Full text of Survey of Current Business : July 1966
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JULY''1966 / VOLUME 46 NUMBER . OF .';:•'••; •- ; • ••: ; V^X./'- ' , / ' . ' • • •:' ';; ' CONTENTS / \ ',- . - ; . ;/•--. ' • THE BUSINESS SITUATION Second Quarter GNP June BtiBiness Activity Pfati&nal Income and Product Tables 1 2 4 ",U.S, NATIONAL INCOME'AND PRODUCT .ACCOUNTS 7 Summary Data 1. Gross National Product and National Income -•2. Personal Income and Outlay 3» Goyernment Receipts and Expenditures , , / :•'• ; * : ' • ., 4« Foreign Transactions 5« Saving arid Investment 6. Income and Employment by Industry 7* Supplementary Tables 8* Implicit Price Deflators 8 11 18 21 27 28 30 35 38 < , NEW > * . ' STATISTICAL SERIES Intercity Motor Carriers 4-, . ' ' , U. SL Department - of John T. Connor / Secretary , Office of'Business -Ek^onomkjs - • ' ' / ; ' - ' George Jaszi /Director Morris R« Gdldman Ixmis J» Paradiso Associate Directors Murray F* Foss / Editor : ;•• .'.' Leo V, Barry, Jr. / Statistics Editor Billy Jo Htirley / Graphics STAFF CONTRIBUTORS TO;THIS - BusinessRemew: JLeo Bernstein National Income and Product; National Income Division Staff 40 , CURRENT BUSINESS STATISTICS General S1-S24 Industry S24-S40 Siibject Index (Inside Back Cover) Subscription prices9 including weekly statistical sup* plements9are $6 a year/or domestic and $9.75 for foreign mailing. Single issue 45 cents. Make checks payable to the Superintendent of Docu* ments and send to '£/. S. Government Printing Q^ce, Washington* IX C. 20402, or to any U.S. Department of Commerce Field Office* ,ILS. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE FIELD OFFICES , N. Mex., 87101 UJS, Conrjlioiise Ph, 247-0311, e, Alaska, 99501 Loussae-Sogn BHg. 272-6331. Atlanta, .» 7S ' Forsy tfa St. 526-6000, Baltimore, M<l., 305 U.S, Customhouse PL 2-8460. BirwuinghaMi^ Ala;, 35205 908 £. 20th St* Ph. 325-3327. Boston, Mas^*, 02110 80 Federal St. CA 3-2312. 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First Aye- Ph;- 261-3385. - Seattle, Wash., 98104 ' 809 Federal Office Bldg. Pittsburgh, PaM 583-5615. 1000 Liberty Are. Ph. 644-2850, the BUSINESS SITUATION LrROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT in the second quarter rose about $11 billion to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $732 billion, according to preliminary estimates. This advance was well below the extraordinary rises of the two preceding quarters, when GNP increased $18 billion and $16% billion. Within the quarter, the rate of expansion was uneven. Monthly indicators, CHART 1 The pace of the GNP advance slowed in the second quarter... Billion $ Change 20 ; such as employment, personal income, and retail sales, suggest that activity rose more rapidly in June than in either of the 2 preceding months. For the quarter as a whole, the slower rate of expansion was attributable chiefly to the consumer sector, where the rise in expenditures was held down mainly, though not exclusively, by a decline in automobile purchases. On an overall basis, GNP other than consumption outlays continued to advance about in line with other recent quarters. About two-thirds of the \% percent rise in current dollar GNP in ' the second quarter was due to prices and about one-third to a gain in the physical volume of output The second quarter price rise of almost 1 percent was about the same as the first quarter advance and about double the quarterly rate of price increase in 1965. Expansion in consumption slows As CONSUMER EXPENDITURES rose only $3 billion Mainly because of a sharp decline in CONSUMER AUTO PURCHASES 10 1 2 3 4 1 1965 2 1966 Change From Previous Quarter Seasonally Adjusted, at Annual Rates U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of Business Economics 66-7-1 Personal consumption expenditures lost much of their buoyancy in the second quarter with a rise of only $3% billion, after gains of about $10 billion in each of the two preceding quarters. Although consumer spending on services continued to increase substantially—by $4 billion—spending on nondurables rose only $2% billion, well below the $5 billion increases in the fourth quarter of 1965 and the first of 1966. These gains were offset in part by a $3 billion decline in auto buying; this reduction exceeded even the large drop in auto purchases that occurred in the fourth quarter of 1964, when strikes in the auto industry reduced supplies. In addition, spending on other durables, which had increased an average of $1 billion per quarter since the beginning of 1965, fell $K billion in the second quarter. This month's SURVEY presents the annual revision of the national income and product accounts. The full set of tables for the 1962-65 period, with revised estimates for 1963-65, starts on page 11. Revised first quarter and preliminary second quarter 1966 estimates appear in the 14 tables on pages 4-6. From now on, each issue of the SURVEY will carry these 14 tables with the latest available figures. The tables will follow a standard arrangement and numbering system. The new procedure should facilitate the use of the national accounts data by providing all of the available current figures in each issue. Rise in business investment Business fixed investment increased $1% billion as industry continued to build up capacity and modernize its facilities. Although the gain was below that of other recent quarters, the outlook for plant and equipment investment for the remainder of the year appears favorable. Unfilled order backlogs for machinery and equipment rose throughout the second quarter both absolutely and in relation to sales. In the latest OBE-SEC plant and equipment survey, conducted in April and May, businessmen reported that they expected to expand their investment expenditures throughout 1966. Residential construction outlays declined $% billion in the second quarter, following a $1 billion rise in the first. Homebuilding activity has fluctuated in a relatively narrow range for the past 2 years. The decline in housing starts this spring was probably influenced by the tightening in money and credit markets that started in late 1965. With credit becoming more stringent toward the end of the second quarter, prospects for residential construction appear unfavorable for the near term. Inventory Investment amounted to $12 billion in the second quarter, a rise 1 SURVEY OF CURKENT BUSINESS of $3 billion. This followed a decline of $1# billion in the first quarter. A significant factor in the second quarter step-up in inventory investment was the increase in auto dealers' inventories, which resulted from the decline in auto Government outlays higher Both Federal and State and local government purchases continued to expand rapidly in the second quarter. Federal purchases increased by $2% billion as the requirements for the war in Vietnam led to higher military purchases for the fifth straight quarter. State and local government purchases increased by $1% billion, in line with their long-term rising trend. Net exports declined moderately again, by $% billion; exports rose by about $K billion but imports increased more. Net exports have been declining since the second quarter of 1965. Since that quarter, exports have increased less than $2 billion, while imports have advanced almost $5 billion. result, disposable personal income rose only $4% billion, the smallest gain in 3 years. June Business Activity Business activity advanced at a somewhat faster pace in June than in either April or May. A number of key measures showed accelerated activity though a few showed the opposite tendency. Among the former, seasonally adjusted retail sales, after 2 months of decrease, improved noticeably, mainly because of higher automobile sales. Employment, after little change in April and only a modest increase in May, picked up considerably in June and was a key factor underlying the stepped-up advance in payrolls and total personal income. The rise in CHART 2 The growth In PERSONAL INCOME moderated in the second quarter Billion $ Change Gain in income moderates 20 The slowing in the rate of gain in production was reflected in the demand 15 for labor. Total employment in nonfarm establishments rose about 600,000 10 in the second quarter, as compared with increases of about one million in each of the two preceding quarters. Average hours worked per week fell slightly from the first quarter's postwar record. But PERSONAL TAXES showed After nine straight quarters of decrease, another large increase the seasonally adjusted unemployment rate rose slightly in the second quarter. Personal income rose $8% billion after advances of $11 billion and $12 billion in the two preceding quarters. With a smaller rise in employment, the -5 expansion in wages and salaries modand DISPOSABLE INCOME registered erated. Property income showed a only a modest rise small advance. However, the year-Jong 20 rise in farm income came to a halt: Farm proprietors' income fell $K billion as a result of a drop in prices received by farmers. Transfer payments were unchanged over the quarter. Personal tax payments in the second quarter showed a $4 billion rise over the first. In April, there were large final settlements on 1965 personal 2 3 4 1 income tax liabilities and, in May, the 1965 1966 Change From Previous Quarter change to graduated income tax withSeasonally Adjusted, at Annual Rates holding rates became effective. As a U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of Business Economics M i July 1966 payrolls, however, was dampened by a cutback in average weekly hours of work over a fairly broad range of manufacturing industries. Industrial production rose but not as much as in May. It is clear that although economic activity is moving ahead at a good pace, it is not increasing at the exceptionally rapid rate of last fall and winter. The rise in output attributable to the increases in defense and capital goods demand is being offset to some extent by a weakness in homebuilding and by the decrease in auto production that has followed the earlier setback in sales. The more moderate gains in output this spring have reduced some of the severe pressures on available resources that were evident in the early part of the year. With large capacity additions being made and with output risingless rapidly, capacity utilization has probably eased slightly. A similar situation prevails in the labor market. The seasonally adjusted unemployment rate in June, at 4 percent, was unchanged from May and above the 3.7-3.8 percent range that prevailed from February through April. These developments could lessen pressures on prices. However, in wholesale industrial markets, there was no evidence through June of any overall slowdown in the accelerated price rise that started around the turn of the year. Income and employment rise 2 66-7-2 Personal income rose $3}£ billion (annual rate) in June after increasing $2% billion in May and $1K billion in April. The June rise reflected payroll gains in all of the important industry groups and a rather large irregular rise in transfer payments, chiefly social security benefits; these were offset in part by the third successive monthly reduction in farm income. The June payroll increase was due chiefly to a considerable improvement in employment. The number of workers in nonfarm establishments increased 325,000 over May, seasonally adjusted, after changing very little in April and rising by 125,000 in May. The June increase was as large as the average rise from September 1965 through March 1966, a period of very strong employment advance. SUEVEY OF CUEKENT BUSINESS July 1966 Increases were widespread among the major industries. As compared with April and May, the chief difference was in private nonmanufacturing employment, which rose considerably in June after decreasing in April and May. As the table below indicates, the shift was especially pronounced in contract construction where strikes earlier in the spring held down employment. Manufacturing employment, paced by substantial gains in the machinery industries and primary metals, increased by more than 100,000 in June. There were modest cutbacks in lumber, transportation equipment, food, and leather; most other manufacturing industries showed small rises. Average weekly hours of work in manufacturing declined for the second straight month, after seasonal adjustment. The June figure, 41.2, was 0.4 hours below the recent peak in February and the same as the average for the full year 1965. The seasonally adjusted unemploym ent rate remained unchanged from May to June at 4.0 percent. Although the number of employed persons increased substantially, the labor force rose somewhat more and the number of persons out of work edged up to 3.1 million. This was slightly higher than Table 1.—Seasonally Adjusted Changes in Nonfarm Establishment Employment [In thousands] 19 36 Dec. Sept.- 1965Dec. Mar. 1966 Mar.- Mar.- Apr.- May1965 June Apr. May June Total 466 17 125 324 209 919 243 791 198 268 65 —48 •59 66 74 250 331 351 267 80 79 108 588 440 -1 -128 -13 142 13 2 1,128 1 034 Government Private.-. Manufacturing___ Nonmanufacturing- __ Mining Construction __ Transportation & public Utilities... Trade Finance Service. 200 12 181 21 161 -2 -41 33 6 76 —130 —92 —95 57 5 —11 1 10 11 12 4 22 5 44 10 20 28 193 18 123 21 45 15 52 Source: U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics. I CHART 3 Dealers' Sales of New Domestically Produced Cars Showed some recovery in June after decreases in April and May Million Units 10 than last year; this will hold assemblies of passenger cars in July to about 460,000 units, which will virtually complete the 1966 model year runs. According to present schedules, the 1967 models are not expected to be produced in any sizable volume until late August. Industrial prices higher Strike Period 5 f 1 1 1 il,t 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 \ \ i.l Hi 1 1 1 1 H 1 1 l;n 1 1 1 1 1 n i, 11 HIM 1963 1964 1965 1966 Monthly, Seasonally Adjusted, at Annual Rates U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of Business Economics 66-7-3 the level that prevailed in the first 5 months of 1966. Some recovery in auto sales Sales of new domestically produced passenger cars, which fell sharply in both April and May, recovered significantly in June. The seasonally adjusted annual rate increased to 8.3 million units from 7.4 million in May arid 8 million in April. For the quarter as a whole, dealers' sales of new cars were some 13 percent below the high first quarter rate. The auto industry is approaching the end of the 1966 model year with the number of unsold new cars at a record level. Inventories at the end of June totaled 1.5 million units, seasonally adjusted, and were equivalent to a stock-sales ratio of 2.2; in June 1965, inventories totaled 1.2 million units and the stock-sales ratio was 1.6. Output of passenger cars in June was maintained at about the reduced volume of May, some 7 percent below the January-April average, after seasonal adjustment. Factory shutdowns and vacations will start 2 to 3 weeks earlier Prices in wholesale markets rose very slightly in June, continuing the pattern evident since March. As in other recent months, an increase in industrial prices was largely offset by a reduction in prices of farm products and processed foods combined. Wholesale industrial prices in June rose 0.2 percent—somewhat more on a seasonally adjusted basis—for the sixth straight month of increase. Most of the major commodity groups showed rises last month, after seasonal allowance; however, lumber declined, and textiles, nonmetallic mineral products, and furniture and household durables were unchanged. Although demand and output rose less rapidly this spring than early in the year, there have so far been no indications of a slowdown in the overall rise in industrial prices. From March to June, wholesale industrial prices increased as much as from December to March; this was the result of shifts that were largely offsetting, as may be seen in the table below. Table 2.—Seasonally Adjusted Changes in Wholesale Industrial Prices [Percent change] Dec. 1965Mar. 1966 All industrial commodities Mar.June 1966 0.9 1.0 .4 4.1 -.1 —.2 .9 .1 30 1.8 .3 1.5 Lumber and wood products Pulp paper, and allied products Metals and metal products Machinery and motive products. _. 25 .8 1.3 .9 17 1.4 .6 .9 Furniture and other household durables. Nonmetallic mineral products Tobacco products and bottled beverages. Miscellaneous products _ __ .1 .4 1.6 1. 2 .6 4 .4 4.6 Textile products and apparel. '. _. Hides skins leather Fuels and power ._ _Chemicals and allied products Rubber and rubber products.. -•. Source: Basic data, Bureau of Labor Statistics; seasonal adjustments, U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of Busi ness Economics. SURVEY OF CUEEENT BUSINESS July 1966 NATIONAL INCOME AND PRODUCT TABLES 1965 1963 1964 1965 I II 1965 1966 III IV UP I 1963 1964 1965 I Seasonally adjusted at annual rates II 1966 III rv I II" Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Billions of current dollars Billions of 1958 dollars Table 1.—Gross National Product in Current and Constant Dollars (1.1, 1.2) Gross National Product Personal consumption expenditures Durable goods Nondurable goods Services Gross private domestic investment 590.5 631 7 681 2 660 8 672 9 721 2 732 0 551 0 580 0 614 4 600.3 607.8 618.2 631.2 401 4 431 5 418 9 426 8 686 5 435 o 704 4 375 0 445 2 455 0 458 9 353 3 373 8 396 2 387 1 392 2 398 9 406.5 412.8 53.9 168.6 152 4 59 4 66 1 178.9 190.6 163 1 174 8 65 1 184.5 169 3 64.4 189.4 173 0 66 7 191. 4 176 9 68 0 197 0 180 2 70 3 201.9 183 4 66 8 204.7 187 4 53 7 162 2 137 4 59 1 66.4 170.5 178.2 144 2 151 6 64.8 64.2 174.2 177.6 148 1 150 4 67.2 69.2 178.5 182.5 153.1 154. 8 72.2 184.1 156.5 103.8 103.7 106.7 111.9 114.5 118.4 82.5 87.1 Fixed investment Nonresidential Structures __ _ Producers' durable equipment Residential structures Nonfarm Farm. _ Change in business inventories Nonfarm Farm 93.0 106.6 95.3 97.9 102.2 103.5 91.9 68.4 23.2 45.2 23.5 23.0 .5 10.2 8.9 1.3 95.0 70.8 24.3 46.4 24.3 23.8 .5 8.5 8.0 .4 81 9 57 4 18.9 38 5 24 6 24.0 .5 46 5.2 —.6 89.0 64.9 21.7 43.2 24.1 23.6 .5 88 8.0 .9 86.6 62.3 20.7 41.5 24,4 23.8 ,.5 9.3 9,3 »0 88.0 63.4 21.7 41 7 24.5 24.0 .5 73 6.5 .8 5.3 42.3 37.0 5.6 32.1 26.6 8.5 36.4 28.0 6.3 37.3 31.0 5.7 33,, 4 27., 7 7.1 38.7 31.6 6.4 38.4 31.9 6.0 38. 7 32.8 5.9 40.1 34.2 141.2 69.8 52.5 17.3 71.4 145.0 149.4 71.9 74.6 54.6 57.0 17.4 17.6 73.1 74.8 109.6 59.5 111.3 57.8 114.1 57.8 111.5 56. 2 113.2 57.3 115.0 58.3 116.6 59.3 118.3 60.4 50.1 53.4 56.3 55.3 55.9 56.7 57.3 57.9 111.6 112.6 631.2 640.5 609.7 621.0 8.5 10.2 632.0 8.5 97 5 69.7 24.9 44 8 27 8 27.2 .6 91 81 .9 94 4 66 7 23.6 43 1 27 7 27 2 .6 95 94 .0 96 0 67 9 24.6 43 3 28 1 27.5 .6 76 67 .9 98 0 101 5 105 6 106 4 70 2 73 9 77.0 78.3 24 4 26.8 28.5 28.0 45 8 47 1 48 5 50 3 27 8 27 6 28 6 28 1 27 3 27.0 28.0 27.6 .5 .5 .5 .5 8 9 12 0 8 7 10 4 72 8.5 11.8 9.0 .2 1.4 .5 1.5 5.9 32.3 26.4 8.5 37.0 28.5 7.0 39.0 32.0 6.4 35.1 28.7 8.2 40.5 32.3 7.1 40.1 33.0 6.1 40.3 34.2 Government purchases of goods and services Federal National defense Other State and local 122.5 64.2 50 8 13.5 58.2 128.9 65.2 50 0 15.2 63.7 136.2 131.6 66.8 64.4 50 1 48.2 16.7 16.2 69.4 67.3 134.3 137.7 65.6 67.5 49 1 50 7 16.5 16.8 68.7 70.2 Addendum: Implicit price deflator for seasonally adjusted GNP, 1958=100 107.2 108.9 110.9 110.7 111.0 95.9 76 7 51 9 17.9 34 0 24 8 24 2 .5 58 5.1 .8 88 3 60.7 21.0 39 7 27 6 27 0 .6 47 53 —.6 110.1 97.8 89.4 65.5 21.3 44.2 23.9 23.4 .5 8.5 7.1 1.4 81 3 54.3 19.5 34 8 27 0 26.4 .6 59 51 .8 Net exports of goods and services Exports Imports 86.5 640.5 6.0 41.7 35.6 644.2 113.6 Table 2.—Gross National Product by Major Type of Product in Current and Constant Dollars (1.3, 1.5) Gross National Product „ Final sales Change in business inventories Goods output 590.5 298 6 Final sales Ohange in bnsvrifisR invp.'ntoTie.s 631.7 584 6 627 0 59 47 318 2 292 7 313 6 59 47 681.2 660.8 686.5 704.4 721.2 358 8 366 0 357.0 89 135.2 128 8 6.4 147.6 141 8 5.8 344 7 333 8 116.1 113 3 2.8 125 5 138 5 135 1 122 2 132 2 127 7 63 74 33 Nondurable goods Final sales Change in business inventories 182 5 179 4 3.1 192 7 206 3 191 3 203 5 1.4 2.7 338 8 198 7 203 6 196 6 202 4 21 1.2 254 3 259 8 226 2 244 5 262 0 Structures 65 7 68.9 74 5 72 7 74.3 Addendum : Gross auto product 25 1 25 8 31 4 32 6 30.8 347 5 141 0 134 3 67 142.6 137 9 4.7 732.0 712 3 720 0 8 9 12.0 335 7 324 3 331.2 338.8 348 4 76 91 95 8 7 10 4 Durable goods Final sales Change in business inventories Services 672.9 672 1 651 4 665 3 677 8 694 0 76 91 95 8 7 10 4 206 5 216 2 218 4 204 4 210 5 215 2 5.7 3.1 2.1 580.0 614.4 600.3 607.8 545 2 575 4 46 58 605 6 8.8 591 0 9.3 551.0 600 5 7.3 618.2 644.2 289 7 307 2 328 5 319. 7 322 5 330.9 341.0 344.7 283.9 302.6 319.7 310.3 315.2 322.4 330.7 336.2 8.5 12 0 9.3 8.5 10.2 46 58 88 73 114.2 123 1 135 5 131.8 131. 7 138.3 140.3 145.4 111 4 119 9 129 4 124 6 125 5 131 8 135.7 139.9 5.5 4.7 6.5 6.1 7.2 2.8 3.2 6.2 175 6 184 1 193 0 187 8 190 8 192 6 200 6 199.4 172 5 182 7 190 3 185 7 189 6 190 6 195.1 196.3 3.0 5.6 2.1 2.0 1.4 2.7 1.1 3.1 265 1 268 8 275 5 200 9 211 2 73 9 76.9 79.8 60 4 61.7 31 6 30 5 31.5 24 7 25 4 227.7 221 1 216 6 220 3 223 3 224.0 64.8 64.0 65.0 64.0 66.2 68.0 31 4 32 2 30 6 31.9 30.7 32.2 607.8 618.2 631.2 640.5 579.4 588.0 Table 3.