376.7 3784 380.1 381.9 3837 3855 387.1 3887 3903 3981 3996 401 1 4737 39.5 434.2 373.2 473 8 375.0 4416 37.3 404.3 4778 48.8 429.0 4771 46.9 430.2 471 0 4658 4643 467 1 4694 4904 4786 488 1 41 1 447.0 4844 4913 241 277 495 424.3 34 6 388 323 300 296 300 490 351 432.1 433.5 434.4 437.6 439.4 441.4 4435 324 326 327 31 4 295 26 1 269 257 242 1970 1988 2008 2028 2044 2Q48 2054 2064 6493 6569 6651 6740 6836 6925 701 2 7096 7173 7246 731 6 9571 470.8 22.7 463.5 9600 471.8 22.4 465.7 9649 474.4 21.7 468.8 9698 476.4 21.5 471.9 9723 478.8 20.9 472.5 9771 480.7 20.7 4757 9777 481.3 20.6 475.8 9842 487.2 20.1 4768 1 000 7 493.7 20.5 486.5 1 0041 495.8 20.2 4880 1 0091 499.0 20.3 4898 278.5 280.2 280.9 282.0 282.6 284.1 286.2 286.1 287.4 292.9 293.8 294.4 5 570 1 56040 61 4 56199 5 551 6 5 678 1 57155 57725 57833 58187 58725 58948 59153 550 528 524 529 721 584 647 597 666 804 346 1899 191 8 6640 631 1 6344 6420 963.4 473.5 23.3 466.6 9474 463.1 28.4 455.9 9515 466.9 26.3 458.3 9559 469.5 25.3 461.1 261.3 281.4 276.2 276.9 53166 58.5 5 639 4 62.3 55043 71 7 55364 71.1 6379 915.4 444.4 33.9 437.1 564 4492 1951 350 1871 1943 428 4486 1934 384 1854 181 3 5056 360 448.4 693 pr Preliminary. Revised. 1. Equals farm proprietors' income, farm wages, farm other labor income, and agricultural net interest. 326 CCAdj Capital consumption adjustment IVA Inventory valuation adjustment Table 2.—The Disposition of Personal Income 1994 1993 1995 1994 Feb. Mar. Apr. May | June July Sept. Aug. | Oct. | Nov. Dec. Jan.r Feb.^ Mar.^ 5,995.6 Billions of dollars, unless otherwise indicated Personal income Loss1 Personal tax and nontax payments Equals: Disposable personal income Less: Personal outlays Personal consumption expenditures .. . .. Durable goods Nondurable goods Services Interest paid by persons Personal transfer payments to rest of world Eouals\ Personal savinas Addenda: Disposable personal income: 1 Total billions of 1987 dollars Per capita: Current dollars 1987 dollars Population (thousands) Personal consumption expenditures: Total, billions of 1987 dollars Durable goods Nondurable goods Services Implicit price deflator, 1987-100 Personal saving as percentage of disposable personal income2 5,375.1 686.4 4,688.7 5,701.7 5,576.0 5,607.5 5,639.4 5,665.4 5,674.9 5,704.4 5,730.6 5,768.4 5,844.7 5,841.8 5,883.5 5,932.2 5,961.4 742.1 722.5 726.3 763.3 737.3 738.7 742.0 743.2 747.2 752.6 754.2 757.5 770.2 774.2 778.4 4,959.6 4,853.5 4,881.2 4,876.1 4,928.1 4,936.2 4,962.4 4,987.3 5,021.2 5,092.1 5,087.6 5,126.0 5,162.1 5,187.2 5,217.2 4,496.2 4,756.5 4,665.9 4,700.0 4,687.2 4,711.3 4,738.8 4,752.0 4,800.0 4,809.0 4,843.0 4,878.5 4,886.4 4,916.2 4,907.9 4,932.3 4,378.2 538.0 1,339.2 2,501.0 4,628.4 591.5 1,394.3 2,642.7 4,544.2 575.8 1,374.0 2,594.4 4,576.5 588.3 1,385.8 2,602.4 4,562.5 581.8 1,374.0 2,606.7 4,585.4 576.7 1,380.5 2,628.2 4,611.5 582.5 1,389.8 2,639.2 4,624.3 576.8 1,398.7 2,648.9 4,670.3 602.2 1,406.0 2,662.1 4,677.8 595.5 1,413.5 2,668.8 4,709.9 608.6 1,415.4 2,686.0 4,743.7 623.9 1,422.3 2,697.5 4,750.8 620.8 1,424.4 2,705.6 4,778.6 617.2 1,436.9 2,724.5 4,770.0 605.3 1,426.0 2,738.7 4,793.8 617.8 1,425.5 2,750.4 : 108.2 9.9 117.6 10.5 111.1 10.5 113.0 10.5 114.2 10.5 115.4 10.5 116.8 10.5 117.4 10.3 119.5 10.3 121.0 10.3 122.6 10.5 124.3 10.5 125.0 10.5 126.9 10.7 127.3 10.7 127.8 10.7 192.6 203.1 187.5 181.2 188.9 216.8 197.4 210.4 187.3 212.2 249.0 209.0 239.6 245.9 279.3 284.9 3,704.1 3,835.7 3,793.3 3,803.1 3,790.9 3,822.9 3,820.9 3,826.0 3,839.2 3,857.6 3,907.0 3,899.9 3,926.1 3,939.9 3,950.5 3,968.2 18,153 14,341 258,291 19,003 14,697 260,986 18,669 14,591 259,972 18,761 14,617 260,180 18,725 14,558 260,404 18,909 14,668 260,626 18,924 14,648 260,852 19,006 14,654 261,090 19,083 14,690 261,343 19,195 14,747 261,586 19,450 14,923 261,802 19,418 14,885 262,006 19,551 14,974 262,188 19,676 15,017 262,358 19,759 15,048 262,522 19,860 15,105 262,698 3,458.7 489.9 1,078.5 1,890.3 126.6 3,579.6 532.1 1,109.5 1,938.1 129.3 3,551.6 521.3 1,102.9 1,927.4 127.9 3,565.7 530.8 1,110.8 1,924.1 128.3 3,547.0 524.9 1,100.4 1,921.7 128.6 3,557.0 518.6 1,104.3 1,934.1 128.9 3,569.5 523.0 1,108.1 1,938.3 129.2 3,565.3 516.7 1,109.5 1,939.1 129.7 3,595.1 538.8 1,113.3 1,943.0 129.9 3,593.7 533.3 1,117.3 1,943.1 130.2 3,613.7 546.2 1,118.0 1,949.5 130.3 3,636.3 559.6 1,123.3 1,953.4 130.5 3,638.7 558.6 1,124.2 1,955.9 130.6 3,647.2 552.2 1,132.1 1,962.9 131.0 3,632.8 541.1 1,123.4 1,968.3 131.3 3,646.1 551.2 1,122.4 1,972.5 131.5 4.1 4.1 3.6 3.8 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.0 4.1 4.3 4.4 4.6 4.5 4.9 5.2 0.7 0.8 0.5 0.6 Percent change from preceding period Personal income current dollars Disposable personal income: Current dollars 1987 dollars Personal consumption expenditures: Current dollars ... ..1987 dollars 4.3 6.1 1.7 0.6 0.6 0.5 0.2 0.5 0.5 0.7 1.3 0 4.1 1.5 5.8 3.6 1.9 1.4 .6 .3 -.1 -.3 1.1 .8 .2 -.1 .5 .1 .5 .3 .7 .5 1.4 1.3 -.1 -.2 .8 .7 .7 .4 .5 .3 .6 .4 5.8 3.3 5.7 3.5 1.3 .8 .7 .4 -.3 -.5 .5 .3 .6 .4 .3 -.1 1.0 .8 .2 0 .7 .6 .7 .6 .1 .1 .6 .2 -.2 -.4 .5 .4 pr Preliminary. Revised. 1. Disposable personal income in 1987 dollars equals the current-dollar figure divided by the implicit price deflator for personal consumption expenditures. 2. Monthly estimates equal the centered 3-month moving average of personal saving as a percentage of the centered 3-month moving average of disposable personal income. Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • 45 Table 3.—U.S. International Transactions in Goods and Services [Millions of dollars; monthly estimates seasonally adjusted] 1994 1993 1995 1994 Feb. Mar. Apr. May June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan.' Feb.' 641,677 697,877 52,817 58349 55920 56,206 58,301 56,510 60,291 60,510 59880 61,909 63,611 60,964 62,416 456866 40628 1 1 1,814 181 696 52 404 54,656 23 893 -8,224 502,590 41942 121 309 205280 57243 59,972 26 775 -9,931 37,367 42,007 3403 10588 17305 4725 4,881 40,320 3085 9609 16742 4686 4,659 2250 40,218 3,266 9898 16551 4508 4,803 41,970 3086 9804 17723 4688 5,113 2340 40,101 3050 10,238 16280 4240 4,858 44,054 3674 10723 17652 43485 3696 10304 17826 44,814 4058 10666 18063 4887 5,481 2467 46,490 44,299 3849 11468 16915 5356 4,989 45,498 2517 -989 43289 3923 10588 16889 4995 5,408 2474 2128 -704 Cervices 184,811 Travel . 57,621 Passenger fares .... ... . . . 16550 Other transportation 23,151 ! Royalties and license fees ........ 20,398 Other private services 54870 Transfers under U.S. military agency sales contracts2 ,. ; 11,413 U S Government miscellaneous services 808 195,287 60,001 17651 24,733 22,823 58453 10,845 782 15,450 4680 Exports of goods and services Goods Foods f6eds and beverages . . Industrial supplies and materials :.. . Capital goods except automotive Automotive vehicles, engines and parts Consumer goods (nonfood), except automotive Other goods . . Adjustments1 . 3161 8704 15314 4 382 4,467 2020 -681 1375 1864 1,781 4865 816 70 1849 -743 16,343 5,171 1 507 2,106 1,796 4854 841 67 -711 15,600 4,729 1 384 2,001 1,790 4738 908 50 5169 5001 5,309 5,185 2346 4196 11230 18916 5579 5,309 2247 4018 11 828 17802 5177 5,248 -783 2261 -826 -873 -989 -807 -988 2421 -699 15,988 4,842 16,331 5,043 16,409 5,072 16,237 4,811 17,025 5,321 16,592 5,031 1491 1492 1419 1588 2,017 1,816 2029 1,857 4896 964 49 1,992 1,960 4892 939 62 2,115 1,999 4889 938 67 2,145 2,021 4945 934 71 1477 2196 920 76 17,121 5,384 1 597 2,134 2,025 4985 919 77 16,665 5,028 1 554 2,152 2,059 4880 927 65 16,918 5,112 1409 17,095 5,342 1 600 2,235 2,010 2018 -828 4916 940 48 2,001 4888 924 74 4912 1592 2,155 2,086 4969 938 67 717,402 804,448 62,411 65236 64,507 65,427 67,132 67,242 69,415 69388 69,876 71,537 70,872 72,917 71,428 Goods .... Foods feeds and beverages . . . Industrial supplies and materials Capital goods, except automotive .-» Automotive vehicles, engines, and parts Consumer goods (nonfood), except automotive ........ Other goods Adjustments * .. .. . 589,441 27867 145,606 152,365 102,420 134,015 18386 8783 669,155 30958 161,995 184,550 118,684 146,293 21 349 5326 50,940 2 363 11,915 14,016 8,787 11,503 53483 2542 12,642 14,456 9,549 11,336 53689 2490 12,755 14,716 9,491 11,846 54,520 2530 13,139 14,872 9,481 12,137 56,021 2592 13,990 15,118 10,153 12,139 56,056 2623 14,358 15,184 9,911 12,024 58,195 2698 14,670 15,293 11,057 12,480 58,002 58,406 2674 13,933 16,571 10,230 12,788 59,984 2638 14,519 16,964 10,743 12,913 1837 1808 1801 1820 1701 1633 1926 1937 789 l'l20 582 560 209 254 364 61,152 2854 14,545 17,220 11,070 13,441 1 778 244 59,693 2809 14,329 16,835 10,711 13,087 1566 59,386 2 657 14,148 16,791 10,729 12,892 1 905 263 Services Travel .. Passenger fares Other transportation Royalties and license fees Other private services Direct defense expenditures2 U.S. Government miscellaneous services 127 961 40564 11,416 24502 4,840 32,119 12176 2,344 135293 43059 12,558 25718 5,926 34,791 10577 2,663 11471 3700 1,004 11753 3909 10818 3324 1,007 10907 3402 1,037 2096 437 2,838 877 220 11 112 11220 3438 l]027 11186 3469 1,024 11486 3809 1,116 11,765 3886 1,155 11735 3894 1,152 2176 2190 2156 2341 2315 476 2,988 868 221 490 2,915 864 234 2273 463 2,915 860 236 514 2,821 854 216 491 2,823 846 223 482 2,828 838 226 Memoranda: Balance on goods Balance on services Balance on goods and services ....... . -132,575 -166 565 56850 59994 -75,725 -106,571 1981 1067 2160 714 2,926 932 216 445 3,025 926 221 2081 438 2,860 890 219 -13573 -11 477 -13369 -14 303 -14,050 -15,955 -14140 3979 5219 5223 4782 5082 4590 5017 -9,594 -6,887 -8,587 -9,221 -8,831 -10,732 -9,123 p Preliminary. r Revised. 1. Reflects adjustments necessary to bring the Census Bureau's component data in line with the concepts and 1035 2713 14,288 16,459 9,870 12,631 1 815 226 283 271 11387 3590 1,070 11 471 2219 2231 477 2,940 857 234 107 2,839 856 222 11553 3 775 1,122 2,204 515 2,864 855 218 3718 1,098 -14517 -15,117 -15,170 5121 5543 5638 -8,878 -9,996 -9,628 1686 236 -12,895 -16,853 -14,195 4900 5635 5183 -7,261 -11,953 -9,012 • definitions used to prepare BEA's international and national accounts. 2. Contains goods that cannot be separately identified. Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis and Bureau of the Census Mar. • 46 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS Gross Product by Industry, 1993 THIS REPORT PRESENTS new estimates of gross product originating (GPO) by industry for 1993* These estimates extend the GPO estimates for 1977-92 that were previously published in-the SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS.1 The estimates for 1993 are consistent with those for 1991-92, which had incorporated gross domestic product (GDP) and distributions by industry of the components of gross domestic income from the annual revision of the national income and product accounts that was released in July 1994. The currentand constant-dollar estimates of GPO for 1991-93 are shown in table i. Data availability Estimates of gross product by industry for 194793 in current dollars and for 1977-93 in constant i. The estimates for 1977-90 were published in the November 1993 SURVEY, and the estimates for 1991-92 were published in the October 1994 SURVEY. dollars are available on diskette and printout. Included are industry distributions of the components of gross domestic income that define current-dollar GPO. Current- and constant-dollar estimates of gross output and intermediate inputs by published GPO industry, of gross output for detailed nonmanufacturing industries, and of manufacturing establishment shipments are also available. For further information, write to the Industry Economics Division (BE-SI), Bureau of Economic Analysis, Washington, DC 20230, or call (202) 606-5307. The gross product by industry program is under the direction of Robert E. Yuskavage, Chief of the GDP by Industry Branch of the Industry Economics Division. The estimates were prepared by the following staff: Felicia V. Candela, Sherlene K. S. Lum, Brian C. Mover, Timothy F. Slaper, John Sporing, and Robert A. Sylvester. A. Vanessa Clark provided support services. Table i follows. H April 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • 47 Table 1.—Gross Domestic Product by Industry in Current Dollars and in Constant Dollars, 1991-93 Billions of dollars EJillions of 1987 dollars Line 1992 1991 1 2 3 4 5 Gross domestic product Private industries Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries Agricultural services, forestry, and fisheries 6 7 8 9 10 Mining Metal mining Coal mining Oil and gas extraction Nonmetallic minerals, except fuels 11 Construction •12 Manufacturing . . . 1993 1991 1992 1993 5,724.8 6,020.2 6,343.3 4,867.6 4,979.3 5,134.5 5,001.5 5,255.8 5,559.5 4,313.3 4,430.7 4,585.4 107.2 115.5 107.3 28.6 856 299 753 320 707 110.3 786 92.0 85.2 6.3 124 7.1 6.3 131 585 7.3 223.1 66.1 808 102.6 71 0 27.8 29.5 31.7 89.4 92.3 89.0 93.1 6.8 123 627 7.6 7.7 155 622 6.9 8.0 167 8.6 162 57.2 61.1 7.1 7.2 222.1 234.2 194.8 201.4 205.3 98.4 1,032.5 1,063.0 1,118.3 910.8 924.6 970.7 5543 5680 6035 5255 5336 573.3 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 Durable goods Lumber and wood products Furniture and fixtures Stone, clay, and glass products Primary metal industries ..... Fabricated metal products .. Industrial machinery and equipment Electronic and other electric equipment Motor vehicles and equipment . Other transportation equipment Instruments and related products Miscellaneous manufacturing industries 29.4 15.7 23.3 42.4 65.1 31.3 16.6 24.8 40.0 34.7 18.1 25.9 42.5 24.9 14.7 24.9 36.4 70.1 71.3 26.0 13.7 23.3 37.5 57.2 23.1 16.2 25.1 40.1 63.7 101.2 102.7 107.7 100.5 107.6 88.3 44.6 66.1 93.7 44.0 61.2 51.2 17.1 125.4 103.0 20.0 93.3 67.5 60.7 59.7 22.1 93.1 59.0 19.3 85.5 56.7 60.8 59.5 51.3 53.5 50.4 17.2 55.8 52.4 49.8 18.7 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 Nondurable goods Food and kindred products Tobacco manufactures Textile mill products Apparel and other textile products Paper and allied products ...-. Printing and publishing Chemicals and allied products Petroleum and coal products Rubber and miscellaneous plastics products Leather and leather products 478.2 101.8 4950 103.9 514.8 105.9 385.4 391.0 397.5 83.4 82.9 17.4 22.3 26.1 45.7 73.5 19.3 24.3 27.1 46.2 76.6 17.3 24.8 28.2 47.3 80.3 110.8 117.0 43.4 47.7 41.4 13 107.1 44.3 36.2 4.1 38.9 4.5 4.9 8.5 21.2 24.1 42.3 58.9 85.7 24.8 32.9 59.7 7.8 22.5 24.6 43.7 57.5 87.8 25.2 35.1 84.3 7.6 23.3 25.3 46.1 57.1 87.7 24.7 37.1 4.2 3.6 3.9 479.1 494.5 515.9 1750 25.6 1837 26.0 1935 28.1 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 Transportation and public utilities ... Transportation Railroad transportation Local and interurban passenger transit Trucking and warehousing . Water transportation Transportation by air Pipelines, except natural gas Transportation services Communications Telephone and telegraph .... Radio and television Electric, gas, and sanitary services 507.0 529.3 1837 23.0 11.0 74.6 10.8 41.4 1938 23.0 11.4 78.4 10.3 46.0 27.5 27.2 22.6 22.6 21.6 169.2 173.4 181.5 155.9 157.1 163.5 4.2 18.7 154.2 127.5 26.7 4.7 20.1 162.1 134.6 559.3 2079 24.3 12.0 79.9 10.5 54.2 5.1 8.9 72.4 8.2 40.3 4.8 21.8 14.7 169.8 142.6 148.2 125.5 9.0 76.6 7.6 44.5 4.8 15.1 153.8 131.2 9.5 79.0 7.6 47.8 5.4 16.1 158.9 137.4 49 Wholesale trade 373.4 394.4 413.1 324.5 340.9 356.6 50 Retail trade 531.9 557.5 592.4 473.2 486.7 511.8 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 Finance, insurance, and real estate Depository institutions Nondepository institutions Security and commodity brokers . Insurance carriers Insurance agents, brokers, and service Real estate Nonfarm housing services .. Other real estate Holding and other investment offices 1,041.1 181.3 1,106.1 193.9 1,180.6 198.5 868.8 129.4 893.4 125.3 915.0 123.3 19.5 51.0 42.3 18.2 38.9 67.5 31.2 73.0 31.3 22.2 67.1 67.7 31.1 718.5 533.4 185.1 565.2 403.9 161.3 575.0 409.4 165.7 583.9 419.5 164.4 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71. 72 73 Services Hotels and other lodging places . Personal services Business services Auto repair, services, and parking Miscellaneous repair services Motion pictures Amusement and recreation services Health services Legal services Educational services Social services and membership organizations Other services Private households 1,093.3 74 75 23.0 37.1 84.7 38.5 25.9 49.6 84.8 40.4 664.2 483.6 180.6 698.7 512.0 186.7 12.1 104.1 24.4 1,264.8 36.8 53.9 39.0 55.4 41.4 199.2 220.5 241.6 48.1 16.2 18.3 44.8 48.8 16.9 19.3 51.1 53.5 18.0 21.6 55.2 335.2 364.4 88.7 52.4 82.3 43.4 65.0 45.6 70.2 18.5 18.3 19.7 871.4 889.9 914.2 45.5 29.9 46.0 30.4 45.8 30.6 173.7 184.2 38.9 14.6 14.6 36.8 37.1 13.9 14.6 40.8 38.1 13.6 16.4 42.7 389.4 248.0 252.0 255.3 92.1 47.8 75.0 64.7 34.8 66.0 35.1 65.3 35.5 57.5 59.6 61.9 115.7 167.9 154.1 163.2 110.0 112.2 10.1 10.8 8.2 8.8 9.0 721.8 755.7 781.6 586.7 584.2 581.6 182.7 146.0 142.4 9.2 Government 12.8 1,182.7 32.0 60.7 76 77 78 Federal General government Government enterprises 239.9 192.7 247.9 199.5 249.8 203.6 194.4 157.2 188.8 151.9 47.2 48.4 46.2 37.2 36.9 36.7 79 80 81 State and local General government Government enterprises 481.9 437.9 507.8 461.7 531.8 483.0 392.3 357.2 395.4 360.1 398.8 363.6 44.1 46.0 48.8 35.1 35.3 35.2 82 83 ,. ....... Statistical discrepancy! 2 Residual 1. The current-dollar statistical discrepancy equals gross domestic product (GDP) measured as the sum of expenditures less gross domestic income— that is, GDP measured as the costs incurred and profits earned in domestic production. The constant-dollar statistical discrepancy equals the current-dollar statistical discrepancy deflated by the implicit price deflator for gross domestic business product. 1.5 8.8 2.3 1.3 7.3 1.9 -33.7 -43.0 -34.4 2. Equals GDP in constant dollars measured as the sum of expenditures less the statistical discrepancy in constant dollars and GDP in constant dollars measured as the sum of gross product originating by industry. NOTE.-Estimates in this table are based on the 1987 Standard Industrial Classification. 48 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 Mid-Decade Strategic Review of BEA'S Economic Accounts: An Update In the February 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS, BEA published, as part of its Mid-Decade Strategic Review, a draft plan for maintaining and improving the performance of its national, international, and regional accounts. Comments on the draft plan were invited to provide the basis for the preparation of the final version of the plan, which is the final step in the review process. This article summarizes the comments on BEA'S draft plan that were expressed at a March conference of users of the accounts, presents a plan that reflects those and other comments, and outlines the first steps in implementing the plan. The Users' Conference N MARCH 21, 1995, about 50 leading users O of the economic accounts gathered to share their views on BEA'S draft strategic plan. They were invited to comment on whether BEA had identified the issues correctly and had proposed the most effective steps to maintain and improve the accuracy, reliability, and relevance of the economic accounts over the coming decade. After welcoming remarks by the president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which hosted the meeting, and by the Secretary of Commerce, the Under Secretary of Commerce for Economic Affairs described the challenge of the statistical system as being similar to that of a tailor trying to measure a sprinting athlete for a suit of clothes: The statistical system must not only keep pace with a rapidly changing economy, but must also be twice as agile in order to measure it accurately. The Director of BEA then introduced the draft strategic plan, which was structured around three major issues: The need for new and improved output measures; the need for better measures of investment, saving, and wealth; and the need to fill gaps in the coverage of international transactions. The first three sessions of the conference focused on the major issues BEA had identified, (The agenda for the conference is reproduced in the box on page 49.) Each of these ses sions started with an overview of the issues and proposed actions; after the overview, a panel presented views and reactions, and then the discussion was opened to all participants. A fourth session dealt with the challenge of improving statistics in the face of resource constraints. Overall, the participants agreed with the issues BEA had identified and the actions that BEA had proposed for the next several years. Participants urged more emphasis on some elements than they thought BEA had placed on them, or they suggested a different priority; in a few areas, participants suggested additional actions. The rest of this section summarizes the views presented at the conference,, Session I: New and Improved Output Measures Overall, participants endorsed BEA'S plan to fea^ture a measure of real GDP that avoids substitution bias. However, some participants were concerned about not having real GDP measures in which the components add to the totals, as is the case with the currently featured measure, which is based on fixed weights. Participants urged BEA to open a broader discussion with users on alternative measures of real GDP as the plan is implemented and to begin briefings, with attention to users' analytical and forecasting needs, on the new measure over the coming months. BEA'S quality-adjusted price indexes for computers, introduced in 1985, have caused problems for some users, particularly econometric modelers. However, most participants felt that BEA had made important progress when it introduced these hedonic indexes and that now it needs to develop improved price/output measures for other areas of the economy. There was some difference of opinion on the focus of these efforts. Among the views expressed were the following: • BEA should move forward rapidly to develop improved price measures for hightechnology products similar to those de- SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS National Conference on the Economic Accounts U.S. Chamber of Commerce 1615 H Street NW Washington, DC March 21,1995 Introductions (8:30-9:15) • Welcoming Remarks, Richard L. Lesher, President, U.S. Chamber of Commerce • Welcoming Remarks, The Honorable Ronald H. Brown, Secretary of Commerce Overview: Robert Eisner, Northwestern University Panel Discussion Chair: Michael Boskin, Stanford University Barry Bosworth, Brookings Institution Charles Hulten, University of Maryland Group Discussion • Introduction, The Honorable Everett M. Ehrlich, Under Secretary of Commerce for Economic Affairs Luncheon (12:15-1:30) Speaker: Alan Blinder, Federal Reserve Board • Overview of the Bureau of Economic Analysis Plan, Carol S. Carson, Director, BEA III. The U.S. Economy in Internationally Integrated Markets (1:45-3:00) Three pervasive issues that affect the economic accounts constitute priorities that our economic statistical system must address. They are: the need to develop new and improved measures of output; the need to update measures of investment, saving, and wealth', and the need to measure better the international flow of goods, services, income, and capital. The first three sessions of the program address in turn these three issues, focusing on the nature of the problem and commenting on the draft BEA plan (as presented in the February SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS). The fourth session addresses how to "do more for less" by translating these issues into priorities for the statistical system. I. The Need for New and Improved Output Measures (9:15-10:30) Our economy's output is getting progressively harder to measure. This problem affects service sector outputs, technologically advanced products, and "products" such as financial derivatives. What steps should we take to address this problem and properly divide the nation's nominal expenditures between real output growth and price changes? Overview: Joel Popkin, Joel Popkin and Associates Panel Discussion Chair: Allen Sinai, Lehman Brothers Maurine Haver, Haver Analytics Bruce Steinberg, Merrill Lynch Group Discussion II. Investment and the Capital Stock (10:45-12:00) Good measures of the capital stock allow us to measure our wealth and the productivity with which we produce output. Measuring the capital stock requires methodological decisions regarding the role of intangible and public sector assets and the valuation of assets. What are the most pressing problems in this area and how should we address them? Increasing international economic integration creates issues for our measurements of goods, services, income, and capital flows. Trade in such relatively new areas as business services creates gaps in coverage in the national and international accounts. Thin coverage of capital flows leads to uncertainty about the economy's international position. What are the most important problems in these areas and what steps should we take to address them? Overview: Edwin Truman, Federal Reserve Board Panel Discussion Chair: David Devlin, Citibank John McLenaghan, International Monetary Fund C Fred Bergsten, Institute for International Economics Group Discussion IV. Improving Statistics in a Resource-Constrained World (3:15-4:15) There's no such thing as a free lunch. In an era of stringent fiscal discipline, the statistical system must have a strong sense of priorities in order to maintain the effectiveness of its program spending. What are the most pressing priorities in the entire statistical system and in the BEA and Census programs that support the economic accounts? Which current programs may most merit reduced effort and, therefore, be a source of funding for other initiatives? Panel Discussion Chair: Joseph Duncan, Dun and Bradstreet Janet Norwood, Urban Institute Geoffrey Hewings, University of Illinois; Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago Charles Waite, Consultant Group Discussion Summary and Closing (4:30-5:00) BEA Reactions: Carol Carson Closing Remarks: Everett Ehrlich April 1995 • 49 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 5O • April 1995 veloped for computers; telecommunications was specifically mentioned. • BEA shcMd undertake further definitional and conceptual work on output measures and the closely related price measures; health, finance, and insurance were the specific areas mentioned. Other participants favored some combination of both courses. The consensus seemed to be that BEA should move forward, and several participants urged BEA to seek out partnerships with business and academia to draw on expertise and interest that would reinforce BEA'S own efforts. One of the clear themes at this session was the need to update and fill gaps in coverage, particularly those in services. (This same theme was echoed by the Vice Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board in his talk at lunch.) Although some suggested that partnerships with the private sector and use of existing private data might moderate the necessary increase in respondent burden, there was a recognition that new surveys of services would probably be required. Several participants stressed the need for a frequently updated industrial classification and for more timely and better integrated industry accounts. Among the other output-related steps in which participants expressed an interest were the following: Improving seasonal adjustments for volatile components and moving closer to international guidelines, especially the recently revised System of National Accounts (SNA). In addition, charging more for BEA'S information to help fund the economic accounts and establishing a regularized process for internal and external review of the accounts were mentioned. Session II: Better Measures of Investment) Saving and Wealth Despite general recognition of the empirical and conceptual difficulties involved, there was consensus on the need for more comprehensive measures of investment. Participants placed special emphasis on adopting measures within the context and discipline of the SNA. In addition, for investment estimates having a degree of uncertainty, or error, several orders of magnitude higher than that for estimates now in the accounts, participants thought satellite accounts would be the appropriate framework and that some indication of the degree of uncertainty associated with the estimates should be given. More specifically, the following points were made: • Purchases of structures and equipment by government, of computer software and selected other intangibles, and of consumer durables (even though the SNA does not treat them as investment) should be included as investment in the main accounts. • Other kinds of investment—such as natural resources, research and development (R&D), and education—should be put in satellite accounts. Some participants called upon BEA to go beyond the SNA: The SNA was seen as a good first step in expanding and updating the accounts, but the need for an expanded analytical framework dictates that BEA not stop there. For example, BEA should ultimately go beyond simply counting government investment and depreciation to the development of estimates of the service value of government capital Participants were in widespread agreement on the need for improved (more market-based) measures of depreciation and capital stocks, as well as for better integration of existing estimates: Estimates of investment, saving, and wealth in BEA'S accounts and in the Federal Reserve Board's flow-of-funds accounts, as well as estimates by BEA of capital stocks and those by the Bureau of Labor Statistics of capital stocks and capital services. Such integration and improvement in the accounts was deemed especially important given the shift in attention from shorter term stabilization issues to longer term issues dealing with productivity, growth, and competitiveness. In addition, several participants urged a review of BEA'S treatment of government interest, and several expressed particular concern that issues dealing with private saving and the government deficit be addressed. Session III: Fitting Gaps in the Coverage of International Transactions There was strong support for improving the measures of international transactions. The most widespread support was for better and more detailed estimates of trade in goods and services, especially when new products, new markets, or new transactors cause difficulties in making (nominal and real) estimates. With respect to capital flows and positions, there was consensus on general priorities in cov- SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS erage, but some difference about the kinds of data that should be assembled by BEA. • The first priority should be to fill gaps in the coverage of conventional financial instruments within portfolio investment. A lower priority should be put on covering derivatives and other new financial instruments. (There was more interest in measuring the services associated with these new instruments than in measuring the flows and positions themselves.) • There was some sentiment for more detailed and more timely capital account data for use in analyzing capital flows and risk. However, several participants felt that assembling such data was better left to those concerned with monitoring the health of the financial system. As mentioned, several of the suggestions were for additional detail or more frequent information. Among them were trade data on an establishment basis to supplement the residencebased data, detail on trade by State, quarterly (rather than only annual) estimates of the international investment position, and country detail on capital flows. Session IV: Improving Statistics in a Resource-Constrained World Most of the discussion focused on how BEA— and Federal statistical agencies in general-—could operate more effectively. Several points echoed those made earlier in the day: Tapping into private-sector data, expanding use of electronic data collection and interchange, and charging more for Federal data. With respect to the relations among the Federal statistical agencies, some participants urged closer cooperation, including data sharing; others believed that consolidation of the agencies was the preferred option. Suggestions were made by several participants and by the Vice Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board about reducing resources from statistical programs in other agencies to support work in services and other high-priority areas. Refined Plan and Next Steps Table i summarizes the final version of BEA'S Mid-Decade Strategic Plan. In view of the consensus among users regarding the elements in the draft strategic plan, the final version differs little from the draft. As noted above, participants at BEA'S conference mainly suggested differences in emphasis and priority to be placed on the various elements of the plan. In the area of output, for example, more prominence hp been given to services; in investment, saving, and wealth, greater emphasis on expansion and improvement within the structure of the SNA; and in international transactions, higher priority to services and conventional financial transactions. However, given the general nature of the strategic plan, the priorities expressed by users are better seen in the steps laid out in the goals and milestones presented in table 2 and the description that follows of the steps to be taken in the next year. These steps are divided among the major areas outlined in the strategic plan. New and improved measures of output Real GDP.—This year, in its comprehensive (benchmark) revision of the national income and product accounts (NIPA'S), BEA will replace its fixed-weighted index as the featured measure of real GDP with an index based on the chain-type annual-weighted index that BEA introduced in 1989 and began publishing in 1992 as an alternative to the fixed-weighted index. (BEA will also replace its fixed-weighted price index with a chain-based price index.) BEA'S schedule calls for release of the comprehensive revision by the end of 1995. The chain-based index is superior to the fixedweighted index in that it allows for changing relative prices and production patterns and thus provides unbiased comparisons of economic activity over long periods of time. Because it allows for regular updating of output and price weights, the chain-based index also has the advantage of eliminating a major source of the revisions in real GDP and price growth that occur as the fixed weights are updated at 5-year or longer intervals. In order to understand users' analytical needs more completely and to brief users on the characteristics of the chain-based indexes, BEA will conduct a series of briefings on the tradeoffs among various alternative measures of real GDP for major user groups. In addition to these briefings, BEA will publish a series of articles in the SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS, beginning this summer, that describe the new measure of real GDP and other aspects of the upcoming comprehensive NIPA revision. This summer, BEA will expedite the release of its existing chain-type annual-weighted index to include it in the regular GDP news release., Finally, immediately preceding the comprehensive revision, BEA will conduct April 1995 • 51 52 • April 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS further news media briefings on the new featured measure. r fL. Quality adjustment and definition of output.— BE A will seek to establish partnerships with users of the accounts, with the Bureau of Labor Statistics and other Federal agencies, and with international organizations to develop coordinated work plans for developing new methods and concepts for measuring changes in output and prices in difficult-to-measure goods and services. For components of GDP that appear to be amenable to hedonic and other methods for separating price changes from quality changes and for which adequate commercial data are available, BE A will work with its private and public partners to develop new output and price indexes. For difficult-to-measure services—such as banking, insurance, financial and legal services, and management consulting services—BEA will work Table 1.—Issues and Proposed Actions Issues, problems, and uses affected Quantitative indicators (e.g., potential size of gap, size of revision, size of component treated differently or added) Statistical source(s) of the problem Proposed actions Need for new and improved output measures Difficulties in measuring and defining certain components of real GDP. Uses affected: Analysis of economic growth, especially of economy's longterm, noninflatjonary growth potential; macroeconomic policy; forecasting; business, budget, and investment planning. Revisions to key components of GDP and national income. Uses affected: Macroeconomic policy; forecasting; business, budget, and investment planning. Possible understatement of growth, especially in fixed investment; potential for understatement in real GDP growth1. Difficulties in measuring quality changes, especially in investment goods. Methodology and structure: Extension of quality adjustment of prices used in real GDP, including hedonic work on goods amenable to such measurement: High-tech goods and nonresidential structures. No quantitative indicator of the difficulties of defining output. Difficulties in defining output, especially in services. Methodology and structure: Further conceptual work on more difficult-tomeasure services and goods. 1.4-9.4 percentage point (±) revisions to quarterly changes (SAAR) for key 2 components of current-dollar GDP: Change in business inventories, $13 billion. Trade in goods and services, $9 billion. Government purchases, $8 billion. Consumer expenditures for services, $6 billion. Consumer expenditures for goods, $4$5 billion. Inability of existing source data used in the quarterly estimates to capture change in the economy. 1.4-8.5 percentage point (±) revisions to quarterly chances (SAAR) for key components of national income. Difficulties in seasonal adjustment Data modification and extension: More frequent updating of sample frames for existing surveys, including trade and manufacturing. Data extension: More frequent surveys for certain growing sectors such as international trade in services, medical care services, and State and local government purchases. Data extension: Extension of existing surveys—such as those for services, inventories, and employee compensation (including bonus payments)—to fill gaps in coverage, Methodology and structure: Improvements in seasonal adjustment for volatile components such as inventories and trade in goods and services. Methodology and structure: Improvements in projections for components such as inventories, trade in goods and services, and bonus payments. Errors in projections for missing source data. Overstatement of real GDP growth in recent years (and understatement in earlier years). Uses affected: Analysis of economic growth, especially of current growth relative to long-term, noninflationary growth; macroeconomic policy; forecasting; business, budget, and investment planning. 0-1.2 percentage point overstatement of quarterly rates of change in real GDP (average since 1991:1-1994:111, 0.4 percentage point)3. Substitution bias, specifically the use of fixed weights (1987) inappropriate for the current period. Methodology and structure: Introduction of more current weights for real GDP for current estimates and more appropriate weights for historical estimates. Outdated and inconsistent view of the structure and organization of production. Uses affected: Federal and State and local tax analysis and budget planning; business location and marketing studies; regional analysis; and industrial organization studies. For industry classifications, inconsistencies across U.S. industries and incompatibilities among North American countries, with special attention needed for services, new and emerging 1industries, and high-tech industries . Outdated and inconsistent industry classification system, source data, and industry accounts. Methodology and structure: Develop a new industrial classification system. Data modification and extension: Implement a new industrial classification system, starting with a restructuring of survey forms. Methodology and structure: Update and better integrate the input-output, industry, gross state product, and GDP estimates within the context of modernizing the accounts along the lines of the new international guidelines. See footnotes at end of table. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS with its partners to develop new concepts and definitions. Updating and filling gaps in services and other industries—This year, the Census Bureau began releasing data from the 1992 Economic Censuses, including data from those service industries included for the first time. The expansion of the Censuses was the largest in over 40 years, adding over 90 new service industries. Incorporation April 1995 • 53 of these data will significantly improve services coverage for BEA'S input-output tables, and data from the transportation, communication, and public utilities industries collected as part of the Censuses services expansion will be used this fall in constructing the "make" table for the 1992 benchmark input-output table. Although further detailed data from the Censuses on the new service industries will be required to utilize these new data directly in the comprehensive NIPA revision, Table 1.—Issues and Proposed Actions—Continued Issues, problems, and uses affected Quantitative indicators (e.g., potential size of gap, size of revision, size of component treated differently or added) Statistical source(s) of the problem Proposed actions Need for better measures of investment, savings, and wealth Extend the concept and update the measurement of investment and wealth/ capital stock. Uses affected: Analysis of sources of economic growth, productivity, returns to public and private investment; tax and expenditures policies. Need for better integration and measurement of investment, saving, and wealth/capital stocks. Uses affected: Analysis of sources of economic growth, productivity, returns to public and private inyestment, and saving; tax and expenditure policies. Treating government spending on structures and equipment and government and business spending on computer software as fixed investment would raise investment and reproducible capital stock in national wealth by about 20 percent. Government capital, $2,863 billion. Computer software, $20-$40 billion. Treating other candidates as inyestment in satellite accounts would raise wealth/ capital stock, for example: R&D capital, $1,050-$1,380 billion, Natural resources, $950-$1,600 billion. Exclusion of certain types of public and private expenditures that contribute to the nation's wealth and productive capacity. Methodology and structure: Expand the accounting for investment and wealth/ capital stock by (1) inclusion of government spending on structures and equipment and government and business spending on computer software and other intangibles in investment in the national accounts and (2) inclusion of research and development and natural resources in satellite accounts, in line with the new international economic accounts guidelines. No quantitative indicator of the need to update measurement. Use of straight-line depreciation Methodology and structure: Use of an improved theoretical basis for depreciation patterns and valuation methods. 3-9 percentage point differencesLack of complete integration between conceptual and statistical—between financial and real accounts. NIPA and flow of funds4 measures of personal saving rates . Treating government "investment" in GDP consistently with international guidelines would eliminate more than half of the apparent 5.8 percentage point shortfall in U.S. versus European investment rates.5 For 1993, investment as a percent of GDP: U.S. rate is 13.7 percent; adding government "investment" raises the rate to 16.7 percent. Average rate for Europe is 19.5 percent. Methodology and structure: Better integration of real and financial accounts in the context of modernizing the accounts in line with the new international economic accounting guidelines. Need to fill gaps in the coverage of international transactions Gaps in the coverage of international trade in certain goods and services, income, and capital. Uses affected: Analysis of trade, monetary, and regulatory policy; forecasting; business and investment planning. Gaps in key components: Trade in goods and services, as much as $10-$20 billion6. Capital flows and stocks, as much as $100-$200 billion6. 1. For a discussion of quantitative indicators, see text. 2. Based on BEA revision studies; see text for details. 3. Based on BEA alternative output and price indexes; see text for details. 4. Based on historical difference between BEA's NIPA measures and the Federal Reserve Board's flow-of-funds estimates; most of the difference between the two series are conceptual, with statistical Inability of existing data collection methods to capture new markets and types of goods, services, and financial instruments and intermediaries. Data modification and extension: Extension of existing surveys to cover new products, services, and markets. Methodology and structure: Extension of data exchanges with other countries and central banks. New data: Development of new surveys such as for financial services and portfolio investment. differences ranging between 0 and 2.9 percentage points over the last 10 years. 5. Calculated from Quarterly National Accounts, compiled by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development. "Europe" includes the 13 countries for which data were published. 6. Based on indicator series and past revisions for similar components. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 54 • April 1995 Table 2.—Proposed Actions and Milestones in Implementation *o Proposed actions Milestones in implementation 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 Need for new and improved output measures Extension of quality adjustment of prices used in real GDP. Establish partnerships to expand work on quality adjustment. Further conceptual work on difficult-to-measure goods and services. Continue work on new Establish partnerships to expand conceptual work. concepts and methods for measuring banking, insurance, and other financial services. Publish new estimates for banking, insurance, and other financial services. Identify and develop new concepts and methods for measuring other difficult-to-measure services and goods. More frequent updating of sample frames for existing surveys, more frequent surveys for services and other sectors, and extension of existing surveys to fill gaps in coverage. Begin to utilize results from Continue work, extending the services expansion consultations to of the Census. business community. Begin work with other agencies to identify cost-effective actions. Conduct new and revised surveys using new sample frames and methods. Incorporate data from new and revised surveys. Incorporate revised seasonal adjustment methods for categories such as inventories and merchandise trade. Incorporate revised seasonal adjustment methods for other key components. Continue partnerships and begin to publish qualityadjusted measures for selected high-tech products. Develop new estimates for Continue work on extension of quality nonresidential construction using model adjustments. pricing or hedonic methods. Improvements in seasonal adjustments. Begin work with other agencies on improving seasonal adjustment. Begin work on revised seasonal adjustment as part of reengineering. Improvements in projections for missing source data. Begin design work for built- Incorporate new methods into current quarter in analytics and projections for projections methods as categories such as part of reengineering. inventories and merchandise trade. Introduction of new weighting schemes. Introduce more current weights for real GDP. Develop a new industry classification system. Present NAICS priority categories, including services, to industry groups and data users for comment and revision. Incorporate improved methods into current quarter projections for other key components. Update base-year weights for current estimates. Continue work with industry groups and data users and finalize NAICS in time for 1997 Economic Censuses. Work with Census to redesign forms on the basis of NAICS. Complete the 1992 benchmark input-output accounts 5 years after the reference year. Update and better integrate BEA's accounts within the context of new international guidelines. Need for better measures of investment, saving, and wealth Expand the coverage of investment along the lines of new international guidelines. Treat government spending Publish new estimates of computer software. on structures and equipment as investment. Update and improve estimates of research and development in the satellite account. Extend integrated economic and environmental satellite accounts (lEESA's) to include selected renewable resource estimates and revise nonrenewable resource estimates. Continue long-term improvements in computer software and work on other intangibles. Expand disaggregation of existing NIPA items in the lEESA's. Use of improved depreciation and valuation methods. Introduce new depreciation and capital estimates. Extend empirical work on used asset prices to other assets. Integration of real and financial accounts. Begin work with the Federal Reserve Board to develop multiyear plan for better integration. Publish new estimates for other difficult-to-measure services and goods. Extend empirical work on used asset prices to other assets. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS BE A will explore means of utilizing the data that are currently available. Beginning this fall, the Economic Classification Policy Committee (which is composed of BE A, the Census Bureau, and the Bureau of Labor Statistics), working with Canada and Mexico, will finalize the proposed North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) and present the proposed structure to users for comments. NAICS will provide an updated and more consistent classification system, particularly in the areas of services, new and emerging industries, and high-technology industries. Better measures of investment, saving, and wealth As part of its comprehensive revision of the NIPA'S, BEA will move toward a more com- April 1995 • 55 prehensive and consistent treatment of investment and capital by introducing the SNA treatment of government purchases of structures and equipment as investment and by introducing better theoretically based estimates of depreciation and capital stocks. These estimates will be the first steps in expanding and improving BEA'S investment and capital stock estimates. The next steps will include further conceptual and empirical work on topics such as investment in computer software, better empirically based estimates of depreciation, the services of government capital, and consumers durables. BEA will also work on extending the concept of capital formation for investments such as R&D and natural resources within the structure of the SNA'S system of satellite accounts. Table 2.