—Gross National Product by Sector in Current and Constant Dollars (1.7, 1.8) Gross National Product Private _ ._ Business Nonfarm Farm Households and institutions Rest of the world General government 590.5 631.7 681.2 660.8 672.9 686.5 704.4 721.2 532.4 568.7 613. 4 595.2 606.4 618.2 633.8 648.4 513 0 491.5 21 5 16.0 34 547 4 527 0 20 4 17 3 40 590 8 573 0 567. 1 551.6 23 8 21 4 18.3 17.5 47 43 583 6 559.4 24 2 18.0 48 595 3 611 2 624.9 570.6 586.6 599.3 24 7 24 7 25 7 18.7 19.1 19.1 44 41 34 58.1 63.0 67.8 65.6 66.6 68.3 70.6 72.8 732. 0 551.0 580.0 614.4 503.2 530.8 563.5 550. 2 600. 3 486.6 513.3 545 4 532 '2 463.8 491. 2 521. 7 509.4 22 8 22 0 23 8 22 8 13.2 13.6 14.0 13.4 34 39 41 46 47.8 49.2 50.9 50.1 557.3 567.2 538 9 548 9 561 6 569.4 515.1 524 6 537.5 546.4 23 8 24 3 24 1 23.0 13 7 14 2 14.5 14.3 33 43 46 40 50.5 p Preliminary. NOTE.—The numbers in parentheses in the titles of tables 1-14 on pages 4-6 are the numbers of the national income and product tables on pages 11-39. 51.1 51.8 52.5 644.2 1965 1963 1964 1965 I II 1966 III IV I 1965 1966 UP 1963 1964 1965 I II III Seasonally adjusted at annual rates [Billions of dollars] IV I HP Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Table 4.—Relation of Gross National Product, National Income, and Personal Income (1.9) [Billions of dollars] Table 6.—National'Income by Type of Income (1.10) National income 481.9 517.3 559.0 543.3 552.2 562.7 577 8 595 7 Compensation of employees 341.0 365.7 392.9 381.7 387.8 395.6 406.5 419.6 Wages and salaries Private Military Government civilian Supplements to wages and salaries Employer contributions for social insurance 26.9 28.0 29.2 28.8 29.0 29.2 29.8 36.5 37.0 .0 .0 .0 .0 .0 .0 .0 .0 .0 33.0 34.2 37.1 36.0 35.2 39.4 37.9 40.0 40.1 17.6 16. 5 19.1 17.3 20.6 19.2 20.0 18.1 20.5 18.8 20.9 19.5 21.0 20.2 21.9 20.9 22.5 21.1 2.3 2.5 2.6 2.6 2.5 2.5 2.6 2.6 2.6 465.5 496.0 535.1 518.0 527.6 541.9 552.8 564.6 573.3 insurance Wage accruals less disbursements Proprietors' income . Plus: Government transfer payments to persons Interest paid by government (net) and by consumers Dividends Business transfer payments _•_ __ Equals: Personal income Table 5.—Gross Corporate Product 1 (1.14) Gross corporate product. __ 335.0 360.9 391.2 381. 8 385.8 393. 1 403.9 415.2 Capital consumption allowances Indirect business taxes plus transfer payments less subsidies Income originating in corporate business . _- . Compensation of employees. . Wages and salaries Supplements Net interest Corporate profits and inventory valuation adjustment -_ Profits before tax Profits tax liability Profits after tax Dividends Undistributed profits. __ Inventory valuation adjustment -. -~--- 33.9 36.3 35.2 36.0 36.8 37. 2 37.7 38.3 32.9 34.8 37.4 37.1 37.1 37.3 37.9 37.3 38.6 216.3 231.4 249.0 242.4 246.1 250. 5 256.8 265.9 270.8 194.9 208.5 224. 1 218.3 221.6 225.4 231.2 237.2 241. 5 21.4 22.9 24.8 24.1 24.5 25.1 25.7 28.7 29.3 -2.4 -2.7 -2.5 -2.6 -2.5 -2.4 -2.4 -2.4 -2.5 56.4 56.9 26.3 30.5 15.4 15.1 63.6 64.0 28.4 35.6 16.0 19.6 -.5 -.4 -1.5 -1.3 -1.8 15.6 71.0 72.5 31.2 41.3 17.7 23.6 16.5 69.6 71.0 30.7 40.3 16.5 23.7 16.0 69.2 70.9 30.7 40.2 17.2 23.0 16.3 70.9 71.9 30.9 41.0 18.1 22.9 74.4 76.2 32.4 43.7 19.0 24.7 76.7 79.5 34.1 45.4 19.4 26.0 -1.0 -1.8 -2.8 -2.0 16.6 17.2 1 31.0 32.9 35.3 34.2 35.0 35.8 36.3 36.8 37.2 31.5 33.3 35.8 35.5 35.5 35.8 36.3 35. 7 36.9 257.6 279.0 303.5 296.0 299.0 304.9 314.1 324.7 204.4 218.7 235.5 229.4 232.8 236.9 243. 0 251. 6 256.3 184. 5 197.3 212. 3 206.9 209.9 213.5 219.0 224.8 228.9 19.9 21.4 23.2 22.5 22.9 23.4 24.0 26.8 27.4 5.2 4.5 5.9 5.8 6.0 6.3 5.8 5.6 6.5 48.6 49.1 22.9 26.2 14.3 11.9 55.2 55.6 24.3 31.3 14.6 16.8 -.5 -.4 -1.5 -1.3 -1.8 -1.0 -1.8 -2.8 -2.0 62.1 63.6 27.5 36.1 16.2 19.9 61.1 62.4 27.1 35.3 15.0 20.2 60,4 62.2 27.0 35.2 15.7 19.5 64.9 66.7 28.5 38.2 17.5 20.7 67.3 70.1 30.2 39.9 17.7 22.2 62.3 57.1 69.5 64.3 77.6 71.4 75.5 69.5 76.2 70.1 77.8 71.6 80.9 74.4 83.1 76.7 46.8 42.8 53.5 49.7 59.9 55.2 58.9 54.5 59.0 54.4 59.7 55.0 61.9 57.0 63.7 58.9 32.0 34.5 33.5 34.1 34.8 35.7 39.6 15.0 15.4 16.0 15.8 15 9 16.0 16 3 19 6 19 9 14.9 16.6 18.5 17.8 18.2 18.8 19.4 20.0 20 6 12.2 2.7 13.7 3.0 15.4 3.1 40 5 51.0 51.9 55.7 53.3 55.9 56.7 57.1 58.4 57.9 39.9 40.7 40.5 40.4 40.7 41.1 41.4 41.6 37.9 39.9 41.0 .0 .0 -.4 Farm. 13.1 12.0 15.1 12.9 15.5 16.0 16.0 17.0 16.3 Rental income of persons _ 17.1 17.7 18.3 18.1 18.3 18.4 18.5 18.7 18.8 Corporate profits and inventory valuation adjustment 58.9 66.6 74.2 73.2 72.7 74.0 76.9 80.0 59.4 67.0 75.7 74.5 74.5 75.0 78.7 82.7 26.3 28.4 33.1 38.7 16.5 17.3 16.6 21.3 31.2 44.5 19. 2 25.3 30.7 30.7 43.8 43.8 18.1 18.8 25.7 25.0 Profits tax liability Profits after tax Dividends _ __ Undistributed profits Net interest 30.9 32.4 34.1 44.1 46.3 48. 7 19. 5 20. 2 20.9 24.6 26.1 27.8 21.1 -.5 -.4 -1.5 -1.3 -1.8 -1.0 -1.8 -2.8 -2.0 13.8 15.5 17.8 16.9 17.5 18.1 18. 7 19.1 19.6 Table 7.—National Income by Industry Division (1.11) All industries, total 481.9 517.3 559.0 543.3 552.2 562.7 577.8 595.7 Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries Mining and contruction Manufacturing _ Nondurable goods Durable goods 18.6 17.7 21.0 18.6 21.4 21.9 22. 1 23.2 30.2 32.4 34.8 34.1 34.4 34.6 35.9 37.1 143.8 155.1 170. 4 166.7 167.6 170.8 176.5 184. 4 57.5 61.5 65.6 64.4 64.9 65.6 67.5 69.8 86.3 93.6 104.8 102.2 102.7 105.2 108.9 114.7 21.4 10.5 22.9 11.2 22.0 10.9 22.8 10.9 23.1 11.2 23 7 11.6 24.1 11.7 11.1 79.1 11.6 83.6 11.3 82.1 11.6 82.5 11. 7 83.9 11.9 85.9 11.9 88.0 61.0 63.0 59.3 60.6 60.3 62.0 61.5 64.1 62.9 65.3 63.7 66.4 75.2 4.3 72.9 4.7 73.9 4.8 75.7 4.1 78.5 3.4 80.7 4.4 Finance, insurance, and real estate 53.6 57.1 Services _ __ 54.1 58.9 Government and government enterprises _ _ _ _ _ 64.7 70.0 3.4 Rest of the world 4.0 Table 8.—Corporate Profits (Before Tax) and Inventory Valuation Adjustment by Broad Industry Groups (6.12) All industries, total _ _ 58.9 66.6 74.2 73.2 72.7 74.0 76.9 80.0 7.8 8.4 8.9 8.5 8.7 8.9 9.5 9.4 1.6 6.2 1.7 6.7 1.8 7.1 Financial institutions Mutual Stock. . __ Nonfinancial corporations Excludes gross product originating in the rest of the world. Preliminary. 61.9 62.9 27.2 35.8 16.6 19.2 29.9 Transportation 20.0 O omm un ication 9.8 Electric, gas, and sanitary services 10.3 Wholesale and retail trade. _ _ _ _ _ 73.4 18. 0 Gross product originating in nonfinancial corpora320.0 345.3 374.6 365.8 369.5 376.5 386.7 397.2 tions Capital consumption allowances Indirect business taxes plus transfer payments less subsidies Income originating in nonfinancial onrporations Compensation of employees . _ Wages and salaries Supplements Net interest Corporate profits and inventory valuation adjustment Profits before tax . _. Profits tax liability . . _ Profits after tax Dividends Undistributed profits. __ Inventory valuation adjustment 311 3 14 1 61.8 37.9 Inventory valuation adjustment 270.4 292.3 317.5 309.5 312.8 319.0 328.8 340.1 387 2 251.6 269.3 289.1 281.2 285 8 291.1 298 5 305 9 10.8 11.7 12.1 11.8 11.7 12.0 13.0 13.6 48.6 52.6 57.1 55.2 56.3 57.7 59.3 60.4 Business and professional Income of unincorporated enterprises __ __ _ _ _ Inventory valuation adjustment Profits before tax . _ 31.8 Gross product originating infinancialinstitutions. . 15.0 Addenda: Cash flow, gross of dividends: All corporations. Nonfinancial corporations Cash flow, net of dividends: All corporations Nonfinancial corporations Other labor income Employer contributions to private pension and welfare funds Other 427.7 311.1 333. 6 358. 4 348.2 353.7 360.8 370.8 380.0 Manufacturing Nondurable goods Durable goods Transportation, communication, and public utilities All other industries 51.2 58.2 65.3 64.6 64.0 65.0 67.5 70.6 28.8 13.0 15 8 32.4 14.5 17 9 37.8 15.7 22 1 37.4 15.5 21 9 36.7 15.5 21 2 37.4 15.5 21.9 39.6 16.4 23.2 41.9 17.2 24.7 9.5 12.9 10.4 15.4 11.1 16.4 10.7 16.5 10.9 16.4 11.2 16.4 11.5 16.4 11.3 17.4 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 6 1965 1963 1964 1965 I II July 1966 1966 III IV I 1965 II* 1963 1964 1965 Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 573.3 533.6 358.4 348.2 J53.7 160.8 570.8 580.0 387.2 25.7 L34.0 144.3 L40.9 142.6 L44.8 L48.9 L53.8 00.6 07.2 L15.5 L12.6 L14.0 L16.2 119. 2 L23.0 76.0 81.2 86.7 84.6 86.0 87.1 89.1 90.8 49.9 54.1 58.1 55.7 57.2 59.2 60.5 61.3 59.5 64.3 69.2 67.0 68.0 69.7 72.3 74.1 156.8 125.9 92.0 62.5 75.9 11.1 Personal tax and nontax receipts Corporate profits tax accruals. Indirect business tax and nontax accruals.. Contributions for social insurance 18.2 18.8 19.4 20.0 20.6 Federal Government expenditures 51.0 51.9 Proprietors' income Business and professional. __ 37.9 39.9 Farm 13.1 12.0 55.7 53.3 40.7 40.5 15. 1 12. 9 55.9 40.4 15.5 56.7 40.7 16.0 57.1 41.1 16.0 58.4 41.4 17.0 57.9 41.6 16.3 Purchases of goods and services Rental income of persons Dividends 17.1 16.5 17.7 17.3 18.3 19.2 18.1 18.1 18.3 18.8 18.4 19.5 18.5 20.2 18.7 20.9 18.8 21.1 Personal interest income 31.4 34.6 38.4 36.9 38.0 38.9 39.7 41.0 42.1 __ 35.3 36.8 39.7 38.6 37.8 42.0 40.5 42.6 42.7 15.2 16.0 18.1 16.7 16.6 20.4 18.6 19.5 19.7 2.8 5.0 12.2 2.6 5.3 12.9 2.2 5.6 13.8 2.4 5.5 14.1 2.2 5.6 13.3 2.2 5.7 13.7 2.0 5.8 14.1 2.0 5.9 15.2 1.6 6.0 15.3 Less: Personal contributions for social insurance 11.8 12.5 13.2 13.1 13.2 13.2 13.5 16.9 17.1 Less: Personal tax and nontax payments 60.9 59.4 66.0 64.9 66.6 65.7 66.7 69.5 73.6 Equals: Disposable personal income _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 404.6 436.6 469.1 453.2 461.0 476.2 486.1 495.1 499.7 Less: Personal outlays. 384.7 412.1 443.4 430.3 438.6 447.1 457.6 468.4 472.1 375.0 401.4 431.5 418.9 426.8 435.0 445.2 455.6 458.9 Transfer payments Old-age and survivors insurance benefits State unemployment insurance benefits Venterans* benefits Other Personal consumption expenditures _ Interest paid by consumers , Personal transfer payments to foreigners Equals: Personal saving Addendum: Disposable personal income in constant (1958) dollars 14.9 16.6 18.5 9.1 10.1 11.3 10.8 11.2 11.5 11.8 12.1 12.6 .6 .6 .6 .6 .6 .6 .6 .6 .7 19.9 24.5 25.7 22.8 22.4 29.0 28.5 26.7 27.6 381.3 406.5 430.8 418.8 423.7 436.8 443.9 448.4 447.7 Table 10.—Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type (2.3) Personal consumption expenditures Durable goods 375.0 401.4 431.5 418.9 426.8 435.0 445.2 455.6 458.9 53.9 59.4 66.1 65.1 64.4 66.7 68.0 70.3 66.8 Automobiles and parts 24.3 Furniture and household equipment _ __ __ 22.2 Other 7.5 25.8 29.8 30.1 29.2 30.2 29.9 31.4 28.3 25.1 8.5 27.1 9.1 26.0 9.0 26.2 9.0 27.3 9.2 28.8 9.3 29.6 9.3 29.3 9.2 Nondurable goods Food and beverages Clothing and shoes Gasoline and oil _ • Other Services Housing __ __ _ Household operation Transportation Other 168.6 88.2 30.6 13.5 36.3 178.9 190.6 184.5 189.4 191.4 197.0 201.9 92.8 33.6 14.1 38.4 98.4 35.9 15.1 41.1 95.4 34.6 14.4 40.1 97.8 35.6 15.2 40.9 152.4 163.1 174.8 169.3 173.0 55.4 23.1 11.4 62.5 59.2 24.3 11.8 67.8 63.2 25.6 12.8 73.3 61.6 24.7 12.2 70.8 62.7 25.4 12.7 72.3 98.7 101.6 103.3 36.0 37.5 39.4 15.3 15.7 15.8 41.4 42.3 43.3 176.9 63.6 26.0 13.0 74.2 180.2 183.4 64.7 26.3 13.4 75.8 66.0 26.5 13.5 77.5 204.7104.4 39.6 16.0 44.7 187.4 67.1 27.4 13.9 79.0 Table 11.— Foreign Transactions in the National Income and Product Accounts (4.1) Receipts from foreigners 32.3 37.0 39.0 35.1 40.5 40.1 40.3 41.7 42.3 Exports of goods and services. _. 32.3 37.0 39.0 35.1 40.5 40.1 40.3 41.7 42.3 32.3 37.0 39.0 35.1 40.5 40.1 40.3 41.7 42.3 Imports of goods and services.- 26.4 28.5 32.0 28.7 32.3 33.0 34.2 35.6 37.0 2.8 .6 2.2 2.8 .6 2.2 2.6 .6 2.0 3.1 .6 2.5 2.8 .6 2.2 2.5 .6 1.9 3.4 .6 2.8 2.9 .7 2.2 Payments to foreigners Transfers to foreigners _ Personal Government 2.8 .6 2.2 51.5 24.6 48.6 26.5 54.2 29.1 53.4 28.7 54.9 28.7 53.8 28.9 54.7 30.3 57.1 31.9 15.3 16.2 16.8 17.5 16.8 16.3 16.7 15.2 23.1 23.9 24.8 24.5 24.6 24.7 25.2 31.7 126.3 127.0 133.7 137.7 113.9 118.1 123.4 119.6 120.6 64.2 65.2 66.8 64.4 65.6 67.5 69.8 71.9 74.6 National defense.. . _ _ _ _ ^ 50.8 Other 13.5 50.0 15.2 50.1 16.7 48.2 16.2 49.1 16.5 50.7 16.8 52.5 17.3 54.6 17.4 57.0 17.6 Transfer payments _ _ _ _ _ _ 29. 1 29.9 To persons 27.0 27.8 To foreigners (net) 2.2 2.2 32.4 30.3 2.2 31.3 29.2 2.0 30.9 28.4 2.5 34.8 32.5 2.2 32.8 30.8 1.9 35.4 32.6 2.8 2.2 Grants-in-aid to State and local governments 9.1 10.4 11.2 11.0 11.1 11.1 11.6 13.0 Net interest paid. 7.7 8.3 8.7 8.6 8.7 8.8 8.8 9.3 Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises.. 3.6 4.2 4.2 4.3 4.2 4.1 4,1 4.1 1.6 4.5 4.4 -2.5 -.2 2.3 Surplusor deficit (-), national income and product accounts .7 -3.0 Table 13.—State and Local Government Receipts and Expenditures (3.3, 3.4) State and local government receipts 63.4 69.6 75. 3 73.4 74.6 75.9 77.3 80.1 9.4 1.7 10.8 1.9 11.8 2.0 11.5 2.0 11.7 2.0 11.9 2.0 12.1 2.1 12.4 2.2 39.4 42.3 45.8 44.6 45.4 46.4 47.0 47.8 3.8 4.1 4.5 4.4 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 91 10 4 11 2 11 0 11 1 11 1 11.6 13.0 62.2 67.9 73.7 71.5 72.9 74.4 75.7 77.7 Purchases of goods and services 58.2 Transfer payments to persons. 6.0 63.7 6.5 69.4 6.9 67.3 6.8 68.7 6.8 70.2 6.9 71.4 7.0 73.1 7.4 Personal tax and nontax receipts Corporate profits tax accrualsIndirect business tax and nontax accruals Contributions for social insurance.- _ _ _ __ _ Federal grants-in-aid State and local government expenditures _ Net interest paid Less: Current surplus of government enterprises.Surplus or deficit (-), national income and product accounts 8 .7 .6 .6 .6 .5 .5 .5 2.8 3.0 3.2 3.1 3.2 3.2 3.2 3.3 12 17 1.6 1.9 1.7 1.5 1.6 2.4 74.8 Table 14.—Sources and Uses of Gross Saving (5.1) 88.7 101.4 109.1 105.3 104.8 112.8 113.6 113.2 Gross private saving Personal saving Undistributed corporate profits Corporate inventory valuation adjustment Corporate capital consumption allowances Noncorporate capital consumption allowances Wage accruals less disbursements _ -_ Government surplus or deficit (— ), national income and product accounts Federal State and local Gross investment _ _ . 24.5 25.7 22.8 22.4 29.0 28.5 26.7 16.6 21.3 25.3 25.7 25.0 24.6 26.1 -.5 —.4 -1.5 19.9 31.8 33.9 -1.3 -1.8 36.3 35.2 36.0 -1.0 36.8 -1.8 -2.8 -2.0 37.2 37.7 38.3 24.2 .0 23.3 23.0 23.2 23.4 23.6 .0 .0 .0 .0 .0 .0 1.8 -1.4 3.2 6.4 6.1 -1.0 1.4 4.7 .7 -3.0 1.2 1.7 1.6 1.6 4.5 1.9 4.4 -2.5 1.7 1.5 -.2 1.6 2.3 2.4 20.9 22.2 .0 .0 27.6 27.8 23.8 98.7 110.7 107.6 108.8 110.9 115.4 117.1 120.8 93.0 106.6 103.8 103.7 106.7 111.9 114.5 5.7 4.2 3.8 5.1 4.2 3.5 2.6 .4 -.8 -.8 -.3 -1.4 -1.6 -4.1 -2.1 118.4 2.4 90.3 Gross private domestic inin vestment _ _ _ _ _ 87.1 Net foreign investment 3.1 Statistical discrepancy ^Preliminary. HP I Federal Government receipts. __ 114.5 115.1 124.9 124.0 125.0 123.8 126.9 136.0 17.8 Other labor income IV Table 12. — Federal Government Receipts and Expenditures (3.1, 3.2) 527.6 541.9 552.8 J64.6 65.5 196.0 535.1 518.0 III II [Billions of dollars] Table 9.—-Personal Income and Its Disposition (2.1) Wage and salary disbursements Commodity-producing industries _ Manufacturing. Distributive industries Service industries Government 1966 Seasonally adjusted at annual rates [Billions of dollars] Personal income I US. National Income and Product Accounts, 1962-65 THE complete set of national income and product tables for the 1962-65 period is presented on pages 11-39. As is usually the practice in July, estimates for the 3 most recent years have been revised to incorporate new information. The estimates for 1962 are the same as those published in August 1965. The estimates published in this issue update figures for 1963-65 by incorporating new and revised statistics from various government agencies and other organizations. The most important of the new data are Internal Revenue Service statistics which are the main source of the estimates of business profits for 1963 and 1964; State unemployment insurance payroll statistics, which provide new information for the wage and salary estimates for 1965; information from the 1963 Census of Business, which affect mainly the personal consumption expenditures estimates; and Census data for fiscal year 1965, which affect the State and local government components of the national income and product accounts for calendar years 1964 and 1965. The full set of income and product tables, with data starting in 1929 in most cases and extending through 1965, will appear shortly in a supplement to the SURVEY entitled The National Income and Product Accounts of the United States, 1929-1965, Statistical Tables. Notice of the publication date will be announced in the SURVEY. The tables in this supplement will present the results of the benchmark revisions of the national income and product accounts that centered around the incorporation of the 1958 economic censuses into the income and product estimates. Summary results of this major revision were published in the August 1965 SURVEY. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 8 July 1966 Table A.—Summary National Income and Product Accounts, 1965 [Billions of dollars] 1.—National Income and Product Account Lin e Line 1 Compensation of employees- 3 4 5 6 7 s 392. 9 Wages and salaries _ __ 358. 4 Disbursements (2—7) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ^ _ _ _ 358. 4 Wage accruals less disbursements (5—4) .0 Supplements to wages and salaries. _ 34. 5 Employer contributions for social insurance (3-14) 16. 0 Other labor income (2—8) _ _ 18. 5 Proprietors' income (2—9) Rental income of persons (2— 10) 55 7 18. 3 _ 24 Personal consumption expenditures (2—3) 25 26 27 28 Change in business inventories 17 8 38 559. 0 39 40 41 42 _ 2. 6 19 Business transfer payments (2—17) 20 Indirect business tax and nontax liability (3—12) 62. 7 21 Less: Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises (3—6) 1.0 Capital consumption allowances (5—7) ?r?r 59. 6 Statistical discrepancy (5—9) — 1. 6 CHARGES AGAINST PRODUCT Gross private domestic investment (5—1) 34 17 Net interest (2-13) . : Fixed investment NonresidentiaL _ Structures Producers' durable equipment Residential structures 74. 2 75. 7 31. 2 44. 5 19. 2 25 3 15 NATIONAL INCOME 66.1 190. ( 174. * 29 30 31 32 33 10 Corporate profits and inventory valuation adjustment Profits before tax ___ _ _ 11 Profits tax liability (3-ll)_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Profits after tax __ __ 13 Dividends (2-11) _ 14 Undistributed profits (5—5) 15 16 Inventory valuation adjustment (5—6) 18 Durable goods __ _ Nondurable goods _ Services 431 I 106. ( 97. I 69. "3 24 1 44.* 27 * 9. 1 7. ( 35 Net exports of goods and services 36 37 GROSS NATIONAL Exports (4-1) Imports (4—2) - _ - 136. 5 Government purchases of goods and services (3—1) 66.* 50. ] 16.1 69.^ Federal National defense Other _ State and local _ ____ GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT. 681. 2 39. C 32. C __ _ _. 681. i 2.—Personal Income and Outlay Account 1 Personal tax and nontax payments (3-10) 66.0 7 Wage and salary disbursements (1-3) 2 Personal outlays 443,4 8 3 Personal consumption expenditures (1-24) 431. 5 9 Proprietors' income (1-8) 4 Interest paid by consumers (2-15) _ - 5 Personal transfer payments to foreigners (net) (4-4) >. 6 Personal saving (5-3) .__ 11.3 .6 25.7 PERSONAL TAXES, OUTLAYS, AND SAVING. 535.1 Other labor income (1-7) 358. 4 „ 18. 5 55. 7 10 Rental income of persons (1-9) 11 Dividends (1-14) 18. 3 _-_ 12 Personal interest income 13 Net interest (1-17) _ _._ 14 Net interest paid by government (3-5) 15 Interest paid by consumers (2-4) ,. 19. 2 ._ _ 38.4 17.8 9. 3 11.3 16 Transfer payments to persons 17 From business (1-19)_-___ 18 From government (3-3) 39. 7 2.6 37. 1 19 Less: Personal contributions for social insurance (3-15)-.. 13.2 PERSONAL INCOME. 535.1 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS July 1966 9 3.—Government Receipts and Expenditures Account Line Line 1 Purchases of goods and services (1-38) 136. 2 10 Personal tax and nontax payments (2-1) _ _ _ - - _ - _ . _ _ _ . _ _ 66. 0 2 Transfer payments ._ 39.3 11 Corporate profits tax liability (1-12) _ _ . _ . . _ _ _ _ _ 31. 2 4 To persons (2-18) To foreigners (net) (4-3) 37. 1 12 Indirect business tax and nontax liability (1-20) . 2.2 ._ 5 Net interest paid (2-14) 9.3 6 Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises (1-21) ___________________ 1.0 7 Surplus or deficit (—) on national income and product accounts (5-8) — _ _ _ __ 3.2 8 9 - Federal State and local. 62. 7 13 Contributions for social insurance 14 15 Employer (l-6)__._ Personal (2-19)..-_-__-- - 29. 2 ____. 16. 0 13. 2 1.6 1.6 GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES AND SURPLUS _ _ ---___ 189.0 GOVERNMENT RECEIPTS... _ _ _ _ . 189.0 4.—Foreign Transactions Account 1 Export of goods and services (1-36) 39.0 2 Imports of goods and services (1-37) _ . . . - _ _ _ 32. 0 3 Transfer payments from U.S. Government to foreigners (net) (3-4) .... ..._..._. ... 4 Personal transfer payments to foreigners (net) (2-5) 5 Net foreign investment (5-2) RECEIPTS FROM FOREIGNERS.... _ _ _ _ _ _ 39.0 2. 2 .6 _____ ... 4.2 PAYMENTS TO FOREIGNERS.. ... 39.0 5.—Gross Saving and Investment Account 1 Gross private domestic investment (1-28) 2 Net foreign investment (4-5) 106. 