—Proposed Actions and Milestones in implementation—Continued Milestones in implementation Proposed actions 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 Need to fill gaps in the coverage of international transactions Extension and revision of existing surveys and forms to cover new services, products, and financial instruments. Extension of data exchanges with other countries and central banks. Revise product code and data collection to include a separate category for computer software. Develop initial estimates of the full market value of computer software based on revised methods and source data. Update and improve estimates of the full market value of computer software. Work with the business community to develop revised and extended "selected services" survey to cover new, growing, and volatile services categories. Conduct extended services surveys. Process and incorporate results from extended surveys into national and international accounts. Begin work with Treasury and the Federal Reserve on costeffective means of collecting data on derivatives and new financial instruments. Work with the business community to develop a revised survey to cover derivatives and new financial instruments. Conduct revised survey to capture derivatives and new financial instruments. Process and incorporate results from new derivatives survey into national and international accounts. Continue work on internationally coordinated definitions for data exchanges. Incorporate data, as appropriate, from countries adopting new standardized definitions. Incorporate data, as appropriate, from countries adopting new standardized definitions. Incorporate data, as appropriate, from countries adopting new standardized definitions. Incorporate data, as appropriate, from countries adopting new standardized definitions. Incorporate results from benchmark financial services survey and conduct annual financial services survey. Incorporate results from annual financial services survey. Process new benchmark survey of U.S. portfolio investment abroad. Continue processing new benchmark survey of U.S. portfolio investment abroad. Incorporate results from new benchmark survey of U.S. portfolio investment abroad. Continue international coordination in development of international benchmark survey of portfolio investment. Continue international coordination in development of international benchmark survey. Finalize design and collection of internationally coordinated benchmark survey. Collect and process data from internationally coordinated benchmark survey. Continue processing results of internationally coordinated benchmark survey. Development of new surveys. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 56 • April 1995 Filling gaps in the coverage of international transactions Services and other trade flows.—BE A will complete tabulation of its new benchmark survey of international trade in financial services and will incorporate the results in the June 1996 annual revision of the balance of payments accounts. BEA will also continue its work with the Census Bureau to develop market-value estimates for exports and imports of computer software. Capital flows and positions.—-BEA will continue its coordinated work with other countries, international organizations, and the U.S. Treasury Department to improve estimates of capital flows and stocks, with special emphasis on Treasury's new benchmark survey of U.S. portfolio investment abroad, on extending existing data exchanges, and on developing measures and new and revised surveys for collecting data on new financial instruments. H Regional Economic Information System CD-ROM Containing Over 25 Years of Economic Data For All U.S. States, Counties, and Metro Areas Local area economic data can be at your fingertips with this product from the Regional Economic Information System (REIS), Bureau of Economic Analysis. The CD-ROM contains annual data for 3,111 counties and 328 metropolitan areas for 1969-93, including: »Personal income by major source > Per capita personal income > Earnings by Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) two-digit industry REIS Regional Economic Information System > Full- and part-time employment by SIC one-digit industry »Regional economic profiles > Transfer payments by major program /%yc\ U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE f •yj£- 1 Economics and Statistics Administration \ ^X & Bureau of Economic Analysis '""<„, # •* Regional Economic Measu rement Di visiori/ •Farm income and expenses • BEA Regional Fact Sheets (BEARFACTS) The CD-ROM contains over 450 megabytes of data and documentation. All the estimates are stored as ASCII files that can be accessed in either sequential or random mode. The package includes REIS software that allows the user to display, print, or copy one or more of the standard tables from the historical personal income series. Additional data, together with software to access the information, are included on the CD-ROM. Those data include gross state product, 1977-92; projections to 2040 of income and employment for States and metropolitan areas; quarterly personal income by State for the latest quarters available at the time of release; county-level gross commuters' income flows for 1969-93; Census Bureau data on intercounty commuting flows for 1960, 1970, 1980, and 1990; and Census Bureau county-level commuting flows and average wage data at the SIC one-digit level for 1980 and 1990. Order the CD-ROM for $35 Request Accession No. 55-93-30-599, enclose a check or money order for $35.00 (foreign air mail orders are $43.75 per disc) payable to Bureau of Economic Analysis, and mail to: Public Information Office, Order Desk, BE-53, Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. Department of Commerce, Washington DC 20230. Be sure to include your return address and telephone number. Telephone (202) 606-5360 or (202) 606-9900 for further information or to place an order using MasterCard or VISA. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 Total and Per Capita Personal Income by State and Region This article was written by Duke D. Tran and Howard L. Friedenberg. The estimates of State personal income, as well as the section on the revisions, were prepared by the Regional Economic Measurement Division. Q-'HIS ARTICLE presents preliminary fourthJL quarter and year 1994 estimates of total personal income for States, regions, and the United States and preliminary 1994 estimates of per capita personal income,, In addition, the article presents revised annual State estimates for 1991-93 and revised quarterly estimates for 1991:1-1994:111. The first section of this article looks at the preliminary estimates of total State personal income, and the second section discusses the preliminary estimates of per capita State personal income. The last section contains information about the revised estimates. Tables 1-4, at the end of the article, present the preliminary and revised estimates: Tables i and 2 contain the quarterly estimates of total and nonfarm State personal income for 1991-94, and tables 3 and 4 contain the annual estimates of total and per capita State personal income and disposable personal income for 1989-94. Table 5 presents percent changes in earnings for selected industries for 1994. in 1993 in all major industries except the Federal Government. Per Capita Personal Income Per capita personal income in the Nation increased 4.9 percent in 1994 after increasing 3.3 percent in 1993 and 4.9 percent in 1992. The increases in per capita income have exceeded the increases in U.S. prices (as measured by the fixedweighted price index for personal consumption expenditures) for 3 consecutive years. In 1994, prices increased 2.4 percent, the smallest increase since 1966.2 By State, increases in per capita income in 1994 exceeded or equaled 2.4 percent in all 50 States. Fastest growing States In 12 States, increases in per capita personal income in 1994 were at least i.o percentage point more than the U.S. average (table A and chart i). 2. U.S. prices had increased 2.8 percent in 1993 and 3.6 percent in 1992. Total Personal Income Total personal income in the Nation increased 2.1 percent in the fourth quarter of 1994 after increasing 1.3 percent in the third quarter.1 Personal income growth picked up in 45 States. The. sharpest pickups were in North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, Nebraska, Iowa, and Kansas; each of these States had a sharp upswing in farm income. In North Dakota, Montana, and Kansas, the upswing mainly reflected large increases in Federal farm subsidy payments; in South Dakota, Nebraska, and Iowa, the upswing mainly reflected large increases in crop production. The five States in which personal income growth slowed or was unchanged were Arizona, Louisiana, Mississippi, Wisconsin, and New Mexico. In the year 1994, personal income in the Nation increased 5.9 percent after increasing 4.4 percent in 1993. Earnings increased faster in 1994 than i. In this section, these percent changes are at quarterly—not at annual— rates. Table A.—Per Capita Personal Income for Selected States and the United States, 1993-94 Percent change Per capita Personal income personNonal infarm come Total Rank 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Fastest growing States: Iowa South Dakota . North Dakota Michigan MississiDDi Minnesota West Virginia Ohio Louisiana Wisconsin Indiana Missouri United States 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 Slowest growing States: Colorado Washington Texas Wyoming Alaska Montana California Hawaii 9.5 8.6 8.5 7.4 7.0 6.4 6.3 6.3 6.1 6.1 5.9 11.2 10.3 8.8 8.9 8.6 8.0 6.6 6.6 6.9 6.9 6.9 6.8 6.6 7.2 5.8 9.1 8.1 6.6 6.6 6.6 6.7 6.5 7.1 6.7 0.3 .7 .2 .4 1.1 .9 .2 .4 .6 .7 .8 .8 4.9 5.9 5.9 1.0 3.9 3.8 3.7 3.6 3.1 2.8 2.7 2.4 6.6 5.5 5.8 5.0 4.6 4.7 3.4 3.5 7.1 5.9 6.1 6.3 4.6 5.8 3.6 3.4 2.6 1.6 2.0 1.3 1.4 1.8 .7 1.1 10.9 ..... Population SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS All of these States had above-average increases in personal income, and all except Mississippi had below-average increases in population. In the Plains States of Iowa, South Dakota, North Dakota, Minnesota, and Missouri* personal income growth was boosted by aboveaverage increases in farm income. Farm income increased substantially following declines in 1993 due to crop losses and damage to farm property caused by the floods in the Midwest. In most of these States, crop production in 1994 reached record levels. In addition, in nonfarm income, all five States had above-average increases in earnings in both durables and nondurables manufacturing and in retail trade (table B).3 In the Great Lakes States of Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin, and Indiana^ personal income growth was boosted by above-average increases in nonfarm income. All of these States had aboveaverage increases in earnings in durables man3. Earnings is the sum of wage and salary disbursements, other labor income, and proprietors' income. ufacturing, in the transportation and public utilities group, in retail trade, and in government. In Michigan, the strength in durables manufacturing was mainly in motor vehicles. In the Southeast States of Mississippi, West Virginia, and Louisiana, both farm and nonfarm income increased at above-average rates. In nonfarm income, all of these States had aboveaverage increases in earnings in construction, in mining, in the transportation and public utilities group, in services, and in government In Mississippi, the strength in construction and in services reflected continued growth in gaming activities. Slowest growing States In eight States, increases in per capita personal income in 1994 were at least i.o percentage point less than the U.S. average. All of these States except Colorado had below-average increases in personal income, and all except California had above-average increases in population. UNITED STATES 4.9% [T] Fastest growing States Slowest growing States PI All other States April 1995 • 59 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 6o • April In Washington, Texas, Wyoming, and Montana, personal income growth was slowed by declines in farm income. Nonfarm income increased at near- or above-average rates. In Alaska, California, and Hawaii, increases in nonfarm income were well below average. Earnings declined or increased at below-average rates in nondurables manufacturing, in all pri- vate service-type industries except retail trade, and in government.4 In addition, in California, weakness in earnings in durables manufacturing reflected continued job cutbacks in defenserelated industries, and in Hawaii, declines in 4. Private service-type industries consist of wholesale and retail trade, the finance, insurance, and real estate group, the transportation and public utilities group, and services. Table B—Percent Change in Earnings for Selected States and the United States, 1993-94 Durables manufacturing Rank 10 11 12 Fastest growing States: Iowa South Dakota North Dakota . .. . Michigan Mississippi Minnesota West Virginia .. Ohio Louisiana Wisconsin Indiana Missouri •. 43 44 45 48 47 48 49 50 Slowest growing States: Colorado .. . Washington Texas Wyoming Alaska Montana California Hawaii 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 q Nondurables manufacturing 109 18.0 183 135 96 7.8 107 97 9.5 145 244 6,9 4.7 11.2 53 8 62 48 6.1 5.1 6.6 108 4.5 33 23 11.0 13.2 154 2.0 8 64 84 55 4.2 -8 37 51 14.1 69 96 4.3 68 30 5.0 6.1 7.1 30 63 Transportation and Wholesale trade public utilities Mining 166 12.3 72 40 9.2 9.8 United States Construction 120 153 17.9 76 170 12.5 11.4 148 7.8 12.6 88 -59 54 4.5 75 92 88 99 53 82 7.8 6.7 83 70 74 85 72 79 77 95 8.7 7.5 94 83 42 53 24 62 25 60 5.4 5.2 37 44 3.7 6.5 6.8 7.2 4 90 7.4 7.8 1.5 64 59 45 22 104 77 69 7.9 66 77 59 100 79 75 7.1 92 77 35 45 3.8 4.1 50 2.0 -48 149 98 74 136 8.3 4.1 8.5 85 -51 11.6 12.5 17.0 40 74 7.4 70 93 84 46 68 77 7.2 8.1 67 47 11 1 o Finance, insurance, and real estate Retail trade 12 Services Government 80 69 55 4.2 21 47 7.4 75 66 5.3 4.5 5.2 63 54 5.8 6.5 4.1 38 7 49 8.4 56 33 98 84 64 7.5 48 80 50 54 33 38 52 2.5 -3 41 23 63 8.2 60 83 162 78 73 70 7.5 fdr 12 13 11 Table C.—Revisions to U.S. Totals in the State Personal Income Series [Billions of dollars; quarters at seasonally adjusted annual rates] 1S 93 Percent 19 94 cnange 1QQO 1QQA II I Personal income: April 1995 January 1995 Revision 53620 5,359.6 Wages and salaries: April 1995 .. . January 1995 . . . Revision 30723 30723 24 32573 0 Retail trade: April 1995 January 1995 Revision 2954 295.4 Finance, insurance, and real estate: April 1995 January 1995 Revision 250.7 2507 Services: April 1995 January 1995 Revision 770.8 7708 Other: April 1995 January 1995 Revision 1,755.4 1 7554 Farm proprietors' income: April 1995 January 1995 Revision 56778 3162 5 352.5 5,348.4 5,383.9 5,381.3 5,468.7 5,469.2 32 41 2.6 -.5 29661 2,964.8 3 078 3 3,076.4 3,107.7 3,107.5 3,137.1 3,140,3 3,192.5 3,200.2 1.3 1.9 .2 -3.2 -7.7 2877 287.4 2954 295.0 298.9 298.9 299.4 300.2 307.0 308.7 3 o 817.6 o 1,915.1 0 35.0 33.9 11 34.6 4 0 -.8 221.4 2206 256.7 2552 .8 1.5 .1 746.9 7456 13 770.5 768.6 778.3 778.2 19 .1 1,710.1 1,711.2 1,755.7 1,757.6 1,769.7 1,769.7 -1.1 -1.9 46.6 45.9 7 36.5 35.5 10 260.8 2607 0 14.4 13.2 12 5,538.3 5,543.2 -4.9 -1.7 IV III II I 52427 5,239.5 0 267.4 IV III 5,637.1 5,647.5 10.4 5,708.9 5,722.1 5,826.8 6.0 6.3 .3 5.2 5.7 -.5 13.2 3,236.9 3,249.3 -12.4 3,269.9 3,286.1 -16.2 3,329.7 313.8 316.6 318.5 322.4 325.6 2.8 269.0 268.4 2743 267.6 276.9 264.5 276.6 -2.5 -5.9 -9.3 12.1 787.5 790.9 800.0 807.9 811.7 824.4 -7.9 12.7 820.9 837.8 -16.9 837.7 -3.4 1,786.5 1,783.0 1,817.1 1,809.3 1,866.0 1,849.3 1,897.4 3.5 7.8 42.3 40.9 1.4 45.1 43.7 1.4 12.4 16.7 36.6 35.9 28.0 26.3 .7 1.7 6.6 7.9 -1.3 -3.9 263.7 2662 1,843.8 1,831.4 1993:1111994:111 1.4 6.1 -4.7 5.5 7.7 -2.2 38.3 5.4 4.5 .9 94.4 99.2 -4.8 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS earnings in construction and in the finance, insurance, and real estate group reflected the effects of pverbuilding earlier in the 1990*8. Revisions Both the annual and quarterly estimates df State personal income have been revised back to 1991 to incorporate the results of a revision of the local area estimates (see "Local Area Personal Income, 1991-93" in this issue). In addition, the national and State estimates of wages and salaries for the first three quarters of 1994 were revised to incorporate Bureau of Labor Statistics tabulations for employees covered by unemployment insurance. Consequently, the national totals for 1994 differ from those presently published in the national income and product accounts tables (see the box on page 6). As shown in table C, total U.S. wages and salaries were revised down for the first three quarters of 1994; the largest downward revision, $16.2 billion (annual rate), was for the third quarter. The downward revisions were more than accounted for by downward revisions in retail trade, the finance, insurance, and real estate group, and services; the third-quarter downward revision for these industries totaled $32.9 billion. Wages and salaries for all other industries were revised up, and the third-quarter April 1995 • Data Availability Quarterly estimates for the years 1969-90 are available from the Regional Economic Information System, Regional Economic Measurement Division, BE-55, Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. Department of Commerce, Washington, DC 20230, or call (202) 606-5360. upward revision for these industries totaled $16.7 billion« On the revised basis, wages and salaries for the Nation grew more slowly than had been indicated by the quarterly State estimates published in the January 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS. From the third quarter of 1993 to the third quarter of 1994, wages and salaries grew 5.2 percent, 0.5 percentage point less than the previously published estimate. Similarly, the growth rate for total personal income was revised down 0.3 percentage point to 6.0 percent. The national and State estimates of farm proprietors' income for 1993 and the first three quarters of 1994 reflect the incorporation of newly available source data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The largest change to the national estimates was the upward revision of $1.7 billion in the third quarter of 1994. Tables i through 5 follow. S 6l SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 62 • April 1995 Table 1.—Total Personal Income, States and Regions [Millions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates] 1991 State and region 1992 1993 I" \\ r UK IV I' II " III"1 United States ... 4,776,294 4,820,149 4,850,243 4,917,626 5,012,488 5,083,121 New England Connecticut Maine Massachusetts New Hampshire .... Rhode Island Vermont 294,573 84,362 21,308 136,203 23,168 19,531 10,002 295,859 85,228 21,270 136,609 23,224 19,449 10,078 295,551 85,137 21,380 136,170 23,256 19,470 10,140 298,842 86,262 21,636 137,512 23,528 19,640 10,263 302,496 87,060 21,962 139,452 23,767 19,803 10,453 305,843 88,559 22,271 140,255 24,053 20,042 10,664 Mideast Delaware District of Columbia Maryland New Jersey . . . New York Pennsylvania 968,164 13,755 15,226 108,320 189,957 408,717 232,188 976,496 13,766 15,412 109,004 191,548 413,069 233,696 980,230 13,880 15,467 109,192 192,660 413,982 235,050 991,266 14,112 15,677 110,400 194,631 418,810 237,636 1,008,530 14,203 16,050 111,300 198,686 426,179 242,111 Great Lakes ....... Illinois Indiana Michigan Ohio ....... Wisconsin 784,874 234,454 95,466 172,754 194,688 87,512 790,341 236,718 96,132 174,200 195,000 88,291 798,110 238,279 97,054 175,768 197,865 89,144 809,166 241,179 98,794 178,277 200,282 90,634 Plains Iowa Kansas Minnesota Missouri Nebraska North Dakota South Dakota 317,399 47,642 44,423 83,983 92,402 28,319 9,402 11,229 320 893 47!559 45,333 84,901 92,738 28,968 9,739 11,656 320,277 47,273 45,097 85,408 93,347 28,522 9,390 11,240 1,014,069 62,941 33,967 252,635 114,855 56,034 62,938 33,712 110,821 54,548 80,250 125,351 26,017 1,023,222 63,382 34,165 254,312 116,333 56,857 63,526 34,089 112,690 54,706 81^088 125,852 26,221 429,729 61,981 22,538 48,756 296,454 Rocky Mountain Colorado Idaho Montana Utah Wyoming Far West Alaska California Hawaii Nevada Oregon Washington Southeast Alabama Arkansas Florida Georgia Kentucky Louisiana Mississippi North Carolina South Carolina Tennessee Virginia West Virginia Southwest Arizona New Mexico Oklahoma Texas , Percent change 1994 1994:1111994.-IV 1993:IV1 994:1 V IV \ r II" III''2 IV 5,128,388 5,317,811 5,242,669 5,352,536 5,383,926 5,468,741 5,538,293 5,637,138 5,708,857 5,826,834 2.1 6.5 308,079 89,707 22,519 140,539 24,267 20,249 10,799 319,280 93,273 23,000 145,789 25,225 20,923 11,070 311,065 89,541 22,815 142,672 24,459 20,649 10,930 319,464 92,521 23,185 146,425 25,037 21,148 11,148 323,657 93,230 23,458 148,727 25,451 21,485 11,305 325,857 93,818 23,671 149,746 25,593 21,656 11,373 330,425 95,048 23,947 152,025 26,042 21,831 11,532 334,523 95,322 24,338 154,417 26,565 22,162 11,719 96',573 24,403 154,962 26,717 22,238 11,747 342,365 98,247 24,857 157,602 27,237 22,485 11,937 1.7 1.7 1.9 1.7 1.9 1.1 1.6 5.1 4.7 5.0 5.2 6.4 3.8 5.0 1,019,805 14,469 16,219 112,719 201,496 429,949 244,952 1,031,812 14,700 16,473 114,380 204,042 434,903 247,314 1,070,351 15,138 16,758 117,314 211,755 455,344 254,043 1,040,776 14,927 16,805 116,076 206,427 435,963 250,578 1,070,448 15,282 16,981 118,510 211,712 452,219 255,743 1,078,336 15,357 17,201 119,231 212,830 455,611 258,106 1,085,409 15,487 17,343 120,334 213,896 458,718 259,632 1,099,694 15,836 17,390 122,176 216,660 464,214 263,419 1,115,010 15,979 17,653 123,835 220,113 470,861 266,568 1,126,225 16,127 17,900 125,483 222,841 473,167 270,707 1,146,037 16,555 18,070 127,784 226,813 481,282 275,533 1.8 2.7 .9 1.8 1.8 1.7 1.8 5.6 6.9 4.2 6.2 6.0 4.9 6.1 823,695 246,149 101,069 180,267 203,678 92,531 838,944 250,228 103,115 184,451 206,837 94,314 847,504 253,088 104,626 185,588 208,512 95,690 876,443 262,208 107,533 192,503 214,901 99,297 866,403 259,091 107,436 189,125 213,064 97,686 883,299 263,177 109,238 194,406 216,963 99,515 888,857 263,856 109,961 195,894 219,092 100,054 904,391 268,422 111,857 199,447 222,316 102,349 924,706 272,832 114,185 206,607 226,865 104,217 937,321 276,956 115,655 209,482 229,751 105,477 954,285 281,283 118,090 213,380 233,846 107,685 975,502 286,937 120,938 218,849 238,911 109,866 2.2 2.0 2.4 2.6 2.2 2.0 7.9 6.9 8.1 9.7 7.5 7.3 329,315 48,376 47,051 87,134 94,902 28,946 10,974 11,932 336,062 50,413 47,214 89,291 96,358 30,380 10,393 12,013 338,555 50,166 47,766 90,032 97,501 30,438 10,612 12,041 341,982 50,683 47,907 91,684 98,454 30,539 10,580 12,135 356,475 52,558 50,584 95,582 101,278 31,756 11,867 12,850 352,498 52,824 49,502 93,941 100,779 32,011 10,633 12,807 354,613 51,370 50,322 94,958 102,550 31,797 10,912 12,705 346,261 49,024 49,376 93,545 101,162 30,870 10,049 12,236 364,999 53,015 52,077 97,231 105,051 32,274 11,888 13,464 373,792 56,687 52,001 100,454 106,355 32,563 11,684 14,047 378,057 56,801 52,857 101,171 108,239 33,237 11,813 13,939 381,123 56,836 53,215 102,971 109,885 33,042 11,403. 13,770 394,173 59,013 55,407 105,592 112,865 34,153 12,428 14,716 3,4 3.8 4.1 2.5 2.7 3.4 9.0 6.9 1,031,716 64,071 34,167 255,430 117,322 57,809 64,101 34,263 114,611 55,129 81,934 126,421 26,457 1,044,937 64,823 34,796 257,738 119,007 58,609 65,259 35,032 115,650 55,910 83,453 127,815 26,844 1,068,214 66,478 36,504 262,130 121,576 60,174 66,464 35,961 118,510 56,800 85,839 130,358 27,422 1,084,140 67,392 37,151 265,300 123,608 60,960 67,554 36,470 120,329 57,632 87,719 132,228 27,796 1,085,260 68,590 37,121 255,494 125,428 61,784 67,429 36,740 122,650 58,447 88,878 134,432 28,268 1,135,045 70,491 38,430 279,736 129,824 63,525 69,903 37,870 126,234 60,108 91,956 138,017 28,950 1,128,598 70,237 38,411 276,467 128,963 62,699 69,847 38,063 126,016 59,928 91,404 137,718 28,846 1,151,342 71,239 38,756 282,576 132,644 63,755 71,144 38,579 129,152 61,016 93,315 139,776 29,389 1,162,751 1,179,250 73,076 71,890 39,532 38,513 285,984 288,723 133,784 136,060 65,372 64,475 71,639 72,455 38,989 40,062 133,304 130,735 62,284 61,589 96,413 94,601 141,038: 142,116 29,513 29,853 1,202,519 74,166 40,747 292,425 139,231 66,412 75,170 41,492 136,311 63,468 98,184 144,341 30,572 1,222,233 75,174 41,120 299,637 141,584 67,813 74,931 41,895 137,725 64,334 99,907 147,029 31,085 1,241,343 76,505 41,595 305,074 143,378 68,550 76,822 42,615 139,717 65,252 101,528 148,783 31,523 1,267,620 78,073 42,318 312,661 147,328 69,798 77,746 43,093 142,473 66,283 103,667 151,949 32,230 2.1 2.0 1.7 2.5 2.8 1.8 1.2 1.1 2.0 1.6 2.1 2.1 2.2 7.5 6.8 7.0 8.3 8.3 6.8 7.3 7.6 6.9 6.4 7.5 6.9 8.0 435,776 62,603 22^833 49,423 300,918 438,865 62,832 22,983 49,403 303,646 447,412 63,702 23,360 50,757 309,592 456,914 65,129 23,894 51,497 316,394 465,063 66,203 24,304 52282 322,275 471,212 67,183 24,774 52,856 326,399 488,642 69,479 25,289 54,454 339,421 485,440 69,053 25,673 54,071 336,644 496,142 70,979 26,134 54,883 344,146 499,676 72,075 26,653 54,924 346,024 509,994 73,266 27,177 56,293 353,258 516,083 74,845 27,573 56,804 356,861 523,305 76,282 27,848 57,581 361,593 531,959 78,800 28,521 57,559 367,080 542,519 79,789 29,201 59,305 374,223 2.0 1.3 2.4 3.0 1.9 6.4 8.9 7.5 5.4 5.9 126,855 65,018 15,936 12,241 25,450 8,209 129,274 66,090 16,384 12,570 25,888 8,342 130,123 66,663 16,401 12,517 26,156 8,385 134,309 68,344 17,081 13,667 26,651 8,566 134,824 68,944 17,135 12,927 27,274 8,543 137,453 70,369 17,506 13,251 27,637 8,690 139,790 71,662 17,832 13,295 28,229 8,771 145,474 74,179 18,659 14,392 29,170 9,074 145,488 74,374 18,647 14,186 29,188 9,094 148,626 76,016 19,103 14,535 29,759 9,213 150,020 77,051 19,220 14,259 30,205 9,285 154,922 79,003 20,107 15,470 30,886 9,457 155,461 79,390 20,003 14,954 31,597 9,516 158,505 80,965 20,470 15,181 32,192 9,696 160,489 82,124 20,740 15,140 32,751 9,733 164,879 84,080 21,410 15,897 33,528 9,963 2.7 2.4 3.2 5.0 2.4 2.4 6.4 6.4 6.5 2.8 8.6 5.4 840,631 12,079 628,430 24,101 26,239 50,855 98,927 848,288 12,136 633,639 24,288 26,562 51,483 100,179 855,371 12,346 637,667 24,679 26,939 52,029 101,711 862,379 12,566 640,222 25,110 27,345 53,129 104,007 881,754 12,769 654,898 25,818 28,092 53,787 106,390 893,318 12,893 662,946 26,170 28,669 54,699 107,940 902,750 13,129 669,449 24,601 29,422 56,018 110,131 926,100 13,500 682,441 27,073 30,820 57,603 114,662 912,401 13,548 672,115 27,084 30,577 57,617 111,460 928,603 13,743 683,441 27,491 31,353 58,582 113,994 934,368 13,801 686,861 27,467 31,932 59,226 115,081 943,917 14,080 691,614 27,536 32,698 60,517 117,471 935,612 14,295 681,514 27,995 33,560 61,237 117,010 968,184 14,406 708,500 28,124 34,695 62,400 120,059 976,794 14,433 713,665 28,440 35,403 63,393 121,459 993,739 14,554 724,253 26,853 36,351 65,034 124,695 1.7 .8 1.5 1.5 2.7 2.6 2.7 5.3 3.4 4.7 4.8 323,657 926,547 888,857 346,261 934,432 269,956 511,100 280,680 902,436 325,857 932,245 904,391 364,999 945,504 274,923 521,538 288,064 911,218 330,425 944,293 924,706 373,792 961,750 280,253 529,582 291,439 902,052 334,523 957,542 937,321 378,057 978,860 284,789 535,225 297,330 933,489 336,639 966,715 954,285 381,123 993,238 289,199 543,055 303,212 941,391 342,365 983,628 975,502 394,173 1,015,333 294,631 553,593 310,221 957,388 1.7 1.7 2.2 3.4 2.2 1.9 1.9 2.3 1.7 3 I' II" III" IV P • 8.0 11.3 6.4 8.6 7.4 5.8 4.5 9.3 11.2 7.5 6.1 Census Divisions New England Middle Atlantic East North Central .... West North Central ... South Atlantic East South Central .... West South Central ... Mountain Pacific 294,573 830,863 784,874 317,399 821,528 232,937 442,115 237,612 814,393 295,859 838,314 790,341 320,893 828,297 235,416 448,032 241,272 821,726 295,551 841,693 798,110 320,277 833,910 238,076 451,317 242,878 828,432 298,842 851,077 809,166 329,315 843,153 241,917 460,405 248,717 835,034 302,496 866,976 823,695 336,062 858,348 248,452 470,859 251,938 853,662 305,843 876,397 838,944 338,555 870,301 252,542 479,261 256,628 864,649 308,079 886,259 847,504 341,982 870,272 255,991 483,805 261,168 873,328 319,280 921,141 876,443 356,475 912,079 263,843 502,208 271,062 895,280 " Revised. p Preliminary. 1. The third-quarter 1992 estimates of personal income reflect the losses resulting from damage caused by Hurricane Andrew in Florida and Louisiana and by Hurricane Iniki in Hawaii. 2. The third-quarter 1993 estimates of personal income reflect the losses resulting from damage caused by floods in Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wisconsin and by drought in Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia. 311,065 892,968 866,403 352,498 905,746 262,403 498,972 270,791 881,824 319,464 919,674 883,299 354,613 925,327 266,888 508,929 277,092 897,250 5.1 5.5 7.9 8.0 7.4 7.2 6.1 7.7 5.1 3. The first-quarter 1994 estimates of personal income reflect the losses resulting from damage caused by the Northridge Earthquake in California. NOTE.—The personal income level shown for the United States is derived as the sum of the State estimates; it differs from the national income and product accounts (NIPA) estimate of personal income because, by definition, it omits the earnings of Federal civilian and military personnel stationed abroad and of U.S. residents employed abroad temporarily by private U.S. firms. It can also differ from the NIPA estimate because of different data sources and revision schedules. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • 63 Table 2.—Nonfarm Personal Income, States and Regions [Millions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates] 1991 State and region I' II' 1992 III' IV I' II' 1993 1 III' IV I' II' Percent change 1994 2 III' IV 3 I' II' III' IV P United States ... 4,730,308 4,768,593 4,813,323 4,872,119 4,957,910 5,033,344 5,084,991 5,264,924 5,183,558 5,303,278 5,356,477 5,413,052 5,479,333 5,586,483 5,666,578 5,773,995 1994:1111994:IV 1993:IV1 994:1 V 1.9 6.7 New England Connecticut Maine Massachusetts New Hampshire .... Rhode Island Vermont 293,759 84,123 21,172 135,972 23,104 19,491 9,896 294,981 84,975 21,125 136,358 23,154 19,406 9,963 294,801 84,925 21,254 135,949 23,197 19,435 10,040 298,131 86,066 21,506 137,307 23,473 19,607 10,173 341,452 98,000 24,683 157,372 27,162 22,443 11,792 1.7 1.7 1.9 1.7 1.9 1.1 1.6 51 4.8 5.2 5.3 6.5 3.9 5.0 Mideast Delaware District of Columbia Maryland New Jersey New York ... Pennsylvania 966,023 13,610 15,226 107,962 189,710 407,978 231,537 974,166 13,603 15,412 108,596 191,278 412,284 232,993 978,258 13,746 15,467 108,849 192423 413].316 234,457 989,339 1,005,910 1,017,349 1,029,345 1,068,026 1,038,284 1,068,158 1,076,198 1,082,840 1,097,158 1,112,615 1,123,999 1,143,715 13,982 14,567 14,061 14,349 15,015 15,248 15,367 16,437 14,796 15,161 15,857 16,011 15,696 15,677 16,050 16,219 16,473 16,758 16,805 16,981 17,201 17,343 17,390 17,653 17,900 18,070 110,071 115,707 110,896 112,356 114,001 116,967 118,192 125,172 118,940 119,946 121,793 123,501 127,470 213589 194412 211 523 222532 198440 201 235 206141 211 433 212552 219753 203 795 216334 226 494 429*194 418*162 425,353 435*211 434*166 451 *573 463*544 454*643 455,030 458*039 472*599 480*686 470*236 237,034 241,111 249,624 274,557 243,995 258,555 246,343 253,120 254,818 257,226 262,401 265,615 269,785 1.8 2.7 .9 1.8 1g 1.7 1.8 5.6 7.0 4.2 6.3 60 43 6.2 Great Lakes Illinois Indiana Michigan Ohio .. Wisconsin 780,852 233,467 95,120 172,003 193,787 86,476 786,348 235,731 95,884 173,396 194,069 87,267 795,917 238,039 97,120 175,206 197,199 88,354 806,242 240,634 98,662 177,649 199,604 89,694 817,564 244,115 100,181 179,477 202,412 91,378 834,007 248,720 102,479 183,675 205,813 93,320 843,380 251,956 104,148 184,954 207,565 94,757 871,588 260,690 106,937 191,810 213,902 98,248 858,502 256,172 106,009 188,085 211,598 96,638 878,303 261,661 108,535 193,540 215,845 98,722 887,171 263,996 109,553 195,355 218,232 100,034 900,344 267,535 111,241 198,719 221,160 101,689 918,549 270,823 113,406 206,087 225,421 102,812 931,936 275,182 114,964 208,989 228,433 104,369 950,342 280,160 117,628 213,010 232,708 106,836 970,890 285,565 120,410 218,429 237,672 108,813 2.2 1.9 2.4 2.5 2.1 1.9 7.8 6.7 8.2 9.9 7.5 7.0 Plains ... Iowa .. Kansas Minnesota Missouri Nebraska North Dakota South Dakota 308,499 45,461 43,582 82,520 91,827 25,957 9,110 10,042 310,792 45,833 43,897 83,464 92,198 26,080 9,175 10,145 314,689 46,325 44,638 84,469 93,065 26,562 9,299 10,331 318,615 46,898 45,123 85,645 94,089 26,903 9,440 10,517 324,306 47,699 45,862 87,479 95,466 27,480 9,598 10,721 329,165 48,493 46,441 88,774 334,028 49,160 46,874 90,578 97,793 28,584 9,930 11,108 344,053 50,562 48,363 93,896 100,170 29,420 10,199 11,444 340,641 50,009 47,731 92,570 99,627 29,113 10,151 11,440 347,076 50,930 48,650 94,354 101,592 29,624 10,290 11,635 349,793 51,114 49,201 95,353 102,153 29,869 10,326 11,777 356,032 52,648 49,760 96,504 104,122 30,400 10,603 11,996 360,792 53,081 50,433 97,976 105,678 30,710 10,689 12,225 367,485 54,079 51,351 99,771 107,647 31,312 10,894 12,431 374,255 55,009 52,129 102,094 109,520 31,859 10,987 12,656 382,146 55,997 53,382 104,071 112,072 32,523 11,186 12,916 2.1 1.8 2.4 1.9 2.3 2.1 1.8 2.0 7.3 6.4 7.3 7.8 7.6 7.0 5.5 7.7 1,000,133 1,008,202 1,019,490 1,033,170 1,052,330 1,069,539 1,073,393 1,121,836 1,114,113 1,138,644 1,153,290 1,164,865 1,186,226 1,208,786 1,228,644 1,254,020 67,554 61,545 62,006 62,848 63,783 65,343 66,335 69,333 69,085 70,962 72,921 75,514 76,942 70,246 71,685 74,128 32,557 37,177 32,860 40,502 41,221 33,409 33,995 34,775 35,449 36,675 37,322 38,854 35,829 37,931 38,199 39,730 249,582 250,821 262,252 253,912 277,149 302,432 309,967 252,399 254,868 258,400 273,940 280,053 283,387 285,641 289,586 297,158 115,794 128,126 113,326 114,590 117,542 121,822 119,895 137,122 141,706 145,390 123,895 127,149 131,110 132,585 134,203 139,828 54,948 55,728 56,799 57,627 58,797 62,248 61,554 65,237 59,803 60,556 64,165 67,536 68,685 62,691 63,523 66,700 69,054 62,280 62,955 64,911 65,746 67,034 69,387 72,121 63,801 66,733 70,559 76,390 77,300 71,526 74,319 74,368 33,044 33,417 36,127 42,432 33,886 35,026 42,032 34,500 35,596 37,106 37,228 38,013 39,535 38,848 40,493 41,176 4 AC CQft 109,727 112,022 139,644 108,345 113,425 115,793 117,976 120,113 124,016 123,220 i£0,090 128,725 130,309 133,101 134,993 136,933 54,137 54,254 54,773 58,127 55,538 57,263 56,400 59,719 59,518 61,855 63,021 64,920 65,861 60,701 61,439 63,969 79,725 80,572 82,959 81,536 85,114 88,262 91,259 94,235 87,009 90,765 101,028 103,058 92,781 95,837 97,454 99,310 124*,692 125*123 125824 127*239 131*593 129*704 133799 137*.440 137*178 139*275 140^704 146462 151*414 141*565 143*673 148250 25,952 26,150 26,398 32*,107 26*783 27,336 27,708 28,747 30*444 30*,964 28,185 28,875 29*,296 31 ',403 29,425 29J50 2.1 1.9 1.8 2.5 2.6 1.7 1.2 1.0 2.0 1.4 2.0 Southeast Alabama Arkansas Florida Georgia Kentucky Louisiana Mississippi North Carolina South Carolina Tennessee Virginia West Virginia 301,567 86,817 21,791 139,222 23,697 19,764 10,277 304,947 88,328 22,097 140,029 23,987 20,006 10,498 OR cce 90,009 28,139 9,732 10,921 307,131 89,459 22,330 140,307 24,197 20,210 10,628 318,436 93,050 22,831 145,577 25,162 20,888 10,926 310,215 89,300 22,641 142,454 24,402 20,605 10,812 318,609 92,272 23,006 146,210 24,983 21,106 11,031 322,794 92,975 23,287 148,504 25,397 21,443 11,188 324,809 93,523 23,452 149,483 25,515 21,606 11,229 329,516 94,807 23,761 151,793 25,982 21,789 11,384 333,662 95,092 24,155 154,201 26,508 22,122 11,584 335,781 96,336 24,233 154,743 26,659 22,198 11,612 2.2 7.7 7.3 7.9 8.5 8.3 7.0 7.2 7.3 7.2 6.5 7.5 7.0 7.9 Southwest Arizona New Mexico Oklahoma Texas 424,642 61,216 22,106 48,036 293,284 429,670 61,676 22,319 48,424 297,251 435,079 62,073 22,623 48,968 301,416 442,324 63,039 22,942 49,674 306,669 451,868 64,417 23,408 50,550 313,494 459,589 65,563 23,825 51,358 318,844 467,088 66549 24,343 52,048 324,148 482,663 68,844 24,794 53,218 335,807 477,752 68,068 25,080 52,925 331,679 489,130 70212 25,543 53,740 339,636 495,158 71 474 26,146 54,058 343,480 502,144 72537 26,509 54,672 348,427 509,151 74013 27,080 55,362 352,696 517,605 75566 27,380 56,361 358,298 527,470 78150 28,102 56,517 364,702 536,392 79113 28,723 57,706 370,850 1.7 1.2 2.2 2.1 1.7 6.8 9.1 8.4 5.5 6.4 Rocky Mountain Colorado Idaho Montana ; Utah Wyoming 124,567 64,306 15,125 11,901 25,239 7,995 126,135 65,105 15,359 12,009 25,619 8,042 128,124 66,015 15,678 12,276 25,964 8,192 130,544 67,250 16,020 12,539 26,408 8,326 132,721 68,335 16,327 12,719 27,003 8,336 135,217 69,749 16,717 12,930 27,360 8,460 137,884 71,145 17,042 13,147 27,977 8,574 141,984 73,224 17,599 13,475 28,864 8,823 142,436 73,416 17,637 13,619 28,918 8,845 145,347 75,078 18,016 13,848 29,469 8,936 147,534 76,333 18,288 13,884 29,962 9,067 150,229 77,656 18,723 14,159 30,538 9,154 152,823 78,742 19,043 14,403 31,270 9,365 155,871 80,316 19,565 14,613 31,872 9,505 158,317 81,605 19,894 14,754 32,453 9,611 161,494 83,198 20,363 14,982 33,166 9,785 2.0 2.0 2.4 1.5 2.2 1.8 7.5 7.1 8.8 5.8 8.6 6.9 Far West Alaska California Hawaii Nevada Oregon Washington 831,832 12,072 621,928 23^876 26,141 50,092 97,721 838,301 12,130 626,446 24,065 26,451 50,578 98,631 846,966 12,340 631,414 24,462 26,851 51,315 100,585 853,754 12,556 634,400 24,893 27,255 52,256 102,394 871,644 12,764 647,548 25,581 28,028 52,981 104,744 883530 12'887 655,843 25,930 28,599 53,926 106,346 892,741 13,124 661,984 24,438 29,356 55,256 108,583 916,338 13,491 675,676 26,863 30,746 56,711 112,850 901,614 13,543 664,254 26,876 30,479 56,625 109,837 918,010 13,737 675,891 27,287 31,251 57,569 112,274 924,539 13,797 679,889 27,270 31,842 58,306 113,436 931,788 14,070 683,426 27,332 32,599 59,260 115,101 925,119 14,292 673,813 27,766 33,446 60,260 115,541 958,524 14,403 701,599 27,892 34,578 61,429 118,623 967,769 14,430 707,228 28,198 35,293 62,524 120,096 983,886 14,547 717,482 28,615 36,241 64,010 122,991 1.7 .8 1.4 1.5 2.7 2.4 2.4 5.6 3.4 5.0 4.7 322,794 924,809 887,171 349,793 927,655 267,568 506,994 276997 892,697 324,809 930,183 900,344 356,032 935,979 271,222 513,419 281 873 899,189 329,516 942,279 918,549 360,792 951,825 276,106 521,231 287,362 891,673 333,662 955,604 931,936 367,485 970,385 281,313 528,757 293,395 923,946 341,452 335,781 981,738 964,916 950,342 970,890 382,146 374,255 984,728 1,006,360 291,117 286,108 547,077 538,110 305,571 299,861 932,476 947,645 1.7 1.7 2.2 2.1 2.2 1.8 1.7 1.9 1.6 2.'l 11.2 8.0 6.9 Census Divisions New England Middle Atlantic East North Central . .. West North Central .. South Atlantic East South Central . .. West South Central .. Mountain Pacific 293,759 829,225 780,852 308,499 812,833 229,262 436,157 234,030 805,691 294,981 836,556 786,348 310,792 818,275 231,723 441,490 236580 811,849 294,801 840,197 795,917 314,689 825,272 235,069 447,593 239,671 820,115 298,131 849,609 806,242 318,615 835,126 238,869 455,248 243,780 826,499 301,567 864,903 817,564 324,306 848,534 244,281 464,565 248 572 843,616 304,947 874,424 834,007 329,165 861,539 248,743 472,384 253 203 854,931 307,131 884,304 843,380 334,028 863,072 252,499 479,059 258133 863,385 • 318,436 919,287 871,588 344,053 904,066 259,946 495,589 266 368 885,592 ' Revised. Preliminary. 1. The third-quarter 1992 estimates of nonfarm personal income reflect the losses resulting from damage caused by Hurricane Andrew in Florida and Louisiana and by Hurricane Iniki in Hawaii. 2. The third-quarter 1993 estimates of nonfarm personal income reflect the losses resulting from damage caused 310,215 890,976 858,502 340,641 897,061 258,632 490,333 266 062 871,136 318,609 917,823 878,303 347,076 917,365 263,732 501,257 272353 886,759 5.1 5.5 7.8 7.3 7.5 7.3 6.6 8.4 5.4 by floods in Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wisconsin. 3. The first-quarter 1994 estimates of nonfarm personal income reflect the losses resulting from damage caused by the Northridge Earthquake in California. NOTE.-Nonfarm personal income is total personal income less farm earnings. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 64 • April 1995 Table 3.—Total and Per Capita Personal Income for States and Regions, 1989-94 Total Area name Per capita3 Millions of dollars 1989 United States 1990 r 1991 1992' Dollars Percent change2 1993 1994* ' 1993-94 1989 1990 r 1991 Rank in U.S. 1992' 1993' 1994^ 4,366,135 4,655,420 4,841,078 5,135,452 5,361,968 5,677,780 5.9 17,690 18,666 19,201 20,137 20,800 21,809 New England Connecticut Maine Massachusetts New Hampshire Rhode Island Vermont 281,095 80,601 20,089 130,466 22,065 18,454 9,421 289,961 83,633 20,981 133,890 22,491 19,121 9,846 296,206 85,247 21,399 136,623 23,294 19,522 10,121 308,925 89,650 22,438 141,509 24,328 20,254 10,746 320,011 92,278 23,282 146,893 25,135 21,234 11,189 335,988 96,297 24,386 154,751 26,640 22,179 11,734 5.0 4.4 4.7 5.3 6.0 4.4 4.9 21,325 24,548 16,467 21,688 19,977 18,441 16,891 21,934 25,427 17,039 22,247 20,227 19,032 17,442 22,424 25,905 17,304 22,764 21,023 19,438 17,822 23,398 27,338 18,137 23,588 21,840 20,206 18,809 24,179 28,151 18,780 24,410 22,357 21,244 19,437 25,319 29,402 19,663 25,616 23,434 22,251 20,224 Mideast Delaware District of Columbia Maryland New Jersey New York Pennsylvania 894,080 12,420 14,227 99,769 178,582 377,342 211,739 947,684 13,193 14,878 105,985 187,167 401,833 224,628 979,039 13,878 15,446 109,229 192,199 413,645 234,643 1,032,625 14,628 16,375 113,928 203,995 436,594 247,105 1,068,742 15,263 17,083 118,538 211,216 450,628 256,015 1,121,742 16,124 17,753 124,820 221,607 472,381 269,057 5.0 5.6 3.9 5.3 4.9 4.8 5.1 20,513 18,867 22,794 21,105 23,114 20,983 17,844 21,682 19,719 24,648 22,090 24,182 22,321 18,883 22,307 20,399 25,988 22,481 24,745 22,928 19,640 23,423 21,208 27,953 23,186 26,111 24,128 20,610 24,137 21,852 29,500 23,908 26,876 24,824 21,281 25,260 22,828 31,136 24,933 28,038 25,999 22,324 Great Lakes Illinois Indiana Michigan Ohio Wisconsin 728,259 217,594 88,227 162,359 180,248 79,831 769,910 230,790 93,415 169,808 190,608 85,288 795,623 237,658 96,861 175,250 196,959 88,895 846,646 252,918 104,086 185,702 208,482 95,458 885,738 263,637 109,623 194,718 217,859 99,901 947,953 279,502 117,217 212,080 232,343 106,811 7.0 6.0 6.9 8.9 6.6 6.9 17,392 19,071 15,972 17,546 16,644 16,438 18,297 20,159 16,816 18,237 17,548 17,398 18,774 20,621 17,286 18,703 18,017 17,962 19,834 21,784 18,415 19,707 18,945 19,103 20,619 22,560 19,213 20,584 19,696 19,806 Plains . Iowa Kansas Minnesota Missouri Nebraska North Dakota South Dakota 289,663 43,352 40,553 77,405 84,348 25,276 8,877 9,851 309,893 46,375 43,763 82,388 89,245 27,470 9,765 10,888 321,971 47,712 45,476 85,356 93,347 28,689 9,876 11,514 343,269 50,955 48,368 91,647 98,398 30,778 10,863 12,259 354,593 51,558 50,319 94,919 102,386 31,738 10,870 12,803 381,786 57,334 53,370 102,547 109,336 33,249 11,832 14,118 7.7 16,462 15,647 16,399 17,843 16,552 16,050 13,735 14,139 17,520 16,684 17,642 18,779 17,409 17,379 15,321 15,630 18,090 17,091 18,251 19,271 18,099 18,023 15,572 16,399 19,133 18,148 19,210 20,485 18,949 19,189 17,098 17,280 Southeast Alabama Arkansas Florida Georgia Kentucky Louisiana Mississippi North Carolina South Carolina Tennessee Virginia West Virginia 916,226 56,291 30,702 228,024 104,184 50,586 56,369 30,672 100,010 47,995 73,177 114,864 23,352 981,283 60,332 32,450 244,604 111,406 54,454 60,228 32,398 108,339 52,855 77,786 121,397 25,034 1,028,486 63,804 34,274 255,029 116,879 57,327 63,956 34,274 113,443 55,074 81,681 126,360 26,385 1,093,165 68,238 37,302 265,665 125,109 61,611 67,837 36,760 121,931 58,247 88,598 133,759 28,109 1,155,485 71,610 38,803 283,437 132,863 64,075 71,271 38,923 129,802 61,204 93,933 140,162 29,400 1,233,429 75,980 41,445 302,449 142,881 68,143 76,167 42,274 139,057 64,834 100,822 148,025 31,352 6.7 6.1 6.8 6.7 7.5 6.3 6.9 8.6 7.1 5.9 7.3 5.6 6.6 15,600 13,967 13,085 18,043 16,250 13,756 13,254 11,915 15,233 13,884 15,074 18,768 12,926 16,501 14,903 13,784 18,788 17,123 14,747 14,281 12,571 16,275 15,106 15,905 19,537 13,967 17,066 15,612 14,454 19,192 17,645 15,429 15,079 13,214 16,802 15,482 16,501 20,099 14,666 Southwest Arizona New Mexico Oklahoma Texas 385,260 56,646 20,134 44,694 263,785 414,512 59,833 21,602 47,580 285,497 437,946 62,780 22,929 49,585 302,652 470,458 66,998 24,565 52,772 326,122 497,813 71,343 26,409 55,043 345,018 528,467 77,429 28,286 57,812 364,939 6.2 8.5 7.1 5.0 5.8 15,359 15,639 13,388 14,187 15,695 16,325 16,265 14,213 15,119 16,749 113,279 58,202 14,241 11,317 22,520 6,999 121,418 62,163 15,482 11,790 24,320 7,664 130,140 66,529 16,451 12,749 26,036 8,376 139,385 71,288 17,783 13,466 28,078 8,769 149,764 76,611 19,269 14,612 30,009 9,262 159,833 81,640 20,656 15,293 32,517 9,727 6.7 6.6 7.2 4.7 8.4 5.0 15,659 17,767 14,321 14,152 13,201 15,270 758,274 10,741 573,255 20,957 22,031 45,452 85,838 820,759 11,550 617,679 23,266 24,682 49,161 94,420 851,667 12,282 634,990 24,545 26,771 51,874 101,206 900,980 13,073 667,434 25,916 29,251 55,527 109,781 929,822 13,793 683,508 27,394 31,640 58,985 114,501 968,582 14,422 706,983 28,353 35,002 63,016 120,806 4.2 4.6 3.4 3.5 19,180 19,631 19,620 19,146 19,370 16,287 18,085 Rocky Mountain Colorado Idaho Montana Utah Wyoming Far West Alaska California Hawaii Nevada Oregon Washington Washington . . 11.2 6.1 8.0 6.8 4.8 8.8 10.3 10.6 6.8 5.5 1994 1989 1 24 3 6 14 21 1 34 4 10 19 31 12 11 4 2 5 17 5 2 3 18 21,952 23,784 20,378 22,333 20,928 21,019 11 30 20 22 25 9 28 16 22 21 19,610 18,275 19,849 20,979 19,557 19,672 17,072 17,879 20,965 20,265 20,896 22,453 20,717 20,488 18,546 19,577 32 26 18 23 29 44 40 29 23 15 24 25 38 35 17,894 16,518 15,572 19,664 18,495 16,418 15,876 14,070 17,831 16,200 17,647 20,934 15,554 18,659 17,129 15,995 20,650 19,249 16,889 16,612 14,745 18,670 16,861 18,439 21,653 16,169 19,649 18,010 16,898 21,677 20,251 17,807 17,651 15,838 19,669 17,695 19,482 22,594 17,208 41 48 16 28 43 46 50 35 42 36 13 49 40 49 20 30 42 45 50 33 44 36 13 46 16,971 16,755 14,817 15,653 17,450 17,895 17,468 15,538 16,460 18,460 18,565 18,085 16,346 17,026 19,145 19,312 19,001 17,106 17,744 19,857 33 45 38 31 37 47 43 32 16,635 18,814 15,301 14,741 14,060 16,902 17,487 19,744 15,836 15,772 14,733 18,284 18,273 20,585 16,679 16,361 15,501 18,896 19,116 21,498 17,512 17,376 16,136 19,719 19,908 22,333 18,231 17,865 17,043 20,436 19 37 39 47 34 17 39 41 48 26 20,241 20,881 20,654 20,906 20,254 17,199 19,265 20,601 21,570 20,877 21,648 20,831 17,768 20,168 21,400 22,258 21,593 22,476 21,972 18,667 21,333 21,798 23,070 21,895 23,504 22,894 19,437 21,774 22,472 23,788 22,493 24,057 24,023 20,419 22,610 7 8 10 9 27 15 8 14 6 7 27 12 21,934 21,617 18,297 17,520 18,230 14,792 15,908 16,589 20,240 22,424 22,262 18,774 18,090 18,715 15,449 16,608 17,304 20,593 23,398 23,424 19,834 19,133 19,465 16,447 17,575 18,100 21,381 24,179 24,128 20,619 19,610 20,284 17,095 18,238 18,891 21,762 25,319 25,260 21,952 20,965 21,279 18,075 19,024 19,755 22,418 Census Divisions New England Middle Atlantic East North Central West North Central South Atlantic . East South Central West South Central Mountain Pacific 281,095 767,664 728,259 289,663 744,846 210,725 395,550 212,091 736,242 289,961 813,628 769,910 309,893 797,691 224,970 425,755 227,536 796,077 296,206 840,486 795,623 321,971 831,722 237,086 450,467 242,620 824,896 308,925 887,693 846,646 343,269 877,750 255,207 484,033 260,199 871,730 320,011 917,859 885,738 354,593 927,752 268,542 510,135 279,157 898,182 r Revised. p Preliminary. 1. The personal income level shown for the United States is derived as the sum of the State estimates; it differs from the national income and product accounts (NIPA) estimate of personal income because, by definition, it omits the earnings of Federal civilian and military personnel stationed abroad and of U.S. residents employed abroad tern- 335,988 963,045 947,953 381,786 987,296 287,218 540,364 300,551 933,580 5.0 4.9 7.0 7.7 6.4 7.0 5.9 7.7 3.9 21,325 20,430 17,392 16,462 17,319 13,922 14,895 15,713 19,175 porarily by private U.S. firms. It can also differ from the NIPA estimate because of different data sources and revision schedules. 2. Percent change was calculated from unrounded data. 3. Per capita personal income was computed using midyear population estimates of the Bureau of the Census. Estimates for 1990-94 reflect State population estimates available as of February 1995. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • 65 Table 4.—Total and Per Capita Disposable Personal Income for States and Regions, 1989-94 Total Area name Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1989 United States Per capita3 1990 1991' 1992' 1993' 1994* 1993-94 Dollars 1989 1990 1991' Rank in U.S. 1992' 1993' 1994^ 1994 1989 3,774,071 4,033,622 4,218,270 4,488,071 4,676,649 4,936,884 5.6 15,291 16,173 16,730 17,598 18,142 18,963 New England ' Connecticut Maine . Massachusetts New Hampshire Rhode Island Vermont 241,080 68,494 17,678 111,294 19,659 15,751 8,204 248,890 71,062 18,546 113,899 20,144 16,645 8,594 255,354 72,921 19,130 116,467 20,892 17,052 8,892 265,183 75,532 20,116 120,474 21,736 17,852 9,473 274,098 77,627 20,804 124,765 22,380 18,689 9,834 286,973 81,003 21,777 130,783 23,623 19,481 10,306 4.7 4.3 4.7 4.8 5.6 4.2 4.8 18,289 20,860 14,490 18,501 17,799 15,741 14,711 18,827 21,605 15,062 18,925 18,117 16,568 15,223 19,332 22,160 15,470 19,406 18,855 16,979 15,657 20,085 23,033 16,261 20,082 19,513 17,809 16,581 20,710 23,681 16,780 20,733 19,907 18,697 17,082 21,625 24,732 17,559 21,649 20,780 19,544 17,763 Mideast .. Delaware District of Columbia Maryland New Jersey New York Pennsylvania 756,872 10,298 11,906 83,823 153,535 313,206 184,104 806,967 11,069 12,263 89,726 161,396 337,229 195,284 838,638 11,854 12,840 92,465 165,777 350,565 205,137 886,401 12,481 13,645 97,650 175,367 371,833 215,423 917,121 13,043 14,200 101,672 181,239 383,758 223,208 958,758 13,690 14,729 106,600 189,131 400,572 234,037 4.5 5.0 3.7 4.8 4.4 4.4 4.9 17,365 15,643 19,075 17,732 19,872 17,417 15,515 18,462 16,544 20,316 18,701 20,852 18,733 16,416 19,108 17,425 21,604 19,031 21,343 19,432 17,170 20,106 18,096 23,293 19,873 22,447 20,549 17,967 20,713 18,673 24,521 20,507 23,062 21,140 18,554 21,590 19,381 25,832 21,293 23,929 22,047 19,418 16 17 5 2 6 17 5 2 3 16 Great Lakes Illinois . Indiana Michigan Ohio .... Wisconsin 629,888 187,719 76,887 139,905 156,510 68,866 667,483 199,341 81,308 147,448 165,624 73,762 692,260 206,301 84,684 152^652 171,697 76,926 740,775 220,277 91,613 163,251 182,635 82,998 772,864 229,190 96,206 170,846 190,036 86,586 823,901 241,928 102,391 185,335 202,008 92,239 6.6 5.6 6.4 8.5 6.3 6.5 15,043 16,452 13,919 15,119 14,453 14,180 15,863 17,412 14,637 15,836 15,248 15,046 16,335 17,900 15,113 16,291 15,706 15,544 17,353 18,972 16,208 17,324 16,596 16,610 17,992 19,613 16,862 18,060 17,180 17,166 19,079 20,587 17,801 19,517 18,195 18,151 10 31 20 23 26 10 27 14 23 24 Plains Iowa .... Kansas Minnesota Missouri Nebraska North Dakota South Dakota 251,241 37,583 34,920 66,033 73,393 22,487 7,884 8,941 269,410 40,351 37,855 70,134 78,166 24,247 8,819 9,837 280,693 41,361 39,758 72,726 82,154 25,360 8,872 10,461 300,219 44,256 42,361 78,001 87,161 27,439 9,831 11,169 308,593 44,417 43,894 80,292 90,474 28,174 9,738 11,604 331,312 49,595 46,329 86,407 96,192 29,356 10,631 12,801 7.4 14,279 13,565 14,121 15,222 14,403 14,278 12,198 12,834 15,231 14,517 15,261 15,986 15,248 15,340 13,837 14,121 15,771 14,816 15,956 16,419 15,928 15,933 13,990 14,899 16,734 15,762 16,825 17,434 16,785 17,107 15,474 15,743 17,066 15,744 17,314 17,746 17,282 17,463 15,294 16,205 18,194 17,529 18,140 18,919 18,226 18,089 16,664 17,751 33 28 19 24 25 42 38 33 25 20 22 26 38 29 Southeast Alabama Arkansas Florida Georgia Kentucky Louisiana Mississippi North Carolina South Carolina Tennessee Virginia West Virginia 804,746 49,870 27,362 200,008 90,561 44,215 50,815 27,902 87,117 42,084 65,749 98,168 20,895 864,179 53,564 28,816 215,305 96,897 47,621 53,686 29,597 94,761 46,645 70,020 104,895 22,372 909,743 56,628 30,530 226,437 102,482 50,105 57,042 31,397 99,380 48,882 73,635 109,582 23,644 967,516 61,031 33,282 235,033 110,081 53,887 60,799 33,627 106,639 51,948 79,507 116,283 25,400 1,019,791 63,897 34,548 250,079 116,342 55,826 63,776 35,414 113,265 54,400 84,101 121,664 26,480 1,085,122 67,593 36,778 266,161 124,719 59,109 67,981 38,334 121,004 57,556 89,983 127,763 28,141 6.4 5.8 6.5 6.4 7.2 5.9 6.6 8.2 6.8 5.8 7.0 5.0 6.3 13,702 12,374 11,662 15,826 14,126 12,024 11,948 10,839 13,269 12,174 13,544 16,040 11,566 14,532 13,231 12,240 16,538 14,893 12,897 12,730 11,484 14,236 13,331 14,317 16,881 12,481 15,096 13,856 12,875 17,040 15,471 13,486 13,449 12,105 14,719 13,741 14,876 17,430 13,143 15,837 14,774 13,894 17,397 16,273 14,360 14,228 12,871 15,594 14,448 15,836 18,199 14,055 16,468 15,284 14,241 18,220 16,855 14,715 14,865 13,415 16,291 14,986 16,509 18,796 14,563 17,286 16,022 14,995 19,076 17,677 15,446 15,754 14,362 17,116 15,709 17,387 19,501 15,445 40 47 14 27 44 46 50 36 43 34 12 49 40 48 18 30 45 41 50 36 42 35 15 46 Southwest Arizona New Mexico Oklahoma Texas 341,586 49,623 18,019 39,537 234,406 365,875 52,753 19,238 41,832 252,052 388,266 55,036 20,519 43,730 268,981 419,281 59,408 22,054 46,448 291,371 442,956 63,093 23,675 48,384 307,804 469,006 68,250 25,312 50,744 324,699 5.9 8.2 6.9 4.9 5.5 13,618 13,700 11,982 12,550 13,947 14,410 14,340 12,658 13,293 14,787 15,046 14,689 13,260 13,805 15,509 15,949 15,489 13,950 14,487 16,492 16,519 15,993 14,654 14,966 17,080 17,139 16,748 15,308 15,575 17,668 32 45 39 30 37 47 44 31 99,271 50,573 12,804 9,858 19,836 6,200 105,753 53,617 13,998 10,263 21,024 6,852 113,707 57,393 14,855 11,193 22,728 7,538 121,597 61,138 16,019 11,801 24,756 7,882 130,494 65,676 17,325 12,779 26,412 8,302 138,563 69,538 18,461 13,367 28,500 8,697 6.2 5.9 6.6 4.6 7.9 4.8 13,723 15,438 12,876 12,329 11,628 13,526 14,489 16,228 13,834 12,832 12,154 15,111 15,279 17,033 14,300 13,848 12,861 16,456 15,941 17,654 15,025 14,338 13,667 16,985 16,657 18,430 15,745 15,196 14,202 17,675 17,259 19,022 16,293 15,615 14,938 18,271 18 37 41 48 35 19 39 43 49 21 649,387 9,467 488,570 17,600 19,111 38,932 75,707 705,064 10,149 528,976 19,691 21,434 42,044 82,770 739,609 10,905 550,934 20,889 23,390 44,665 88,826 787,100 11,653 583,080 22,202 25,541 47,773 96,851 810,733 12,285 595,717 23,504 27,527 50,703 100,996 843,249 12,838 615,813 24,263 30,328 53,757 106,250 4.0 4.5 3.4 3.2 16,426 17,303 16,721 16,079 16,802 13,951 15,951 17,388 18,348 17,688 17,693 17,589 14,709 16,888 17,890 19,152 18,113 18,424 18,200 15,298 17,701 18,695 19,841 18,864 19,255 19,186 16,060 18,820 19,006 20,548 19,083 20,166 19,918 16,707 19,206 19,564 21,175 19,593 20,587 20,815 17,419 19,886 7 9 11 8 29 13 6 12 9 7 34 11 18,827 18,436 15,863 15,231 15,859 13,203 14,063 14,522 17,381 19,332 19,109 16,335 15,771 16,372 13,799 14,757 15,166 17,880 20,085 20,123 17,353 16,734 17,057 14,697 15,682 15,902 18,679 20,710 20,719 17,992 17,066 17,735 15,230 16,249 16,566 18,976 21,625 21,606 19,079 18,194 18,543 16,049 16,906 17,250 19,520 Rocky Mountain Colorado Idaho . Montana Utah ... Wyoming Far West Alaska California Hawaii Nevada Oregon Washington 11.7 5.5 7.6 6.3 4.2 9.2 10.3 10.2 6.0 5.2 1 22 3 4 15 21 • ' • 1 32 4 8 13 28 Census Divisions New England Middle Atlantic .... East North Central West North Central South Atlantic East South Central West South Central Mountain Pacific ' Revised. P Preliminary. 1. Percent change was calculated from unrounded data. 241,080 650,845 629,888 251,241 644,859 187,736 352,121 186,024 630,277 248,890 693,909 667,483 269,410 693,933 200,802 376,386 199,179 683,630 255,354 721,479 692,260 280,693 727,566 211,765 400,283 212,653 716,219 265,183 762,624 740,775 300,219 769,160 228,052 431,900 228,600 761,559 274,098 788,206 772,864 308,593 811,144 239,238 454,512 244,789 783,205 286,973 823,740 823,901 331,312 860,362 255,019 480,203 262,453 812,921 4.7 4.5 6.6 7.4 6.1 6.6 5.7 7.2 3.8 18,289 17,321 15,043 14,279 14,994 12,403 13,259 13,782 16,415 2. Per capita disposable personal income was computed using midyear population estimates of the Bureau of the Census. Estimates for 1990-93 reflect State population estimates available as of February 1994. 66 • April 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS Table 5.—Percent Change in Selected Shares of Personal Income, 1993-94' Earnings2 Total personal income Area name United States . New England Connecticut . Maine Massachusetts New Hampshire Rhode Island Vermont , Mideast Delaware .. District of Columbia Maryland . . New Jersey New York Pennsylvania .... Great Lakes Illinois Indiana Michigan Ohio Wisconsin . . . . . i......... . Plains Iowa Kansas Minnesota Missouri Nebraska North Dakota South Dakota Southeast Alabama Arkansas Florida Georgia Kentucky Louisiana Mississippi North Carolina South Carolina Tennessee Virginia West Virginia . . . 6.5 7.1 5.8 6.5 2.8 1.8 4.6 2.8 7.9 1.6 -.4 5.7 6.8 4.7 5.2 7.5 5.0 4.2 6.0 4.3 6.4 6.8 7.0 4.5 7.5 7.5 4.7 2.4 5.5 5.7 6.9 5.1 7.4 4.6 6.3 3.0 4.7 .7 5.9 2.6 .6 5.5 6.2 7.8 5.4 9.5 6.8 5.1 6.1 5.5 7.5 9.4 7.7 8.6 5.0 5.6 3.9 5.3 4.9 4.8 5.1 5.0 5.9 3.3 5.7 5.6 4.5 5.4 5.0 6.0 3.3 5.8 5.6 4.5 5.5 7.0 6.0 6.9 8.9 6.6 6.9 7.8 6.8 7.9 9.2 7.6 8.0 7.8 6.7 8.2 9.5 7.6 7.4 7.7 8.7 8.5 3.7 8.3 8.5 12.6 8.9 7.4 7.8 6.6 7.4 7.6 7.2 6.2 8.3 3.3 5.5 .1 16.3 16.6 17.2 10.3 . 6.0 3.7 -.7 -13.5 -11.5 6.7 6.1 6.8 6.7 7.5 6.3 6.9 8.6 7.1 5.9 7.3 5.6 6.6 Southwest Arizona New Mexico Oklahoma Texas 6.2 8.5 7.1 5.0 5.8 Rocky Mountain Colorado Idaho . Montana Utah Wyoming Far West Alaska California Hawaii Nevada Oregon ....... Washington 14.5 6.5 9.3 7.7 5.2 10.5 12.5 7.1 6.3 8.0 6.6 8.0 7.0 7.2 7.3 5.7 8.2 6.1 7.4 7.1 6.5 8.0 6.7 7.9 7.1 7.0 9.7 7.2 5.6 8.2 6.0 7.3 6.6 7.0 10.3 3.3 9.9 -7.6 -1.7 9.4 6.9 2.0 11.1 -5.1 7.9 -.8 4.2 6.2 5.1 2.8 -2.7 5.5 6.8 4.1 5.1 15.4 8.8 4.5 .9 13.6 7.7 5.3 6.1 8.7 5.1 6.5 3.5 .8 5.0 2.0 3.8 6.7 6.6 7.2 4.7 8.4 5.0 7.3 7.0 8.2 4.5 9.6 4.1 8.2 7.7 2.3 .4 4.2 4.6 3.4 3.5 4.3 4.0 3.6 2.3 10.6 6.8 5.5 10.3 11.8 7.8 5.2 10.5 10.2 10.6 6.3 9.5 5.9 2.0 -.3 4.1 4.5 4 3.8 2.2 -.8 5.0 11.7 8.2 5.7 -4.8 -5.9 3.1 -9.6 11.6 Government 11.2 6.3 5.3 4.7 4.4 5.7 7.1 3.5 4.5 8.3 9.9 2.7 Whole- Finance, sale and insurance, retail real trade and estate Manufacturing Con- 6.3 12.0 Transportation, public utilities struction 5.2 4.6 4.3 5.7 7.1 3.5 4.6 6.1 8.0 6.8 4.8 8.8 . Mining 5.0 4.4 4.7 5.3 6.0 4.4 4.9 7.7 . Nonfarm 5.9 11.2 . Total 8.5 4.6 4.2 12.2 9.7 8.6 5.0 7.3 -2.8 9.2 8.3 8.9 6.5 7.6 1.1.3 14.5 15.3 12.5 9.5 7.6 24.4 17.4 12.0 14.1 11.0 9.8 12.9 8.0 15.6 10.5 11.4 17.9 11.7 5.2 12.4 10.9 17.0 15.5 27.4 25.5 13.1 12.5 17.7 14.8 21.6 12.6 24.4 17.0 9.2 14.9 8.8 3.3 19 17.6 7.8 12.7 7.9 9.5 8.5 9.6 7.7 7.0 8.2 13.8 13.3 16.0 6.7 6.9 9.6 5.0 8.8 8.4 7.5 7.5 6.3 5.0 6.6 5.5 3.6 6.6 10.7 12.5 6.7 5.7 7.8 5.1 13.9 2.9 9.5 9.5 2.4 -3.7 1.6 2.2 18.1 9.5 2.1 11.1 5.4 3.7 3.0 7.5 Services Other Military 9.7 2.7 -4.2 5.4 7.8 9.3 8.1 6.6 3.5 1.5 -9.0 -4.5 5.4 8.3 3.7 4.8 3.8 1.2 5.7 11.2 6.3 7.8 6.0 6.8 4.6 5.7 6.0 5.8 8.4 7.8 5.5 5.0 5.5 6.0 5.3 5.1 5.0 4.7 7.7 7.2 6.7 9.3 7.7 8.1 7.9 6.1 9.0 8.8 9.0 7.2 6.3 7.7 3.7 5.3 6.0 5.2 7.1 6.3 8.0 8.3 7.0 6.3 11.6 10.7 11.9 16.8 11.2 5.4 8.4 6.2 4.6 4.7 3.8 7.0 7.4 7.7 7.5 7.1 8.8 7.8 5.0 7.4 7.4 4.9 5.4 2.8 6.2 4.4 4.3 4.2 4.5 7.0 6.3 5.8 7.8 6.9 7.4 6.0 8.2 10.4 11.2 6.8 6.4 7.7 4.0 6.5 8.3 7.2 8.4 8.7 6.8 9.4 6.9 6.8 8.2 8.5 8.9 7.4 8.0 8.1 8.3 7.7 9.4 8.4 9.0 8.5 6.9 5.6 5.3 2.7 6.3 5.7 .6 5.4 2.4 7.7 5.5 6.4 5.2 2.5 7.9 5.0 6.9 8.4 8.3 6.9 7.5 10.3 12.1 10.6 7.5 11.2 4.8 2.9 7.8 8.0 9.0 7.8 5.9 8.5 1.5 5,2 6.4 4.5 3.8 11.0 6.0 7.4 -1.9 8.2 13.4 9.9 6.9 7.3 10.2 10.2 10.0 7.7 12.4 7.3 5.5 8.6 4.4 -1.3 12.8 8.9 7.8 14.0 5.8 16.2 7.7 7.9 8.5 6.8 7.3 8.1 11,3 2.0 12.0 11.7 6.4 8.0 7.2 9.9 9.3 11.5 8.5 9.5 13.2 6.7 14.1 10.7 9.1 12.5 13.3 7.3 14.4 14.6 12.0 6.7 8.7 7.7 5.8 6.4 10.9 12.7 8.2 3.4 4.9 6.1 3.8 8.0 3.3 13 8.4 9.1 9.8 8.2 8.0 8.7 7.5 12.8 14.4 1.6 5.6 1.2 5.4 5.9 4.8 5.0 1.7 10.5 10.5 11.9 7.6 .7 8.1 8.4 7.5 7.5 6.3 4.9 6.2 4.3 4.7 7.9 1.4 5.5 4.9 7.1 7.0 7.4 8.2 6.5 9.4 5.6 State and local Federal, civilian 5.4 10.3 10.9 10.6 8.5 17.7 11.8 8.5 2.7 9.3 3.4 22.6 10.7 5.3 -9.0 5.8 10.9 -15.9 -7.0 -6.2 9.2 1.5 -14.2 1.0 2.1 -2.7 -1.0 -2.3 2.9 3.7 3.0 3.8 3.4 2.5 .3 4.8 4.4 5.5 .4 7.5 -.9 -2.3 -7.0 .3 -4.4 .3 -10.1 -10.1 -6.0 -1.6 3.9 4.1 4.7 3.3 3.9 3.2 2.9 5.1 -2.3 3.6 .8 3.4 3.5 4.2 8.4 3.4 3.8 4.8 -.4 7.0 2.2 9.1 -3.8 -5.3 -7.1 -8.7 1.8 -4.9 4.4 -.4 3.5 1.3 2.3 1.7 3.4 -2.1 4.4 2.1 -.7 2.0 -3.7 3.9 -.7 3.8 .6 .8 -.6 -4.7 -5.2 -1.3 -7.6 ,1 -.9 -.8 3.0 -.9 -9.6 -2.8 -3.9 -5.1 .9 4.1 1.6 -4.2 1.5 -4.8 -5.3 -11.6 -2.1 -1.3 -.4 -7.9 -9.2 -11 3 3.5 .7 -.2 4.4 6.4 6.1 5.6 2.7 6.4 5.3 3.8 8.3 5.0 5.9 5.4 6.7 5.9 5.9 8.4 6.8 5.5 2.8 6.2 6.7 8.9 8.0 7.1 7.2 5.5 5.4 9.2 4.4 4.9 8.7 6.7 6.3 6.2 8.3 6.9 4.3 6.0 5.6 5.2 7.2 5.1 7.1 2.3 4.1 3.1 4.0 6.6 4.8 4.4 Census Divisions New England Middle Atlantic East North Central West North Central South Atlantic . . East South Central West South Central Mountain I!!.!.'!.!..!!..! pacific .'....• 5.0 4.9 7.0 7.7 6.4 7.0 5.9 7.7 3.9 1. Percent change was calculated from unrounded data. 2. Consists of wage and salary disbursements, other labor income, and proprietors' income. 5.2 5.0 7.8 8.9 6.5 7.7 6.3 8.6 4.1 5.3 5.0 7.8 7.4 6.5 7.7 6.5 9.2 4.3 -.7 3.5 7.7 3.3 8.0 6.1 3.6 2.6 -1.6 8.5 7.4 12.6 16.3 9.9 11.9 12.4 20.8 8.6 2.8 2.8 9.4 8.5 6.0 7.2 6.5 9.3 2.3 5.7 5.8 7.7 5.4 6.5 8.2 7.3 8.7 4.9 6.0 5.5 7.9 7.7 7.7 8.5 7.5 11.3 5.2 7.8 8.1 11.6 10.4 9.5 12.5 10.6 12.9 8.2 3.5 3.4 3.4 3.9 2.2 4.7 2.9 .6 2.0 -9.0 -3.9 -4.4 -2.3 -3.9 -1.7 -.1 -1.4 -8.1 5.4 4.2 5.3 6.7 6.3 8.1 5.9 6.5 4.1 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 Local Area Personal Income, 1991-93 THIS REPORT PRESENTS new estimates of personal income and per capita personal income for local areas—that is, for counties and metropolitan areas— for 1993 and revised estimates for 1991-92. It also discusses the sources of the revisions to the local area estimates for 1991-92. Table i presents estimates for the metropolitan areas, including the new Hattiesburg, Mississippi, metropolitan statistical area (Forrest and Lamar Counties), which was defined by the Office of Management and Budget in July 1994. The metropolitan areas in all States, including the States of the New England region, are defined in terms of counties and county equivalents. For the New England region, the preferred definitions of the metropolitan areas are in terms of cities and towns, but the available data for cities and towns are not sufficient to prepare estimates of personal income.1 Table 2 presents estimates for counties and county equivalents. For Virginia, estimates are presented for the larger independent cities as well as for most counties; estimates for the smaller independent cities are combined with estimates for adjacent counties. i. The list of the metropolitan areas and their constituent counties is available from the National Technical Information Service (NTIS) in hard copy (Accession No. PB 94-165-628) and in electronic format (Wordperfect 5.1, Accession No. PB 94-501-707). Write to NTIS, Document Sales, 5205 Port Royal Road, Springfield, VA 22161, or call (703) 487-4650. Revisions to the estimates The estimates for 1991-92 were revised to reflect the revision of the State estimates of the components of personal income that were released in August 1994 and the routine incorporation of source data that are more current than the data that were available when the 1992 local area estimates were prepared.2 The incorporation of new source data mainly affected the estimates of nonfarm proprietors' income, of dividends, interest, and rent, and of the residence adjustment, which is the net inflow of the earnings of interarea commuters. The 1991-92 estimates of nonfarm proprietors' income were revised to incorporate 1991 data on the number of small establishments by industry from the Census Bureau's County Business Patterns. The 1992 estimates of dividends, interest, and rent and of the residence adjustment were revised to incorporate Internal Revenue Service tabulations of individual income tax return data for 1992. 2. See "State Personal Income, Revised Estimates for 1991-93/' SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 74 (August 1994): 64-79. In addition, both the State and the local area estimates of per capita personal income for 1990 have been recomputed to reflect revised Census Bureau estimates of population. The State estimates of per capita personal income are included in table 3 of "Total and Per Capita Personal Income by State and Region" in this issue; for the availability of the local area estimates, see the next section. Acknowledgments The revised estimates of local area personal income were prepared by the Regional Economic Measurement Division under the direction of Linnea Hazen, former Chief. The preparation of the estimates was a divisionwide effort. Estimates of nonfarm labor earnings (wages and salaries and other labor income) were prepared by the Regional Wage Branch under the supervision of Sharon C. Carnevale, Chief. Major responsibilities were assigned to Elizabeth P. Cologer, Lisa C. Ninomiya, Michael G. Pilot, John A. Rusinko, and James M. Scott. Contributing staff members were E. Frances Bake, Christopher T. Berry, Lisa A. Bradburn, Susan P. Den Herder, Elizabeth A. Freeman, Lela S. Lester, Russell C. Lusher, Richard A. Lutyk, Paul K. Medzerian, Mauricio Ortiz, Michael Phillips, William E. Reid, Jr., Lori A. Riegert, Victor A. Sahadachny, and Jaime Zenzano. Estimates of farm earnings (wages and salaries, other labor income, and proprietors' income) and the residence adjustments were prepared by the Quarterly Income Branch under the supervision of Robert L, Brown, Assistant Division Chief. Major responsibilities were assigned to James M. Zavrel. Contributing staff members were Elaine M. Briccetti, Daniel R. Corrin, Richard H. Grayson, Michael S. Wagner, and Daniel Zabronsky. Estimates of nonfarm proprietors' income, dividends, interest, rent, transfer payments, and personal contributions for social insurance were prepared by the Proprietors' Income Branch. Major responsibilities were assigned to Charles A. Jolley. Contributing staff members were Sean P. Collier, Catherine A. Cumberland, Toan A. Ly, Ellen M. Wright, and Marianne A. Ziver. The public use tabulations and data files were assembled and the text and tables for this report were prepared by the Regional Economic Information System Branch. Major responsibilities were assigned to Kathy A. Albetski, Wallace K. Bailey, and Gary V. Kennedy. Contributing staff members were H Steven Dolan, Jeffrey L. Newman, Michael J. Paris, Albert Silverman, Nancy E. Smith, Callan S. Swenson, Monique B. Tyes, and Mary C. Williams. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 68 • April 1995 Data availability Personal income by type of payment, earnings by Standard Industrial Classification (sic) division, population, and per capita personal income are available for metropolitan areas and counties for 1969-93 (see table A). Data are also available as follows: A version of the foregoing table that includes earnings by sic two-digit industry; a set of tables that includes only the three summary statistics—personal income, per capita personal income, and population; and supplemental tables for employment by sic division, for transfer payments by program, and for major categories of farm income and expenses. The summary statistics are presented in Local Area Personal Income, 1969-92, which also presents a description of the sources and methods used to prepare the estimates and a list of the State agencies and uni- versities from which the more detailed tables can be obtained.3 The entire set of the detailed and summary tables for all counties and metropolitan areas and for all years will be available on a CD-ROM by the end of May. This CD-ROM will also contain quarterly State estimates of personal income for 1969-94, gross state product estimates for 1977-92, projections of State and metropolitan area personal income and employment to 2040, and a description of the sources and jmethods used to estimate local area personal income. The CD-ROM is designed for use with microcomputers equipped with the MS-DOS operating system and in3. U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, Local Area Personal Income, 1969-92 (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, September 1994). The 1991-92 estimates of personal income and the 1990-92 estimates of population and per capita personal income in that publication have been superseded by revisions. Table A.—Example of Available Data for Local Areas: Personal Income by Major Source and Earnings by Major Industry, 1988-93l [Thousands of dollars] New London County, Connecticut 1988 1990 1991 1992 1993 income by Place of Residence Total personal income Nonfarm personal income Farm income2 Population (thousands)3 Per capita personal income (dollars) Derivation of total personal income: Total earnings by place of work Less: Personal contributions for social insurance4 Plus: Adjustment for residence5 Equals: Net earnings by place of residence Plus: Dividends, interest, and rent6 Plus: Transfer payments 4,696,727 4,649,645 47,082 5,001,642 4,953,590 48,052 5,129,498 5,071,027 58,471 5,304,888 5,245,818 59,070 5,542,255 5,479,860 62,395 5,727,364 5,658,582 254.3 18,472 254.9 19,625 255.2 20,102 253.9 20,891 247.9 22,358 248.8 23,017 3,557,432 221,909 47,913 3,383,436 753,194 560,097 3,742,284 238,690 41,932 3,545,526 836,872 619,244 3,797,899 246,894 3,606,893 821,127 701,478 3,914,754 265,681 29,337 3,678,410 845,061 781,417 4,088,473 288,732 40,094 3,839,835 803,606 898,814 4,243,527 310,220 24,947 3,958,254 834,168 934,942 2,962,737 277,716 316,979 35,200 281,779 3,122,063 306,191 314,030 35,595 278,435 3,169,878 316,737 311,284 42,317 268,967 3,252,738 344,768 317,248 43,273 273,975 3,378,916 370,005 339,552 46,031 293,521 3,482,644 398,029 362,854 49,722 313,132 47,082 3,510,350 2,717,472 13,303 2,870 252,605 1,041,641 270,198 771,443 177,038 87,800 372,678 105,704 663,833 792,878 140,846 296,219 355,813 48,052 3,694,232 2,851,514 11,880 3,032 249,006 1,092,398 58,471 3,739,428 2,831,824 13,437 4,236 182,679 1,108,053 306,990 801,063 59,070 3,855,684 2,910,090 13,500 4,652 159,111 1,146,157 329,209 816,948 212,037 89,131 349,306 110,957 825,239 945,594 156,696 322,628 466,270 62,395 4,026,078 3,096,971 13,482 7,545 191,544 1,100,003 358,807 741,196 210,918 95,561 358,884 124,825 994,209 929,107 165,095 289,074 474,938 68,782 4,174,745 3,212,127 16,105 7,567 187,674 1,084,430 376,090 708,340 235,912 95,676 373,403 119,979 1,091,381 962,618 170,165 268,923 523,530 Earnings by Place of Work Earnings by type: Wages and salaries Other labor jncome 7 Proprietors' income Farm Nonfarm Earnings by industry: Farm ; ..... Nonfarm Private Agricultural services, forestry, fisheries, and other8 Mining Construction Manufacturing .... Nondurable goods ......,., Durable goods , Transportation and public utilities Wholesale trade .;.Retail trade Finance, insurance, and real estate Services Government and government enterprises Federal, civilian ... Military State and local D L Not shown to avoid disclosure of confidential information. Estimates are included in totals. Less than $50,000. Estimates are included in totals. 1.1988-93 based on 1987 SIC. 2. Farm income consists of proprietors' net farm income, the wages of hired labor, the pay-in-kind of hired farm labor, and the salaries of officers of corporate farms. 3. Census Bureau midyear population estimates. Estimates for 1990-93 reflect State and county estimates available as of February 1995. 4. Personal contributions for social insurance are included.in earnings by type and industry but excluded from 803,110 194,913 94,770 377,057 104,553 723,905 842,718 144,193 298,470 400,055 87,259 360,025 106,697 775,049 907,604 158,604 322,619 426,381 personal income. 5. U.S. adjustment for residence consists of adjustments for border workers: Income of U.S. residents commuting outside U.S. borders to work less income of foreign residents commuting inside U.S. borders to work plus certain Caribbean seasonal workers. 6. Includes the capital consumption adjustment for rental income of persons. 7. Includes the inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments. 8. "Other" consists of wages and salaries of U.S. residents employed by international organizations and foreign embassies and consulates in the U.S. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS eludes a program to help users select, display, print, and copy the tables. The price is $35.00. These tables are also available on magnetic tapes, computer printouts, and microcomputer diskettes. Each table for all years of data for all the metropolitan areas or for all the counties is available on a single reel of magnetic tape, but the table that includes earnings by sic two-digit industry requires two reels at standard blocksize; the price of each reel of magnetic tape is $100. The tables on computer printouts are priced by the number of pages; the minimum charge is $10. The tables on diskette are priced at $20 per diskette; as many as nine diskettes are required for all of the local areas in a given table series, April 1995 • but users can limit their orders to the local areas in particular States. In addition, the following information is free: A sample packet of all tables, a list of the State agencies and universities from which the State and local area estimates can be obtained, and a description of sources and methods used to prepare the local area estimates. For information on ordering these products, write to the Regional Economic Information System, BE55, Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. Department of Commerce, Washington, DC 20230, or call (202) 6065360. Visa or Mastercard are accepted for telephone orders. Tables i and 2 follow. H 69 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 70 • April 1995 Table 1.—Total Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by Metropolitan Area, 1991-93 Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Area name 1991 United States 2 Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolltan portion Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1992 1993 1992-93 Rank in U.S. Dollars 1991 1992 1993 4,841,078 5,135,452 5,361,968 4,084,174 4,329,394 4,519,469 756,904 806,058 842,499 4.4 4.4 4.5 19,201 20,137 20,800 20,335 21,300 21,994 14,758 15,571 16,111 4.5 4.1 4.3 5.8 7.2 4.7 4.6 22,181 19,064 19,919 20,575 21,599 20,492 20,483 1.6 4.5 20,788 21,266 21,388 19,578 19,284 21,108 20,434 21,690 22,600 .............. wv 184,676 35,128 57,256 85,162 43,830 106,867 78,949 196,557 37,486 59,933 91,805 46,992 113,208 84,801 205,307 39,025 62,495 97,146 50,359 118,551 88,727 308,148 63,945 33,111 320,326 63,966 35,331 325,310 70,793 36,935 503,953 534,717 552,496 3.3 25,847 27,334 28,122 131,372 35,714 30,352 138,266 38,407 32,122 142,974 40,832 33,052 3.4 6.3 2.9 22,205 23,325 24,064 19,234 20,222 21,001 19,736 20,578 20,969 159,928 67,910 170,661 73,589 176,570 76,128 3.5 3.4 25,245 22,214 165,098 173,378 181,313 4.6 24,177 25,084 25,956 1,936 12,008 1,704 17,438 10,250 1,894 11,723 2,015 3,206 5,854 2,053 12,738 1,771 18,263 10,996 1,961 12,341 2,155 3,432 6,275 2,140 13,349 1,886 18,991 11,907 2,076 12,853 2,261 3,661 6,663 4.2 4.8 6.5 4.0 8.3 5.9 4.1 4.9 6.7 6.2 16,348 18,096 15,029 20,071 17,015 14,379 19,482 15,355 16,988 24,882 16,985 19,061 15,394 20,936 17,843 15,029 20,365 16,396 17,964 25,537 17,635 19,843 16,236 21,724 18,899 16,579 21,100 17,157 18,888 26,619 10,462 1,667 5,812 3,342 1,991 63,543 7,339 7,232 15,506 8,988 11,271 1,758 6,319 3,570 2,103 68,383 7,732 7,699 17,005 9,367 11,907 1,834 6,622 3,805 2,249 73,206 8,003 8,050 18,397 9,786 5.6 4.3 4.8 6.6 7.0 7.1 3.5 4.6 8.2 4.5 20,987 14,454 18,180 17,131 15,561 20,807 22,643 16,824 17,759 15,750 22,349 15,143 19,500 18,044 16,286 21,812 23,680 17,392 18,897 15,928 23,378 15,679 20,153 18,943 17,202 22,675 24,397 18,147 19,737 16,312 52,387 2,369 4,293 8,986 6,159 2,345 2,673 36,305 2,070 4,417 54,626 2,487 4,369 9,707 6,640 2,501 2,850 38,148 2,218 4,752 56,584 2,589 4,557 10,128 6,773 2,611 3,018 39,315 2,378 5,261 3.6 4.1 4.3 4.3 2.0 4.4 5.9 3.1 7.2 21,718 16,101 22,785 16,745 16,847 17,580 16,566 28,330 17,964 13,981 22,483 17,021 22,961 17,782 17,977 18,108 17,639 29,573 18,781 14,721 23,153 17,711 23,619 18,308 18,207 18,362 18,660 30,298 19,676 15,920 4,807 15,557 1,388 1,680 2,449 5,555 4,943 16,626 1,531 1,802 2,650 6,116 5,044 17,494 1,601 1,884 2,750 6,722 2.0 5.2 4.6 4.6 3.8 9.9 18,129 18,327 16,407 15,372 18,581 17,943 18,612 19,414 17,807 16,276 19,844 19,106 19,081 20,234 18,335 16,788 20,238 20,114 224 121 281 59 155 269 76 239 156 14 35 290 105 153 235 45 25 189 123 277 39 216 31 182 186 178 169 4 124 288 147 103 180 258 102 107 131,227 5,179 3,434 3,601 136,412 5,630 3,572 3,902 141,698 6,011 3,730 4,019 3.9 6.8 4.4 3.0 23,146 24,043 24,861 22,373 23,657 24,612 17,287 17,587 18,005 17,971 18,507 18,676 22 24 197 168 2,679 1,622 22,249 3,465 6,676 1,300 3,308 2,879 8,185 4,525 2,965 1,739 23,143 3,661 7,048 1,329 3,525 3,020 8,561 4,836 3,208 1,878 23,863 3,842 7,394 1,399 3,690 3,043 8,889 5,127 8.2 8.0 3.1 4.9 4.9 5.2 4.7 .8 3.8 6.0 9,922 13,195 18,666 19,310 16,831 21,004 19,387 16,572 15,647 18,006 10,636 13,897 19,401 20,227 17,678 21,312 20,372 17,245 16,250 19,125 11,042 14,602 20,013 20,933 18,439 22,216 21,096 17,852 16,910 20,179 22,515 2,667 7,234 1,365 170,068 2,854 29,941 2,203 45,248 7,133 24,102 2,869 7,739 1,458 181,158 3,036 31,913 2,518 47,195 7,715 25,726 3,037 8,251 1,547 189,213 3,154 33,192 2,642 49,146 8,195 6.7 5.9 6.6 6.1 4.4 3.9 4.0 4.9 4.1 6.2 18,884 19,946 16,908 18,504 22,719 15,272 19,394 13,003 20,466 17,668 19,913 21,148 17,983 19,330 23,987 16,026 20,488 14,084 21,271 18,338 20,856 21,943 18,960 20,107 24,857 16,507 21,116 14,657 22,126 18,841 1,978 8,232 4,066 25,799 2,118 8,688 4,333 27,750 2,219 9,113 4,505 29,195 4.8 4.9 4.0 5.2 17,237 17,716 15,614 18,820 18,117 18,605 18,436 18,978 16,076 16,612 19,947 20,717 309 301 114 83 175 51 78 210 250 104 86 57 152 108 23 271 75 300 52 161 170 151 266 88 10.7 23,400 20,133 20,760 21,824 22,509 21,621 21,467 24,251 20,744 21,595 22,702 23,463 22,600 22,028 ""••»»"•• 26,623 27,293 23,494 23,873 Metropolitan Statistical Areas 4 Abilene, TX Albany, GA Albany-Schenectady-Troy, NY Albuquerque, NM Alexandria LA Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton, PA .... Altoona PA Amarillo, TX Anchoraae AK Ann Arbor Ml * Anniston AL Appleton-Oshkosh-Neenah, Wl Asheville NC Athens GA Atlanta' GA Atlantic-Cape May, NJ* Augusta-Aiken GA-SC Austin-San Marcos, TX Bakersfield, CA Baltimore MD* Banoor ME (NECMA) Barnstable-Yarmouth, MA (NECMA) Baton Rouge LA Beaumont-Port Arthur TX BeHingham WA Benton Harbor Ml Beroen-Passaic NJ * Billings MT '. Biloxi-Gulfport-Pascagoula, MS Binghamton NY Birmingham AL Bismarck ND . „ Bloomington IN Bloomington-Normal IL .. .. Boise City, ID Boston-Worcester-Lawrence-LowellBrockton, MA-NH (NECMA) Boulder-Longmont CO* Brazoria TX* Bremerton, WA* Brownsville-Harlingen-San Benito, TX Bryan-College Station, TX Buffalo-Niagra Falls, NY Burlington, VT (NECMA) Canton-Massillon, OH Casper WY .. .. Cedar Rapids IA Champaign-Urbana, IL Charleston-North Charleston, SC .... Charleston, WV Charlotte-Gastonia-Rock Hill, NC-SC Charlottesville, VA Chattanooga, TN-GA Cheyenne, WY Chicago, IL* Ghico-Paradise CA Cincinnati, OH-KY-IN* Clarksville-Hopkinsville, TN-KY Cleveland-Lorain-Elvria,OH* Colorado Springs, CO Columbia MO Columbia SC Columbus GA-AL Columbus OH See footnotes at end of table. 10.7 Area name 1991 Corpus Christi, TX Cumberland, MD-WV Dallas TX* Danville VA . . . Davenport-Moline-Rock Island, IA-IL Dayton-Springfield, OH Daytona Beach, FL Decatur AL . . .. Decatur IL Denver GO* Des Moines, IA Detroit Ml* Dothan AL Dover DE Dubuoue IA Duluth-Superior, MN-wi Dutchess County, NY* Eau Claire Wl El Paso TX Elkhart-Goshen, IN Elmira NY Enid OK Erie,' PA ..... Eugene-Springfield, OR Evansville-Henderson, IN-KY Fargo-Moorhead, ND-MN Fayetteville, NC Fayetteville-Springdale-Rogers, AR . Flint, Ml * Florence, AL Florence SC Fort Collins-Loveland, CO Fort Lauderdale, FL* Fort Myers-Cape Coral, FL Fort Pierce-Port St. Lucie, FL Fort Smith, AR-OK Fort Walton Beach, FL Fort Wayne IN Fort Worth-Arlington, TX* Fresno, CA Gadsden AL Gainesville, FL Galveston-Texas City, TX* Gary, IN* Glens Falls NY Goldsboro NC Grand Forks, ND-MN Grand Rapids-Muskegon-Holland, Great Falls MT Greeley CO* Green Bay, Wl Greensboro-Winston-Salem-High Point, NC Greenville, NC Greenville-Spartanburg-Anderson, sc Hagerstown, MD* Hamilton-Middletown, OH* Harrisburg-Lebanon-Carlisle, PA Hartford, CT (NECMA) Hattiesburg, MS Hickory-Morganton, NC Honolulu HI Houma, LA Houston TX* Huntington-Ashland, WV-KY-OH Huntsville, AL Indianapolis, IN '.. Iowa Citv IA Jackson Ml Jackson MS Jackson, TN Jacksonville FL Jacksonville, NC .... Jamestown NY Janesville-Beloit Wl Jersey City NJ . . Johnson City-Kingsport-Bristol, TNJohnstown, PA .... Joplin, MO Kalamazoo-Battle Creek, Ml Kankakee, IL* .... Kansas City, MO-KS Kenosha,WI *..... Killeen-Temple, TX Knoxville, TN Kokomo, IN La Crosse, WI-MN Lafayette, LA Lafayette, IN Lake Charles, LA Lakeland-Winter Haven, FL 1992 Per capita personal income3 Percent change2 ..Millions of dollars 1993 Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Areas Ghicago-Gary-Kenosha, IL-IN-WI Cincinnati-Hamilton, OH-KY-IN , Cleveland-Akron, OH Dallas-Fort Worth TX DenveNBoulder-Greeley, CO Detroit-Ann Arbor-Flint, Ml Houston-Galveston-Brazoria, TX Los Angeles-Riverside-Orange County CA . . . . . Miami-Fort Lauderdale, FL Milwaukee-Racine, Wl New York-No. New Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-CT-PA Philadelphia-Wilmington-Atlantic City, PA-NJ-DE-MD Portland-Salem, OR-WA Sacramento-Yolo, CA San Francisco-Oakland-San Jose, CA Seattle-Tacoma-Bremerton, WA Washington-Baltimore, DC-MD-VA- Total personal income 1993 992-93 Rank in Dollars 1991 1992 U.S. 1993 1993 i,548 1,697 1,685 6.2 3.1 6.2 4.0 3.6 4.0 5.8 4.3 3.9 7.1 4.6 4.7 2.1 5.1 3.0 3.5 1.9 3.7 5.6 6.3 3.1 3.9 3.8 6.2 4.7 3.1 5.5 6.6 3.7 3.9 5.8 8.0 7.4 5.0 4.2 3.6 5.6 4.7 4.9 4.4 4.0 6.1 4.6 4.1 3.1 6.3 -.7 15,083 16,390 16,290 278 17,211 1,323 2,085 3,711 18,446 1,393 2,207 3,999 19,545 1,475 2,404 4,221 6.0 5.9 8.9 5.5 18,036 16,884 15,617 18,686 19,126 20,062 17,584 18,369 16,221 17,145 19,857 20,637 112 177 240 92 20,113 1,766 21,446 1,889 22,682 2,016 5.8 6.7 18,859 15,907 19,892 20,772 16,795 17,679 87 218 13,670 2,000 5,187 14,413 2,076 5,573 15,295 2,145 5,833 16,218 16,173 17,356 16,914 16,561 18,315 17,740 17,028 18,852 215 246 160 11,770 27,575 1,321 4,783 19,365 2,418 71,499 4,581 5,706 27,931 12,389 28,507 1,415 5,161 20,807 2,475 76,933 4,904 6,198 30,048 12,900 29,275 1,503 5,501 21,601 2,645 80,503 5,077 6,436 31,775 19,743 24,511 13,220 16,177 22,802 13,104 20,826 14,604 19,018 19,863 20,624 25,417 14,038 17,289 24,166 13,328 21,856 15,587 20,185 21,095 21,305 26,147 14,707 18,213 24,929 14,192 22,433 16,043 20,519 22,019 71 15 299 185 21 302 47 283 93 55 1,733 2,406 6,444 1,266 17,195 1,593 2,183 2,404 10,986 1,849 2,530 6,875 1,385 18,210 1,818 2,274 2,662 11,597 1,939 2,647 7,294 1,459 19,346 1,911 2,381 2,776 11,945 6.1 3.3 4.7 4.1 2.7 6.2 6.6 3.8 6.9 4.6 3.5 3.8 5.7 4.8 4.6 6.1 5.4 6.2 5.1 4.7 4.3 3.0 17,914 18,853 15,921 16,687 16,133 17,029 15,987 17,249 18,469 19,172 10,604 12,587 15,332 16,009 17,021 18,622 19,877 20,964 19,578 17,349 17,904 17,920 20,102 13,168 16,724 19,233 21,610 128 233 204 201 109 307 260 141 65 6,730 7,155 7,446 3,720 2,062 7,774 1,600 31,807 2,264 3,309 10,338 1,766 2,034 3,906 2,210 8,201 1,695 33,729 2,419 3,761 11,134 1,882 2,161 4,010 2,341 8,600 1,799 35,291 2,545 4,170 11,821 2,010 2,248 4,984 2,613 2,617 6,489 5,234 2,805 2,744 6,817 5,519 2,948 2,871 7,130 5,499 1,518 58,557 1,620 6,509 17,682 5,946 1,561 63,209 1,713 6,826 18,523 6,313 1,610 67,136 1,781 7,070 19,267 6,544 2,185 2,153 36,566 8,199 88,701 2,029 1,742 1,467 3,879 6,867 2,330 2,262 39,155 8,801 93,953 2,179 1;861 1,580 4,102 7,267 2,431 2,349 41,944 9,203 98,367 2,224 1,956 1,628 4,245 5,699 2,163 7,122 2,713 1,578 928 4,710 4,708 5,039 2,586 5,883 2,321 7,833 2,962 1,639 974 5,013 5,017 5,418 2,821 5,993 2,407 8,274 3,148 1,689 1,012 5,205 5,327 5,673 2,910 3,803 3,519 7,704 2,008 1,792 3,389 28,762 6,791 5,403 2,583 4,427 3,936 7,983 2,136 1,909 3,643 29,980 7,152 5,609 2,836 4,672 4,194 8,278 2,219 2,020 3,936 32,202 7,511 5,847 2,937 2,508 8,376 26,605 12,500 1,427 3,107 4,016 10,745 1,943 1,448 2,711 9,039 28,596 13,339 1,535 3,309 4,295 11,285 2,059 1,549 2,863 9,464 30,010 13,921 1,597 3,510 4,494 11,750 2,122 1,647 4.1 2.7 5.9 4.9 6.1 4.6 5.2 10.9 6.2 6.8 4.1 5.5 5.1 4.6 4.6 15,454 14,926 21,352 14,828 18,397 18,496 16,483 17,093 15,373 15,900 22,658 23,605 15,688 16,278 19,145 19,786 19,324 20,093 241 289 32 279 122 110 15,792 16,298 18,287 21,971 20,516 20,701 15,346 15,225 16,903 16,092 16,225 17,169 19,190 22,849 21,669 21,853 16,364 16,040 18,092 16,959 16,812 17,651 20,032 23,807 22,331 22,856 16,624 16,546 18,503 17,561 256 221 113 30 49 42 265 270 173 227 21,840 22,405 15,553 16,564 11,618 12,478 17,227 18,594 16,588 17,218 16,475 17,245 16,970 17,964 16,367 17,240 17,952 19,132 16,650 17,893 22,797 17,054 12,790 19,476 17,770 17,917 18,604 18,045 19,907 18,202 43 243 308 130 214 203 171 195 118 187 13,699 16,110 17,838 15,087 15,342 17,657 22,326 19,543 20,682 14,509 15,917 17,441 18,468 15,935 16,142 18,381 22,866 20,258 21,072 15,717 16,403 17,866 19,139 16,403 16,877 19,189 23,840 20,907 21,472 16,015 274 209 146 274 251 144 29 85 67 285 16,946 18,202 19,049 15,919 14,290 16,740 18,038 17,591 16,183 13,619 17,738 18,202 19,520 20,299 20,183 20,912 16,572 16,918 15,364 15,993 17,518 18,424 18,906 19,363 18,370 19,035 17,033 17,401 14,440 15,261 187 97 84 249 286 176 134 149 232 295 15,288 16,105 16,608 267 15,423 15,161 17,964 16,393 19,862 17,198 13,177 17,277 18,049 17,354 16,209 16,054 18,795 17,113 20,894 18,056 14,742 18,254 19,132 18,265 16,673 16,755 19,538 17,918 21,639 18,695 15,486 19,058 20,278 18,857 263 259 129 202 63 167 292 148 98 159 14,268 16,029 15,408 15,714 14,833 17,106 16,056 16,272 15,434 17,810 16,69 16,85 293 212 262 254 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • 71 Table 1.—Total Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by Metropolitan Area, 1991-93—Continued Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Area name 1991 Lancaster PA . . . Lansing-East Lansing, Ml Laredo TX Las Cruces NM Las Vegas NV-AZ Lawrence, KS Lawton OK Lewiston-Auburn, ME (NECMA) Lexington, KY Lima OH Lincoln, NE ... Little Rock-North Little Rock, AR ..... Longview-Marshall TX Los Angeles-Long Beach, CA* Louisville KY-IN Lubbock TX Lynchburg VA Macon, GA Madison Wl Mansfield, OH McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, TX Medford-Ashland OR Melbourne-Titusville-Palm Bay, FL .. Memphis, TN-AR-MS Merced, CA Miami, FL* Middiesex-Somerset-Hunterdon, NJ * Milwaukee-Waukesha, Wl* Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN-WI Mobile, AL Modesto, CA Monmouth-Ocean, NJ Monroe, LA Montgomery, AL ... Muncie, IN Myrtle Beach, SC .. Naples, FL Nashville, TN Nassau-Suffolk, NY* New Haven-Bridgeport-StamfordDanbury-Waterbury, CT* New London-Norwich, CT (NECMA) New Orleans, LA New York, NY* ..... Newark, NJ* Newburgh, NY-PA* Norfolk-Virginia Beach-Newport News, VA-NC .... Oakland, CA* Ocala, FL Odessa-Midland, TX Oklahoma City, OK Olympia, WA* Omaha, NE-IA Orange County, CA* Orlando, FL Owensboro, KY Panama City, FL ... Parkersburg-Marietta, WV-OH Pensacola, FL Peoria-Pekin, IL Philadelphia, PA-NJ* Phoenix-Mesa, AZ . Pine Bluff, AR Pittsburgh, PA Pittsfield, MA (NECMA) Portland, ME (NECMA) Portland-Vancouver, OR-WA* Providence-Warwick-Pawtucket, Rl (NECMA) . .. ... Provo-Orem, UT Pueblo CO . Punta Gorda FL Racine Wl * Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill, NC Rapid City, SD Reading, PA Redding, CA Reno NV . Richland-Kennewick-Pasco, WA Richmond-Petersburg, VA Riverside-San Bernardino, CA* Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1992 1993 1992-93 Rank in U.S. Dollars 1991 1992 1993 9,065 4.2 8,344 2.6 1,682 8.4 2,008 5.5 21,451 9.1 1,385 5.0 1,748 1.5 1,900 4.0 8,231 4.3 2,798 3.0 4,501 5.1 ,10,228 4.6 3,526 4,0 197,843 1.3 20,543 4.9 4,084 , 6.6 3,626 5.7 4.4 5,420 8,962 6.1 2,984 6.5 4,466 7.8 2,830 6.1 8,243 3.8 21,247 5.6 2,904 2.7 38,591 13.6 30,645 4.1 33,133 4.5 64,093 5.0 8,327 6.0 6,875 3.9 26,388 4.6 2,274 4.3 5,753 5.1 2,184 4.3 2,506 3.1 7.7 4,991 22,597 7.1 3.2 75,675 19,051 17,630 9,663 12,531 19,284 14,875 13,926 16,747 17,965 16,348 18,160 17,364 16,131 21,006 18,958 16,224 16,729 16,777 20,749 15,476 9,428 16,458 18,072 18,379 14,236 17,788 26,800 20,552 21,976 15,025 16,261 23,703 14,281 17,180 16,570 15,510 27,610 19,125 27,099 20,037 18,666 10,464 13,014 20,336 15,629 14,311 17,575 18,813 17,431 19,454 18,612 17,158 21,531 20,284 17,066 17,213 17,404 22,221 16,010 9,833 17,276 18,685 19,508 14,945 16,943 28,178 21,862 23,327 15,885 16,745 24,992 15,030 18,096 17,511 16,028 28,052 20,649 27,875 20,671 19,140 10,757 13,228 21,232 16,023 14,794 18,286 19,328 17,943 20,130 19,192 17,662 21,661 21,092 17,947 18,067 17,886 23,193 17,037 10,085 17,890 18,915 20,386 15,082 19,266 28,999 22,786 24,145 16,494 17,083 25,805 15,586 18,716 18,292 16,872 29,237 21,634 28,630 91 145 310 306 73 284 298 184 135 200 106 143 219 61 79 199 193 207 38 245 311 205 154 96 296 139 7 44 , 27 272 242 17 291 166 183 253 6 64 9 46,252 5,305 22,222 217,052 50,268 6,404 49,232 5,542 23,447 232,228 53,523 6,758 50,723 5,727 24,623 239,824 55,324 7,010 3.0 3.3 5.0 3.3 3.4 3.7 28,326 20,891 17,222 25,421 26,249 18,691 30,206 22,358 18,053 27,176 27,865 19,417 31,151 23,017 18,882 27,975 28,687 19,882 3 41 158 10 8 119 25,454 49,906 2,978 4,178 16,383 3,233 12,530 59,407 22,709 1,392 2,055 2,348 5,481 6,278 110,106 41,844 1,147 48,065 2,837 5,198 31,118 27,003 53,557 3,238 4,336 17,477 3,524 13,466 61,961 24,151 1,476 2,192 2,547 5,871 6,590 115,880 44,523 1,217 50,675 2,954 5,450 33,500 27,984 55,568 3,420 4,530 18,250 3,715 14,002 62,940 25,641 1,537 2,312 2,665 6,134 6,952 119,737 47,490 1,256 52,531 3,012 5,675 35,605 3.6 3.8 5.6 4.5 4.4 5.4 4.0 1.6 6.2 4.1 5.5 4.6 4.5 5.5 3.3 6.7 3.2 3.7 1.9 4.1 6.3 17,396 23,571 14,682 18,227 16,909 19,069 19,308 24,280 17,808 15,842 15,803 15,724 15,572 18,358 22,332 18,311 13,460 20,035 20,517 21,218 19,809 18,053 24,931 15,595 18,624 17,805 19,953 20,542 24,927 18,530 16,635 16,426 16,958 16,296 19,238 23,490 19,087 14,312 21,073 21,545 22,253 20,853 174 18,485 25,621 19 15,972 287 1$,315 136 18,328 181 20,259 101 72 21,281 25,022 ; 20 19,224 142 237 17,193 16,852 255 17,648 222 16,810 257 20,270 99 24,236 26 19,853 120 14,890 297 21,825 58 22,094 53 23,063 40 21,651 62 17,758 3,303 1,839 2,014 3,459 17,742 1,368 6,708 2,556 6,371 2,792 19,037 46,090 18,447 3,562 1,930 2,112 3,638 19,305 1,474 7,115 2,714 6,932 3,068 20,084 48,202 19,369 3,797 2,055 2,222 3,802 20,705 1,553 7,413 2,802 7,324 3,338 21,074 49,260 5.0 6.6 6.5 5.2 4.5 7.3 5.4 4.2 3.3 5.7 8.8 4.9 2.2 19,379 12,268 14,928 17,159 19,475 19,990 16,345 19,676 16,578 24,283 17,963 21,622 16,825 20,156 12,928 15,582 17,540 20,296 21,194 17,392 20,745 17,223 25,855 19,092 22,457 17,077 21,189 13,401 16,347 18,012 21,100 22,071 18,077 21,452 17,646 26,671 20,080 23,262 17,180 74 305 276 196 76 54 192 68 223 13 111 37 238 1. The personal income level shown for the United States is derived as the sum of the county estimates; it differs from the national income and product accounts (NIPA) estimate of personal income because, by definition, it omits the earnings of Federal civilian and military personnel stationed abroad and of U.S. residents employed abroad temporarily by private U.S. firms. It can also differ from the NIPA estimate because of different data sources and revision schedules. 2. Percent change was calculated from unrounded data. Roanoke, VA Rochester MN Rochester, NY ;. Rockford, IL , Rocky Mount NC Sacramento CA* Saginaw-Bay City-Midland, Ml St. Cloud MN .... .... St Joseph MO St Louis MO-IL Salem OR* Salinas, CA Salt Lake City-Ogden, UT San Angelo, TX " San Antonio, TX ... San Diego CA San Francisco, CA * San Jose CA* San Luis Obispo-Atascadero-Paso Robles CA Santa Barbara-Santa Maria-Lompoc, CA Santa Cruz-Watsonville, CA* Santa Fe NM Santa Rosa CA* Sarasota-Bradenton, FL Savannah, GA Scranton-Wilkes-Barre-Hazelton, PA Seattle-Bellevue-Everett, WA* Sharon PA Sheboygan, Wl Sherman-Denison TX Shreveport-Bossier City, LA Sioux City, IA-NE Sioux Falls, SD South Bend, IN Spokane, WA Springfield, IL ... . .. Springfield, MO Springfield, MA (NECMA) State College, PA Steubenville-Weirton, OH-WV .......... Stockton-Lodi CA Sumter SC Syracuse NY . . . Tacoma WA* Tallahassee, FL Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL Terre Haute, IN ,. Texarkana, TX-Texarkana, AR Toledo OH Topeka, KS Trenton NJ* Tucson, AZ Tulsa OK Tuscaloosa AL Tyler, TX Utica-Rome, NY Vallejo-Fairfield-Napa, CA* Ventura, CA* Victoria TX ..;.. Vineland-Millville-Bridgeton, NJ* ...... Visalia-Tulare-Portervlle, CA ..... Waco TX . . Washington, DC-MD-VA-WV* Waterloo-Cedar Falls, IA .. Wausau Wl ......... West Palm Beach-Boca Raton, FL . Wheeling, WV-OH Wichita, KS Wichita Falls, TX Williamsport PA Wilmington-Newark, DE-MD* Wilmington, NC Yakima WA Yolo CA* York PA Youngstown-Warren, OH ..... Yuba City, CA Yuma, AZ Percent change2 Millions of dollars Area name 1993 8,197 8,698 7,678 8,135 1,552 1,360 1,764 1,903 17,874 19,655 1,237 1,318 1,722 1,54.8 1,827 1,755 7,412 7,890 2,717 2,536 3,937 4,281 9,003 9,777 3,164 3,389 195,242 188,218 19,592 18,166 3,832 3,625 3,277 3,430 4,950 5,193 7,775 8,448 2,705 2,803 4,142 3,789 2,667 2,480 7,944 7,502 18,756 20,125 2,648 2,828 35,183 33,985 27,643 29,427 29,653 , 31,693 56,740 61,042 7,292 7,853 6,283 6,618 23,652 25,237 2,046 2,181 5,474 5,111 2,094 1,981 2,308 : 2,430 4,430 4,636 19,187 21,100 70,932 ; 73,351 Per capita personal income3 Total personal income 1991 1992 1993 4,394 2,251 22,053 6,090 2,117 27,686 7,103 2,256 1,586 52,255 4,596 7,169 17,562 1,578 21,882 51,132 48,959 38,194 4,648 2,427 22,837 6,443 2,228 29,301 7,495 2,410 1,642 54,820 4,907 7,785 18,934 1,665 23,720 53,672 52,240 40,791 4,893 2,515 23,657 6,722 2,352 30,149 7,820 2,524 1,691 56,936 5,228 7,827 20,181 1,763 25,172 54,719 53,926 42,233 5.3 3.6 3.6 4.3 5.6 2.9 4.3 4.7 3.0 3.9 6.5 .5 6.6 5.9 6.1 2.0 3.2 3.5 1992-93 Rank in U.S. Dollars 1991 1992 1993 1993 19,376 20,633 20,574 18,150 15,659 19,852 17,721 14,865 16,217 20,838 16,075 19,753 15,961 16,084 16,226 20,003 30,341 25,281 20,517 21,991 21,101 18,977 16,304 20,693 18,631 15,720 16,725 21,788 16,762 .21,110 16,797 16,757 17,226 20,629 32,122 26,703 21,481 22,347 21,719 19,581 17,003 21,073 19,400 16,248 17,202 22,521 17,437 21,371 17,481 17,602 17,889 20,950 32,927 27,360 66 48 60 127 248 80 133 280 235 46 230 69 228 225 206 82 1 12 3,836 4,023 4,118 2.4 17,498 18,223 18,546 172 8,524 5,036 2,424 8,748 11,851 4,554 11,049 50,429 1,908 1,859 1,578 5,949 1,945 2,722 4,313 6,375 3,788 4,445 11,268 2,015 2,192 8,154 1,303 13,527 10,647 3,941 8,891 5,324 2,633 9,176 12,477 4,875 11,623 54,648 2,012 2,021 1,667 6,350 2,157 2,956 4,634 6,928 3,996 4,795 11,405 2,124 2,280 8,653 1,381 14,157 11,515 4,197 9,076 5,471 2,827 9,461 13,085 5,109 12,039 56,383 2,027 2,149 1,743 6,719 2,238 3,121 4,894 7,326 4,151 5,099 11,735 2,195 2,352 9,097 1,454 14,560 12,012 4,465 2.1 2.8 7.4 3.1 4.9 4.8 3.6 3.2 .7 6.4 4.6 5.8 3.7 5.6 5.6 5.7 3.9 6.3 2.9 3.3 3.2 5.1 5.2 2.8 4.3 6.4 22,801 21,976 20,186 22,038 23,647 17,368 17,266 24,219 15,700 17,793 16,507 15,941 16,730 19,102 17,338 17,123 19,801 16,460 18,759 15,969 15,448 16,490 12,647 18,058 17,598 16,398 23,615 23,004 21,366 22,796 24,756 18,260 18,164 25,713 16,488 19,200 17,472 16,958 18,414 20,267 18,497 18,133 20,707 17,390 19,057 16,680 16,160 17,169 13,315 18,81.7 18,587 17,145 24,013 23,439 22,267 23,285 25,634 18,808 18,839 26,121 16,581 20,264 18,139 17,835 18,885 21,022 19,308 18,742 21,345 18,063 19,636 17,011 16,711 17,808 13,706 19,289 19,010 17,886 28 34 50 36 18 164 162 16 268 100 190 211 157 81 137 165 70 194 125 247 261 213 303 138 150 207 38,639 2,279 1,795 10,999 3,098 8,760 10,840 13,009 2,313 2,689 5,141 9,086 14,432 1,322 2,478 4,562 2,907 110,711 2,031 1,948 27,016 2,553 9,564 2,175 1,939 11,448 2,928 3,093 2,666 6,664 10,021 1,984 1,472 40,542 2,428 1,903 11,726 3,223 9,333 11,565 13,792 2,455 2,929 5,375 9,575 14,921 1,424 2,630 5,058 3,141 116,675 2,161 2,101 28,517 2,663 10,187 2,294 2,059 12,023 3,108 3,411 2,821 6,997 10,478 2,134 1,550 42,742 2,532 1,966 12,222 3,363 9,655 12,261 14,348 2,584 3,086 5,539 9,911 15,267 1,505 2,707 5,181 3,317 122,584 2,236 2,195 30,031 2,762 10,448 2,447 2,134 12,527 3,318 3,579 2,903 7,254 10,964 2,180 1,684 5.4 4.3 3.3 4.2 4.3 3.4 6.0 4.0 5.2 5.4 3.0 3.5 2.3 5.7 2.9 2.4 5.6 5.1 3.5 4.5 5.3 3.7 2.6 6.7 3.7 4.2 6.7 4.9 2.9 3.7 4.6 2.1 8.7 18,391 15,409 14,902 17,922 19,055 26,796 16,029 18,039 15,097 17,543 16,137 19,444 21,318 17,474 17,824 14,105 15,271 25,790 16,299 16,668 30,372 16,123 19,438 16,913 16,209 21,904 16,530 15,970 18,605 19,290 16,625 15,656 13,185 19,153 16,298 15,742 19,088 19,742 28,518 16,725 18,881 15,979 18,941 16,858 20,187 21,729 18,497 18,908 15,263 16,368 26,779 17,373 17,786 31,372 16,788 20,364 17,921 17,089 22,731 17,113 17,171 19,455 20,019 17,322 16,395 13,101 20,004 16,876 16,143 19,920 20,480 29,385 17,271 19,433 16,659 19,615 17,445 20,672 22,003 19,257 19,474 15,319 17,054 27,761 17,974 18,358 32,230 17,421 20,692 18,819 17,660 23,458 17,700 17,573 19,943 20,504 18,113 16,457 13,529 115 252 282 117 95 5 234 132 264 126 229 90 56 140 131 294 243 11 198 179 2 231 89 163 220 33 217 226 116 94 191 273 304 3. Per capita personal income was computed using Bureau of the Census midyear population estimates. Estimates for 1991-93 reflect State and county population estimates available as of February 1995, 4. Includes Metropolitan Statistical Areas, Primary Metropolitan Statistical Areas (PMSA's designated by *), and New England County Metropolitan Areas (NECMA's). The New Haven-Bridgeport-Stamford-Danbury-Waterbury, CT NECMA is presented as a PMSA (part of the New York CMSA). J2 • April 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS Table 2.—Total Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 1991-93 Per capita personal income3 Total personal Income Area name 1991 United States L Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1992 1992-93 1993 4,841,078 5,135,452 5,361,968 4,084,174 4,329,394 4,519,469 756,904 806,058 842,499 Alabama Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion . . .. Rank in State Dollars 1991 1992 1993 4.4 4.4 4.5 19,201 20,137 20,800 20,335 21,300 21,994 14,758 15,571 16,111 zi:.:: 68,238 49,217 19,021 71,610 51,603 20,007 4.9 4.8 5.2 15,612 16,518 17,129 16,718 17,692 18,304 13,345 14,098 14,696 Autauga Baldwin Barbour Bibb Blount Bullock Butler Calhoun Chambers Cherokee 532 1,650 364 209 560 114 250 1,667 482 262 569 1,806 395 226 598 121 262 1,758 514 275 601 1,947 409 235 632 124 278 1,834 543 282 5.6 7.8 3.6 4.2 5.7 2.6 6.1 4.3 5.5 2.3 15,194 16,150 14,130 12,314 14,031 10,185 11,478 14,454 13,066 13,289 15,798 17,005 15,483 13,137 14,858 10,982 12,037 15,143 13,883 13,895 16,241 17,571 16,000 13,481 15,403 11,236 12,743 15,679 14,640 13,978 15 8 21 56 25 65 59 23 37 50 Chilton Choctaw Clarke Clay Cleburne Coffee Colbert Conecuh Coosa Covington 439 207 363 180 181 661 774 173 132 483 468 216 381 191 183 709 826 182 142 512 494 224 399 207 199 745 855 192 146 534 5.5 3.7 4.7 8.1 9.0 5.0 3.5 5.7 2.8 4.3 13,293 12,930 13,183 13,513 14,180 16,355 14,811 12,114 11,886 13,217 14,077 13,396 13,740 14,275 14,092 17,252 15,788 12,881 12,829 13,885 14,654 13,893 14,325 15,370 15,089 17,991 16,244 13,644 12,964 14,392 35 52 40 26 29 6 14 55 58 38 Crenshaw Cullman Dale Dallas De Kalb Elmore Escambia Etowah Fayette Franklin 168 992 680 615 737 722 459 1,427 226 385 178 1,069 727 649 801 777 477 1,535 242 425 194 1,142 735 674 857 821 498 1,597 255 449 9.4 6.8 1.1 3.9 7.0 5.7 4.5 4.0 5.3 5.7 12,398 14,460 13,645 12,850 13,305 14,244 12,891 14,290 12,489 13,747 13,151 14,297 15,349 16,192 14,577 14,776 13,511 14,013 14,334 15,163 14,826 15,209 13,249 13,763 15,364 15,993 13,375 14,124 14,968 15,664 41 16 33 49 28 27 54 22 45 24 Geneva Greene Hale Henry Houston Jackson Jefferson Lamar Lauderdale Lawrence 347 109 175 212 1,348 701 12,299 204 1,233 417 371 114 183 227 1,452 753 13,097 216 1,310 447 392 116 198 221 1,489 799 13,694 226 1,364 460 5.5 1.4 8.0 2.6 6.1 4.6 5.0 4.2 2.8 14,381 15,411 16,090 10,703 11,180 11,422 11,101 11,493 12,334 13,544 14,585 14,069 16,375 17,434 17,718 14,488 15,400 16,175 18,791 19,959 20,861 12,978 13,794 14,356 15,265 16,029 16,505 12,984 13,887 14,141 20 63 60 47 7 19 3 39 10 44 Lee Limestone Lowndes Macon Madison Marengo Marion Marshall Mobile Monroe 1,201 845 142 263 4,862 304 365 1,072 5,642 332 1,291 929 144 278 5,269 320 392 1,164 6,048 337 1,349 942 144 288 5,494 332 417 1,231 6,380 347 4.6 1.4 5.5 3.6 4.3 3.6 6.5 5.7 5.5 3.1 13,598 14,433 14,786 15,230 16,377 16,359 11,179 11,332 11,239 10,752 11,344 11,732 19,877 21,049 21,455 13,156 13,753 14,119 12,331 13,173 13,894 14,920 15,874 16,382 14,726 15,579 16,191 13,920 14,017 14,290 32 13 64 62 1 46 51 12 17 42 Montgomery Morgan Perry Pickens Pike Randolph Russell St. Clair Shelby Sumter 3,857 1,768 129 248 378 254 631 697 2,002 177 4,127 1,883 136 263 404 264 672 746 2,184 186 4,331 1,971 140 279 423 289 704 803 2,365 196 4.9 4.7 2.5 5.7 4.6 9.2 4.6 7.6 8.3 5.3 18,210 17,341 10,427 11,949 13,502 12,659 13,234 13,551 19,430 10,893 19,284 20,014 18,190 18,736 10,973 11,157 12,586 13,264 14,359 14,923 13,058 14,197 13,723 14,059 14,092 14,740 20,419 20,999 11,500 12,120 4 5 66 57 31 43 48 34 2 61 Talladega Tallapoosa Tuscaloosa Walker Washington Wilcox Winston 950 574 2,313 1,025 216 137 284 996 627 2,455 1,067 220 141 306 1,042 648 2,584 1,113 250 148 339 4.6 3.3 5.2 4.2 12,752 14,647 15,097 15,062 12,854 A QQO y,yy<: 12,878 13,304 15,991 15,979 15,608 13,072 10,297 13,742 13,822 16,433 16,659 16,189 14,647 10,759 14,988 53 11 9 18 36 67 30 12,282 5,854 6,428 13,073 6,275 6,798 13,793 6,663 7,130 5.5 6.2 4.9 53 170 5,854 190 42 35 90 1,430 53 678 58 185 6,275 205 45 39 95 1,541 51 725 47 185 6,663 227 46 41 98 1,607 55 748 -18.5 -.2 6.2 910 374 937 388 1,002 410 Alaska Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Aleutians East Borough Aleutians West Census Area Anchorage Borough Bethel Census Area Bristol Bay Borough Denali Borough Dillingham Census Area Fairbanks North Star Borough .... Haines Borough Juneau Borough Kenai Peninsula Borough Ketchikan Gateway Borough See footnotes at end of table. 