6 4.2 3 Personal saving (2-6) 4 Wage accruals less disbursements (1-4) 25. 7 ---- 5 Undistributed corporate profits (1-15) 6 Corporate inventory valuation adjustment (1-16)__. 7 Capital consumption allowances (1-22) 8 Government surplus or deficit (—) on national income and product accounts (3-7) ___. 9 Statistical discrepancy (1-23). GROSS INVESTMENT._._ _. _ _ _ _ _ _ 110.7 •0 25. 3 1. 5 59. 6 3.2 1.6 GROSS SAVING AND STATISTICAL DISCREPANCY ...... 110.7 SURVEY OF CUKEENT BUSINESS 10 July 1966 CHART 4 THE NATIONAL INCOME AND PRODUCT ACCOUNTS - 1965 Relation of the Four Major Measures of Production and Income Flows • GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT is the market value of the output of goods and services produced by the Nation's economy • NATIONAL INCOME is the total earnings of labor and property from the production of goods and services • PERSONAL INCOME is the total income received by persons from all sources • DISPOSABLE PERSONAL INCOME is the income remaining to persons after payment of personal taxes GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT $681 Bil. Less $122 Bil. Equals NATIONAL INCOME $559 Bil. Less Plus Rental Income/X & Net Interest $36 Corporate Profits $74 Less Equals DISPOSABLE PERSONAL INCOME $469 Bil. Undistributed Corporate Profits, Corporate Profits Taxes, and Social Security Taxes U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of Business Economics Equals PERSONAL INCOME $535 Bil. Transfer Payments to Persons and Consumer and Gov't Interest 1. Gross National Product and National Income Table 1.1.— Gross National Product 1962 1963 1964 1962 1965 I II III IV Millions of dollars IV I II III IV 627.7 637.9 644.2 660.8 672.9 686.5 704.4 357.2 363.0 368.2 372.0 378.3 381.5 391.1 398.0 407.5 408.8 418.9 426.8 435.0 445.2 50.1 51.1 163. 2 165.3 144. 0 146.7 52.4 167. 1 148.7 53.2 168.0 150.8 54.5 169.9 153.9 55.6 169.6 156.3 57.6 174.9 158.7 61.1 181.7 164.7 58.9 182. 4 167.5 65.1 64.4 184.5 189. 4 169. 3 173.0 66.7 191.4 176.9 68.0 197.0 180.2 348.3 351.7 49,540 53,928 59,353 66,057 162, 557 168,632 178,877 190,596 142,960 152,422 163,126 174,812 48.5 160.2 139.6 48.5 161.6 141. 6 Residential structures Nonfarm _. Farm III 616.8 564.4 Nonresidential Structures Producers' durable equipment II 605.8 557.2 Fixed investment I IV 594.7 547.8 Gross private domestic investment -- .. III 584.2 560,325 590,503 631,712 681,207 Durable goods Nondurable goods Services II Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates Personal consumption expenditures 355,057 374,982 401,356 431,465 Gross national product I 1965 1964 1963 572.0 577.4 59.8 176.5 161.6 83,018 87,140 92,959 106,559 80.6 82.8 84.3 84.7 82.7 85.1 88.0 92.9 90.2 91.8 92.5 97.4 103.8 103.7 106.7 111.9 77, 014 81,274 88,293 97, 478 73.9 76.7 79.2 78.3 78.1 80.3 82.0 84.7 86.6 87.6 88.9 90.0 94.4 96.0 98.0 101.5 51, 667 19,207 54,284 19,469 60,714 21,011 69,679 24,864 49.5 18.5 51.3 19.2 53.1 19.7 52.7 19.5 52.0 18.8 53.5 19.7 55.0 ,19. 4 56.8 19.9 58.1 20.3 59.7 20.9 61.7 21.0 63.3 21.8 66.7 23.6 67.9 24.6 70.2 24.4 73.9 26.8 32,460 34,815 39,703 44,815 31.0 32.1 33.5 33.2 33.2 33.8 35.5 36.8 37.9 38.8 40.7 41.4 43.1 43.3 45.8 47.1 25,347 _. 24,753 594 26,990 26,411 579 27,579 27, 017 562 27,799 27,249 550 24.4 23.8 .6 25.4 24.8 .6 26.0 25.4 .6 25.6 25.0 .6 26.1 25.5 .6 26.8 26.2 .6 27.1 26.5 .6 28.0 27.4 .6 28.5 27.9 .6 27.9 27.3 .6 27.2 26.6 .6 26.7 26.2 .6 27.7 27.2 .6 28.1 27.5 .6 27.8 27.3 .5 27.6 27.0 .5 6,004 5,290 714 5,866 5,081 785 4,666 5,260 -594 9,081 8,146 935 6.7 6.3 .4 6.1 5.6 .5 5.2 4.3 .8 6.4 6.3 1.1 4.7 4.0 .7 4.8 4.3 .6 6.0 5.3 .7 8.1 7.0 1.2 3.5 3.6 .0 4.2 5.1 -.9 3.6 4.6 -1.0 7.4 7.9 —. 5 9.5 9.4 -.0 7.6 6.7 .9 8.7 7.2 1.5 10.4 9.0 1.4 Change in business inventories Nonfarm Farm _ 5,130 5,897 8,490 6,957 4.6 5.7 5.3 4.9 4.6 6.2 5.6 7.1 9.0 7.9 8.4 8.6 6.4 8.2 7.1 6.1 30,278 25,148 32,339 26,442 36,958 28,468 38,993 32,036 29.2 24.6 30.9 25.2 30.6 25.3 30.4 25.6 30.1 25.5 32.4 26.2 32.5 26.9 34.3 27.1 36.4 27.4 36.0 28.1 37.2 28.8 38.1 29.6 35.1 28.7 40.5 32.3 40.1 33.0 40.3 34.2 Government purchases of goods and services 117, 120 122,484 128,907 136,226 Net exports of goods and servicesExports Imports _ _ _ 114.4 117.0 117.4 119.3 121.9 120.9 122.9 124.3 126.5 131.6 134.3 137.7 141.2 Federal _ 63,389 National defense. _ __ _ _- 51,582 Other 11,807 64,244 50, 760 13, 484 65,182 49,985 15, 197 66,827 50, 143 16,684 61.9 51.1 10.8 64.0 53.0 10.9 63.3 51.3 12.0 64.4 50.9 13.5 65.0 51.2 13.8 63.4 50.5 12.9 64.2 51.0 13.2 64.4 50.3 14.1 64.9 50.1 14.8 66.6 51.6 15.1 65.1 49.8 15.3 64.1 48.5 15.6 64.4 48.2 16.2 65.6 49.1 16.5 67.5 50.7 16.8 69.8 52.5 17.3 State and local. 58,240 63,725 69,399 52.5 53.1 54.1 55.0 56.9 57.5 58.7 59.8 61.6 63.4 64.4 65.3 67.3 68.7 70. 2 71.4 53,731 130.1 129.5 129.4 Table 1.2.—Gross National Product in Constant Dollars [Billions of 1958 dollars] 1962 1962 1963 1964 1965 I II III IV I II 19 55 1964 1963 III IV IV I II III rv 578.1 585.0 587.2 600.3 607.8 618.2 631.2 371.0 378.9 387.1 392.2 398.9 406.5 II I III Se asonally adjustf >dat annual rat es Gross National Product. ._ . 529.8 Personal consumption expenditures 338.4 Durable goods Nondurable goods Services . 49 2 158.2 131 1 Gross private domestic investment. . Fixed investment Nonresidential- _ _ Structures Producers' durable equipment Residential structures Nonfarm Farm Change in business inventories Nonfarm Farm... Net exports of goods and servicesExports.Imports Government purchases of goods and services. __ Federal State and local _ 551.0 580.0 614.4 519.5 527.7 533.4 353.3 373.8 396 2 333 3 335.7 340 1 344 6 53 7 162 2 137 4 59 1 170 5 144 2 66 4 178 2 151 6 48 1 156 4 128 8 538.3 48 1 49 7 50 8 157 6 158 7 160 0 130 1 131 8 133 8 541.2 546.0 348.5 350 9 52 2 53 0 161 3 161 7 135 0 136 2 554.7 562.1 569.7 356 1 357.7 54 4 163 3 138 4 55 3 162 4 140 0 365 7 57 2 167 2 141 2 379.5 59 5 60 9 58 8 64 8 64.2 168 4 173 3 173 1 174 2 177 6 143 1 145 3 146 9 148 1 150 4 67.2 69.2 178 5 182 5 153 1 154 8 102.2 79.4 82.5 86.5 97 8 77 2 79.0 80 6 80 7 78 7 80 6 84 6 85 6 85.7 90.2 95.9 95.3 97.9 76 7 81 9 89 0 70 7 73 1 75 3 74 5 74 1 75 9 83 1 77 2 87 7 73.4 79 7 81 2 81 6 82.2 82.8 86 6 88.0 89.4 91.9 49.7 17 9 51 9 17 9 57 4 18 9 64 9 21 7 47 6 17 3 49 3 18 0 51 1 18 3 50 7 18 1 49 8 17 3 51 1 18 1 52 5 17 8 54 3 18 3 55 5 18 7 56 6 18 9 58 2 18 7 59 2 19 2 20 7 63.4 21 7 65.5 21 3 68.4 23 2 31 7 34 0 38 5 43 2 30 3 31 3 32 8 32 6 32 5 33 1 34 7 41 5 23.8 23 2 6 24.8 24.2 5 24.6 24 0 5 24.1 23 6 5 23.1 22 5 23.8 23 3 g 24.2 23 7 6 23.8 23 3 24.3 23 7 5 24.7 24 2 5 24.7 24 2 5 6.0 52 7 58 51 g 46 52 — 6 88 80 9 65 60 4 59 53 5 53 44 9 62 51 11 46 39 7 48 42 5 59 53 6 Q Q 36 7 37 7 39 5 40 0 41.7 44.2 45 2 25.4 24 9 5 25.7 25 2 5 24.9 24 4 5 24.1 23.5 5 23.6 23.1 5 24.4 23 8 5 24.5 24.0 5 23.9 23.4 5 23.5 23.0 5 81 69 12 35 35 40 49 — 9 3.5 45 —1 0 7.4 79 — 5 9.3 93 7.3 65 .8 8.5 71 1.4 10.2 89 1.3 35 9 o o 4 5 56 85 63 35 52 49 4 4 39 57 55 71 92 82 84 80 5.7 7.1 6.4 6.0 30.0 25 5 32.1 26 6 36.4 28 0 37 3 31 0 28 5 25 0 30 7 25 5 30 5 25 6 30 3 25 9 29 8 25 9 32 2 26 5 32 5 26 9 34 1 27 0 36 1 26 9 35 7 27 5 36.7 28 3 37.1 29 0 33.4 27 7 38. 7 31.6 38.4 31.9 38.7 32 8 107.5 109.6 111.3 114. 1 105.5 107.8 107.8 108 5 110.2 108 7 110 0 109.5 110.3 113.2 115.0 116.6 60.0 47.5 59.5 50.1 57 8 53.4 58 6 46 9 60 7 47.1 60 8 49.4 59 0 49 7 59 6 50 4 58 7 50.9 58 2 52 0 58.3 56.7 59.3 57.3 57 8 56.3 60 2 47.6 60 6 48.0 113.3 111.3 110.1 111.5 59 7 53.6 57 4 53.9 56.1 54.0 56.2 55.3 57.3 55.9 11 Table 1.3.—Gross National Product by Major Type of Product [Billions of dollars] 1962 1962 1964 1963 1965 I II 1964 1963 IV III I III II IV I 1965 II III IV I II III IV Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 560.3 590.5 631. 7 681.2 547.8 557.2 564.4 572.0 577.4 584.2 594.7 605.8 616.8 627.7 637.9 644.2 660.8 672.9 686.5 704.4 554.3 584.6 627.0 672. 1 541.1 551.1 559.2 565.6 572.7 579.4 588.8 597.7 613.3 623.5 634.4 636.8 651. 4 665.3 677.8 694.0 6.0 5.9 4.7 9.1 6.7 6.1 5.2 6.4 4.7 4.8 6.0 8.1 3.5 4.2 3.6 7.4 9.5 7.6 8.7 284.5 298.6 318.2 344.7 279.1 282.7 286.2 290.2 292.5 294.9 300.7 306.2 310. 7 315.6 322.4 324. 3 333.8 338.8 347.5 358.8 278. 5 292.7 313.6 335.7 272.4 276.6 281.1 283.8 287.8 290.1 294.7 298.1 307. 1 311.4 318. 8 316. 9 324.3 331.2 338.8 348.4 6.0 5.9 4.7 9.1 6.7 6.1 5.2 6.4 4.7 4.8 6.0 8.1 3.5 4.2 3.6 7.4 9.5 7.6 8.7 10.4 Durable goods Final sales __ _ Change in business inventories 109. 0 106.2 116.1 113.3 125.5 122.2 138.5 132.2 107.1 103.4 108.3 105.5 110.8 107.9 109.9 108.1 111.4 109. 4 115.0 111.8 116.9 114.7 121.0 117. 3 121. 9 119.6 126. 1 122.4 127. 8 125. 0 126.4 122.0 135.1 127.7 135.2 128.8 141.0 134.3 142.6 137.9 2.8 2.8 3.3 6.3 3.7 2.8 2.9 1.7 2.0 Nondurable goods Final sales _ _ Change in business inventories 175.5 172.2 182.5 179. 4 192.7 191.3 206.3 203.5 172. 1 169.1 174.4 171.1 175.4 173.2 180.3 175.6 Gross National Product-Final sales Change in business inventories.-- __ _ __ _ Goods output - - - Final sales Change in business inventories -- ______ 10.4 3.2 2,3 3.8 2.3 3.6 2.8 4.4 7.4 6.4 6.7 4.7 181. 1 179.9 178.4 178.3 183.8 180.1 185.2 180.8 188.8 187.5 189.6 189.0 194. 6 193. 8 197. 9 195.0 198.7 196.6 203.6 202. 4 206.5 204.4 216.2 210.5 1.6 3.7 4.4 1.2 .5 .8 2.9 2.1 1.2 2.1 5.7 237.3 242.7 268.8 3.2 3.1 1.4 2.7 3.0 3.3 2.3 4.7 2.7 213. 3 226.2 244.5 262.0 208.2 212.1 214.6 218.5 220.9 223.8 228.1 232.2 247. 1 251.1 254.3 259.8 265.1 Structures 62.6 65.7 68.9 74.5 60.5 62.4 63.6 63.4 64.0 65.5 65.9 67.4 68.8 69.4 68.5 68.8 72.7 74.3 73. 9 76.9 Addendum : Gross auto product. 22.5 25.1 25.8 31.4 21.3 21.7 23.5 23.4 24.5 24.4 25.4 26.0 26.3 26.6 27.1 23.1 32.6 30.8 31.6 30.5 Services _ _ _ Table 1.4.—Gross National Product by Major Type of Product and Purchaser Table 1.6.—Gross National Product by Major Type of Product and Purchaser in Constant Dollars [Billions of dollars] Gross National Product Durable jsfoods Personal consumption expenditures. Producers' durable equipment Government purchases Net exports Change in business inventories __ Nondurable goods Personal consumption expenditures Government purchases Net exports Change in business inventories Services Personal consumption expenditures Government purchases Net exports _ _ Structures. __ Private structures Government structures _ _ _ _ ___ ___ __ _ _ __ _ _ [Billions of 1958 dollars] 1962 1963 1964 1965 529.8 551.0 580.0 614.4 107.0 49.2 31.7 19.8 3.4 2.8 114.2 53.7 34.0 20.3 3.3 2.8 123.1 59.1 38.5 18.0 4.3 3.2 135.5 66.4 43.2 16.6 3.2 6.1 Nondurable goods _ ___ __ _ Personal consumption expenditures. _ __ __ Government purchases Net exports Change in business inventories . 170.3 158.2 9.2 -.2 3.1 175.6 162.2 9.5 .8 3.1 184.1 170.5 10.6 1.6 1.4 193.0 178.2 11.9 .2 2.7 Services Personal consumption expenditures. Government purchases _ _ _ _ _ Net exports 193.7 131.1 61.3 1.3 200.9 137.4 61.9 1.5 211.2144.2 64.5 2.5 221.1 151.6 66.6 2.9 58.8 41.7 17.1 60.4 42.7 17.8 61.7 43.4 18.3 64.8 45.8 19.0 1962 1963 1964 560.3 590. 5 631.7 681.2 109.0 49.5 32.5 20.3 4.0 2.8 116.1 53.9 34.8 20.8 3.8 2.8 125. 5 59.4 39.7 18.5 4.7 3.3 138.5 66.1 44.8 17.4 3.9 6.3 Durable goods. _ __ _ __ Personal consumption expenditures __ _ _ __ Producers' durable equipment Government purchases _ _ Net exports. __ _ __ Change in business inventories 175.5 162.6 9.2 .5 3.2 182.5 168.6 9.5 1.3 3.1 192.7 178.9 10.5 2.0 1.4 206.3 190.6 12.1 .8 2.7 213.3 143.0 69.6 .7 226.2 152.4 73.0 .8 244.5 163.1 79.6 1.8 262.0 174.8 85.0 2.2 62.6 44. 6 18.0 65.7 46.5 19.3 68.9 48.6 20.3 74.5 52.7 21.8 1965 Gross National Product ... Structures Private structures Government structures Table 1.5.—Gross National Product by Major Type of Product in Constant Dollars [Billions of 1958 dollars] 1962 1963 1964 1965 I II III IV I II 1965 1964 1963 1962 III IV I II III IV I II III IV Seasonally adjusted at annual rates 529.8 551.0 580.0 614.4 519.5 527.7 533.4 538.3 541.2 546.0 554.7 562.1 569.7 578.1 585.0 587.2 600.3 607.8 618.2 631.2 Final sales. Change in business inventories 523.8 545.2 575.4 605.6 513.0 521.9 528.1 532.1 536.7 541. 2 548.8 554.1 566.3 574.1 581. 4 579.9 591.0 600.5 609.7 621.0 6.0 5.8 4.6 8.8 6.5 5.9 5.3 6.2 4.6 4.8 5.9 8.1 3.5 4.0 3.5 7.4 9.3 7.3 8.5 10.2 Goods output _______ Final sales Change in business inventories. -. 277. 3 271.3 289.7 283.9 307.2 302.6 328.5 319.7 272.1 265.7 275.7 269.8 279.2 273.9 282.2 276.0 284.3 279.8 286.1 281.3 291.9 286.0 296. 6 288.6 300.4 296.9 305.1 301.1 311.3 307. 8 311.9 304.6 319.7 310.3 322.5 315.2 330.9 322. 4 341.0 330.7 6.0 5.8 4.6 8.8 6.5 5.9 5.3 6.2 4.6 4.8 5.9 8.1 3.5 4.0 3.5 7.4 9.3 7.3 8.5 10.2 Durable goods .. Final sales. Change in business inventories 107.0 104.1 114. 2 111.4 123.1 119.9 135.5 129. 4 104.8 101.1 106.2 103.3 108.8 105.9 108.0 106.2 109.6 107. 7 113.0 109.8 115.2 112.9 119.0 115.3 119.5 117.3 123.7 120.3 125. 4 122.6 123.9 119.4 131.8 124.6 131.7 125.5 138.3 131.8 140.3 135. 7 2.8 2.8 3.2 6.1 3.7 2.9 3.0 1.8 1.9 3.2 2.3 3.7 2.2 3.5 2.8 4.4 7.2 6.2 6.5 4.7 Nondurable goods Final sales Change in business inventories. 170.3 167.2 175.6 172.5 184.1 182.7 193.0 190.3 167.3 164.6 169.5 166.5 170.3 168.0 174.1 169.8 174.7 172.1 173.1 171.5 176.7 173.1 177.6 173.3 180.9 179.6 181.4 180.8 185. 9 185. 1 188.1 185.2 187.8 185.7 190.8 189.6 192.6 190.6 200.6 195.1 4.4 1.2 .5 .8 2.9 2.1 1.1 2.0 5.6 204. 1 206.7 210.4 212.8 214.6 216.6 220.3 223.3 224.0 Gross National Product. .. Services. __ 3.1 193.7 3.1 1.4 2.7 200.9 211.2 221.1 2.7 190.0 3.0 193.2 2.3 194.7 4.4 197.0 2.6 197.4 1.6 3.7 199.3 202. 6 Structures 58.8 60.4 61.7 64.8 57.4 58.9 59.5 59.0 59.5 60.5 60.3 61.4 62.6 62.6 60.8 60.6 64.0 65.0 64.0 66.2 Addendum : Gross auto product- 22.0 24.7 25.4 31.4 20.8 21.3 23.1 23.0 24.2 23.9 25.1 25.6 26.0 26.2 26.7 22.9 32.2 30.6 31.9 30.7 12 SUKVEY OF CUERENT BUSINESS July 1966 13 Table 1.7.—Gross National Product by Sector [Billions of dollars] 1962 1962 1963 1964 1965 I II H)64 IS 63 III IV I II III IV I II 19 55 HI IV I II III IV 704.4 Se asonalljr adjust(3d at annual ra1tes Gross National Product. _ Private.. . Business Nonfarm __ Farm Households and institutions. Rest of the world General government 560.3 590.5 631.7 681.2 547.8 557.2 564.4 572.0 577.4 584.2 594.7 605.8 616.8 627. 7 637.9 644.2 660.8 672.9 686.5 505.7 532.4 568.7 613.4 494.0 502.8 509. 6 516.3 520.6 526.7 536.5 545.9 555.5 565. 5 574. 2 579.4 595.2 606.4 618.2 633.8 487.4 466.2 21.2 15.0 3.3 513. 0 491.5 21 5 16.0 3.4 547.4 527.0 20 4 17.3 4.0 590.8 567.1 23 8 18.3 4.3 476.4 454.9 21 5 14.6 3.0 484.9 463.5 21 5 14.7 3.2 491.2 470.2 21 0 15.2 3.2 497.2 476.3 20 8 15.5 3.7 501.3 479.4 21 9 15.8 3.5 507.5 516 9 526 5 534. 6 485.9 495. 5 505.2 513.8 21 3 20 7 21 6 21 5 15.9 16.2 16.0 16.7 33 33 33 4.2 544.1 523.4 20 7 17.3 4.0 552.6 532.5 20 1 17.6 4.0 558. 2 538.0 20.2 17.4 3.8 573.0 551.6 21.4 17.5 4.7 583.6 559.4 24.2 18.0 4.8 595. 3 570.6 24.7 18.7 4.1 611.2 586.6 24.7 19.1 3.4 54.7 58.1 63.0 67.8 53.8 54.4 54.8 55.7 56.8 62.3 63.7 64.8 65.6 66.6 68.3 70.6 III IV 57.5 58.3 59.9 61.3 Table 1.8.—Gross National Product by Sector in Constant Dollars [Billions of 1958 dollars] 1962 1962 1963 1964 1965 I II 1963 III IV I II 19(55 1964 III IV I II III IV I II Se asonally adjuste ?d at an nual rat es Gross National Product.. . 529.8 Private . Business Nonfarm Farm. _ __ _ _ Households and institutions. _ Rest of the world . General government- 551.0 580.0 614.4 519.5 527.7 533. 4 538.3 541.2 546.0 554.7 562. 1 569.7 578.1 585. 0 587.2 600.3 607.8 618.2 631.2 482.9 503.2 530. 8 563.5 473 0 480.8 486 3 491 3 494 0 498 3 506 6 513 9 521 3 529 1 535 4 537 4 550.2 557.3 567.2 579. 4 466 7 444.6 22.1 486 6 463 8 22.8 513 3 491 2 22.0 545 4 521 7 23.8 457 1 434 9 22 2 464 8 442 0 22 8 470 0 448 5 21 6 474 4 452 9 21 5 477 2 454 3 22 9 481 8 458 7 23 i 489 9 467 4 22 5 497 4 474 8 22 6 503 9 482 2 21 7 511 5 488 8 22 6 517 6 495 8 21 8 520 0 497 9 22 0 532 2 509 4 22 8 538 9 515 1 23 8 548 9 524.6 24.3 561. 6 537.5 24.1 12.9 3.4 13.2 3.4 13.6 3.9 14.0 41 12.9 30 12.7 33 13.0 33 13.0 38 13.2 36 13.2 33 13.4 33 13.2 34 13.2 41 13.7 4 0 13.9 39 13.7 37 13.4 46 13.7 4.6 14.2 4.0 14.5 3.3 46.9 47.8 49.2 50 9 46 6 46 9 47 1 47 0 47 3 47 7 48 1 48 2 48 5 49 0 49 5 49 8 50 1 50 5 51.1 51.8 Table 1.9.—Relation of Gross National Product, National Income, and Personal Income 1962 1963 1964 1962 1965 I II 1963 III IV Millions of dollars Gross National Product - Less: Capital consumption allowances 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 and inventory valuation adjustment Contributions for social insuranceWage accruals less disbursements Plus: Government transfer payments to persons Interest paid by government (net) and by consumers Dividends.. Business transfer payments Equals: Personal income 52, 601 II III IV I II III IV I II III IV 660.8 672.9 686.5 704.4 Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates 560,325 590,503 631, 712 681,207 49,970 I 1965 1964 547.8 557.2 564.4 572.0 577.4 584.2 594.7 605.8 616.8 627.7 637.9 644.2 59,589 49.2 49.7 50.2 50.8 51.4 52.4 52.9 53.8 54.6 55.5 56.6 57.5 58.2 59.1 60.2 60.8 510,355 537,902 575, 664 621, 618 498.7 507.5 514.1 521.1 526.0 531.8 541.9 552.0 562.2 572.2 581.4 586.6 602.7 613.8 626.3 643.6 62, 652 50.3 51.0 52.0 52.8 53.8 54.2 54.9 55.8 56.4 57.9 59.5 60.2 62.0 62.2 62.7 63.6 2,329 2,522 2,565 -294 -1,383 -1,609 2.1 -1.0 2.1 .0 2.1 1.1 2.1 1.9 2.2 .3 2.3 -1.5 2.3 -.5 2.4 .6 2.4 .4 2.5 -.6 2.6 -2.3 2.6 -3.3 2.6 -4.1 2.5 -2.1 2.5 -.8 2.6 .4 51, 508 2,054 484 54, 692 752 56, 048 58, 497 1,253 1,010 1.6 1.5 1.3 1.1 .9 .7 .7 .8 1.0 1.3 1.4 1.4 1.2 1.0 .9 .9 457, 687 481,927 517,281 559,020 448.8 456.0 460.4 465.6 470.6 477.4 485.7 493.9 504.0 513.7 522.9 528.5 543.3 552.2 562.7 577.8 1, 378 55, 660 58,933 66, 593 74,201 54.3 54.9 56.1 57.4 56.0 58.0 60.3 61.4 65.3 66.5 67.8 66.8 73.2 72.7 74. 0 76.9 23,994 26, 868 27, 969 29, 214 23.6 24.0 24.1 24.3 26.3 26.7 27.0 27.4 27.4 27.7 28.2 28.6 28.8 29.0 29.2 29.8 0 0 0 0 .0 .0 .0 .0 .0 .0 .0 .0 .0 .0 .1 -.1 .0 .0 .0 .0 31,232 32,989 34,241 37, 137 31.1 30.8 31.1 32.0 33.5 32.5 32.7 33.2 34.6 33.9 34.1 34.4 36.0 35.2 39.4 37.9 16, 115 1.5, 183 17, 589 16, 454 19, 131 17, 340 20, 603 19, 173 15.5 14.4 15.9 15.0 16.4 15.3 16.7 15.6 17.0 16.0 17.3 16.4 17.8 16.6 18.2 16.8 18.6 17.1 18.9 17.3 19.4 17.4 19.6 17.7 20.0 18.1 20.5 18.8 20.9 19.5 21.0 20.2 2,054 2,329 2,522 2,565 2.1 2.1 2.1 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.3 2.4 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.6 2.6 2.5 '2.5 2.6 442,617 465,487 495, 953 535,083 433.9 440.8 445.0 450.3 457.0 461.3 467.8 475.8 484.0 492.0 500.3 507. 5 518.0 527.6 541.9 552.8 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 14 July 1966 Table 1.10.—National Income by Type of Income 1962 1963 1964 1962 1965 I II 1964 1963 III IV Millions of dollars I II III IV I 1965 III II IV I II III IV Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates National Income 457, 687 481,927 517,281 559, 020 448.8 456.0 460.4 465.6 470.6 477.4 485.7 493.9 504.0 513.7 522.9 528.5 543.3 552.2 562.7 577.8 Compensation of employees 323,632 341,004 365,657 392,930 317.1 322.9 325.7 328.8 333.6 338.1 343.1 349.2 355.3 362.2 369. 8 375.3 381.7 387.8 395.6 406.5 296, 091 311, 095 333,619 358,389 290. 3 295.6 297.9 300.6 304.5 308.5 313.0 318.5 324.4 330.6 337. 4 342.2 348.2 353.7 360.8 370.8 240, 132 251,616 269,288 289,145 10, 756 10,849 11, 692 12, 126 45,203 48,630 52, 639 57, 118 235.2 11.1 44.0 240.0 11.0 44.6 241.8 10.6 45.4 243.5 10.3 46.8 246.3 10.5 47.6 249.7 10.6 48. 2 253.4 10.7 48,9 257.1 11.6 49.8 261. 8 11.6 51. 0 267.1 11.6 51.9 272.3 11.7 53. 4 275.9 11.9 54. 3 281.2 11.8 55.2 285.8 11. 7 56.3 291. 1 12.0 57.7 298.5 13.0 59.3 Wages and salaries Private Military Government civilian Supplements to wages and salaries-., __ 27,541 Employer contributions for social insurance - - 13,657 Other labor income _ - - • 13,884 Employer contributions to private pension and welfare funds 11,356 Other 2,528 Proprietors' income ----- .__ _. 50,111 29,909 32, 038 34, 541 26.8 27.4 27.8 28.2 29.2 29.6 30.1 30.8 •31.0 31.7 32.4 33.1 33.5 34.1 34.8 35.7 15, 045 14,864 15, 425 16, 613 16,002 18,539 13.4 13.4 13.7 13.7 13.8 14.0 13.8 14.3 14.7 14.5 15.0 14.6 15.2 15.0 15.4 15.4 15.1 15.9 15.3 16.4 15.5 16.9 15.8 17.3 15.8 17.8 15.9 18.2 16.0 18.8 16.3 19.4 12, 165 2,699 13,652 2,961 15,392 3, 147 51,013 51,903 55,745 50.3 50.4 49.9 49.8 50.8 50.7 51.1 51.4 51.3 52.2 51.9 52.2 53.3 55.9 56.7 57.1 37,093 37, 910 39,884 40, 654 36.7 37.1 37.2 37.3 37.5 37.6 38.1 38.5 39.1 39.9 40.3 40.3 40.5 40.4 40.7 41.1 37,076 37,944 39,926 41,028 17 -34 -42 13,018 13,103 12, 019 15,091 13.5 13.3 12.7 12.6 13.4 13.1 13.0 12.9 12. 2 12.2 11.7 11.9 12.9 15.5 16.0 16.0 Rental income of persons.. . _. 16,691 17, 139 17,665 18,344 16.3 16.5 16.8 17.2 17.1 17.1 17.1 17.2 17.4 17.6 17.8 17.9 18.1 18.3 18.4 18.5 Corporate profits and inventory valuation adjustment - 55,660 58,933 66,593 74,201 54.3 54.9 56.1 57.4 56.0 58.0 60.3 61.4 65.3 66.5 67.8 66.8 73.2 72.7 74.0 76.9 55,408 59, 401 67,026 75, 676 54.4 54.8 56.0 56.5 55.9 58.9 60.1 62.7 65.8 66.8 67.8 67.7 74.5 74.5 75.0 78.7 24,179 26,324 31, 229 33, 077 15, 183 16, 454 16,046 16,623 28,359 38,667 17,340 21,327 31, 183 44,493 19, 173 25,320 23.7 30.7 14.4 16.3 23.9 30.9 15.0 15.9 24.4 31.5 15.3 16.2 24.7 31.8 15.6 16.3 24.8 31.1 16.0 15.1 26.1 32.8 16.4 16.4 26.6 33.5 16.6 16.9 27.8 34.9 16.8 18.1 27.9 38.0 17.1 20.9 28.3 38.5 17.3 21.3 28.7 39.1 17.4 21.7 28.6 39.0 17.7 21.4 30. 