13.7 5.0 10.9 21,570 22,258 23,070 24,882 25,537 26,619 19,238 19,900 20,515 3.3 6.7 3.5 4.3 8.1 3.2 21,718 18,708 24,882 13,583 30,482 18,661 21,940 17,725 24,768 24,294 23,653 21,492 25,537 14,403 30,430 19,843 22,350 18,504 24,676 25,578 20,114 20,298 26,619 15,493 29,699 22,062 22,616 19,149 26,413 26,066 17 16 3 25 1 14 13 18 4 6 6.9 5.6 21,376 21,645 26,448 27,428 22,761 28,789 12 2 10.6 Area name 1992 1991 Kodiak Island Borough Lake and Peninsula Borough Matanuska-Susitna Borough ....... Nome Census Area North Slope Borough Northwest Artie Borough Pr. of Wales-Outer Ketchikan Census Area Sitka Borough Skagway-Yakutat-Angoon Census Area4 ; Skagway-Hoonah-Angoon 4 Census Area Southeast Fairbanks Census Area Valdez-Cordova Census Area ..... Wade Hampton Census Area ..... Wrangell-Petersburg Census Area Yakutat Borough4 Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area Arizona .. Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Apache Cochise Coconino Gila Graham Greenlee La Paz Maricopa Mohave Navajo . Pima Pinal Santa Cruz Yavapai Yuma ;... ,.!.' , I. Arkansas . . Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Arkansas Ashley Baxter Benton Boone Bradley Calhoun Carroll Chicot Clark Clay .. .. Cleburne Cleveland . Columbia . . . . . Conway Craighead Crawford Crittenden Cross Dallas Desha Drew Faulkner Franklin Fulton Garland Grant Greene Hempstead Hot Sorina Howard Independence Izara Jackson Jefferson Johnson Lafayette Lawrence Lee Lincoln .... Little River Looan Lonoke Madison Marion Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1993 63,804 45,926 17,879 -3.0 Per capita personal income3 Total personal income .; ........ .. ...i .,; ..... ... ...... .. 1993 Rank in State Dollars 1992 1993 20,226 17,182 16,041 15,209 22,734 16,321 20,889 18,448 16,506 16,223 24,491 17,515 15 19 23 24 7 21 16,969 17,188 16,904 21,957 22,452 22,970 22 11 1992-93 1991 278 28 672 120 147 95 286 30 718 130 148 104 302 31 767 141 163 113 5.5 5.8 6.8 8.2 9.7 9.2 19,901 16,523 15,879 14,320 23,772 15,295 109 193 110 200 114 208 3.6 4.1 98 104 1993 22,343 23,731 92 24,347 9 59 98 270 61 103 271 68 5.7 .5 12.0 16,723 17,381 18,024 24,439 26,509 26,317 9,884 9,906 10,768 20 5 27 170 173 1.5 2.2 24,125 24,454 24,475 23,111 13,771 14,502 15,148 8 10 26 16,755 17,468 18,085 17,516 18,218 18,899 12,545 13,323 13,610 93 248: "97 175 16 99 62,780 55,590 7J89 66,998 59,173 7,825 71,343 63,077 8,267 6.5 6.6 5.6 546 1,324 1,353 544 280 120 220 40,337 1,435 777 627 609 1,497 1,436 1,564 1,490 584 621 321 306 134 136 229 v 268 45,821 42,988 1,642 1,535 849 896 2.9 4.2 4.9 6.5 5.0 1.5 17.3 6.6 7.0 5.6 8,747 13,428 13,593 13,217 10,307 14,443 15,957 18,612 14,248 9,858 9,714 14,274 14,577 13,801 11,059 ,15,465 16,665 19,432 14,527 10,529 9,769 14,509 14,863 14,271 11,276 15,304 19,323 20,196 14,787 10,659 15 8 6 9 13 5 2 1 7 14 10,840 1,507 365 1,660 1,472 11,565 1,535 390 1,799 1,550 12,261 1,669 415 1,921 1,684 6.0 8.7 6.5 6.8 8.7 16,029 12,776 11,738 14,807 13,185 16,725 12,741 12,029 15,447 13,101 17,271 13,534 12,260 15,733 13,529 3 10 12 4 11 34,274 16,986 17,288 37,302 18,561 18,741 38,803 19,422 19,381 4.0 4.6 3.4 14,454 15,572 15,995 16,110 17,344 17,828 13,128 14,141 14,502 307 352 474 1,694 404 165 66 265 173 272 329 379 507 1,912 427 177 71 289 202 296 342 380 534 2,038 454 184 73 307 202 315 4.0 .5 5.3 6.6 6.4 4.3 3.6 6.3 .1 6.3 14,282 14,410 14,917 16,678 14,106 14,056 11,386 13,870 11,177 12,711 15,362 15,402 15,572 18,107 14,576 15,181 12,309 14,804 12,852 13,792 16,099 15,398 15,907 18,411 15,134 15,717 12,621 15,098 12,902 14,376 10 19 11 2 22 15 63 23 59 35 220 266 94 352 258 999 517 651 239 130 245 283 100 368 280 1,106 560 710 267 138 246 295 106 383 291 1,142 583 726 277 145 .3 4.3 6.2 4.1 3.8 3.2 4.2 2.3 3.5 5.2 12,195 13,365 12,050 13,635 13,433 14,365 11,864 13,105 12,439 13,600 13,673 13,945 12,706 14,303 14,558 15,578 12,631 14,319 13,910 14,459 13,810 14,058 13,327 14,953 15,087 15,740 12,819 14,498 14,363 15,235 41 38 49 26 24 14 60 34 36 21 197 214 906 186 102 1,228 196 394 259 314 221 235 1,021 196 109 1,325 209 431 290 333 214 238 1,090 203 112 1,397 218 447 306 351 -3.2 1.6 6.7 3.5 3.2 5.4 4.3 3.5 5.4 5.3 11,919 12,317 14,616 12,383 10,233 16,474 13,914 12,200 11,947 12,006 13,555 13,625 15,881 12,865 10,856 17,427 14,521 13,153 13,206 12,598 13,284 13,660 16,324 13,123 10,980 17,946 14,982 13,424 13,769 12,952 51 45 8 55 73 5 25 46 42 57 200 429 146 239 1,147 218 104 199 126 131 217 464 151 273 1,217 240 113 212 144 152 230 488 155 279 1,256 259 112 230 141 156 5.9 5.0 2.5 2.4 3.2 7.8 -.8 8.4 -2.6 2.2 14,617 13,654 12,667 12,561 13,460 11,764 10,954 11,332 9,727 9,485 15,877 14,692 12,801 14,433 14,312 12,814 11,996 12,197 1 1 203 10,951 16,766 15,245 12,906 14,761 14,890 13,385 11,841 13,212 10,677 11,216 7 20 58 31 29 48 70 52 74 72 196 258 583 156 151 200 290 653 170 162 203 304 688 176 170 1.8 4.8 5.3 3.8 5.0 14,123 12579 14,624 13,008 12,420 14,582 13,962 15,970 13,782 13,015 14,953 14,598 16,126 14,062 13,190 27 32 9 37 54 Is " SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • 73 Table 2.—Total Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 1991-93—Continued Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Area name 1991 Miller Mississippi Monroe Montgomery Nevada Percent change2 Millions of dollars . ... Newton Ouachita Perry Phillips Pike Poinsett Polk Pope Pulaski Randolph St. Francis Saline 1992 1992-93 1993 Rank in State Dollars 1991 1992 1993 525 797 156 97 128 540 757 148 102 132 2.8 -5.0 -5.3 5.9 3.7 12,776 13,597 13,887 13,082 14,476 14,784 12,476 14,239 13,670 11,790 12,104 12,716 11,998 12,783 13,207 40 30 44 62 53 74 399 95 321 136 300 217 681 111 6,573 79 416 107 359 146 328 236 752 117 7,066 83 427 110 355 155 326 251 772 117 7,354 4.9 2.6 3.2 -1.1 6.2 -.6 6.3 2.7 -.1 4.1 9,563 13,383 11,795 11,387 13,663 12,365 12,449 14,405 11,889 18,724 75 33 56 65 18 50 39 13 64 1 10,322 14,047 12,873 12,767 14,604 13,439 13,381 15,644 12,695 20,014 10,575 14,562 13,123 12,607 15,430 13,293 13,916 15,783 12,613 20,746 Sebastian Sevier Sharp Stone Union 183 309 942 122 80 1,656 196 170 113 766 193 345 1,037 132 83 1,835 208 180 121 823 208 357 1,096 139 86 1,895 222 190 127 851 7.6 3.5 5.7 5.7 4.4 3.3 6.7 5.9 4.9 3.4 11,004 10,920 14,346 11,887 10,478 16,495 14,073 11,749 11,300 16,456 12,122 12,735 15,879 13,403 11,353 18,407 15,501 12,359 12,218 18,276 69 61 12 47 71 3 17 67 68 4 Van Buren Washington White Woodruff Yell 163 1,825 703 118 248 174 2,024 759 132 274 180 2,156 796 137 287 3.7 6.5 4.9 3.8 4.8 11,433 12,204 12,392 15,617 16,855 17,379 12,577 13,329 13,705 12,535 14,335 14,934 13,884 15,152 15,613 66 6 43 28 16 634,990 619,617 15,373 667,434 651,226 16,207 683,508 666,573 16,935 2,4 2.4 4.5 20,877 21,593 21,895 21,060 21,786 22,084 15,472 15,930 16,382 California Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Alameda . ...... Alpine Amador Butte Galaveras Colusa .. . Contra Costa Del Norte . . El Dorado Fresno Glenn Humboldt Imoerial nvo Kern Kings Lake Lassen Los Angeles Madera 11,418 12,243 15,460 12,660 10,871 18,076 14,539 11,978 11,960 17,644 28,614 21 507 2,854 553 324 21,292 323 2,631 11,166 30,806 22 528 3,036 574 329 22,751 343 2,811 11,865 31,878 24 549 3,154 599 370 23,690 358 2,919 12,394 3.5 11.8 4.0 3.9 4.3 12.5 4.1 4.2 3.9 4.5 22,112 17,827 16,191 15,272 16,242 19,534 25,866 12,484 19,711 16,181 23,545 18,862 16,559 16,026 16,286 19,511 27,090 12,879 20,450 16,807 24,234 20,365 16,986 16,507 16,627 21,727 27,757 13,320 20,598 17,215 8 20 40 43 42 14 4 58 19 37 346 1,949 1,697 321 8,988 1,342 880 373 188,218 1,334 379 2,042 1,804 333 9,367 1,418 919 403 195,242 1,474 407 2,111 1,979 343 9,786 1,479 949 405 197,843 1,528 7.3 3.3 9.7 3.2 4.5 4.3 3.3 .5 1.3 3.6 13,741 16,128 14,342 17,517 15,750 12,835 16,653 13,296 21,006 14,019 14,871 16,740 14,020 18,089 15,928 13,276 16,998 14,397 21,531 14,899 15,869 17,256 14,509 18,694 16,312 13,652 17,232 14,346 21,661 14,841 48 34 53 25 46 57 36 54 15 52 Marin Mariposa Mendocino Merced Modoc Mono Monterey Napa Nevada Orange 8,215 238 1,340 2,648 138 175 7,169 2,639 1,484 59,407 8,712 256 1,402 2,828 143 189 7,785 2,772 1,566 61,961 8,985 262 1,435 2,904 153 201 7,827 2,849 1,641 62,940 3.1 2.5 2.4 2.7 6.8 6.0 .5 2.8 4.8 1.6 35,395 15,982 16,433 14,236 14,256 17,819 19,753 23,561 18,216 24,280 37,304 16,766 17,166 14,945 14,629 19,114 21,110 24,357 18,804 24,927 38,310 16,958 17,588 15,082 15,914 19,649 21,371 24,923 19,444 25,022 1 41 32 51 47 22 16 7 23 6 Placer Plumas Riverside Sacramento San Benito San Bernardino San Diego San Francisco San Joapuin San Luis Obispo 4,039 339 22,126 21,015 624 23,964 51,132 21,563 8,154 3,836 4,284 359 23,167 22,207 654 25,035 53,672 23,337 8,653 4,023 4,473 369 23,800 22,756 685 25,461 54,719 24,018 9,097 4,118 4.4 2.9 2.7 2.5 4.7 1.7 2.0 2.9 5.1 2.4 22,258 16,862 17,728 19,465 16,675 16,070 20,003 29,694 16,490 17,498 22,907 17,393 17,957 20,345 16,997 16,336 20,629 31,990 17,169 18,223 23,263 17,770 18,012 20,751 17,236 16,468 20,950 32,777 17,808 18,546 12 30 28 18 35 44 17 2 29 27 San Mateo Santa Barbara Santa Clara Santa Cruz Shasta Sierra Siskiyou Solano Sonoma Stanislaus 19,181 8,524 38,194 5,036 2,556 55 675 6,447 8,748 6,283 20,191 8,891 40,791 5,324 2,714 57 701 6,803 9,176 6,618 20,923 9,076 42,233 5,471 2,802 59 720 7,062 9,461 6,875 3.6 2.1 3.5 2.8 3.3 3.2 2.8 3.8 3.1 3.9 29,268 22,801 25,281 21,976 16,578 16,531 15,360 18,146 22,038 16,261 30,444 23,615 26,703 23,004 17,223 17,355 15,877 18,871 22,796 16,745 31,208 24,013 27,360 23,439 17,646 17,577 16,412 19,342 23,285 17,083 3 9 5 10 31 33 45 24 11 39 1,188 676 190 4,562 804 1,290 728 202 5,058 856 1,323 747 207 5,181 883 2.6 2.6 2.5 2.4 3.1 17,658 18,581 18,616 13,229 14,014 14,317 14,476 15,322 15,648 14,105 15,263 15,319 16,040 16,918 17,129 26 55 49 50 38 . . .. Sutter Tehama Trinity Tulare . Tuolumne ... See footnotes at end of table. Area name Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1993 493 748 138 93 120 Per capita personal income3 Total personal income 1991 1992 1992-93 1993 Rank in State Dollars 1991 1992 21,729 22,003 19,455 19,943 13,896 13,956 1993 14,432 2,666 796 14,921 2,821 844 15,267 2,903 857 2.3 2.9 1.5 21,318 18,605 13,389 66,529 56,191 10,337 71,288 60,280 11,009 76,611 64,546 12,065 7.5 7.1 9.6 19,744 20,585 21,498 20,447 21,297 22,164 16,635 17,398 18,521 4,308 188 9,876 75 89 81 5,179 180 55 142 4,665 191 10,526 81 83 80 5,630 187 54 156 5,014 218 11,270 86 100 91 6,011 198 66 169 7.5 15,833 13,637 24,292 13,435 19,822 16,550 22,373 14,149 23,066 18,071 71 41 44 33 290 10,986 21 1,706 523 185 73 41 46 36 316 11,792 25 1,929 600 204 81 47 51 41 344 12,524 26 2,193 667 232 El Paso Fremont Garfield Gilpin Grand Gunnison Hinsdale Huerfano Jackson Jefferson 7,133 407 528 53 144 150 9 75 26 9,690 7,715 441 546 62 152 165 9 78 27 10,243 8,195 484 599 70 166 180 11 85 30 10,943 Kiowa Kit Carson Lake La Plata Larimer Las Animas Lincoln Logan Mesa Mineral 41 135 93 553 3,389 176 90 282 1,532 9 40 140 96 613 3,643 180 95 300 1,654 10 48 157 101 662 3,936 197 104 329 1,764 10 Moffat Montezuma Montrose Morgan Otero 189 266 375 409 293 41 129 76 437 203 204 292 401 407 298 44 141 76 486 201 212 317 438 455 327 48 157 85 527 228 Pueblo Rio Blanco Rio Grande Routt Saguache San Juan San Miguel Sedgwick Summit Teller 1,839 95 166 317 61 11 74 48 320 227 1,930 104 163 339 60 9 81 47 357 261 2,055 105 188 370 73 9 94 54 395 282 Washington Weld Yuma 89 2,085 189 87 2,207 170 108 2,404 181 85,247 79,131 6,116 89,650 83,281 6,369 27,950 21,348 4,188 3,561 18,302 5,305 2,666 1,928 Ventura Yolo Yuba Colorado Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion V| v " ' u Archuleta Bent Boulder Chaffee Cheyenne .. Ploar fVaak Conejos Costilla Crowley Ouster Delta Denver .. Dolores Doualas Eagle Elbert ...... Ourav Park .IIZIIZZI"""" Phillips Pitkin Prowers Connecticut Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Fairfield Hartford Litchfield Middlesex New Haven New London Tolland Windham Delaware Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Kent 1993 13 21 56 17,425 15,708 26,048 13,966 22,824 17,835 24,612 14,890 28,210 20,409 42 52 5 61 14 38 9 56 2 19 9,384 9,774 10,764 12,483 12,936 14,523 11,129 11,730 12,513 16,562 16,879 18,215 13,491 14,291 14,960 23,236 24,323 25,408 14,952 17,932 18,352 25,555 26,380 27,265 22,318 24,424 25,800 17,999 18,834 19,824 63 57 62 34 55 8 33 4 6 22 17,668 18,338 18,841 12,598 13,370 14,068 16,934 17,514 18,459 16,806 19,569 21,583 17,829 18,199 19,220 14,385 15,257 15,931 18,955 18,696 19,597 12,650 13,240 14,119 16,055 16,109 17,446 21,722 22,518 23,377 28 60 32 16 25 50 24 59 41 11 25,280 18,734 15,161 16,532 17,657 12,947 19,743 16,262 15,891 16,281 24,305 19,418 15,709 17,732 18,381 13,192 20,573 17,386 16,858 17,368 28,030 21,807 16,660 18,487 19,189 14,379 22,957 18,930 17,522 18,129 3 15 46 31 26 58 13 27 39 35 16,432 13,984 14,959 18,260 14,582 16,998 16,779 18,308 34,506 15,236 17,622 14,913 15,706 17,808 14,872 17,579 17,547 18,408 37,791 15,252 18,066 15,716 16,521 19,759 16,084 17,844 18,508 20,114 39,481 17,172 36 51 47 23 49 37 30 20 1 43 14,928 15,494 15,507 21,600 12,765 15,061 18,386 17,961 23,394 17,642 15,582 16,818 15,208 22,519 12,392 15,002 18,988 17,784 24,646 18,974 16,347 16,697 17,483 23,769 15,011 15,689 20,502 20,573 25,753 18,814 48 45 40 10 54 53 18 17 7 29 8.9 6.7 18,869 15,617 21,147 18,820 23,073 16,221 17,145 18,874 20,083 12 44 21 92,278 85,725 6,552 2.9 2.9 2.9 25,905 27,338 28,151 26,274 27,767 28,606 21,924 22,749 23,298 30,215 22,117 4,348 3,667 19,017 5,542 2,723 2,021 31,198 22,677 4,460 3,795 19,525 5,727 2,803 2,092 3.3 2.5 2.6 3.5 2.7 3.3 2.9 3.5 33,721 25,068 23,832 24,722 22,763 20,891 20,608 18,675 13,878 11,908 1,970 14,628 12,552 2,076 15,263 13,098 2,166 4.3 4.3 4.3 20,399 21,208 21,852 21,120 22,008 22,725 16,912 17,386 17,733 1,742 1,861 1,956 5.1 15,225 14.1 7.1 6.2 20.2 13.1 6.8 5.9 23.5 8.2 11.2 13.2 8.9 14.5 9.1 6.2 5.5 13.7 11.2 13.5 6.2 9.6 9.7 13.9 9.2 9.1 11.7 8.1 11.3 6.8 20.5 11.9 5.1 8.1 8.0 9.2 10.0 9.5 6.7 4.6 3.7 8.8 9.2 11.8 9.5 9.4 11.5 10.8 8.4 13.3 6.5 1.1 15.4 9.3 22.7 4.9 15.6 15.8 10.7 8.0 24.2 16,649 13,789 25,025 14,081 18,659 16,109 23,657 14,518 21,942 19,448 36,495 26,114 24,600 25,331 23,713 22,358 20,972 19,579 16,040 37,642 26,876 25,085 26,056 24,422 23,017 21,526 20,225 16,546 1 2 4 3 5 6 7 8 3 74 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS ® April 1995 Table 2.—Total Personal income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 1991-93—Continued Total personal income Area name Millions of dollars 1991 New Castle Sussex 10,165 1,970 District Of Columbia 1992 1992-93 1993 10,692 2,076 Per capita personal income 3 Percent change2 11,142 2,166 Dollars 1991 1992 1993 4.2 4.3 22,621 23,532 24,320 16,912 17,386 17,733 1 2 15,446 16,375 17,083 4.3 25,988 27,953 29,500 265,665 250,519 15,146 283,437 267,553 15,884 6.7 6.8 4.9 19,192 19,664 20,650 19,479 19,946 20,969 15,411 15,944 16,435 Alachua Baker Bay Bradford .... Brevard Broward .... Calhoun .... Charlotte ... Citrus Clay 3,107 245 2,055 266 7,502 28,762 122 2,014 1,429 1,875 3,309 262 2,192 285 7,944 29,980 128 2,112 1,492 1,985 3,510 278 2,312 304 8,243 32,202 135 2,222 1,558 2,119 6.1 5.9 5.5 6.6 3.8 7.4 5.3 5.2 4.5 6.7 16,740 12,932 15,803 11,590 18,072 22,326 10,823 17,159 14,650 17,042 17,518 13,628 16,426 12,389 18,685 22,866 11,285 17,540 14,901 17,437 18,424 14,158 16,852 13,049 18,915 23,840 11,790 18,012 15,295 18,134 20 51 29 60 18 7 65 23 37 22 Collier Columbia .. Dade De Soto .... Dixie Duval Escambia .. Flagler Franklin Gadsden ... 4,430 585 35,183 361 113 12,514 4,144 448 121 515 4,636 625 33,985 368 121 13,157 4,408 490 129 557 4,991 662 38,591 370 118 13,927 4,570 534 137 584 7.7 5.9 5.9 3.7 8.9 6.4 5.0 27,610 13,425 17,788 14,904 10,298 18,195 15,544 14,182 13,309 12,275 28,052 29,237 14,092 14,552 16,943 19,266 15,145 15,043 10,716 10,334 18,827 19,820 16,316 16,899 14,561 14,845 13,923 14,458 13,193 13,712 3 45 16 40 67 13 27 42 47 55 Gilchrist Glades Gulf Hamilton ... Hardee Hendry Hernando .. Highlands .. Hillsborough Holmes 121 102 150 125 311 463 1,551 1,132 14,879 182 130 107 162 135 313 468 1,636 1,157 15,710 194 140 112 174 135 312 482 1,728 1,199 16,573 205 7.3 4.5 7.8 -.3 -.4 2.9 5.6 3.6 5.5 5.6 12,008 13,620 12,988 11,331 15,577 17,061 14,510 16,114 17,592 11,400 12,524 14,434 13,832 12,028 15,590 16,910 14,899 16,248 18,343 11,900 12,622 15,097 14,482 11,876 15,490 17,174 15,251 16,541 19,129 12,356 62 39 46 64 35 25 38 31 17 63 Indian River Jackson .... Jefferson ... Lafayette ... Lake Lee Leon Levy Liberty ....... Madison .... 2,395 563 156 66 2,608 6,791 3,427 328 71 194 2,489 606 166 74 2,778 7,152 3,640 349 77 206 2,563 638 172 75 2,905 7,511 3,880 368 83 216 3.0 5.3 4.0 2.0 4.6 5.0 6.6 5.3 8.1 4.8 25,940 13,471 13,501 12,105 16,501 19,543 17,269 12,341 12,573 11,614 26,575 27,220 14,279 14,949 14,105 14,575 12,906 13,098 17,116 17,325 20,258 20,907 17,969 18,746 12,863 13,062 13,464 14,199 12,298 12,665 5 41 44 58 24 11 19 59 50 61 Manatee .... Marion Martin Monroe Nassau Okaloosa .. Okeechobee Orange ...... Osceola ... Palm Beach 4,290 2,978 3,001 1,735 832 2,508 400 12,731 1,676 27,016 4,565 3,238 3,122 1,787 895 2,711 416 13,441 1,779 28,517 4,801 3,420 3,242 1,942 956 2,863 438 14,243 1,894 30,031 5.2 5.6 3.9 8.7 6.8 5.6 5.3 6.0 6.4 5.3 19,769 14,682 28,854 21,927 18,291 16,946 13,156 18,193 14,461 30,372 20,858 15,595 29,754 22,369 19,083 17,738 13,655 18,865 14,936 31,372 21,584 15,972 30,256 23,582 19,771 18,202 14,227 19,607 15,379 32,230 10 33 2 8 14 21 49 15 36 1 Pasco Pinellas .... Polk Putnam .... St. Johns . St. Lucie .. Santa Rosa Sarasota .. Seminole .. Sumter 4,248 17,961 6,489 813 1,974 2,402 1,337 7,562 5,694 401 4,459 18,738 6,817 887 2,173 2,487 1,462 7,912 6,153 430 4,730 19,71.2 7,130 947 2,344 2,605 1,565 8,284 6,599 456 6.1 5.2 4.6 6.8 7.9 4.7 7.0 4.7 7.2 6.2 14,890 20,813 15,714 12,283 22,503 15,277 15,657 26,607 18,885 12,477 15,527 21,704 16,272 13,271 24,074 15,423 16,237 27,748 19,884 13,262 16,176 22,798 16,858 13,972 24,797 15,773 16,556 28,761 20,846 13,955 32 9 28 53 6 34 30 4 12 54 Suwannee Taylor Union Volusia Wakulla .... Walton ..... Washington 370 226 99 6,096 205 369 209 395 242 105 6,378 220 398 224 415 236 110 6,733 239 429 236 5.1 4.9 5.6 8.6 7.8 5.5 13,359 13,984 14,345 13,024 13,988 13,690 9,547 10,035 10,398 15,925 16,369 16,991 13,768 14,255 14,816 12,889 13,527 14,128 12,114 12,875 13,250 48 56 66 26 43 52 57 116,879 86,478 30,402 125,109 92,654 32,455 132,863 98,670 34,193 6.2 6.5 5.4 17,645 18,495 19,249 19,363 20,241 21,067 14,088 14,839 15,410 198 80 119 58 619 147 447 833 234 194 204 87 128 56 656 158 483 905 242 209 213 93 136 53 704 172 519 974 258 214 4.4 6.7 6.1 7.5 8.9 7.5 7.5 6.7 2.4 12,436 12,726 13,238 12,870 13,949 14,410 12,430 13,085 13,469 15,837 15,439 14,165 15,491 16,224 17,162 14,041 14,738 15,871 14,371 15,057 15,638 14,349 15,239 16,226 14,088 14,523 15,337 13,619 14,467 14,457 136 102 128 114 30 49 57 43 70 101 2,714 2,843 2,967 4.4 17,901 18,687 11 Georgia Metropolitan portion Nonmetropoiitan portion Appling ..... Atkinson ... Bacon Baker Baldwin .... Banks Barrow Bartow Ben Hill .... Berrien Bibb See footnotes at end of table. 13.6 .4 -2.4 -2.3 -5.6 19,269 Percent change2 Millions of dollars Area name 1993 255,029 240,599 14,430 Florida . Metropolitan portion Nonmetropoiitan portion Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Rank in State 1991 Bleckley Brantley Brooks Bryan Bulloch Burke Butts Calhoun Camden 1992 1992-93 1993 Rank in State Dollars 1991 1992 1993 1993 157 133 191 219 558 251 203 72 412 164 143 203 247 601 270 223 74 458 168 151 210 267 628 282 238 75 490 2.5 5.9 3.7 8.3 4.5 4.4 6.5 .6 6.9 14,860 11,804 12,329 13,377 12,630 12,155 13,043 14,448 12,057 15,514 12,362 13,143 14,076 13,243 12,857 14,252 15,250 12,180 15,794 12,732 13,369 14,192 13,479 13,194 14,952 14,975 12,318 51 147 131 111 127 138 82 79 151 116 1,033 556 97 3,965 211 293 1,592 1,360 40 125 1,094 593 102 4,226 236 316 1,759 1,435 42 130 1,165 637 107 4,413 241 333 1,910 1,524 42 4.0 6.5 7.4 4.6 4.4 2.0 5.5 8.6 6.2 -.5 14,553 14,156 12,830 11,247 18,080 13,872 13,099 16,435 15,457 12,043 15,501 15,650 14,811 15,535 13,391 14,040 11,565 11,764 19,031 19,704 14,403 15,113 14,092 14,746 17,249 18,490 16,247 17,173 12,440 12,196 56 61 118 156 8 74 89 15 29 153 Clayton Clinch Cobb Coffee Colquitt Columbia Cook Coweta Crawford Crisp 2,979 71 10,242 433 527 1,165 164 942 110 282 3,150 79 11,009 468 553 1,251 175 1,036 118 300 3,324 87 11,833 497 576 1,338 184 1,119 124 316 5.5 10.5 7.5 6.2 4.3 7.0 5.0 7.9 5.0 5.4 16,106 11,436 22,102 14,427 14,347 16,609 12,140 16,477 11,984 13,800 16,753 17,389 12,641 13,713 23,079 23,885 15,244 15,909 14,922 15,470 17,186 17,429 13,027 13,315 17,170 17,556 12,736 12,906 14,758 15,529 24 123 2 46 66 23 133 18 142 62 Dade Dawson Decatur De Kalb Dooly Douahertv jr « v Douglas Early Echols 157 149 370 11,762 221 144 1,470 1,154 167 26 164 163 382 12,388 231 148 1,525 1,244 172 28 174 179 398 13,070 242 149 1,618 1,336 171 28 6.1 9.5 4.3 5.5 4.4 .8 6.1 7.4 -.8 1.9 11,820 15,090 14,360 21,172 12,327 14,528 15,204 15,721 14,021 11,397 12,334 12,875 15,841 16,685 14,757 15,299 22,042 22,973 13,058 13,509 14,757 14,530 15,618 16,538 16,541 17,255 14,303 14,200 12,266 12,607 146 37 71 4 126 97 40 28 110 149 Effingham Elbert Emanuel Evans Fannin Fayette Floyd Forsyth Franklin Fulton 370 266 254 124 195 1,439 1,343 906 263 17,579 403 278 262 131 209 1,567 1,434 1,016 281 18,968 430 288 270 138 218 1,686 1,497 1,125 304 20,181 6.6 3.8 3.1 5.8 4.5 7.6 4.4 10.7 8.2 6.4 13,945 14,014 12,312 14,092 12,047 21,716 16,427 19,265 15,518 26,807 14,691 14,646 12,667 14,655 12,603 22,529 17,451 20,410 16,393 28,541 14,874 15,108 12,900 15,011 13,149 23,227 18,071 21,396 17,529 29,823 86 75 143 77 139 3 17 6 19 1 Gilmer Glascock Glynn Gordon Grady Greene Gwinnett Habersham Hall Hancock 200 33 1,132 529 248 163 7,729 430 1,656 102 211 35 1,214 574 267 173 8,451 462 1,785 110 228 36 1,280 613 278 181 9,219 497 1,939 117 7.9 3.8 5.5 6.7 4.2 4.6 9.1 7.8 8.6 5.7 14,372 14,445 17,861 14,814 12,136 13,490 20,749 15,300 16,862 11,394 14,783 15,457 15,173 15,473 19,023 19,752 15,839 16,490 12,963 13,279 14,182 14,510 21,617 22,347 16,129 17,042 17,888 18,945 12,294 12,879 67 65 7 41 134 99 Haralson Harris Hart Heard Henry Houston Irwin Jackson Jasper Jeff Davis 310 292 293 98 1,044 1,453 115 440 120 164 329 313 309 104 1,147 1,530 119 467 131 172 346 333 320 110 1,265 1,601 121 509 140 178 5.1 6.4 3.9 6.3 10.3 4.6 1.5 9.0 6.7 3.0 14,017 14,689 15,241 16,419 17,220 17,527 14,740 15,278 15,733 11,143 11,518 11,963 16,420 16,973 17,341 15,906 16,401 16,753 13,366 13,793 14,004 14,309 14,867 15,869 14,012 15,057 15,764 13,618 14,274 14,631 73 20 55 155 25 36 119 50 53 93 226 100 97 333 166 75 589 234 503 100 242 107 104 353 176 80 631 246 597 107 249 110 111 365 191 84 664 268 608 112 3.0 3.1 6.7 3.5 8.5 4.4 5.4 8.9 1.8 5.2 12,880 13,837 12,042 12,555 11,582 12,512 15,893 16,600 12,559 13,122 13,232 13,964 14,569 15,398 14,018 14,137 9,391 10,394 13,356 13,991 14,163 12,916 13,134 17,040 14,252 14,100 15,954 14,619 10,724 14,364 115 141 140 33 108 116 45 94 158 103 64 1,126 214 297 100 169 303 68 256 94 70 1,208 231 315 104 182 321 73 270 95 73 1,282 253 331 107 187 348 81 285 94 3.8 6.1 9.5 4.9 3.4 2.9 8.2 10.9 5.6 -1.0 10,211 15,498 15,023 15,102 11,631 14,023 14,559 12,716 11,879 15,059 10,420 15,895 16,017 15,768 11,971 14,316 15,350 13,420 12,450 14,966 159 47 44 52 154 105 69 129 150 80 Candler . Carroll Catoosa Charlton Chatham Chattahoochee Chattooga Cherokee Clarke Clay ... Jefferson Jenkins Johnson Jones Larnar Lanier Laurens Lee Liberty Lincoln Long Lowndes Lumpkin McDuffie Mclntosh Macon Marion Meriwether Miller . .. I 10,457 14,619 14,191 14,530 11,452 12,830 14,013 11,967 11,323 14,984 32 13 145 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • 75 Table 2.—Total" Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 1991-93—Continued Total personal income Millions of dollars Area name 1991 Total personal income Per capita personal income3 Percent change2 1992-93 Rank in State Dollars 1991 1991 1992 1993 13,078 14,293 12,516 14,942 12,526 16,314 14,294 17,888 13,605 13,455 13,656 14,867 13,047 15,956 13,463 16,731 14,968 18,507 14,192 13,926 14,276 15,360 13,227 16,775 14,302 17,333 15,517 19,505 15,057 14,202 107 68 137 35 106 27 63 10 76 109 4.4 8.0 3.3 4.7 5.1 3.5 6.4 7.4 8.9 2.6 15,964 16,026 16,470 15,470 16,562 17,334 13,357 14,440 14,492 14,046 14,882 15,479 13,029 13,644 14,344 16,136 17,105 17,464 14,322 15,281 15,873 12,452 13,338 14,048 13,190 13,945 14,988 12,353 13,074 13,340 42 26 100 64 104 21 48 117 78 132 3,628 1,166 52 207 127 893 381 71 486 79 3.6 7.2 5.6 2.9 .9 5.5 6.2 5.2 4.0 4.1 17,071 17,345 17,812 18,476 12,970 13,857 13,697 14,529 13,139 13,921 14,315 15,069 14,211 14,914 11,653 12,238 14,564 15,154 11,052 11,348 18,500 19,267 14,525 14,690 13,935 15,739 15,577 12,890 15,583 11,654 14 12 98 90 121 54 60 144 58 157 26 248 110 151 143 648 559 363 93 73 27 256 113 161 144 693 550 378 99 75 3.5 3.3 3.2 6.3 .5 7.0 4.0 6.3 3.9 13,150 14,249 13,216 13,777 13,511 14,317 12,887 13,037 12,628 13,604 15,676 16,394 14,963 15,730 14,276 14,818 13,016 13,320 11,803 12,241 14,924 14,188 14,650 14,188 13,407 17,432 15,583 15,277 13,679 12,712 84 112 91 113 130 22 59 72 124 148 867 123 109 159 349 800 601 483 72 293 913 131 115 172 371 845 654 508 77 316 968 133 119 185 388 891 704 532 81 335 6.0 1.3 3.7 7.0 4.5 5.4 7.7 4.7 4.5 6.1 15,349 13,958 11,152 12,860 13,270 13,589 15,061 13,592 11,828 15,189 16,140 15,117 11,827 13,363 14,093 14,267 16,095 14,183 12,820 16,249 16,978 14,930 12,245 13,949 14,647 14,961 16,553 14,838 13,259 17,109 34 83 152 120 92 81 39 87 135 31 320 32 61 221 1,256 96 161 141 265 338 33 64 238 1,365 102 167 149 279 350 33 67 256 1,468 103 177 156 286 3.6 1.0 5.2 7.2 7.5 1.0 5.8 4.9 2.7 13,766 14,067 12,319 16,454 17,161 13,614 15,154 13,823 13,242 14,197 14,704 13,185 17,157 18,462 14,496 15,700 14,471 13,663 14,594 14,817 13,673 18,112 19,560 14,588 16,639 14,920 13,768 95 88 125 16 9 96 38 85 122 24,545 19,365 5,180 25,916 20,807 5,109 27,394 21,601 5,794 5.7 3.8 21,648 22,476 23,504 22,802 24,166 24,929 18,203 17,494 19,376 2,098 19,365 1,010 2,071 2,217 20,807 646 2,246 2,332 21,601 1,096 2,365 16,451 5,555 10,896 17,783 6,116 11,667 19,269 6,722 12,547 Blaine Boise Bonner Bonneville 4,299 51 947 71 117 530 340 53 404 1,270 4,762 54 1,024 78 126 559 362 60 446 1,381 5,248 58 1,092 84 134 597 394 66 477 1,459 Boundary Butte Camas Canyon Caribou Cassia Clark Clearwater 103 36 11 1,256 98 331 22 130 114 39 12 1,354 106 343 22 135 122 44 14 1,475 110 371 24 140 Mitchell Monroe Montoomerv Morgan Murray Muscogee Newton Oconee Oglethorpe Paulding 1992 1993 266 251 93 196 340 2,932 623 328 135 601 281 266 98 212 373 3,112 669 346 145 659 293 280 101 228 404 3,228 720 377 157 731 Peach Pickens Pierce Pike Polk Pulaski Putnam Quitman Rabun Randolph 341 229 180 148 445 130 210 28 156 100 351 248 197 156 468 138 228 30 166 106 367 268 203 164 492 143 243 32 181 108 Richmond Rockdale Schley Screven Seminole Spalding Stephens Stewart Sumter Talbot 3,326 1,014 46 189 119 795 338 65 445 73 3,501 1,088 50 201 126 846 359 68 467 76 24 236 103 142 134 613 529 345 89 71 Taliaferro Tattnall Tavlor Telfair Terrell Thomas lift Toombs Towns Treutlen ..... ;.. ... .. . ;• . . ... .... . . Troup Turner Twiaos Union Upson . Walker Walton Ware . Warren Washington .... ........ Wayne Webster Wheeler White Whitfield Wilcox Wilkes Wilkinson Worth Hawaii Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion .. Hawaii Honolulu Kauai Maui + Kalawao Idaho Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Ada Adams Bannock . . . Bear Lake Benewah .... .... See footnotes at end of table. 4.4 5.3 2.7 7.5 8.4 3.7 7.6 8.9 8.6 11.0 -1.6 13.4 5.3 16,632 17,051 17,519 22,802 24,166 24,929 18,969 11,919 19,887 19,699 20,829 21,354 8.4 9.9 7.5 15,836 16,679 17,512 17,943 19,106 20,114 14,942 15,638 10,377 5.2 3.8 69.8 10.2 7.7 6.6 8.5 6.5 6.8 8.9 9.4 7.1 5.6 6.3 10.6 14.8 8.9 4.1 8.1 9.5 4.3 Millions of dollars Area name 1993 4 1 3 2 Custer Elmore ,. . . 1992 Per capita personal income3 Percent change2 1993 1992-93 Rank in State Dollars 1991 1992 1993 14,245 16,129 14,988 16,979 16,529 17,326 16 13 10,797 12,579 14,259 15,933 13,904 12,492 14,884 16,413 14,585 13,246 11,444 13,561 14,958 16,302 14,393 13,086 15,629 17,430 15,665 14,066 12,457 12,686 15,714 17,753 15,216 13,719 16,964 17,838 16,499 15,143 43 41 21 11 27 36 14 10 17 28 16,646 13,666 9,995 12,796 16,888 11,885 12,640 13,230 16,722 13,772 16,693 14,621 10,202 12,738 18,058 12,142 12,503 13,510 17,322 14,606 17,635 15,455 10,882 13,718 18,834 13,126 13,978 14,500 18,202 14,924 12 24 44 37 4 40 35 33 11,890 15,455 17,386 12,931 12,065 15,744 18,022 13,444 12,506 16,700 18,154 14,537 42 15 8 32 60 334 61 349 63 385 102 141 175 190 193 212 231 1,212 455 93 109 153 188 198 204 229 246 1,348 490 100 122 147 206 221 218 246 275 1,468 523 109 Lewis Lincoln Madison Minidoka Nez Perce Oneida Owyhee Payette Power Shoshone 60 46 236 253 582 41 107 224 121 194 60 50 244 257 634 42 107 237 130 199 66 54 260 280 673 46 123 263 140 206 Teton Twin Falls Valley Washington 43 851 114 112 47 883 124 118 50 952 134 131 237,658 209,034 28,623 252,918 222,300 30,618 263,637 232,002 31,634 4.2 4.4 3.3 20,621 21,784 22,560 21,622 22,803 23,631 15,410 16,446 16,932 Adams Alexander Bond Boone Brown Bureau Calhoun Carroll .... Cass Champaign 1,116 125 220 554 73 603 74 277 218 2,879 1,168 136 234 595 81 653 79 300 235 3,020 1,202 135 240 630 85 676 78 316 235 3,043 2.9 -.6 2.5 6.0 5.2 3.4 Christian Clark ...... Clay Clinton ... Coles Cook Crawford Cumberland De Kalb . De Witt .. 577 232 213 572 799 111,938 320 153 1,297 271 604 250 230 612 854 118,736 342 168 1,375 295 Douglas . Du Page Edgar Edwards . Effingham Fayette ... Ford Franklin .. Fulton Gallatin .. 305 22,530 293 106 526 258 249 553 570 98 Greene ... Grundy ... Hamilton Hancock . Hardin .... Henderson Henry Iroquois .. Jackson . Jasper .... Franklin Freembnt (incl. Ylwstn. Natl. Pk.) Gem Gooding Idaho Jefferson Jerome Kootenai Latah Lemhi Illinois Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion 4.6 10.4 11.9 -3.5 9.2 11.7 7.1 7.2 11.8 8.9 6.8 9.1 9.7 7.9 6.3 9.1 6.2 9.1 14.9 10.8 7.5 3.8 7.6 7.8 7.5 11.0 1993 29 5.2 -.1 .8 16,805 11,763 14,626 17,458 12,372 16,875 14,035 16,651 16,203 16,572 17,928 12,883 15,760 18,732 14,337 18,768 14,968 18,958 17,687 17,852 41 100 80 27 95 26 86 25 47 44 632 261 231 643 907 123,299 357 177 1,439 308 4.6 4.5 .5 5.0 6.2 3.8 4.4 5.5 4.7 4.4 16,756 17,517 18,263 14,585 15,655 16,189 14,666 15,960 16,050 16,809 17,843 18,600 15,470 16,444 17,437 21,879 23,121 23,983 16,463 17,427 18,035 14,182 15,492 16,194 16,391 17,231 17,833 16,276 17,685 18,406 33 73 74 28 54 3 37 72 46 29 318 23,941 313 112 555 284 275 597 606 110 320 25,252 321 115 581 292 266 593 638 108 .7 5.5 2.7 2.7 4.6 2.8 15,649 16,320 16,331 28,145 29,412 30,476 15,036 16,090 16,402 14,327 15,187 15,754 16,472 17,316 17,980 12,440 13,633 13,955 17,710 19,619 19,067 13,745 14,864 14,701 14,997 15,889 16,721 14,421 16,119 15,801 69 2 68 81 39 99 23 90 62 79 193 638 117 319 69 118 802 496 800 158 211 696 133 342 72 129 847 549 841 174 215 728 135 356 75 131 876 565 864 178 1.8 4.7 .9 4.3 3.7 1.3 3.5 2.8 2.8 2.5 12,667 13,795 14,015 19,170 20,574 21,214 13,817 15,766 15,855 14,895 15,881 16,528 13,519 13,837 14,246 14,461 15,590 15,677 15,680 16,493 17,083 16,057 17,608 17,988 13,164 13,755 14,021 14,862 16,416 16,780 98 8 76 66 96 82 58 38 97 61 -1.3 -3.3 -.6 5.2 -1.5 17,548 12,838 15,504 18,172 13,619 18,284 15,164 18,061 17,613 17,245 19,914 21,299 22,445 15,284 15,199 15,657 14,132 14,931 15,630 11,540 12,390 13,285 14,537 15,533 16,140 13,781 14,089 14,769 23,698 24,346 25,715 14,359 15,097 15,356 14,451 15,411 15,765 16,924 17,894 18,621 3 22 23 39 18 30 2 25 20 6 Jefferson Jersey .... Jo Daviess Johnson . Kane Kankakee Kendall ... Knox Lake La Salie . 564 303 379 123 6,801 1,600 779 896 15,011 1,765 589 322 410 130 7,167 1,695 826 960 16,548 1,886 613 335 429 135 7,541 1,799 879 1,004 17,443 1,971 4.1 4.0 4.8 4.3 5.2 6.1 6.4 4.6 5.4 4.5 15,218 14,607 17,294 10,781 20,836 16,393 19,258 15,900 28,315 16,408 15,846 15,359 18,785 11,158 21,482 17,113 20,010 17,058 30,660 17,464 16,431 15,842 19,466 11,447 22,099 17,918 20,713 17,840 31,764 18,111 67 78 20 102 6 42 10 45 1 35 12,346 13,248 13,566 12,726 13,358 14,484 14,408 16,223 18,705 13,400 14,024 14,686 13,866 14,894 15,282 16,763 16,996 18,101 28,156 26,808 29,637 15,206 15,498 16,002 38 34 5 31 26 9 1 1.9 Lawrence Lee Livingston Logan .... McDonough McHenry McLean . 269 523 657 488 465 4,154 2,449 299 557 707 526 496 4,494 2,650 306 586 736 552 518 4,814 2,750 2.4 5.1 4.0 4.9 4.4 7.1 3.8 16,873 15,128 16,662 15,925 13,259 21,562 18,581 18,836 19,269 16,014 16,622 17,748 18,395 17,069 17,943 14,164 14,633 22,498 23,138 19,844 20,238 22 63 30 40 91 4 13 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 Table 2.—Total Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 1991-93—Continued Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Area name 1991 Macon Macoupin Madison Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1992 1992-93 1993 Rank in State Dollars 1991 1992 1993 16 53 19 16,725 17,478 16,034 14,442 18,966 16,608 18,407 15,935 16,877 15,984 17,434 18,150 16,604 15,130 19,402 17,146 18,332 15,850 17,535 16,588 55 34 64 85 21 57 32 77 50 65 17,033 19,781 14,740 20,082 14,666 12,270 13,577 22,101 15,159 15,968 17,506 20,839 14,566 20,337 15,178 12,781 14,626 22,788 14,907 17,341 52 9 93 12 84 101 92 5 87 56 3.3 3.8 .6 3.9 1.5 -.1 2.1 3.9 6.5 5.7 19,298 19,937 16,132 17,070 15,833 16,349 19,930 20,816 13,475 14,830 13,403 14,344 14,296 15,604 15,328 17,590 17,934 18,839 17,999 18,759 20,553 17,532 16,312 21,469 14,884 14,431 15,940 18,344 19,930 19,785 11 51 71 7 89 94 75 31 17 18 268 1,468 229 321 262 266 287 1,090 7,817 966 .9 2.2 4.9 2.5 2.5 3.3 4.3 4.4 6.0 2.4 13,960 14,847 15,410 16,386 15,568 16,809 14,550 16,347 16,136 17,277 14,062 15,136 15,434 17,023 16,116 17,250 18,853 19,671 15,410 16,071 14,903 16,804 17,568 16,885 17,547 15,585 17,916 18,069 20,226 16,313 88 60 48 59 49 83 43 36 14 70 5,038 604 5,247 640 4.1 6.0 18,597 19,434 20,072 16,91,8 18,055 18,981 15 24 96,861 72,768 24,093 104,086 78,007 26,079 109,623 82,083 27,539 5.3 5.2 5.6 17,286 18,415 19,213 18,145 19,272 20,079 15,124 16,254 17,026 Adams Allen Bartholomew Benton Blackford Boone . Brown Carroll Cass Clark 476 5,853 1,172 138 202 818 216 303 596 1,432 497 6,323 1,300 160 214 894 235 321 650 1,549 526 6,586 1,409 170 222 955 256 344 679 1,627 5.7 4.2 8.4 6.7 3.8 6.8 8.9 7.2 4.5 5.0 15,170 19,315 18,098 14,559 14,463 21,092 14,971 15,876 15,522 16,165 15,789 20,754 19,908 16,535 15,274 22,637 16,076 16,649 16,856 17,340 16,588 21,498 21,302 17,680 15,910 23,747 17,203 17,817 17,608 18,054 60 4 5 37 71 2 46 34 40 26 Clay Clinton Crawford Daviess . .. Dearborn Decatur De Kalb Delaware Dubois Elkhart 352 482 113 389 630 367 573 1,981 687 2,713 387 520 124 418 675 400 628 2,094 736 2,962 410 553 132 434 710 436 666 2,184 783 3,148 6.0 6.3 6.6 3.7 5.3 9.0 6.0 4.3 6.4 6.3 14,195 15,335 11,442 14,030 15,758 15,346 15,929 16,570 18,425 17,227 15,384 16,363 12,336 14,984 16,378 16,442 17,142 17,511 19,635 18,594 15,963 17,282 12,978 15,406 16,845 17,804 17,973 18,292 20,680 19,476 70 44 92 79 53 35 30 25 9 15 Fayette . Floyd Fountain Franklin Fulton . Gibson Grant Greene Hamilton Hancock 391 1,156 240 274 276 503 1,187 442 3,059 874 429 1,258 273 292 299 540 1,234 478 3,417 943 462 1,330 290 311 316 561 1,285 489 3,722 1,009 7.7 5.7 6.1 6.4 5.7 3.9 4.2 2.3 8.9 7.0 15,068 17,448 13,440 13,867 14,543 15,793 15,990 14,259 26,414 18,826 16,409 18,729 15,245 14,701 15,624 16,965 16,629 15,234 28,218 19,883 17,583 19,510 16,152 15,521 16,241 17,488 17,398 15,300 29,156 20,933 41 14 67 78 65 42 43 80 1 7 Harrison Hendricks Henry Howard Huntington Jackson Jasper jay .... Jefferson Jenninas 443 1,463 759 1,487 581 559 361 286 418 327 484 1,605 816 1,588 633 609 397 301 456 379 513 1,726 860 1,692 673 646 422 314 474 414 6.0 7.5 5.4 6.6 6.4 6.0 6.4 4.4 3.9 9.4 14,539 15,790 18,862 20,165 15,756 16,787 18,195 19,303 16,229 17,686 14,589 15,779 14,172 15,292 13,208 13,818 13,945 15,039 13,653 15,552 16,395 21,040 17,665 20,443 18,586 16,506 15,875 14,447 15,558 16,608 64 6 38 12 23 61 73 87 77 59 2,262 823 4,798 2,349 643 4,984 3.9 2.5 3.9 635 210 244 202 200 274 406 455 585 208 697 225 266 216 217 288 432 490 612 225 729 232 278 229 226 298 439 485 636 232 4.7 3.2 4.3 6.0 4.5 3.3 1.5 -1.0 3.9 3.0 15,269 16,427 14,809 13,676 17,742 15,824 17,660 14,834 16,048 14,876 Ogle Peoria Perry Piatt Pike .. . . Pope Pulaski Putnam Randolph Richland . . . . 759 3,469 304 293 244 51 92 121 506 247 810 3,634 314 315 256 53 101 127 523 267 844 3,826 312 325 265 57 108 131 511 289 4.3 5.3 -.9 3.1 3.4 7.1 6.7 3.1 -2.2 8.4 16,170 18,863 14,222 18,758 13,952 11,575 12,386 21,101 14,616 14,830 Rock Island St. Clair Saline Sangarnon Schuyler Scott Shelby . Stark Stephenson Tazewell 2,882 4,232 417 3,588 102 75 319 99 865 2,244 2,993 4,483 434 3,780 111 81 349 113 913 2,353 3,092 4,653 436 3,925 113 81 357 117 972 2,487 Union .. Vermilion Wabash Warren Washington Wayne White Whiteside Will Williamson 247 1,354 204 279 240 239 253 975 6,920 893 265 1,436 218 314 256 257 276 1,044 7,375 943 Winnebago Woodford 4,777 565 Marion ... Marshall Mason Massac Menard Mercer Monroe Montgomery Morgan Moultrie . Indiana Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolltan portion See footnotes at end of table. Area name Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1993 18,287 19,190 20,032 15,985 17,157 17,501 18,008 18,977 19,630 2,153 766 4,532 Per capita personal income3 Total personal income 1991 Johnson Knox Kosciusko Lagrange Lake La Porte Lawrence Madison Marion Marshall 1992 1992-93 1993 Rank in State Dollars 1991 1992 1993 1993 1,712 596 1,149 373 8,224 1,741 653 2,106 16,284 659 1,862 652 1,264 408 8,605 1,854 699 2,218 17,368 708 1,994 686 1,318 437 8,935 1,931 738 2,336 18,181 751 7.1 5.2 4.2 7.0 3.8 4.2 5.6 5.3 4.7 6.0 18,639 14,997 17,571 12,536 17,181 16,109 15,166 16,011 20,199 15,377 19,890 16,305 19,178 13,496 17,925 17,057 16,121 16,866 21,392 16,392 20,637 17,135 19,721 14,204 18,574 17,643 16,825 17,698 22,307 17,214 11 49 13 89 24 39 54 36 ' 3 45 Martin Miami Monroe Montgomery Morgan Newton Noble Ohio Orange Owen 149 518 1,680 576 934 191 571 '73 236 234 160 538 1,802 634 1,004 211 632 77 256 256 165 566 1,884 676 1,067 221 678 80 274 272 3.0 5.1 4.6 6.6 6.3 4.4 7.2 4.2 6.7 6.3 14,369 13,968 15,372 16,587 16,332 13,850 14,905 13,579 12,735 13,218 15,301 15,738 14,567 15,598 16,276 16,788 18,093 19,062 17,154 17,947 15,237 15,770 16,350 17,191 14,521 14,718 13,825 14,651 13,991 14,432 75 76 55 20 31 74 48 82 84 88 Parke Perry Pike Porter Posey Pulaski Putnam Randolph Ripley Rush 223 249 193 2,521 431 183 433 402 400 262 243 266 204 2,681 473 202 476 419 440 286 255 279 211 2,815 499 214 506 442 468 302 5.0 4.9 3.5 5.0 5.5 5.8 6.2 5.4 6.2 5.7 14,344 15,535 16,135 13,090 14,042 14,689 15,628 16,430 16,867 19,075 19,959 20,659 16,616 18,153 19,072 14,368 15,624 16,468 14,029 15,174 15,881 14,793 15,490 16,240 15,927 17,306 18,001 14,401 15,641 16,439 68 83 52 10 19 62 72 66 29 63 St, Joseph Scott Shelby Spencer Starke Steuben Sullivan Switzerland Tippecanoe Tipton 4,313 281 681 281 258 453 279 97 2,131 279 4,634 310 736 304 285 489 306 104 2,285 295 4,894 331 784 320 297 516 321 108 2,396 318 5.6 6.6 6.5 5.0 4.1 5.6 5.1 4.5 4.8 7.9 17,338 13,173 16,674 14,301 11,290 16,300 14,694 12,471 16,194 17,305 18,497 14,420 17,866 15,440 12,671 17,268 16,082 12,978 17,284 18,260 19,308 15,077 18,736 16,089 13,323 17,928 16,779 13,378 17,936 19,442 18 81 22 69 91 33 57 90 32 16 Union Vanderburgh Vermillion Vigo Wabash Warren Warrick Washington Wayne Wells 93 3,113 254 1,673 538 102 814 314 1,125 440 101 3,329 270 1,771 567 127 872 344 1,186 468 106 3,483 282 1,839 594 137 920 365 1,245 494 4.6 4.6 4.3 3.9 4.7 8.0 5.5 6.2 5.0 5.6 13,171 14,214 14,548 18,784 19,967 20,839 15,277 16,258 16,786 15,713 16,518 17,109 15,410 16,306 17,097 12,521 15,513 16,716 17,779 18,734 19,364 13,050 14,085 14,648 15,615 16,457 17,199 16,932 17,948 18,901 86 8 56 50 51 58 17 85 47 21 357 454 396 490 434 519 9.5 5.9 15,308 16,181 16,655 17,245 28 27 47,712 22,567 25,145 50,955 24,178 26,777 51,558 25,170 26,389 1.2 4.1 -1.5 17,091 18,148 18,275 18,591 19,697 20,322 15,936 16,945 16,673 125 68 192 190 119 349 2,031 442 363 319 135 71 210 201 122 375 2,161 474 395 333 125 65 209 204 112 381 2,236 477 396 325 -7.1 -7.9 -.6 1.5 -8.0 1.8 3.5 .7 .3 -2.3 14,881 16,034 14,316 15,247 13,870 15,106 13,815 14,559 16,434 17,134 15,478 16,447 16,299 17,373 17,441 18,719 15,804 17,120 15,243 15,867 14,826 14,238 14,969 14,747 16,012 16,342 17,974 18,912 17,096 15,373 82 90 78 84 57 46 19 11 33 71 318 238 177 366 244 294 799 233 210 112 332 254 202 391 257 313 832 235 222 118 324 242 180 381 244 311 842 225 215 115 -2.2 -4.6 -10.9 -2.7 -5.1 -.7 1.2 -4.3 -3.3 -2.5 15,933 15,063 15,373 17,104 16,192 16,816 16,969 16,583 15,876 13,530 16,507 16,062 17,558 18,215 17,135 17,693 17,763 16,796 16,737 14,151 16,009 15,409 15,634 17,616 16,225 17,726 18,071 16,141 16,122 13,787 58 70 66 24 50 22 18 54 55 95 286 273 829 261 556 111 100 278 727 276 308 296 888 283 606 119 104 290 763 299 300 280 897 271 627 122 103 274 786 300 -2.6 -5.4 1.1 -3.9 3.3 2.2 -1.2 -5.4 3.0 .4 16,247 14,449 16,253 15,660 18,314 13,398 12,282 15,282 16,993 18,183 17,383 15,751 17,320 16,949 19,601 14,337 12,773 15,830 17,807 19,601 16,979 14,840 17,504 16,439 19,844 14,507 12,744 14,967 18,328 19,475 35 81 26 44 5 88 98 79 15 8 1,467 1,580 1,628 3.0 16,903 18,092 18,503 14 . . . .... White Whitley Iowa Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolltan portion Adair Adams Allamakee Appanoose Audubon Benton Black Hawk Boone Bremer Buchanan Buena Vista Butler Calhoun Carroll Cass Cedar Cerro Gordo Cherokee Chickasaw Clarke day Clayton Clinton Crawford Dallas Oavis Decatur Delaware Des Moines Dickinson Dubuoue . .... * 18,025 18,033 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • 77 Table 2.—Total Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 1991-93—Continued Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Area name : 1991 Emmet .. Fayette .. Floyd Franklin . Fremont Greene .. Grundy .. Guthrie .. Hamilton Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1992 1993 170 316 271 173 126 158 210 186 329 283 193 136 180 318 276 169 121 178 229 159 218 179 284 189 297 183 280 Total personal income Rank in State Dollars 1992-93 1991 1992 1993 -3.3 -3.6 -2.7 -12.3 -11.4 -10.7 -4.9 -3.3 -5.9 14,688 14,347 16,063 15,252 15,407 15,728 17,595 16,061 17,716 16,036 14,987 16,722 17,283 16,645 17,676 18,961 16,928 18,432 15,783 14,469 16,405 15,064 14,798 15,724 18,072 16,323 17,416 Hancock Hardin ... Harrison Henry .... Howard . Humboldt Ida Iowa Jackson Jasper ... 178 308 213 307 146 163 131 255 295 597 197 327 236 326 154 184 140 285 319 635 179 315 225 335 148 172 133 283 321 639 -9.1 -3.7 -4.3 2.9 -3.6 -6.4 -5.0 -.6 .6 .8 14,280 16,250 14,509 15,779 14,767 15,273 15,761 17,255 14,842 17,171 15,891 17,376 16,025 16,620 15,548 17,433 16,870 19,299 15,909 18,205 14,687 16,902 15,207 17,152 14,986 16,457 15,968 19,056 15,961 18,280 Jefferson Johnson Jones .... Keokuk .. Kossuth . Lee Linn Louisa ... Lucas .... Lyon 248 1,733 264 178 268 620 3,308 177 138 266 1,849 281 185 307 649 3,525 192 147 264 1,939 278 180 270 655 3,690 192 147 15,153 17,914 13,480 15,294 14,646 15,943 19,387 15,221 15,187 14,671 16,103 18,853 14,199 15,900 16,843 16,603 20,372 16,845 16,274 14,975 15,749 19,578 13,992 15,528 14,864 . 16,854 21,096 16,331 16,212 14,152 1993 61 : 89 45 75 83 64 17 48 28 86 36 73 32 76 ; 43 , 59 10 60 16 :; 1 63 7 92 68 175 179 169 -.5 4.8 -1.0 -2.2 -12.1 1.1 4.7 -.5 -.3 -5.6 Madison Mahaska Marion ... Marshall Mills Mitchell . Monona . Monroe . Montgomery Muscatine 201 330 511 682 257 189 145 129 196 732 216 347 544 706 272 198 161 136 205 798 217 350 563 714 262 187 152 138 201 827 .2 .9 3.5 1.1 -3.6 -5.4 -5.6 1.3 -1.8 3.6 15,969 15,389 16,939 17,897 19,355 17,302 14,541 15,761 16,404 18,061 16,901 16,140 17,990 18,696 20,357 18,251 16,100 16,576 17,196 19,539 16,808 16,199 18,509 18,844 19,604 ',. 17,014 15,137 16,880 16,690 20,070 40 52 13 12 O'Brien .. Osceola Page Palo Alto Plymouth Pocahontas Polk Pottawattamie Poweshiek Ringgold 258 111 278 151 400 144 262 113 296 171 418 159 249 100 293 156 412 135 7,038 1,303 7,544 1,386 7,902 1,412 316 72 333 79 334 72 -4.9 -11.9 -1.2 -8.8 -1.6 -14.9 4.7 1.9 .3 -8.2 16,710 15,327 16,499 14,279 17,043 15,326 21,160 15,721 16,691 13,325 16,907 15,724 17,785 16,294 17,683 17,058 22,324 16,594 17,593 14,559 16,169 13,899 17,587 14,985 17,259 14,745 23,063 16,883 17,692 13,371 53 94 25 77 30 85 1 37 23 97 -5.9 3.8 -4.6 -.2 3.7 .9 -6.7 -.7 -2.9 2.7 15,292 18,426 15,886 15,079 16,326 15,418 12,784 14,711 12,787 15,612 16,537 19,257 16,415 15,788 17,347 16,031 13,454 15,625 13,877 16,252 15,698 19,935 15,754 15,546 17,858 16,027 12,525 15,507 13,412 16,619 65 4 62 67 20 56 99 16,499 16,805 13,545 16,261 16,066 15,230 17,142 14,846 15,400 17,447 17,196 14,501 17,311 17,841 16,353 18,909 15,671 16,663 17,788 17,337 13,975 17,428 17,210 16,249 19,434 14,648 15,359 18,251 19,210 19,849 20,087 21,092 21,692 16,069 16,960 17,618 Sac Scott Shelby .... Sioux Story Tama Taylor Union .... Van Buren Wapello . Warren .. Washington Wayne .. Webster Winnebago Winneshiek Woodbury Worth .... Wright ... Kansas Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion 186 201 189 2,825 2,987 3,101 211 454 217 480 207 479 1,209 1,290 1,338 268 90 186 99 558 279 95 196 107 584 282 89 195 104 599 604 334 95 654 192 320 650 347 101 695 213 343 675 352 98 695 204 342 1,701 1,890 1,960 117 218 124 238 117 218 3.8 1.2 -3.5 .1 -4.1 -.4 3.7 -5.5 -8.4 45,476 27,182 18,294 48,368 28,924 19,444 50,319 30,110 20,209 4.0 4.1 3.9 Allen Anderson Atchison Barber ... Barton ... Bourbon Brown ... Butler .... Chase ... Chautauqua 198 104 244 87 487 226 166 903 44 62 214 125 266 95 506 240 180 977 51 63 Cherokee Cheyenne Clark Clay Cloud .... Coffey ... Gomanche Cowley 286 59 51 141 165 136 314 58 50 155 174 147 324 69 64 158 182 147 45 560 48 589 54 611 See footnotes at end of table. 218 118 271 100 528 241 181 1,014 54 64 80 ;; 39 2 47 51 91 6 34 74 38 41 3 :69 96 42 21 29 93 27 31 49 9 87 72 1.7 -6.3 1.8 5.6 4.3 .3 1.0 3.8 6.2 1.9 13,520 13,416 14,498 15,039 16,670 15,218 14,880 17,452 15,089 14,327 14,546 15,941 15,838 16,681 17,283 16,182 16,212 18,327 17,527 14,482 14,790 14,927 16,038 17,755 18,219 16,148 16,518 18,558 18,491 14,747 102 100 83 57 50 82 76 44 46 103 3.2 17.4 26.8 2.0 4.6 -7.1 11.6 3.7 13,320 18,270 21,403 15,553 15,182 16,140 20,193 15,296 14,527 18,119 21,102 16,666 16,227 17,144 21,940 15,990 14,869 21,435 26,839 17,061 17,023 17,005 24,723 16,516 101 18 6 68 69 71 10 78 Percent change2 Millions of dollars Area name 1991 1992 Per capita personal income3 1992-93 1993 1991 1992 2.9 1.3 15,420 18,739 16,354 16,686 19,724 20,730 2.0 14,604 16,125 14,875 21,112 13,732 16,425 14,071 17,209 16,208 14,164 15,613 15,796 17,067 16,648 15,629 16,023 22,106 24,488 15,333 15,503 17,366 18,242 15,473 16,536 17,827 18,557 16,133 17,717 15,183 15,317 Crawford Decatur 548 73 585 75 Dickinson Doniphan Douglas Edwards Elk Ellis Ellsworth Finney Ford Franklin 276 131 1,237 78 301 138 307 132 1,318 80 1,385 88 5.0 9.3 44 425 49 450 51 474 4.0 5.4 93 578 446 314 101 609 449 340 108 640 491 351 6.8 5.2 9.4 3.2 Geary Gove Graham Grant Gray Greeley Greenwood Hamilton Harper Harvey 397 72 52 133 102 56 117 71 115 543 451 76 61 142 98 48 127 70 124 572 452 88 55 149 112 63 132 78 129 596 Haskell Hodgeman Jackson Jefferson Jewell Johnson Kearny Kingman Kiowa Labette 91 36 180 257 62 9,716 92 38 197 278 71 10,429 100 47 201 283 69 11,007 93 125 66 348 93 141 65 358 107 145 74 363 14.3 Lane, Leavenworth Lincoln Linn Logan Lyon McPherson Marion Marshall Meade 51 946 56 112 51 533 458 178 192 85 48 56 15.7 1,021 1,069 66 123 51 553 489 197 214 84 66 124 57 571 507 200 212 96 Miami Mitchell Montgomery Morris Morton Nemaha Neosho Ness Norton Osage 369 114 577 84 60 185 266 72 93 223 396 128 597 93 64 194 282 79 103 239 411 125 613 95 66 187 288 82 104 240 Osborne Ottawa Pawnee Phillips Pottawatomie, Pratt Rawlins Reno Republic Rice 74 77 145 105 242 176 52 85 86 153 117 262 179 56 83 87 160 117 275 191 66 1,035 1,086 1,136 100 168 113 173 118 185 914 83 55 133 962 128 1,021 1,032 97 59 148 93 64 150 139 134 8,118 347 3,098 58 8,638 334 3,223 62 8,838 373 3,363 63 Sherman Smith Stafford Stanton Stevens Sumner Thomas Trego Wabaunsee Wallace 124 76 93 65 116 422 145 58 103 30 123 83 93 55 117 456 136 63 108 29 146 86 103 54 128 468 158 66 112 35 Washington Wichita Wilson Woodson Wyandotte 107 65 142 60 122 64 153 68 123 80 156 65 2,252 2,348 2,427 Riley Rooks Rush Russell Saline Scott Sedgwick Seward Shawnee Sheridan 1,019 602 76 1,063 Rank in State Dollars -3.8 .3 15.5 -9.8 5.0 14.5 31,1 4.0 10.6 4.6 4.2 8.3 22.5 2.4 2.0 -2.8 5.5 2.9 12.9 1.4 4.6 -.1 .7 10.9 3.3 3.7 1.3 -1.0 14.0 3.8 -1.9 2.7 2.5 2.7 -3.6 2.4 3.3 .5 .5 -2.0 1.2 4.7 .5 4.7 6.9 17.9 4.6 3.8 7.0 1.1 -3.2 8.8 1.2 4.3 -3.5 2.3 11.6 4.3 1.0 18.9 3.9 10.7 -1.4 9.5 2.6 16.1 5.4 4.2 19.2 .6 26.3 1.5 -4.2 3.3 1993 1993 73 24 87 74 84 12 93 49 75 45 60 96 13,514 13,721 14,591 22,711 24,099 28,058 14,928 17,748 16,371 18,497 19,170 19,816 18,916 18,154 20,934 31,853 27,873 35,594 14,841 15,962 16,517 30,704 30,097 33,459 16,371 18,174 19,213 17,509 18,376 18,852 104 5 80 31 22 1 77 2 35 39 23,287 23,376 25,142 16,420 17,507 21,595 15,628 17,160 17,424 16,057 17,108 17,179 15,074 17,516 17,314 26,602 27,878 28,692 23,468 23,298 26,403 15,039 17,016 17,250 18,499 18,116 20,380 14,781 15,217 15,605 9 17 63 66 64 3 7 65 27 90 21,817 20,964 24,168 14,265 15,280 15,774 15,767 18,805 18,917 13,386 14,536 14,560 16,754 16,257 18,293 15,461 16,013 16,396 16,788 17,732 18,290 13,921 15,419 15,348 16,701 18,779 18,671 19,935 19,694 22,309 13 88 37 105 47 79 48 95 42 15 16,477 17,015 17,709 17,600 15,700 16,192 14,798 15,180 18,685 19,461 18,623 17,972 16,554 16,967 20,280 21,284 17,857 17,994 15,300 15,095 70 62 81 98 34 54 72 20 53 99 15,490 15,809 14,924 13,405 17,459 17,679 15,543 17,933 15,836 14,400 15,436 18,016 13,810 15,475 19,131 19,947 16,167 18,154 14,786 15,509 18,323 18,564 15,534 16,895 16,626 17^457 15,669 18,031 16,149 16,757 17,876 15,572 20,644 18,560 16,015 19,994 19,834 18,193 18,847 17,846 55 91 25 43 85 28 30 51 40 56 14,098 13,828 14,517 17,163 19,233 24,512 19,835 18,640 19,055 19,480 15,526 15,744 17,613 19,491 20,784 25,775 21,110 19,617 20,480 21,939 92 89 61 33 23 8 21 32 26 16 18,209 18,107 21,368 15,323 16,994 17,738 17,934 18,178 19,878 27,182 23,848 24,018 22,839 22,662 24,644 16,199 17,417 17,747 17,401 16,313 19,113 16,006 17,679 18,687 15,925 16,724 17,150 16,183 15,885 18,891 19 59 29 14 11 58 36 41 67 38 15,446 17,846 18,012 23,895 23,008 28,460 14,122 15,172 15,226 14,912 16,734 16,003 14,070 14,820 15,465 52 4 97 86 94 15,179 16,085 15,759 19,310 20,145 26,290 20,774 17,899 19,742 20,926 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 Table 2.