7 43.8 18.1 25.7 30.7 43.8 18.8 25.0 30.9 44.1 19.5 24.6 32.4 46.3 20.2 26.1 -468 -433 -1, 475 -.1 .0 .1 .9 .2 -.9 .2 13,838 15,463 17,800 10.8 11.3 11.8 12.4 13.0 13.5 14.2 Business and professional Income of unincorporated enterprises Inventory valuation adjustment Farm Profits before tax Profits tax liability . Profits after tax Dividends Undistributed profits. Inventory valuation adjustment Net interest 252 11,593 .--_ -374 -1.3 14.7 -.5 -.3 .0 -.9 14.7 15.1 15.7 16.3 -1.3 16.9 -1.0 -1.8 17.5 18.1 -1.8 18.7 Table 1.11.—National Income by Industry Division [Billions of dollars] U)62 1962 1963 1964 1965 I II IS 64 1€ 63 III IV I II III IV I II 19i65 IV I II III 522.9 528.5 543.3 552.2 562.7 577.8 17.7 18.6 21. 4 21.9 22.1 33.4 34.1 34.4 34.6 35.9 167 6 64.9 102.7 170.8 65.6 105. 2 176.5 67.5 108.9 III IV Scjasonall y adjust ed at aiinual ra tes AH industries, total 457.7 Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries _- _ -_ -_ -- 18.5 Mining and construction 28.5 M anuf acturing Nondurable goods Durable goods - 481.9 448.8 456.0 460.4 465.6 18.7 18.2 18.1 18.8 18.5 18.6 18.4 17.7 18.0 17.4 28.4 28.8 28.9 29.2 29 9 30 6 30 9 31 3 32 1 32 6 139 7 56.5 83.2 139 0 56.1 82.9 142 9 57.1 85.8 145 5 58 0 87.5 148 0 58 8 89.2 151 2 59.9 91.4 153 9 61.2 92.7 157 3 61. 9 95.3 157 9 62.9 95.0 166 7 64.4 102. 2 517.3 559.0 18.6 17.7 21.0 18.8 30.2 32.4 34 8 27.8 133 9 54.6 79.2 136 5 55.6 80.9 138.0 55.7 82.3 470.6 477.4 485.7 493.9 504.0 513.7 137 0 55.6 81.4 143 8 57.5 86.3 155 1 61 5 93.6 170 4 65 6 104.8 19.1 9.3 20.0 9.8 21.4 10.5 22.9 11.2 18.9 9.0 18.9 9.2 19.1 9.5 19.3 9.4 19.4 9.5 19.9 9.7 20.2 10.0 20 5 10.0 21.0 10.2 21.1 10.5 21.6 10.5 21.8 10.9 22.0 10.9 22.8 10.9 23.1 11.2 23.7 11.6 Electric, gas, and sanitary services Wholesale and retail trade 97 70.3 10.3 73.4 11 1 79.1 1] 6 83.6 96 69.3 97 70.1 98 70.8 99 71.0 10 1 72.3 10 2 72.5 10 5 73.6 10 6 75.2 10 7 77.1 10 9 78.8 11 3 80.0 11 4 80.5 11 3 82.1 11 6 82.5 11.7 83.9 •11.9 85.9 Finance, insurance, and real estate - ._• Services 50.7 50.7 53.6 54.1 57.1 58.9 61.0 63.0 49.6 49.3 50.4 50.5 51.2 51.0 51.8 51.8 52.6 52.9 52.9 53.6 53.8 54.7 54.9 55.4 55.4 57.0 56.7 58.5 57.7 59.7 58.7 60.4 59.3 60.6 60.3 62.0 61.5 64.1 62.9 65.3 Government and government enterprises. - . Rest of the world 60.7 33 64.7 3.4 70.0 40 75.2 43 59.7 3.0 60.3 3.2 60.8 3.2 62.0 3.7 63.2 3.5 64.0 33 64.8 3.3 66.7 33 68.1 4.2 69.1 4.0 70.8 4.0 72.0 3.8 72.9 4.7 73.9 4.8 75.7 4.1 78.5 3.4 Transportation Communication __ _ _ _ . . SURVEY OF CUREENT BUSINESS July 1966 15 Table 1.13.—National Income by Sector and Legal Form of Organization Table 1.12.-—National Income by Industry [Millions of dollars] [Millions of dollars] 1962 1963 1964 1965 1962 All industries, total Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries .. 18, 455 Farms Agricultural services, forestry, and fisheries Mining Metal mining Coal mining Crude petroleum and natural gas Mining and quarrying of nonmetallic minerals. __ __ Contract construction Manufacturing _ Nondurable goods _ . 18, 587 17, 683 21 028 17, 301 1,154 17 404 1,183 16 398 1,285 19 671 1 357 5 653 5 954 5 950 6 432 758 1 141 2, 811 943 785 1 212 2, 917 1, 040 883 1 284 2,658 1,125 1 025 1 361 2 775 1 271 22 834 24 198 26 419 28 328 136,988 143, 839 155, 078 170 408 55 609 61 484 65 632 Food and kindred products 12 832 13 409 14 252 Tobacco manufactures 1 136 1 216 1 202 Textile mill products 4 664 4 713 5 204 Apparel and other fabricated textile products 5 489 5 672 6 075 Paper and allied products _ __ 5 112 5 163 5 495 Printing, publishiD g, and allied industries 7, 119 7,312 8,006 Chemicals and allied products 9,910 10, 402 11, 212 Petroleum refining and related industries 4 489 4 597 4 667 Rubber and miscellaneous plastic products . __ 3 172 3 286 3 590 Leather and leather products-1,686 1,738 1,781 14 480 1 191 5 854 6 563 5 734 8 615 12, 332 5 063 3 984 1,816 Durable goods _ ._ __ Transportation. __ _ ____ Railroad transportation Local, suburban, and highway passenger Motor freight transportation and warehousing Water transportation __ __ Air transportation Pipeline transportation Transportation services 86 331 93 594 104 776 3,289 2 260 4 748 10 937 8,798 13 307 12 086 3,549 2 363 5 062 11, 521 9,184 14 016 12 326 3,912 2 596 5 437 13 120 10, 126 16 158 12 786 4,122 2 850 5 789 14 747 11, 340 18 362 14 215 9 828 10 314 3 265 2 547 10 411 11 848 3 507 2 544 10 757 12 287 3 715 2 700 11 14 4 2 __. 19, 060 20, 025 21,372 22, 926 6,438 1 703 6 588 1,724 1,664 340 603 6,634 1 716 6 913 1 815 1,881 426 640 6,795 1 771 7 463 2,001 2,229 429 684 7,084 1 857 8 185 2,018 2,574 454 754 9 284 9 820 10 529 11 152 8 253 1,031 8 717 1 103 9,382 1,147 9 924 1,228 9 739 10 344 11 080 11 605 ; Communication Telephone and telegraph _ _ __ Radio broadcasting and television 57 508 81 379 Lumber and wood products, except furniture. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Furniture and fixtures Stone, clay, and glass products . Primary metal industries . _ _ __ Fabricated metal products Machinery, except electrical Electrical machinery Transportation equipment and ordnance, except motor vehicles Motor vehicles and motor vehicle equipment Instruments _ _. _ Miscellaneous manufacturing industries _ _ _ __ . _- _ - _. „ . Electric, gas, and sanitary services Wholesale and retail trade 549 537 391 874 70 328 73 414 79 127 83 600 25 505 44 823 26 768 46 646 28 682 50 445 30, 514 53 086 50 730 53, 567 57 115 61 019 7 320 7 977 8 562 8 963 —333 —361 —679 1 513 1 397 1 578 5 064 4 903 5 145 2,453 2 175 2 268 34 991 37 383 40 056 —615 1,745 5 329 2,590 43 007 54 134 58 911 63, 013 Hotels and other lodging places 2 270 2 423 2 592 Personal services 5 036 5 282 5 690 Miscellaneous business services _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 6,122 6 614 7 528 Automobile repair, automobile services, and garages- _ _ 2,017 2,174 2,356 Miscellaneous repair services __ _ 1 227 1 315 1 391 Motion pictures 890 910 1 054 Amusement and recreation services, except motion pictures 1 849 1 970 2 126 Medical and other health services 12* 609 13 519 14 666 Legal services. _ 3 162 3 424 3 724 Educational services 3 010 3 374 3 755 Nonprofit membership organizations _ _ 4,298 4,562 4,904 4 743 5 216 Miscellaneous professional services 4 385 Private households 3 803 3 824 3 909 2,785 6 012 8,343 2, 535 1,482 1 205 Wholesale trade Retail trade _ - - Finance, insurance, and real estate. . Banking Credit agencies, holding and other investment companies Security and commodity brokers Insurance carriers Insurance agents, brokers, and service. _ _ _ _ _ Real estate Services _.. _ Government and government enterprises.-- 50 678 - - 2 237 15 562 3 881 4 137 5, 291 5 579 3 964 60, 670 64, 681 70, 003 75, 243 Federal _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ General government __ Government enterprises __ _ _„ . _ 28, 347 24, 277 4,070 29, 676 25, 261 4 415 31,858 27, 156 4 702 33, 469 28, 435 5,034 State and local. - __ General government Government enterprises -_ _-.__ _ __ 32, 323 30, 391 1,932 35, 005 32 859 2,146 38, 145 35 876 2,269 41> 774 39, 346 2,428 3,268 3,364 4,014 4,266 Rest of the world 1963 1964 1965 457,687 481, 927 517, 281 559 020 _ - __ . National income Income originating in business, total 457, 687 481, 927 517, 281 559,020 384, 763 404,444 432,974 468, 628 Corporate business, including mutual financial institutions _ - 256, 360 270, 356 292, 254 Compensation of employees Wages and salaries.. Supplements to wages and salaries 205, 903 216, 334 231, 389 186, 065 194, 939 208, 504 19 838 21 395 22, 885 Corporate profits and inventory valuation adjustment Profits before tax Inventory valuation adjustment _ Net interest Sole proprietors and partnerships Compensation of employees __ __ -_ Wages and salaries _;.____; Supplements to wages and salaries - Proprietors' income Income of unincorporated enterprises Inventory valuation adjustment Net interest !_ - Other private business Compensation of employees Wages and salaries Supplements to wages and salaries . Proprietors' income Rental income of persons Compensation of employees Wages and salaries. Supplements to wages and salaries Income originating in the rest of the world Compensation of employees Corporate profits Net interest 70, 999 72, 474 -1,475 -2, 637 —2,364 —2, 687 -2, 470 91 974 95 027 99 029 106 324 40, 372 38, 079 2,293 42, 198 39, 686 2,512 45, 115 42, 489 2, 626 48, 343 45, 574 2,769 49, 711 49, 694 17 50, 618 50, 652 -34 51, 513 51, 555 -42 55, 355 55,729 -374 1,891 2, 211 2, 401 2,626 30, 427 32, 500 34, 720 37, 337 1,669 1,569 100 1,760 1,649 111 1,855 1,740 115 1,987 1,864 123 400 395 390 390 16 691 17, 139 17, 665 18, 344 13, 206 14, 810 16, 616 6,002 6,561 6,971 7,462 _ 6, 002 5,566 436 6,561 6,072 489 6,971 6, 423 548 7,462 6,901 561 54, 668 58, 120 63, 032 67,781 54, 668 -- 50, 363 4,305 58,120 53, 375 4,745 63, 032 57, 874 5,158 67, 781 62, 307 5,474 14,988 15,999 17,261 18,345 14, 988 14, 419 569 15,999 15, 342 657 17, 261 16, 555 706 18, 345 17, 575 770 3,268 3,364 4,014 4,266 30 2,566 672 32 2,547 785 34 3,041 939 36 3,202 1,028 - Income originating in households and institutions Compensation of employees Wages and salaries -Supplements to wages and salaries 63 552 63, 985 —433 11, 667 -- Income originating in general government ... __ Compensation of employees __ Wages and salaries -. _Supplements to wages and salaries 56, 386 56, 854 -468 -_- - _ - Net interest Government enterprises. _- t _ .- -- 53 094 52, 342 252 317, 505 248. 976 224, 132 24 844 - _- _ Table 1.14.—Gross Corporate Productl [Billions of dollars] • 1 2 3 4 5 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 32 33 34 35 1963 1962 1962 1963 1964 1965 I II III IV I II 1964 III IV I 1965 III II IV I II III IV Seasonally adjusted at annual rates Gross Corporate Product. Capital consumption allowances Indirect business taxes plus transfer . payments less subsidies Income originating in corporate business _i __. Compensation of employees Wages and salaries Supplements Net interest Corporate profits and inventory valuation adjustment Profits before tax Profits tax liabilityProfits after tax . Dividends Undistributed profits Inventory valuation adjustment Gross product originating in financial institutions Gross product originating in nonfinancial corporations. Capital consumption allowances Indirect business taxes plus transfer payments less subsidies _ . __ Income originating in nonfinancial corporations Compensation of employees __ Wages and salaries Supplements Net interest Corporate profits and inventory valuation adjustment. Profits before tax _.. Profits tax liabilityProfits after tax . . Dividends Undistributed profits __ _ _ . Inventory valuation adjustment Addenda: Cash flow, gross of dividends: All corporations (2+12) _ . Nonfinancial corporations (18+28) Cash flow, net of dividends: All corporations (2+14) _ _ Nonfinancial corporations (18+30) 317.4 335.0 360.9 391.2 311.3 316.0 319.7 322.8 325.8 332.1 30.1 31.8 33.9 36.3 29.6 29.9 30.2 30.6 30.9 31.7 31.9 32.5 31.0 32.9 34.8 37.4 30.4 30.7 31.2 31.7 32.4 32.7 33.0 33.4 33.6 34.5 35.4 35.8 37.1 37.1 37.3 37.9 256.4 270.4 292.3 317.5 251.3 255.4 258.3 260.5 262.5 267.8 273.2 277.9 284.4 290.0 296.0 298.6 309.5 312.8 319.0 328.8 205.9 186.1 19.8 -2.6 216.3 194.9 21.4 -2.4 231.4 208.5 22.9 -2.7 249.0 224.1 24.8 -2.5 201.8 182.5 19.3 -2.5 205.6 185.9 19.7 -2.6 207.4 187.4 20.0 -2.7 208.8 188.5 20.3 -2.8 211.7 190.8 20.9 -2.5 214.6 193.4 21.2 -2.3 217.7 196.1 21.5 -2.2 221.4 199.4 22.0 -2.4 224.8 202.8 22.0 -2.5 229.3 206.7 22.6 -2.7 234.1 210.9 23.2 -2.8 237.4 213.6 23.8 -2.7 242.4 218.3 24.1 -2.6 246.1 221.6 24.5 -2.5 250.5 225.4 25.1 -2.4 256.8 231.2 25.7 -2.4 53.1 52.8 24.2 28.7 14.0 56.4 56.9 26.3 30.5 15.4 63.6 64.0 28.4 35.6 16.0 71.0 72.5 31.2 41.3 17.7 52.0 52.1 23.7 28.3 13.3 52.3 52.3 23.9 28.4 13.7 53.6 53.4 24.4 29.0 14.1 54.5 53.6 24.7 29.0 14.2 53.3 53.2 24.8 28.4 14.9 55.5 56.4 26.1 30.3 15.4 57.8 57.6 26.6 31.0 15.6 58.9 60.2 27.8 32.4 15.9 62.1 62.6 27.9 34.8 15.7 63.5 63.7 28.3 35.5 15.9 64.7 64.8 28.7 36.1 16.0 63.9 64.8 28.6 36.2 16.4 69.6 71.0 30.7 40.3 16.5 69.2 70.9 30.7 40.2 17.2 70.9 71.9 30.9 41.0 18.1 74.4 76.2 32.4 43.7 19.0 14.7 3 15.1 19.6 23.6 15.1 14.6 14.9 14.7 13.5 14.9 15.4 16.5 19.1 19.5 20.1 19.8 23.7 23.0 22.9 24.7 — 5 4 15 .0 .1 .9 .2 — .9 .2 -1.3 — .5 — .3 .0 — .9 — 1'.3 —1.8 —1.0 —1.8 14.6 15.0 15.6 16.5 14.7 14.7 14.6 14.3 14.8 14.8 15.0 15.3 15.2 15.6 15.7 15.9 16.0 16.3 16.6 17.2 302.8 320.0 345.3 374.6 296.6 301.3 305.1 308.4 311.0 317.3 323.2 328.6 335.7 342.4 349.9 353.3 365.8 369.5 376.5 386.7 29.2 29.4 29.8 30.2 30.9 31.1 31.7 32.1 32.6 33.3 33.9 34.2 35.0 35.8 36.3 29.4 29.9 30.3 31.0 31.3 31.6 32.1 32.2 33.0 33.9 34.3 35.5 35.5 35.8 36.3 29.3 31.0 32.9 35.3 28.9 29.7 31.5 33.3 35.8 29.1 338. 1 343.9 350.9 358.0 365.6 369.2 381.8 385.8 393.1 403.9 32.9 33.5 34.2 34.8 35.2 36.0 36.8 37.2 243.8 257^6 279.0 303.5 238.6 242.8 245.7 248.3 249.8 255.1 260.4 264.8 271.4 276.8 282.7 285.1 296.0 299.0 304.9 314.1 194.7 176.2 18.5 4.1 204.4 184.5 19.9 4.5 218.7 197.3 21.4 5.2 235.5 212.3 23.2 5.9 190.7 172.7 18.0 3.9 194.5 196.2 176.1 . 177.5 18.4 18.7 4.2 4.0 197.5 178.6 18.9 4.4 200.1 180.7 19.4 4.2 202.9 183.1 19.7 4.4 205.7 185.7 20.1 4.6 209.0 188.5 20.4 4.8 212.4 191.9 20.6 4.9 216.7 195.7 21.1 5.0 221.2 199.5 21.6 5.2 224.4 202.2 22.2 5.5 229.4 206.9 22.5 5.6 232.8 209.9 22.9 5.8 236.9 213.5 23.4 6.0 243.0 219.0 24.0 6.3 45.0 44.7 20.9 23.9 12.8 48.6 49.1 22.9 26.2 14.3 55.2 55.6 24.3 31.3 14.6 62.1 63.6 27.5 36.1 16.2 44.0 44.1 20.5 23.6 12.0 44.2 44.2 20.6 23.6 12.6 45.4 45.2 21.1 24.2 13.0 46.4 45.5 21.3 24.2 13.1 45.5 45.3 21.3 24.1 13.8 47.8 48.8 22.7 26.0 14.3 50.1 49.9 23.2 26.7 14.5 51.0 52.3 24.3 28.0 14.8 54.1 54.6 24.0 30.7 14.4 55.0 55.3 24.2 31.1 14.5 56,3 56.3 24,6 31.7 14.5 55.3 56.2 24.4 31.7 14.8 61.1 62.4 27.1 35.3 15.0 60.4 62.2 27.0 35.2 15.7 61.9 62.9 27.2 35.8 16.6 64.9 66.7 28.5 38.2 17.5 11.1 11.9 16.8 19.9 11.6 10.9 11.2 11.1 10.3 11.8 12.2 13.2 16.3 16.6 17.2 16.9 20.2 19.5 19.2 20.7 .3 -.5 -.4 -1.5 -.1 .0 .1 .9 .2 -.9 .2 -1.3 -.5 -.3 .0 -.9 -1.3 -1.8 -1.0 -1.8 58.7 62.3 69.5 77.6 58.0 58.2 59.2 59.6 59.3 62.0 62.9 64.9 67.7 68.9 70.3 71.0 75.5 76.2 77.8 80.9 53.2 57.1 64.3 71.4 52.5 52.7 53.6 54.0 54.2 56.9 .57.8 59.7 62.8 63.7 65.0 65.6 69.5 70.1 71.6 74.4 44.8 46.8 53.5 59.9 44.7 44.5 45.1 45.3 44.5 46.6 47.3 49.0 52.0 53.0 54.3 54.7 58.9 59.0 59.7 61.9 40.4 42.8 49.7 55.2 40.5 40.1 40.6 40.9 40.4 42.6 43.3 44.9 48.4 49.2 50.5 50.8 54.5 54.4 55.0 57.0 i Excludes gross product originating in the rest of the world. Table 1.15.—Gross Auto Product [Billions of dollars] 1963 1962 1962 1963 1964 1965 I II III IV I II 19*)5 1964 III IV I II III IV I II III IV Seasonally adjuste 1 at aniltual rat<js Gross auto product 1 Personal consumption expenditures Producers' durable equipment Change in dealers' auto inventories Net exportsExports Imports ... Addenda: New cars, domestic 2. New cars, foreign 1 ? 22.5 25.1 25.8 31.4 21.3 21.7 23.5 23.4 24.5 24.4 25.4 26.0 26.3 26.6 27.1 23.1 32.6 30.8 31.6 30.5 18 8 20.6 21.7 25.3 18.0 18.4 19.0 19.7 20.3 20.5 20.7 21.0 21.4 22.0 23.0 20.3 25.8 24.8 25.6 25.1 3.3 3.6 3.8 4.5 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.6 3.7 3.7 3.8 3.9 4.1 3.6 4.6 4.4 4.5 4.4 .1 .4 —.1 1.1 -.3 .8 .0 .5 -.1 .5 .7 .8 .3 —.6 -1.1 1.8 1.3 .9 .5 2 .6 .4 2 .7 .5 .3 .9 .6 .3 1.0 .7 -.2 1 .5 .4 2 .6 .4 .3 .7 .4 .1 .6 .5 .0 .4 .4 .2 .7 .5 .3 .8 .5 .4 .9 .5 .2 .8 .5 .2 .8 .6 .5 1.0 .6 .1 .8 .6 .3 .8 .5 .2 .9 .7 .4 1.1 .6 .3 1.1 .8 20.6 .7 23.1 .8 23.8 .9 29.0 1.1 19.4 .7 19.9 .7 21.6 .7 21.5 .7 22.5 .7 22.3 .8 23.6 .7 24.0 .8 24.3 .9 24.6 .9 25.1 1.0 21.0 1.0 30.7 .9 29.0 1.0 29.7 1.2 26.7 1.3 The gross auto product total includes government purchases, which amounted to $0.2 billion annually, 1962-65. Differs from the gross auto product total by the markup on both used cars and foreign cars. 16 Table 1« 16."Gross Auto Product in Constant Dollars [Billions of 1958 dollars] 19 62 1962 1963 1964 I 1965 II 1964 1963 IV III I II I IV III II 19C 5 III IV I II III IV Sea sonally adjustec 1 at annual rate s Gross auto product l Personal consumption expenditures .. Producers' durable equipment. __ __ __ Change in dealers' auto inventories Net exports Exports Imports 22.0 24,7 25.4 31.4 20.8 21.3 23.1 23.0 24.2 23 9 25 1 25 6 26 0 26 2 26.7 22 9 32 2 30 6 31 9 30 7 18.4 20.3 21.4 25.3 17 7 18 1 18 6 19 3 20 0 20 1 20 5 20 6 21 0 21 6 22 7 20 1 25 4 24 6 25 9 25 3 37 38 40 36 4 5 4 3 4 6 4 5 5 3 3. 2 3.6 3.8 4.5 3.1 3.2 33 34 3.5 35 36 3 Q .1 .4 —.2 11 — 2 — 3 g 0 5 I 5 7 8 3 6 11 18 13 9 .2 .6 .4 2 ,7 .5 3 .9 .6 3 1.0 .7 1 .5 .4 2 .6 .4 3 .7 .4 2 .7 5. 0 .4 .4 2 .7 .5 3 .8 .5 4 9 5 2 8 5 2 9 .6 5 11 .6 2 8 7 3 8 .5 2 9 7 4 11 .6 11 20.1 22 8 23 4 29 2 21 1 22 0 .8 8 23 2 23 7 23 9 24 2 1.1 19 4 22 2 1.0 18 9 21 1 .8 24 7 10 20 9 10 30 Q 10 28 6 29 7 28 7 13 __ _ _ _ - _ -1- Addenda: New 2cars, domestic New cars, foreign .7 .7 .8 .7 .8 i The gross auto product total includes government purchases, which amounted to $0.2 billion annually, 1962-65. *7 8 9 9 Table l918.™"Gross Farm Product in Constant Dollars [Billions of 1958 dollars] 1962 1963 1964 39, 928 40, 997 39, 322 43 441 Cash receipts from farm marketings and CCC loans____ 36,068 Farm products consumed directly in farm households. _ 1,074 Change in farm inventories 714 Gross rental value of farm homes 2,072 37, 046 1,014 785 2 153 36S 719 934 —594 2 263 39, 208 924 935 2 374 Cash receipts from farm marketings and CCC loans Farm products consumed directly in farm households.. Change in farm inventories Gross rental value of farm homes _ _ _ _ 18,642 19, 291 18, 728 19, 485 16 937 17 475 16 966 17 578 1,705 1,816 1, 762 -63 -161 21, 223 4,095 1,384 _ Less: Value of intermediate products consumed, total Intermediate products consumed, other than rents Gross rents paid to nonfarm landlords (excluding operating expenses) Plus: Other items Equals: Gross farm product _ -__ _ _ Less: Capital consumption allowances Indirect business taxes __ _ _ _ . _ _ _ _ _ 12 2 Differs from the gross auto product total by the markup on both used cars and foreign cars, Table 1.17.—Gross Farm Product [Millions of dollars] Total value of farm output, _ _ _ _ _ 10 .9 1965 1962 1965 42.0 41.1 ' 43.2 .7 38.3 1.1 .8 38.8 1.0 —.6 39.6 .9 .9 1.9 1.9 1.9 18.6 19.1 18.9 19.3 16.9 17.3 17.2 17.4 1,907 Less: Value of intermediate products consumed, total.—.. Intermediate products consumed, other than rents Gross rents paid to nonfarm landlords (excluding operating expenses) 1.7 1.7 1.7 1.8 -177 —198 Plus: Other items. ... -.1 -.2 -.2 -.2 21,545 20, 417 23S 758 22.1 22.8 22.0 23.8 4,201 1,457 4,458 1, 508 4 694 1,594 Plus: Government payments to farm landlords 1, 557 1,517 1,947 2,201 Equals s National income originating in farming 17,301 17, 404 169398 19, 671 40.7 1964 1963 Total value of farm output . _ _ __ __• Equals; Gross farm product - - 37.0 : 1.1 1.9 Table 1.19.— Gross National Product; Not Seasonally: Adjusted [Billions of dollars] 19 65 19 54 1963 1962 II ' III IV I II IV III III IV I II III 139.6 138.1 151. S 137.8 146.1 146, 5 160. 2 148.3 157.1 156.2 •170.1 157.2 168.2 168.1 187,7 87,4 86.6 98.3 87.3 92.2 92.0 103.5 93.4 98.3 99.0 110.6 98.9 105.5 105.9 121.2 10 8 36.6 35. 3 12 4 39.6 35.5 11 3 39 4 35.9 15 1 46.9 36.3 11 6 38.1 37.5 13 5 41.0 37.7 12.4 41.2 38.4 16.3 48. 4 38.8 13.1 40. 3 40.0 15.1 42.7 40.5 14.0 43.8 41.1 17.1 52.0 41.5 14.6 41. 6 . 42.7 16.2 46. 0 43.3 15.3 46.4 44.1 20.0 56.5 44.7 19.9 21.4 21.3 20.4 20.3 22.2 22.3 22.3 22.3 24.0 23.0 23.7 25.5 27.0 26.5 27.6 16.2 20.0 20.9 21.3 21.9 19.1 22.9 23.1 23.1 20.8 25.0 25.4 26.3 11.4 4.2 7 2 13.3 4.6 86 12.0 13.9 13.7 14.7 16.3 15.3 17.5 19.2 88 81 84 4.2 9.2 15.4 5. 7 90 15.6 5.2 10.3 17.6 5.3 9.4 13.5 9.7 10.4 10.4 11.4 10.9 12.1 4.8 4 6 .1 6.7 65 .1 6.6 7.6 7.5 .2 7.2 7.1 .1 5.6 5.5 .1 7.4 7.2 .1 7.7 7.6 .2 6.9 6.7 .1 .'5.4 7 2 7.4 7.3 7.9 7.7 .2 7.1 6.9 .1 3. 7 3.6 .1 15 13 .l 9 .7 .2 .9 .8 .2 .4 .1 .3 3.2 3.2 -.1 .2 -.2 .5 .6 -.1 4.7 4.7 .0 1.1 .8 .4 .1.3 —.1 1.0 1.2 -.2 1.2 16 7 1.7 1.'4 1.7 .6 2.2 2.4 2.1 1. 3 2.7 1.8 2. 2 .9 2.1 7.1 5.9 7.9 6.4 7.2 6.5 8.0 6.4 7.3 6.0 8.3 6.6 7.7 7.1 9.0 6.8 8.9 6.5 9.2 7.1 8.8 7.5 10.0 10.4 9.4 8.5 10.6 7.4 8.6 6.8 27.5 29.1 29.4 31.1 28.8 30.0 31.6 32.1 30.2 32.7 32.9 33. 2 .31.0 33.6 34.8 36.9 Federal National defense Other 15.2 12.7 2.5 15.9 13.8 15.3 12.0 17.1 13.1 15.7 12.4 15.4 12.9 16.0 12.5 17.1 12.9 15.9 12.2 16.6 13.3 3.4 15.8 12.1 16.8 12.3 15. 4 11.7 16.2 12.6 16.2 12.0 4.5 3.7 3.6 4.2 19.0 -13.8 3.6 State and local 12.3 13.2 14.2 14.3 16.0 17. 1 16. 3 15. 6 17.4 18.6 I II Gross National Product 131.3 Personal consumption expenditures 82.7 Durable goods Nondurable goods Services •. __ Gross private domestic investment _ _ Fixed investment ._ „ Nonresidential Structures __ __ Producers' durable equipment Residential structures Nonfarm Farm __ _ _ _ • Change in business inventories Nonfarm Farm . ._ Net exports of goods and services Exports Imports _ .. _: _ Government purchases of goods and services _ _ 2.1 20.4 13.1 5.2 7 9 7.3 .2 3.3 20.4 13.9 5.1 17.1 3.9 4.9 5.1 7.0 "6.4 50 69 .1 .1 .1 j 32 13 -.3 .3 3.0 .2 1.1 .1 3.9 14.0 3.3 13.1 2.5 14.5 5.3 3.5 15.6 IV 4.2 15.0 I • 3.7 5.8 4.9 5.3 .1 6.2 .1 2.0 1.7 .2 8.2 7.1 6.6 17 1.0 .3 8.5 5.2 • 17.9 2.—Personal Income and Outlay Table 2.1.—Personal Income and Its Disposition 1962 1964 1963 1962 1965 I II IV III I Millions of dollars Personal income 442,617 465,487 495, 953 535,083 _ IV III II I II 1965 IV III I II III IV Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates Wage and salary disbursements 296,091 311,095 333, 619 358,389 Commodity-producing industries 120,756 125,744 134,013 144,300 Manufacturing 96,662 100,606 107,166 115,509 Distributive industries 72,538 75,991 81,154 86,711 Service industries 46,838 49,881 54,121 58,134 Government 55,959 59,479 64,331 69,244 O ther labor income 1964 1963 433. 9 440.8 445.0 450.3 457.0 461.3 467.8 475.8 484,0 492.0 500.3 507.5 518.0 527.6 541.9 552.8 290.3 295.6 297.9 300. 6 304.5 308.5 313.0 318.5 324.4 330. 6 337.2 342.3 348.2 353.7 360.8 370.8 118.3 94.7 71.2 45.7 55.1 120.9 96.8 72.3 46.8 55.6 121.7 97.3 73.0 47.1 56.0 122.1 97.8 73.6 47.7 57.1 122.9 98.5 74.6 48.8 58.1 124.8 99.8 75.5 49.4 58.8 126.7 101.1 76.4 50.3 59.6 128.6 103.0 77.4 51.1 61.4 130.2 104.2 79.1 52.6 62.6 132.9 106.2 80.5 53.7 63.5 135.5 108.6 81.9 54.8 65.0 137.4 109.7 83.1 55.4 66.3 140.9 112.6 84.6 55.7 67.0 142.6 114.0 86.0 57.2 68.0 144.8 116.2 87.1 59.2 69.7 148.9 119.2 89.1 60.5 72.3 13,884 14,864 16,613 18,539 13.4 13.7 14.0 14.3 14.5 14.6 15.0 15.4 15.9 16.4 16.9 17.3 17.8 18.2 18.8 19.4 Proprietors' income __ _ 50, 111 Business and professional. __ 37,093 Farm 13,018 51,013 37,910 13,103 51,903 39,884 12,019 55,745 40,654 15,091 50.3 36.7 13.5 50.4 37.1 13.3 49.9 37.2 12.7 49.8 37.3 12.6 50.8 37.5 13.4 50.7 37.6 13.1 51.1 38.1 13.0 51.4 38.5 12.9 51.3 39.1 12.2 52.2 39.9 12.2 51.9 40.3 11.7 52.2 40.3 11.9 53.3 40.5 12.9 55.9 40.4 15.5 56.7 40.7 16.0 57.1 •41.1 16.0 Rental income of persons Dividends Personal interest income 16, 691 15, 183 27,708 17, 139 16,454 31,427 17,665 17, 340 34,594 18,344 19, 173 38,403 16.3 14.4 26.3 16.5 15.0 27.1 16.8 15.3 28.2 17.2 15.6 29.2 17.1 16.0 29.9 17.1 16.4 30.8 17.1 16.6 31.9 17.2 16.8 32.9 17.4 17.1 33.3 17.6 17.3 34.0 17.8 17.4 35.1 17.9 17.7 35.9 18.1 18.1 36.9 18.3 18.8 38.0 18.4 19.5 38.9 18.5 20.2 39.7 Transfer payments Old-age and survivors insurance benefits State unemployment insurance benefits Veterans' benefits Other 33,286 35,318 36,763 39,702 33.1 32.9 33.2 34.1 35.7 34.8 35.0 35.6 37.1 36.4 36.6 37.0 38.6 37.8 42.0 40.5 14,298 15,245 16,018 18,067 13.8 14.1 14.4 14.9 15.0 15.1 15.4 15.5 15.8 15.9 16.1 16.3 16.7 16.6 20.4 18.6 2,921 4,827 11,240 2,823 5,036 12,214 2,564 5,262 12,919 2,198 5,637 13,800 3.3 4.8 11.2 2.8 4.8 11.1 2.8 4.8 11.2 2.9 5.0 11.4 3.0 4.9 12.8 2.8 5.0 11.9 2.7 5.0 11.9 2.7 5.1 12.3 2.7 5.2 13.3 2.6 5.3 12.7 2.5 5.3 12.8 2.4 5.3 13.0 2.4 5.5 14.1 2.2 5.6 13.3 2.2 5.7 13.7 2.0 5.8 14.1 Less: Personal contributions for social insurance 10,337 11,823 12,544 13,212 10.2 10.3 10.4 10.5 11.6 11.7 11.9 12.1 12.3 12.4 12.6 12.8 13.1 13.2 13.2 13.5 Less: Personal tax and nontax payments 57,350 60,883 59,^78 65,991 55.0 56.8 58.1 59.5 60.3 60.6 60.9 61.7 60.7 56.9 59.1 60.9 64.9 66.6 65.7 66.7 Equals: Disposable personal income 385,267 404,604 436, 575 469,092 378.9 384.0 386.9 390.8 396.7 400.7 406.9 414.1 423.4 435.1 441.2 446.6 453.2 461.0 476.2 486.1 Less: Personal outlays. _ 363,677 384,662 412,088 443,407 356.6 Personal consumption expenditures _ 355,057 374,982 401,356 431,465 348.3 Interest p a i d by consumers __ 8,108 9,075 10,132 11,314 7.8 Personal transfer payments 5 to foreigners 512 605 628, 600 360.2 365.9 371.9 377.4 381.5 388.1 391.6 401.4 408.5 418.4 420.0 430.3 438.6 447.1 457.6 351.7 357.2 363.0 368.2 372.0 378.3 381.5 391.1 398.0 407.5 408.8 418.9 426.8 435.0 445.2 8.0 5 8.2 8.4 8.6 8.9 9.2 9.5 10.0 10.3 10.6 10.8 11.2 11.5 11.8 5 5 6 6 6 6 9.7 6 6 6 6 .6 .6 .6 .6 25,S85 22.3 23.9 20.9 18.9 19.3 19.2 18.8 22.5 22.0 26.6 22.8 26.6 22.8 22.4 29.0 28.5 _ 367,300 381,300 406,500 430,800 362.6 366.8 368.5 371.1 375.7 378.0 383.1 388.1 395.7 405.5 410.8 413.9 418.8 423.7 436. g 443.9 Equals: Personal saving 21,590 19,942 24, 487 Addendum: Disposable p e r (1958) dollars. Table 2.2.—Personal Incomes Seasonally Adjusted Monthly Totals at Annual Rates [Billions of dollars] Wage and salary disbursements Year and month Personal income 1962 442.6 All industries 296.1 Commodityproducing Total 120.8 Manufacturing 96.7 Distributive 72.5 Proprietors' income Service Government 46.8 56.0 Other labor income Business and professional 13.9 37.1 Farm Eental income of persons Dividends 13.0 16.7 15.2 33.3 10.3 425.5 26.1 26.3 26.5 26.8 27.1 27.5 33.1 32.9 33.4 32.7 32.9 33.0 10.2 10.1 10.3 10.3 10.3 10.3 413.1 416.1 419. 7 422.2 423.4 424.6 15.1 15.3 15.5 15.4 15.3 16.0 27.9 28.2 28.6 28.8 29.1 29.5 33.0 33.3 33.2 34.2 34.1 34.0 10.4 10.4 10.3 10.5 10.5 10.5 426.5 427.8 430.2 431.3 433.7 435.8 16.5 31.4 35.3 11.8 448.1 440.2 438. 1 439.9 440.9 443.9 447.0 448.1 450.3 452.5 456.0 457.8 462.2 January February March _ April May _ _ _ __ _ June -. 430.7 433.7 437. 2 439.8 440.8 441.8 287.8 290. 3 292.7 295.1 295.5 296.0 117.0 118.3 119.5 121.1 120.8 120.8 93.8 94.8 95.7 96.8 96.7 96.8 70.5 71.1 71.8 72.0 72.3 72.6 45.5 45.7 46.0 46.6 46.7 46.9 54.7 55.2 55.4 55.5 55.6 55.7 13.3 13.4 13.5 13.6 13.7 13.8 36.6 36.7 37.0 37.1 37.2 37.1 13.6 13.5 13.5 13.5 13.3 13.1 16.3 16.3 16.3 16.4 16.5 16.6 14.2 14.4 14.6 14.9 15.0 15.1 July August _ __ September. _ _ _ _ _ October November December _ _ 443.4 444.6 447.0 447.9 450.4 452.6 297.3 297.4 299.1 299.0 301.0 301.9 121.5 121.4 122.2 121.6 122.4 122.4 97.2 97.0 97.8 97.4 98.0 98.0 72.8 72.9 73.4 73.3 73.6 73.9 47.1 47.1 47.2 47.5 47.8 47.9 55.8 56.1 56.3 56.6 57.2 57.6 13.9 14.1 14.1 14.3 14.4 14.4 37.2 37.2 37.3 37.1 37.3 37.3 12.8 12.7 12.6 12.6 12.6 12.7 16.7 16.8 16.9 17.1 17.2 17.3 125.7 100. 6 76.0 49.9 59.5 14.9 37.9 13.1 17.1 1963 January February March... April May'__ June.-- _ _ July August _ _ _ _ _ September October. November _ December _ 18 Less: personal NonagriPersonal interest Transfer . contribu- cultural income payments tions for income social insurance 27.7 465.5 311.1 457.6 455.7 457.6 458.4 461.2 464.2 303.2 304.3 305.8 306.3 308.2 310.9 122.7 122.7 123. 4 123.5 124.9 125.8 98. 3 98.3 98.9 98.8 100.0 100.6 74.2 74.6 75.1 75.2 75.3 76.1 48.5 48.9 49.0 49.1 49.3 49.8 57.8 58.2 58.4 58.6 58.7 59.2 14.4 14.5 14.5 14.6 14.6 14.7 37.5 37.5 37.5 37.6 37.7 37.6 13.2 13.4 13.4 13.3 13.1 12.9 17.2 17.1 17.1 17.1 17.1 17.1 16.0 16.1 16.0 16.1 16.4 16.6 29.7 29.9 30.2 30.4 30.8 31.2 38.1 34.4 34.7 34.7 34.9 34.8 11.7 11.5 11.6 11,7 11.7 11.8 465.6 467.8 470.0 473.4 474.9 479.1 311.4 312.9 314.6 317.0 318.0 320.4 126.3 126.4 127.5 128.1 128.3 129.4 101.0 100.7 101.6 102.4 103.0 103.7 76.0 76.5 76.7 77.1 77.4 77.9 50.0 50.4 50.5 50.8 51.0 51.4 59.2 59.7 59.9 61.1 61.3 61.8 14.8 15.0 15.1 15.2 15.4 15.6 38.0 38.0 38.2 38.4 38.4 38.7 13.1 13.0 13.0 13.0 12.9 12.8 17. 1 17.1 17.1 17.2 17.2 17.2 16.6 16.5 16.5 16.6 16.7 17.2 31.6 32.0 32.2 32.6 32.9 33.3 34.9 35.1 35.1 35.5 35.4 36.1 11.9 11.9 11.9 12.0 12.0 12.2 Table 2.2.—-Personal Income: Seasonally Adjusted Monthly Totals at Annual Rates—Continued [Billions of dollars] Proprietors' income Wage and salary disbursements Year and month Personal income Commodityproducing AU industries Total Manufacturing 1964 496.0 333.6 134.0 January February March- _ _ _ April _ May June - 482.3 483.8 186.1 489.3 492. 6 494.1 321.6 324.9 326. 5 328.7 330.8 332.3 128. 9 130.4 131. 3 132.5 132.8 133. 5 July August September. _ October _ November December 497.3 500.8 502.7 503.5 506. 8 512.1 334.8 337.8 339.2 339.4 342.0 345. 4 1965 535.1 January February . March.-- April May June.- __ 516. 7 517.3 520.1 522.5 528.0 532.2 _ 535.4 537.8 552.5 547.2 553.2 558.2 July August _ September . October.... November December _ Distributive Other labor income Business and professional Service Government Less: Personal Personal Nonagriinterest Transfer contribu- cultural income payments tions for income social insurance Rental income of persons Dividends 12.0 17.7 17.3 34.6 36.8 12.5 479.7 17.0 17.1 17.1 17.1 17.3 17.4 33.2 33.3 33.5 33.7 34.0 34.4 38.5 36.2 36.4 36.6 36.5 36.2 12.3 12.3 12.3 12 .4 12.4 12.5 465.7 467.5 469.9 472.9 475.9 477.7 17.4 17.3 17.4 17.4 17.6 18.0 34.7 35.2 35.4 35.6 35.8 36.3 36.6 36.6 36.6 36.9 36. 7 37.3 12.6 12.6 12.7 12.8 12.8 12.9 481.3 484.9 486.9 487.5 490.7 495. 6 Farm 81.2 54.1 64.3 103. 5 104.2 104.8 105.9 106.2 106.6 78.5 79.1 79.5 79.9 80.7 81.0 52.1 52.8 52.8 53.2 53.8 54.0 62.1 62.6 62.9 63.1 63.5 63.8 15.7 15.9 16.0 16.2 16.4 16.5 38.8 39.1 39.4 39.7 40.0 40.1 12.4 12.2 12.0 12.2 12.3 12.2 17.3 17 A 17.4 17.5 17.6 17.6 134.5 135.7 136.4 135. 4 137. 2 139.6 107.5 108.7 109.6 107.9 109.6 111.4 81.8 82.1 81.8 82.5 83.1 83.7 54.5 54.7 55.3 55.3 55.4 55.5 64.0 65.2 65.6 66.2 66.3 66.6 16.7 16.9 17.1 17.2 17.3 17.5 40.3 40.2 40.2 40.2 40.2 40.4 11.7 11.7 11.7 11.7 11.9 12.2 17.7 17.8 17.9 17.9 17.9 18.0 358.4 144.3 115.5 86.7 58.1 69.2 18.5 40.7 15.1 18.3 19.2 38.4 39.7 13.2 515.6 345. 6 348.4 350.6 351.0 354.1 356. 1 139.7 141. 2 141. 9 141.2 142.7 143.8 111.8 112.7 113.3 113.1 114. 1 114.9 83.7 84.6 85.4 85.6 86.2 86.3 55.5 55.6 56.0 56.6 57.2 57.7 66.8 67.0 67.2 67.7 68.0 68.3 17.6 17.8 17.9 18.1 18.2 18.4 40.4 40.4 40.6 40.4 40.4 40.4 13.1 12.9 12.6 13.8 15.7 16.9 18.1 18.1 18.2 18.2 18.3 18.3 18.1 18.2 18.2 18.4 18.7 19.3 36.6 36.9 37.3 37.6 38.0 38.4 40.3 37.7 37.8 38.1 37.7 37.5 13.1 12.9 13.1 13.1 13.1 13.2 499.2 500.1 503. 3 504.3 507.9 510.8 358.3 360.6 363.5 366.9 371.4 374.1 144. 0 145.0 145.2 146. 9 149.2 150.7 115.6 116.3 116.5 117.9 119.6 120.3 86.8 87.1 87.6 88.4 89.2 89.7 58.6 59.1 59. 8 60.0 60.6 60.9 68.8 69.5 70.9 71.6 72.4 72.9 18.6 18.8 19.0 19.2 19.4 19.6 40.7 40.6 40.7 40.8 41.1 41.3 16.3 15.9 15.9 15.8 16.0 16,2 18.4 18.4 18.5 18.5 18.6 18.6 19.3 19.5 19.8 20.0 20.2 20.5 38.7 38.9 39.2 39.4 39.7 40.0 38.4 38.3 49.2 39.8 40.3 41.4 13. 2 13.2 13.2 13.3 13.5 13.6 514.6 517.6 532.3 526.9 532.6 537.2 107.2 39.9 16.6 Table 2.3.—-Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Type [Billions of dollars] IS 62 1962 1963 1964 1965 I II IS 63 I IV III III II 19f 5 19 64 IV I II III IV I II III IV Se ason.all?7 adjusted at arinual ra tes Personal consumption expenditures 355. 1 375.0 401 4 431 5 348.3 351 7 357 2 363 0 368 2 372 0 378 3 381 5 391 1 398 0 407 5 408 8 418 9 426 8 435 0 445 2 49.5 22.0 53.9 24.3 59.4 25.8 66.1 29.8 48.5 21.2 48.5 21.6 50.1 22.3 51.1 23.0 52.4 23.7 53.2 24.1 54.5 24.4 55.6 24.9 57.6 25.3 59.8 26.0 61.1 27.1 58.9 24.6 65.1 30.1 64.4 29.2 66.7 30.2 68.0 29.9 20.5 6.9 22.2 7.5 25.1 8.5 27.1 9.1 20.4 6.9 20.0 6.9 20.7 7.0 21.0 7.1 21.4 73 21.7 7.4 22.5 7.6 23.1 7.6 24.1 82 25.4 84 25.3 87 25.7 85 26.0 9.0 26.2 9.0 27.3 9.2 28.8 9.3 Nondurable goods _ ~Food and beverages. _ _ Clothing and shoes Gasoline and oil _ _ ._ _ _ Other . 162.6 85.7 29.6 12.9 34.4 168.6 88.2 30.6 13.5 36.3 178.9 92.8 33.6 14.1 38.4 190.6 98.4 35.9 15.1 41.1 160.2 84.6 29.1 12.7 33.8 161.6 85.2 29.4 12.7 34.4 163.2 86.2 29.7 12.9 34.3 165.3 86.7 30.2 13.4 35.0 167 1 87.6 30.2 13.3 35.9 168.0 88.3 30.3 13.3 36.1 169.9 88.3 31.4 13.5 36.7 169.6 88.6 30.7 13.7 36.6 174 9 90.7 32 8 13.9 37.5 176 5 92.1 32 7 13.9 37.7 181.7 93.9 34 3 14.2 39.3 182 4 94.4 34 4 14.4 39.1 184.5 95.4 34 6 14.4 40.1 189.4 97.8 35.6 15.2 40.9 191.4 98.7 36.0 15.3 41.4 197.0 101.6 37.5 15.7 42.3 Services Housing Household operation. _ _ Transp ortation Other 143.0 52.0 22.0 11.0 58.0 152.4 55.4 23.1 11.4 62.5 163.1 59.2 24.3 11.8 67.8 174.8 63.2 25.6 12.8 73.3 139.6 50.3 21.7 10.9 56.8 141.6 51.3 21.7 11.0 57.5 144.0 52.6 22.2 11.0 146 7 53.6 22.4 11 2 59 5 148 7 54.0 23.0 11 3 60 5 150.8 55.0 22.7 11.4 61.7 153.9 55.8 23.5 11 5 63 0 156 3 56.8 23.3 11.6 64 6 158 7 57.7 23.8 11 7 65 5 161 6 58.7 24.2 11 7 67 0 164 7 59.6 24.7 11 9 68 4 167 5 60.7 24.7 12 1 70 1 169.3 61.6 24.7 12.2 70 8 173.0 62.7 25.4 12.7 72 3 176.9 63.6 26.0 13.0 74 2 180.2 64.7 26.3 13 4 75.8o Durable goods _ _ _ _ _ Automobiles and parts. _ __ Furniture and household equipment.. Other 58 2 Table 2.4.—Personal Consumption Expenditures by Major Types Not Seasonally Adjusted [Billions of dollars] 19 62 Personal consumption expenditures Durable goods _ Automobiles and parts Furniture and household equipment Other Nondurable goods Food and beverages. Clothing and shoes Gasoline and oil Other _. _ Services Housing _ Household operation Transportation Other __ _ _ - - IS 63 I II III IV 82.7 87.4 86.6 98.3 10.8 12.4 11.3 15.1 51 4 5 1.3 61 4.7 1.5 48 5.1 1.4 61 63 27 56 47 1.3 36 6 39 6 39 4 46 9 20.1 5.7 29 79 21.3 7.3 33 77 21.9 6.5 34 7.6 35.3 35.5 12.6 6.2 26 14 0 12.8 5.3 2.8 14.5 I IS 65 IS 64 IV II III IV I II III IV I II III 87.3 92.2 92.0 103.5 93.4 98.3 99 0 110.6 98.9 105.5 105.9 121.2 11.6 13 5 12 4 16.3 13 1 15 1 14 0 17 1 14.6 16.2 15.3 20.0 68 51 16 53 56 16 66 68 2.9 62 53 15 73 60 19 61 6 2 18 62 76 33 73 56 1.7 81 6.1 2.0 66 6.8 1.9 7.8 8.6 3.6 38 1 41 0 41 2 48 4 40 3 42 7 43 8 52 0 41 6 46 0 46.4 56.5 22.4 10.1 33 11 2 20.7 5.9 30 84 22.0 7.5 34 81 22.6 6.9 36 81 22.9 10.3 34 11 7 21.7 6.7 32 87 22 9 7.8 36 85 23.9 7.5 38 86 24.3 11.5 36 12 6 22.4 6.7 24.2 8.7 39 9.1 25.3 8.0 4.0 9.2 26.5 12.6 3.9 13.5 35.9 36.3 37.5 37.7 38.4 38.8 40.0 40.5 41.1 41.5 42.7 43.3 44.1 44. 7 13.2 5.0 28 14.9 13.4 5.5 28 14.6 13.5 6.6 26 14 8 13.7 5.5 29 15 5 14 0 5.3 30 16 1 14.2 5.7 29 15 9 14.4 6.8 28 16 1 14.7 5.9 30 16 9 14 9 5.6 31 17 5 15 2 6.1 30 17 3 15.4 7.0 29 17 4 15.7 6.1 33 18.2 15.9 5.9 3.4 18.9 16.2 6.5 3.3 18.7 93 19 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 20 July 1966 Table 2.5.-—Personal Consumption Expenditures by Type of Product [Millions of dollars] 1962 1963 1964 93,054 96,008 00,671 106,791 66, 302 17, 020 68, 385 17, 545 71, 975 18, 558 76, 156 19, 907 1,347 1,350 1,375 1,439 1,007 7, 378 952 7,776 875 7,888 869 8,420 ____ 35,700 37,049 40,564 43,427 1. Shoes and other footwear (n.d.c.) 2. Shoe cleaning and repair (s.) _ _ 3 Clothing and accessories except footwear a. Women's and children's (n.d.c.) b. Men's and boys' (n.d.c.) 4. Standard clothing issued to military personnel (n.d.c.) -_ _ — .5 Cleaning dyeing pressing alteration, storage, and repair of garments including furs (in shops) not elsewhere classified (s ) 6 Laundering in establishments (s ) 7 Jewelry and watches (d.c.) 8. Other (s.) 4,775 251 4,838 260 5,201 288 5,380 313 24, 754 16, 071 25, 735 16, 709 28, 308 18, 379 9,929 30, 478 19, 778 10, 700 69 64 64 76 I. Food * and tobacco __ __ _ 1. Food purchased for off-premise consumption (n.d.c.) 2. Purchased meals and beverages (n.d.c.)_ 3. Food furnished government (including military) and commercial employees (n.d.c.) 4. Food produced and consumed on farms (n.d.c.) _ _ __. 5. Tobacco products (n.d.c.) II. Clothing, accessories, and jewelry III. Personal care _ _ _ _____ _ 3, 142 3,298 3,584 3,841 2,262 447 2,397 457 2,640 479 2,835 504 6,248 6,530 7,032 7,509 3,640 2,890 3,966 4,309 3 066 3 200 51,950 55,410 59,189 63,157 34,745 37, 095 39, 375 41, 773 13, 535 15, 671 16 988 1,598 14, 435 2,153 1,727 1,880 2,374 2,022 _ _ _ 51, 170 54,127 58, 255 61, 877 _'_ 1. Owner-occupied nonfarm dwellings—spacerental value (s ) 2. Tenant-occupied nonfarm dwellings (including lodging houses) •—space rent (s ) 3 Rental value of farmhouses (s ) 4. Other (s.) _ _ V. Household operation 9,026 3,453 2,795 1 Toilet articles and preparations (n.d.c.) 2 Barbershops beauty parlors and baths (s ) IV. Housing 8,683 1965 2,072 1 Furniture, including mattresses and bed4,811 springs ( d c ) 2. Kitchen and other household appliances 5, 005 (dc) 3. China, glassware, tableware, and utensils 2, 004 (d.c.) _ _ 4,793 4 Other durable house furnishings (d.c.) 3,145 5 Semldurable house furnishings (n.d.c.) 6. Cleaning and polishing preparations, and miscellaneous household supplies and paper 3,792 products (n d c ) 1,195 7. Stationery and writing supplies (n.d.cO 15,237 8 . Household utilities _ 5,688 a Electricity (s ) 3,644 b Gas (s ) c. Water and other sanitary services (s.) _ _ _ 1,483 4,422 d Other fuel and ice (n d c.) 5,101 9. Telephone and telegraph (s.) _ 3,803 10 Domestic service (s ) 2,284 11. Other (s.) VI. Medical care expenses 1. Drug preparations and sundries (n.d.c.) 2 Ophthalmic products and orthopedic appliances (d.c.) __ 3 Physicians (s ) 4. Dentists (s.) __ _ ____ 5. Other professional services (s.) • __ 6 Privately controlled hospitals and sanitariums (s.) _. 7 TTealt.h insurance a Medical care and hospitalization (s ) b Income loss (s ) VII. Personal business 1. Brokerage charges and investment counseling 2. Bank service charges, trust services, and safedeposit box rental (s.) 3. Services furnished without payment by financial intermediaries except insurance companies (s.) 2,263 5,833 6,262 5,244 5,777 6,063 2,108 5,164 2,536 3,369 2,340 5,740 3,805 3,950 4,080 4,234 5,126 1,277 16,096 5,960 3^770 1,596 1,447 17, 862 1,723 1,850 5,914 6,391 6,284 3,934 6,579 4,049 5,384 4,770 5,509 3,824 2,460 4,960 22, 002 23, 340 25, 681 28, 120 4,012 4,137 4,326 4,628 895 5,992 2,265 936 6,413 2,307 1,066 1,142 6,100 1,672 1, 067 6,751 1,654 1,074 605 580 3,909 2,582 3,964 2,726 7,036 2,491 1, 245 1,231 7, 787 2,691 1,376 7,730 8,444 1,078 1, 775 1,151 1,963 624 1964 3 897 2 105 1 575 1 128 4 528 2 245 1 669 1 145 4 846 2 432 1 712 1 192 5 17 2 59 1 77 1 23 1965 4. 5. 6. 7. Expense of handling life insurance (s.) Legal services (s ) Funeral and burial expenses (s.) Other (s.) VIII. Transportation _ 45,975 49 140 51 753 57 82 1. User-operated transportation 42 516 a. New cars and net purchases of used cars (d.c.) _ . 19 486 b. Tires, tubes, accessories, and parts (d.c.)__ 2,557 c. Automobile repair, greasing, washing, parking, storage, and rental (s.) , 5 200 d. Gasoline and oil (n.d.c.) 12 908 e. Bridge, tunnel, ferry, and road tolls (s.) 327 f. Automobile insurance premiums less claims paid (s.) __ __ _ 2,038 45 695 48 161 54 05 21 549 2,707 22 814 2,970 26 67 3,16 5 591 13 457 '344 5 683 14 129 381 6 18 15' 14 40 2 047 2 184 2 47 2. Purchased local transportation a. Street and electric railway and local bus (s.) b. Taxicab (s.) _ _ c. Railway (commutation) (s.) _ 1 981 1 977 1 988 2 02 1 266 '588 127 1 252 595 130 1 261 593 134 i 07 60 13 3. Purchased intercity transportation _ a. Railway (excluding commutation) and sleeping and parlor car (s.) b. Intercity bus (s.) _ c. Airline (s.) d. Other (s.) 1,478 1 468 1 604 1 75 303 336 809 30 268 316 853 31 262 324 985 33 24 32 1 14 3 20 474 22 213 24 573 26 30 IX. Recreation 1. Books and maps (d.c.) 2. Magazines, newspapers, and sheet music (n.d.c.) 3. Nondurable toys and sport supplies (n.d.c.) 4. Wheel goods, durable toys, sport equipment, boats, and pleasure aircraft (d.c.) 5. Radio and television receivers, records, and musical instruments (d.c.) _ 6. Radio and television repair (s.) ._ _ _.. _ _ 7. Flowers, seeds, and potted plants (n.d.c.) _. 8. Admissions to specified spectator amusements a. Motion picture theaters (s.) b. Legitimate theaters and opera, and entertainments of nonprofit institutions (except athletics) (s.) _ c. Spectator sports (s.) _ 9. Clubs and fraternal organizations except insurance (s.) 10. Commercial participant amusements (s.) 1 11. Pari-mutuel net receipts (s.) 12. Other (s.) X. Private education and research __ 1. Higher education (s.) _ 2. Elementary and secondary schools (s.) . 3. Other (s.) XI. Religious and welfare activities (s.) XII. Foreign travel and other, net 1. Foreign travel by United States residents (s.) 2. Expenditures abroad by United States Government personnel (military and civilian) (n.d.c.) 3. Less: expenditures in the United States by foreigners (s.) 4. Less: personal remittances in kind to foreigners (n.d.c.) . _ 1 523 1 620 1 931 2 07 2 415 2 792 2 521 2 986 2 767 3' 200 2 84 3 41 2,269 2,538 2 810 2 9£ 3,935 882 739 1,646 903 4 539 906 842 1,692 904 5 420 954 888 1,774 923 6 02 1 02 1,01 1 ,84 94 417 326 446 342 484 367 5( 3£ 773 1,366 808 1,443 834 1 492 St 1 51 564 1 570 626 694 1 692 1 809 73 1 9^ 4,392 4,736 5,217 5 51 2,018 1,452 922 2 128 1,623 985 2 429 1,736 1 052 2 6J 1 8t 1 1( 5,082 5,262 5,527 5,6( 2,529 2,745 2,828 3,2( 2,556 2,840 2,992 33 1 150 1 170 1 271 14 1,059 1,133 1,302 13 118 132 133 1 355,057 374,982 401,356 431,4 16,481 18S 422 20,066 22,055 1,238 1,421 1,651 2,074 Durable commodities (d.c.) _ _ 59,353 66,0 1,118 1,185 1,290 1,395 Nondurable commodities (n.d.c.) 162,557 168,632 178,877 190,5 5,420 6,229 6,943 7,818 Services (s.) 142,960 152 422 163,126 174 8 1. Expenditures for food (items 1-4) include consumer expenditures for alcoholic beverages of the following amounts in millions of dollars: 1962, $11,295; 1963, $11,720; 1964, $12,410; and 1965, $12,940. Expenditures for food excluding alcoholic beverages are as follows in millions of dollars: 1962, $74,381; 1963, $76,512; 1964, $80,373; and 1965, $85,431. 1963 VII. Personal business— Con tinned 6,199 4,193 1,374 16, 901 1962 Total personal consumption expenditures _ _ _ 49,540 53,928 NOTE.—Consumer durable commodities are designated (d.c.), nondurable commodities (n.d.c.), and services (s.) following group titles. SURVEY OF CUEEENT BUSINESS July 1966 21 Table 2.6.