—Total Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 1991-93—Continued Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Area name 1991 Kentucky Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Adair Allen Anderson Ballard Barren Bath . Bell Boone Bourbon Boyd .... Boyle Bracken Breath itt Breckinridge Bullitt Butler Caldwell Galloway Campbell Carlisle Carroll Carter Casey Christian Clark Clay Clinton Crittenden Cumberland ... , ... Edmonson Elliott Estill Fayette Fleming Floyd Franklin Fulton Gallatin Garrard Grant Graves Grayson Green Greenup Hancock Hardin Harlan Harrison Hart Henderson Henry . Hickman Hopkins Jackson Jefferson Jessamine Johnson Kenton Knott ..... ....... . . Knox . .. . Larue Laurel Lawrence Lee Leslie Letcher Lewis Lincoln Livingston Looan Lyon McCracken McCreary McLean Madison Magoffin Marion Marshall Martin Percent change2 Millions of dollars . .. ... ...... .... ... t«. .. .. . ... Mason Meade Menifee Mercer Metcalfe .... ... See footnotes at end of table. 1992 1992-93 1991 1993 Rank in State Dollars 1992 1993 61,611 34,522 27,089 64,075 36,010 28,065 4.0 4.3 3.6 15,429 17,913 13,105 16,418 16,889 18,998 19,635 13,996 14,319 188 165 229 120 489 115 349 1,056 297 877 204 180 249 136 530 123 372 1,159 316 938 209 191 264 139 558 124 385 1,234 322 951 2.8 6.2 6.2 2.0 5.2 1.0 3.5 6.4 2.0 1.4 12,122 11,233 15,156 15,119 14,245 11,794 11,220 17,430 15,392 17,091 13,003 12,017 15,939 17,217 15,376 12,392 12,064 18,417 16,315 18,342 13,212 12,611 16,320 17,450 15,969 12,360 12,478 18,884 16,663 18,661 74 84 29 15 31 92 88 9 23 10 375 101 167 195 649 120 171 456 1,366 78 406 105 186 211 715 130 183 503 1,425 87 423 108 199 214 770 135 190 524 1,489 91 4.3 3.0 6.9 1.6 7.7 3.3 4.1 4.3 4.5 3.7 14,547 12,782 11,114 11,928 13,188 10,641 13,091 14,770 16,086 14,814 15,642 13,009 12,272 12,754 14,031 11,467 13,929 16,000 16,772 16,648 16,149 13,241 12,972 12,945 14,520 11,801 14,627 16,501 17,359 17,137 30 72 80 81 52 97 49 26 16 19 135 277 156 799 462 217 95 110 72 1,392 146 302 171 894 490 241 101 118 77 1,476 150 311 171 913 507 253 105 123 78 1,537 2.3 3.1 .5 2.2 3.4 5.4 4.0 4.6 1.2 4.1 14,302 11,202 10,952 12,058 15,515 9,924 10,313 11,878 10,640 15,842 15,417 12,058 11,816 13,050 16,281 10,837 11,035 12,682 11,474 16,635 15,737 12529 11,774 13,655 16,687 11,161 11,377 13,070 11,509 17,193 36 94 99 65 22 108 104 79 101 18 105 57 1S5 4,564 160 529 775 114 70 159 113 65 168 4,834 167 570 824 128 76 170 116 61 175 5,031 168 586 865 130 78 174 2.8 4.0 4.1 .7 2.7 5.0 1.3 2.6 2.4 10,086 8,767 10,380 19,957 12,099 12,065 17,501 13,918 12,654 13,372 11,062 11,248 9,853 9,307 11,064 11,399 20,818 21,372 13,266 13,227 12,993 13,294 18,374 19,104 15,816 16,898 13,446 13,453 13,973 14,119 106 120 102 4 73 71 8 20 69 57 220 474 248 126 527 132 1,203 420 242 179 238 522 266 133 564 139 1,298 445 256 189 249 544 275 136 567 144 1,336 449 264 194 4.6 4.3 3.6 2.3 .5 3.5 3.0 .8 3.1 2.8 13,498 14,049 11,539 12,041 14,362 16,893 13,973 11,491 14,711 11,739 14,079 15,320 12,270 12,809 15,217 17,784 15,403 12,268 15,431 12,178 14,286 15,830 12,379 13,124 15,269 18,086 14,950 12,382 15,801 12,359 54 32 91 77 43 12 46 90 34 93 681 188 72 746 114 13,392 455 281 2,501 186 743 204 85 777 122 14,393 489 302 2,661 200 771 213 84 796 128 15,017 514 315 2,764 206 3.7 4.2 -.4 2.5 4.7 4.3 5.1 4.4 3.9 3.1 15,744 14,245 12,901 16,114 9,364 20,073 14,480 12,024 17,491 10,273 16,957 15,146 15,250 16,752 9,954 21,488 15,158 12,806 18,576 10,986 17,461 15,494 15,309 17,207 10,393 22,372 15,558 13,171 19,128 11,361 14 40 42 17 115 2 39 75 6 105 299 177 564 154 73 142 319 129 228 135 322 190 607 165 79 161 326 139 251 143 340 193 639 172 82 167 336 140 262 151 5.5 1.3 5.2 4.3 4.5 4.2 3.0 1.1 4.1 5.2 9,945 15,050 12,724 10,828 9,364 10,426 11,786 9,887 11,242 14,772 10,611 15,902 13,418 11,219 9,985 11,701 12,091 10,584 12,275 15,653 11,181 15,779 13,739 11,643 10,524 12,170 12,487 10,685 12,491 16,476 107 35 63 100 113 95 87 112 86 27 314 80 1,134 139 122 794 129 215 422 163 354 86 1,202 152 134 861 140 232 458 173 367 89 1,262 164 134 916 142 235 470 176 3.6 3.8 4.9 7.6 .1 6.4 1.7 1.2 2.5 1.9 12,747 11,712 17,936 8,815 12,680 13,562 9,750 12,946 15,266 12,858 14,181 12,023 18,854 9,627 13,819 14,460 10,453 13,994 16,390 13,500 14,525 12,069 19,647 10,165 13,971 15,019 10,514 14,074 16,535 13,697 51 96 5 116 61 44 114 59 25 64 241 301 48 284 104 263 32! 269 336 53 323 114 2.3 3.4 2.2 5.4 3.0 14,372 15,317 15,606 12,641 13,444 13,154 9,356 10,029 10,017 14,736 15,690 16,453 11,524 12,329 12,430 37 76 117 28 89 307 111 Area name 1993 57,327 32,178 25,149 -4.9 Total personal income Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1991 Per capita personal income3 1992-93 Rank in State Dollars 1991 1992 1993 12,966 13,190 9,602 12,806 14,532 13,533 14,007 9,808 13,219 15,357 14,220 14,098 9,957 13,462 15,802 55 58 118 68 33 1.5 8.3 3.2 4.8 3.8 4.3 3.3 3.5 4.0 13,292 11,810 23,111 12,273 8,650 12,583 12,511 13,423 10,097 13,153 13,875 13,583 12,549 12,673 24,230 25,024 13,178 13,470 9,644 9,378 13,164 13,414 13,423 14,016 13,941 14,365 10,799 11,024 13,851 14,195 66 83 1 67 119 70 60 53 109 56 6.5 5.9 3.8 3.1 5.1 5.1 4.5 3.7 4.4 2.6 11,452 10,694 10,673 12,150 16,995 17,520 13,705 14,149 13,281 12,351 11,961 11,310 11,096 12,967 18,020 18,564 14,783 14,860 14,384 14,370 12,676 11,796 11,393 13,110 18,410 19,107 15,396 14,951 14,794 14,614 82 98 103 78 11 7 41 45 47 50 4.6 6.7 5.6 2.4 3.7 -.7 3.9 1.6 4.0 13,515 12,934 15,748 15,735 13,909 9,818 15,414 11,687 9,740 20,807 14,193 13,619 17,219 16,950 15,100 10,681 16,645 12,298 10,927 21,510 14,759 13,885 16,822 17,476 15,596 11,017 16,589 12,513 10,965 22,285 48 62 21 13 38 110 24 85 111 3 71,271 56,855 14,417 5.1 5.1 4.9 15,079 15,876 16,080 16,884 12,084 12,853 16,612 17,651 13,482 697 229 1,009 284 448 446 207 1,367 4,392 2,744 736 248 1,057 294 466 483 220 1,458 4,642 2,871 5.6 8.1 4.8 3.5 4.1 8.4 6.2 6.7 5.7 4.6 11,859 9,840 15,557 12,165 10,227 13,394 12,086 14,735 16,758 15,408 12,404 10,139 16,602 12,573 11,432 14,347 13,042 15,842 17,809 16,056 12,989 10,676 17,021 12,986 11,722 15,462 13,743 16,611 18,775 16,690 48 63 8 49 58 15 35 10 5 9 113 114 123 197 243 312 6,810 112 240 372 126 121 146 211 263 343 7,327 110 262 408 136 125 140 222 265 369 7,623 107 276 429 8.7 3.3 5.6 5.4 11,586 12,365 11,090 11,363 11,765 12,479 17,663 11,836 12,262 11,115 12,757 13,269 13,148 12,206 12,639 13,658 18,702 11,517 13,206 12,104 13,595 13,849 12,415 12,839 12,712 14,717 19,288 11,417 13,724 12,672 39 31 55 50 51 25 2 60 37 53 Franklin . Grant Iberia Iberville . Jackson Jefferson Jefferson Davis Lafayette Lafourche LaSalle 253 196 958 411 199 7,976 356 2,853 1,108 167 278 210 999 451 209 8,316 370 2,995 1,145 179 279 225 1,057 471 223 8,710 387 3,159 1,206 190 .3 7.2 5.8 4.5 6.8 4.7 4.6 5.5 5.3 6.2 11,402 11,179 13,894 13,268 12,812 17,628 11,524 16,941 12,855 12,180 12,492 11,900 14,364 14,526 13,334 18,240 11,937 17,516 13,271 12,980 12,402 12,675 15,031 15,141 14,292 19,100 12,480 18,153 13,919 13,744 56 52 21 19 28 3 54 6 30 34 Lincoln . Livingston . Madison Morehouse Natchitoches Orleans Ouachita Plaquemines Pointe Coupee Rapides 580 959 135 416 416 8,664 2,046 379 281 1,894 621 1,055 148 455 456 9,219 2,181 385 320 1,961 654 1,119 146 460 496 9,649 2,274 402 317 2,076 5.3 6.0 1.2 8.8 4.7 4.3 4.6 -.8 5.9 13,719 13,302 11,047 13,124 11,433 17,643 14,281 14,838 12,443 14,379 14,665 15,153 14,330 14,737 12,123 11,747 14,254 14,337 12,461 13,428 18,841 19,800 15,030 15,586 14,944 15,845 14,100 13,920 15,029 16,579 18 24 57 27 42 1 14 13 29 11 108 272 272 937 733 97 283 570 990 122 280 290 980 772 107 304 597 1,056 129 282 318 1,028 809 113 322 628 1,103 5.6 .5 9.7 4.9 4.7 5.4 6.0 5.3 4.4 11,735 13,314 12,102 14,090 16,917 9,743 13,622 14,050 12,283 13,168 13,816 13,712 13,754 12,626 13,734 14,720 15,386 17,517 17,999 10,765 11,228 14,669 15,424 14,518 15,136 13,030 13,469 32 33 36 17 7 62 16 20 41 1992 1993 Monroe , Montgomery Morgan .. Muhlenberg Nelson ... 148 258 119 401 441 155 275 129 412 478 165 282 131 418 505 Nicholas . Ohio Oldham .. Owen Owsley ... Pendleton Perry ..... Pike Powell ... Pulaski .. 90 250 812 114 44 156 385 979 118 663 95 266 882 124 49 167 415 1,019 128 712 94 271 955 128 51 173 433 1,052 133 740 Robertson Rockcastle Rowan .. Russell .. Scott Shelby ... Simpson Spencer Taylor .... Toad 24 160 221 182 415 444 211 98 284 135 26 170 233 198 454 479 230 105 313 159 28 180 242 204 477 503 240 108 327 163 142 80 258 1,237 146 173 213 391 66 424 154 86 281 1,353 159 191 228 419 75 447 161 91 275 1,429 163 199 227 435 76 465 63,956 51,116 12,840 67,837 54,098 13,739 Acadia ... Allen Ascension Assumption Avoyelles Beauregard Bienville Bossier .. Caddb ... Calcasieu 666 215 924 276 399 412 193 1,267 4,118 2,617 Caldwell Cameron Catahoula Claibome Concordia De Soto East Baton Rouge East Carroll East Feliciana Evangeline Trigg Trimble .. Union .... Warren .. Washington Wayne .. Webster Whitiey .. Wolfe .... Wood ford Louisiana Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Red River Richland Sabine . St. Bernard St. Charles St. Helena St. James St. John the Baptist St Landry ' 6.3 2.3 1.8 1.7 5.6 -1.4 -2.3 -4.6 5.1 .6 7.6 4.0 -2.7 -1.5 1993 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • 79 Table 2.—Total Persona! Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 1991-93—Continued Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Percent change2 Millions of dollars Area name 1991 1992 1993 1992-93 Rank in State Dollars 1991 1992 1993 59 6.4 4.7 12,579 17,856 12,169 12,793 13,323 12,752 11,933 11,569 11,632 13,604 12,047 18,505 13,082 13,232 13,378 13,972 12,391 12,096 12,626 14,224 13,590 19,078 13,717 13,360 14,430 14,808 13,207 13,036 13,398 14,840 40 4 38 44 26 23 45 47 43 22 330 138 135 222 4.3 1.5 2.4 8.3 14,942 10,661 8,942 11,908 16,029 11,321 10,140 12,610 16,490 11,411 10,400 13,159 12 61 64 46 22,438 9,764 12,674 23,282 10,164 13,118 3.8 4.1 3.5 17,304 18,137 18,780 18,760 19,726 20,486 16,326 17,078 17,641 Kennebec Knox Lincoln Oxford . . Penobscot 1,755 1,223 5,198 423 853 2,094 657 583 764 2,369 1,827 1,278 5,450 444 896 2,181 683 615 801 2,487 1,900 1,309 5,675 462 933 2,239 719 636 836 2,589 4.0 2.4 4.1 4.2 4.1 2.7 5.2 3.4 4.3 4.1 16,747 13,997 21,218 14,458 17,907 17,882 17,923 19,099 14,550 16,101 17,575 14,668 22,253 15,084 18,693 18,617 18,563 20,048 15,206 17,021 18,286 15,238 23,063 15,713 19,239 19,114 19,421 20,583 15,830 17,711 8 12 1 11 5 7 3 2 10 9 Piscataquis Sagadahoc Somerset Waldo . Washington York .... 252 610 707 466 487 2,957 265 632 744 492 505 3,137 273 649 776 519 527 3,240 3.1 2.7 4.3 5.6 4.4 3.3 13,491 17,842 13,971 13,827 13,642 17,843 14,119 18,569 14,634 14,426 14,022 18,839 14,560 19,156 15,192 14,963 14,617 19,344 16 6 13 14 15 4 109,229 103,111 6,118 113,928 107,548 6,380 118,538 111,918 6,619 4.0 4.1 3.8 22,481 23,186 23,908 22,867 23,586 24,323 17,509 18,034 18,555 Allegany Anne Arundel Baltimore Calvert Caroline Carroll . Cecil .... Charles Dorchester Frederick 1,154 9,560 16,841 1,104 398 2,649 1,283 2,012 488 3,026 1,187 10,030 17,515 1,172 410 2,836 1,332 2,106 506 3,249 1,219 10,477 18,096 1,261 426 2,950 1,385 2,225 519 3,463 2.7 4.5 3.3 7.6 3.8 4.0 4.0 5.7 2.5 6.6 15,404 22,030 24,055 20,265 14,555 20,846 17,507 19,333 16,182 19,494 15,897 22,801 24,859 20,539 14,712 21,776 17,854 19,897 16,737 20,314 16,433 23,400 25,560 21,129 15,065 22,206 18,253 20,694 17,080 20,881 21 5 4 10 22 6 16 12 19 11 Garrett Harford Howard Kent .... Montgomery Prince Georges Queen Annes St. Marys Somerset Talbot .. 394 3,700 5,248 355 24,952 15,192 733 1,319 304 807 411 3,857 5,512 376 26,030 15,770 752 1,391 310 843 421 4,010 5,838 382 27,181 16,454 777 1,433 328 881 2.5 4.0 5.9 1.6 4.4 4.3 3.2 3.0 5.8 4.6 13,723 19,565 26,938 19,620 32,423 20,480 21,146 16,827 13,062 25,858 14,153 19,791 27,574 20,390 33,340 20,973 21,446 17,478 13,219 26,934 14,412 20,345 28,165 20,633 34,299 21,772 21,772 18,106 13,817 27,895 23 14 2 13 1 7 8 18 24 3 Washington Wicomico Worcester Baltimore City 2,000 1,296 757 13,656 2,076 1,345 789 14,123 2,145 1,414 817 14,436 3.3 5.1 3.5 22 16,173 17,074 20,828 18,645 16,561 17,540 21,193 19,477 17,028 18,184 21,371 20,182 20 17 9 15 136,623 134,894 1,729 141,509 139,742 1,767 146,893 145,057 1,836 3.8 3.8 3.9 22,764 23,588 24,410 22,813 23,644 24,467 19,534 19,880 20,575 4,293 2,837 9,041 271 14,969 1,266 8,665 2,603 36,952 192 4,369 2,954 9,306 278 15,517 1,286 8,738 2,667 38,693 203 4,557 3,012 9,706 293 16,108 1,324 8,956 2,779 40,136 219 4.3 1.9 4.3 5.5 3.8 2.9 2.5 4.2 3.7 7.6 22,785 20,517 17,833 23,044 22,327 17,924 19,060 17,823 26,497 31,342 22,961 21,545 18,364 23,324 23,118 18,176 19,333 18,207 27,720 32,668 23,619 22,094 19,091 24,251 23,894 18,727 19,918 18,781 28,710 33,991 7 8 12 5 6 14 11 13 3 1 16,869 8,668 16,185 13,811 17,558 9,036 16,698 14,205 18,306 9,476 17,244 14,778 4.3 4.9 3.3 4.0 27,293 19,794 24,939 19,487 28,204 20,539 26,130 20,034 29,217 21,307 27,059 20,738 2 9 4 10 175,250 151,712 23,538 185,702 160,865 24,837 194,718 168,524 26,194 4.9 4.8 5.5 18,703 19,707 20,584 19,573 20,655 21,569 14,537 15,190 15,910 137 116 1,507 144 122 1,616 148 129 1,723 3.1 5.8 6.6 13,380 13,923 14,542 11,952 12,494 13,217 16,383 17,341 18,214 St. Mary St. Tammany Tangipahoa Tensas Terrebonne Union .. Vermilion Vernon Washington Webster West Baton Rouge West Carroll West Feliciana Winn ... Maine Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Aroostook Franklin HanrnHr Maryland Metropolitan portion Nonmetropoiltan portion Massachusetts Metropolitan portion Nonmetropoiltan portion Barnstable Berkshire Bristol . Dukes Essex . Franklin Hampden Hampshire Middlesex Nantucket . . Norfolk Plymouth Suffolk Worcester Michigan Metropolitan portion Nonmetropoiltan portion Alcona Alger .. Allegan 476 485 520 731 2,680 1,051 89 1,310 264 597 739 496 565 697 2,875 1,150 91 1,329 293 624 773 541 591 779 3,075 1,229 92 1,438 315 668 736 575 619 292 129 115 190 316 136 132 205 21,399 9,322 12,077 See footnotes at end of table. 7.2 11.7 7.0 6.9 1.4 8.2 7.3 7.2 -4.8 Area name 1991 1992 1993 1992-93 Rank in State Dollars 1991 1992 1993 1993 Benzie 466 270 210 103 820 1,923 195 489 283 216 105 862 2,031 207 512 299 229 113 906 2,124 221 4.8 5.6 6.2 7.0 5.1 4.6 6.8 15,129 14,509 13,686 12,819 16,236 17,204 15,744 15,829 15,016 13,860 13,367 16,852 18,114 16,478 16,559 15,499 14,572 14,320 17,517 18,924 17,156 38 53 66 71 30 17 35 Berrien Branch Calhoun Cass Charlevoix Cheboygan Chippewa Clare. I—— Clinton Crawford 2,673 603 2,334 733 359 301 418 321 973 152 2,850 617 2,484 785 378 312 447 341 1,037 159 3,018 640 2,575 836 400 331 477 367 1,071 171 5.9 3.8 3.7 6.5 5.8 6.0 6.7 7.4 3.3 7.6 16,566 14,473 16,990 14,874 16,432 14,090 11,830 12,442 16,477 12,074 17,639 14,772 17,963 16,002 17,027 14,351 12,564 12,993 17,452 12,266 18,660 15,271 18,510 17,068 17,753 14,968 13,209 13,591 17,799 12,941 18 57 20 36 27 60 78 76 26 79 570 436 1,670 494 7,704 287 254 1,185 565 618 602 462 1,781 521 7,983 307 261 1,277 594 674 634 485 1,826 547 8,278 324 280 1,352 634 710 5.3 5.0 2.5 4.9 3.7 5.7 7.2 5.9 6.7 5.3 14,935 16,174 17,680 19,253 17,838 12,751 14,133 18,058 14,314 14,033 15,710 17,065 18,713 20,001 18,468 13,412 14,488 19,010 14,971 15,189 16,432 17,929 19,038 20,648 19,139 13,809 15,461 19,744 15,939 16,012 40 25 15 8 14 74 55 12 49 47 Houghton Huron Ingham Ionia losco Iron . Isabella Jackson Kalamazoo Kalkaska 479 569 5,035 772 433 179 792 2,406 4,406 179 491 602 5,317 818 426 184 827 2,530 4,618 189 523 643 5,447 855 395 193 859 2,647 4,851 206 6.6 6.8 2.4 4.5 5.0 3.8 4.6 5.0 9.0 13,400 16,196 17,856 13,395 14,030 13,683 14,182 15,921 19,650 12,897 13,588 17,140 18,906 14,114 14,115 13,827 14,678 16,687 20,448 13,470 14,479 18,343 19,464 14,543 15,945 14,592 15,111 17,349 21,296 14,395 69 21 13 67 48 65 58 32 7 70 Kent Keweenaw Lake Lapeer Leelanau Lenawee Livingston 9,714 26 103 1,301 313 1,536 2,424 99 169 15,095 10,417 27 109 1,342 335 1,632 2,639 91 177 15,812 11,041 28 119 1,416 355 1,713 2,828 99 188 16,522 6.0 6.0 9.0 5.5 6.1 4.9 7.2 8.7 6.5 4.5 19,118 15,364 11,654 16,928 18,676 16,447 20,292 17,212 15,734 20,882 20,343 15,239 12,033 17,135 19,302 17,355 21,553 16,182 16,396 21,767 21,407 15,471 12,735 17,719 19,907 18,035 22,560 17,641 17,409 22,691 6 54 81 28 11 24 5 29 31 4 323 1,079 384 448 378 1,649 159 2,308 685 108 339 1,135 412 478 409 1,773 169 2,471 738 115 347 1,182 436 518 425 1,851 181 2,589 778 120 2.4 4.1 5.9 8.5 3.9 4.4 6.6 4.8 5.4 4.3 15,035 15,127 14,760 11,844 15,315 21,497 12,783 17,121 12,545 11,857 15,425 15,797 15,524 12,665 16,553 22,796 13,266 18,231 13,333 12,409 15,366 16,450 16,308 13,622 17,262 23,576 13,903 19,022 13,889 12,666 56 39 42 75 33 3 72 16 73 82 2,418 539 29,853 331 227 128 257 88 281 3,573 2,535 582 32,088 349 235 131 286 93 298 3,878 2,644 617 33,641 365 254 136 310 101 323 4,137 4.3 6.0 4.8 4.6 7.9 3.7 8.4 8.7 8.5 6.7 15,039 13,715 27,120 14,531 11,749 14,460 12,614 11,004 15,114 18,471 15,654 14,299 28,725 15,203 11,994 14,927 13,915 11,332 15,575 19,659 16,239 14,732 29,781 15,773 12,773 15,568 14,729 12,131 16,376 20,578 44 62 1 50 80 52 63 83 41 9 190 281 3,531 2,573 909 586 122 1,100 834 1,034 198 293 3,691 2,669 960 623 122 1,153 873 1,100 206 314 3,845 2,807 1,030 670 130 1,198 914 1,174 4.1 7.0 4.2 5.1 7.3 7.5 5.8 3.9 4.6 6.7 13,707 13,791 16,629 17,322 15,384 14,532 14,762 15,628 14,955 14,530 14,264 14,133 17,378 17,799 16,171 15,275 14,450 16,276 15,558 15,221 14,749 14,727 18,108 18,561 17,260 16,268 15,082 16,783 16,140 16,023 61 64 23 19 34 43 59 37 45 46 6,502 37,570 377 7,000 39,570 406 7,366 41,393 433 5.2 4.6 6.7 22,763 24,319 25,489 17,883 18,915 19,912 14,103 14,989 15,683 2 10 51 85,356 64,501 20,856 91,647 69,350 22,297 94,919 72,617 22,302 3.6 4.7 7.0 19,271 20,485 20,979 21,087 22,395 23,145 15,218 16,190 16,079 163 4,308 376 172 4,631 395 181 4,891 410 5.1 5.6 3.8 13,045 13,564 14,027 17,074 17,907 18,556 13,328 13,886 14,385 Aloena VLT.JT Antrim Arenac ' Barrv Bay Delta Dickinson Eaton . . Emmet Genesee Gladwin Gogebic Grand Traverse Gratiot Hillsdale . .. ... . .... Mackinac'""II!I"""I"i" II Macomb Manistee Marquette Mason Mecosta Menominee Midland Missaukee Monroe Montcalm Montmorency Muskegon Newavoo Oakland Oceana Ogemaw Ontonagon Osceola Oscoda Otsego Ottawa .. . . . . . Presque Isle .. .. Saginaw St. Clair St. Joseph Sanilac Schoolcraft Shiawassee Tuscola Van Buren ..... Washtenaw Wayne Wexford Minnesota Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion 68 77 22 Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1993 10,759 10,886 11,569 St Martin Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Aitkin Anoka Becker . ... . -7.3 79 12 71 So • April 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS Table 2—Total Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 1991-93—Continued Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Percent change2 Mill ons of dollars Area name 1991^ 1992 1992-93 1993 Rank in State Dollars 1991 1992 1993 466 448 96 852 452 419 1,016 494 485 98 922 479 453 1,125 518 512 86 941 471 475 1,203 4.7 5.5 -11.8 2.0 -1.7 4.9 6.9 13,244 13,796 14,198 14,410 15,345 15,915 15,598 16,241 14,336 15,716 17,081 17,517 16,770 17,700 17,377 14,228 15,254 15,845 20,255 21,672 22,218 76 44 74 19 20 47 6 Cass Chippewa Chisago Clay Clearwater Cook Cottonwood Crow Wing Dakota Dodge 295 214 494 710 98 70 192 690 6,080 255 326 223 535 783 102 76 203 746 6,657 268 344 210 569 789 106 81 187 798 7,038 269 5.5 -5.8 6.4 37 6.8 -7.7 7.0 5.7 .4 13,317 14,264 14,655 16,228 17,039 16,063 15,698 16,476 16,802 14,010 15,320 15,280 11,895 12,486 12,850 17,570 18,517 18,911 15,388 16,191 14,955 15,192 16,003 16,691 21,224 22,505 23,120 15,943 16,532 16,373 70 41 26 57 85 9 66 29 3 32 418 261 312 507 707 99 26,317 293 198 400 449 286 311 537 764 115 28,302 308 210 427 471 267 311 529 781 105 29,557 316 221 450 4.9 -6.7 -.1 -1.6 2.3 -8.4 4.4 2.6 5.4 5.4 14,394 15,332 15,881 15,671 17,234 16,117 15,163 15,061 15,037 15,483 16,489 16,194 17,210 18,528 18,698 15,866 18,600 17,234 25,353 27,195 28,266 15,795 16,379 16,641 13,018 13,592 14,165 15,156 15,994 16,354 46 40 64 37 11 21 1 31 77 33 583 177 172 633 94 228 139 148 62 368 611 180 187 656 121 240 144 158 65 396 636 168 195 673 90 245 128 166 66 408 4.0 -7.0 4.5 2.6 -26.1 2.1 -11.5 5.4 2.0 3.1 14,144 14,685 15,050 15,198 15,496 14,364 13,396 14,368 14,814 16,157 16,561 16,773 16,465 21,522 16,157 14,094 14,864 15,140 15,864 16,616 14,786 14,219 15,023 15,776 14,589 15,032 15,468 15,737 16,811 17,129 63 72 68 27 39 61 69 50 56 23 102 422 536 58 141 375 318 263 373 659 100 454 581 64 186 408 325 273 395 712 91 450 601 63 144 380 327 289 415 711 -9.2 -.9 3.4 -.9 -22.9 -6.9 .7 5.9 5.1 -.2 14,962 14,530 13,232 17,096 18,397 18,093 16,621 17,875 18,314 11,474 12,672 12,344 13,031 17,304 13,470 16,389 17,959 16,752 15,140 15,574 15,633 13,836 14,181 14,911 12,560 13,269 13,873 17,607 19,090 18,929 84 14 13 87 82 28 53 67 80 8 Murray Nicollet . Nobles Norman Olmsted Otter Tail Pennington Pine Pipestone Polk 154 448 350 121 2,251 751 200 268 164 487 164 492 355 140 2,427 806 219 297 166 563 138 504 339 123 2,515 821 217 316 157 524 -15.6 2.4 -4.7 -11.9 3.6 1.9 -.9 6.4 -5.5 -7.0 15,935 16,897 14,349 15,815 17,188 17,121 17,423 17,571 16,686 15,392 17,887 15,815 20,633 21,991 22,347 14,684 15,624 15,785 14,941 16,317 16,220 12,423 13,536 14,084 15,764 15,873 15,095 14,988 17,266 16,041 73 24 30 48 5 49 36 78 62 42 Pope Ramsey Red Lake Redwood Renville Rice Rock Roseau St. Louis Scott 144 10,544 53 283 295 782 169 236 3,259 1,124 160 11,076 62 302 310 825 177 257 3,440 1,237 155 11,551 56 276 273 859 159 242 3,552 1,322 -2.9 4.3 -9.5 -8.7 -11.9 4.1 -9.9 -5.9 3.3 6.9 13,344 21,717 11,991 16,433 16,776 15,649 17,325 15,355 16,389 18,683 14,731 22,772 14,098 17,568 17,744 16,334 17,945 16,502 17,263 19,871 14,229 23,826 12,681 16,006 15,642 16,847 16,192 15,556 17,872 20,376 75 2 86 43 52 25 38 55 15 7 Sherburne Sibley Stearns Steele ... Stevens Swift Todd Traverse Wabasha Wadena 675 209 1,808 538 167 159 290 82 327 160 732 221 1,925 572 173 163 306 96 348 169 786 217 2,012 586 158 159 314 75 357 176 7.4 -2.0 4.5 2.4 -8.9 -2.5 2.7 -22.2 2.6 4.6 15,368 15,961 14,580 15,412 14,982 15,817 17,408 18,345 15,789 16,477 15,018 15,635 12,420 13,087 18,751 21,856 16,419 17,401 12,268 13,071 16,302 14,998 16,335 18,744 15,156 15,226 13,338 17,232 17,635 13,686 35 65 34 10 60 59 83 22 17 81 Waseca Washington Watonwan Wilkin . . . . Winona Wright Yellow Medicine 266 3,139 174 110 760 1,149 183 292 3,457 197 132 821 1,240 189 282 3,718 185 117 856 1,312 177 -3.5 7.6 -6.0 -11.6 4.3 5.8 -6.3 15,663 16,115 15,616 20,618 21,868 22,394 14,936 17,004 15,885 14,839 17,826 15,693 15,874 17,129 17,759 16,229 17,109 17,631 15,757 16,265 15,231 54 4 45 51 16 18 58 Itasca Jackson Kanabec Kandiyohi Kittson Koochiching Lac Qui Parle Lake Lake of the Woods Le Sueur Lincoln Lyon McLeod Mahnomen Marshall Martin Meeker, Mille Lacs Morrison Mower , ., See footnotes at end of table. Area name 1993 Beltrami Benton Big Stone Blue Earth Brown Carlton Carver Douglas Faribault Fillmore Freeborn Goodhue Grant Hennepin Houston Hubbard isanti Per capita personal income3 Total personal income 1991 Mississippi Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1992 1992-93 1991 1993 Rank in State Dollars 1992 1993 1993 34,274 13,326 20,947 36,760 14,273 22,487 38,923 15,383 23,540 5.9 7.8 4.7 13,214 14,070 14,745 15,033 15,841 16,782 12,270 13,137 13,661 Adams Alcorn Amite Attaia Benton Bolivar Calhoun Carroll Chickasaw Choctaw 459 427 129 212 78 501 174 99 224 91 494 464 136 224 85 531 193 109 240 97 517 490 142 232 89 529 198 110 248 97 4.8 5.8 4.1 3.8 4.8 -.2 2.8 1.3 3.3 -.5 13,015 13,266 9,654 11,422 9,824 12,046 11,747 10,657 12,374 10,076 14,219 14,205 10,180 12,134 10,661 12,716 12,977 11,709 13,345 10,707 14,876 15,002 10,607 12,568 11,324 12,741 13,326 11,574 13,667 10,652 15 13 79 52 68 48 40 66 34 77 Claiborne Clarke Clay Coahoma Copiah Covington De Soto Forrest Franklin George 106 211 270 399 291 183 1,145 922 85 188 115 219 289 435 317 198 1,231 985 91 204 122 227 296 440 328 209 1,326 1,039 96 217 6.4 3.4 2.4 1.2 3.6 5.5 7.7 5.5 5.1 6.5 9,087 10,391 12,198 12,614 12,678 13,495 12,691 13,789 10,538 11,376 11,076 11,983 16,069 16,698 13,345 14,140 10,391 11,123 11,025 11,870 11,005 13,011 13,740 13,880 11,679 12,456 17,300 14,824 11,567 12,504 70 45 33 29 64 55 5 16 67 54 Greene Grenada Hancock Harrison Hinds Holmes Humphreys Issaquena Itawamba Jackson 101 284 423 2,292 4,189 208 157 27 246 1,701 111 301 442 2,462 4,434 209 157 26 271 1,848 117 314 491 2,729 4,685 220 160 24 286 2,040 5.2 4.2 11.1 10.8 5.7 5.1 1.7 -8.1 5.9 10.4 9,614 10,386 13,042 13,748 13,059 13,322 13,812 14,564 16,480 17,479 9,822 9,739 13,156 13,186 14,141 13,850 12,286 13,463 14,474 15,328 10,593 14,166 14,080 15,869 18,550 10,454 13,463 13,392 14,149 16,510 80 23 25 9 1 81 38 39 24 7 Jasper Jefferson Jefferson Davis Jones Kemper Lafayette Lamar Lauderdale Lawrence Leake 187 70 136 834 111 393 399 1,138 139 219 200 80 143 890 118 421 430 1,200 151 239 212 82 149 949 125 446 463 1,286 154 252 5.8 2.6 4.3 6.6 5.7 6.1 7.8 7.2 2.4 5.3 11,022 11,609 8,285 9,386 9,784 10,284 13,434 14,317 10,716 11,610 12,245 13,231 12,938 13,809 15,027 15,729 11,159 12,189 11,837 12,914 12,262 9,686 10,733 15,146 12,173 13,919 14,450 16,806 12,341 13,499 59 82 75 12 60 28 20 6 58 37 Lee. Leflore Lincoln Lowndes Madison Marion Marshall Monroe Montgomery Neshoba Newton Noxubee Oktibbeha Panola Pearl River Perry Pike Pontotoc Prentiss Quitman 1,061 502 374 845 858 281 340 442 136 305 1,159 537 397 887 931 299 368 470 148 330 1,246 554 410 937 985 309 390 491 155 357 15,799 13,336 12,298 14,099 15,395 11,084 10,952 12,024 11,078 12,172 16,969 14,326 12,902 14,772 16,014 11,751 11,778 12,830 12,091 13,008 17,817 14,762 13,275 15,602 16,127 12,073 12,398 13,240 12,517 13,845 258 122 449 350 440 103 428 276 260 109 278 139 474 382 466 114 462 306 282 125 290 141 501 388 495 120 487 320 299 117 7.5 3.2 3.4 5.6 5.8 3.4 6.0 4.3 4.3 8.0 4.1 1.2 5.6 1.7 6.2 5.5 5.4 4.6 6.1 -6.2 12,566 9,727 11,724 11,458 11,258 9,351 11,649 12,224 11,031 10,469 13,471 11,160 12,433 12,259 11,749 10,309 12,483 13,291 11,980 12,416 13,855 11,276 13,165 12,355 12,163 10,704 12,985 13,775 12,633 11,618 2 17 41 , 10 8 62 56 42 53 31 30 69 44 57 61 76 46 32 51 65 Rankin Scott Sharkey Simpson Smith Stone Sunflower Tallahatehie Tate Tippah 1,397 309 82 295 184 135 383 150 282 232 1,510 354 85 326 198 145 408 165 301 250 1,624 384 76 351 218 154 398 159 315 266 7.6 8.3 -10.5 7.5 10.0 6.6 -2.3 -3.9 4.5 6.4 15,610 12,806 11,730 12,270 12,483 12,352 10,706 9,946 13,037 11,890 16,431 14,545 12,107 13,561 13,430 13,049 11,311 11,145 13,818 12,625 17,321 15,594 10,780 14,435 14,556 13,535 11,001 10,649 14,316 13,226 4 11 74 21 19 35 71 78 22 43 Tishomingo Tunica Union Walthall Warren Washington Wayne Webster Wilkinson Winston 213 85 288 139 727 851 218 118 93 224 234 97 316 149 783 880 237 127 100 231 255 96 337 156 838 900 253 130 103 249 8.9 -.8 6.7 4.9 7.0 2.2 6.8 2.4 2.6 7.6 11,929 13,048 13,971 10,611 12,107 11,874 12,917 14,048 14,922 9,639 10,406 10,938 15,224 16,307 17,322 12,622 13,207 13,504 11,095 12,179 12,913 11,503 12,373 12,653 9,698 10,582 10,861 11,419 11,850 12,721 27 63 14 72 3 36 47 50 73 49 Yalobusha Yazoo 153 331 169 351 177 355 4.9 1.0 12,614 13,000 18 26 13,887 13,842 14,585 13,986 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 « 8l Table 2.—Total Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 1991-93—Continued Total personal income Area name Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1991 Missouri Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion 1992-93 1993 1992 Rank in State Dollars 1991 1992 1993 98,398 74,472 23,926 102,386 77,609 24,776 4.1 4.2 3.6 Adair Andrew Atchison Audrain Barry Barton Bates Benton Bellinger . Boone 322 220 117 364 379 157 202 168 121 1,978 345 229 124 378 397 173 227 173 128 2,118 358 230 101 395 418 180 226 180 135 2,219 3.8 .5 -18.8 4.6 5.3 4.1 -.7 4.0 5.2 4.8 13,157 14,885 15,734 15,402 13,541 13,717 13,381 11,892 11,355 17,237 14,060 15,372 17,116 16,031 13,830 14,948 15,012 12,079 11,906 18,117 14,558 15,412 14,064 16,744 14,251 15,496 14,756 12,258 12,319 18,605 63 46 72 19 70 40 60 106 102 9 Buchanan Butler Caldwell Callaway Camden Cape Girardeau Carroll Carter Cass Cedar 1,365 547 104 496 429 1,031 154 66 1,053 150 1,413 585 114 522 456 1,089 168 70 1,153 157 1,461 618 113 533 487 1,142 159 75 1,210 167 3.4 5.5 -.7 2.1 6.8 4.8 16,454 13,910 12,434 14,900 15,262 16,486 14,541 11,642 15,967 12,438 16,966 14,794 13,481 15,526 15,848 17,127 15,811 12,290 17,109 12,998 17,523 15,444 13,402 15,531 16,415 17,794 14,928 12,711 17,486 13,611 12 45 91 39 28 10 57 98 13 86 Chariton Christian Clark Clay Clinton Cole Cooper Crawford Dade Dallas 135 492 87 2,938 261 1,128 218 252 97 153 142 534 97 3,122 279 1,191 230 271 107 161 141 579 93 3,276 291 1,247 236 284 113 172 14,919 14,185 11,562 18,770 15,445 17,419 14,639 12,834 12,925 11,765 15,911 14,759 12,869 19,701 16,363 18,177 15,279 13,628 14,154 12,224 15,884 15,097 12,288 20,345 16,884 18,871 15,209 13,937 14,712 12,588 35 54 103 5 18 8 51 77 61 100 98 109 177 123 448 1,326 211 95 3,660 147 105 115 184 132 491 1,402 223 95 3,949 155 100 118 195 139 491 1,462 233 95 4,184 158 -4.3 12,444 10,883 12,913 10,366 13,632 16,124 14,961 13,903 17,318 13,981 13,507 11,485 13,422 11,137 14,886 16,816 15,714 13,910 18,355 14,773 12,833 11,605 14,045 11,783 14,884 17,318 16,152 13,973 19,137 15,094 97 110 73 108 58 14 31 74 7 55 120 272 82 92 139 402 129 12,222 1,411 2,574 124 304 87 94 145 428 137 12,784 1,522 2,758 121 314 91 88 147 454 142 13,313 1,612 2,898 -2.0 1.0 6.2 4.0 4.1 5.9 5.1 14,238 14,649 14,341 13,453 14,913 15,292 10,806 11,357 11,568 15,419 15,897 15,107 14,433 14,914 15,117 12,536 13,141 13,630 12,045 12,806 13,115 19,282 20,180 21,010 15,513 16,548 17,246 14,698 15,525 16,049 68 49 111 53 52 85 96 3 16 33 550 58 362 494 395 130 438 202 225 212 589 61 387 523 411 144 467 209 241 226 624 62 409 534 436 146 479 214 241 241 6.0 1.1 5.7 2.2 5.9 1.0 2.7 2.6 .2 6.8 12,744 12,935 13,223 15,842 12,968 12,683 14,661 14,554 15,601 12,432 13,454 13,749 13,980 16,787 13,386 14,113 15,405 15,097 16,486 12,966 13,867 13,933 14,492 16,920 13,963 14,296 15,358 15,481 16,626 13,526 81 78 64 17 75 69 47 42 23 88 224 140 103 409 41 279 189 179 132 172 234 149 106 433 45 293 210 190 143 185 248 155 112 449 43 309 202 198 146 189 6.0 4.5 5.6 3.8 14,738 12,457 12,657 14,769 11,133 13,363 13,215 14,464 14,734 15,138 15,417 13,240 13,018 15,497 12,073 13,766 14,908 15,242 16,007 16,286 16,265 13,787 13,659 16,152 11,137 14,434 14,388 15,820 16,495 16,456 29 83 84 32 114 65 66 37 25 27 207 271 652 302 108 183 102 267 245 534 221 305 688 309 117 195 107 291 263 556 232 289 729 286 122 203 114 286 271 584 2.9 4.9 13,266 13,034 14,451 14,123 11,280 15,204 11,788 12,294 14,560 15,009 13,848 14,628 15,059 14,457 12,254 16,081 12,137 13,492 15,503 15,606 14,185 13,958 15,763 13,470 12,615 16,665 12,516 13,268 15,861 16,219 71 76 38 90 99 21 101 95 36 30 510 219 1,254 283 523 536 235 1,350 300 559 559 244 1,429 317 560 4.3 3.9 5.8 5.8 .2 14,352 13,752 21,014 12,640 12,494 14,855 14,768 21,955 13,249 12,804 15,284 15,326 22,491 13,789 13,925 50 48 2 82 79 . ... Harrison Henry Hickory Holt Howard Howell Iron Jackson Jasper Jefferson .. Johnson Knox Laclede Lafayette Lawrence Lewis Lincoln Linn Livingston McDonald Macon Madison Maries Marion Mercer Miller Mississippi Moniteau Monroe Montgomery ..... ..... . ... . Morgan i New Madrid Newton Nodaway Oreoon ... r w» usage Ozark Pemiscot ..i Perry . Pettis . . . Pike. Platte Polk Pulaski .. .... . . See footnotes at end of table. -5.6 6.6 5.0 5.8 -.7 8.5 -4.9 4.9 4.1 4.7 2.3 4.8 5.4 6.7 3.0 5.9 5.4 .1 4.3 4.1 .1 5.9 1.8 3.3 4.9 -6.4 -4.9 5.4 -3.9 4.3 2.2 2.0 4.9 -5.1 6.1 -7.6 4.8 4.4 6.4 -1.7 Area name 18,099 18,949 19,557 20,112 21,031 21,757 13,769 14,486 14,854 1991 Putnam Rails Randolph Ray...!.. Reynolds 1992 Per capita personal income3 Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1993 93,347 70,805 22,543 Daviess De Kalb Dent Douglas Dunklin Franklin Gasconade Gentry Greene Grundy Total personal income Per capita personal income3 1992-93 1993 Rank in State Dollars 1991 1992 1993 1993 63 130 347 303 80 65 143 364 323 77 67 150 396 324 81 3.0 5.1 8.7 .2 5.8 12,616 15,391 14,603 13,834 11,890 13,000 16,745 15,212 14,861 11,631 13,483 17,290 16,470 14,582 12,279 89 15 26 62 104 133 4,073 106 228 633 26,083 369 53 68 567 138 4,432 116 241 661 27,268 372 55 76 597 148 4,679 121 243 695 28,242 380 57 74 619 6.9 5.6 3.7 1.0 5.1 3.6 2.2 4.1 10,627 18,559 12,630 14,196 12,753 26,150 15,911 12,533 14,192 14,436 10,973 19,661 13,630 14,895 13,200 27,279 16,233 12,904 15,876 15,095 11,396 20,057 13,915 14,833 13,597 28,186 16,681 13,336 15,470 15,485 112 6 80 59 87 1 20 92 43 41 77 105 405 304 80 414 243 283 307 229 81 108 432 339 82 462 257 285 326 237 86 113 437 370 84 519 268 293 340 247 4.3 2.9 4.3 4.3 10,145 15,222 14,042 15,374 12,641 15,677 11,179 14,773 15,219 11,115 10,436 15,731 14,877 16,279 13,056 16,725 11,807 15,174 15,751 11,376 11,029 16,560 14,994 16,641 13,285 17,566 12,273 15,447 15,967 11,637 115 24 56 22 93 11 105 44 34 109 130 293 32 182 7,407 135 312 34 196 7,520 140 336 34 206 7,781 3.5 7.5 2.4 5.5 3.5 10,968 11,131 11,320 12,195 12,783 13,283 13,077 14,060 14,363 10,794 11,457 11,853 18,918 19,543 20,677 113 94 67 107 4 12,749 3,394 9,355 13,466 3,612 9,855 14,612 3,853 10,759 8.5 6.7 9.2 15,772 16,361 17,376 17,527 18,300 19,154 15,219 15,749 16,817 130 131 81 47 127 22 1,323 105 185 39 131 133 82 51 135 21 1,393 91 196 40 145 150 100 57 150 27 1,475 127 209 48 Dawson Deer Lodoe Fallen Fergus Flatnead Gallatin Garfield Glacier Golden Valley Granite 140 130 46 197 970 827 25 152 15 36 145 138 46 198 1,049 884 22 156 16 38 157 147 51 213 1,132 953 30 173 18 40 Hill Jefferson Judith Basin Lake Lewis and Clark Liberty Lincoln McCone Madison Meagher 281 133 38 291 816 46 220 31 82 31 280 145 37 314 878 44 236 32 84 31 311 156 43 339 937 61 250 39 93 34 39 1,279 55 9 79 106 31 92 23 358 41 1,405 57 8 74 95 29 93 23 388 43 1,496 61 10 92 128 33 98 26 417 156 127 171 106 71 546 99 48 99 89 164 139 171 113 81 581 105 51 90 83 179 148 176 119 88 610 118 56 107 106 15 131 37 15 135 38 17 150 43 . .... q* p]!, flr)pc St Clair Ste Genevieve St Francois St. Louis Saline Schuyler Scotland Scott Shannon Shelby Stoddard Stone Sullivan Taney Vernon Warren Washington Wayne Webster Worth Wright St Louis City Montana Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Beaverhead Bio Horn Blaine Carbon Carter Cascade Chouteau Custer Daniels Mineral Missoula Musselshell Petroleum Phillips Ponoera Powder River Powell Prairie Ravalli Richland Roosevelt Rosebud Sanders Sheridan Silver Bow ....... Stillwater Sweet Grass Teton Toole Treasure Valley Wheatland .. -2.5 3.7 6.3 4.9 1.2 9.2 2.3 12.2 16,704 12,728 14,382 15,813 17,388 17,576 18,369 23,762 17,356 22,718 37 55 49 40 28 25 17 2 29 3 15,082 16,033 17,402 12,726 13,605 14,439 14,941 15,481 17,103 15,956 15,936 17,127 15,950 16,695 17,347 15,818 16,374 17,032 16,862 15,470 20,856 12,655 12,823 14,093 16,687 17,449 18,567 14,332 14,902 15,366 27 47 33 32 30 34 5 51 14 42 15,925 16,318 16,844 13,467 16,896 20,465 12,503 14,318 13,455 16,728 15,741 17,672 17,524 18,067 16,307 19,208 14,215 14,756 17,703 18,469 19,506 27,382 13,392 13,674 15,432 18,256 13,818 14,963 16,963 18,866 23 20 11 45 16 1 52 19 44 13 11,592 15,899 13,308 17,931 15,437 16,851 15,213 13,755 17,353 13,740 11,771 17,055 13,759 15,282 14,577 15,146 14,372 13,755 17,477 14,081 11,954 17,711 14,584 19,281 18,263 20,714 16,211 14,313 19,234 14,414 56 22 46 9 18 6 39 50 10 48 18.8 26.9 14,718 11,783 16,374 12,239 15,456 16,029 14,745 15,175 15,977 17,868 15,590 12,741 16,205 12,726 17,793 16,947 15,452 16,074 14,485 16,641 17,285 13,531 16,500 12,771 19,683 17,606 16,806 17,479 16,881 20,979 31 53 38 54 7 24 36 26 35 4 13.3 11.1 12.8 16,480 16,042 16,434 16,779 16,487 16,601 19,208 18,064 18,515 12 21 15 10.6 12.5 22.6 10.6 11.4 24.8 5.9 39.5 6.4 20.4 8.0 7.0 9.7 7.5 7.8 7.8 34.8 10.5 11.8 5.7 11.0 7.2 17.7 8.1 6.8 39.3 5.9 20.0 10.4 12.3 6.2 6.5 8.8 29.4 23.4 35.3 11.4 4.6 11.4 7.7 9.2 7.1 3.2 5.1 8.8 5.1 12.3 11.0 15,337 11,507 11,993 14,083 15,875 15,442 16,884 19,421 15,854 18,184 15,211 11,451 11,989 14,498 16,201 14,172 17,584 16,610 16,600 18,758 82 • April SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS Table 2.—Total Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 1991-93—Continued Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Percent change2 Millions of dollars Area name 1991 1992 15 2,070 199 Wibaux Yellowstone Park (incl Ylwstn Natl Park) Nebraska Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolltan portion 28,689 15,407 13,282 1992-93 1993 14 18 2,218 2,378 210 231 30,778 16,629 14,149 31,738 17,369 14,369 25.4 7.2 10.2 3.1 4.4 1.6 Adams Antelope Arthur Banner Blaine Boone Box Butte Boyd Brown Buffalo 529 120 561 126 569 125 1.5 -.7 6 15 12 122 256 38 61 7 16 13 127 265 42 65 7 17 14 123 276 42 66 3.0 9.0 2.8 585 651 676 3.8 Burt Butler Cass Cedar Chase Cherry Cheyenne Clay Colfax Cuming 122 143 367 140 84 87 180 130 147 127 156 397 151 87 95 185 137 157 126 149 405 151 91 102 193 135 155 -.9 198 199 201 Custer Dakota Oawes Dawson Deuel Dixon Dodge Douglas Dundy .. Fillmore 223 243 120 384 41 239 267 129 397 43 235 278 139 414 46 -1.3 -2.0 -2.9 4.3 .4 1.8 -3.9 2.0 .5 4.5 7.3 4.5 -.9 -1.2 1.2 3.9 8.0 4.4 6.8 100 104 102 562 8,841 55 154 606 9,560 57 164 621 9,989 57 155 Franklin Frontier Furnas Gage Garden Garfield Gosper Grant Greeley Hall 64 44 94 379 43 34 40 13 46 841 68 49 103 409 45 36 43 13 50 895 66 49 102 416 45 39 41 13 48 935 -3.2 Hamilton Harlan Hayes Hitchcock Holt Hooker Howard Jefferson Johnson Kearney 163 65 34 58 206 14 83 146 71 131 172 68 35 62 225 15 92 158 77 135 168 65 32 64 231 16 92 152 76 131 -2.4 Keith Keya Paha Kimball Knox Lancaster Lincoln Logan Loup McPherson Madison 131 14 74 137 138 16 77 148 141 17 83 144 3,937 4,281 4,501 546 15 7 c 528 581 16 8 9 564 599 16 8 10 599 Merrick Morrill Nance Nemaha Nuckolls Otoe Pawnee Perkins Phelps Pierce 124 108 70 134 91 224 55 61 205 118 131 106 75 137 100 245 60 66 211 125 133 107 73 143 99 244 58 66 209 126 Piatte Polk Red Willow Richardson Rock Saline Sarpy Saunders Scotts Bluff Seward 507 107 185 542 115 195 558 108 202 160 38 173 40 173 41 202 226 219 . .. Sheridan Sherman See footnotes at end of table. 1,709 1,788 1,849 287 621 264 305 650 288 310 669 293 102 56 107 60 112 59 2.6 4.5 -.3 -5.8 -.6 -.6 1.7 1.5 8.7 -2.4 -6.5 -4.7 4.5 -35 -93 3.3 2.5 7.7 -.2 -3.5 -1.3 -3.1 2.5 5.7 8.0 -2.6 5.1 3.2 .3 1.5 12.6 6.3 1.4 .4 -2.4 4.8 -1.0 -.1 -3.5 .6 -.7 .7 2.9 -6.0 3.7 -.2 2.1 -2.8 3.4 1.5 3.0 1.9 5.3 -1.5 Dollars 1991 1992 12,573 17,964 13,688 12,549 15,618 18,781 19,676 14,204 15,041 1993 _ 19,187 16,325 15,890 20,488 20,979 18,731 21,331 15,472 18,021 17,317 29 74 15,630 16,201 16,039 16,586 17,962 17,458 16,969 17,957 18,301 13,827 14,904 14,996 19,140 20,214 21,253 13,840 14,971 16,243 19,150 19,426 20,241 18,324 18,994 18,859 15,954 16,667 16,249 19,722 19,896 20,024 79 58 43 88 8 76 15 32 75 18,960 16,206 15,594 18,927 20,225 19,235 20,373 15,356 17,603 16,951 1991 41 8 43 80 14 12 34 7 85 48 61 19 18,175 14,323 13,486 18,543 18,178 16,060 16,282 20,953 21,726 21,667 19,279 15,541 14,591 18,252 19,604 16,691 17,494 22,450 23,213 23,304 18,984 15,748 15,312 18,765 21,019 16,381 17,977 23,322 23,097 22,231 31 82 86 33 11 16,321 14,208 16,759 16,685 18,085 15,727 19,975 17,429 15,334 17,020 17,445 17,187 15,677 15,617 18,113 17,987 17,971 18,222 19,097 19,854 16,782 18,554 21,030 20,141 16,612 16,461 16,783 15,711 18,009 18,584 63 84 49 45 23 36 16 70 83 35 18,235 19,139 18,477 17 187 18111 17293 28i449 29^318 26]921 15,737 17,185 17,930 16,442 18,111 18,523 17,769 19,440 21,372 13,573 14,815 14,732 16,768 18,312 17,612 15,093 16,459 16,240 20,096 20,624 20,016 39 62 2 51 37 6 90 57 77 20 15,536 14,017 18,088 14,608 18,160 16,660 17,609 10,716 17,137 16,112 16,480 16,864 16,239 17,071 19,035 19,962 15,652 15,287 19,454 20,130 17,551 18,139 18,831 18,151 10,779 11,063 17,591 19,362 17,025 17,894 68 65 21 87 17 47 46 93 26 52 15,399 20,201 16,342 16,683 15,889 15,705 16,619 18,877 20,922 14,980 16,139 20,000 17,684 17,245 17,684 16,978 18,666 20,502 21,510 16,017 16,360 19,906 17,339 18,424 17,618 16,937 17,635 20,565 21,237 16,076 72 22 60 40 56 67 55 13 9 78 16,928 19,335 16,032 16,147 18,766 15,981 16,161 15,690 17,141 16,927 18,027 20,764 17,096 17,544 20,420 17,764 16,693 16,473 17,757 18,305 18,341 19,698 17,682 17,668 21,111 17,109 17,341 16,605 18,223 18,421 42 25 53 15,489 15,234 16151 16,369 17,012 16,341 66 73 71 50 3 4 5 54 10 64 59 69 44 41 Sioux Stanton Thayer Thomas Thurston Valley Washington Wayne Webster Wheeler York Nevada Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Churchill Clark Douglas Elko Esmeralda Eureka Humboldt Lander Lincoln Lyon Mineral Nye Pershing Storey Washoe White Pine Carson City New Hampshire Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Belknap Carroll Cheshire Coos Grafton Hillsborough Mernmack Rockingham Strafford Sullivan Percent change2 Millions of dollars Area name 1993 18,023 19,189 19,672 19,262 20,548 21,297 16,772 17,805 18,012 17,846 15,266 14,567 18,537 18,250 18,297 19,551 13,571 16,653 15,399 Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Rank in State ~ 1992 1991 1992 1993 12,784 15,595 18,512 18,908 11,650 17,064 18,492 13,942 13,057 16,182 19,824 20,346 12,475 18,094 19,771 15,284 13,129 15,887 19,009 19,224 12,356 18,479 20,098 14,813 91 81 30 28 92 19,188 19,304 28,927 27,346 19,679 19,764 27 .6 17,902 26,983 18,138 992-93 1993 Rank in State Dollars 1993 20 98 123 16 81 86 310 133 20 100 131 17 87 20 97 125 17 88 91 336 ' 145 91 348 76 81 81 25 261 27 286 26 288 26,771 22,810 3,961 29,251 25,052 4,199 31,640 27,134 4,506 8.2 8.3 7.3 20,831 20,954 20,145 21,972 22,894 22,190 23,114 ""•"""•• 20,753 21,654 16,132 19,984 26,616 18,822 26,200 20,392 19,286 •19,118 19,313 17,319 16,825 21,151 27,291 19,453 28,228 21,625 19,351 19,170 19,592 17,884 17,728 22,148 28,087 20,482 35,465 24,269 20,608 19,264 19,189 18,539 15 18,948 16,657 16,439 19,738 25,855 16,198 22,682 19,473 16,833 17,816 20,226 26,671 17,092 23,558 10 141 1.7 -2.7 -4.5 3.9 1.0 .1 3.6 -2.2 -.1 -4.6 300 318 347 9.2 16,136 793 674 34 33 264 123 73 370 17,796 849 725 38 34 275 127 74 395 19,467 907 798 43 36 304 126 72 429 9.4 6.8 110 117 119 1.1 303 73 49 6,371 155 324 73 50 6,932 155 5.5 9.1 5.4 5.7 3.4 10.2 14.1 4.9 10.5 -.9 -2.1 8.6 912 969 342 80 52 7,324 160 1,033 6.5 17,806 16,174 16,590 18,948 24,283 16,234 21,906 23,294 14,731 8,562 24,328 15,399 8,928 25,135 15,944 9,191 3.3 3.5 2.9 21,023 21,547 20,179 21,840 22,357 22338 22,843 21,031 21.562 19,917 21,787 19,067 17,726 20,911 22,109 21,375 22,408 17,715 18,087 20,231 22,365 19,902 18,336 21,821 22,736 22,374 23,338 18,656 19,524 975 780 993 811 1,023 1,341 1,404 1,434 38 18 89 1 24 6 2 8 1 4 7 11 12 13 17 14 9 3 16 5 6 4 7 10 5 2 3 1 9 8 697 748 776 3.0 2.7 2.1 .9 3.0 2.8 3.6 4.4 4.1 3.8 192,199 192,199 203,995 203,995 211,216 211,216 3.5 3.5 24,745 24,745 26,111 26,876 &V,Vf V 26,111 26876 Atlantic Bergen Burlington Camden Cape May Cumberland Essex Gloucester Hudson Hunterdon 5,280 26,767 8,637 10,421 2,059 2,478 18,896 4,432 10,986 3,165 5,561 28,215 9,311 10,986 2,172 2,630 20,371 4,704 11,597 3,390 5,761 29,051 9,591 11,340 2,242 2,707 20,957 4,890 11,945 3,588 3.6 3.0 3.0 3.2 3.2 2.9 2.9 4.0 3.0 5.8 23,195 32,346 21,930 20,633 21,339 17,824 24,438 18,917 19,877 29,003 24,245 33,830 23,637 21,698 22,349 18,908 26,381 19,910 20,964 30,354 24,949 34,658 24,286 22,388 23,085 19,474 27,203 20,518 21,610 31,545 10 2 11 16 13 21 8 20 19 4 Mercer Middlesex Monmouth Morris Ocean Passaic Salem Somerset Sussex Union 8,760 16,286 14,493 13,536 9,160 9,538 1,277 8,191 2,898 13,011 9,333 17,135 15,465 14,312 9,772 9,932 1,366 8,902 3,036 13,778 9,655 17,712 16,098 14,881 10,290 10,264 1,412 9,346 3,188 14,178 3.4 3.4 4.1 4.0 5.3 3.3 3.4 5.0 5.0 2.9 26,796 24,060 25,915 31,974 20,882 21,009 19,570 33,376 21,838 26,385 28,518 25,101 27,285 33,502 22,059 21,786 20,955 35,608 22,564 27,935 29,385 25,771 28,132 34,412 22,849 22,344 21,681 36,542 23,343 28,659 5 9 7 3 14 17 18 1 12 6 15 New Jersey Metropolitan portion Warren New Mexico Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Bernalillo Catron Chaves Cibola Colfax Curry De Baca Dona Ana Eddy Grant Guadalupe Harding Hidalgo 832 616 631 636 1,576 7,441 2,578 5,449 1,841 1,656 7,732 2,686 5,735 1,932 1,707 7,949 2,782 5,985 2,011 20,638 22,741 20,228 18,688 22,384 23,163 23,088 23,973 19,120 20,219 1,928 2,026 2,120 4.6 20,796 21,635 22,444 22,929 14.438 8,490 24,565 15,531 9,034 26,409 16,742 9,667 7.5 7.8 7.0 14,817 16,725 12,410 15,538 16,346 17,536 18,422 12,993 13,677 9.32S ' 31 1006C ' 31 78 57 848 232 195 17,806 12^189 13,884 9,285 18691 19 85, 12&0 13^095 818 217 180 604 2j 1,76^ 657 2< 8716 *73 355 42 11 71 '33 936 24! 21! 701 3' 2,00( 10.3 5.7 84 6.7 14.7 365 831 387 5.5 7.0 5.9 4' 11 8' 49 13 8! 98 11J 9.1 1,901 '77* u'l3( 13^644 12,16' 12^53' K652 12,66( 14,424 9,805 u'95( 14^363 1 2,95; 131)1' 15',19v 12,74^ 15,661 10,166 1584* 15',107 14,725 13^221 15',955 13,56! 10301 10817 11 82 11^510 11 £78 13^287 13164 13,580 14,585 3 23 9 33 7 12 14 22 6 20 28 21 15 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • 83 Table 2,—Total Personal Income and Per Capita Persona! Income by County, 1991-93—Continued Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Percent change2 Mill ons of dollars Area name 1991 1992 1992-93 1993 Rank in State Dollars 1991 1992 1993 769 201 476 219 583 37 663 806 216 497 234 626 41 710 864 230 528 254 663 45 724 Quay Rio Arriba Roosevelt Sandoval San Juan San Miguel Santa re Sierra Socorro Taos 143 342 219 912 1,189 272 1,948 130 167 279 153 364 251 992 1,272 291 2,136 135 176 293 159 389 276 1,107 1,361 316 2,299 147 190 310 119 64 622 129 64 675 143 66 739 413,645 390,487 23,158 436,594 412,355 24,239 450,628 425,759 24,868 3.2 3.3 2.6 %$ Albany Allegany Bronx Broome Cattaraugus Cayuga Chautauqua Chemung Chenango Clinton 6,594 656 18,299 3,935 1,213 1,251 2,183 1,578 776 1,268 6,883 688 19,272 4,046 1,305 1,333 2,274 1,639 821 1,323 7,152 710 19,943 4,135 1,321, 1,374 2,381 1,689 843 1,386 3.9 3.1 3.5 1.2 3.1 4.7 3.1 2.7 4.7 22,482 23,527 24,494 12,851 13,449 13,886 15,256 16,138 16,682 18,540 19,055 19,604 14,255 15,257 15,402 15,106 16,094 16,567 15,332 16,009 16,724 16,588 17,218 17,770 14,894 15,697 16,057 14,722 15,463 16,022 6 62 42 20 52 45 40 31 46 47 Columbia Cortland Delaware Dutchess Erie Essex Franklin Fulton Genesee Greene 1,120 725 673 5,699 18,396 596 639 846 1,024 724 1,174 768 703 5,883 19,149 626 678 888 1,066 757 1 ,220 783 720 5,993 19,746 646 701 923 1,100 782 3.9 2.0 2.4 1.9 3.1 3.1 3.3 3.9 3.2 3.4 17,786 14,731 14,199 21,840 18,952 15,899 13,364 15,522 16,915 15,952 18,565 19,233 15,545 15,837 14,798 15,080 22,405 22,797 19,707 20,344 16,757 17,091 13,983 14,307 16,335 16,938 17,510 17,977 16,298 16,654 23 48 54 11 15 36 58 39 28 43 Hamilton Herkimer Jefferson Kings Lewis Livingston Madison Monroe Montgomery Nassau 87 954 1,683 40,816 371 1,029 1,161 15,923 851 40,355 93 1,009 1,764 43,117 384 1,074 1,214 16,453 882 41,698 97 1,049 1,789 44,456 386 1,110 1,250 17,034 909 42,862 3.6 4.0 1.4 3.1 .5 3.4 3.0 3.5 3.1 2.8 16,364 17,490 18,327 14,406 15,191 15,733 14,949 15,497 15,696 17,841 18,899 19,506 13,688 14,065 14,101 16,360 16,784 17,219 16,517 17,060 17,529 22,148 22,705 23,416 16,365 16,912 17,431 31,255 32,162 32,966 27 49 50 22 61 35 33 10 34 3 68,402 3,852 4,187 9,187 1,851 5,886 647 1,928 944 2,053 75,420 78,172 3,993 . 4,116 4,490 4,366 9,521 9,798 1,919 2,001 6,422 6,205 668 694 2,088 2,138 993 1,020 2,139 2,218 3.6 3.1 2.8 2.9 4.3 3.5 3.9 2.4 2.8 3.7 46,105 17,410 16,591 19,443 19,175 18,873 15,237 15,616 15,535 23,992 50,734 18,056 17,297 20,090 19,651 19,664 15,290 16,785 16,223 24,591 52,277 18,563 17,900 20,630 20,337 20,164 15,348 17,012 16,602 25,153 1 26 29 14 16 - ; 17 53 . 38 .. 44 5 Queens Rensselaer Richmond Rockland St. Lawrence Saratoga Schenectady Schoharie Schuyler Seneca 42,528 2,815 8,731 6,797 1,505 3,571 3,133 473 255 555 45,039 2,938 9,184 7,079 1,599 3,784 3,278 497 262 573 46,272 3,068 9,583 7,328 1,644 3,947 3,399 516 271 585 2.7 4.4 4.4 3.5 2.8 4.3 3.7 3.8 3.5 2.3 21,794 18,081 22,657 25,371 13,292 19,320 20,844 14,495 13,532 16,432 23,061 18,797 23,495 26,227 13,973 20,141 21,787 15,095 13,820 17,092 23,608 19,558 24,223 26,870 14,246 20,768 22,640 15,637 14,264 17,849 9 21 8 4 60 13 12 51 59 30 Steuben Suffolk Sullivan Tioga Tompkins Ulster Warren Washington Wayne Westch ester 1,698 30,577 1,253 872 1,496 3,166 1,098 845 1,578 29,426 1,738 31,653 1,314 897 1,552 3,283 1,169 889 1,655 30,977 1,773 32,813 1,355 909 1,602 3,329 1,210 912 1,717 31,851 2.0 3.7 3.1 1.3 3.2 1.4 3.5 2.5 3.8 2.8 17,021 23,054 17,931 16,480 15,745 18,880 18,297 14,073 17,451 33,553 17,353 17,663 23,712 24,432 18,621 19,113 16,843 17,015 16,263 16,702 19,457 19,624 . 19,329 19,763 14,733 15,021 18,121 18,567 35,110 35,945 Torrance Union Valencia New York Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion . . .... •• New York Oneida Onondaga Ontario Orange Orleans .. . Osweao (Xsego "Til! Putnam . ;.. . Wvomina Yates . . 577 332 See footnotes at end of table. 