-—Personal Consumption Expenditures by Type of Product in Constant Dollars [Billions of 1958 dollars] 1962 1963 1964 338.4 353.3 373.8 396.2 49.2 53.7 59.1 66.4 Autos End parts New cars and. net purchases of used cars Tires tubes accessories, and parts 21.8 19 1 2.8 24.1 21 2 2.9 25.6 22 5 3.2 30.0 26.7 3.3 Furniture and liouseliold equipment Furniture including mattresses and bedsprings Kitchen and other household appliances China, glassware, tableware, and utensils, and other durable house furnishings Radio and television receivers, records, and musical instruments 20.5 4.7 54 22.3 5.0 58 25.3 5.7 6.5 27.5 6.0 6.9 66 7.1 7.8 8.4 3.8 4.4 5.4 6.2 Other durable goods . __ __ Ophthalmic products and orthopedic appliances Wheel goods durable toys sport equipment boats and pleasure aircraft Jewelry and watches and books and maps 6.8 .8 7.3 .9 8.2 1.0 8.9 1.1 22 38 2.4 4.0 2.7 4.5 2.9 4.9 170.5 178.2 88.6 69.8 16.4 91.8 72.2 17.3 Personal consumption expenditures *! Durable goods . . 158.2 Nondurable goods 83.9 65.9 15.6 Food and beverages Food purchased for off-premise consumption Purchased meals and beverages Food furnished government (including military) and commercial employees, and food produced and consumed on farms Addenda* Food excluding alcoholic beverages Alcoholic beverages Clotf&ing and slioes Shoes and other footwear Women's and children's clothing and accessories except footwear Men's and boys' clothing and accessories except footwear, and standard clothing issued to military personnel __ _ 162.2 85.2 67.0 15.7 1965 1962 2.5 2.4 2.3 2.3 73.2 10.7 74.2 11.0 77.0 11.6 79.7 12.1 28.4 4 3 29.1 4.4 31.6 4.7 33.5 4.8 15.6 16.1 17.6 18.8 8.4 8.6 9.3 9.9 Gasoline and oil 12.5 13.0 13.7 14.3 Other nondurable goods Tobacco products Toilet articles and preparations Semi durable house furnishings 33.4 6.8 3.4 3.1 34.9 7.0 3.6 3.3 36.6 7.0 3.93.6 38.7 7.2 4.2 4.0 1 1963 1964 1965 Other nondurable goods— Continued Cleaning and polishing preparations, and miscellaneous household supplies and paper products Other fuel and ice Drug preparations and sundries Nondurable toys and sport supplies Services _ 3.8 4.3 40 2.8 131.1 3.9 4.5 4 2 3.0 137.4 4.0 4 7 44 3.2 4.5 5 ( 4 3 144 2 151 Housing Owner-occupied nonfarm dwellings—space-rental value . _ Tenant-occupied nonfarm dwellings (including lodging houses) —space rent. _ _ Rental value of farmhouses 49 1 51 8 54 7 57 32 9 34 8 36 6 38 12.8 19 13.5 19 14 6 19 15 j Household operation services Electricity Gas Water Telephone-Domestic service . 20 4 55 33 13 4 9 33 21 2 58 34 14 53 33 22 2 61 35 15 57 32 23 Transportation services- __ User-operated transportation ser vicesPurchased local transportation _ _ Street and electric railway and local bus Purchased intercity transportation Railway (excluding commutation) and sleeping and parlor car. _ __ Intercity bus Airline 10 0 7.0 17 1.1 13 10 3 74 . 17 1. 1 13 10 5 74 16 10 14 11 7 3 3 8 3 3 7 3 3 9 Other services Shoe cleaning and repair Cleaning, dyeing, pressing, alteration, storage, and repair of garments including furs (not in shops) not elsewhere classified, and laundering in establishments Barbershops, beauty parlors, and baths Medical care services Physicians..Dentists Brokerage charges and investment counseling Services furnished without payment by financial intermediaries except insurance companies Admissions to specified spectator amusements 51 7 2 54 1 2 56 8 2 59 29 2.6 14 9 52 21 10 3.0 2.6 15 5 55 20 10 32 2.7 16 7 59 21 10 3 2 17 6 2 1 4.8 1.4 5.2 1.4 5.5 1.3 6. 1. _ Q 3 1 6 3 I I 1 I Totals and subtotals include items not shown separately. 8.—Government ieceipts and Expenditures Table 3.1.—Federal Government Receipts and Expenditures [Millions of dollars] 1962 Receipts Personal tax and nontax receipts Tota1 receipts before refunds. „.. Income taxes Estate and gift taxes Nontaxes : __ _ _ Less i Tax refunds Corporate profits tax accruals Indirect business tax and nontax accruals Total accruals before refunds Excise taxes Liquor Tobacco Other — Customs duties Nontaxes . .: Less: Tax refunds Contributions for social insurance - - - - 1963 1964 1962 1965 106 450 114 520 115 082 124 924 51,471 48, 579 57, 203 54,717 54 882 52 064 2,264 2,595 58 57 54, 207 59, 331 56 431 2.849 51 48, 609 53, 848 51 720 2.076 52 5 239 5,732 6,138 5,124 22 746 14, 575 24 640 15, 318 26 454 16, 181 29, 147 16,816 14, 821 13, 154 3,391 2, 031 7, 732 1,213 454 15, 577 13, 771 3,500 2,116 8,155 1,283 523 16, 432 14, 375 3,711 2,069 8,595 1,328 729 17, 087 14,316 3,806 2,091 8,419 1,706 1,065 246 259 251 271 20, 520 23,091 23,868 24,754 Expenditures Purchases of goods and services. . Compensation of employees Structures (excluding construction force account compensation) Other purchases Addendum: Construction force account compensation Transfer payments To persons To foreigners (net) Grants-in-aid to State and local governments N e t interest paid . _ _ __ Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises 1963 1964 1965 110 256 113 857 118 111 123 357 63, 389 24, 277 64,244 25 261 65,182 27, 156 66, 827 28, 435 3,879 35 233 232 3,762 35 221 242 3,519 34 507 233 3,480 34 912 237 27, 702 25, 538 2 164 29, 140 26 961 2,179 29, 935 27 770 2 165 32, 420 30, 254 2,166 8 000 7,186 3, 979 9 143 7,740 3,590 10 432 8,312 4,250 11, 185 8,736 4,189 Surplus or deficit ( — ), national income and product accounts __ -3,806 663 -3S029 1,567 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 22 July 1966 Table 3.2.—Federal Government Receipts and Expendituress Quarterly [Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates] 1962 Receipts Personal tax and nontax receipts _ Corporate profits tax accruals Indirect business tax and nontax accruals Contributions for social insurance.. Expenditures Purchases of goods and services National defense _ _ _ _ _ Other _ - _ _ _- Transfer payments To persons To foreigners (net) Grants-in-aid to State and local governments Net interest paid __ __ __ __ __ Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises Surplus or deficit (— ), national income and product accounts 19 53 19 54 I II III IV I II III IV 103 4 105.6 107.6 109.2 112 0 113.9 115 0 117.2 115.3 46.5 22.3 14.4 20.2 48.1 22.5 14.4 20.5 49.3 23.0 14.7 20.6 50.5 23.2 14.8 20.7 51.1 23.2 15.1 22.6 51.3 24.4 15.2 23.0 51.4 24.9 15.4 23.2 52.0 26.0 15.6 23.5 50.4 26.0 15.5 23.4 108.4 110. 2 110.2 112.4 114.4 112.1 113.8 115.1 61.9 51.1 10.8 64.0 53.0 10.9 63.3 51.3 12.0 64.4 50.9 13.5 65.0 51.2 13.8 63.4 50.5 12.9 64.2 51.0 13.2 27.8 25.4 2.4 27.2 25.1 2.0 27.6 25.5 2.1 28.4 26.2 2.1 29.6 27.6 2.1 28.6 26.5 2.1 7.8 6.9 7.9 7.1 7.9 7.3 8.3 7.5 8.6 7.5 4.1 4.0 4.0 3.9 3.6 -5.0 -4.6 -2.6 -3.2 -2.4 I II 19 35 I III IV 112 3 115 4 117 2 46 2 26 4 16.1 23.7 48 1 26 8 16 6 24.0 49 26 16 24 117.2 119 1 118 4 64.4 50.3 14.1 64.9 50.1 14.8 66.6 51.6 15.1 65 1 49 8 15.3 29.0 26.7 2.3 29.3 27.1 2.2 30.4 28.3 2.2 29.8 27.5 2.3 8.9 7.6 9.4 7.8 9.7 8.0 9.8 8.2 3.5 3.5 3.7 4.0 1.8 1.2 2.1 -1.9 II III IV 124 0 125 0 123 8 126 9 53 28 17 24 4 7 5 5 54 9 28 7 16 8 24 6 53 8 28 9 16 3 24 7 54 30 16 25 117 7 119 6 120 6 126 3 127 0 64 1 48 5 15.6 64 4 48 2 16.2 65 6 49 1 16 5 67 5 50 7 16 8 69 8 52 5 17 3 29 7 27 6 2.2 29 8 27 7 2.1 31 3 29 2 2.0 30 9 28 4 2 5 34 8 32 5 22 32 8 30 8 19 10.2 8.2 10.8 8.4 11.0 8.4 11.0 8.6 11.1 8.7 11.1 8.8 11.6 8.8 4.2 4.4 4.4 4.3 42 41 41 —6.7 —3.0 —.5 4.5 4.4 —2.5 — 2 6 7 5 4 7 3 7 2 Table 3.3.—State and Local Government Receipts and Expenditures [Millions of dollars] Receipts -- Personal tax and nontax receipts Income taxes Death and gift taxes Motor vehicle licenses Property taxes Other taxes Nontaxes __ _ _ -_ -_ _ __ Corporate profits tax accruals Indirect business tax and nontax accruals Sales tax __ __ - _- State -General : _Gasoline Liquor _ Tobacco Local - - - Motor vehicle licenses . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Property taxes. __ _ _ __ __ _ ... Other taxes Nontaxes _ _ 1962 1963 1964 58,581 63, 390 69, 553 75,301 Receipts— Continued 8,741 3,191 .575 9,412 3,392 10, 799 3,978 11, 784 4,417 865 634 221 637 917 678 228 3,255 3,560 1965 729 976 727 255 4 134 781 777 252 4,520 1,433 1,684 1,905 2,036 39, 374 13, 272 11, 758 5,775 3,968 42 316 14, 331 12, 681 6,376 4,192 45 836 15, 886 14, 132 7,293 4, 468 1,096 1,472 1,184 1,514 1,226 1,650 1,425 1, 754 929 988 18, 959 3,706 20, 226 3,983 1,022 21, 623 4,248 1,185 23, 099 4,565 1,298 831 824 871 982 887 1963 Contributions for social insurance 3,474 3 777 4 101 4 46( Federal grants-in-aid 8 000 9 143 10 432 11 18, 57, 645 62, 204 67 886 73, 65( 53 731 30, 391 58 240 32, 859 63 725 35, 876 69 39( 39, 34( 14, 125 9 215 15, 491 9 ggo 16, 810 11 039 18, 31< 11 73' 1,037 36, 933 12, 462 10, 990 5,367 3,740 787 1962 946 Expenditures _ _ Purchases of goods and services Compensation of employees _ _ _ __ _ Structures (excluding construction force account compensation) _ _ Other purchases Addendum: Construction force account compensation Transfer payments to persons Net interest paid . Less: Current surplus of government enterprises Surplus or deficit (— ), national income and product accounts 1964 1965 350 383 412 45( 5,694 6,028 6,471 6,881 821 774 687 55, 2,601 2,838 2,997 3,17( 936 1,186 1,667 1,64, IV Table 3.4.—State and Local Government Receipts and Expenditures i Quarterly [Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates] 1962 Receipts Personal tax and nontax receipts. _ Corporate profits tax accruals Indirect business tax and nontax accruals Contributions for social insurance Federal grants-in-aid Expenditures Purchases of goods and services _ Transfer payments to persons Net interest paid Less: Current surplus of government enterprises.. Surplus or deficit (— ), national income and product accounts 19 65 19 64 19 63 I II III IV I II III IV I II III IV I II III 57.0 58.0 59.0 60.3 61.7 62.7 63.9 65.3 66.8 68.7 70.8 72.0 73.4 74,6 75.9 77.3 8.5 1.4 35 9 3.4 7.8 8.7 1.4 36 5 3.4 7.9 8.8 1.4 37 3 35 7.9 9.0 1.5 38 0 3.6 8.3 9.2 1.6 38 7 37 8.6 9.3 1.7 39 0 3.7 8.9 9.5 1.7 39 5 38 9.4 9.7 1.8 40 2 39 9.7 10.3 1.9 40 8 4 0 9.8 10 7 1.9 41 9 41 10.2 11.0 1.9 42 9 41 10.8 11.3 1.9 43 7 4.2 11.0 11.5 2.0 44 6 4.4 11.0 11.7 2.0 45 4 4.4 11.1 11.9 2.0 46.4 4.5 11.1 12.1 2.1 47.0 4.6 11.6 56.6 57.0 57.9 58.8 60.9 61.5 62.6 63.8 65.7 67.6 68.6 69.5 71.5 72.9 74.4 75.7 52.5 5.7 .8 2.5 53. 1 5.7 .8 2.6 54.1 5.6 8 2.6 55.0 5.8 8 2.7 56.9 5.9 .8 2.8 57.5 6.0 .8 2.8 58.7 6.0 8 2.9 59.8 6.1 7 2.9 61.6 6.3 7 2.9 63 4 6.4 7 3.0 64.4 6.5 7 3.0 65.3 6.6 .6 3.1 67.3 6.8 .6 3.1 68.7 6.8 .6 3.2 70.2 6.9 .5 3.2 71.4 7.0 .5 3.2 .4 1.0 1.2 1.5 .8 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.0 1.1 2.2 2.6 1.9 1.7 1.5 1.6 Table 3.5.—Federal Government Receipts and Expendituress Not Seasonally Adjusted [Billions of dollars]' 1963 1962 I Receipts Personal tax and. nontax receipts CorDorate profits tax accruals Indirect business tax and nontax accruals 25.7 Expenditures ' • Purchases of goods and services -National defense • Other Transfer payments To persons -To foreigners (net) Grants-in-aid to State and local governments Net interest paid Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises - 26.8 15.2 12.7 Surplus or deficit (— ), national income and product accounts 11.0 5.2 3. 0o 6 2 III IV I II III IV I II III IV I II III 30.8 14.7 25.7 12.0 24.3 10.9 27.6 11.8 32.6 14.9 27.7 12.9 26.6 11.8 28.2 11.4 3.8 6 4 3.5 4 5 3.9 34 3.5 70 4.1 71 4.1 39 3.5 7 3 33.1 14.6 6.8 4.3 27.8 12.0 6.6 26.1 10.7 7 0 3.9 c q 4.4 30.2 11 8 6 7 36.6 16 9 7 5 30 2 13 5 7 0 27.2 15.9 13.8 26.9 15.3 12.0 29.3 17.1 13.1 27.9 15.7 12.4 27.3 15.4 12.9 29.4 16.6 13.3 3.4 7.5 6.9 .6 2.4 2.0 29.8 15.8 12.1 30.1 16.8 12.3 28.8 15.4 11.7 3.0 2.1 2.8 2.1 2.4 2.2 6 0 2. o 2 2 6.1 5.7 5.8 5.4 6.4 6.1 6.8 3.6 51 6.0 7 0 4.2 3.3 7.6 7.1 .5 2.5 7.2 6.7 .6 2.2 1.9 2.0 1.9 2.0 1.9 2.6 .2.0 2.6 2.0 .9 1.2 .7 .8 1.3 .8 .9 .8 1.5 1.0 .9 -1.2 -5.1 -.2 5.3 -1.3 -3.1 -.7 3.7 -2.0 -4.0 14 1.8 1.7 1.8 1.8 2.2 1.8 1.0 .8 3.6 3.9 7.0 6.4 .5 28.9 16.0 12.5 3.5 7.1 6.5 .5 29.7 17.1 12.9 4.2 7.2 6.6 .6 3.7 7.3 6.8 .5 4.4 IV 4.2 28 0 12 0 7 9 4.0 4.0 28.9 15.9 12.2 3.6 7.8 7.2 .5 2.3 2.1 3.3 6.7 6.2 .5 -1.1 1965 II 2.1 6.9 6.3 .5 2.5 7.2 6.6 .6 1964 4.5 7.3 6.8 .5 3.7 8.0 7.4 5 29.6 16 2 12 6 36 7g 7' 2 31 8 16 2 12 0 4 2 8 6 80 5 33 19 13 5 8 7 1 0 8 2 1 6 5 3.1 2 2 3.0 2 2 .7 17 8 70 —1 6 51 Table 3.6.-—State and Local Government Receipts and Expenditures s Not Seasonally Adjusted [Billions of dollars] 1963 19 62 1964 1965 I II III IV I II III IV I n III IV I II III Receipts Personal tax and nontax receipts Corporate profits tax accruals Indirect business tax and nontax accruals C ontributions for social insurance .. Federal grants-in-aid 13e3 2.9 .3 8.1 .8 18 14.7 2.7 .4 9.0 .9 1.8 13.4 1.9 .4 8.1 .9 2.2 17.1 2.0 .4 11.7 .9 2.2 14.5 2.5 .4 8.8 .9 2.0 15.8 2.8 .4 9.6 .9 2.0 14.6 2.0 .4 8.7 1.0 2.6 18.5 2.2 .5 12.3 1.0 2.6 16.0 2.9 4 9.4 1.0 2.3 17.1 3.1 .5 10.1 1.0 2.4 1604 2.3 5 9.6 1.0 3.0 20 1 2.5 5 13.2 1.1 2.8 17 1 3.0 5 10.1 1.1 2.4 18 7 3*4 5 10 9 1.1 2.8 17 6 26 5 10 3 11 3.1 21 9 28 Expenditures - - -Purchases of goods and services _ Transfer payments to persons Net interest paid - . - -Less: Current surplus of government enterprises- 13.3 12.3 1.4 .2 .6 14.2 13.2 1.4 .2' .6 15.1 14.2 1.4 .2 .7 15.0 14.0 1.4 .2 .7 14.1 13.1 1.5 .2 .7 15.5 14.5 1.5 .2 .7 16.5 15.6 1.5 .2 .7 16.0 15.0 1.5 .2 .7 15.3 14.3 1.6 .21 .7 17.1 16.0 1.6 .2 .7 18.1 17.1 1.6 .2 .8 17.4 16.3 1.7 .2 .8 16 7 15.6 1.7 .2 .8 18 4 17 4 1.7 .1 .8 19 6 18 6 17 .1 .8 19 0 17 9 18 1 .8 .0 .6 -1.7 2.1 .4 .3 -1.9 2.5 .7 .0 -1.7 2.7 .4 .3 —2.0 2.9 Surplus or deficit (— ), national income and product accounts IV Q 14 4 11 30 Table 3.7.—Social Insurance Funds [Millions of dollars] Federal receipts __ Contributions for social insurance Personal contributions Employer contributions Government and government enterprises Private —Investment income -~ Federal expenditures Benefit payments Transfers to general govern mpTit Surplus or deficit 1962 1963 1964 20, 520 8,871 11 649 1 742 9,907 1 438 21, 958 24S 603 23, 091 10, 234 12 857 1 991 10, 866 1 512 25, 514 23, 868 10, 792 13 076 2 177 10, 899 1 646 26, 560 24, 754 11, 272 13 482 2 272 11, 210 1 806 21, 141 20, 244 22, 280 21, 355 1962 1963 1964 Contributions for social insurance. __ Personal contributions Employer contributions Government and government enterprises Private Investment income 4,348 3,474 1 466 2 008 2,000 ' 8 874 4,783 3 777 1 589 2 188 2,180 8 1 006 5,307 4,101 1 752 2 349 2,340 9 1 206 5,835 4,460 1 940 2 520 2,510 10 1,375 Expenditures Benefit payments Transfers to general government 1,832 1 800 32 2,011 1 979 32 2,216 2 181 35 2,403 2,366 37 2,516 2,772 3,091 3,432 1965 22, 789 21, 814 897 925 975 24, 739 23, 660 1 079 817 2,323 2,725 1,821 Table 3.8.—Contributions for Social Insurance State and local Receipts _ _ Surplus or deficit Table 3.9.-—Government Transfer Payments to Persons [Millions of dollars] [Millions of dollars] 1962 1963 1964 Total contributions for social insurance 23,994 26,868 27,969 29 214 Employer contributions. . Federal social insurance funds Old-age and survivors insurance State unemployment insurance Federal unemployment tax. _ _ Eailroad retirement insurance Railr oa d unemployment insurance _ _ _ Federal civilian employee retirement systems Veterans life insurance (Government) State and local social insurance funds State and local employee retirement systems Cash sickness compensation funds Personal contributions- _ Federal social insurance funds Old-age and survivors insurance OASI self-employedState unemployment insurance -._ Eailroad retirement insurance _. Federal civilian employee retirement systems.. Veterans life insurance (Government) State and local social insurance funds State and local employee retirement systems . Cash sickness compensation funds 13,657 15,045 12, 857 7 496 3 034 15,425 13, 076 7 868 3 059- 16 002 13 482 8 219 3 051 1965 11, 649 6 242 2 997 999 289 160 954 g 838 287 156 1,038 8 1965 542 305 153 1,140 9 570 326 149 1 158 9 2,008 2,000 2,188 2,180 8 8 2,349 2,340 2 520 2 510 10,337 8,871 6 242 11,823 10, 234 7 496 12,544 10, 792 7 868 13 212 11 272 8 219 1 010 844 19 289 913 564 883 21 287 977 570 9 999 20 305 10 20 326 1,056 1 098 1,466 1,330 1,589 1,410 1 752 1,545 136 179 207 1 940 1 710 544 599 230 1962 1963 1964 1965 31,232 32,989 34,241 37, 137 25, 538 26, 961 27, 770 30,254 Benefits from social insurance funds 20, 244 Old-age and survivors insurance benefits _ 14, 298 2,921 State unemployment insurance benefits .. Railroad retirement insurance benefits 1,091 132 Railroad unemployment insurance benefits Federal civilian pensions 1,120 682 Veterans life insurance Direct relief 175 Veterans benefits Military pension, disability, and retirement payments. 4,613 506 Other 21, 355 15, 245 2,823 1,118 21, 814 16, 018 2,564 1,146 23, 660 18, 067 2,198 1,187 1,260 1,383 1,518 Total government transfer payments to persons Federal Government State and local government Benefits from social insurance funds Government pensions Cash sickness compensation Direct relief Special types of public assistance General assistance Other _ __ 143 4,881 582 78 625 120 5,130 706 60 630 75 5,550 969 5,694 6,028 6,471 6,883 1,800 1,617 1,979 1,750 2,181 1,930 2,366 2,100 3,495 3,206 3,631 3,354 3,801 3,976 3,732 183 - 99 810 289 399 229 277 418 251 O CQ1 270 489 23 266 244 541 SUEVEY OF CUEEENT BUSINESS 24 July 1966 Table 3.10.—Government Expenditures by Type of Function [Millions of dollars] 1962 1963 Military services and foreign military assistance Atomic energy development Other _ __ Space research and technology General government _ _ _ _ _ _ . ___ __ ___ General administration General property and records management Central personnel management and employment costs Net interest paid Other International affairs and finance Conduct of foreign affairs and information activities Foreign economic assistance and other transfers Education Elementary and secondary Higher Other Health and hospitals Sanitation __ Social security and special welfare services __ __ _ . Civilian safety Police Fire Correction _ _ -__- Labor Veterans' benefits and services Education training and other benefits Disability and pension allowances Insurance.. Hospitals and medical care Administration and other services.. Regulation of commerce and finance Urban renewal and community facilities Public housing _ __ EJ°^ '3,^' t-<-2 2^s -2 +§ Sg d03 1 d 03 •§ "B w °O t» 2°»-i 5 £* £*4§ Purchases of goo services Purchases of goo services Subsidies less cm of government Transfer paymei interest paid Purchases of goo services 1 Transfer paymer interest paid 2,601 13,857 4,244 6,880 9,143 3,590 2,204 8,240 6,802 2,838 1 Transfer paymei interest paid 6,515 Grants-in-aid to local governmc Less: Current si government en ••§ »rt Less: Current su government en (H Subsidies less cui of government i ft.JQ S p, 4^ O d~g 2 O> do3 03 "o 337 337 52, 130 0,760 1, 104 373 -107 359 359 49, 729 8,816 2,844 2,570 214 196 958 4 -104 76 230 31 76 230 31 49, 379 8,319 1, 098 2,779 2,491 6 -28 -50 69 -107 282 22 80 244 35 80 244 35 270 18 1 796 I 785 11 9,904 1,583 8,337 33 3 370 3 351 -49 6,545 3,908 2,665 19 28 10, 779 1,758 9,040 2,981 2,981 -52 7,003 4,289 2,758 44 1,187 1,187 3,163 3,163 470 470 1,442 175 1, 267 564 1,984 2,504 7,375 -365 7, 740 774 774 305 291 562 ""562 33 """33 "-52 44 33 1, 086 1,086 415 415 132 1,120 1,252 6,859 -327 7,186 31 292 277 33 -49 2,585 410 2,166 7 2 2,611 425 2, 179 6 419 2 166 2 410 2,164 7 2 431 2,180 425 6 134 1,014 374 88 551 1 23, 941 23, 773 168 25 34 315 29 134 341 299 374 287 264 18, 747 18, 747 i 4,238 4,238 956 788 168 2,386 821 892 319 77 495 327 247 318 25 29 265 24 278 217 53 564 226 357 570 1,844 821 1 1,929 1,795 7,523 3,557 715 849 7,523 3,557 1 15,905 3,688 12,249 3,681 4,621 4,604 1,402 1,427 431 54 226 380 5,954 1,343 4,603 202 3,642 761 201 3,641 76: 9 -1 239 6 2 5,914 1,887 3 3,145 63 63 622 216 45 18 65 364 204 -17 38 1 188 176 191 13 61 -18 5: „ Postal service 88 8 Other 20 20 Agriculture and agricultural resources 4,69 1,14 Stabilization of farm prints an <\ inp,omfi Financing farm ownership and utilities Conservation of agricultural resources Other services Natural resources Conservation and development of resources Recreation. _ _ _ __ __ ___ _ _ _ 3,55 5 75 32 1 75 1,60 14 65 3 22 22 1 79 1,64 14 _ 6,210 18 2,497 697 -- — 525 405 70 50 137 2 50 — 17 137 -17 386 3,499 3,433 4,917 1,188 3,500 67 44 590 82 679 6 797 _ _ _ _ _ 179 /I 35 23 16 28 1 18 14 65 66 65 1,47 61 85 1,52 66 85 5 5 66 8 27 27 4,03 60 2,81 6 80 35 1,85 1,66 18 422 31 18 63 ______ 4 3 26 _ _ _ _ _ 26 1,89 1,70 18 18 -18 2,664 955 230 10,43 10, 993 10, 223 10,63 62 15 20 83 149 -18 1 13 13 626 11,478 14,142 1 54 3 66 85 24 _____ 422 955 32 66 ______ 85 1 3 ______ 18 12 3,826 44 -21 63 5,610 1,774 3,836 ______ ______ 59 2,89 22 106 20 179 1,363 82 43 844 19 5,610 1,774 3,836 4,831 797 80 128 3,42 1,370 6,544 2,080 85 4,841 4,822 1,681 1,744 4,384 4,384 2,320 2,320 1, 203 1,203 861 861 172 171 3, 843 3,844 817 817 1,187 1,181 190 188 27 249 9,834 10, 359 9,577 9,982 86 16 156 83 17 22 40 27 _____ 16, 938 13, 146 3,855 63 405 697 2,941 2,876 63 405 18 77 :;;;:; 4,253 2,256 1,175 1, 175 822 822 879 10,750 13,247 1 524 2,830 2, 922 328 16, 361 72 """316 356 27 1 249 2,836 2,922 _ _ _ _ _ _ 16, 689 744 5 224 1,560 54 662 3,664 4 1 2,585 3.051 303 15, 388 394 71 ""292 609 1,435 17 """"25 688 19, 357 3,146 2,590 3,051 15, 691 757 4,253 2,256 59 1 25 25,311 1,629 19, 626 4S056 23, 191 5,224 54 2," 179 1,560 3,664 701 18, 511 2,877 54 28 357 22, 089 4, 350 1,160 70 2,946 594 428 662 810 Housing and community development 03 •§ d03 d t3 347 -104 77 Transportation Highways Water Air fc ® TS 962 1,10! 