612 341 632 354 , 7.3 6.5 6.3 8.3 5.9 9.4 1.9 13,880 15,813 26,387 11,539 9,276 8,836 12,743 14,250 15,205 16,531 16,985 27,481 28,753 11,832 12,140 9,640 10,256 9,545 10,235 *n CQQ 13,751 i o,oyo 11 4 1 27 31 32 19 3.9 6.9 13,524 9,936 12,791 13,773 12,717 10,432 19,090 12,831 11,397 11,804 14,537 15,048 10,464 10,936 14,363 15,672 14,422 15,313 13,423 14,020 11,010 11,771 20,315 21,170 13,569 14,135 11,689 12,453 12,129 12,620 13 30 8 10 18 29 2 1.7 26 24 11,056 15,453 13,323 11,775 15,891 13,964 25 5 16 10.1 11.6 7.0 8.6 7.6 8.4 8.3 6.0 11.4 2.3 9.6 -2.2 3.2 3.8 12,579 16,173 14,489 24,128 24,824 24,845 25,573 15,548 16,185 16,535 13,326 14,394 14,039 14,689 14,425 15,035 Area name 1993 Lea Lincoln Los Alamos Luna McKinley Mora Otero 32 7 24 37 41 19 18 56 25 2 57 55 Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Percent change2 Millions of dollars Rank in State Dollars 1991 1992 1993 113,443 80,049 33,394 121,931 86,387 35,544 129,802 91,987 37,815 6.5 6.5 6.4 16,802 17,831 18,670 17,893 19,053 19,910 14,660 15,426 16,214 Alamance Alexander Alleahanv Anson Ashe Avery Beaufort Bertie Bladen . . . . Brunswick 1,859 421 135 332 317 219 622 261 369 742 1,966 451 141 341 332 235 646 275 396 780 2,093 483 149 368 360 252 659 291 424 835 6.5 7.0 5.1 7.8 8.4 7.2 2.0 5.9 7.1 7.1 16,923 15,071 13,947 14,190 14,130 14,737 14,563 12,707 12,806 14,164 17,679 16,013 14,632 14,510 14,762 15,807 15,020 13,453 13,651 14,402 18,647 16,771 15,416 15,265 15,778 16,813 15,166 14,169 14,507 14,834 19 40 61 65 55 39 68 90 84 75 Buncombe ... . . Burke ... ... Cabarrus Caldwell Gamden Carteret , Caswell Catawba Chatham Cherokee 3,118 1,138 1,744 1,051 81 794 271 2,172 708 237 3,332 1,219 1,854 1,135 85 850 285 2,355 760 249 3,552 1,299 1,981 1,209 90 900 303 2,510 812 264 6.6 6.6 6.8 6.6 5.4 5.9 6.3 6.6 6.8 6.3 17,521 14,909 17,156 14,746 13,469 14,802 13,037 18,090 17,854 11,688 18,461 15,777 17,858 15,813 13,892 15,515 13,773 19,423 18,827 12,206 19,355 16,633 18,799 16,674 14,521 16,175 14,480 20,469 19,787 12,824 13 44 18 42 83 50 85 10 11 96 Chowan Clay Cleveland Columbus Craven Cumberland Currituck Dare Davidson Davie 199 89 1,288 677 1,230 3,803 210 384 2,017 533 204 96 1,372 722 1,344 4,427 227 401 2,146 580 216 101 1,448 775 1,408 4,672 242 429 2,264 615 6.0 5.8 5.6 7.4 4.7 5.5 6.5 6.8 5.5 6.1 14,607 12,251 15,026 13,601 14,900 13,699 14,734 16,608 15,701 18,877 14,844 13,082 15,792 14,389 16,034 15,917 15,487 16,981 16,537 20,413 15,679 13,591 16,514 15,301 16,979 16,403 15,899 17,625 17,153 21,305 58 92 45 64 34 46 53 25 30 9 Duplin Durham Edgecombe Forsyth . Franklin Gaston Gates Graham Granville Greene 613 3,581 781 5,761 496 2,808 133 74 516 241 646 3,884 825 6,120 538 2,989 135 82 569 244 704 4,110 865 6,458 582 3,152 142 89 606 263 8.9 5.8 4.8 5.5 8.2 5.5 5.2 8.7 6.5 7.5 15,278 15,935 17,118 19,284 20,626 21,547 13,865 14,673 15,432 21,445 22,623 23,579 13,261 14,134 14,858 15,842 16,774 17,602 14,180 14,279 14,855 9,981 10,971 11,930 13,377 14,539 15,191 15,369 15,509 16,287 33 7 59 3 73 26 74 99 67 48 Guilford Halifax Harnett Haywood Henderson Hertford Hoke Hyde Iredell Jackson 7,236 739 898 716 1,247 273 257 82 1,564 359 7,725 783 982 755 1,329 286 279 83 1,677 385 8,167 828 1,051 791 1,421 300 299 81 1,803 409 5.7 5.7 7.0 4.8 6.9 5.0 7.1 7.5 6.2 20,462 13,256 13,056 15,101 17,595 12,135 11,106 15,263 16,396 13,170 21,596 22,530 13,976 14,587 13,933 14,525 15,679 16,217 18,461 19,335 12,711 13,246 11,638 11,921 15,218 15,142 17,331 18,297 13,966 14,740 1,320 155 717 900 799 476 344 225 364 11,704 1,440 170 796 964 855 506 362 238 387 12,612 1,544 181 866 1,012 916 538 384 253 406 13,503 7.2 6.6 8.8 4.9 7.1 6.3 6.2 6.6 4.9 7.1 15,739 16,477 17,018 15,625 15,517 13,203 14,368 13,086 14,425 22,181 16,715 17,993 18,524 16,644 16,238 13,988 14,846 13,710 15,327 23,530 17,450 18,838 19,699 17,333 16,915 14,740 15,427 14,587 15,763 24,612 27 17 12 29 36 78 60 80 56 1 191 318 1,186 1,336 2,186 269 1,593 1,947 160 459 200 335 1,272 1,402 2,328 282 1,818 2,107 168 480 211 354 1,359 1,487 2,482 295 1,911 2,256 175 510 5.1 5.8 6.8 6.0 6.6 4.5 5.1 7.1 4.4 6.1 13,249 13,874 14,573 13,714 14,291 15,136 19,678 20,570 21,458 16,941 17,445 18,074 17,525 18,265 18,931 12,948 13,629 14,297 10,604 12,587 13,168 20,007 21,193 21,945 13,937 14,454 14,905 14,464 14,800 15,369 81 70 8 22 16 89 95 6 72 62 414 137 460 1,766 304 1,659 604 1,292 1,346 1,713 450 147 493 1,889 321 1,800 623 1,412 1,392 1,824 480 153 529 2,016 339 1,911 655 1,532 1,480 1,940 6.7 4.4 7.2 6.7 5.4 6.2 5.1 8.5 6.3 6.4 13,798 13,055 14,978 15,907 20,796 15,240 13,423 12,171 15,526 15,251 14,536 14,759 13,953 14,412 15,928 16,849 16,795 17,679 21,400 22,186 16,296 17,127 13,859 14,454 13,106 14,024 16,019 16,979 16,036 16,841 76 87 37 24 5 32 86 91 35 38 809 790 455 795 867 840 488 821 925 942 533 860 6.6 14,023 14,935 15,791 16,529 17,281 19,123 13,338 14,251 15,352 15,136 15,536 16,152 54 15 63 51 North Carolina Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Johnston Jones. Lee Lenoir Lincoln McDowell Macon Madison Martin Mecklenburg Mitchell Montgomery Moore Nash New Hanover Northampton Onslow Orange Pamlico . Pasquotank Pender Perquimans Person Pitt Polk Randolph Richmond Robeson Rockingham Rowan Rutherford Sampson Scotland , Stanly , 1992-93 -1.7 12.2 9.1 4.8 1991 1992 1993 1993 4 79 82 49 14 94 100 69 21 77 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 84 • April 1995 Table 2.—Total Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 1991-93—Continued Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Area name Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1991 1992 1992-93 1993 Rank in State Dollars 1992 15,627 16,399 16,648 17,406 11,378 12,108 16,931 17,131 15,107 14,394 17,122 17,879 47 28 97 31 88 23 15,016 23,063 11,421 15,425 14,114 14,440 15,718 17,519 16,086 13,027 57 2 98 52 71 66 43 20 41 93 Stokes Surry Swain Transylvania Tyrrell Union 572 992 125 418 58 1,438 604 1,050 131 441 58 1,526 639 1,111 142 455 56 1,643 7.7 15,155 15,873 10,886 16,236 15,291 16,542 Vance Wake Warren Washington Watauga Wayne Wilkes , Wilson Yadkin Yancey 554 9,690 188 211 499 1,448 896 1,099 474 195 597 10,576 200 219 539 1,549 944 1,169 506 205 629 11,401 211 227 582 1,647 1,003 1,239 534 215 5.5 7.8 5.8 3.5 8.0 6.3 6.3 6.0 5.7 4.9 14,090 21,843 10,851 14,965 13,379 13,619 15,021 16,546 15,311 12,446 9,876 4,325 5,551 10,863 4,703 6,160 10,870 4,883 5,987 .1 3.8 -2.8 15,572 17,098 17,072 16,675 17,851 18,335 14,810 16,564 16,165 Adams Barnes Benson Billings Bottineau Bowman Burke Burleigh Cass Cavalier 43 180 84 17 113 59 44 1,060 1,876 89 50 204 93 18 138 64 52 1,169 2,038 112 49 181 88 20 132 68 48 1,227 2,121 93 Dickey Divide Dunn Eddy Emmons Foster Golden Valley Grand Forks Grant Griggs 92 41 44 42 57 62 28 1,061 35 50 99 48 51 45 71 69 32 1,133 43 54 93 43 53 45 67 66 29 1,161 39 45 McKenzie McLean Mercer Morton 42 40 71 38 80 58 87 148 167 328 52 44 86 45 88 66 98 172 182 362 51 44 72 42 92 57 96 168 187 374 Mountrai! Nelson Oliver Pembina Pierce Ramsey Ransom Renville Richland Rolette 96 65 30 169 83 198 90 41 270 136 114 76 37 189 90 223 96 54 276 156 117 66 36 171 95 211 93 51 275 153 North Dakota Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolltan portion Hettinger Kidder La Moure Sargent Shendan Sioux Slope Stark. Steele Stutsman Towner Trail! Walsh 84 25 30 12 317 38 340 52 142 222 Ward Wells Williams 88 28 34 17 342 43 366 66 150 243 78 28 37 13 349 33 364 52 136 223 5.8 5.8 8.1 3.2 -3.1 -3.4 -10.9 -52 13.6 -4.2 6.5 -8.2 4.9 4.1 -17.3 -6.1 -10.1 4.8 .6 -6.1 -4.4 -8.6 2.4 -8.2 -16.7 -2.1 -1.4 -16.1 -6.7 3.7 -14.3 -2.9 -2.7 2.8 3.4 2.7 -12.1 -1.9 -9.8 6.2 -5.2 -3.1 -5.1 -.2 -22 -11.1 -.6 9.0 -19.6 2.1 -22.3 -.5 -21.1 -9.2 -8.3 3.5 15,726 23,959 11,989 16,055 15,090 15,261 16,657 18,596 16,761 13,566 13,977 14,495 11,965 14,748 14,589 16,950 15,633 17,329 17,928 15,150 16,663 16,518 13,481 15,271 17,943 18,739 19,451 18,725 19,127 19,548 17,184 14,829 12,551 17,411 17,138 20,286 18,115 19,359 19,596 16,261 13 41 50 10 15 1 8 5 4 26 15,321 14,783 11,135 14,232 12,239 16,062 13,990 15,127 10,084 15,632 16,798 17,908 13,062 15,646 15,441 17,927 16,525 15,987 12,814 17,104 15,842 16,503 13,874 15,861 14,627 16,992 15,252 16,405 11,946 14,238 31 22 48 29 43 17 38 23 51 46 12,605 12,202 13,373 13,555 12,592 15,179 14,026 14,474 17,265 14,001 16,337 13,901 16,310 16,457 14,105 17,359 16,235 17,172 19,202 15,371 16,353 13,861 13,971 15,747 14,692 14,982 16,122 16,775 19,796 15,624 25 49 47 33 42 40 28 19 3 34 14,109 15,348 13,084 18,734 16,740 15,785 15,267 13,626 15,058 10,565 16,844 17,939 16,683 21,153 18,627 17,772 16,333 18,230 15,379 11,965 17,350 16,149 16,374 19,220 20,151 16,705 15,764 17,304 15,035 11,586 11 27 24 6 2 21 32 12 39 52 20,022 14,066 8,648 18,871 14,980 18,343 16,774 19,219 17,365 18,306 17,688 14,377 9,272 15,599 15,357 14,501 16,741 15,452 15,843 17,006 17,154 18,541 16,975 9 45 53 35 37 44 20 36 30 16 14 7 18 953 103 342 986 101 349 2.3 15,551 16,567 15,902 18,417 15,352 16,409 196,959 166,743 30,215 208,482 176,202 32,280 217,859 183,939 33,920 4.5 4.4 5.1 18,017 18,945 19,696 18,746 19,686 20,457 14,833 15,716 16,390 Adams Alien Ashland Ashtabula Athens Auglaize Belmont Brown Butler Carroll 282 1,777 703 1,445 708 758 1,044 490 5,187 357 316 1,899 754 1,525 736 816 1,084 529 5,573 387 334 1,945 806 1,601 771 852 1,117 550 5,833 406 5.9 2.5 7.0 5.0 4.8 4.2 3.0 4.0 4.7 4.9 10,879 11,967 16,190 17,269 14,631 15,516 14,405 15,132 11,882 12,342 16,733 17,818 14,761 15,308 13,755 14,551 17,356 18,315 13,257 14,243 12,474 17,749 16,387 15,806 12,784 18,401 15,769 14,807 18,852 14,730 88 36 53 58 85 25 60 69 21 70 §ff™.ZZII™ZZI! 583 2,425 633 2,618 657 2,711 3.8 3.6 16,016 16,413 17,273 17,714 17,730 18,349 38 26 Ohio Metropolitan portion See footnotes at end of table. 1992 1992-93 1993 Rank in State Dollars 1991 1992 1993 1993 Clermont Clinton Columbiana Coshocton Crawford Cuyahoga Darke Defiance 2,493 564 1,556 497 700 31,019 840 661 2,695 604 1,634 526 737 32,055 885 693 2,822 644 1,702 554 777 33,278 931 721 4.7 6.5 4.2 5.2 5.5 3.8 5.2 3.9 16,138 17,076 15,644 16,482 14,228 14,813 13,965 14,757 14,667 15,468 21,978 22,723 15,640 16,442 16,720 17,567 17,499 17,377 15,345 15,423 16,353 23,632 17,247 18,183 41 42 64 63 54 3 44 32 Delaware Erie Fairfield Fayette Franklin Fulton Gallia Geauga Greene Guernsey 1,499 1,392 1,818 378 19,113 656 414 1,765 2,493 515 1,639 1,471 1,961 411 20,519 698 452 1,864 2,634 548 1,755 1,544 2,080 438 21,538 733 471 1,938 2,763 557 7.0 5.0 6.1 6.6 5.0 5.0 4.3 4.0 4.9 1.7 21,532 18,074 17,104 13,621 19,550 16,807 13,251 21,470 17,982 13,136 23,817 19,880 18,543 15,620 21,547 18,345 14,821 23,579 19,796 14,119 1 12 23 61 5 27 68 4 14 76 Henry Highland Hocking Holmes Huron Jackson 18,800 1,208 396 201 483 463 340 380 915 382 19,959 1,295 431 218 514 502 366 413 963 402 20,654 1,356 450 225 538 529 385 439 1,018 423 3.5 4.7 4.4 3.2 4.6 5.3 5.3 6.4 5.7 5.3 21,626 22,909 23,711 18,266 19,393 20,177 12,674 13,813 14,378 12,550 13,656 14,024 16,516 17,436 18,244 12,687 13,503 13,976 13,116 13,751 14,259 11,379 12,229 12,785 16,023 16,749 17,632 12,418 12,866 13,386 2 10 72 77 30 78 73 84 39 81 Jefferson Knox Lake Lawrence Licking Logan Lorain Lucas Madison Mahoning 1,218 705 4,213 808 2,162 693 4,497 8,358 533 4,418 1,263 747 4,459 871 2,323 760 4,812 8,915 579 4,628 1,297 797 4,644 915 2,442 788 5,060 9,260 615 4,841 2.7 6.7 4.1 5.0 5.1 3.7 5.1 3.9 6.2 4.6 15,248 14,725 19,338 12,960 16,563 16,065 16,421 18,116 14,082 16,692 15,902 15,360 20,300 13,849 17,625 17,369 17,423 19,359 14,899 17,452 16,391 16,177 21,028 14,400 18,297 17,740 18,200 20,188 15,579 18,276 52 55 6 71 28 37 31 9 62 29 958 2,309 274 647 1,647 203 11,117 197 358 1,204 1,026 2,479 290 682 1,755 217 11,515 206 375 1,323 1,077 2,624 297 714 1,865 217 11,928 214 401 1,404 4.9 5.9 2.6 4.7 6.3 .2 3.6 4.0 7.0 6.2 14,939 18,423 11,814 16,290 17,509 13,190 19,316 13,908 12,725 14,656 15,939 19,342 12,353 17,078 18,508 14,196 19,976 14,398 13,130 16,027 16,694 20,087 12,574 17,795 19,484 14,178 20,713 14,936 13,752 16,903 49 11 87 34 15 74 7 67 80 47 136 728 286 376 674 303 2232 594 542 2,005 150 762 305 400 728 334 2,372 633 584 2,066 155 798 320 419 766 357 2,485 664 613 2,206 3.6 4.7 5.1 4.8 5.2 6.9 4.8 4.8 4.9 6.8 11,771 12,862 13,171 18,161 19,014 19,845 14,082 15,121 15,787 11,841 12,391 12,811 13,801 14,497 15,050 12,278 13,219 13,895 15,487 16,240 16,847 14,695 15,490 16,134 15,860 16,954 17,751 15,780 16,213 17,292 82 13 59 83 66 79 48 57 35 43 962 1,012 1,033 941 767 6,318 9,775 4,047 1,043 1,063 1,096 987 812 6,661 10,366 4,216 1,331 626 1,098 1,116 1,154 1,024 858 6,988 10,864 4,421 1,386 656 5.3 5.0 5.3 3.8 5.7 4.9 4.8 4.9 4.1 4.7 13,626 16,199 12,873 15,758 16,815 17,091 18,821 17,693 14,529 17,525 14,597 16,970 13,539 16,484 17,693 17,929 19,849 18,378 15,582 18,616 15,215 17,835 14,152 17,026 18,521 18,712 20,685 19,262 16,147 19,003 65 33 75 46 24 22 8 18 56 19 472 131 2,096 933 1,637 609 1,985 500 140 2,254 996 1,747 658 2,113 350 521 148 2,389 1,043 2,229 373 4.3 5.9 6.0 4.7 5.9 7.3 5.5 6.6 15,540 11,698 17,922 14,996 15,961 16,446 17,513 14,953 16,512 12,265 18,869 15,889 16,839 17,655 18,518 15,687 17,225 12,731 19,415 16,507 17,631 18,909 19,393 16,569 45 86 16 51 40 20 17 50 49,585 32,277 17,308 52,772 34,406 18,366 55,043 35,816 19,226 4.3 4.1 4.7 15,653 16,480 17,026 17,064 17,888 18,427 13,563 14,319 14,913 224 91 126 92 239 152 389 371 250 102 135 104 256 163 412 398 272 107 143 111 272 169 431 408 8.9 4.7 6.7 6.6 6.1 4.0 4.7 2.5 11,894 14,375 9,805 15,371 12,783 13,329 12,097 12,731 Hancock Hardin Marion Medina Meigs Mercer""!!""!""!"!!"!'" Miami Monroe Montgomery Morgan Morrow Muskingum Noble Ottawa Paulding Perry Pickaway Pike ., Portage Preble Putnam Richland - ROSS 18,765 11,806 7,806 12,981 13,855 16,415 15,455 15,074 16,282 16,570 Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1993 890 90 321 -1.3 Area name 1991 1991 1993 Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Sandusky Scioto Seneca Shelby Stark Summit Trumbull Tuscarawas Union . '« Van Wert Vinton Warren Washington Wavne . wood ....!!!.!!!!!!!.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Wyandot Oklahoma Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolftan portion Adair Alfalfa Atoka Beaver Beckham Biaine Bryan Caddo . . ! ! ! ! nnn 1 $ 23,016 19,019 17,943 14,765 20,732 17,590 13,967 22,412 18,892 13,915 13,098 16,228 10,307 17,716 13,792 14,604 12,666 13,555 14,047 17,105 10,963 18,930 14,771 15,406 13,007 13,841 52 14 77 9 39 26 67 54 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • 85 Table 2.—Total Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 1991-93—Continued Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Area name Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1991 Canadian Carter . 1,192 645 Cherokee Choctaw Cimarron Cleveland Coal ... Comanche Cotton 1992 1992-93 1993 1,277 683 1,347 720 5.2 13,965 15,618 16,787 17,245 14,262 13,599 18,652 13,464 14,824 20,953 14,526 16,369 17,667 17,917 15,104 14,073 19,356 14,425 17,346 22,083 43 20 12 11 31 51 7 47 13 2 135 164 430 104 118 924 221 173 131 570 3.8 3.7 9.9 6.5 7.4 2.0 4.8 7.2 3.5 5.0 11,325 11,574 12,989 13,246 9,981 17,404 15,290 13,496 11,286 11,619 11,863 12,341 13,627 14,079 10,914 18,608 16,161 14,514 12,035 12,442 12,362 12,867 14,876 15,014 11,787 19,084 16,827 15,397 12,685 12,823 72 68 37 35 74 8 16 27 71 69 392 447 114 349 435 212 119 150 466 154 410 469 116 368 449 226 128 157 488 162 4.5 5.0 1.6 5.5 3.2 6.6 7.0 5.1 4.9 4.9 12,669 14,371 13,236 14,236 11,616 11,793 13,926 12,544 13,065 12,045 13,364 15,163 13,572 14,889 12,933 12,339 15,320 ,13,357 13,562 12,713 13,747 15,652 13,783 15,329 13,285 12,816 16,720 13,736 13,990 13,452 56 25 55 28 65 70 18 57 53 64 893 160 126 123 10,926 456 537 419 208 858 943 168 132 132 11,645 491 558 442 215 914 984 178 134 137 12,100 504 581 464 224 953 4.3 6.5 1.3 4.1 3.9 2.7 4.2 5.1 4.3 4.2 13,047 14,391 12,754 10,876 18,083 12,490 12,873 13,706 13,361 13,932 13,721 15,092 13,396 11,712 19,055 13,322 13,238 14,463 13,744 14,622 14,272 15,894 13,567 12,225 19,587 13,514 13,611 15,066 14,236 15,055 48 24 60 73 6 63 59 32 49 33 527 452 797 111 57 871 306 410 613 290 559 468 841 120 61 919 324 441 631 302 582 494 873 129 63 972 336 459 656 330 4.2 5.5 3.8 7.5 2.8 5.8 3.7 4.0 3.8 9.1 12,814 13,283 13,536 10,118 14,027 15,392 12,244 12,039 14,324 17,889 13,338 13,798 14,151 10,872 15,343 15,885 13,105 12,748 14,667 18,688 13,718 14,525 14,477 11,534 15,956 16,299 13,522 13,126 15,230 20,592 58 44 46 75 23 21 62 66 30 5 121 10,108 659 996 152 139 256 140 10,732 688 1,027 156 156 266 152 11,155 715 1,021 170 157 276 8.2 3.9 4.0 -.6 9.5 .7 4.0 11,789 19,723 13,529 20,481 13,270 15,506 13,557 13,881 20,688 13,936 21,256 13,510 17,315 14,025 15,050 21,356 14,123 21,415 14,883 17,977 14,756 34 4 50 3 36 10 40 51,874 38,287 13,587 55,527 41,023 14,504 58,985 43,541 15,445 6.2 6.1 6.5 17,768 18,667 19,437 18,740 19,684 20,477 15,502 16,286 17,002 228 1,199 5,876 568 634 931 220 321 1,445 1,422 238 1,287 6,329 610 671 990 243 338 1,572 1,501 257 1,392 6,735 637 706 1,035 261 353 1,687 1,571 7.6 8.1 6.4 4.4 5.3 4.5 7.6 4.5 7.4 4.7 14,652 16,828 20,320 16,797 16,382 15,284 14,947 16,325 17,985 14,833 15,134 17,865 21,327 17,832 17,082 16,005 16,056 16,967 18,701 15,564 16,010 19,014 22,167 18,396 17,609 16,524 16,760 17,311 19,227 16,131 33 6 3 9 16 27 23 18 5 31 26 120 107 276 2,480 193 30 126 112 292 2,667 221 33 135 120 304 2,830 238 15,237 15,052 15,260 16,330 16,458 13,663 17,050 16,109 16,109 16,845 17,276 15,253 18,709 17,147 17,196 17,181 17,890 16,033 7 21 19 20 13 32 409 85 73 974 379 571 103 86 54 81 438 87 77 1,012 401 599 108 93 63 85 Haskell Hughes Jackson Jefferson Johnston Kay .... Kingfisher Kiowa . Latimer Le Flore 123 149 369 92 99 837 200 151 120 506 130 158 391 98 110 905 211 161 126 543 Lincoln Logan . Love ... McClam McCurtain Mclntosh Major .. Marshall Mayes Murray 372 420 109 329 387 200 110 138 443 145 Muskogee Noble . Nowata Okfuskee Oklahoma Okmulgee Osage Ottawa Pawnee Payne Tillman iuisa . '"!""" Wagoner Washington Washita Woods Woodward ."""!!"!"!!!."". ........ Oregon Metropolitan portion . .. ... Nonmetropolltan portion Baker Benton Clackamas Clatsop Columbia Coos Crook Curry Deschutes Douglas Gilliam Grant Harney ., Hood River Jackson Jefferson , ; . .» ... 15 19 13,391 14,311 16,535 16,475 13,968 12,789 16,690 12,297 12,065 17,952 381 78 73 928 371 535 93 79 45 71 See footnotes at end of table. 7.7 4.9 10.8 6.0 6.7 1.5 5.0 4.2 3.3 5.1 7.0 2.4 4.9 3.9 5.9 4.9 4.9 7.7 16.9 10.3 7.3 7.0 4.3 6.1 7.4 Area name Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1991 Rank in State Dollars 1991 1992 1993 14,409 14,482 14,728 16,367 15,108 15,511 15,992 17,240 15,581 16,149 18,015 18,045 35 30 12 11 15,880 15,230 14,197 16,277 14,324 20,599 15,155 19,055 14,349 14,793 16,565 15,875 14,665 16,981 14,967 21,706 15,768 20,556 15,124 15,297 16,851 16,683 15,628 17,687 16,759 22,629 16,301 23,939 15,487 16,368 22 25 34 15 24 2 29 1 36 28 6.5 14,997 16,946 16,230 20,279 15,104 15,941 16,019 16,602 17,374 18,453 16,986 17,749 21,279 22,046 16,419 18,392 16,743 17,400 26 8 14 4 10 17 3.6 3.6 3.7 19,640 20,610 21,281 20362 21,369 22,073 15,606 16,387 16,888 1,502 32,438 1,219 3,319 710 7,413 2,261 990 13,876 3,069 4.1 3.4 3.1 4.2 4.3 4.2 4.9 3.0 4.2 4.8 17,111 22,400 15,139 16,033 12,929 19,676 15,355 14,810 22,972 17,517 17,738 23,516 15,967 16,927 14,013 20,745 16,396 15,568 24,018 18,685 18,202 24,406 16,340 17,585 14,531 21,452 17,157 15,966 24,756 19,222 29 5 50 32 64 10 36 55 4 21 2,639 100 955 2,124 11,293 630 1,230 562 1,024 1,364 2,706 108 990 2,195 11,800 648 1,284 587 1,061 1,408 2.5 7.5 3.7 3.3 4.5 3.0 4.4 4.4 3.6 3.2 15,553 16,136 15,737 15,969 27,537 14,316 14,819 13,932 15,194 14,975 16,267 17,261 16,435 16,680 29,157 14,983 15,685 15,047 16,075 15,711 16,740 18,585 16,907 17,011 30,065 15,427 16,286 15,676 16,626 16,079 42 27 39 37 2 61 52 57 43 53 4,151 4,968 12,786 599 4,710 2,090 60 2,105 182 530 4,377 5,203 13,413 643 5,013 2,218 64 2,209 193 568 4,565 5,415 13,814 674 5,205 2,300 66 2,283 203 582 4.3 4.1 3.0 4.9 3.8 3.7 3.9 3.3 5.0 2.6 20,854 20,682 23,296 17,114 16,970 14,331 12,357 17,103 12,948 13,349 21,778 21,521 24,449 18,305 17,964 15,178 13,153 17,785 13,628 14,283 22,493 22,214 25,172 19,099 18,604 15,689 13,695 18,229 14,283 14,587 7 9 3 22 26 56 67 28 65 63 565 1,323 704 303 3,899 8,197 1,479 2,013 6,091 5,741 600 1,389 743 323 4,076 8,698 1,550 2,130 6,397 6,053 623 1,413 771 333 4,211 9,065 1,586 2,213 6,657 6,280 3.8 1.7 3.8 3.4 3.3 4.2 2.3 3.9 4.1 3.7 12,794 14,692 15,208 14,531 17,824 19,051 15,369 17,505 20,701 17,434 13,547 15,360 16,039 15,335 18,702 20,037 16,055 18,411 21,605 18,372 14,022 15,598 16,566 15,619 19,406 20,671 16,407 19,071 22,397 19,080 66 59 45 58 19 11 48 24 8 23 Mercer Mifflin Monroe Montgomery\".."".""."."!Z!!"! !!" Montour Northampton Northumberland Perry 1,939 716 1,908 647 1,722 21,016 378 4,724 1,513 638 2,059 765 2,012 679 1,821 21,963 410 4,989 1,587 679 2,134 795 2,027 705 1,932 22,747 430 5,206 1,651 707 3.7 3.9 .7 3.8 6.1 3.6 4.8 4.4 4.0 4.2 16,209 15,148 15,700 13,925 17,088 30,673 21,093 18,912 15,657 15,222 17,089 15,722 16,488 14,552 17,430 31,840 22,748 19,812 16,515 16,066 17,660 16,338 16,581 15,041 17,859 32,753 23,591 20,548 17,206 16,552 31 51 44 62 30 1 6 12 35 46 Philadelphia Pike Potter Schuylkill Snyder Somerset Sullivan Susauehanna Tioga Union 28,382 518 242 2,459 663 1,192 91 620 579 624 29,532 552 260 2,587 705 659 624 660 30,265 587 274 2,668 736 1,304 102 676 648 688 2.5 6.4 5.2 3.1 4.4 3.0 4.4 2.7 3.8 4.3 18,124 16,844 14,349 16,096 17,882 15,153 14,967 15,110 14,025 17,158 19,034 17,011 15,444 16,778 18,898 16,090 15,949 16,028 14,959 18,078 19,663 17,245 16,033 17,350 19,659 16,535 16,802 16,361 15,499 16,650 14 34 54 33 15 47 40 49 60 25 1,052 803 3,683 1,107 843 3,887 1,152 870 4,041 4.1 3.2 4.0 17,698 18,651 17,816 18,725 17,954 18,849 19,475 19,239 19,480 18 20 17 1993 42 61 1 17 76 38 22 45 41 29 Delaware Dewey Ellis .... Garfield Garvin Grady . Grant.. Greer . Harmon Harper Texas 1993 14,655 13,527 25,280 16,731 10,990 14,794 16,134 14,482 14,667 15,313 526 208 80 3,094 64 1,748 107 204 924 405 Pottawatomie Pushmataha Roger Mills Rogers Seminole Seouovah Stephens 1992 16,541 17,085 15,835 16,514 13,757 12,921 22,575 16,131 10,507 14,311 15,465 13,869 14,351 14,512 489 199 72 2,918 60 1,722 102 196 895 386 Pittsburg 1991 15,695 15,104 13,471 12,276 22,241 15,315 10,311 13,926 14,785 13,058 13,528 14,101 469 188 71 2,720 59 1,548 96 183 834 373 8S: Ouster 5.5 5.4 Rank in State Dollars Per capita personal income3 Total personal income 1992 1993 Josephine Klamath Lake .... Lane .... 930 844 105 4,708 989 911 116 5,017 1,051 963 130 5,327 Lincoln Linn ..... Malheur Marion . Morrow Multnomah Polk Sherman Tillamook Umatilla 635 1,423 376 3,818 114 12,268 779 36 316 889 677 1,503 397 4,073 122 13,062 834 39 338 937 710 1,606 427 4,347 143 13,776 881 46 354 1,020 Union .. Wallowa Wasco . Washington Wheeler Yamhill 360 121 359 6,645 22 1,079 387 126 379 7,209 24 1,1.61 411 137 396 7,704 28 1,236 234,643 206,340 28,303 247,105 217,173 29,932 256,015 224,979 31,036 Adams Allegheny Armstrong Beaver Bedford Berks .. Blair ... Bradford Bucks .. Butler 1,374 29,896 1,120 3,001 624 6,708 2,015 909 12,620 2,711 1,442 31,362 1,181 3,185 680 7,115 2,155 961 13,313 2,928 Cambria Cameron Carbon Centre Chester Clarion Clearfield Clinton Columbia Crawford 2,528 94 908 2,015 10,536 597 1,158 517 966 1,296 Cumberland Dauphin Delaware Elk . Erie Fayette Forest Franklin . Fulton Greene Huntingdon Indiana Jefferson Juniata Lackawanna Lancaster Lawrence Lebanon Lehigh Luzerne Pennsylvania Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolltan portion KS9. Venango Warren Washington ... :••::•;: . ... '£ 1992-93 6.2 5.7 12.5 6.2 4.8 6.9 7.7 6.7 17.2 5.5 5.6 17.4 5.0 8.9 6.2 9.0 4.4 6.9 17.4 1993 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 86 • April 1995 Table 2.—Total Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 1991-93—Continued Per capita personal income 3 Total personal income Percent change2 Millions of dollars Area name 1991 Wayne Westmoreland Wvornina York 1992 1992-93 1993 Dollars 1991 1992 1993 16,624 18,979 16,338 20,019 16,930 19,617 16,743 20,504 1 4 3 5 2 Harding . Hughes Hutchinson Hyde Jackson Jerauld Jones Kingsbury Lake Lawrence 26 254 125 30 30 49 26 100 178 314 26 277 138 29 30 49 24 101 179 344 27 303 131 33 29 52 30 99 179 364 4.5 9.4 -4.8 14.7 -5.7 6.4 26.0 -1.9 -.5 5.8 15,930 17,093 15,315 17,827 10,696 20,582 19,711 17,132 16,931 14,906 16,335 17,354 18,205 19,686 17,003 16,330 17,063 19,471 10,733 10,175 20,478 21,716 18,675 23,396 17,100 16,829 16,842 16,789 16,095 16,715 32 13 43 14 64 5 2 35 37 39 Lincoln Lyman McCook McPherson Marshall Meade Mellette Miner , Minnehaha Moody 278 63 80 52 92 323 23 54 2,445 124 299 62 88 56 97 349 22 55 2,657 115 304 69 86 54 97 378 27 52 2,817 111 1.4 11.7 -2.0 -2.8 -.8 8.2 20.2 -4.2 6.0 -3.1 17,870 17,533 14,198 16,527 19,386 14,366 10,890 16,618 19,252 18,782 18,855 18,440 16,824 18,700 15,734 14,999 18,064 17,628 20,493 20,281 15,040 16,461 10,562 12,769 17,448 16,800 20,439 21,345 17,136 16,731 22 21 50 30 12 41 59 36 7 38 Pennington Perkins Potter Roberts Sanborn Shannon Spink Stanley . Sully Todd 1,368 74 54 125 47 66 167 40 49 68 1,474 75 61 138 48 72 165 41 52 69 1,553 80 63 132 49 82 174 48 62 74 5.4 6.8 4.3 -4.3 2.7 13.8 5.6 17.3 18.2 7.3 16,345 19,583 16,963 12,846 16,893 6,422 21,037 16,172 31,874 7,996 17,392 19,963 19,552 14,275 17,171 6,821 20,942 16,464 33,625 7,970 18,077 21,403 20,604 13,499 17,551 7,517 22,041 18,761 39,707 8,455 25 6 11 56 31 66 4 19 1 65 107 151 182 99 324 28 107 166 196 104 352 27 114 160 200 108 363 29 7.2 -3.6 1.5 4.3 3.2 7.3 15,415 17,816 17,660 16,721 16,426 13,110 15,478 16,688 19,384 18,702 18,828 18,846 17,876 18,856 17,675 18,018 12,692 13,267 40 20 18 17 26 58 81,681 60,313 21,368 88,598 65,357 23,242 93,933 69,390 24,543 6.0 6.2 5.6 16,501 17,647 18,439 18,013 19,221 20,107 13,341 14,342 14,937 1,196 456 208 106 1,396 1,169 388 144 625 1,286 492 208 115 1,497 1,274 421 155 403 662 1,351 522 225 121 1,570 1,346 443 158 429 687 5.0 6.1 7.8 5.0 4.9 5.6 5.4 2.1 6.7 3.7 17,267 18,255 14,677 15,480 14,024 13,823 10,911 11,781 15,794 16,542 15,630 16,836 10,960 11,805 13,479 14,346 13,301 14,484 12,064 12,734 19,076 16,196 14,704 12,278 16,941 17,499 12,285 14,432 15,297 13,101 6 27 49 88 19 16 87 52 38 75 386 138 308 87 353 665 192 445 10,619 121 421 152 339 93 389 726 218 482 11,608 132 453 160 356 99 411 766 211 514 12,342 141 7.7 5.4 4.9 6.6 5.6 5.5 -3.3 6.6 6.3 6.8 13,802 14,671 15,204 10,702 11,652 12,108 11,570 12,542 12,935 12,106 12,873 13,780 12,082 13,233 13,847 16,199 17,450 18,139 14,247 16,238 15,653 12,344 13,116 13,522 20,722 22,448 23,655 11,576 12,690 13,476 40 90 77 61 59 12 32 65 2 66 205 517 524 341 167 474 668 390 189 749 224 556 577 373 183 508 739 425 211 788 239 596 603 387 198 534 760 456 222 -841 6.5 7.1 4.6 3.8 8.4 5.0 2.8 7.3 5.5 6.7 14,147 15,313 16,199 14,425 15,259 16,039 15,017 16,551 17,096 13,195 14,316 14,759 11,304 12,259 13,100 13,490 14,423 15,026 14,388 15,841 16,193 14,841 15,914 16,816 10,836 11,883 12,393 13,253 13,820 14,606 26 30 18 47 76 43 28 22 83 50 146 753 5,394 60 290 279 620 263 281 394 156 815 5,790 67 313 302 667 297 302 430 166 874 6,178 71 321 307 693 289 323 459 6.3 7.2 6.7 6.4 2.8 1.9 3.8 -2.8 7.1 6.8 10,893 14,861 18,780 9,057 12,314 11,970 13,687 13,488 12,821 14,034 11,593 12,304 15,848 16,844 20,085 21,230 9,940 10,369 13,126 13,404 12,831 12,800 14,544 14,876 15,251 14,859 13,651 14,449 15,128 15,963 85 21 4 95 68 78 45 46 51 31 1,111 3,239 1,764 11,160 2,249 1,165 3,368 1,807 11,551 2,363 1,220 3,527 1,865 12,124 2,498 4.7 4.7 3.2 5.0 5.7 22,655 20,015 20,057 18,788 20,163 55,074 40,245 14,828 58,247 42,456 15,791 61,204 44,620 16,584 5.1 5.1 5.0 15,482 16,200 16,861 16,236 16,929 17,628 13,750 14,519 15,093 296 2,199 120 2,217 187 285 1,714 1,722 178 5,191 318 2,372 127 2,349 202 313 1,821 1,787 187 5,448 332 2,482 133 2,495 211 331 1,934 1,853 192 5,651 4.2 4.6 4.8 6.2 4.4 5.6 6.2 3.7 2.9 3.7 12,335 17,464 10,147 15,150 11,067 13,774 19,246 12,933 13,744 17,107 13,210 18,449 10,785 15,863 1.1,919 14,854 19,908 13,172 14,265 17,943 13,770 18,962 11,398 16,545 12,497 15,541 20,489 13,477 14,505 18,918 31 4 45 14 40 18 1 34 25 5 Cherokee Chester Chesterfield Clarendon Colleton .. Darlington Dillon .. Dorchester Edgefield Fairfield . 588 395 499 317 436 895 334 1,272 245 276 625 426 552 335 464 953 356 1,326 261 297 661 442 583 350 484 999 373 1,385 272 310 5.8 3.8 5.6 4.5 4.2 4.8 4.8 4.4 4.2 4.4 13,021 12,131 12,785 11,067 12,405 14,262 11,462 14,706 13,220 12,230 13,689 13,033 14,191 11,668 13,052 14,969 12,143 15,147 13,987 13,229 14,334 13,510 14,962 12,078 13,394 15,477 12,640 15,480 14,399 13,872 27 33 22 42 36 20 39 19 26 30 Florence Georgetown Greenville Greenwood Hampton .. Horry Jasper Kershaw Lancaster Laurens 1,792 701 5,832 911 222 2,308 186 681 771 877 1,909 760 6,114 969 236 2,430 202 703 821 937 2,020 797 6,499 1,020 251 2,506 213 729 867 994 5.8 4.9 6.3 5.2 6.3 3.1 5.3 3.7 5.6 6,1 15,342 14,685 17,996 15,139 12,111 15,510 11,874 15,436 13,957 14,951 16,142 15,609 18,705 16,019 12,749 16,028 12,870 15,680 14,872 15,880 16,877 16,134 19,655 16,713 13,324 16,872 13,465 15,971 15,583 16,733 10 15 2 13 37 11 35 16 17 12 200 3,055 92 412 342 454 920 1,116 1,371 5,178 209 3,216 99 439 351 475 962 1,195 1,442 5,472 213 3,390 103 457 361 503 1,015 1,252 1,536 5,723 2.0 5.4 4.1 4.2 3.0 6.0 5.5 4.8 6.5 4.6 10,755 17,648 10,316 11,993 11,439 13,546 15,795 12,973 14,138 17,757 11,162 18,136 11,016 12,732 11,715 14,144 16,360 13,764 14,604 18,618 11,433 18,582 11,257 13,146 12,046 14,887 16,996 14,292 15,378 19,222 44 7 46 38 43 23 9 28 21 3 227 3,663 1,303 373 413 2,311 234 3,882 1,381 404 444 2,442 246 4,104 1,454 426 462 2,590 5.3 5.7 5.2 5.5 3.9 6.1 13,859 15,896 12,647 12£47 11,179 17,1.1.0 14,161 16,680 13,315 13,227 11,998 17,845 14,690 17,484 13,706 13,925 12,415 18,617 24 8 32 29 41 6 11,514 4,091 7,424 12,259 4,430 7,829 12,803 4,674 8,129 4.4 5.5 3.8 16,399 17,280 17,879 18,082 19,210 19,943 15,599 16,350 16,875 Aurora Beadle Bennett Bon Homme Brookings Brown Brule Buffalo Butte Campbell 41 299 39 105 369 629 81 21 107 35 45 311 40 113 393 664 86 21 113 39 41 328 44 113 410 693 90 21 121 40 -9.6 5.4 10.4 .2 4.4 4.4 4.6 3.5 7.1 3.6 13,634 16,571 12,238 14,888 14,559 17,670 14,434 11,765 13,012 17,934 14,966 17,323 12,874 16,150 15,265 18,629 15,256 11,389 13,529 20,167 13,470 18,287 13,961 16,105 15,772 19,391 16,087 12,023 13,889 21,184 57 24 54 44 47 15 45 60 55 8 Charles Mix Clark Clay Codington Corson Custer Davison Day Deuel Dewey 132 80 179 375 45 97 299 102 60 58 143 82 194 403 48 103 322 105 62 60 147 78 194 432 49 109 334 105 64 64 3.0 -5.6 -.1 7.3 2.1 5.3 3.9 -.5 2.5 7.3 14,458 18,381 13,623 16,319 10,735 15,806 17,107 14,802 13,294 10,271 15,427 18,809 14,769 17,269 11,376 16,271 18,292 15,396 13,907 10,761 15,815 17,825 14,521 18,011 11,710 16,916 18,915 15,493 14,123 1.1,284 46 28 52 27 62 34 16 48 53 63 53 71 55 79 55 78 -1.2 -.1 14,405 15,125 15,090 16,644 18,242 18,327 Lee Lexington ... McCormick Marion Marlboro Newberrv Oconee ... Orangeburg Pickens Richland .. ..... .. ; . . .. Saluda . Spartanburg Sumter Union Williamsburg South Dakota Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Douglas Edmunds See footnotes at end of table. 1993 33 10 42 29 3 51 9 61 19,438 20,206 21,244 19,379 20,156 21,189 20,057 20,721 21,832 . 1993 15,905 16,930 19,426 20,940 16,669 16,423 16,691 17,677 19,398 22,341 14,925 14,685 18,378 21,174 13,818 11,941 4.8 5.0 3.2 .. 1992 15,180 17,270 16,614 15,883 19,963 14,855 19,821 11,956 21,234 19,369 1,865 .. 1991 8.1 3.2 -2.2 3.8 14.2 .1 14.8 -14.7 20,254 18,447 1,807 .. 1992-93 1993 120 54 137 91 57 75 90 35 19,522 17,758 1,764 Abbeville Aiken Allendale Anderson Bamberg BarnwelT Beaufort Berkeley Calhoun Charleston 1992 111 52 140 88 50 75 78 41 15,956 17,991 15,654 19,290 South Carolina Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion 1991 Rank in State Dollars 108 47 138 84 51 7.4 85 35 3.6 3.8 3.7 3.7 24,866 21,653 21,832 20,618 21,887 Millions of dollars Fall River Faulk Grant Gregory Haakon Hamlm Hand Hanson 721 7,364 488 7,254 23,745 20,751 20,721 19,550 20,918 Percent change2 38 16 41 13 696 7,095 471 6,997 Bristol Kent Newport Providence Area name 1993 655 6,684 443 6,664 Rhode Island Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Rank in State 49 23 ,. Tripp Turner Union Walworth Yankton Ziebach Tennessee Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Anderson Bedford Benton Bledsoe Blount Bradley Campbell Cannon Carroll Carter .369 Cheatham Chester Claiborne Clay Cocke Coffee Crockett Cumberland Davidson Decatur DeKalb Dickson Dyer Fayette Fentress Franklin Gibson Giles Grainger Greene Grundy Hamblen Hamilton Hancock Hardeman Hardin Hawkins Haywood Henderson Henry . . ... ... .-. .. ...... SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • 87 Table 2.—Total Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 1991-93—Continued Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Area name Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1991 1992-93 Rank in State Dollars Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Area name Percent change2 Millions of dollars Rank in State Dollars 1991 1992 Hickman Houston Humphreys Jackson Jefferson Johnson Knox ... Lake .... Lauderdale Lawrence 208 80 208 106 450 142 6,331 74 284 507 222 85 221 115 485 151 6,798 88 323 550 239 90 237 121 515 163 7,236 92 320 580 7.4 6.2 7.4 5.1 6.1 8.4 6.4 3.8 -.8 5.4 12,024 11,267 13,188 11,563 13,306 9,469 18,540 10,421 12,085 14,104 12,637 11,821 13,911 12,621 13,990 9,880 19,578 12,035 13,637 15,095 13,290 12,417 14,709 13,196 14,298 10,440 20,534 12,466 13,399 15,557 71 81 48 73 54 94 5 80 69 33 Cameron Camp ... Carson . Cass .... Castro .. Chambers Cherokee Childress Clay Cochran 2,679 170 110 417 167 332 582 87 144 63 2,965 184 122 441 161 347 618 101 155 73 3,208 203 133 454 195 369 649 111 162 82 8.2 10.2 9.3 3.0 20.9 6.4 5.0 9.2 4.7 12.6 9,922 16,939 16,857 13,845 18,976 16,353 14,287 14,594 14,733 15,167 11,042 19,447 20,473 14,956 22,534 17,709 15,900 17,424 16,518 19,752 243 47 34 194 20 90 151 97 126 44 Lewis ... Lincoln . Loudon . McMinn McNairy Macon .. Madison Marion .. Marshall Maury ... 109 388 486 585 294 201 1,266 327 355 885 122 423 530 624 316 222 1,385 347 400 979 131 440 568 662 327 235 1,459 371 428 1,061 7.1 4.1 7.1 5.9 3.5 5.5 5.4 7.1 7.1 8.4 11,369 13,684 15,070 13,660 12,959 12,487 15,987 13,014 15,794 15,217 12,458 14,834 15,966 14,346 13,973 13,632 17,249 13,734 17,377 16,402 13,204 15,381 16,756 15,046 14,255 14,264 17,920 14,415 18,140 17,275 72 36 24 42 57 56 13 53 11 17 Coke .... Coleman Collin .... Collingsworth Colorado Comal .. Comanche Concho Cooke .. Coryell . 47 121 6,629 52 295 980 195 37 466 606 50 136 7,252 58 309 1,092 216 44 490 700 52 144 7,901 68 331 1,172 226 45 519 780 3.8 5.8 9.0 16.5 7.1 7.3 4.4 2.1 5.9 11.6 13,774 14,988 15,441 12,866 14,242 15,021 23,844 24,968 25,666 14,712 16,417 19,333 16,139 16,787 17,942 18,397 19,739 20,364 14,642 16,182 16,682 12,227 14,560 14,655 15,229 15,818 16,815 9,830 10,864 11,549 169 189 8 51 79 37 122 203 115 238 Meigs .. Monroe Montgomery Moore . Morgan Obion .. Overton Perry ... Pickett .. Polk 98 359 1,403 62 182 479 195 78 55 172 104 391 1,624 66 198 532 211 86 59 187 109 419 1,728 70 204 560 223 93 62 199 4.1 7.1 6.4 5.6 3.0 5.2 5.6 7.8 4.5 6.7 11,837 11,655 13,611 12,795 10,480 15,076 10,964 11,584 12,035 12,497 12,465 12,504 14,725 13,498 11,227 16,814 11,830 12,698 12,986 13,480 12,633 13,127 15,249 14,053 11,375 17,590 12,374 13,661 13,625 14,289 79 74 39 58 92 15 84 63 64 55 34 63 61 86 30 126 41,951 179 345 69 36 63 63 104 32 129 45,171 220 344 75 39 65 67 123 34 153 47,711 251 391 78 15,800 17,141 13,287 13,573 14,772 15,354 11,797 14,343 9,904 9,310 22,742 23,178 22,205 23,672 12,625 15,585 18,332 18,312 14,536 15,914 18,572 14,330 16,000 17,077 10,619 26,914 24,760 17,673 20,466 16,705 63 210 148 107 245 6 12 91 35 120 Putnam Rhea .... Roane .. Robertson Rutherford Scott ... Sequatchie Sevier . Shelby .. Smith ... 786 304 709 619 2,042 206 112 786 16,079 202 857 325 762 674 2,311 223 119 867 17,222 216 922 344 806 721 2,494 232 127 930 18,189 225 7.6 5.8 5.7 7.1 8.0 4.3 6.5 7.3 5.6 4.2 15,126 16,128 16,921 12,290 12,859 13,324 14,881 15,916 16,782 14,497 15,415 16,070 16,454 17,960 18,498 11,101 11,842 12,200 12,419 12,969 13,716 14,810 15,880 16,490 19,250 20,427 21,439 14,058 14,891 15,416 20 70 23 29 8 89 62 25 3 35 7.6 3.8 6.3 19.1 7.1 18.9 5.6 13.9 13.6 4.8 Stewart Sullivan Sumner Tipton ... Trousdale Unicoi ... Union .. Van Buren Warren Washington 5,366 270 35 93 62 122 244 1,751 29 1,403 5,779 289 38 97 63 136 261 1,798 31 1,529 6,221 302 42 100 70 144 272 1,878 33 1,622 7.6 4.6 11.9 3.1 10.9 6.0 4.2 4.5 7.0 6.1 18,847 14,676 14,312 8,670 17,312 9,550 13,430 14,550 12,872 16,208 20,305 16,410 17,160 9,468 19,287 11,273 15,149 15,373 11,842 18,012 38 134 106 250 53 241 181 174 236 75 119 2,457 1,755 541 67 229 144 46 447 1,508 125 2,587 1,899 589 73 247 157 50 490 1,630 137 2,692 2,044 619 75 259 168 54 523 1,710 12,343 16,949 16,634 14,050 11,329 13,860 10,299 9,456 13,375 16,049 13,409 18,289 18,469 15,143 12,287 15,421 11,820 10,718 15,353 17,759 67 10 9 41 86 34 91 93 37 14 Denton . De Witt Dickens Dimmit . Donley . Duval ... Eastland Ector .... Edwards Ellis Wayne Weakley White .. Williamson Wilson 7,122 430 227 359 342 60 143 28 4,841 115 7,833 465 237 389 377 72 145 32 5,326 127 8,274 495 254 407 398 75 172 35 5,641 131 5.6 6.4 7.2 4.5 5.6 4.7 18.8 10.6 5.9 3.7 11,618 12,478 12,790 15,312 16,372 17,166 12,955 13,467 14,321 14,643 15,917 16,408 17,142 18,574 19,281 12,856 15,716 16,753 16,789 17,069 20,777 16,175 18,775 21,106 20,030 20,850 21,049 14,467 15,857 15,703 230 105 211 135 54 117 30 28 29 159 161 424 247 2,102 1,147 181 455 270 2,357 1,276 192 477 286 2,594 1,351 5.9 11,355 11,891 12,417 13,299 14,267 14,877 12,143 13,185 13,799 24,702 26,625 28,048 16,482 17,971 18,549 82 44 60 1 7 El Paso Erath .... Falls ..... Fannin .. Fayette . Fisher ... Floyd .... Foard ... Fort Bend Franklin 302,652 262,698 39,954 326,122 283,450 42,672 345,018 299,435 45,583 5.8 5.6 6.8 17,450 18,460 19,145 18,097 19,132 19,780 14,128 14,966 15,809 579 199 1,095 278 126 33 371 329 120 180 616 211 1,141 293 134 38 401 357 119 195 646 219 1,201 311 142 39 424 379 143 209 4.9 3.6 5.3 6.1 5.8 1.6 5.8 6.3 12,082 13,713 15,477 15,062 16,266 16,922 11,892 16,231 17,244 16,759 Freestone Frio Gaines . Galveston Garza ... Gillespie Glasscock Goliad .. Gonzales Gray 224 149 165 4,016 60 295 24 81 247 429 243 161 187 4,295 71 311 28 86 271 460 245 168 223 4,494 74 329 27 91 293 488 1.0 4.0 19.1 4.6 3.5 5.6 -5.0 5.5 8.1 6.0 14,212 15,451 15,627 10,348 10,636 11,065 11,647 13,178 15,695 18,038 18,906 19,363 11,945 14,268 14,729 16,893 17,445 17,808 16,274 19,947 18,055 13,405 14,253 14,876 14,296 15,756 16,996 18,203 19,582 20,727 164 242 160 50 201 85 74 197 112 31 528 67 304 2,703 19,628 104 13 215 1,303 3,434 569 74 319 3,062 21,244 108 16 233 1,378 3,572 615 78 330 3,390 22,510 117 19 243 1,427 3,730 Grayson Gregg ... Grimes . Guadalupe Hale Hall Hamilton Hansford . Hardeman Hardin .. 1,578 1,905 245 961 499 50 123 149 75 624 1,667 2,054 259 1,044 507 56 134 159 82 692 1,743 2,130 276 1,123 580 72 140 178 87 724 4.6 3.7 6.7 7.6 14.4 29.0 4.0 11.8 6.9 4.5 16,507 17,819 12,804 14,629 14,319 13,022 16,256 26,256 15,133 14,735 17,472 18,139 19,033 19,584 13,331 13,961 15,656 16,398 14,346 16,451 14,452 18,873 17,727 18,571 28,280 32,596 16,339 17,626 15,960 16,221 71 46 218 136 131 60 64 3 94 142 1,622 115 33 81 463 190 373 327 273 160 1,739 121 37 87 489 204 398 352 288 172 1,878 130 42 96 520 219 428 379 303 180 Harris ... Harrison Hartley . Haskell . Hays .... Hemphill Henderson Hidalgo Hill Hockley 61,704 821 105 92 932 70 810 3,789 379 325 66,196 868 110 107 1,025 73 869 4,142 405 353 69,103 909 126 114 1,115 77 919 4,466 430 388 4.4 4.7 14.5 6.9 8.8 6.5 5.7 7.8 6.1 9.9 21,274 14,373 29,016 13,659 13,926 18,856 13,712 9,428 13,888 13,290 22,349 22,990 15,166 15,693 29,859 33,863 15,959 17,233 14,974 15,689 20,695 22,325 14,511 15,062 9,833 10,085 14,752 15,480 14,350 15,775 19 161 2 102 162 22 186 247 167 156 Hood .... Hopkins Houston Howard Hudspeth Hunt ..... Hutchinson 558 447 314 488 22 982 457 613 487 335 504 25 1,068 471 637 517 356 545 28 1,109 489 3.9 6.2 6.3 8.1 15.7 3.9 3.9 18,529 19,802 20,682 15,412 16,752 17,747 14,665 15,630 16,574 15,217 15,718 17,003 7,487 8,272 9,526 15,338 16,416 16,883 17,906 18,599 19,414 32 88 125 111 249 113 48 Texas Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Anderson Andrews Angelina Aransas Archer Armstrong Atascosa Austin Bailey Bandera Bastrop Bavlor ~~j v Bee Bell Bexar Blanco Borden Bospue Bowie Brazoria Brazos Brewster Briscoe Brooks Brown . Burieson Burnet . Caldwell Calhoun Callahan . . . . .. See footnotes at end of table. 1992 1993 10.2 4.1 7.7 5.1 3.1 4.8 7.1 8.4 6.7 4.9 5.9 4.9 5.8 10.1 20.8 7.0 8.0 5.2 3.5 10.7 6.0 8.2 17.4 4.3 3.5 4.4 8.0 7.7 15.3 9.6 6.4 7.2 7.7 7.7 5.3 5.2 12,297 17,664 17,619 15,036 12,173 14,713 11,166 10,221 14,634 17,178 1993 1993 12,813 13,335 14,514 15,294 15,850 16,501 15,317 15,823 17,459 18,181 19,509 19,026 12,729 13,254 17,117 17,665 17,370 21,154 17,603 17,859 226 177 127 153 69 59 227 92 26 82 13,657 14,371 15,092 15,699 17,359 18,350 12,107 13,000 14,050 14,267 16,051 16,805 16,271 17,255 17,916 16,777 16,645 17,372 17,599 22,164 24,383 14,138 15,173 15,402 15,902 16,748 17,199 17,287 17,587 18,005 185 67 216 116 81 99 14 171 104 76 13,195 13,897 14,602 13,415 13,909 15,020 17,675 19,300 23,052 9,993 10,635 11,551 13,527 14,284 15,107 13,853 14,650 15,040 16,346 17,169 17,811 12,317 13,094 13,824 14,087 14,381 14,926 13,531 14,437 14,957 206 190 18 237 184 187 84 221 195 193 1991 Cottle ... Crane ... Crockett Crosby . Culberson Dallam . Dallas ... Dawson Deaf Smith Delta .... 1992 1993 1992-93 1991 1992 10,636 18,151 18,728 14,648 18,446 16,949 15,215 16,203 16,024 17,249 19,611 15,733 15,257 9,250 17,805 10,630 14,514 14,765 12,360 17,333 1993 1993 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 88 • April 1995 Table 2,—Total Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 1991-93—Continued Total personal income Area name Millions of dollars 1991 Irjon Jack Jackson 1992 1992-93 1993 1991 16,070 15,505 19,224 13,999 13,643 16,282 15,120 13,911 16,614 22,531 146 166 57 217 224 141 183 220 123 21 23,749 12,475 18,654 13,875 19,877 10,104 12,769 14,525 15,257 15,035 23,688 14,654 19,255 15,306 16,792 10,751 13,049 15,419 16,528 15,912 24,876 16,148 19,885 15,781 24,418 11,501 14,304 17,957 17,260 18,414 11 144 43 154 13 240 212 77 101 66 8.1 6.5 4.4 6.6 5.4 4.6 4.5 8.4 8.0 6.9 13,618 10,745 15,273 14,256 14,734 14,665 14,283 18,173 12,751 16,898 14,624 15,037 11,898 12,665 16,614 17,385 15,807 16,416 15,824 16,466 15,491 15,774 15,156 15,726 19,818 21,789 14,447 15,244 17,733 18,587 188 231 98 133 129 157 158 24 180 62 4.4 6.6 6.4 30,683 16,224 13,061 14,519 15,271 21,375 13,794 12,523 12,663 15,466 25,564 17,066 16,716 15,650 16,368 22,055 14,720 13,619 13,432 16,290 29,643 17,947 20,010 16,495 17,054 24,038 15,288 14,217 16,428 17,008 4 78 41 128 109 15 178 213 132 110 4.3 8.6 8.8 4.2 4.5 5.8 6.2 7.0 4.7 6.9 15,779 7,206 13,076 13,717 22,292 14,659 14,474 13,485 14,368 18,073 15,377 7,656 13,770 15,039 22,859 15,347 16,234 14,661 15,610 18,916 15,781 7,925 14,635 15,437 23,603 16,123 16,841 15,663 16,320 19,296 155 253 205 170 17 145 114 163 137 52 16,479 13,809 15,510 13,840 15,004 11,186 14,080 15,980 17,438 23,482 16,956 18,080 14,766 14,999 15,657 20,305 14,881 15,547 15,928 16,713 12,093 12,415 14,867 15,399 17,145 17,783 19,147 20,595 23,091 25,204 73 191 39 165 119 232 172 87 33 10 Beaver Box Elder Cache Carbon Daaoett jf"y.yw * 15,146 14,253 13,317 16,023 21,940 10,764 14,102 15,897 9,483 13,198 16,118 15,284 14,229 16,822 20,973 11,416 14,883 16,993 9,460 13,736 16,300 15,964 14,840 17,353 25,659 12,094 14,998 17,929 9,958 13,928 139 150 198 100 9 235 192 80 248 219 Iron Juab Kane Millard Morgan Piute Rich Salt Lake San Juan Sanpete 4.8 7.8 4.7 18,182 12,059 13,333 13,186 10,727 18,096 19,516 12,690 22,143 13,777 19,020 11,085 14,301 14,164 11,730 18,352 19,078 13,966 23,151 14,728 19,928 13,409 15,258 14,723 12,351 20,182 22,222 14,646 23,972 15,375 42 225 179 202 233 40 23 204 16 173 Sevier Summit Tooele Uintah Utah Wasatch Washington Wayne Weber 1.6 5.2 5.0 5.3 9.8 8.8 15,076 13,601 12,835 11,989 12,834 14,541 15,763 14,451 13,805 12,748 13,206 15,072 15,986 14,825 14,420 12,857 13,790 16,195 149 199 208 229 222 143 489 29 4,614 68 494 1,576 227 164 871 350 512 32 4,687 71 530 1,659 240 170 930 381 4.8 8.2 1.6 5.3 7.4 5.3 5.5 3.5 6.9 8.9 14,195 14,601 17,793 12,493 12,277 15,074 12,810 12,601 15,171 20,540 10 12 685 57 6 32 383 70 672 224 10 14 725 63 6 34 396 74 732 236 11 15 764 66 8 36 439 85 776 271 4.5 8.4 5.4 5.8 Lee Leon Liberty Limestone Lipscomb Live Oak Llano 184 58 286 183 189 786 298 56 124 198 200 64 310 205 205 847 315 60 141 210 216 68 323 218 216 886 329 65 152 224 Loving Lubbock Lynn McCulloch McLennan McMullen Madison Marion Martin Mason 3 3,625 88 122 2,907 17 152 124 61 52 4 3,832 113 131 3,141 18 164 136 66 55 4 4,084 133 139 3,317 19 173 142 82 59 Matagorda Maverick Medina Menard Midland Milam Mills Mitchell Montague Montgomery 594 279 367 30 2,427 335 66 104 248 3,488 582 311 393 34 2,537 353 74 113 270 3,840 607 338 427 36 2,651 374 78 121 283 4,106 Moore Morris Motley Nacogdoches Navarro Newton Nolan Nueces Ochiltree Oldham 296 180 23 756 596 150 231 4,734 155 52 305 191 22 817 635 163 241 5,145 169 51 339 198 29 862 671 170 250 5,433 178 56 Orange Palo Pinto Panola Parker Parmer Pecos Polk Potter Presidio Rains 1,238 357 294 1,066 218 155 450 90 1,334 377 316 1,141 210 162 498 1,692 65 96 1,362 398 331 1,204 259 173 531 1,808 72 100 1,639 54 32 186 168 142 20 196 602 153 1,740 51 35 198 182 144 20 214 670 162 1,852 61 38 205 193 157 22 225 723 170 661 131 101 201 764 76 692 139 110 220 801 85 703 146 115 232 880 93 La Salle Randall Reagan Real Red River Reeves Refugio Roberts Robertson Rockwall Runnels Rusk Sabine San Augustine San Jacinto San Patricio San Saba See footnotes at end of table. "B 1991 2.7 8.0 11.8 41.5 5.9 10.9 14.3 6.0 15.2 18.4 6.4 5.6 7.4 5.5 4.7 23.8 11.3 3.7 27.9 5.5 5.7 4.6 3.7 5.6 5.3 9.3 2.1 5.3 4.5 5.5 23.2 6.6 6.6 6.9 10.2 4.6 6.5 21.5 7.0 3.8 6.0 8.9 13.8 Schleicher Scurry Shackelford Shelby 1992 Per capita personal income3 Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1993 15,589 15,150 18,969 13,340 12,943 15,735 14,383 13,446 16,040 22,034 441 28 4,298 63 467 1,483 207 155 813 313 King Kinney Kleberg Knox Lamar Lamb 1993 65 138 72 31 111 242 Kenedy Kent .;. Kerr 1992 Area name 17,637 18,370 18,562 14,299 15,116 16,311 16,539 16,687 18,110 30 103 217 Jasper Jeff Davis Jefferson Jim HOQQ JimWelis Johnson Jones Karnes Kaufman Kendall Rank in State Dollars 28 97 212 ..... Total personal income Per capita personal income3 Percent change2 1992-93 1993 Rank in State Dollars 1993 1991 1992 12,332 13,705 17,047 13,998 12,923 14,175 14,370 15,369 18,102 17,711 15,483 16,584 214 175 89 124 34,343 17,543 16,200 5,654 14,552 11,370 16,442 14,935 22,144 19,555 36,100 18,941 16,688 6,086 15,535 12,858 18,104 15,427 21,294 20,746 42,373 19,615 17,226 6,306 16,294 13,033 19,281 16,007 26,352 21,501 1 45 103 254 140 228 55 147 7 25 3.0 5.9 7.4 6.0 4.8 4.3 16,348 16,977 13,796 22,409 15,817 16,084 19,058 13,099 13,444 13,636 16,985 18,143 15,224 24,684 16,792 16,757 20,283 14,175 13,636 14,434 17,635 17,825 17,804 28,057 17,434 17,602 21,127 14,531 14,099 14,787 93 83 86 5 96 95 27 207 215 200 7.4 4.2 8.3 8.3 1993 37 255 56 309 39 270 60 339 42 281 60 367 Sterling Stonewall Sutton Swisher Tarrant 98 2,689 86 242 126 16 33 64 176 23,499 101 2,929 93 273 134 19 36 65 177 25,266 116 3,086 97 299 143 20 38 68 217 26,509 Taylor Terrell . . . Terry Throckmorton Titus Tom Green Travis Trinity Tyler Upshur 1,936 23 181 41 384 1,578 11,331 150 227 437 2,053 25 198 44 412 1,665 12,411 163 244 468 2,140 25 230 50 425 1,763 13,323 173 255 488 Upton Uvalde Val Verde Van Zandt Victoria Walker Waller Ward Washington Webb 60 291 425 536 1,322 590 348 182 473 1,360 64 311 455 574 1,424 619 378 180 498 1,552 68 331 477 610 1,505 653 398 186 525 1,682 6.6 6.6 4.7 6.1 5.7 5.6 5.4 3.0 5.4 8.4 13,937 12,338 10,650 13,888 17,474 11,415 14,462 14,172 18,125 9,663 15,379 12,846 11,184 14,745 18,497 11,773 15,434 14,382 18,732 10,464 16,747 13,674 11,503 15,363 19,257 12,315 15,853 15,136 19,395 10,757 118 223 239 176 56 234 152 182 49 244 Wharton Wheeler Wichita Wilbarger Willacy Williamson Wilson Winkler Wise Wood 614 100 2,049 219 149 2,389 313 109 516 426 629 107 2,159 241 169 2,649 340 116 564 457 668 112 2,305 249 190 2,965 367 118 596 478 6.3 5.3 6.8 3.4 7.9 1.7 5.6 4.6 15,455 17,585 16,954 14,719 8,321 16,304 13,430 12,639 14,602 14,306 15,711 16,691 19,147 20,423 17,951 18,860 16,392 17,062 9,243 10,092 17,296 18,273 14,304 14,886 13,673 14,374 15,757 16,464 15,207 15,474 121 36 61 108 246 68 196 209 130 168 126 306 78 93 144 327 88 98 157 339 94 106 8.6 3.5 6.7 8.3 14,471 17,140 8,207 7,537 16,386 18,523 8,878 7,981 70 58 251 252 26,036 20,865 5,171 28,078 22,497 5,581 30,009 23,978 6,031 6.9 6.6 8.1 14,733 15,501 16,136 15,235 16,037 16,677 13,004 13,661 14,293 62 531 924 290 9 2,786 152 127 48 84 67 562 990 307 9 3,007 169 135 50 95 72 601 1,068 316 10 3,216 178 141 53 105 7.4 7.0 7.9 3.1 6.3 7.0 5.7 4.7 5.8 12,858 14,388 12,887 14,360 12,190 14,360 11,923 12,272 11,906 12,557 242 69 66 146 76 13 25 12,240 106 187 265 75 72 144 82 14 26 13,215 123 196 292 79 77 152 89 15 28 14,105 135 214 192 383 378 255 3,303 135 647 23 2,536 203 438 401 273 3,562 147 713 26 2,712 218 492 422 285 3,797 158 803 27 2,860 10,121 3,465 6,656 10,746 3,661 7,085 536 676 572 715 Sherman Smith Somervell Starr Ctanh0n3 Yoakum Young Zapata Zavala Utah Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolltan portion Davis • Duchesne Emery Garfield Grand .... . . Vermont Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Addison Bennington 15.2 5.4 5.3 9.4 6.5 3.3 5.8 4.5 22.6 4.9 4.2 .4 16.3 13.3 12.3 12.0 10.1 10.3 5.9 6.8 5.6 8.0 5.0 8.9 6.7 10.3 9.1 7.4 18,165 19,181 9,055 8,658 14,250 15,806 14,331 15,677 14,071 15,651 13,410 13,576 13,185 14,131 12 5 11 6 14 7 19 16 21 13 11,326 12,038 12,559 11,755 12,573 13,044 12,926 13,901 13,577 12,709 12,431 12,911 13,475 14,201 14,659 10,293 11,017 10,681 14,773 15,420 16,239 16,428 17,320 18,070 9,663 10,305 8,783 10,885 11,080 11,714 24 22 15 23 9 28 4 2 29 27 12,782 13,427 24,050 24,717 14,591 15,068 11,648 11,856 12,928 13,401 13,814 14,349 12,806 13,477 12,168 12,321 16,467 16,984 18 1 8 26 20 10 17 25 3 13,482 14,995 13,506 15,088 13,031 15,069 12,938 13,176 12,268 13,426 5.4 5.4 12,310 22,506 13,957 11,109 12,268 12,973 12,328 10,706 15,729 11,189 3,842 7,347 4.1 4.9 3.7 17,822 18,809 19,437 19,310 20,227 20,933 17,135 18,151 18,736 588 734 2.9 2.6 15,992 18,913 12.4 5.4 4.2 6.6 7.0 12.6 16,89 19,985 17,235 20,402 9 4 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • 89 Table 2,—Total Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 1991-93—Continued Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Percent change2 Millions of dollars Area name 1991 1992 1992-93 1993 Rank in State Dollars 1991 1992 1993 422 2,743 78 621 100 348 391 348 458 2,884 85 670 108 375 418 379 464 3,036 87 694 112 393 438 387 1.3 5.3 2.9 3.7 4.2 5.0 4.7 2.1 14,974 20,616 12,182 15,208 18,212 17,162 14,720 14,298 16,147 16,230 21,518 22,351 13,039 13,318 16,174 16,517 19,305 19,706 18,283 18,997 15,637 16,212 15,462 15,692 11 1 14 10 5 7 12 13 Rutland . Washington Windham Windsor 1,065 986 780 1,026 1,125 1,040 842 1,077 1,162 1,091 874 1,128 3.3 4.9 3.8 4.8 17,046 17,972 18,588 17,876 18,747 19,616 18,811 20,236 20,880 18,885 19,786 20,698 8 6 2 3 126,360 104,975 21,385 133,759 111,213 22,545 140,162 116,726 23,436 4.8 5.0 4.0 20,099 20,934 21,653 21,610 22,468 23,239 14,964 15,660 16,162 Accomack Amelia... Amherst Appomattox Arlington Bath ...... Bland ... Botetourt Brunswick Buchanan 470 137 390 182 5,368 ;84 80 417 195 468 494 145 406 192 5,690 90 84 443 199 487 505 152 434 199 5,923 96 87 471 208 479 Buckingham Caroline Charles City Charlotte Chesterfield Clarke ... Craig Culpeper Cumberland Dickenson 171 288 94 150 4,731 232 61 508 122 228 181 304 101 163 5,041 245 66 526 126 246 192 322 105 166 5,336 256 70 550 133 254 Essex ... Fauquier Floyd .... Fluvanna Franklin . Giles .... Gloucester Goochland Grayson Greene . 139 1,212 170 213 577 238 502 350 200 153 149 1,259 174 232 619 246 532 379 216 163 Hanover Henrico Highland Isle of Wight King and Queen King George King William Lancaster Lee Loudoun 1,298 5,227 40 438 99 255 207 248 278 2,230 Louisa ... Lunenberg Madison Mathews Mecklenburg Middlesex Nelson .. New Kent Northampton Northumberland Area name 1991 Albemarle + Charlottesville Allegheny, Clifton Frg. + Covington Augusta, Staunton + Waynesboro Bedford + Bedford City Campbell + Lynchburg Carroll 4 Galax Dinwiddie, Col. Hts. + Petersburg Fairfax, Fairfax City + Falls Church Frederick + Winchester Greensville + Emporia 3,521 2,776 2,141 2,768 3,992 1,611 4,764 1,810 880 7,838 3,718 2,989 2,238 2,995 4,170 1,674 5,027 1,918 924 8,324 3,880 3,181 2,314 3,058 4,236 1,730 5,228 2,010 966 8,629 4.4 6.4 3.4 2.1 1.6 3.4 4.0 4.8 4.5 3.7 31,276 17,467 15,769 15,975 15,817 15,550 23,503 18,584 16,711 19,410 2,300 2,473 2,607 5.4 20,998 22,420 23,357 10 32,847 34,023 18,052 18,337 16,354 16,656 16,778 17,288 16,418 17,198 16,062 16,595 24,802 25,875 19,761 20,642 17,415 17,853 20,015 20,285 2 34 56 45 47 58 6 19 40 20 15,306 17,090 17,553 17,149 12,968 17,594 16,131 16,849 17,681 18,285 18,160 18,833 17,568 18,502 13,774 14,257 18,208 19,005 26,044 1,218 218 27,589 1,283 229 29,076 1,351 237 5.4 5.3 3.1 30,068 31,224 32,422 17,515 18,168 18,787 13,924 13,645 14,047 3 31 97 Halifax + South Boston Henry + Martinsville James City + Williamsburg Montgomery + Radford Pittsylvania •+ Danville Prince George + Hopewell Pr. William, Manassas + Manassas Park Roanoke + Salem Rockbridge, Buena Vista + Lexington Rockingham + Harrisonburg • 501 1,214 1,006 1,179 1,620 799 528 1,273 1,074 1,246 1,713 841 544 1,302 1,125 1,287 1,781 871 3.1 2.3 4.7 3.3 4.0 3.5 13,886 14,476 14,735 16,669 17,535 17,894 20,958 21,861 22,383 13,063 13,782 14,185 14,828 15,688 16,278 16,046 16,325 17,007 88 39 13 95 62 50 5,043 2,167 5,349 2,287 5,714 2,412 6.8 5.5 19,531 20,125 20,921 20,871 22,039 23,145 17 12 471 1,497 491 1,599 508 1,695 3.4. 6.0 14,695 16,655 15,688 18,327 75 35 Southampton + Franklin Spotsylvania + Fredricksburg Washington + Bristol Wise + Norton York + Poquoson 419 1,480 992 665 1,132 436 1,601 1,041 711 1,218 444 1,731 1,075 735 1,290 1.7 8.1 3.3 3.4 5.8 16,564 17,030 17,342 18,580 19,540 20,141 15,340 16,010 16,368 15,082 16,113 16,694 20,244 20,966 20,927 43 22 60 55 16 101,206 87,132 14,075 109,781 94,565 15,215 114,501 98,431 16,070 4.3 4.1 5.6 20,168 21,333 21,774 20,925 22,134 22,559 16,478 17,415 17,948 244 290 2,200 985 1,036 4,615 67 1,487 433 86 264 313 2,428 1,073 1,107 5,068 77 1,541 484 93 305 335 2,617 1,123 1,148 5,448 93 1,600 503 97 592 41 857 1,044 1,045 393 39,962 3,601 418 259 639 45 956 1,120 1,127 429 43,270 3,902 456 282 721 51 1,037 1,154 1,165 452 44,504 4,019 479 301 959 168 600 522 297 127 10,647 274 1,538 143 1,041 186 653 586 318 140 11,515 292 1,652 148 1,102 208 687 618 329 149 12,012 305 1,737 157 9,423 6,375 444 3,233 57 769 2,345 536 3,093 10,251 6,928 491 3,524 61 836 2,501 570 3,411 10,713 7,326 529 3,715 63 888 2,611 620 3,579 15,849 16,709 16,884 24,372 24,816 25,775 14,049 14,123 14,572 16,073 16,671 17,246 14,230 15,100 15,695 14,582 15,020 15,577 16,344 16,994 17,124 24,000 25,275 26,279 12,404 13,406 13,886 14,090 14,325 14,620 52 7 92 46 74 76 49 5 98 91 1,374 5,457 41 471 108 267 218 257 300 2,431 1,466 5,707 43 487 109 283 229 264 314 2,667 6.7 4.6 4.7 3.5 .4 6.0 4.9 3.0 4.8 9.7 19,784 23,745 15,404 17,073 15,653 18,271 18,489 22,655 11,413 24,786 20,378 24,557 15,773 18,030 17,111 18,612 18,836 23,407 12,307 25,821 21,177 25,223 16,628 18,295 17,330 18,966 19,272 23,961 12,917 26,430 15 8 57 36 44 29 24 9 104 4 Adams . Asotin Benton Chelan Clallam Clark Columbia Cowlitz Douolas Ferry 319 146 170 162 429 158 187 189 194 189 342 151 178 168 445 167 200 201 204 207 362 153 187 174 465 174 212 211 207 212 6.0 1.5 4.8 3.9 4.3 4.2 5.5 5.3 1.4 2.5 15,265 12,734 14,047 19,310 14,582 17,805 14,358 17,549 14,883 17,659 15,933 13,215 14,777 19,860 15,023 18,734 15,382 18,339 15,706 18,960 16,497 13,606 15,276 20,240 15,474 19,256 16,034 19,038 15,938 19,270 59 101 79 21 77 26 65 27 68 25 Franklin Garfield Grant Grays Harbor Island Jefferson King Kitsap Kittitas Klickitat Nottoway Orange .. Page .... Patrick .. Powhatan Prince Edward Pulaski . Rappahannock Richmond Russell . 216 348 316 245 247 220 460 131 107 369 222 361 338 255 266 233 487 136 114 386 230 385 355 267 282 242 507 144 117 398 3.5 6.6 5.0 5.0 6.0 3.8 4.3 5.6 2.7 3.1 14,287 15,770 14,372 13,991 15,378 12,487 13,363 19,596 14,779 12,818 14,714 16,098 15,174 14,507 15,842 13,056 14,069 20,196 15,522 13,398 15,126 16,879 15,846 15,183 16,174 13,279 14,690 20,774 15,787 13,716 86 53 69 83 63 102 89 18 71 100 Lewis Lincoln Mason Okanogan Pacific Pend Oreille Pierce San Juan Skagit Skamania Scott .... Shenandoah Smyth .. Stafford Surry .... Sussex . Tazewell Warren . Westmoreland Wythe .. 300 512 454 1,112 93 152 661 440 236 359 321 537 484 1,198 98 161 697 459 250 375 329 569 501 2.7 5.9 3.4 7.7 13,019 15,912 13,943 16,754 15,000 14,867 14,188 16,274 14,843 13,987 13,789 16,595 14,756 16,916 15,333 15,745 14,882 16,546 15,483 14,557 14,124 17,344 15,221 17,601 15,250 16,333 15,134 17,138 15,973 15,252 96 42 82 41 81 61 85 48 67 80 1993 4.6 4.4 6.7 5.1 4.4 4.8 3.3 4.4 3.7 8.4 5.5 3.8 4.1 6.5 3.4 8.9 See footnotes at end of table. 1993 413 1,835 1,056 2,137 484 1,464 154 1,314 181 252 653 255 553 404 223 178 2.7 2.2 5.4 2.6 5.3 1992 395 1,758 990 2,034 464 1,397 90 72 66 99 11 14 84 32 51 93 -8.9 1991 378 1,688 934 1,953 434 1,337 13,170 13,936 14,643 14,561 15,166 15,752 15,035 15,780 16,003 12,660 13,684 13,854 21,655 22,440 23,231 19,363 20,446 21,195 13,551 14,605 15,164 17,702 18,051 18,627 15,505 15,930 16,972 12,824 13,864 14,321 712 484 257 394 1992-93 54 37 30 33 94 28 6.0 5.9 4.5 2.1 5.9 4.6 6.1 4.6 5.7 3.1 "8 165 1993 Combination Areas:5 73 64 87 70 1 23 103 38 105 78 -1.7 1992 Rank in State Dollars Independent Cities: Alexandria Chesapeake Hampton Newport News Norfolk .. Portsmouth Richmond Roanoke Suffolk... Virginia Beach 14,755 15,438 15,699 15,276 15,749 16,076 13,550 14,017 14,870 14,551 15,316 15,811 31,431 33,093 34,216 17,569 18,809 19,855 12,379 12,796 13,091 16,320 17,230 17,980 12,169 12,295 12,777 14,833 15,453 15,353 2.3 5.1 6.7 3.9 4.1 6.7 3.4 6.2 4.4 Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1993 Caledonia Chittenden Essex .... Franklin . Grand Isle Lamoille Orange .. Orleans . Virginia Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolltan portion Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Washington Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion .. .. ... ... b/VM^IMU Snohomish . .. Spokane Stevens Thurston Wahkiakum Walla Walla Whatcom Whitman Yakima . . . . , 15,228 17,543 17,437 18,498 20,907 16,062 16,859 17,503 18,910 20,203 21,037 18,564 19,834 20,404 17,866 18,562 18,873 18,311 19,453 20,082 17,281 19,484 23,017 17,679 18,105 18,534 15,655 16,943 16,961 13,191 13,873 14,182 7 25 6 9 15 11 3 18 32 39 17,234 22,495 17,147 17,433 17,620 19,314 28,202 18,676 16,586 17,181 28 4 31 26 23 13 1 17 33 29 5.1 5.5 3.5 6.0 4.3 4.5 5.1 6.4 15,781 16,904 17,365 18,810 20,537 22,478 14,743 15,370 15,516 15,559 17,093 17,630 15,531 16,289 16,542 13,865 14,671 14,966 17,598 18,587 19,010 25,757 26,863 27,196 18,366 19,124 19,415 16,760 17,249 17,873 27 5 36 22 34 38 14 2 12 21 4.5 5.7 7.8 5.4 3.1 6.2 4.4 8:8 4.9 19,438 17,123 13,943 19,069 16,709 15,371 17,580 13,929 15,970 20,471 18,133 14,693 19,953 17,521 16,468 18,108 14,819 17,171 8 16 37 10 20 30 19 35 24 15.6 7.0 7.8 4.7 3.8 7.5 20.6 3.8 3.8 3.9 12.8 15.0 8.5 3.0 3.4 5.4 2.9 3.0 5.1 6.7 5.8 12.1 15,144 18,117 15,054 16,132 16,780 18,228 26,031 17,971 15,103 15,439 15,796 19,782 16,257 17,102 17,309 19,042 27,747 18,507 16,300 16,419 20,828 18,742 15,147 20,259 17,874 17,180 18,362 16,021 17,573 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 9O • April 1995 Table 2.—Total Personal Income and Per Capita Personal Income by County, 1991-93—Continued Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Area name Percent change2 Millions of dollars Rank in State Dollars 1992 1993 1991 1992 1993 26,385 12,413 13,972 28,109 13,227 14,882 29,400 13,922 15,478 4.6 5.3 4.0 14,666 15,554 16,169 16,517 17,509 18,318 13,338 14,150 14,626 Barbour Berkeley Boone Braxton Brooke Cabell Calhoun Clay Doddndge Fayette 176 934 371 149 382 1,595 79 96 76 600 189 998 391 156 397 1,701 86 102 81 636 199 1,058 393 165 413 1,784 90 108 85 671 5.1 6.1 .5 5.5 3.9 4.8 4.4 5.4 5.1 5.5 11,262 15,203 14,254 11,379 14,232 16,495 10,060 9,648 10,649 12,542 11,898 15,897 14,782 11,974 14,910 17,626 10,841 10,227 11,314 13,263 12,444 16,522 14,960 12,491 15,433 18,412 11,236 10,629 11,708 13,889 45 13 23 44 19 5 52 55 50 31 Gilmer Grant Greenbrier Hancock Hardy Harrison Jackson Jefferson Kanawha 87 158 507 199 593 150 1,062 328 600 3,847 93 163 538 213 620 165 1,127 360 643 4,096 98 169 570 227 642 194 1,182 378 690 4,327 5.4 3.6 5.9 6.6 3.6 17.5 4.9 4.9 7.4 5.6 11,450 14,939 14,475 11,665 16,827 13,464 15,269 12,606 16,363 18,576 12,501 15,290 15,240 12,240 17,694 14,705 16,066 13,799 17,169 19,736 13,176 15,628 16,045 12,729 18,417 17,019 16,766 14,278 18,047 20,861 34 17 15 41 4 9 11 29 7 2 Lewis Lincoln Logan McDowell Marion Marshall Mason Mercer Mineral Mingo 216 211 575 383 663 531 319 999 364 443 229 229 615 409 892 553 341 1,051 374 477 239 237 626 421 889 573 355 1,099 391 489 4.8 3.7 1.8 2.7 -.4 3.6 4.1 4.5 4.4 2.6 12,601 9,828 13,371 11,129 15,049 14,298 12,690 15,417 13,590 13,103 13,158 10,570 14,367 12,029 15,469 14,831 13,704 16,172 13,919 14,259 13,767 10,784 14,529 12,537 15,288 15,317 14,065 16,865 14,438 14,441 33 53 26 43 21 20 30 10 28 27 1,218 151 172 332 977 105 108 113 363 679 1,356 157 184 344 1,026 114 118 123 379 740 1,412 165 195 353 1,073 129 124 133 390 800 4.1 5.1 5.9 2.8 4.6 13.5 5.4 8.5 2.9 8.1 15,920 12,152 13,852 12,415 19,382 13,093 14,307 12,668 12,407 15,336 17,563 12,502 14,437 12,745 20,310 14,185 15,598 13,570 12,909 16,325 18,174 12,929 15,179 12,947 21,308 16,170 16,535 14,774 13,172 17,145 6 38 22 37 1 14 12 24 35 8 Raleigh Randolph Ritchie Roane Summers Taylor Tucker Tyler Upshur Wayne 1,143 365 118 163 151 167 99 117 275 497 1,204 390 128 176 161 176 105 123 286 528 1,239 417 134 185 169 185 108 127 300 549 3.0 6.9 4.8 5.0 4.9 5.1 3.3 2.9 4.8 4.0 14,835 12,966 11,537 10,768 10,777 10,995 12,760 11,907 11,932 11,858 15,601 13,789 12,560 11,665 11,374 11,607 13,416 12,534 12,391 12,581 15,924 14,583 13,074 12,271 11,987 12,161 13,870 12,774 12,721 12,919 16 25 36 47 49 48 32 40 42 39 Webster Wetzel Wirt Wood Wyoming 98 278 53 1,415 337 108 291 59 1,550 358 113 298 62 1,622 356 5.2 2.5 5.2 4.6 -.6 9,276 14,510 10,201 16,245 11,687 10,291 15,206 11,081 17,723 12,333 10,740 15,619 11,541 18,470 12,415 54 18 51 3 46 88,895 64902 23,994 95,458 69,760 25,698 99,901 73,133 26,768 4.7 4.8 4.2 17,962 19,103 19,806 19,248 20,501 21,314 15,213 16,120 16,597 Buffalo Burnett Calumet ChioDewa Clark; . 1 I I I . . I 188 228 608 192 3,711 210 162 568 804 418 200 237 644 201 3,999 219 174 614 864 456 214 252 649 215 4,221 234 183 636 889 462 6.8 6.5 .9 7.1 5.5 6.8 5.4 3.6 2.9 1.5 11,727 14,031 14,788 13,560 18,686 15,539 12,342 16,306 15,183 13,087 12,322 14,447 15,447 14,109 19,857 16,043 13,139 17,413 16,193 14,163 12,894 15,230 15,396 14,782 20,637 17,019 13,486 17,666 16,548 14,333 71 49 46 54 8 31 67 28 33 60 Columbia Crawford Oane Dodae Door Douolas Dunn 754 217 7,775 1,116 449 620 475 811 230 8,448 1,207 470 662 520 853 239 8,962 1,261 485 693 542 1,518 73 5.1 4.0 6.1 4.4 3.2 4.6 4.2 4.2 6.7 16,403 13,566 20,749 14,417 17,450 14,695 13,099 15,780 13,057 17,373 14,298 22,221 15,470 18,119 15,538 14,195 16,791 13,694 17,944 14,699 23,193 16,022 18,503 16,123 14,463 17,365 14,217 24 55 3 40 19 37 58 30 64 West Virginia Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Monongalia Monroe Morgan Nicholas Ohio Pendleton Pleasants Pocahontas Preston Putnam . . . .. : Wisconsin Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Adams Ashland Barron Bayfield WVWJJ1MW Florence .. 1J 8 MS 1992-93 1991 Area name 1993 1. The personal income level shown for the United States is derived as the sum of the county estimates; it differs from the national income and product accounts (NIPA) estimate of personal income because, by definition, it omits the earnings of Federal civilian and military personnel stationed abroad and of U.S. residents employed abroad temporarily by private U.S. firms. It can also differ from the NIPA estimate because of different data sources and revision schedules. 2. Percent change was calculated from unrounded data. 3. Per capita personal income was computed using Bureau of the Census midyear population estimates. Esti- Per capita personal income3 Total personal income Percent change2 Millions of dollars 1991 1992 1992-93 1991 1993 Rank in State Dollars 1992 1993 1993 Fond du Lac 1,634 1,754 1,838 4.8 17,976 19,139 19,899 12 Forest Grant Green Green Lake Iowa Iron .. Jackson Jefferson Juneau Kenosha 104 709 547 307 303 86 236 1,129 303 2,264 114 746 585 330 333 90 256 1,214 320 2,419 121 760 600 341 338 97 259 1,278 338 2,545 6.0 1.9 2.5 3.5 1.4 7.4 1.4 5.2 5.8 5.2 11,718 14,416 17,816 16,323 14,896 13,889 14,072 16,489 13,723 17,198 12,701 15,094 18,774 17,413 16,231 14,328 15,236 17,550 14,377 18,056 13,046 15,323 18,983 17,853 16,096 15,221 15,364 18,202 14,911 18,695 69 48 16 26 38 50 47 21 53 17 Kewaunee La Crosse Lafayette Langlade Lincoln Manitowoc Marathon Marinette Marquette Milwaukee 277 1,741. 242 272 388 1,335 1,948 621 174 18,350 300 1,852 250 298 416 1,406 2,101 653 183 19,456 308 1,932 236 315 443 1,463 2,195 680 189 20,204 2.8 4.3 -5.4 5.7 6.4 4.0 4.5 4.0 3.7 3.8 14,650 17,647 15,116 13,803 14,113 16,504 16,668 15,198 13,786 19,178 15,747 18,621 15,549 14,965 14,900 17,269 17,786 15,919 14,153 20,418 16,050 19,277 14,661 15,731 15,645 17,908 18,358 16,429 14,219 21,338 39 14 56 43 44 25 20 35 63 5 Monroe Oconto Oneida Outagamie Ozaukee Pepin Pierce Polk Portage Price 517 406 533 2,628 1,918 100 529 504 959 235 559 432 576 2,856 2,071 108 570 547 1,062 252 579 450 611 2,999 2,176 110 593 577 1,077 259 3.6 4.1 6.0 5.0 5.1 2.6 4.0 5.6 1.4 2.6 13,904 13,353 16,476 18,509 25,752 14,043 15,962 14,283 15,377 15,000 14,810 14,033 17,396 19,849 27,281 15,185 17,047 15,345 16,854 16,101 15,200 14,377 17,988 20,589 28,317 15,523 17,534 15,968 16,942 16,437 51 59 23 9 1 45 29 41 32 34 Racine Richland . Rock Rusk St. Croix Sauk Sawyer Sheboygan Taylor Trempealeau 3,459 227 2,404 181 966 796 185 1,859 247 365 3,638 244 2,662 189 1,054 855 202 2,021 269 386 3,802 253 2,776 197 1,103 897 218 2,149 274 406 4.5 3.4 4.3 4.1 4.7 5.0 7.9 6.4 1.9 5.4 19,475 12,883 17,021 11,932 18,834 16,682 12,812 17,793 13,012 14,350 20,296 13,749 18,622 12,511 20,193 17,571 13,575 19,200 14,131 15,033 21,100 14,228 19,233 13,003 20,739 18,131 14,521 20,264 14,301 15,787 6 62 15 70 7 22 57 11 61 42 Vernon Vilas Walworth Washburn Washington Waukesha .. Waupaca . Waushara Winnebago Wood 337 270 1,294 185 1,962 7,422 747 286 2,616 1,338 359 287 1,370 197 2,111 8,055 813 302 2,849 1,434 357 307 1,469 206 2,242 8,512 857 308 2,987 1,498 -.5 6.8 7.2 4.3 6.2 5.7 5.4 2.1 4.9 4.5 13,051 14,905 16,951 13,264 19,912 23,717 15,943 14,570 18,309 17,997 13,719 15,459 17,629 13,950 20,798 25,222 17,104 15,016 19,662 19,150 13,428 16,150 18,587 14,207 21,426 26,126 17,766 15,150 20,329 19,876 68 36 18 65 4 2 27 52 10 13 66 .. .. . . 536 573 594 3.8 12,983 13,771 14,170 8,376 2,665 5,710 8,769 2,788 5,982 9,262 2,946 6,316 5.6 5.7 5.6 18,284 18,896 19,719 19,645 20,227 21,056 17,712 18,334 19,152 Albany Big Horn Campbell Carbon Converse Crook Fremont Goshen Hot Springs Johnson 448 157 579 299 178 103 485 210 81 115 470 160 610 301 187 106 508 219 86 116 493 163 642 312 198 114 531 227 90 121 5.0 2.1 5.1 3.5 6.1 7.6 4.5 3.5 5.3 4.0 14,536 14,889 19,397 18,259 16,024 19,482 14,204 16,969 17,360 18,525 15,267 14,989 19,979 18,677 16,462 19,634 14,811 17,581 18,177 18,574 15,882 15,233 21,006 19,201 17,156 21,012 15,285 18,026 19,567 19,105 20 23 5 12 18 4 22 17 11 13 Laramie Lincoln Natrona Niobrara Park Platte Sheridan Sublette Sweetwater Teton 1,365 194 1,300 47 419 135 517 91 725 366 1,458 205 1,329 49 444 139 533 92 769 406 1,547 210 1,399 51 477 149 567 98 803 462 6.1 2.5 5.2 5.3 7.5 7.0 6.3 6.9 4.4 13.9 18,504 15,028 21,004 19,393 17,993 16,628 21,940 18,342 18,199 31,010 19,330 15,707 21,312 19,610 18,725 17,045 22,232 18,236 19,033 33,221 20,107 15,882 22,216 20,354 19,661 18,178 23,217 18,942 19,767 35,983 8 21 3 7 10 16 2 14 9 1 293 143 123 304 151 127 318 156 134 4.3 3.8 5.4 15,271 15,549 16,105 17,245 17,786 18,342 18,910 19,319 20,620 19 15 6 Shawano (incl. Menominee) Wyoming Metropolitan portion Nonmetropolitan portion Uinta Washakie Weston mates for 1991-93 reflect State and county population estimates available as of February 1995. 4. Estimates from 1993 forward separate Skagway-Yakutat-Angoon Census Area into Skagway-Hoonah-Angoon Census Area and Yakutat Borough. 5. Virginia combination areas consist of one or two independent cities with populations less than 100,000 combined with an adjacent county. The county name appears first, followed by the city name(s). Separate estimates for the jurisdictions making up the combined areas are not available. C-l SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 BUSINESS CYCLE INDICATORS Series originating in Government agencies are not copyrighted and may be reprinted freely. Series from private sources are provided through the courtesy of the compilers and are subject to their copyrights. Current and historical data for the series shown in the C-pages are available on diskettes, printouts, and the Commerce Department's Economic Bulletin Board. For more information, contact the Business Cycle Indicators Branch, Business Outlook Division (BE-52), Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. Department of Commerce, Washington, DC 20230. (Telephone: (202) 606-5366; fax: (202) 606-5313.) NOTE.—This section of the SURVEY is prepared by the Business Cycle Indicators Branch. Series no. Series title and timing classification Year 1994 1994 | Mar. Feb. May Apr. June 1995 July Aug. | Sept Oct | Dec. Nov. Mar. Feb. Jan. 1. COMPOSITE INDEXES The Leading index 910* • 1• 54 84 32* 20 4 29* 92* 99* 194 106* 83* 950 • Composite index of leading indicators, 1987=100 (L,L,L) .... Percent change from previous month Percent change over 3-month span, AR Leading index components: Average weekly hours mfg (L L L) Average weekly initial claims1 for unemployment insurance, thous. (L.C.L) $. Mfrs.1 new orders, consumer goods and materials, bil.1987$ (L,L,L). Vendor performance, slower deliveries diffusion index, percent (L,L,L)*. Contracts and orders for plant and equipment, bil. 1987$ (L,L,L). Index of new private housing units authorized by local building permits, 1987-100 (L.L.L). Change in mfrs.' unfilled orders, durable goods, bil. 1987$, smoothed (L,L,L)f. Change in sensitive materials prices, percent, smoothed (L,L,L)t. Index of stock prices, 500 common stocks, 1941-43=10, NSA(L,L,Lr. Money supply M2 bil 1987$ (L L L) Index of consumer expectations, U. of Michigan, 1966:1=100, NSA(L,L,L)©2. Diffusion index of 11 leading indicator components: Percent rising over 1 -month span Percent rising over 6-month span 101.7 .2 2.3 100.7 .2 4.0 101.3 .6 3.6 101.4 .1 3.2 101.5 .1 1.6 10.1.7 .2 1.2 101.7 0 3.2 102.3 .6 2.4 102.3 0 2.0 102.2 -.1 0 102.3 .1 .8 102.5 .2 1.2 102.5 0 0 102.3 -.2 "-2.7 42.0 41.3 42.1 42.2 42.1 42.0 42.0 42.0 42.0 42.1 42.1 42.2 42.2 42.1 '101.8 *>_.5 337 344 328 344 368 339 335 323 321 329 327 325 329 330 "41.9 330 1,430.54 115.62 118.25 117.64 118.72 117.72 115.36 122.00 120.15 120.80 '123.24 '124.96 125.46 '122.72 "121.97 60.1 529.63 58.3 42.69 86.0 80.4 -.71 -1.71 .84 r 55.1 57.2 59.8 59.7 57.2 61.4 62.1 64.7 43.44 42.06 42.28 44.30 43.18 44.51 46.53 45.70 65.7 65.2 44.63 '47.63 837 86.6 86.9 84.0 84.7 86.9 89.0 87.4 85.2 -1.40 -.98 -.54 -.12 -.16 -.43 -.49 -.41 -.19 89.3 .21 62.6 '48.69 56.7 62.5 '49.54 "50.84 81.9 80.9 77.9 '.61 '.86 ".90 1.44 1.84 '2.17 '2.10 1.74 1.51 460.33 471.58 463.81 447.23 450.90 454.83 451.40 464.24 466.96 463.81 461.01 455.19 465.25 481.92 493.15 2,764.5 2,777.8 2,780.1 2,781.9 2,780.0 2,768.9 2,768.8 2,756.8 2,749.8 2,742.3 ,85.1 '2,741.1 '2,738.3 '2,739.1 '2,728.3 "2,728.6 1.71 1.05 1.21 2.36 2.50 2.37 2.16 2.08 88.8 88.4 85.9 79.8 '63.6 63.6 45.5 27.3 "36.4 63.6 "36.4 83.8 83.5 85.1 82.6 84.2 82.7 78.5 80.8 83.5 59.9 70.4 45.5 63.6 81.8 63.6 54.5 63.6 63.6 72.7 45.5 72.7 40.9 81.8 77.3 77.3 59.1 90.9 45.5 72.7 113.9 .4 4.5 112.1 .6 4.4 112.7 .5 5.5 112.9 .2 4.0 113.2 .3 3.2 113.6 .4 2.9 113.7 .1 4.3 114.4 .6 3.9 114.7 .3 5.7 115.3 .5 5.0 115.8 .4 6.1 116.4 .5 113,429 3,664.7 111,919 3,618.9 112,298 3,629.0 112,699 3,641.9 112,951 3,652.7 113,334 3,649.3 113,624 3,654.2 113,914 3,665.0 114,186 3,683.6 114,348 3,735.7 114,882 3,727.3 115,113 3,751.4 '115,282 '115,627 "115,830 '3,764.5 '3,775.6 "3,792.0 116.6 115.6 118.1 6,688,779 '545,346 '•552,494 116.7 549,492 117.4 550,033 118.0 553,990 118.2 549,988 119.1 565,578 119.0 564,681 119.5 566,945 120.3 572,659 121.7 578,177 '122.2 '122.3 '577,913 * 577,453 84.8 The Coincident Index Composite index of coincident indicators, 1987=100 (C.C.C) Percent change from previous month Percent change over 3-month span, AR • Coincident index components: Employees on nonagricultural payrolls, thous. (C,C,C) .... 41 4 Personal income less transfer payments, bil. 1987$, AR 514 (C.G.C). Index of industrial production, 1987-100 (C.C.C) 474 Manufacturing and trade sales, mil. 1987$ (C.C.C) .. 574 Diffusion index of 4 coincident indicator components: 951 r Percent ising over 1 -month span Percent risino over 6-month span 4 920* 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 75.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 75.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 97.5 96.0 95.8 96.4 96.8 97.4 97.6 97.8 98.4 98.8 99.4 83.3 75.0 50.0 '4.9 75.0 3 '116.7 '.3 '3.9 '116.9 '.2 3 2.4 100.0 100.0 '87.5 '75.0 99.5 100.0 .5 '100.8 '.8 4 7.0 3 117.1 3 .2 "121.9 3 66.7 The Lagging Index Composite index of lagging indicators, 1987=100 (Lg.Lg.Lg) Percent change from previous month Percent chance over 3-month span AR 4 Lagging index components: Average duration of unemployment, weeks (Lg.Lg.Lg) $ . 91 4 Ratio, mfg. and trade inventories to sales in 1987$ 774 (Lg,Lg,la). Change in labor cost per unit of output, mfg., percent, 624 AR, smoothed (Lg,Lg,Lg)t. Average prime rate charged by banks, percent, NSA 1094 9304 1014 954 1204 952 Commercial and industrial loans outstanding, mil. 1987$ (Lg,Lg,Lg)§. Ratio, consumer installment credit outstanding to personal income, percent (Lg.Lg.Lg). Change in Consumer Price Index for services, percent, AR, smoothed (Lg,Lg,Lg)f. Diffusion index of 7 lagging indicator components: Percent rising over 1 -month span 4 9404 Ratio, coincident index to lagging index, 1987=100 (L,L,L) . .3 3.5 -.4 -1.7 -.2 0 .6 3.4 .6 5.1 .2 4.2 .2 4.2 .6 5.0 18.8 1.47 18.8 1.48 19.2 19.1 1.47 19.4 1.48 18.4 1.47 19.0 1.46 1.49 18.9 1.45 18.8 1.46 -2.3 -1.2 -2.4 -3.3 -4.0 -3.7 -3.5 -3.6 -2.6 7.14 6.00 6.06 6.45 6.99 7.25 7.25 7.51 7.75 ..4 6.7 19.3 1.46 .1 7.75 .1 4.9 .6 4.5 18.2 1.45 —5 16.7 16.9 1.45 "1.46 -1.8 '-2.4 8.50 8.15 14.95 3.1 14.40 3.4 14.51 14.60 3.5 3.4 14.77 3.2 14.94 3.0 '5.8 17.8 1.44 383,840 '372,670 '371,156 '373,607 '376,485 '378,445 '382,359 '384,641 '391,477 '398,103 '398,286 '402,746 8.50 15.25 15.25 15.49 15.49 '15.51 "15.58 3.0 3.1 3.1 3.1 2.9 3.1 3.4 78.6 50.0 57.1 42.9 71.4 64.3 57.1 71.4 71.4 100.0 64.3 71.4 57.1 85.7 100.0 116.7 116.8 117.6 117.1 116.9 116.6 116.5 117.0 116.6 116.7 116.5 50.0 57.1 4 17.5 "1.9 9.00 9.00 15.18 42.9 42.9 101.2 4 .4 '407,339 '411,829 "419,911 2.8 35.7 42.9 4 ' 5 14.98 61.3 63.7 NoTE.—The following current high values were reached before February 1994: June 1991—BCI-106 (2,868.4); December 1991—BCI-77 (1.65); January 1992—BCI-120 smoothed (4.3); December 1992—BCI-83 (89.5); and December 1993-BCI-29 (95.6). See page C-6 for other footnotes. .4 6.9 78.6 '85.7 3.6 4 70.0 100.0 117.0 '116.7 116.0 "115.7 C-2 • April 1995 Series no. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 1994 Year Series title and timing classification 1994 Feb. Mar. Apr. | May | June | July 1995 | Aug. | Sept | Oct Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. 131,718 124,403 131,725 124,570 132,136 124,639 132,308 125,125 132,511 125,274 2. LABOR FORCE, EMPLOYMENT, AND UNEMPLOYMENT 441 442 451 452 453 1• 21* 54 46 * 60 484 42 41* 963 40* 90* 37 43* 45 91* 44 Labor force: Civilian labor force, thous Civilian employment thous Civilian labor force participation rates (percent): Males 20 years and over Females 20 years and over Both sexes 16-19 years of age Marginal employment adjustments: Average weekly hours, mfg. (L,L,L) Average weekly overtime hours, mfg. (L,C,L) Average weekly initial claims for unemployment insurance, thous. (L,C,L) 1 $. Job vacancies: Index of help-wanted advertising, 1967=100 (L.lg.U) Ratio, help-wanted advertising to unemployed (L,Lg,U) ... Employment: Employee hours in nonagricultural establishments, bil. hours, AR (U.C.C). Persons engaged in nonagricultural activities, thous. (U.C.C). Employees on nonagricultural payrolls, thous. (C,C,C) .... Diffusion index of employees on private nonagricultural payrolls, 356 industries: Percent rising over 1 -month span Percent rising over 6-month span Employees in goods-producing industries, thous. (L,C,U) Ratio, civilian employment to population of working age, percent (U.Lg.U). Unemployment: Number of persons unemployed, thous. (L,Lg,U) | Civilian unemployment rate, percent (L.Lg.U) i Average weekly insured unemployment rate, percent (L,Lg,U)2$. Average duration of unemployment, weeks (Lg.Lg.lg) $ . Unemployment rate, 15 weeks and over, percent (Lg,Lg,Lg)$. 131,056 123,060 130,784 122,208 130,706 122,160 130,787 122,402 130,699 122,703 130,538 122,635 130,774 122,781 131,086 123,197 131,291 123,644 131,646 124,141 76.8 59.3 52.7 76.9 59.5 52.7 76.8 59.3 52.9 76.8 59.3 53.6 76.6 59.3 52.9 76.5 59.1 53.2 76.6 59.2 52.5 76.6 59.4 76.6 59.6 76.8 59.5 52^8 51 ,5 42.0 41.3 42.1 42.2 42.1 42.0 42.0 4.5 344 4.7 328 4.8 344 4.7 368 4.7 339 4.6 335 420 4.6 323 4.7 337 124 122 77.2 59.3 52J 77.0 59.2 52.9 53'.6 5s!e 420 4.7 321 421 4.7 329 421 4.8 327 42.2 422 4.9 329 421 4.9 330 126 ,,490 137 134 139 129 "133 '132 .543 .545 .578 .512 '.551 '.543 21 3.83 * 21 3.88 121,469 121,576 4.8 325 '124 116 121 117 122 119 .467 .423 '.432 .412 .450 .441 .454 .449 210.20 205.56 208.41 209.56 210.47 210.03 210.18 210.14 211.67 213.15 211.85 213.38 119,651 118,840 118,764 118,964 119,290 119,341 119,448 119,761 120,233 120,647 120,903 121,038 113,429 111,919 112,298 112,699 112,951 113,334 113,624 113,914 114,186 114,348 114,882 115,113 58.3 65.9 62.9 68.8 60.2 67.9 23,584 23,327 23,395 62.5 66.0 23,506 56.3 67.8 23,519 63.2 66.3 23,576 59.3 68.1 23,590 59.8 70.1 23,640 77.2 59.4 76.9 59.5 51.8 56.9 68.1 23,673 64.6 59.8 r 69.4 23,715 r '69.7 23,873 r 21 4.78 121,064 r 11 5,282 r r 54^5 '41 9 '4.7 330 11 5,627 '115,830 ''58.6 '61.0 61.7 ''67.1 23,827 77.1 59.5 '55.6 ' 23,938 '23,992 23,958 62.5 62.3 62.3 62.3 62.4 62.3 62.4 62.5 62.7 62.9 63.0 63.0 63.0 63.2 63.3 7,996 6.1 2.5 8,576 6.6 2.6 8,546 6.5 2.6 8,385 6.4 2.5 7,996 6.1 2.5 7,903 6.1 2.5 7,993 6.1 2.5 7,889 6.0 2.4 7,647 5.8 2.4 7,505 5.7 2.3 7,315 5.6 2.3 7,155 5.4 2.3 7,498 5.7 2.3 7,183 5.4 2.3 7,237 5.5 2.3 18.8 18.8 19.2 19.1 19.4 18.4 19.0 18.9 18.8 19.3 18.2 17.8 16.7 16.9 17.5 2.2 2.3 2.3 2.3 2.2 2.1 2.2 2.1 2.1 2.2 1.9 2.0 1.8 1.7 17 3. OUTPUT, PRODUCTION, AND CAPACITY UTILIZATION 55* 50 49 47* 73* 74* 75* 124 82* Output: Gross domestic product bil 1987$ AR (C C C) Percent change from previous quarter AR Gross national product, bil. 1987$, AR (C,C,C) Value of domestic goods output, bil. 1987$, AR (C.C.C) Industrial production indexes, 1987«100: Total (C C C) Durable manufactures (C,C,C) Nondurable manufactures (C L L) Consumer aoods (CLC) Capacity utilization rates (percent): Total industry (L C U) Manufacturing (L C U) 53440 4.1 5,337.3 2,223.1 5261 1 53670 40 5,359.9 2,235.5 53141 4.1 5,310.5 2,201.3 3.3 5,262.7 2,168.8 118.1 125.5 115.6 122.1 116.6 122.9 116.7 123.7 117.4 124.0 118.0 124.6 118.2 125.2 119.1 127.0 119.0 127.2 119.5 128.0 120.3 129.1 1133 1107 1125 1134 1134 1136 1140 1137 1142 1154 113.2 112.4 112.9 1124 1123 112.8 113.5 113.3 113.8 113.0 113.0 113.9 840 832 837 838 841 841 845 842 844 83.4 82.2 82.9 83.2 83.2 83.3 83.8 83.6 83.8 84.8 84.4 836 830 '5471.7 5 433 8 5.1 5,416.0 2,286.9 P2.8 '2,320.1 121.7 '131.2 '1164 '115.5 85.5 85.2 r r 122.2 131.8 1168 r 116.1 r r r 85.6 85.3 r 122.3 '131.7 r 1166 r 116.1 '121.9 '131.6 '1164 '115.2 r 85.4 r '84.9 '84.5 84.9 4. SALES, ORDERS, AND DELIVERIES 57 « 59* 7* 8* 92* 32* Sales: Manufacturing and trade sales mil 1987$ (C C C) Sales of retail stores mil 1987$ (U LU) Orders and deliveries: Mfrs;1 new orders, durable goods, bil. 1987$ (L.L.L) Mfrs. new orders, consumer goods and materials, bil. 1987$ (L,L,L). Mfrs.1 unfilled orders, durable goods, mil. 1987$0 Change from previous month, bil. 1987$ Change from previous month, bil. 1987$, smoothed (UULJtVendor performance, slower deliveries diffusion index, percent (L,L,L)*. r 6 688 779 rr 545 346 r 552 494 549492 1 863 999 152 702 154 829 153687 550 033 153 172 553 990 154527 549988 153886 565 578 156031 564681 156971 566 945 159047 572 659 159568 r 1,539.32 1,430.54 124.58 115.62 125.35 118.25 125.61 117.64 126.94 118.72 128.04 117.72 122.78 115.36 130.42 122.00 130.73 120.15 129.43 120.80 133.21 ' 123.24 362,137 363,422 361,459 -1.96 -1.40 361,811 .35 362,272 .46 362,987 .72 360,716 -2.27 358,695 359,004 .31 359,415 .41 360,214 .80 -.02 -.71 60.1 -.95 -1.71 58.3 55.1 -.98 -.54 -.12 -.16 57.2 59.8 59.7 57.2 -202 -.43 61.4 578,177 159,661 r 577 91 3 '577453 r r 159,883 158113 '158,264 135.37 124.96 136.52 125.46 362,137 ''363,489 '1.35 r -.49 -.41 -.19 1.92 .-21 62.1 64.7 65.2 65.7 r r r 134.95 122.72 '135.76 '121.97 364,299 '364,277 '-.02 '.81 '.61 '.86 '.90 62.6 62.5 56.7 5. FIXED CAPITAL INVESTMENT 12* 13 * 10 20* 27* 9* 69* 76* Formation of business enterprises: Index of net business formation, 1967=100 (L.L.L) Number of new business incorporations (L L L) Business investment commitments: Contracts and orders for plant and equipment, bil.$ (L,L,L). Contracts and orders for plant and equipment, bil. 1987$ . (L.L.L). Mfrs.' new orders, nondefense capital goods, bil. 1987$ (L.L.L). Construction contracts awarded for commercial and industrial buildings, mil. sq. ft. (L.C.U)©3. Business investment expenditures: Mfrs.1 machinery and equipment sales and business construction expenditures, bil.$, AR (C.Lg.Lg). Index of industrial production, business equipment, 1987-100 (C.Lg.U). 38.50 39.27 38.98 679.13 50.13 59.51 52.08 515.41 491.54 503.68 146.7 142.0 142.6 NOTE.—The following current high value was reached before February 1994: July 1991—BCI-92 change (6.72). See page C-6 for other footnotes. '47.00 '48.08 '48.69 '49.54 '50.84 42.63 42.59 '43.94 41.32 '44.58 '45.50 '46.96 59.15 58.95 64.28 57.34 65.54 73.59 64.86 525.00 534.90 530.49 544.24 544.59 '555.91 '571.16 '578.90 148.9 149.5 150.9 151.0 '152.6 '153.7 '154.1 '154.6 39.64 40.70 52.59 59.93 57.35 503.95 517.15 509.96 144.5 145.5 146.9 143.5 485.43 46.85 44.63 40.85 499.18 42.06 41.83 46.53 54.80 39.47 '43.44 45.30 43.80 44.51 38.58 '41.06 42.69 '47.63 42.21 43.18 42.18 44.30 41.33 529.63 '129.4 45.70 40.57 39.90 501.37 124.8 58,528 '127.2 42.08 '124.3 60,488 42.28 125.4 58,992 '128.4 125.0 64,564 122.9 56,380 127.5 64,119 '128.2 '66,414 125.5 64,844 125.9 63,097 125.1 60,680 125.7 '126.5 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS Series no. Year Series title and timing classification 1994 April'1995 • 1994 Mar. Feb. Apr. | May June ] July C-3 1995 Sept Aug. Oct Nov. Jan. Dec. Mar. Feb. 5. FIXED CAPITAL INVESTMENT-Continued 86 • 87 * 88 • 28 • 29 • 89 • Business investment expenditures—Continued: Gross private nonrestdential fixed investment, bil. 1987$, AR: Total (C Lg C) Structures {Lg Lg Lg) Producers' duraole equipment (C Lg C) Residential construction and investment: New private housing units started, thous., AR (L.L.L) Index of new private housing units authorized by local building permits, 1987-100 (L.L.L). Gross private residential fixed investment, bil. 1987$ AR (L.L.L). 6724 6436 144 1 499.4 1,457 1,318 1,499 1,463 1,489 1,370 1,440 1,463 1,511 1,451 1,536 1,545 86.0 80.4 83.7 86.6 86.9 84.0 84.7 86.9 89.0 87.4 85.2 89.3 231.3 229.9 1506 6579 151 0 5069 708.2 521.9 6800 151 6 5284 2338 P 740.1 M608 ^579.3 1556 552.6 - 1,366 81.9 80.9 *1,211 77.9 ^227.6 231.5 230 2 '1,315 6. INVENTORIES AND INVENTORY INVESTMENT 70 77* 30 4 31 * Inventories on hand: Mfg. and trade inventories, bil. 1987$ (Lg,Lg,La)0 Ratio, mfg. and trade inventories to sales in 1987$ (Lg.Lg.Lg). Inventory investment: Change in business inventories bil 1987$ AR(LLL) Change in mfg. and trade inventories, bi!.$, AR (L,L,L) § 832.14 805.34 804.03 1.47 1.48 1.46 478 254 '51.0 55.6 r -U 805.40 811.95 1.47 813.79 819.53 822.38 1.47 1.49 1.45 52.5 '•54.2 571 •' 100.5 107.89 111.68 116.03 117.35 2.17 1.44 3.51 1.84 1.48 592 * 116.9 r 53.7 r 828.83 831.48 832.14 1.46 1.46 1.45 1.44 52.0 '77.4 494 '63.2 118.46 .95 120.02 823.70 r r 837.03 ^841.41 1.45 '1.46 32.6 '145.5 ^630 ^99.4 123.84 '3.18 '2.17 125.83 '1.61 '2.10 128.63 128.22 2.23 2.08 -.32 1.74 "187.06 r 7. PRICES 99* 98 23* 336 337 ^ 334 + 333 332 ^ 331 311 • 320 323 ^ 120* Sensitive commodity prices: Index of sensitive materials prices, 1987=100 Percent change from previous month Percent change from previous month, smoothed (UL,L)t. Index of producer prices for sensitive crude and intermediate materials, 1982*100 (L.L.L). Cattle hides Lumber and wood products Wastepaper news Wastepaper mixed NSA .. Wastepaper, corrugated Iron and steel scrap Copper base scrap Aluminum base scrap Other nonferrous scrap n.e.c. NSA Sand, gravel, and crushed stone Raw cotton Domestic apparel wool Index of spot market prices, raw industrial materials, 1967-100, NSA (U.L.L)©1*. Copper scrap, $ per Ib.© Lead scrap, $ per Ib, © Steel scrap $ per ton© ... Tin, $ per Ib., NSA© Zinc, $ per Ib., NSA© * Burlap $ per yd NSA© .. Cotton $ per Ib © Print cloth, $ per yd., NSA© Wool tops $ per Ib NSA © Hides f per Ib NSA© Rosin $ per 100 Ib © Rubber $perlb.© Tallow, $ per Ib.© Producer Price Indexes: Finished goods 1982=100 Percent change over 1 -month span Percent change over 6-month span AR Finished goods fess foods and energy, 1982-100 Percent change over 1 -month span Percent chanoe over 6-month span AR Finished consumer goods 1982=100 Percent change over 1 -month span Percent change over 6-month span AR Capital equipment, 1982-100 Percent change over 1 -month span Percent change over 6-month span AR Intermediate materials, supplies, and components, 1982.100. Percent change over 1 -month span Percent change over 6-month span AR Crude materials for further processing! 1982-1$ Percent change over 1 -month span Percent change over 6-month span AR Fixed-weighted price index, gross domestic business product, 1987-100. Percent change from previous quarter AR Consumer Price Indexes for all urban consumers: All items 1982-84-100 NSA Percent change over 1 -month span Percent change over 6-month span AR All items less food and energy 1982-84-100 Percent change over 1 -month span Percent chsnoe over 6-month span AR Services 1982-84-100 .'. Percent change from previous month, AR Percent change from previous month, AR, smoothed (Lg,Lg,Lg)f. 112.96 1.90 1.71 103.17 1.72 104.24 105.60 .84 1.04 1.05 1.30 1.21 176.82 171.45 171.32 169.53 168.41 172.22 176.50 180.52 180.63 182.40 2008 180.1 2069 2078 321.2 1786 1805 1859 1887 1938 2031 2089 2123 180.1 179.4 175.9 173.5 177.8 181.0 1039 1027 724 197.4 896 207.1 1305 1857 256.8 136.2 138.0 145.3 366.3 171 9 159.2 2654 3085 506.4 3126 750 166.0 2028 133.0 1109 1052 177.9 2244 3034 489.3 1808 1024 2296 182.4 3248 2956 343.8 1395 1453 1191 1500 1531 1231 1626 1331 1928 155.7 1737 1363 1984 1954 136.9 121 8 137.3 137.3 137.7 80.3 1206 64.0 1176 70.5 1184 80.1 1202 83.6 1222 81.3 299.2 275.2 279.1 280.9 288.0 290.9 137.9 121 5 .856 .149 132523 3.676 115.4 136.8 .717 .131 140201 3.598 .747 .130 138530 3.621 744 .128 135827 3630 .876 .128 125098 3.730 .917 .129 113198 3.713 .503 .483 .467 .461 .478 .484 278 733 273 753 275 726 275 724 275 752 275 705 .842 4122 868 56268 .750 3750 746 55944 .750 3900 788 55944 .772 3950 845 55888 .860 3910 873 56000 .890 4000 886 56000 1807 158.8 1723 141 8 138.1 111 4 83.1 299.5 1.14 2.50 275 673 890 4000 906 56000 138.4 138.7 1204 1258 836 305.3 872 313.6 1189 88.2 1339 90.2 318.9 329.7 844 .165 2794 404.8 191 0 164.7 1820 1452 887 .154 132161 131 992 3518 .482 3612 .505 275 680 .890 4070 896 55888 278 721 890 4475 938 55944 1931 171.6 2026 1497 .895 .665 .186 .669 .192 .737 .183 125.5 .1 15 137.1 .1 17 125.2 .2 11 136.3 .1 24 123.1 .3 .7 133.1 .2 29 117.1 125.2 0 15 136.4 .1 22 123.1 125.2 0 10 136.6 .1 16 125.8 -.3 2.1 137.8 .1 10 123.4 .5 134.3 .1 26 117.8 125.5 .2 .2 137.3 .1 10 123.2 .3 -.2 134.4 .1 g 118.2 126.2 .6 r 16 137.6 .2 -1 .8 133.7 .3 23 117.2 125.2 .1 10 137.2 .1 21 122.8 1.0 133.3 .2 29 117.2 125.1 -.1 16 137.0 .3 19 122.8 -.2 1.3 134.1 .3 24 117.4 125.3 -.4 2.2 137.3 -.4 13 122.9 -.4 2.4 134.3 -.5 15 119.9 4 47 101.7 -.1 -1 8 127.2 .3 16 101.7 -.6 -27 1 26 102.9 1.2 40 0 26 103.5 .6 6 .2 33 101.9 .3 47 102.6 -.4 -76 .7 r 61 102.6 0 125.9 18 126.7 .3 40 103.0 1.1 -54 25 28 27 148.2 .2 28 146.7 .3 22 155.0 .2 29 161.4 5.4 3.4 1565 .2 29 163.1 2.9 3.1 147.2 .2 25 147.4 .2 29 1555 1558 .3 30 161.9 3.8 3.5 .2 30 162.2 2.2 3.4 -1.5 147.5 .1 32 156.2 .3 31 162.5 2.2 3.2 148.0 .3 3.2 156.7 .3 28 162.9 3.0 3.0 148.4 .3 3.0 157.0 .2 28 163.2 2.2 2.8 123.9 .6 r 1.8 134.7 .2 6 119.0 r -35 2.5 135.0 .2 10 119.5 .4 64 100.1 99.5 -2.4 -5.7 -3.1 .3 78 -.6 .885 4680 928 57315 2469 1389 139.0 924 340.2 1 043 .192 144211 3.998 1899 2051 181.9 2364 1948 178.3 1768 1399 1473 93.9 1763 2127 1677 140.7 140.9 1509 1008 1755 1109 348.0 340.5 344.6 1 052 202 143 929 4147 .599 292 909 885 4700 901 58350 984 .203 141 955 3750 1 019 .202 134859 3790 .544 .548 291 937 294 1 020 .885 4600 918 58233 .901 4550 980 58.116 .861 .212 .919 .185 .941 .177 126.1 .6 1.8 r 137.6 r .2 15 r 123.9 r .8 1.9 134.5 .1 16 r 120.9 126.5 r .3 2.4 137.9 r .2 15 124.3 r .3 2.8 135.0 .4 10 121.5 126.9 .3 127.3 .3 127.3 0 138.2 .2 138.6 .3 138.8 .1 124.7 .3 125.1 .3 125.1 0 135.4 3 135.8 .3 135.7 -.1 122.7 123.8 124.2 r r 1.0 .9 .3 101.0 1.0 102.5 1.5 101.2 r .8 82 '100.1 r .6 -.2 3.1 2.4 149.5 .1 2.8 158.0 .2 2.8 164.6 3.0 3.1 .885 4700 908 58233 4554 504.1 2062 .770 .212 128.4 149.4 .2 2.7 157.7 .2 23 164.2 2.2 3.1 2381 1712 3751 .717 .188 127.7 149.0 .4 30 157.4 .3 27 163.9 5.3 3.0 2347 175.8 3828 6398 756.0 292 865 .627 .173 o 189.44 2275 177.2 3704 4838 632.9 .570 .557 .164 1230 189.60 2223 180.6 290 788 .518 .157 o 190.27 .584 4525 941 56112 1.47 1.51 2202 182.5 3782 3664 413.7 2029 189.8 282 707 .512 .145 .1 14 134.1 .2 19 118.5 .178 139144 4077 130.10 188.54 .530 .493 .155 r 9 994 .912 .167 132295 3.673 .447 .156 1233 r 138.3 1891 1583 1742 1422 895 .490 r 2274 r 183.4 r 3377 r 3400 r 356.0 r 2003 r 185.8 r 2326 M663 r 139.1 .157 117992 3620 2.37 1.32 2.16 .597 .172 NOTE.-The following current high values were reached before February 1994: December 1991-BCI-77 (1.65); January 1992-BCI-120 smoothed (4.3); and December 1993-BCI-28 (1,602) and BCI-29 (95.6). See page C-6 for other footnotes. 1872 3.90 2.36 149.7 .1 2.6 158.3 .2 28 165.1 3.7 3.1 .5 8.0 100.0 r -.1 -1.3 2.2 * 129.3 *2.8 149.7 .2 2.6 158.5 .1 3.1 165.2 .7 2.9 150.3 3 150.9 .3 151.4 .2 159.2 .4 159.6 .3 160.1 .3 166.0 6.0 3.1 166.5 3.7 3.4 167.1 4.4 3.6 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS C-4 • April 1995 Series no. Year Series title and timing classification 1994 1994 Feb. Mar. Apr. May 1995 Aug. July June Sept [ | Dec. Nov. Get Jan. | Feb. j Mar. 8. PROFITS AND CASH FLOW 16* 18* 22* 81 * 26 * 35 Profits and profit margins: Corporate profits after tax, bil.$, AR (L,l,L) Corporate profits after tax, bil. 1987$, AR (L.L.L) . Ratio, corporate domestic profits after tax to corporate domestic income, percent (L.L.L). Ratio, corporate domestic profits after tax with IVA and CCAdj to corporate domestic income, percent(U,L,L). Ratio, implicit price deflator to unit labor cost, all persons, norifarm business sector,1 982*1 00 (L,L,L). Corporate net cash flow, bil. 1987$, AR (L.L.L) 322.0 271.2 8.1 299.4 253.1 7.6 3295 276.6 83 321.4 271.5 81 337.9 283.7 84 8.6 8.4 8.8 8.8 104.6 104.1 104.5 105.0 1047 539.3 527.1 535.0 542.6 552.7 8.6 9. WAGES, LABOR COSTS, AND PRODUCTIVITY 345 346 534 63 62* 370 • 358 • Wages and compensation: Index of average hourly compensation, all employees, nonfarm business sector, 1982=100. Percent change from previous quarter, AR Index of real average hourly compensation, all employees, nonfarm business sector, 1982-100. Percent change from previous quarter, AR Wages and salaries in mining, mfg., and construction, bil. 1987$, AR(C,C,C). Unit labor costs: index of unit labor cost, all persons, business sector 1982-100 (Lg,lg,Lg). Index of labor cost per unit of output, mfg., 1987-100 ... Percent change from previous month, AR Percent change from previous month, AR, smoothed (Lg,Lg,Lg)f. Productivity: Index of output per hour, all persons, business sector, 1982-100. Percent change over 1-quarter span, AR Percent change over 4-quarter span, AR Index of output per hour all persons nonfarm business sector, 1982-100. 163.0 161.9 162.2 163.5 1649 3.0 106.1 5.8 106.5 .7 106.0 32 105.9 34 106.2 .5 617.7 3.6 612.4 -2.0 613.1 615.0 615.1 1381 137.4 108.4 109.9 109.0 108.6 108.2 -2.4 -2.3 -1.1 -1.2 -9.4 -2.4 -4.3 -3.3 -4.3 -4.0 119.9 119.8 2.3 2.9 2.5 1179 616.8 108.3 1.1 108.0 107.5 -3.3 -3.5 -5.4 -3.6 138.2 619.6 627.2 107.9 4.6 109.0 -3.7 -2.6 12.9 .1 120.3 1.6 117.2 625.8 r 625.9 ''632.5 '630.5 107.4 -16.3 -.5 106.7 r 106.7 '0 '-2.4 r '108.3 '-1.1 -7.5 -1.8 108.4 '20.9 '.5 '1.9 120.8 17 37 -2.0 11 624.5 138.6 1381 119.2 1179 -4 616.6 616.4 1182 1187 10. PERSONAL INCOME AND CONSUMER ATTITUDES 52 51* 58 83* 122 123* Personal income: Personal income bil 1987$ AR (CCC) Personal income less transfer payments, bil. 1987$, AR (C.C.C). Indexes of consumer attitudes: Consumer sentiment, U. of Michigan, 1966:1-100, NSA .(L.L.U©1. Consumer expectations, U. of Michigan, 1966:1-100, NSA(UUL)©1. Consumer confidence, The Conference Board, 1985-100 (L,L,L)*. Consumer expectations, The Conference Board, 1985-100 (L,l,L)Y 44098 3,664.7 4,359.7 3,618.9 43706 3,629.0 4,385.2 3,641.9 43952 3,652.7 43923 3,649.3 43981 3,654.2 4,411.5 3,665.0 44304 3,683.6 4,485.6 3,735.7 44765 3,727.3 45050 •3,751.4 '45284 '45403 '4,559.4 '•3,764.5 "3,775.6 '3,792.0 92.3 93.2 91,5 92.6 92.8 91.2 89.0 91.7 91.5 92.7 91.6 95.1 97.6 95.1 90.3 83.8 83.5 85.1 82.6 84.2 82.7 78.5 80.8 83.5 85.1 84.8 88.8 88.4 85.9 79.8 90.6 79.9 86.7 92.1 88.9 92.5 91.3 90.4 89.5 89.1 100.4 103.4 101.4 99.4 100.2 92.3 84.4 92.6 95.4 93.6 94.6 91.9 89.4 89.5 87.9 97.5 98.1 94.8 90.8 90.1 11. SAVING 290 295 292 298* 293* Gross saving bil $ AR Business saving bil $ AR Personal saving bil.$ AR . ... Personal saving rate percent 920.6 850.4 203.1 -132.9 4.1 886.2 861.8 175.5 -151.1 3.6 950.3 850.0 232.6 -132.3 4.6 922.6 849.4 203.3 -130.1 4.1 923.3 8404 201.1 -118.1 4.1 '270.0 '5.2 12. MONEY, CREDIT, INTEREST RATES, AND STOCK PRICES 85* 102* 105 106* 107 108 93 94 112* 113* 110* 14 39 Money: Percent change in money supply M1 (L L L)* Percent change in money supply M2 (UC.U) Money supply M1, bil. 1987$ (L.L.L) Money supply M2 bil 1987$ (L L L) Velocity of money: Ratio, gross domestic product to money suppy M1 (C.C.C). Ratio, personal income to money supply M2 (C.Lg.C) .... Bank reserves: Free reserves mil $ NSA (L U U) $ Member bank borrowings from the Federal Reserve, mil.$, NSA (L,Lg,U). Credit flows: Net change in business loans, bil.$, AR (L.L.L) § Net change in consumer installment credit, bil.$, AR (L,L,L). Funds raised by private nonfinancial borrowers in credit markets, mil.$, AR (L.L.L). Credit difficulties: Current liabilities of business failures, mil.$, NSA (L.L.L) |. Percent of consumer installment loans delinquent 30 davs and over fl_.L.L)©2Oi. .36 .32 881.8 2,780.1 .15 .22 881.8 2,781.9 1.559 1.564 1,070 70 43.56 '-38.86 46.51 117.01 .14 .07 878.0 2,764.5 880.7 2,777.8 5.884 5.783 1.581 1.555 814 259 .40 -.08 451,540 380,220 31,215.7 2,430.8 1.72 1.87 .31 -.09 .45 '.31 -.12 '-.06 877.8 2,756.8 .02 -.02 -.25 -.12 -.05 .03 871.3 '2,741.1 .03 .12 869.5 '2,738.3 872.4 2,742.3 1.586 1.596 1.620 1.618 1.628 '1.636 1.645 649 458 535 469 573 487 424 380 759 249 959 209 1,207 136 887 59 '64.22 81.04 '55.22 181.91 '87.32 124.00 '88.80 139.70 '31.26 157.85 '77,76 78.65 '104.42 '108.31 882.2 2,768.8 1.570 1.574 1.578 912 55 1,027 124 715 200 772 333 '-3.25 132.36 '34.24 115.10 '49.22 163.13 '54.68 129.35 '2,181.9 '1,688.7 '2,565.0 '2,328.6 '2,111.7 '2,459.5 '3,533.5 '3,674.4 '2,576.9 '3,108.0 1.78 1.72 1.71 1.82 1.68 '1.651 '726 '69 '103.81 '126.55 '97.91 '518,436 489,928 417,576 '6.083 6.009 5.899 5.846 1.74 '.06 .09 -.15 '.24 .33 '-.09 '862.4 867.7 863.8 '2,739.1 '2,728.3 '2,728.6 876.0 2,749.8 881.0 2,768.9 NOTE-The following current high values were reached before February 1994: June 1991-BCI-106 (2,868.4); July 1991-BCI-93 (345); August 1991-BCI-94 (764); December 1991-BCI-62 index (112.1); December 1992BCI-53 (664.2), BCI-83 (89.5), and BCI-123 (103.9); May 1993-BCI-85 (1.86) and BCI-102 (0.65); 3d Q 1993- .06 .09 881.0 2,780.0 1.66 BCI-110 (523,004); and 4th Q 1993-BCI-81 (9.0). See page C-6 for other footnotes. 1.73 1.70 1.72 '2,240.2 '1,302.1 '1,769.5 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS Year Series no. April 1995 • 1994 1994 Feb. [~ Mar. June May Apr. C-5 1995 July Sept Aug. Oct | Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. 12. MONEY, CREDIT, INTEREST RATES, AND STOCK PRICES-Continued Outstanding debt: Consumer installment credit outstanding, mil.$ 66 72 101 4 95 • 119* 114* 116* 1154 117 118 109* 194 Commercial and industrial loans outstanding, mil.$, (Lg.Lg.Lg) §. Commercial and industrial loans outstanding, mil. 1987$ (Lg,Lg,Lg)§. Ratio, consumer installment credit outstanding to personal income, percent (Lg,Lg,lg). Interest rates (percent, NSA): Federal funds rate (LLgtg)* Discount rate on new 91-day Treasury bills (C.Lg.Lg)* .. Yield on new high-grade corporate bonds (Lg.Lg.Lg)* .... Yield on long-term Treasury bonds (C.Lg.lg)* Yield on municipal bonds, 20-bond average (U.Lg.lg)* .. Secondary market yields on FHA mortgages (Lg.Lg.Lg) Average prime rate charged by banks (Lg.Lg.Lg)* Index of stock prices, 500 common stocks, 1941-43=10, 911,311 802,720 813,750 823,342 836,936 847,715 854,469 879,961 869,628 449,717 '432,297 ' 432,026 ' 434,879 '438,981 '443,538 ' 448,890 '453,492 '460,169 383,840 '"372,670 ''371,156 ''373,607 ''376,485 14.95 14.40 4.20 4.27 8.14 7.41 6.18 8.68 7.14 3.25 3.21 7.27 6.44 5.40 7.59 6.00 460.33 471.58 14.51 334 3.52 7.64 6.90 5.91 8.57 6.06 463.81 r 378,445 ''382,359 r 384,641 r 391, 477 891,603 r 904,757 911,311 '920,337 p 928,496 468,1 69 '470,774 '477,254 '485,956 '494,607 '505,153 '398,103 '398,286 '402,746 '407,339 '411,829 '419,911 14.60 14.77 14.94 14.98 15.18 15.25 15.25 15.49 15.49 3.56 3.74 7.95 7.32 6.23 8.63 6.45 4.01 4.19 8.17 7.47 6.19 8.63 6.99 4.25 4.18 8.16 7.43 6.11 9.03 7.25 4.26 4.39 8.30 7.61 6.23 8.65 7.25 4.47 4.50 8.25 7.55 6.21 8.66 7.51 4.73 4.64 8.48 7.81 6.28 9.10 7.75 4.76 4.96 8.76 8.02 6.52 9.23 7.75 5.29 5.25 8.89 8.16 6.97 9.53 8.15 5.45 5.64 8.66 7.97 6.80 9.54 8.50 5.53 5.81 8.59 7.93 6.53 9.10 8.50 592 447.23 450.90 454.83 '15.51 '15.58 5.80 8.39 7.69 6.22 9.05 9.00 5.98 5.73 8.23 7.52 6.10 8.60 9.00 451.40 464.24 466.96 463.81 461.01 455.19 465.25 481.92 493.15 11636 6,147 28654 6,939 5,811 5,567 9,221 '7,246 68.7 69.0 68.7 10001 6,174 '68.6 '10670 '6,864 68.8 '67.9 '67.8 867 300.5 862 862 45043 4003 9847 57831 4795 44358 3878 9693 57776 4389 7378 NSA (L.L.L)*. 13, NATIONAL DEFENSE 525 548 557 570 5644 Defense Department prime contract awards, mil.$ NSA § .. Manufacturers' new orders, defense products, mil.$ Index of industrial production, defense and space equipment, 1987=100. Employment defense products industries thous Federal Government purchases, national defense bil.$, AR 12821 4,902 8045 6,280 7500 1 1 330 6,136 7,180 7,050 7943 5,546 71.0 73.6 73.7 73.6 72.4 71.3 69.9 876 292.3 895 291 .7 891 886 877 871 8437 78,517 882 291.7 69.2 861 2853 858 44277 4014 9257 58122 3618 7,921 45621 4102 10040 59713 4454 8185 '134,739 '177715 '-42976 47 478 4626 10288 59*122 4315 8500 119.0 112 119.5 113 120.3 113 1142 1132 1164 '852 '850 '284.0 14. EXPORTS AND IMPORTS 602 604 606 612 614 616 6184 6204 622 Exports excluding military aid shipments mil $ Exports of domestic agricultural products, mil.$ Exports of nonelectrical machinery mil $ General imports, mil.$ Imports of petroleum and petroleum products, mil.$ Imports of automobiles and parts, mil.$ ..... Merchandise exports, adjusted, excluding military, mil.$ l1.... Merchandise imports adjusted, excluding military mil $ . 