240 Commerce, transportation, and housing §d 02 fl a CQ § M O® 52, 787 1,582 1,221 Public assistance and relief Unemployment benefits Old age and retirement benefits Other 2.2 23,973 1,545 8,740 Health, labor, and welfare Public utilities Transit Electricity Water and gas . & +3 © «•-, Transfer paymei interest paid - -- += a --j T3 d State and local Purchases of goo services Total 'C? ^ c» 3a c3 <D Federal 10, 256 3,389 4,888 8,000 3,979 7,645 3,731 "o National defense £ 3$ ft w *s 1 'CS pj c3 State and local Grants-in-aid to local governme Federal 559 416 92 51 56 220 }34 56 220 -4 17 -26 4 1,57 16 48 928 1,619 -17 748 888 64 266 34 58 -20 12 3 9 14 14 3,30 75 74 2,77 2 51 75 74 1,69 72 97 1,76 79 97 -18 -18 67 67 SUEVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS July 1966 25 Table 3.10.—Government Expenditures by Type of Function—Continued [Millions of dollars] 1964 1965 __ ',—- - I Less: Current surplus of government enterprises J3 OT ^ Transfer payments and net interest paid &a- Purchases of goods and services | | Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises *O Grants-in-aid to State and local governments to T3 Transfer payments and net interest paid Less: Current surplus of government enterprises Transfer payments and net interest paid Purchases of goods and services Subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises 1 State and local Space research and technology 51,561 49,985 1,287 401 -112 373 373 51,855 0,143 1,428 399 -115 376 376 - 48,876 47,630 1,281 2,765 2,462 6 -80 -107 77 -112 297 27 83 246 44 83 246 44 49,699 8,306 1,422 6 2,407 2,119 -251 -282 86 -115 282 31 84 233 59 84 233 59 . Military services and foreign military assistance-----Atomic energy development Other - 4,629 4,606 - General government - ~- International affairs and finance Conduct of foreign affairs and information activities. Foreign economic assistance and other transfers Elementary and secondary Higher __ Other 1,259 1,259 ' 539 539 218 1,386 1,604 7,914 -398 8,312 36 391 341 _ -__ Public assistance and relief Unemployment benefits Old age and retirement benefits Other 489 2,165 5 489 5 1,151 428 - —- ... Labor Veterans' benefits and services Hospitals and medical care AdnfiiTvistr^tion and other services Housing and coTm^tTnity dfiveiopmpTit _ 203 1,275 430 203 406 447 422 343 299 20,596 20,596 1 4,750 4,750 1,113 910 18,323 14,332 4,042 306 5,235 5,215 1,851 1,902 636 __ . Conservation of agricultural resources __ _._ 2,166 737 2 28,863 28,634 229 51 31 32 367 ~~"~55 324 413 22,554 22,554 2 5,012 5,012 1,297 1,068 229 51 29,594 2,143 22,237 5,214 51 1,885 852 331 19,735 15,558 4,229 5,710 5,686 1,878 1,930 702 24 890 21,766 4,100 6,572 2,367 4,205 3,074 2,640 17, 516 614 3 3,066 5 2 640 354 17, 162 74 212 328 6,065 2,044 4,021 3,370 2,260 19, 667 1, 459 5 3,360 5 2,260 400 19, 267 740 485 234 6,572 2,367 4,205 58 58 58 701 278 4,722 4,722 2,496 2,496 1,284 1,284 942 942 63 63 890 338 49 374 449 449 6,172 1,450 4,714 8 30 18 1 33 4,584 18 947 3,983 3,899 84 449 33 602 -222 423 439 133 316 33 257 345 113 314 313 435 4,515 3,330 -153 69 41 693 235 __.— 312 423 1,900 1, 955 1,747 1,802 153 153 947 231 10,978 11, 592 10, 761 11, 217 149 53 153 222 82 164 862 oao 2,825 140 412 6,365 1,445 4,908 10 7,187 2,109 87 614 456 100 58 2 890 1 3, 88J 3,826 ] ~"~57 683 508 112 63 233 653 } 233 694 2,482 352 314 87 880 255 1,288 1,788 -38 793 1,033 513 -252 }375 13 318 195 138 3,007 890 653 13 103 243 288 287 < 373 4,410 3,257 -258 46 78 9 __—. 217 587 368 488 7C 2,055 2,058 7C l,87c 1,88* 17C 17C 18 420 346 833 12 OKO { 4 , 620 208 /\ 434 186 286 12 226 11, 518 12, 201 11, 262 11, 770 41 147 153 215 79 278 208 -240 46 142 3,938 810 801 3,483 28 810 427 801 31 11 161 -216 1,861 1,931 852 782 161 -216 1,07£ 1,079 18 669 13,251 16,258 583 677 481 30 18 14 4,395 583 1,717 —13 758 972 481 12 1 375 185 1,902 213 200 613 —145 117 1,089 52 ijr 87 5,360 1,250 82 3,908 468 616 700 836 52 5,094 5,094 2,686 2,686 1,369 1,369 1 039 1 039 63 1 105 106 4,162 4 163 641 641 1,276 1,269 175 179 18 686 12,245 15,070 93 12 12 12 5 63 50 2 106 26,756 790 ;_ 21 50 2 6,065 2,044 4,021 ; Postal service 1 5 24 28 37 363 """56 5 437 1 223 72 3,971 447 596 704 870 Transportation Highways Water Air Natural resources Conservation and development of resources Recreation __..„ 5 495 3,392 1,039 2,403 553 553 -56 1,041 1,041 571 19 879 3,394 93 ReHulation of comnierce arid finance Other Agriculture and agricultural resources Stabilization of farm prices and income 495 2,166 500 2,168 1 26,459 26,256 7,495 2,192 Commerce transportation, and housing Urban renewal and community facilities Public housing 2,668 642 776 46 -56 8,766 5,860 2,956 3,780 3,780 1 80 147 2 149 3 896 3 897 ^ 671 671 1,276 1,271 177 179 Education training and other benefits Disability and pension allowances Public utilities Transit Electricity Water and gas 2,165 51 46 1,351 1,351 622 622 1,682 158 1,524 8,306 -430 8,736 395 368 37 23,844 58 - 62 759 2,205 2,913 687 687 """758 758 -48 30 51 12,356 2,069 10,297 3,427 3,427 494 2,166 1,718 Social security and special welfare services _ -48 7,785 4,944 2,892 26,321 1,683 20,234 4,404 _ _ 62 2,660 395 337 419 - Health, labor, and welfare Health and hospitals Sanitation _ 5,592 5,562 23 11,707 1,959 9,734 General administration _ _ General property and records management Central personnel management and employment costs . Net interest paid .. .__ . - : . Other - Civilian safety Police Fire C orrection "3 "o EH Federal 18,111 65, 182 8,247 10,432 4,250 67,886 63,725 7,158 2,997 23,357 6,827 1,156 11, 185 4, 189 73,656 69,399 7,436 3,179 Total National defense State and local Grants-in-aid to State and local governments I Transfer payments and net interest paid Purchases of goods and services Federal 695 156 3,881 3,515 -271 754 32 744 303 10 39 334 754 744 36 120 193 -196 1,881 1,951 788 718 187 -196 1,163 1,163 6 10 70 70 SUKVEY OF CUKEENT BUSINESS 26 July 1966 Table-3.11.—Government Purchases of Goods and Services by Object Classification [Millions of dollars] 1962 1963 1964 63,389 64,244 65,182 66,827 __. 51,582 18,609 11, 496 7,113 1,955 31,018 50,760 19,009 11, 651 7,358 1,718 30, 033 49,985 20,355 12,633 7,722 1,323 28,307 50,143 21,205 13, 131 8,074 1,149 27, 789 11,807 5,668 1,924 4,215 13,484 6,252 2,044 5,188 15,197 6,801 2,196 6,200 16,684 7, 230 2,331 7,123 Federal Government purchases of goods and services National defense Compensation of employees.. Military Civilan Structures Other All other functions Compensation of employees Structures .. Other 1 1962 1963 1964 53,731 58,240 63,725 69, 39* 21,795 15, 626 2,914 3, 255 23,773 17, 124 3,402 3,247 26,256 18, 922 3,726 3,608 28,634 20,89f 4,20C 3,538 31,936 14, 765 11, 211 5,960 34,467 15, 735 12, 089 6,643 37,469 16, 954 13,084 7,431 40,76* 18, 45( 14, 11< 8,19( 1965 State and local government purchases of goods and services Education ._ _ _ Compensation of employees.. Structures Other _ _ _. . All other functions C ompensation of employees Structures Other __ 1965 Table 3.12.—Relation of the Federal Government Receipts and Expenditures in the National Income and Product Accounts to the Consolidated Cash Budget [Billions of dollars] Calendar quarters not seasonally adjusted Fiscal years 1962 Receipts Federal receipts from the publie— Consolidated cash budget. 101.9 Less: Coverage differences: .2 District of Columbia... .1 Other .4 Financial transactions .1 Miscellaneous „ _ _ „ „ _ Plus: Netting differences: Contributions to government employee retirement funds 1.8 Other .__ -1.3 Timing differences: Corporate income tax__ 1.7 Federal and State unemployment insur.5 ance taxes Withheld personal income tax and social security contribu.3 tions .1 Excise taxes Other .1 .0 Miscellaneous Equals: Federal receipts— National income and product 104.2 accounts Expenditures Federal payments to the public— Consolidated cash 107.7 budget -. . Less: Coverage differences: .3 District of Columbia. . Federal Home Loan Banks and Federal 1.1 Land Banks Other .2 Financial transactions: 2.2 Net lending Net purchases of foreign currency 1.1 Timing differences: Checks outstanding and certain other accounts -.5 -.2 Miscellaneous Plus: Netting differences: Contributions to government employee retirement funds 1.8 Other -1.3 Timing differences: Increase in payables (net of advances) on purchases of goods .4 and services . Accrued interest less interest paid _. . _ . _ .7 .3 On transfer payments. . On subsidies less current surplus of gov.3 ernment enterprises. _ Miscellaneous .7 Equals: Federal expenditures— National income and product accounts'. ... 106.4 1965 1964 1963 1962 II III IV I II III IV I II III IV I II III 26.2 31.0 26.0 23.0 28.2 32.6 27.3 24.5 30.3 33.4 27.0 24.3 30.7 37.7 29.2 25.8 .3 .1 .3 .2 .1 .0 .1 .0 .1 .0 .1 .0 .0 .0 .5 .1 .1 .0 .1 .0 .1 .0 .0 .0 .1 .0 .1 .1 .1 .0 .2 .0 1 .0 .1 .0 .1 .0 .1 .0 .1 .0 .1 .0 .1 .0 .1 .0 .1 .0 .1 .1 .1 .0 .1 .0 .1 .0 .1 •° .1 .0 .1 .0 .1 .0 .0 .0 2.0 -1.9 2.2 -1.5 .4 -.3 .5 -.4 .4 -.3 .5 -.7 5 -.4 5 -.5 .5 -.4 5 -.6 5 -.5 .5 -.4 .6 -.3 .5 -.6 .5 -.3 .5 -.3 .6 -.3 .5 -.4 1.3 1.0 -.5 1.1 1.7 -1.7 .0 1.5 2.1 -.5 1.5 2.0 1.4 2.2 1963 1964 1965 109.7 115.5 119.7 .3 .1 .7 .2 .3 .1 .5 .1 1.9 -1.9 1.2 I -1.5 -1.8 -1.4 -1.1 __ IV 0 1 —.1 —.3 —.1 .4 .0 1 .2 .0 .0 2 -.2 .0 .0 .1 .3 .0 .0 — 5 -.2 .0 .0 .1 .2 .0 .0 .4 .0 .1 .0 .1 -.1 .0 .0 -.2 .0 .0 .0 .1 .0 .0 .0 27.7 26.6 28.2 33.1 27.8 26.1 30.2 36.6 30.2 28.0 29.1 31.0 30.6 28.7 30.1 30,, 9 30.6 28.3 32.6 33.1 34.0 .0 -.2 —.1 .7 .1 —.2 —.1 1 1 — 2 .4 .0 .1 .1 -.5 .1 .1 .1 .2 -.1 .1 .1 .4 -.1 .0 .0 .1 .2 .0 .0 —.6 -.2 .0 .0 —.1 .2 ,0 .0 I i -.1 .1 .0 .2 .0 .0 o — 5 -.2 .0 .0 110.2 115.5 120.6 25.7 30.8' 25.7 24.3 27.6 32.6 113.8 120.3 122.4 25.9 27.9 28.5 29.6 26.5 _ i -.1 .3 .3 4 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I I 1 1 1 .1 .1 .1 .1 .5 .2 1.8 .2 12 2 4 .7 5 1 3 1 1i g 1i 1 6 I 5 I .5 1 3 1 .3 1 -.3 .1 1.0 .1 .5 .1 .2 .1 o o o o .7 1.8 2.5 4 5 g — 4 1 4 7 I 7 5 10 — 3 .1 1.8 .3 .5 1.2 .9 .9 .3 .4 .3 .2 .3 .4 .2 .3 .0 .4 .2 .2 .2 .3 -.1 .3 .1 .3 -.9 .1 .9 .6 -.6 .0 -.3 -.3 .5 .1 .5 -.2 -.8 .2 -.2 .2 .8 -.1 .0 .0 -.3 .1 -1.4 .1 L2 .1 .4 .0 .0 .0 -.7 .6 .8 .2 .4 -.1 1.9 -1.9 2.0 -1.9 2.2 -1.5 .4 -.3 .5 -.4 .4 -.3 .5 -.7 .5 -.4 .5 -.5 .5 -.4 .5 -.6 .5 -.5 .5 -.4 ,,6 -.3 .5 -.6 .5 -.3 .5 -.3 .6 -.3 .5 -.4 -.7 -1.4 .7 .0 -.1 .0 .2 -.4 .1 .1 -.2 -1.4 1,0 .3 -.2 -.4 -.2 .3 .9 .1 .9 .0 .8 .0 .5 .0 -.1 .0 .4 .0 .1 .0 .3 .0 .1 .0 .2 .0 .3 .0 .3 .0 .1 .0 .3 .0 .1 .0 .3 .0 .1 .0 .1 .0 .4 .0 .1 .6 .4 .7 -.1 .5 -.1 .1 .3 .2 .0 .1 -.1 .2 .0 .1 .2 .2 .2 .2 -.3 .1 .0 .2 .5 .2 -.1 .3 -.1 .0 .1 .1 .1 .1 .1 .2 .0 111.4 116.9 118.3 26.8 27.2 26.9 29.3 27.9 27.3 28.9 29.7 28.9 29.4 29.8 30.1 28.8 29.6 31.8 33.1 SUKVEY OF CUEKENT BUSINESS July 1966 27 Table 3.13.—Relation of State and Local Government Receipts and Expenditures in the National Income and Product Accounts to Bureau of Census Data: Fiscal Years [Billions of dollars] 1962 1964 1963 1962 1965 1964 1963 1965 Receipts Expenditures State and local government revenue from own sources— "Census _ _ _ _ 61.6 65.7 71.5 77.1 State and local government direct expenditures— Census. 70.5 74.7 80.6 87.0 Less* EJ.xcess of tax collections over accruals — l — 2 — .1 — .1 Less: Operating expenditures and current surplus of utilities and liquor stores 6.4 5.3 5.5 6.0 6.4 4.0 4.5 4.7 5.1 Receipts of unemployment* compensation funds 2.8 3.2 3.3 3.2 Interest received 1.6 1.8 2.0 2.4 .1 .1 .1 .1 Receipts of utilities and liquor stores Receipts of other commercial activities _ _ _ Sale of land and capital gains Plus: Government contributions to self -administered insurance funds Federal gran ts-in -aid- _ ____ Equals: vSfate and local government receipts— National income and product accounts 1.4 1.6 1.7 1.8 7.6 8.3 9.8 10.9 57.0 60.7 67.0 72.7 53 55 60 Operating expenditures and current surplus of other commercial activities _ _ _ _ _ _ 4.0 4.5 4.7 5.1 Unemployment compensation benefits 2.8 2.8 2.6 2.3 1.6 18 20 2.4 1.2 1.3 1.3 1.4 Plus: Government contributions to self-administered insurance funds _ 1.4 1.6 1.7 1.8 Equals: State and local government expenditures— National income and product accounts _ 57.1 60.4 65.7 71.2 Interest received Purchase of land _ ___ 4.—Foreign Transactions Table 4.1.—Foreign Transactions in the National Income and Product Accounts 1962 1963 1964 1962 1965 I II 1963 IV III I Millions of dollars Receipts from foreigners. _ _ _ 30,278 32,339 36,958 II 1964 III IV I 1965 II IV III I II III IV Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates 38,993 29.2 30.9 30.6 30.4 30.1 32.4 32.5 34.3 36.4 36.0 37.2 38.1 40.1 40.3 29.2 30.9 30.6 30.4 30.1 32.4 32.5 34.3 36.4 36.0 37.2 38.1 35.1 35.1 40.5 Exports of goods and services- 30, 278 32,339 36, 958 38,993 40.5 40. 1 40.3 38,993 29.2 30.9 30.6 30.4 30.1 32.4 32.5 34.3 36.4 36.0 37.2 38.1 35.1 40.5 40.1 40.3 Imports of goods and services . 25, 148 26, 442 28, 468 32, 036 Transfers to foreigners 2,676 2,784 2,765 2,794 Personal 605 600 512 628 Government 2, 164 2,179 2,165 2,166 24.6 2.9 .5 2.4 25.2 2.5 5 2.0 25.3 2.6 .5 2.1 25.6 2.6 .5 2.1 25.5 2.7 .6 2.1 26.2 2.7 6 2.1 26.9 2.9 .6 2.3 27.1 2.8 6 2.2 27.4 2.8 6 2.2 28.1 2.9 6 2.3 28.8 2.8 6 2.2 29.6 2.7 6 2.1 28.7 2.6 6 2.0 32.3 3.1 6 2.5 33.0 2.8 6 2.2 34.2 2.5 .6 1.9 1.7 3.2 2.7 2.2 1.9 3.5 2.7 4.3 6.3 5.0 5.7 5.9 3.8 5.1 4.2 3.5 Payments to foreigners 30,278 32,339 Net foreign investment 2,454 3,113 36,958 5,725 4,163 Table 4.2.—Foreign Transactions in the National Income and Product Accounts: Not Seasonally Adjusted [Billions of dollars] 19 62 I Receipts from foreigners.- _ _ _ _ ___ Exports of goods and services Payments to foreigners Imports of goods and services.. _ __ Transfers to foreigners _ __ _ Personal Government Net foreign in vestment . _ __ . II 19 63 III IV I II 1965 1964 III IV I II III IV I II III IV 7.1 7.9 7.2 8.0 7.3 8.3 7.7 9.0 8.9 9.2 8.8 10.0 8.6 10.4 9.4 10. < 7.1 7.9 7.2 8.0 7.3 8.3 7.7 9.0 8.9 9.2 8.8 10.0 8.6 10.4 9.4 10. 7.1 7.9 7.2 8.0 7.3 8.3 77 90 89 92 88 10 0 86 10.4 94 10.1 5.9 .7 .1 6 6.4 .7 .1 .5 6.5 .6 .1 5 6.4 .7 .1 5 6.0 .7 .1 5 6.6 .7 .2 6 7.1 .7 .1 5 6.8 .7 .2 6 6.5 .7 1 5 7.1 .7 1 6 7.5 .6 1 5 7.4 .7 2 5 6.8 .7 .2 5 8.2 .8 .2 6 8.5 .7 .2 5 8.t .9 .1 1.0 .7 13 7 20 1.1 1.4 .2 1.4 .5 1.0 —.1 1.5 17 r 5.—Saving and Investment Table 5.1.—Sources and Uses of Gross Saving 1962 1964 1963 1962 1965 I II I IV III Millions of dollars Gross private saving 87,858 Personal saving Undistributed corporate profits — _ . _ -_ 16,046 Corporate inventory valua252 tion adjustment Corporate capital consump30,067 tion allowances Noncorporate capital consumption allowances— __ _ 19, 903 Wage accruals less disburse0 ments 21, 590 1964 1963 II I IV III II 1965 IV III I II III IV Billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted at annual rates 88, 698 101,429 109, 119 87.7 89.5 87.5 86.9 85.9 87.0 88.7 93.1 96.9 103.1 101.2 104.5 105.3 104.8 112.8 113.6 19, 942 22.3 23.9 20.9 18.9 19.3 19.2 18.8 22.5 22.0 26.6 22.8 26.6 22.8 22.4 29. 0 28.5 16.9 18.1 20.9 21.3 21.7 21.4 25. 7 -.5 -.3 .0 -.9 -1.3 24, 487 25, 685 16, 623 21, 327 25, 320 16.3 15.9 16.2 16.3 15.1 16.4 -468 -433 -1,475 -.1 .0 .1 .9 .2 -.9 .2 31, 750 33,867 36,300 29.6 29.9 30.2 30.6 30.9 31.7 31.9 32.5 32.9 33.5 34.2 34.8 35.2 36.0 36.8 37.2 20,851 22, 181 23,289 19.6 19.8 20.0 20. 2 20.4 20.7 21.0 21.3 21.6 22.0 22.4 22.7 23.0 23.2 23.4 23.6 0 0 0 .0 .0 .0 .0 .0 .0 .0 .0 .0 .0 .1 -.1 .0 .0 .0 .0 Government surplus or deficit (— ), national income and product accounts. _ _ _ -2,870 1,849 -1,362 3,212 -4.5 -3.6 -1.4 -1.7 -1.5 3.0 2.5 3.5 -0.9 -5.7 -0.8 2.1 6.4 6.1 -1.0 1.4 -3,806 936 663 -3, 029 1,667 1,186 1,567 1,645 -5.0 0. 4 -4.6 1.0 -2.6 1.2 -3.2 1.5 -2.4 0.8 1.8 1.2 1.2 1.3 2.1 1.4 -1.9 1.0 -6.7 1.1 -3.0 2.2 -.5 2.6 4.5 1.9 4.4 1.7 -2.5 1.5 -.2 1.6 90,253 98,684 110, 722 82.3 86.0 87.1 87.0 84.7 88.6 90.7 97.2 96.5 96.8 98.2 103.3 107.6 108.8 110.9 115.4 87, 140 3,113 92, 959 106, 559 5,725 4,163 80.6 1.7 82.8 3.2 84.3 2.7 84.7 2.2 82.7 1.9 85.1 3.5 88.0 2.7 92.9 4.3 90.2 6.3 91.8 5.0 92. 5 5.7 97.4 5.9 103. 8 3.8 103. 7 5.1 106.7 4.2 111.9 3.5 .0 1.1 1.9 .3 -.5 .6 .4 -.6 -2.3 -4.1 -2.1 -.8 .4 Federal State and local Gross investment. - __ _ 85,472 Gross private domestic investment __ _ _ _ Net foreign investment. . 83, 018 2,454 Statistical discrepancy -294 -1,383 -1,609 484 -1.0 -1.5 -1.3 -3.3 25.0 -1.8 24.6 -1.0 26.1 -1.8 Table 5.2.—Purchases of Structures by Type Table 5.3.—Purchases of Structures by Type in Constant Dollars [Millions of dollars] [Billions of 1958 dollars] 1962 1963 1964 63, 140 66,337 69, 564 75, 149 44, 554 46, 459 48,590 52, 663 Residential structures 25, 347 26, 990 27, 579 27, 799 Residential structures New construction 24, 875 26, 410 27, 060 27, 228 New construction 24, 292 _ _ - 18, 638 25, 843 20, 064 26, 507 20, 612 26, 689 20, 765 1, 223 583 1, 341 567 1,457 553 1,486 539 1,069 — 597 1,069 -489 1,030 -511 1,107 -536 Total structures • -- Private structures Nonfarm buildings New dwelling units Additions and alterations Nonhousekeeping units Farm buildings - _ _-__ Brokers' commissions on sale of structures _ _ _ _ - _ _ _ _ Net purchases of used structures Nonresidential structures 19, 207 New construction 19 213 Nonresidential buildings, excluding farm Industrial Commercial _ _ _ _ _ Religious Educational Hospital and- institutional Other buildings. _ _ _ _ _. _ ___ ___ Public utilities Railroads _ _ _ __ Telephone and telegraph Electric light and power _ _ _ _ Gas Other '.__. _ - Farm Petroleum and natural gas well drilling and exploration______ _ _ _ All other private construction. _ _ __ _ _ Brokers' commissions on sale of structures N e t purchases o f used structures _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Public structures __ _ _ _ _ N e w construction. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Buildings, excluding military Residential Industrial _ Educational ___ _ _ Hospital Other public buildings Highways and streets.- _ _ Military facilities Conservation and development Other public construction Sewer systems._ _ Water supply facilities _ Miscellaneous public construction Net purchases of used structures . 28 __ _ _ 19, 469 19 377 J 21,011 1965 1962 24, 864 21, 017 24, 751 11, 526 11, 6 6 12, 998 16, 521 2 949 4,955 1 036 647 870 1,069 2 906 4,995 1 001 678 1 030 1,036 3,572 5,406 999 703 1,301 1,017 5,086 6,704 1,222 753 1,432 1,324 4 330 201 996 1,899 1,031 203 4 596 240 1,128 2,020 948 260 4,850 259 1,263 2,098 1,064 166 5,178 270 1,^54 2,271 1,064 119 699 680 668 656 2 381 277 2 145 310 2,163 338 1,980 416 152 — 158 155 -63 150 -156 159 -46 18, 586 19,878 20, 974 17,869 19 326 20, 307 6,092 6 449 7,052 474 938 451 400 422 458 2 984 3 477 3,790 403 440 397 1 351 1 660 1,948 6 365 7 091 7,144 1 266 1 227 968 1 524 1 690 1,729 2 622 2 869 3,414 1 072 1,325 947 682 956 882 868 1,040 1,133 667 717 552 22,486 21, 904 7,684 464 365 4,261 496 2,098 7,539 883 2 032 3,766 1,189 1,281 1,296 582 Total structures Private structures _ _ __ ___ Nonfarm buildings Farm buildings _ _ __ _ _ Brokers' commissions on sale of structures Net purchases of used structures _ _ Nonresidential structures _ _ _ _ _ New construction.. __ _ _ _ _-•' _ __ Nonresidential buildings, excluding farm Industrial. Commercial Religious Educational _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Hospital and institutional Other buildings Public utilities. . _ _ _ _ _ Railroads Telephone and telegraph _ _ Electric light and power ___ Gas _ _ _ Other Farm _ _ Petroleum and natural gas well drilling and exploration _ _ _ _ _ _ All other private construction __ _. _ . Brokers' commissions on sale of structures Net purchases of used structures _ Public structures . _ _. _ New construction Building^, excluding military Residential Industrial. __ __ _ _ _ Educational Hospital Other public buildings _ __ _ __ Highways and streets Military facilities Conservation and development Other public construction Sewer systems _ __ Water supply facilities _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Miscellaneous public construction Net purchases of used structures _ _ _ _ 1964 1963 1965 65.4 59.3 61.0 62.3 41.7 42.7 43.4 45.8 23.8 24.8 24.6 24.1 23.3 24.2 24.1 23.6 22.8 .6 23.7 .5 23.6 .5 23. 1 .5 1.0 -.6 1.0 -.4 .9 -.5 1.0 -.5 17.9 17.9 18.9 21.7 17.9 17.8 18.9 21.6 10.5 2.8 4.4 .9 .6 .8 1.0 4.2 .2 1.0 1.9 1.0 .2 10.3 2.7 4.3 .9 .6 .9 .9 4.4 .2 1.1 2.0 .9 .2 11.2 3.3 4.5 .8 .6 1.1 .9 4.5 .2 1.2 2.0 .9 .2 13.9 4.5 5.5 1.0 .6 1.2 1.1 4.7 .2 1.3 2.1 .9 .1 .7 .6 .6 .6 2.3 .2 2.2 .3 2.2 .3 2.1 .3 .1 -.1 .1 -.1 .1 -.1 .1 .0 17.7 18.3 18.8 19.6 17.0 17.8 18.2 19.1 5.6 .9 .4 2.7 .4 1.2 5.7 .4 .4 3.0 .4 1.5 6.0 .4 .4 3.2 .4 1.6 6.4 .4 .3 3.5 1.7 6.5 1.2 1.4 7.0 1.1 1.5 7.0 .9 1.4 7.2 .8 1.6 2.4 1.0 .6 .8 2.5 .8 .8 .9 2.9 1.1 .8 1.0 3.1 .9 1.0 1.1 .7 .5 .6 .5 SUEVEY OF CUKKENT BUSINESS July 1966 29 Table 5.6.—Change in Business Inventories Table 5.4.—Private Purchases of Producers' Durable Equipment by Type [MiUions of dollars] [MiUions of dollars] 1962 1963 1964 6,004 714 5,290 5 866 5 081 4 666 —594 5 260 5,290 4,686 604 5 081 4 343 5 260 4 430 8 146 6 805 1 341 5,021 4, 434 5,583 4,811 772 5 735 4 863 872 9 995 8 280 1,715 269 252 17 -502 —468 —475 —433 —42 —1 849 —1 475 —374 5,290 5,081 5,260 8,146 2,791 2,643 1 990 2,494 -504 2 571 2 904 —333 4 219 4 978 —759 649 587 62 1,344 1,322 1 131 1, 142 1 263 1 692 -429 Retail trade. _. ___ Change in book value Inventory valuation adjustment 1,679 1,657 1,406 1,429 1, 130 1, 180 —50 2,158 2,722 -564 Allother Change in book value Inventory valuation adjustment 171 134 37 428 509 —81 506 603 —97 1963 1964 32,460 Total private purchases 32, 176 Purchases of new equipment 295 Dealers' margins on used equipment (except passenger cars) . 