1 Balance on merchandise trade, mil.S 512 521 38048 3144 44927 112244 8611 663 829 50151 49680 '3958 91 043 6770 502,729 117,848 669 093 154900 166364 -37 052 42750 3446 9047 52363 4087 7,067 41 031 3363 9000 53107 3900 7,428 41 045 3620 9235 53960 3867 7,381 122,510 164231 -41,721 42753 3692 9311 55811 4432 7759 40927 3491 9400 55802 4698 7,688 R fiQ6 127632 172247 -44615 '44998 4259 10070 '60908 3958 8178 46202 4349 10342 59457 4659 8487 '122.2 '122.3 15. INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS 474 721 4 7284 7254 7264 7224 7274 7234 320 + 738 4 735 736 + + 732 737 ^ 733 ^ ^ 194 7484 7454 7464 7424 7474 7434 7504 7584 7554 7564 7524 7574 7534 Industrial production indexes (1987=100): United States ... OECD, European countries2 Japan Federal Republic of Germany France United Kingdom Italy Canada Consumer price indexes (1982-84=100): United States, NSA Percent change over 6-month span AR Japan, NSA ... Percent change over 6-month span, AR Federal Republic of Germany, NSA Percent change over 6-month span AR France NSA Percent change over 6-month span AR United Kingdom, NSA Percent change over 6-month span AR Italy NSA Percent change over 6-month span AR Canada NSA Percent change over 6-month span AR Stock price indexes (1967=100, NSA): United States* Japan* Federal Republic of Germany* France* United Kingdom* Italy* Canada* Exchange rates: Exchange value of U.S. dollar, index: March 1973=100, NSA?*. Foreign currency per U.S. dollar (NSA): Japan (yen)* Federal Republic of Germany (d mark)* France (franc)* United Kingdom (pound)* Italy (lira)* Canada (dollar)* .. 118.1 111 115.6 108 1129 110 111 110 1090 1108 1097 1060 1055 109.8 '1049 '1064 1076 129.4 2.6 145.8 17 169.4 30 193.7 41 146.7 22 118.7 .8 128.5 3.0 144.9 1.7 167.0 29 191.3 36 147.2 25 119.3 .7 128.7 3.0 145.2 1.7 167.4 27 191.7 36 1482 1477 1476 148.2 28 1 19.3 7 107 '108 108 -24 116.6 108 1137 108 108 107 -20 116.7 110 111 2 110 110 '110 147.4 2.9 119.5 0 129.0 3.0 145.6 1.5 169.4 2.3 192.2 36 147.6 -.8 117.4 118.0 111 118.2 113 110 1 109 111 110 1130 1119 1098 1086 1107 1097 1142 1104 147.5 32 119.6 .2 129.3 2.5 145.9 1.8 170.0 22 192.9 39 148.0 32 119.2 -.3 129.5 2.8 145.9 1.7 170.0 23 193.3 38 147.6 14 148.4 30 118.6 .8 129.6 2.5 145.9 1.8 169.2 2.0 193.6 38 148.2 11 '111 1473 10 504.5 486.5 500.8 513.0 490.5 1,466.9 1,457.0 1,488.6 1,449.6 1,445.1 372.7 380.2 396.9 399.8 376.8 1,034.4 '1,141.4 '1,095.8 '1,072.1 '1,075.8 1,520.6 1,488.3 1,478.3 1,584.3 1,472.6 815.6 717.2 703.3 699.9 823.9 482.2 489.2 499.9 488.9 484.0 91.32 95.79 94.35 94.39 92.79 10630 10218 1.7355 1 6216 5.8955 5.5459 .6760 .6531 1 61 1 49 1 685 96 1.3424 1.3664 105.10 1.6909 5.7647 .6703 1 666.63 1.3644 103.48 1.6984 5.8170 .6746 1 626.07 1.3830 103.75 1.6565 5.6728 .6648 1,594.56 1.3808 111 110 110 494.8 1,526.2 373.1 '987.1 1,409.9 757.1 454.8 91.60 102.53 1.6271 5.5597 .6552 1,592.22 1.3836 119.1 113 1164 113 110 '113 '113 111 111 1152 '111 8 111 112 112 1109 112 '112 '113 1124 111 6 '1120 149.0 30 119.2 1.0 129.7 2.5 145.9 1.5 170.0 2.3 194.2 36 148.3 19 149.4 27 119.5 .8 129.8 2.5 146.3 1.4 170.4 3.1 194.7 43 148.4 2.2 149.5 2.8 120.0 1.2 129.9 1.7 146.7 1.8 170.6 4.4 195.8 41 148.2 2.2 491.0 505.0 1,498.5 1,494.6 389.4 372.0 '998.2 '1,030.6 1,430.8 1,503.9 721.2 738.5 472.2 491.5 508.0 1,441.2 379.8 '975.9 1,463.2 504.5 1,433.3 112 112 111 1127 1138 149.7 26 119.7 .2 130.1 2.2 146.7 1.8 170.7 4.5 196.5 47 149.0 27 501.5 710.2 492.0 361.7 '943.0 1,427.7 668.9 484.9 1,383.9 362.4 '970.1 1,441.3 668.9 462.5 121.7 '121.9 '115 '1160 115 '1147 '113 112 '111 '1109 '1154 '1148 149.7 26 119.4 150.3 150.9 119.4 118.9 130.4 1.9 146.5 2.1 171.5 4.9 197.2 61 149.2 2.8 131.0 131.5 131.7 146.9 147.5 147.9 171.5 172.6 173.3 197.9 199.5 201.2 149.8 150.5 150.8 1182 '1145 495.2 1,383.9 359.2 '977.3 1,413.1 506.1 1,344.3 '361.7 '925.2 1,420.4 651.7 691.6 474.9 454.0 151.4 524.2 536.4 1,277.1 '1,163.3 '366.0 '348.0 '921.2 '902.1 '1,420.4 '1,442.0 '642.8 '696.1 466.1 487.4 89.06 89.26 88.08 86.66 87.71 89.64 88.30 87.29 83.69 98.45 1.5674 5.3702 .6465 1 562.31 1.3826 99.94 1.5646 5.3602 .6484 1 582.15 1.3783 98.77 1.5491 5.2975 .6385 1,565.79 1.3540 98.35 1.5195 5.2025 .6225 1,548.29 1.3503 98.04 1.5396 5.2867 .6292 1,583.81 1.3647 100.18 1.5716 5.4132 99.77 1.5302 5.2912 98.24 1.5022 5.2252 1,633.71 1.3893 1,611.53 1.4132 1,620.58 1.4005 90.52 1.4061 4.9756 .6249 1,688.99 1.4077 266.7 246.3 264.2 '246.1 266.8 '249.0 270.4 '247.9 '269.9 '248.2 '267.6 '249.3 '268.9 '248.0 .6416 .6351 .6361 16. ALTERNATIVE COMPOSITE INDEXES 9904 9914 4 CIBCR long-leading composite index 1967-100 CIBCR short-leading composite index, 1967-1 00 4 See footnotes on page C-6. 2645 241.9 261.2 235.9 261.7 239.2 262.3 238.7 263.5 239.8 263.5 241.3 265.1 239.6 267.5 244.1 C-6 • April 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS FOOTNOTES FOR PAGES C-l THROUGH €-5 a AR c © e Anticipated. Annual rate, Corrected. Copyrighted, Estimated. Later data listed in notes. NSA p r + § o Not seasonally adjusted. Preliminary. Revised. Graph included for this series. Major revision—see notes. End of period. L,C,Lg,U Cyclical indicator series are classified as L (leading), C (coincident), Lg (lagging), or U (unclassified) at reference cycle peaks, troughs, and overall. Series classifications are shown in parentheses following the series titles, t Cyclical indicator series denoted by t are inverted (i.e., the sign is reversed) for cyclical analysis calculations, including classifications, contributions to composite indexes, and current high values, t Cyclical indicator series denoted by t are smoothed by an autoregressive-moving-average filter developed by Statistics Canada. For information on composite indexes and other concepts used in this section, see "Business Cycle Indicators: Upcoming Revision of the Composite Indexes" in the October 1993 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS and 'The Composite Index of Coincident Indicators and Alternative Coincident Indexes" in the June 1992 SURVEY. References to series in this section use the prefix "BCI-" followed by the series number. Unless otherwise noted, series are seasonally adjusted. Percent change data are centered within the spans: 1-month changes are placed in the ending month, 3-month changes are placed in the 3d month, 6-month changes are placed in the 4th month, 1-quarter changes are placed in the ending quarter, and 4-quarter changes are placed in the 3d quarter. Diffusion indexes are defined as the percent of components rising plus one-half of the percent of components unchanged. Diffusion index data are centered within the spans: 1-month indexes are placed in the ending month and 6-month indexes are placed in the 4th month. High values reached by cyclical indicators in the expansion following the last reference cycle trough (March 1991) are shown in boldface type; high values reached prior to the period shown in the table are listed at the bottom of each page. For inverted series, low values are indicated as highs. Sources for series in this section are shown on pages C-30 through C-32. Page C-1 Page C-4 NOTE.—Major data revision: Commercial and industrial loans outstanding in 1987 dollars (BCI-101)— see note for page C-4. * Preliminary April 1995 values: BCI-32 = 56.1, BCI-19 = 507.91, and BCI-109 = 9.00. 1. Data exclude Puerto Rico, which is included in figures published by the source agency. From August 1992 through April 1994, data include initial claims made under the July 1992 Emergency Unemployment Compensation amendments. 2. Copyrighted. This series may not be reproduced without written permission from the University of Michigan, Survey Research Center, P.O. Box 1248, Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1248. 3. Excludes BCI-57, for which data are not available. 4. Excludes BCI-77 and BCI-95, for which data are not available. NOTE.—Major data revisions: Series that include data on commercial paper issued by nonfinancial companies (BCI-72, -101, and -112) have been revised from 1992 forward to reflect the incorporation of new seasonal adjustment factors for that data. For further information, contact The Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Market Reports Division, 33 Liberty Street, New York, NY 10045. * Preliminary April 1995 values: BCI-122 = 105.5, BCI-123 = 97.8, and BCI-85 = 0.00. 1. Copyrighted. This series may not be reproduced without written permission from the University of Michigan, Survey Research Center, P.O. Box 1248, Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1248. 2. Copyrighted. This series may not be reproduced without written permission from the American Bankers Association, 1120 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20036. Page C-5 Page C-2 NOTE.—New plant and equipment expenditures by business in current and 1987 dollars (BCI-61 and BCI-100) have been deleted because they now are available only on an annual basis. For further information, contact the U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, Agriculture and Financial Statistics Division, Washington, DC 20233. * Preliminary April 1995 value: BCI-32 = 56.1. 1. Data exclude Puerto Rico, which is included in figures published by the source agency. From August 1992 through April 1994, data include initial claims made under the July 1992 Emergency Unemployment Compensation amendments. 2. Data exclude Puerto Rico, which is included in figures published by the source agency. 3. Copyrighted. This series may not be reproduced without written permission from F.W. Dodge, McGraw-Hill, Inc., 24 Hartwell Avenue, Lexington, MA 02173. Page C-3 NOTE.—Major data revision: Change in manufacturing and trade inventories (BCI-31) has been revised from 1982 forward to incorporate revised data on manufacturing, merchant wholesale, and retail inventories. For further information, contact the U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, Services Division, Washington, DC 20233. * Preliminary April 1995 value: BCI-23 = 350.0. 1. Copyrighted. This series may not be reproduced without written permission from Knight-Ridder Financial, 30 South Wacker Drive, Suite 1810, Chicago, IL 60606. NOTE.—Major data revisions: Commercial and industrial loans outstanding in current and 1987 dollars (BCI- 72 and BCI-101)—see note for page C-4. Defense Department prime contract awards (BCI-525) is now shown without seasonal adjustment. The seasonal adjustment was discontinued because of the recurring gaps in the data. For further information, contact the U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, Business Outlook Division, Washington, DC 20230. * Preliminary April 1995 values: BCI-119 = 6.05, BCI-114 = 5.67, BCI-116 = 8.09, BCI-115 = 7.41, BCI-117 = 6.02, BCI-109 = 9.00, BCI-19 (1941-43=10) = 507.91, BCI-19 (1967=100) = 552.5, BCI-748 = 1,153.9, BCI-745 = 345.3, BCI-746 = 954.6, BCI-742 = 1,493.7, BCI-747 = 644.1, BCI-743 = 483.6, BCI-750 = 81.81, BCI-758 = 83.69, BCI-755 = 1.3812, BCI-756 = 4.8503, BCI-752 = 0.6222, BCI-757 = 1,710.89, and BCI-753 = 1.3762. 1. Balance of payments basis: Excludes transfers under military grants and Department of Defense sales contracts (exports) and Department of Defense purchases (imports). 2. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. 3. This index is the weighted-average exchange value of the U.S. dollar against the currencies of the other G-10 countries plus Switzerland. Each country is weighted by its 1972-76 global trade. For a description of this index, see the August 1978 Federal Reserve Bulletin (p. 700). 4. This index is compiled by the Center for International Business Cycle Research (CIBCR), Graduate School of Business, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027. Notes for Pages C-7 Through C-27 The following notes explain general features of the charts that appear in this section: • Business cycle peaks (P) and troughs (T), as designated by the National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc., are indicated at the top of each chart. The shaded areas represent recessions. • For each series classified as a cyclical indicator, the timing classifications at peaks, at troughs, and overall are shown in a box adjacent to the title. (L = leading, C = coincident, Lg = lagging, U = unclassified.) A complete list of series titles and sources is shown on pages C-30 through C-32. • Arithmetic scales are designated "Scale A." On the same arithmetic scale, equal vertical distances represent equal differences in data. (For example, the vertical distance from 10 to 15 is the same as the distance from 100 to 105.) • Logarithmic (log) scales are designated L-1, L-2, or L-3 to indicate their relative size. On log scales of the same size, equal vertical distances represent equal percentage changes. (For example, the vertical distance from 10 to 15 is the same as the distance from 100 to 150.) Compared with an L-1 scale, the same percentage change covers half the distance on an L-2 scale and one-third the distance on an L-3 scale. • Data are monthly unless otherwise indicated. Quarterly data are indicated by a "Q" following the series title. • Some series include a centered moving average, which is shown as a heavy line superimposed on the actual monthly data. • Parallel lines across a plotted series indicate a missing data value, change in definition, or other significant break in continuity. • The box near the end of each plotted series indicates the latest data month (Arabic numeral) or quarter (Roman numeral) shown or, for series computed over a span of time (diffusion indexes and rates of change), the latest data period used in computing the series. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • C-7 CYCLICAL INDICATORS Composite Indexes Apr. T Apr. Feb. P T Dec. Nov. P T Nov. Mar. P T Jan. July July Nov. PT P T Jury Mar. P T 1958 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 941995 NOTE.—The numbers and arrows indicate length of leads (-) and lags (+) in months from business cycle turning dates. Current data for these series are shown on page C-1. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS C-8 • April 1995 CYCLICAL INDICATORS Composite Indexes: Rates of Change Dec. Nov. P T Nov. Mar. P T Jan. July July Nov. PT P T 910:. Com raiteBbx < f 11 leHfib I idlcaK rs July Mar. PT tchanae over 3-month idex dHHbii iclden Composite Indexes: Diffusion 950. Muston Indtx of Ifpdirig IndlflHc imponbnts of components rising oven-month span Diffus on IncwBf 4 colncionn 1958 59 60 61 6 2 6 3 6 4 6 5 6 6 6 7 6 8 6 9 7 0 7 1 7 2 7 3 7 4 7 5 7 6 7 7 7 8 7 9 8 0 8 1 8 2 8 3 8 4 8 5 8 6 8 7 8 8 8 9 9 0 9 1 9293 941995 NOTE.—Current data for these series are shown on page C-1. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • C-9 CYCLICAL INDICATORS Composite Indexes: Leading Index Components Apr. T Apr. Feb. P T Dec. Nov. P T ,.,!,,, dQ. I, I , , , ,,,!,,., i,',i I I I • 1958 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 7 2 7 3 7 4 7 5 7 6 7 7 7 8 7 9 8 0 8 1 8 2 8 3 8 4 8 5 8 6 8 7 8 8 8 9 9 0 9 1 9 2 9 3 941995 NOTE.—Current data for these series are shown on page C-1. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS C-10 • April 1995 CYCLICAL INDICATORS Composite Indexes: Leading Index Components—Continued Apr. T Apr. Feb. P T Dec. Nov. P T indi strles, smoo hlf (I II. iol 1958 5 9 6 0 6 1 6 2 6 3 6 4 6 5 6 6 8 7 6 8 6 9 7 0 7 1 7 2 7 3 7 4 7 5 7 6 7 7 7 8 7 9 8 0 8 1 8 2 8 3 8 4 8 5 8 6 8 7 8 8 8 9 9 0 9 1 9 2 9 3 941995 1. This series is smoothed by an autoregressive-moving-average filter developed by Statistics Canada. 2. This is a copyrighted series used by permission; it may not be reproduced without written permission from the University of Michigan, Survey Research Center. NOTE.—Current data for these series are shown on page C-1. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • C-ll CYCLICAL INDICATORS Composite Indexes: Coincident Index Components Apr. T Apr. Feb. P T Dec. Nov. P T Nov. Mar. P T 1958 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 NOTE.—Current data for these series are shown on page C-1. Jan. July July Nov. PT P T July Mar. P T 7 8 7 9 8 0 8 1 8 2 8 3 8 4 8 5 8 6 8 7 8 8 8 9 9 0 91 9293 941995 C-12 • SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 CYCLICAL INDICATORS Composite indexes: Lagging Index Components Apr. T Apr. Feb. P T Dec. Nov. P T Nov. Mar. P T Jan. July July Nov. P T P T July Mar. P T manuf wturlifBid' rade Cons imer PHfeln lex fo 1958 5 9 6 0 6 1 8 2 6 3 6 4 6 5 6 6 6 7 6 8 0 9 7 0 7 1 7 2 7 3 7 4 7 5 7 6 7 7 7 8 7 9 8 0 8 1 8 2 8 3 8 4 8 5 8 6 8 7 8 8 8 9 9 0 9 1 9 2 9 3 941995 1. This series is smoothed by an autoregressive-TOving-average filter developed by Statistics Canada. Nore.-Current data for these series are shown on page C-1. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • C-13 CYCLICAL INDICATORS Employment and Unemployment Dec. Nov. P T Nov. P Mar. T Jan. July July F T P Nov. T product on or|$ isupervi sory 43. Civil an uneir ployment rste^ercent—ir verted s ale) 1967 68 89 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 NOTE.—Current data for these series are shown on page C-2. 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 1995 C-14 • SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 CYCLICAL INDICATORS Output, Production, and Capacity Utilization Dec. Nov. P T 1967 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 NOTE.—Current data for these series are shown on page C-2. 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 90 91 92 93 94 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • C-15 CYCLICAL INDICATORS Sales and Orders Wages and ConsumerAttitudes and salaries In ctiqn (ann. rpte, Mf. 1967 6 8 6 9 70 71 7 2 7 3 7 4 7 5 7 6 7 7 7 8 7 9 8 0 8 1 8 2 8 3 8 4 8 5 8 6 8 7 8 8 NOTE.—Current data for these series are shown on pages C-2 and C-4. 90 91 92 93 94 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS C-16 • April 1995 CYCLICAL INDICATORS Fixed Capital Investment Dec. Nov. P T Jan. July P T July Nov. P T 2. Net (>uslness( fomtttk L.L.L 1967 6 8 6 9 7 0 7 1 7 2 7 3 7 4 7 5 7 6 7 7 7 8 7 9 8 0 8 1 8 2 8 3 8 4 8 5 8 6 8 7 8 8 8 9 9 0 9 1 1. This is a copyrighted series used by permission; it may not be reproduced without written permission from F.W. Dodge, McGraw-Hill, Inc. 9293 NOTE.—Current data for these series are shown on page C-2. 94 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • C-17 CYCLICAL INDICATORS Fixed Capital Investment—Continued 1967 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 NOTE.—Current data for these series are shown on pages C-2 and C-3. 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 8 7 8 8 8 9 9 0 9 1 9 2 9 3 9 4 1995 C-18 • SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 CYCLICAL INDICATORS Fixed Capital Investment—Continued Dec. Nov. P T 89. Cross private resident la I fixed invest! tent in 1! I87 dolla Inventories and Inventory Investment 30. Change in business In Chat ge In mi nufactur ng 1967 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 NOTE.—Current data for these series are shown on page C-3. 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • C-19 CYCLICAL INDICATORS Prices and Profits Jan. July P T 1967 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 IVA Inventory valuation adjustment CCAdj Capital consumption adjustment NOTE.—Current data for these series are shown on pages C-3 and C-4. July P July Mar. P T Nov. T 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 90 91 92 93 94 1995 1. From June 1981 forward, this is a copyrighted series used by permission; it may not be reproduced without written permission from Knight-RkJder Financial. C-20 • April 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS CYCLICAL INDICATORS Money, Credit, and Interest Rates Dec. Nov. P T Jan. July P T July P Nov. T stallment credit moving avg.) 196768 6 9 7 0 7 1 7 2 7 3 7 4 7 5 7 6 7 7 7 8 7 9 8 0 8 1 8 2 8 3 8 4 8 5 8 6 8 7 NOTE.—Current data for these series are shown on page &4. 90 91 92 93 94 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • C-21 CYCLICAL INDICATORS Money, Credit, and Interest Rates—Continued Dec. Nov. P T Nov. P Mar. T Jan. July July Nov. P T P T Ion j-term T easury c onds Alternative Composite Indexes 1967 6 8 6 9 7 0 7 1 7 2 7 3 7 4 7 5 7 6 7 7 7 8 7 9 8 0 8 1 8 2 8 3 8 4 8 5 8 6 8 7 8 8 8 9 9 0 9 1 9 2 9 3 9 4 1995 CIBCR Canter for International Business Cycle Research (Columbia University). NOT.—Current data for these series are shown on page C-5. C-22 • April 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS OTHER IMPORTANT ECONOMIC MEASURES Prices 20-, o-l 20n 20-i Prod icerBBe Indexei '<— 20-i 10- o-10-1 10- o-1020-i 100-10-1 20- -10 10- 50403020100-10-20-30-J 196768 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 NOTE.—Current data for these series are shown on page C-3. 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 90 91 92 93 94 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • OTHER IMPORTANT ECONOMIC MEASURES Other Measures Dec. Nov. P T Jan. July P T Nov. Mar. P T July Nov. P T I Government se, Q flann. rate 1967 6 8 6 9 7 0 7 1 7 2 7 3 7 4 7 5 7 6 7 7 7 8 7 9 8 0 8 1 8 2 8 3 8 4 8 5 8 6 8 7 8 8 NOTE.—Current data for these series are shown on pages C-4 and C-5. 90 91 92 93 94 1995 C-23 C-24 • SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS Apri/1995 OTHER IMPORTANT ECONOMIC MEASURES International Industrial Production Dec. Nov. P T 1967 68 69 70 71 Nov. P 72 73 Mar. T 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 NOTE.—Current data for these series are shown on page C-5. Jan. July PT July P Nov. T 81 82 July Mar. P T 83 84 85 86 87 88 90 91 92 93 94 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • C-25 OTHER IMPORTANT ECONOMIC MEASURES International Consumer Prices Dec. Nov. P T Jan. July July PT P Nov T Percent change over 6-moB span, annual rate 196768 6 9 7 0 71 7 2 7 3 7 4 7 5 7 6 7 7 7 8 7 9 8 0 8 1 8 2 8 3 8 4 8 5 8 6 8 7 8 8 NOTE.—Current date for these series are shown on page C-5. 90 91 92 93 94 1995 C-26 • SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 OTHER IMPORTANT ECONOMIC MEASURES International Stock Prices Dec. Nov. P T 745. Federal Repi ibllc ofprmany 196768 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 NOTE.—Current data for these series are shown on page C-5. 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 90 91 92 93 94 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • OTHER IMPORTANT ECONOMIC MEASURES International Exchange Rates Dec. Nov. P T Nov. P Jan. July P T Mar. T July P Nov. T exchange value of U.S (in dex:|March 1973=100) Republi Germahy (d, mak-k) 1967 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 NOTE.—Current data for these series are shown on page C-5. 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 1995 C-27 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS C-28 • April 1995 Business Cycle Expansions and Contractions Duration in months Business cycle reference dates Contraction (trough from previous peak) Peak Trough December 1854 December 1858 June 1861 December 1867 December 1870 June 1857 October 1860 April 1865 June 1869 October 1873 March 1879 May 1885 April 1888 May 1891 June 1894 Cycle Expansion (trough to peak) Trough from previous trough Peak from previous peak 18 8 32 18 30 22 46 18 34 48 30 78 36 40 54 50 52 March 1882 March 1887 July 1890 January 1893 December 1895 65 38 13 10 17 36 22 27 20 18 99 74 35 37 37 101 60 40 30 35 June 1897 December 1900 August 1904 June 1908 January 1912 June 1899 September 1902 May 1907 January 1910 January 1913 18 18 23 13 24 24 21 33 19 12 36 42 44 46 43 42 39 56 32 36 December 1914 March 1919 July 1921 August 1918 January 1920 May 1923 .. October 1926 August 1929 , 23 7 18 14 13 44 10 22 27 21 35 51 28 36 40 67 17 40 41 34 May 1937 . February 1945 . November 1948 July 1953 ,. August 1957 43 13 10 50 80 37 45 39 64 63 88 48 55 93 93 45 56 49 April 1960 „ December 1969 ... November 1973 January 1980 July 1981 8 10 11 16 6 24 106 36 58 12 47 34 117 52 64 32 116 47 74 18 16 8 92 28 100 108 Average, all cycles: 1854-1991 (31 cycles) 1854-1919 (16 cycles) 1919-1945 (6 cycles) 1945-1991 (9 cycles) 18 22 18 11 35 27 35 50 53 48 53 61 Average, peacetime cycles: 1854-1991 (26 cycles) .... 1854-1919 (14 cycles) 191 g_1945 (5 CyC|es) 1945-1991 (7 cvcles) 19 22 20 11 29 24 26 43 48 46 46 53 ... July 1924 November 1927 March 1933 June 1938 October 1945 October 1949 May 1954 April 1958 February 1961 November 1970 March 1975 July 1980 November 1982 March 1991 . ., .... July 1990 ..... 1.30 cycles. 2.15 cycles. 3. 25 cycles. 4.13 cycles. . . . ..... .... a 11 *53 49 53 61 2 3 4 48 47 45 53 NOTE.—Figures printed in bold italic are the wartime expansions (Civil War, World Wars I and II, Korean war, and Vietnam war), the postwar contractions, and the full cycles that include the wartime expansions. Source: National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc., 1050 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS April 1995 • C-29 Cyclical Leads (-) and Lags (+) for Selected Indicators [Length in months] At reference peaks Series title Series no. July 1990 July 1981 Jan. 1980 Nov. 1973 Dec. 1969 Apr. 1960 Nov. 1948 July Aug. 1957 1953 Mean LEADING INDICATORS 1 5 8 32 20 29 92 99 19 106 83 910 940 Average weekly hours manufacturing Average weekly initial claims for unemployment insurance (inverted) 1 Manufacturers' new orders in 1987 dollars consumer goods and materials Vendor performance slower deliveries diffusion index Contracts and orders for plant and equipment in 1987 dollars Building permits new private housing units Change in manufacturers' unfilled orders in 1987 dollars, durable goods (smoothed)2 Change in sensitive materials prices (smoothed)2 Index of stock prices 500 common stocks Money supply M2 in 1987 dollars Index of consumer expectations . Composite index of 11 leading indicators Ratio coincident index to lagging index 41 51 47 57 920 Employees on nonagricultural payrolls Personal income less transfer payments in 1987 dollars Index of industrial production Manufacturing and trade sales in 1987 dollars Composite index of 4 coincident indicators 91 77 62 109 101 95 120 930 Average duration of unemployment (inverted) * Ratio, manufacturing and trade inventories to sales in 1987 dollars Change in index of labor cost per unit of output, manufacturing (smoothed) 2 Average prime rate charged by banks Commercial and industrial loans outstanding in 1987 dollars Ratio, consumer installment credit to personal income 2 Change in Consumer Price Index for services (smoothed) Composite index of 7 lagging indicators -15 -22 -2 +1 -7 -21 -3 +2 1 -10 -16 -13 -9 -10 -19 -13 -7 NST -24 . -38 -15 -15 -7 -9 -8 0 -1 -11 -6 +3 -10 -10 -15 -9 -11 -14 -11 -13 -4 -11 -10 -7 -10 -12 -11 -10 -11 -9 -11 -12 -13 -14 -13 -17 -12 -17 -9 NST -2 -11 -12 -21 23 -25 -28 -9 -30 -19 -17 -13 -16 -9 -20 -27 -3 10 -3 -12 -5 -8 -26 -9 -6 NST -5 -5 -9 -11 -13 -5 -7 -7 -13 -3 n.a. -30 -17 n.a. -7 -10 -11.1 -14.2 -12.4 -11.6 -11.2 -1.1 -3.7 -1.2 -7 -18 -18 -4 -7 0 -2 -3 -3 -10 -6 -7 -8 NST -2 -8 -4 -1 -3 +2 -4 -1 0 +1 0 -6 +1 +2 0 +2 10 0 +11 0 0 0 0 +3 NST -2 -2 -2 0 +1 -3 -3 -3 -5 0 -5 -6 -5 -1 -1 0 -3 0 -2 -1 -4 +1 -1 -13 +6 +8 -14 0 -10 +2 -8 +5 +15 +6 +1 +14 NST +2 +3 -6 +5 +5 +3 +2 -7 +5 +3 -2 +16 +16 +10 +10 +5 +11 +13 -2 +11 +1 +2 +8 NST +4 +3 +2 +9 +10 +3 NST +8 -6 +3 +1 +8 +6 +4 +1 +5 -5 +4 +2 +5 +6 +7 -1 +5 0 +8 0 NST +3 NST -11.0 -12.9 -9.3 -8.4 -7.3 -15.4 -10.6 -7.8 COINCIDENT INDICATORS +0.8 -.4 LAGGING INDICATORS n.a. +5 n.a. NST -1.4 +9.2 +6.4 +2.0 +4.6 +1.0 +1.9 +3.2 At reference troughs Mar. 1991 Nov. 1982 a Mar. 1975 Nov. 1970 May Apr. 1958 Feb. 1961 Oct. 1949 1954 Mean LEADING INDICATORS 1 5 8 32 20 29 92 99 19 106 83 910 940 Average weekly hours, manufacturing Average weekly initial claims for unemployment insurance (inverted) 1 Manufacturers' new orders in 1987 dollars consumer goods and materials Vendor performance slower deliveries diffusion index Contracts and orders for plant and equipment in 1987 dollars Building permits, new private housing units Change in manufacturers' unfilled orders in 1987 dollars, durable goods (smoothed)2 Change in sensitive materials prices (smoothed) 2 Index of stock prices, 500 common stocks Money supply M2 in 1987 dollars . Index of consumer expectations Composite index of 11 leading indicators Ratio, coincident index to lagging index 41 51 47 57 920 Employees on nonagricultural payrolls Personal income less transfer payments in 1987 dollars Index of industrial production Manufacturing and trade sales in 1987 dollars Composite index of 4 coincident indicators 91 77 62 109 101 95 120 930 Average duration of unemployment (inverted) * Ratio manufacturing and trade inventories to sales in 1987 dollars Change in index of labor cost per unit of output, manufacturing (smoothed) 2 Average prime rate charged by banks Commercial and industrial loans outstanding in 1987 dollars Ratio consumer installment credit to personal income Change in Consumer Price Index for services (smoothed) 2 Composite index of 7 lagging indicators 0 0 -2 -4 -1 -2 -2 -4 -4 -3 +1 -2 0 -1 +4 -7 -6 -2 -8 -5 -4 -8 NST -6 -4 -5 -6 0 -4 -7 -6 -9 -4 -4 -4 -15 -8 -2 0 0 -11 +1 -2 -9 -1 -4 NST -3 -2 -1 +1 -1 0 0 0 0 NST 0 0 0 0 -2 0 -1 0 +1 0 0 0 0 +3 -1 -1 -5 +2 0 -3 0 -3 0 +10 +44 +8 +25 +18 +11 +5 +21 +19 +27 +12 +16 +15 NST +27 +15 +5 +14 +7 +57 NST +9 +5 +6 +6 +13 +6 +4 +4 +7 +8 +4 +12 +12 +11 +14 +3 +6 +8 +9 +1 NST -1 NST +1 0 0 0 +3 -2 +20 0 -5 -2 -5 -2 -2 -1 -2 -1 -8 +4 -13 -2 -5 -4 NST -8 -10 -10 0 -2 -2 -2 -2 -3 -1 0 NST -2 -4 -2 -2 0 0 0 -1 +9 0 +1 -2 -3 -2 -1 -1 0 -2 -1 0 +1 -1 -10 -3 -2 -5 -7 -6 •j +11 +8 0 -2 0 0 0 +1 +1 +1 0 0 0 -1 0 +19 +8 +14 +10 +8 +11 0 +2 +7 +6 +6 +7 +1 +8 NST +3 +3 n.a. -4 0 -1.2 -.1 -1.8 -4.2 +.6 -5.4 -.6 -2.4 -4.6 -5.2 -4.0 -3.1 -3.1 COINCIDENT INDICATORS +1.8 +.1 0 -1.2 +.3 LAGGING INDICATORS n.a. Not available. Data needed to determine a specific turning point are not available. 1. This series is inverted; i.e., low values are peaks and high values are troughs. 2. This series is smoothed by an autoregressive-moving-average filter developed by Statistics Canada. NOTE—Reference peaks and troughs are the cyclical turning points in overall business activity (see previous page); specific peaks and troughs are the cyclical turning points in individual series. This table lists, for the composite indexes and their components, the leads (-) and lags (+) of the specific peaks and troughs in relation to the n.a. +6 +35 +24 +21 +18 +36 n.a. +9 +10.3 +17.4 +7.6 +20.0 +10.2 n.a. +9.0 +9.7 NST +12.6 corresponding reference peaks and troughs. See Measuring Business Cycles by Arthur F. Burns and Wesley C. Mitchell (National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc., 1946] for information on the selection of cyclical peaks and troughs. NST No specific turn. No specific turning point is discernible in the data. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS C-30 • April 1995 TITLES AND SOURCES OF SERIES Series are listed below in numerical order within each of the two major groups. Series numbers are for identification only and do not reflect relationships or order among the series. "M" following a series title indicates monthly data; "Q" indicates quarterly data. Data apply to the whole period except when indicated by "EOM" (end of month) or "EOQ" (end of quarter). To save space, the following commonly used sources are referred to by number: Source 1—U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis; Source 2—U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census; Source 3—U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics; Source 4—Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. The numbers in parentheses following the sources indicate the C-pages on which the series appear: Numbers in plain type indicate data tables; numbers in bold type indicate charts. 1. Cyclical Indicators 1. Average weekly hours of production or nonsupervisory workers, manufacturing (M).—Source 3 (1,2,9) 5. Average weekly initial claims for unemployment insurance, State programs (M).—Source 1 and U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration (1,2,9) 7. Manufacturers' new orders in 1987 dollars, durable goods industries (M).— Sources 1,2, and 3(2,15) 8. Manufacturers' new orders in 1987 dollars, consumer goods and materials Industries (M).-Sources 1, 2, and 3 (1,2,9) 35. 37. 39. 40. 9. Construction contracts awarded for commercial and industrial buildings, floor space (M).—F.W. Dodge, McGraw-Hill, Inc.; seasonal adjustment by Bureau of Economic Analysis (This is a copyrighted series used by permission; it may not be reproduced without written permission from the source.) (2,16) 41. 42. 43. 44. 10. Contracts and orders for plant and equipment in current dollars (M).— Sources 1,2, and F.W. Dodge, McGraw-Hill, Inc. (2) 45. 12. Index of net business formation (M).—Source 1 and Dun & Bradstreet, Inc. (2,16) 46. 13. Number of new business incorporations (M).—Dun & Bradstreet, Inc. (2,16) 14. Current liabilities of business failures (M).—Dun & Bradstreet, Inc. (4) 16. Corporate profits after tax in current dollars (Q).—Source 1 (4,19) 18. Corporate profits after tax in 1987 dollars (Q).—Source 1 (4,19) 19. Index of stock prices, 500 common stocks (M).—Standard & Poor's Corporation (1,5,10,26) 20. Contracts and orders for plant and equipment in 1987 dollars (M).—Sources 1, 2, 3, and F.W. Dodge, McGraw-Hill, Inc. (1,2,9) 21. Average weekly overtime hours of production or nonsupervisory workers, manufacturing (M).—Source 3 (2,13) 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 22. Ratio, corporate domestic profits after tax to total corporate domestic income (Q).—Source 1 (4,19) 55. 57. 58. 23. Index of spot market prices, raw industrial materials (M).—Sources 1,3, and Knight-Ridder Financial. (From June 1981 forward, this is a copyrighted series used by permission; it may not be reproduced without written permission from Knight-Ridder Financial) (3,19) 59. 60. 26. Ratio, implicit price deflator to unit labor cost, all persons, nonfarm business sector (Q).—Sources 1 and 3 (4,19) 62. 27. Manufacturers' new orders in 1987 dollars, nondefense capital goods industries (M).—Sources 1,2, and 3 (2,16) 28. New private housing units started (M).—Source 2 (3,18) 29. Index of new private housing units authorized by local building permits (M).—Sources 1 and 2(1,3,10) 30. Change in business inventories in 1987 dollars (Q).—Source 1 (3,18) 63. 66. 69. 70. 31. Change in manufacturing and trade inventories (M)—Sources 1 and 2 (3,18) 72. 32. Vendor performance, slower deliveries diffusion index (M).—National Association of Purchasing Management and Purchasing Management Association of 73. Chicago; seasonal adjustment by U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of the Chief Economist (1,2,9) Corporate net cash flow in 1987 dollars (Q).—Source 1 (4) Number of persons unemployed (M).—Source 3 (2) Percent of consumer installment loans delinquent 30 days and over (EOM).—American Bankers Association (This is a copyrighted series used by permission; it may not be reproduced without written permission from the source.) (4) Employees on nonagriculturai payrolls, goods-producing industries (M).— Source 3 (2,13) Employees on nonagriculturai payrolls (M).—Source 3(1,2,11) Number of persons engaged in nonagriculturai activities (M).—Source 3 (2) Civilian unemployment rate (M).—Source 3 (2,13) Unemployment rate, persons unemployed 15 weeks and over (M).—Source 3(2) Average weekly insured unemployment rate, State programs (M).—Source 1 and U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration (2) Index of help-wanted advertising in newspapers (M).—The Conference Board (2,13) Index of industrial production (M).-Source 4 (1,2,5,11,24) Employee hours in nonagriculturai establishments (M).—Source 3 (2,13} Value of domestic goods output in 1987 dollars (Q).-Source 1 (2) Gross national product in 1987 dollars (Q).—Source 1 (2) Personal income less transfer payments in 1987 dollars (M).—Source 1 (1,4, ft) Personal income in 1987 dollars (M).—Source 1 (4) Wages and salaries in 1987 dollars, mining, manufacturing, and construction (M).—Sources 1 and 3 (4,15) Gross domestic product in 1987 dollars (Q).—Source 1 (2,14) Manufacturing and trade sales in 1987 dollars (M).-Sources 1 and 2 (1,2,11) Index of consumer sentiment (Q,M).—University of Michigan, Survey Research Center (This is a copyrighted series used by permission; it may not be reproduced without written permission from the source.) (4) Sales of retail stores in 1987 dollars (M).-Sources 1 and 2 (2,15) Ratio, help-wanted advertising in newspapers to number of persons unemployed (M).—Sources 1,3 and The Conference Board (2) Change in index of labor cost per unit of output, manufacturing, smoothed (M).-Sources1and4(1,4,t2) Index of unit labor cost, all persons, business sector (Q).—Source 3 (4) Consumer installment credit outstanding (EOM).—Source 4 (5) Manufacturers' machinery and equipment sales and business construction expenditures (M).—Sources 1 and 2 (2,17) Manufacturing and trade inventories in 1987 dollars (EOM).—Sources 1 and 2(3) Commercial and industrial loans outstanding in current dollars (M).— Sources 1,4, and The Federal Reserve Bank of New York (5) Index of industrial production, durable manufactures (M).—Source 4 (2,14) SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 74. Index of industrial production, nondurable manufactures (M)—Source 4 (2,14) 75. Index of industrial production, consumer goods (M).—Source 4 (2,14) 76. Index of industrial production, business equipment (M).—Source 4 (2,17) 77. Ratio, manufacturing and trade inventories to sales in 1987 dollars (M).— Sources 1 and 2(1,3,12)" 81. Ratio, corporate domestic profits after tax with inventory valuation and capital consumption adjustments to total corporate domestic income (Q).-Source 1 (4,19) 82. Capacity utilization rate, manufacturing (M).—Source 4 (2,14) 83. Index of consumer expectations (Q,M).—University of Michigan, Survey Research Center (This is a copyrighted series used by permission; it may not be reproduced without written permission from the source.) (1,4,10) 85. Change in money supply M1 (M).-—Sources 1 and 4 (4,20) 86. Gross private nonresidential fixed investment in 1987 dollars (Q).—Source 1(3,f7) 87. Gross private nonresidential fixed investment in 1987 dollars, structures (Q).-Source 1 (3,17) 88. Gross private nonresidentiai fixed investment in 1987 dollars, producers' durable equipment (Q).—Source 1 (3,17) 89. Gross private residential fixed investment in 1987 dollars (Q).—Source 1 (3,18) 90. Ratio, civilian employment to population of working age (M).—Source 3 (2.13)' 91. Average duration of unemployment in weeks (M).—Source 3 (1,2,12) 92. Change in manufacturers' unfilled orders in 1987 dollars, durable goods industries, smoothed (M).—Sources 1,2, and 3 (1,2,10) 93. Free reserves (M).—Sources 1 and 4 (4) 94. Member bank borrowings from the Federal Reserve (M).—Source 4 (4) 95. Ratio, consumer installment credit outstanding to personal income (M).— Sources land 4(1,5,12) 98. index of producer prices for sensitive crude and intermediate materials (M).—Sources 1 and 3 (3) 99. Change in sensitive materials prices, smoothed (M).—Sources 1, 3, and Knight-Ridder Financial (1,3,10) 101. Commercial and industrial loans outstanding in 1987 dollars (M).—Sources 1,3,4, and The Federal Reserve Bank of New York (1,5,12) 102. Change in money supply M2 (M).—Sources 1 and 4 (4,20) 105. Money supply M1 in 1987 dollars (M).-Sources 1,3, and 4 (4) 106. Money supply M2 in 1987 dollars (M).-Sources 1,3, and 4(1,4,10) 107. Ratio, gross domestic product to money supply M1 (Q).—Sources 1 and 4 (4) 108. Ratio, personal income to money supply M2 (M).—Sources 1 arid 4 (4) 109. Average prime rate charged by banks (M).—Source 4 (1,5,12) 110. Funds raised by private nonfinancial borrowers in credit markets (Q).— Source 4 (4,20) 112. Net change in business loans (M).—Sources 1, 4, and The Federal Reserve Bank of New York (4,20) 113. Net change in consumer installment credit (M).—Sources 1 and 4 (4,20) 114. Discount rate on new issues of 91-day Treasury bills (M).—Source 4 (5,21) 115. Yield on long-term Treasury bonds (M).—U.S. Department of the Treasury (5,*f) 116. Yield on new issues of high-grade corporate bonds (M).—Citibank and U.S. Department of the Treasury (5,21) 117. Yield on municipal bonds, 20-bond average (M).—The Bond Buyer (5) 118. Secondary market yields on FHA mortgages (M).—U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Federal Housing Administration (5) 119= Federal funds rate (M).-Source 4 (5, if) 120. Change in Consumer Price Index for services, smoothed (M).—Sources 1 and 3 (1,3,72) 122. Index of consumer confidence (M).—The Conference Board (4) 123. Index of consumer expectations (M).—The Conference Board (4,15) 124. Capacity utilization rate, total industry (M).—Source 4 (2) April 1995 • C-31 910. Composite index of 11 leading indicators (includes series 1, 5, 8,19, 20,29, 32, 83, 92, 99,106) (M).-Source 1 (1,7,8) 920. Composite index of 4 coincident indicators (includes series 41, 47, 51, 57) (M).-Sourcel (1,7,0) 930. Composite index of 7 lagging indicators (includes series 62, 77, 91, 95,101, 109,120) (M).-Source 1 (1,7,0) 940. Ratio, coincident composite index (series 920) to lagging composite index (series 930) (M).-Source 1 (1,7) 950. Diffusion index of 11 leading indicator components (M).—Source 1 (1,0) 951. Diffusion index of 4 coincident indicator components (M).—Source 1 (1,0) 952. Diffusion index of 7 lagging indicator components (M).—Source 1 (1.8) 963. Diffusion index of employees on private nonagriculturai payrolls, 356 industries (M).—Source 3 (2) 990. CIBCR long-leading composite index (M).—Columbia University, Center for International Business Cycle Research (5,21) 991. CIBCR short-leading composite index (M).—Columbia University, Center for International Business Cycle Research (5,21) 2. Other Important Economic Measures 290. Gross saving (Q).—Source 1 (4) 292. Personal saving (Q).—Source 1 (4) 293. Personal saving rate (Q).—Source 1 (4,23) 295. Business saving (Q).—Source 1 (4) 298. Government surplus or deficit (Q).—Source 1 (4,23) 311. Fixed-weighted price index, gross domestic business product (Q).—Source 1 (3,22) 320. Consumer Price Index for all urban consumers, all items (M).—Source 3 (3,5,22,25) 323. Consumer Price Index for ail urban consumers, all items less food and energy (M).—Source 3 (3,22) 331. Producer Price Index, crude materials for further processing (M).—Sources land 3 (3,22) 332. Producer Price Index, intermediate materials, supplies, and components (M).—Sources 1 and 3 (3,22) 333. Producer Price Index, capital equipment (M).—Sources 1 and 3 (3,22) 334. Producer Price Index, finished consumer goods (M).—Sources 1 and 3 (3,22) 336. Producer Price Index, finished goods (M).—Sources 1 and 3 (3,22) 337. Producer Price Index, finished goods less foods and energy (M).—Sources land 3 (3,22) 345. Index of average hourly compensation, all employees, nonfarm business sector (Q).—Source 3 (4) 346. Index of real average hourly compensation, all employees, nonfarm business sector (Q).—Source 3 (4) 358. Index of output per hour, all persons, nonfarm business sector (Q).—Source 3(4) 370. Index of output per hour, all persons, business sector (Q).—Source 3 (4,.23) 441. Civilian labor force (M).—Source 3 (2) 442. Civilian employment (M).—Source 3 (2) 451 Civilian labor force participation rate, males 20 years and over (M).—Source 3(2) 452. Civilian labor force participation rate, females 20 years and over (M).— Source 3 (2) 453= Civilian labor force participation rate, both sexes 16-19 years of age (M)— Source 3 (2) C-32 • April 1995 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 525. Defense Department prime contract awards for work performed in the United States (M).—U.S. Department of Defense, Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense (Comptroller), Washington Headquarters Services, Directorate for Information Operations and Reports (5) 548. Manufacturers' new orders, defense products (M).—Source 2 (5) 557. Index of industrial production, defense and space equipment (M).—Source 4(5) 564. Federal Government purchases, national defense (Q).—Source 1 (5,23) 570. Employment, defense products industries (M).—Sources 1 and 3 (5) 602. 604. 606. 612. 614. 616. 618. 620. 622. Exports, excluding military aid shipments (M).—Sources 1 and 2 (5) Exports of domestic agricultural products (M).—Sources 1 and 2 (5) Exports of nonelectrical machinery (M).—Sources 1 and 2 (5) General imports (M).—Sources 1 and 2 (5) Imports of petroleum and petroleum products (M).—Sources 1 and 2 (5) Imports of automobiles and parts (M).—Sources 1 and 2 (5) Merchandise exports, adjusted, excluding military (Q).—Source 1 (5,23) Merchandise imports, adjusted, excluding military (Q).—Source 1 (5,23) Balance on merchandise trade (Q).—Source 1 (5) 721. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, European countries, index of industrial production (M).—Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (Paris) (5,24) 722. United Kingdom, index of industrial production (M).—Central Statistical Office (London) (5,24) 723. Canada, index of industrial production (M).—Statistics Canada (Ottawa) (5,24) 725. Federal Republic of Germany, index of industrial production (M).— Statistisches Bundesamt (Wiesbaden) (5,24) 726. France, Index of industrial production (M).—Institut National de la Statistique et des Etudes Economiques (Paris) (5,24) 727. Italy, index of industrial production (M).—Istituto Centrale di Statistica (Rome) (5,24) 728. Japan, index of industrial production (M).—Ministry of International Trade and Industry (Tokyo) (5,24) 732. United Kingdom, consumer price index (M).—Department of Employment (London); percent changes seasonally adjusted by Bureau of Economic Analysis (5,25) 733. Canada, consumer price index (M).—Statistics Canada (Ottawa); percent changes seasonally adjusted by Bureau of Economic Analysis (5,25) 735. Federal Republic of Germany, consumer price index (M).—Statistisches Bundesamt (Wiesbaden); percent changes seasonally adjusted by Bureau of Economic Analysis (5,25) 736. France, consumer price index (M).—Institut National de la Statistique et des Etudes Economiques (Paris); percent changes seasonally adjusted by Bureau of Economic Analysis (5,25) 737. Italy, consumer price index (M).—istituto Centrale di Statistica (Rome); percent changes seasonally adjusted by Bureau of Economic Analysis (5,25) 738. Japan, consumer price index (M)—Bureau of Statistics, Office of the Prime Minister (Tokyo); percent changes seasonally adjusted by Bureau of Economic Analysis (5,25) 742. United Kingdom, index of stock prices (M).—Central Statistical Office (London) (5,25) 743. Canada, index of stock prices (M).—Toronto Stock Exchange (Toronto) (5,25) 745. Federal Republic of Germany, index of stock prices (M).—Statistisches Bundesamt (Wiesbaden) (5,25) 746. France, index of stock prices (M).—Institut National de la Statistique et des Etudes Economiques (Paris) (5,25) 747. Italy, index of stock prices (M).-Banca d'ltalia (Rome) (5,26) 748. Japan, index of stock prices (M).-Bank of Japan (Tokyo) (5,25) 750. Index of weighted-average exchange value of U.S. dollar against currencies of 10 industrial countries (M).-Source 4 (5,27) 752. United Kingdom, exchange rate per U.S. dollar (M).—Sources 1 and 4 (5,27) 753. Canada, exchange rate per U.S. dollar (M).-Source 4 (5,27) 755. Federal Republic of Germany, exchange rate per U.S. dollar (M).—Source 4 (5,27) 756. France, exchange rate per U.S. dollar (M).—Source 4 (5,27) 757. Italy, exchange rate per U.S. dollar (M).-Source 4 (5,27) 758. 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Presents the number employment, payroll, and shipments or sales of the establishments Data are disaggregated by industry, by State, and by country of ultimate beneficial owner, 696 pp. $36,60 (GPO STOCK NO, 003-010-00228-0), Foreign Direct Investment in the United States; Establishment Data for Manufacturing, 1991. (1994) A joint effort by BEA and the Bureau of the Census, this is the latest in a series of publications that present new data for foreign-owned U.S. manufacturing establishments (plants), including data on their number, value added, shipments, employment, total employee compensation, employee benefits, hourly wage rates of production workers, cost of materials and energy used, inventories by stage ot fabrication, and expenditures for new plant and equipment, The data are disaggregated by detailed1 industry (up to 459 industries), by State, and by country of investor, 220 pp, $14.00 (GPO STOCK NO, 003-01000250-6),, Also available in this series are publications presenting data for 1990, 216 pp. $14,00 (GPO STOCK NO. 003-010-00242-5); 1989, 204 PP $13.00 (GPO STOCK HO, 003-010-00243-3); and 198$, 204 pp. $13,00 (GPO STOCK NO;, 003-010-00244^1), US, Direct Investment Abroad: 1989 Benchmark Survey, Final Results, (1992) Presents final results of the latest benchmark survey of the worldwide operations of U.S. multinational companies. Contains detailed 19% data on the financial structure and overall operations of U.S. parent companies and their foreign affiliates in 263 tables organized by industry of parent or by country and industry of affiliate. Also contains a complete methodology and copies of survey forms and instructions. 448 pp, $25.00 (GPO STOCK NO, 003-010-00234-4), US. Direct Investment Abroad: Operations of US, Parent Companies and Their Foreign Affiliates, (1994) Two publications containing results for 1991 and 1992 from BEA'S annual survey of the worldwide operations of US, multinational companies. Contains information on the financial structure and operations of US. parent companies and their foreign affiliates. Data are classified by country and industry of affiliate and by industry of US. parent 100 pp. $6.50 each. Preliminary 1992 Estimates* GPO STOCK NO, 003-010-00245-0; Revised 1991 Estimates: GPO STOCK NO, O03-010-OO247-6. ; UNITE*} STATES GOVRNMENT POINTING * DC 0BBICIAI* BUSINESS $300 Schedule of Upcoming BEA News Releases Subject Release Date U.S. International Trade in Goods and Services, March 1995 Gross Domestic Product, ist quarter 1995 (preliminary) Corporate Profits, ist quarter 1995 (preliminary) '* May 18 May 31 May 31 Personal Income and Outlays, April 1995 Composite Indexes of Leading, Coincident, and Lagging Indicators, April 1995 U.S. International Transactions, ist quarter 1995 U.S. International Trade in Goods and Services, April 1995 Gross Domestic Product, ist quarter 1995 (final) Corporate Profits, ist quarter 1995 (revised) June i June 2 June 21 * June 21 June 30 June 30 Personal Income and Outlays, May 1995 Composite Indexes of Leading, Coincident, and Lagging Indicators, May 1995 U.S. International Trade in Goods and Services, May 1995 State Personal Income, ist quarter 1995 Gross Domestic Product, 2nd quarter 1995 (advance) Personal Income and Outlays, June 1995 July July * July July July July Composite Indexes of Leading, Coincident, and Lagging Indicators, June 1995 U.S. International Trade in Goods and Services, June 1995 State Per Capita Personal Income, 1994 (revised) Gross Domestic Product, 2nd quarter 1995 (preliminary) Corporate Profits, 2nd quartet 1995 (preliminary) Personal Income and Outlays, July 1995 * Joint release by the Bureau of the Census and BEA. For information, call (202) 606-9900, Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. Department of Commerce. 3 6 18 26 28 31 Aug. 2 * Aug. 17 , Aug. 23 Aug. 30 Aug. 30 Aug. 31