108 Net purchases of used equipment from government 59 Less* Exports of used equipment Sale of equipment scrap (except passenger cars) — 60 34, 815 34,446 339 138 45 63 39,703 39, 311 393 156 64 93 44,81 44,35 46 20 7 12 32,520 34,878 39,796 44,94 1,678 924 503 849 1,910 1,026 529 1,013 2,028 1,217 554 1, 215 2,35 1,25 45 1,41 1,141 952 462 1,642 1,365 1,239 575 1,872 1, 483 1,421 654 2,290 1,63 1,65 80 2,93 Special-industry machinery, n e e General industrial, including materials handling, equipment _ _ -_ Office computing and accounting machinery Service-industry machines 2,234 2, 185 2,559 2,67 Manufacturing Change in book value _ _ _ Inventory valuation adjustment 1,898 1,950 1,664 2,086 2,246 1,693 2,521 2, 500 1, 910 2,651 2,86 2,07 Wholesale trade _ _ _ Change in book value. __ _ __ Inventory valuation adjustment Electrical machinery Electrical transmission, distribution, and industrial apparatus Communication equipment Other electrical equipment 4,730 4,630 5, 311 5,92 2,115 2,293 322 2,099 2, 047 484 2,484 2,271 556 2,81 2,49 62 Trucks, buses, and truck trailers Passenger cars Aircraft Ships and boats 4,342 3,314 1,020 412 4,766 3, 643 630 348 4,846 3,827 1,016 526 5,37 4! 47 1,39 581 676 1,190 939 602 1,473 1, 047 1,007 1,723 1,188 1,15 1,94 1,34 1962 Total excluding scrap deduction Furniture and fixtures Fabricated metal products Engines and turbines Tractors -- Agricultural machinery (except tractors) Construction machinery Mining and oilfield machinery Metalworking machinery - _ __ _ . Railroad equipment Instruments Miscellaneous equipment 1965 1965 Change in business inventories} total Farm _ _ __ Nonfarm Change in nonfarm inventories Corporate Noncorporate. __ _ __ _ _ _ '__ _ Change in book value _ Corporate. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Noncorporate 587 Inventory valuation adjustment. _ Corporate Noncorporate _ Change in nonfarm inventories by industrial group __ 148 22 785 738 —34 22 —23 341 338 3 830 —11 9 081 935 8 146 Table 5.7.—Comparison of Personal Saving in the National Income and Product Accounts With That of the Securities and Exchange Commission Table 5.5.—Private Purchases of Producers' Durable Equipment by Type in Constant Dollars Line [Billions of 1958 dollars] 1962 Total private purchases Purchases of new equipment Dealers' margins on used equipment (except passenger cars)~ Net purchases of used equipment from government Less: Exports of used equipment. Sale of equipment scrap (except passenger cars)-_-_ Total excluding scrap deduction .. Furniture and fixtures Fabricated metal products Engines and turbines _ _ _ Tractors _ __ _ _ _ _ Agricultural machinery (except tractors) _ Construction machinery Mining and oilfield machineryMetalworking machinery ^ _ __ _ 1963 1964 1965 31.7 34.0 38.5 43.2 31.5 .3 .1 .1 .1 33.7 .3 .1 .0 .1 38.1 .4 .2 .1 .1 42.7 .5 .2 .1 .1 31.8 34.1 38.6 43.3 1.6 .9 .5 .8 1.9 1.0 .6 .9 2.0 1.2 .6 1.1 2.3 1.2 .5 1.2 1.0 .9 .4 1.5 1.2 1.2 .5 1.7 1.3 1.3 .6 2.1 1.4 1.5 .8 2.6 Special-industry machinery, n.e.c General industrial, including materials handling, equipment _ Office, computing, and accounting machinery. __ __ _ __ Service-industry machines _ 2.1 2.0 2.3 2.3 1.8 1.9 1.7 2.0 2.2 1.7 2.4 2.4 1.9 2.4 2.8 2.1 Electrical machinery ... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ... Electrical transmission, distribution, and industrial apparatus Communication equipment Other electrical equipment ._ _ 4.8 4.7 5.4 6.2 2.2 2.3 .3 2.2 2.0 .5 2.6 2.3 .6 3.1 2.4 .6 Trucks, buses, and truck trailers Passenger cars Aircraft.._ _ Ships and boats 4.4 32 1.0 .4 4.8 3.6 .6 .4 4.9 3. 8 1.0 .5 5.4 45 13 6 .7 1.1 1.0 .6 1.4 1.1 1.0 1.6 1.3 11 18 14 Railroad equipment Instruments Miscellaneous equipment _ _ [Billions of dollars] 1962 1963 1964 1965 1 Increase in financial assets 1 37.0 42.4 49.3 52.5 2 3 2.8 14.9 9.9 .4 .3 .3 6.8 11.6 11.7 12 .7 1.8 7.0 12.3 11.3 9 2.4 10 0 15.3 9.3 6 1.8 2.4 —.1 2.0 -3. 4 4.3 1.4 4.2 .5 1.6 -4.3 4.5 1.7 4.5 .9 2.0 -2.5 4.8 2.0 4.9 2.3 2.1 -4. 4 5.3 2.1 5.6 39.1 19.0 39.5 19 6 43.5 19 5 4 5 6 7 Currency and demand deposits _ Time deposits Saving shares _ _ U.S. saving bonds Other U.S. Government securities State and local government securities 8 9 10 11 12 13 Corporate and other bonds Investment company shares.----- _ O ther preferred and common stock. Private insurance reserves Private insured pension reserves Private noninsured pension reserves . _ 0 0 14 15 16 Gross investment in tangible assets Nonfarm homes Noncorporate business structures, equipment, and inventories 37.5 18.7 18.8 20.1 19. 9 24.0 17 18 19 Capital consumption allowances Nonfarm homes Other.. _ 19.9 7.4 12.5 20.9 7.9 13. 0 22.2 8.4 13.8 23.3 8.9 14.3 20 21 22 23 ?4 25 Increase in debt _ _ Mortgage debt on nonfarm homes Other mortgage debt.- _ _ Consumer credit Securities loans _ Other debt 31.2 12.5 4.7 5.0 1.1 7.9 35.4 14.9 5.6 6.3 .9 7.7 37.0 15.6 6.1 6.5 .1 8.8 42.3 15.4 6.2 9.0 .0 11.6 ?6 Personal saving— SEC (1+14-17-20) 23.4 25.3 29.6 30.5 27 Personal saving— National income and product accounts .__ _ _ _ _ 21.6 19.9 24.5 25.7 28 Difference between lines 26 and 27 1.9 5.4 5.1 4.8 29 Addendum: Government insurance and pension reserves _ 3.7 4.0 4.6 5.0 i Excludes changes in government insurance and pension reserves. 6.—Income and Employment by Industry Table 6.1.—Compensation of Employees by Industry Table 6.2.—Wages and Salaries by Industry [Millions of dollars] [MiUions of dollars] 1962 1963 1964 1965 341,004 365,657 392,930 323,632 All industries, total 3,443 3,534 3,533 3,467 Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries 2,892 2,775 2,822 2,848 Farms 642 668 619 711 Agricultural services, forestry, and fisheries 4,591 4,424 4,816 4,378 Mining 637 616 605 688 Metal mining _ _ 1,041 1,080 1,133 1, 013 Coal mining 2,142 2,032 2,093 2,019 Crude petroleum and natural gas _ 781 746 853 Mining and quarrying of nonmetallic minerals 730 22,964 21, 190 18,277 19,466 Contract construction 130,067 120,460 Manufacturing 108,158: 112,888 43,507 48, 734 46, 003 Nondurable goods 42 136 10, 484 11, 000 11, 379 Food and kindred products 10 248 504 476 509 Tobacco manufactures 463 3,950 4,210 4,599 Textile mill products _ _ _ _ __ 3,906 5,337 5,705 5,030 Apparel and other fabricated textile products. _ __ 4,864 4, 414 4,197 4,662 Paper and allied products 4,020 6,944 6,138 6,550 Printing, publishing, and allied industries 5,900 7, 367 7,865 6,939 6,600 Chemicals and allied products 2,068 2,081 2,149 Petroleum refining and related industries 2,033 3,286 2,736 2,969 Rubber and miscellaneous plastic products 2, 623 1,636 1, 571 1,489 Leather and leather products -. _ 1, 479 74,457 81,333 69,381 Durable goods _ 66, 022 2,970 3,115 2,723 Lumber and wood products, except furniture . 2,591 2,204 2,378 2,030 Furniture and fixtures 1,943 3,904 4,420 4,191 Stone, clay, and glass products 3,707 11, 454 9,492 10, 476 Primary metal industries ._ _ _ _ _ _ . 9,216 9,341 7,814 8,503 Fabricated metal products 7,455 14, 177 11,383 12, 684 Machinery, except electrical 10, 763 10, 717 11, 083 12, 110 Electrical machinery _ _ ___ 10, 521 Transportation equipment and ordnance, except 9,614 10, 123 9,445 motor vehicles _ _ _ __ __ 8,866 7,706 8,809 7, 095 Motor vehicles and motor vehicle equipment. 6,369 3,011 2,785 2,677 Instruments 2,550 2,241 2,101 2,395 Miscellaneous manufacturing industries _ 2,041 19,064 17, 050 17,978 Transportation __ 16, 556 6,200 5,871 6,008 Railroad transportation. _ 5,871 1,446 1,483 1,533 Local, suburban, and highway passenger 1, 429 6, 745 5,752 6,192 Motor freight transportation and warehousing 5, 439 1,614 1,753 1,719 Water transportation 1 576 1,864 2,070 1,681 Air transportation 1, 572 166 167 175 Pipeline transportation. 169 546 588 Transportation services __ __ _. 519 500 Communication _ _ _ 6,091 5,587 6,511 5,370 Telephone and telegraph 5,269 5,640 4,652 4, 820 Radio broadcasting and television __ 822 871 767 718 5,233 Electric, gas, and sanitary services __ . 4,719 4,990 4,519 Wholesale and retail trade 63, 101 58, 835 54, 960 51,995 Wholesale trade __ 22, 186 19,706 20, 760 23, 838 Retail trade 36,649 39, 263 32, 289 34, 200 Finance, insurance, and real estate 18,855 16 610 17 740 15 608 Banking- _ __ _ _ _ __ 4,997 4, 094 4,352 4,670 Credit agencies, holding and other investment companies2,238 1,935 2,085 1,754 Security and commodity brokers.... 1,281 1,033 1,148 1, 066 Insurance carriers _ _ __ 5,845 5,316 5,612 4,990 Insurance agents, brokers, and service 1,467 1,276 1,366 1, 195 Real estate _ _ _ _ _ ___ 2,859 3,027 2, 698 2, 509 Services 43, 507 37, 053 34, 604 40, 302 Hotels and other lodging places— _ 1,952 2,091 2,239 1, 856 Personal services _ __ 3,916 3 271 3 655 3 416 Miscellaneous business services _ _ __ 6,551 5,857 5,187 4,789 Automobile repair, automobile services, and garages 1,553 1,430 1,313 1,208 Miscellaneous repair services 822 897 730 768 Motion pictures. _ _ _ _ 1,027 919 841 859 Amusement and recreation services, except motion pictures.. 1 662 1,752 1 482 1 563 Medical and other health services 8,012 6,036 6,688 7,448 Legal services . 752 973 813 893 Educational services. __ __ 2, 792 3, 483 3,846 3,143 Nonprofit membership organizations 5,164 4,802 4,247 4,478 Miscellaneous professional services 3,049 3,331 3,613 2, 797 Private households.. 3,964 3 803 3,824 3, 909 Government and government enterprises 60, 670 75, 243 64, 681 70, 003 Federal 29 676 28 347 33, 469 31 858 General government _ 24, 277 25, 261 27, 156 28, 435 Civilian, except work relief— Military... Work relief Government enterprises 5,034 4,070 4,415 4,702 State and local 32, 323 41, 774 35, 005 38, 145 General government 32 859 35 876 39 346 30 391 Public education __ Nonschool, except work relief Work relief — Government enterprises 1,932 2,269 2, 428 2, 146 Rest of the world 32 34 36 30 Addendum: All private industries __ 295, 620 262, 932 276, 291 317, 651 30 1962 1963 1964 1965 Table 6.3.—Average Number of FulJ-Time and Part-Time Employees by Industry [Data in thousands] 1962 1963 1964 1965 296,091 311,095 333,619 358,389 63, 166 64,176 65, 692 68,012 3,335 2,755 3,380 2,776 3,286 2,656 3,372 2,699 630 673 1,947 1,769 1,925 1,745 1, 752 1,575 1,679 1, 495 580 604 3,917 3,956 551 826 540 839 4,115 568 873 1,954 4,314 613 915 178 651 84 152 299 116 180 634 81 148 289 116 177 631 81 144 290 116 184 636 85 142 288 121 1,876 1,894 664 683 720 16,842 17,802 19,446 21, 105 2,881 2,958 3,071 3,201 96, 662 100,606 107, 166 115,509 16,868 16,995 17,297 18, 088 37, 838 38, 972 41, 196 43,578 7,366 7,375 7,455 7, 660 9,239 9,444 9,901 10, 224 1,757 1,744 1,750 1, 761 3,607 4,460 3,680 5, 472 5,824 1,468 2,344 1,355 3,635 4,604 3,830 5,651 6,111 1,500 2,446 1,354 3,879 4,908 4,030 6,026 6,463 1,493 2,641 1,433 4,239 - 5,255 4, 253 6,380 6,873 1,521 2,917 1,493 1,294 1,345 58,824 61,634 65,970 71,931 2,408 1,781 3,340 8,004 6,772 9,727 9,569 2,517 1,859 3,504 8,241 7,094 10, 275 9,749 2,748 2,024 3,752 9,022 7, 701 11,410 10, 080 2,884 2,186 3,953 9,838 8,451 12, 732 11, 000 8,119 5,001 2,250 1,853 8,521 5, 601 2,367 1,906 8,661 6,033 2,495 2,044 15,008 15,417 5,242 1,301 4,992 1, 426 1,432 5,207 1,321 5,298 1,456 1,511 4,816 4,143 389 158 457 397 422 2,001 785 423 90 908 89 895 91 897 88 930 1,259 1,274 9,502 9,620 9,842 10,428 588 389 600 605 406 615 612 429 630 1,173 1,126 1,493 1,573 1,176 1,146 1,533 1,558 1,233 1,187 1,614 1,544 1,302 1,265 1,749 1,656 9,155 6,856 2,692 2,184 1,127 1,133 744 362 391 1, 106 1,138 700 356 393 16,248 17,217 2,475 2,470 2,494 2,537 5,305 1,352 5,704 1,554 1,676 5,466 1,397 6,215 1,585 1,860 5,013 5,405 5,764 4,298 4,630 4,944 775 820 4,369 4,564 793 273 883 224 197 21 84 825 731 94 612 770 270 902 221 203 20 84 827 730 97 614 755 268 921 230 213 19 88 849 748 101 618 738 269 965 226 229 19 91 881 776 105 626 156 468 154 503 153 541 615 926 850 196 408 357 588 384 589 622 930 865 192 417 347 625 954 878 187 432 347 767 364 401 640 982 910 184 467 353 841 384 422 673 715 3,974 4,145 48,740 51,416 55, 132 59, 166 11,591 11,853 12,255 12,729 18, 541 30, 199 19,493 31, 923 20,858 34, 274 22, 418 36, 748 3,055 8,536 3,101 8, 752 3,178 9,077 3,296 9,433 13, 899 3,512 1,579 1,001 4, 422 1,106 2,279 14, 731 3,744 1,740 966 4,673 1,171 2, 437 15,816 4,012 1,882 1,076 4,997 1,262 2, 587 16, 777 4,273 2,017 1,201 5,189 1,355 2,742 2,805 2,880 2,955 3,029 716 742 767 308 132 327 123 32, 939 35, 150 1,822 3,215 4,845 1,235 38, 305 1,955 3,451 5,495 1,351 41, 357 1,737 3,090 4,489 1,143 2,096 3,702 6,150 1,470 1,399 5,824 1, 474 6,432 1,567 7,176 1, 655 7,732 723 781 859 938 2,625 4, 029 2,645 3,764 2,938 4,239 2,868 3,784 3,256 4, 546 3,156 3,867 680 791 711 806 762 864 833 967 791 879 229 613 355 129 861 221 606 341 126 10, 344 10, 609 11,012 11,360 580 920 883 285 145 177 594 930 943 299 147 175 618 955 842 218 589 1,017 315 151 176 886 238 630 645 994 1, 118 333 160 181 399 369 380 390 1,756 1,863 1,972 3,589 4,883 3,423 3,919 179 887 1,152 169 848 1, 173 1, 215 1, 250 2,694 2,656 2,683 2, 604 164 806 413 432 454 2,090 190 917 479 55, 929 59, 447 64, 297 69, 208 12, 163 12, 407 12, 754 13,242 26, 166 22, 405 11, 649 10 756 27, 313 23, 238 12, 389 10, 849 29, 231 24, 896 13, 204 11 692 30, 743 26, 081 13, 955 12, 126 5,334 4, 606 1,806 2,800 5,283 4, 547 1,824 2,723 5,281 4, 537 1,817 2,720 5,329 4,567 1,835 2, 732 3,761 4,075 32, 134 30 137 15, 706 14, 431 4,335 4,662 728 736 744 762 29, 763 27 958 14, 375 13, 583 35, 066 32 978 17, 395 15, 583 38, 465 36, 226 19, 239 16, 987 6,829 6,461 3,184 3,277 7,124 6, 726 3,385 3,341 7,473 7, 047 3,603 3,444 7,913 7,456 3,891 3,565 1,805 1,997 2,088 2,239 30 32 34 36 368 4 398 4 426 4 457 4 240, 132 251, 616 269,288 289, 145 50,999 51,765 52,934 54,766 SUEVEY OF CUERENT BUSINESS July 1966 All industries, total _______ Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries. Farms Agricultural services, forestry, and fisheries __ Mining Metal mining Coal mining Crude petroleum and natural gas Mining and quarrying of nonmetallic minerals Contract construction Manufacturing __ __ _ Nondurable goods Food and kindred products Tobacco manufactures Textile mill products Apparel and other fabricated textile products Paper and allied products Printing, publishing, and allied industries Chemicals and allied products Petroleum refining and related industries Rubber and miscellaneous plastic products Leather and leather products Durable goods ••_ __ Lumber and wood products, except furniture Furniture and fixtures ______ Stone clay, and glass products Primary metal industries F abricated metal products Machinery, except electrical _ Electrical machinery Transportation equipment and ordnance, except motor vehicles _ Motor vehicles and motor vehicle equipment Instruments . Miscellaneous manufacturing industries Transportation Railroad transportation . Local, suburban, and highway passenger Motor freight transportation and warehousing Water transportation Air transportation Pipeline transportation Transportation services-, Communication Telephone and telegraph Radio broadcasting and television Electric, gas, and sanitary services Wholesale and retail trade Wholesale trade Retail trade _ Finance, insurance, and real estate _ Banking __ Credit agencies, holding and other investment companies. Security and commodity brokers Insurance carriers __ Insurance agents, brokers, and service Real estate Services Hotels a n d other lodging places - __ __ Personal services Miscellaneous business services _• _ Automobile repair, automobile services, and garages Miscellaneous repair services Motion pictures _ Amusement and recreation services, except motion pictures Medical and other health services Legal services __ Educational services Nonprofit membership organizations Miscellaneous professional services -_ __ __ Private households Government and government en terprises Federal General government . Civilian, except work relief _ Military Work relief Government enterprises _ _ _ State and local _._ _ General government Public education Nonschool, except work relief Work relief Government enterprises Rest of the world Addendum : All private industries Table 6.4.—Number of FullTime Equivalent Employees by Industry Table 6.5.—Average Annual Earnings per Full-Time Employee by Industry Table 6.6.—Number of Persons Engaged in Production by Industry [Data in thousands] [Dollars] [Data in thousands] 1963 1964 5,705 67,047 67,775 69, 112 71,248 2,030 4,545 4,416 4,176 4,039 1 805 4,054 4 247 4,115 3, 876 3,734 301 300 305 6 521 6 783 687 669 666 670 6 667 5 669 6 554 5,888 7 012 6 062 6,738 6,207 7 212 6 444 6,948 6,488 86 161 319 121 83 156 309 121 83 152 310 121 87 150 308 125 1963 1964 1965 58, 463 59, 333 60,671 62,815 5,065 5,243 5,499 1 930 1,908 1,736 1,661 1,728 1,771 1,893 1 769 1 745 1 495 161 163 1 575 166 1,557 3,602 1 591 3 706 1,686 3, 913 651 634 631 636 6 017 6 240 84 152 299 116 81 148 289 116 81 144 290 116 85 142 288 121 6 560 5 434 6,274 5,724 161 1962 1965 1962 1964 1962 1963 1965 298 2 881 2 958 3,071 3,201 5,846 6 018 6,332 6 593 3 632 3,715 3,836 3,971 16 868 16 995 17, 297 18, 088 5 730 5 920 6 196 6 386 17 230 17 355 17, 653 18,443 7,366 7,375 7,455 7,660 5,137 5,284 5,526 5,689 7,507 7,516 7,593 7,797 1 757 1 744 1,750 1,761 1, 793 91 897 88 930 1 779 1,783 91 899 88 932 1 259 1 274 1 300 1,320 1, 371 1,000 90 908 __ 31 89 895 1,294 1, 345 5,258 4,322 3,972 3 542 5,984 5,909 6 852 7,490 5,745 3,796 5 415 4,461 4,061 3 614 6 158 6,076 7 065 7 812 5,866 3,902 5 658 4,637 4,324 3 793 6 448 6,317 7 361 7 984 6,113 4,130 5 806 4,807 4,558 3 907 6 645 6,497 7 553 8 266 6 246 4, 229 1 792 90 910 1 285 89 897 641 615 926 850 196 408 357 622 930 865 192 417 347 625 954 878 187 432 347 9,502 9,620 9,842 10,428 6,191 6,407 6,703 6,898 588 384 589 588 389 600 605 406 615 612 429 630 1,173 1,126 1,493 1,573 1,176 1,146 1,533 1,558 1,233 1,187 1,614 1, 544 1,302 1, 265 1,749 1,656 4,095 4,638 5 671 6, 824 6,014 6,515 6,083 4 281 4,779 5 840 7 008 6,190 6,703 6,257 4,542 4,985 6 101 7 317 6,488 7,069 6, 528 4 712 5,096 6 275 7 556 6,681 7,280 6,643 1,127 1,133 1, 106 1, 138 2,261 2,250 2,269 2,304 793 770 755 738 261 710 258 723 256 739 257 774 7, 204 7,144 6, 320 4,715 6,638 6,610 4,985 7,031 7,059 7,269 7,524 5, 935 5,895 5,668 7,826 6, 493 4,894 6,445 4,264 5,410 5,053 6,291 9, 355 5,507 6,249 4,252 3,783 3. 393 3.805 5, 718 4,482 5,862 5,038 7,521 7,528 6,539 4 875 6,852 6,762 5,120 7,328 7,317 7,443 7,800 6,078 6,128 5,888 8,125 6,751 5,071 6, 687 ' 4,418 5,595 5,207 6,541 9,758 5,706 6,542 4,423 3,924 3, 490 3,935 5,809 4,643 6,077 5,200 7,831 7,866 6, 854 5,097 7,161 7,026 5,281 7,719 7,507 7,869 8,105 6,288 6,435 6,190 8,424 7,070 5,261 6,983 4,574 5,851 5,400 6,770 10, 549 5, 977 6,785 4,636 4,129 3.600 4,113 6,106 4,808 6,350 5,538 8,045 8,152 7, 010 5 175 7,473 7,407 5,436 8,030 7,770 8,122 8,053 6,518 6,618 6,371 8,632 7,291 5,436 7,236 4,719 6,070 5, 608 6,979 11, 548 6,155 7,021 4,785 4,292 3,697 4,241 6,212 4,949 6,559 6,044 4,484 3,317 4,576 3,257 3,724 6,629 2,416 4,993 4,965 4,864 6,450 3 841 4,592 3,452 4,791 3 465 3,843 6,878 2 470 5,205 5,234 5,111 6,792 3 984 4,763 3,639 4, 994 3,671 4,034 7,205 2,556 5,474 5,605 5,487 7,267 4,299 4,911 3,700 5,126 3,914 4,220 7,409 2,655 5,701 5,844 5,711 7,605 4,439 5,664 5,017 5 014 5,314 4,731 6,073 5,180 5 181 5 448 4,919 6,394 5,370 5 382 5,655 5,106 6,718 5,592 5 607 5,846 5,359 664 671 678 694 5,932 5 576 2,705 2, 871 6,203 5, 817 2,883 2,934 6,530 6,128 3, 076 3,052 6,878 6,461 3,291 3,170 5,070 7 500 5,081 5 174 8 000 5,252 5,194 8 500 5,504 5,369 9 000 5,706 356 4 386 4 402 4 417 4 55,841 56,350 57,363 59,105 700 356 393 744 362 391 767 364 401 640 982 910 184 467 353 841 384 422 202 197 21 77 817 731 86 612 199 203 20 77 818 730 88 614 207 213 19 80 840 748 92 618 9,960 2,877 7,083 2,569 10, 140 2,915 7,225 2,633 10, 480 2,987 7,493 2,703 10,885 3,098 7,787 2,764 695 719 743 762 266 99 278 102 289 104 251 107 204 229 19 83 871 776 95 626 803 177 636 819 179 551 836 186 558 8,708 8,958 9,277 9,636 512 812 785 255 116 157 522 817 834 266 117 155 543 839 900 281 120 156 567 873 990 297 127 160 312 321 329 843 193 573 337 1,756 1, 863 1,972 2,090 1,082 1,103 1,127 1,157 1,532 11,421 5,218 4,547 1,824 2,723 1,513 11,745 5,215 4,537 1, 817 2,720 1,476 12, 139 5,261 4,567 1,835 2, 732 158 806 399 1,558 11,202 5,270 4,606 1,806 2 800 163 848 417 172 887 438 183 917 462 664 671 678 694 5,932 5,576 2,705 2,871 6,203 5,817 2,883 2,934 6,530 6,128 3, 076 3, 052 6,878 6,461 3,291 3,170 356 4 386 4 402 4 417 4 47,257 47,908 48,922 50,672 616 996 853 196 410 359 623 626 1,024 1, 052 868 192 419 349 880 187 434 349 912 184 469 355 9 723 9 839 10,060 10,646 675 404 604 674 409 615 690 426 630 697 449 645 1 175 1 144 1,537 1,576 1 178 1 163 1,578 1, 561 1,235 1,204 1,659 1,547 1, 304 1,282 1, 795 1,659 1,130 1 136 1,109 1,141 745 364 416 768 366 426 842 386 446 2,442 2, 432 2,451 2,486 793 770 755 738 292 849 289 863 287 879 288 914 203 206 20 81 822 732 90 626 211 216 19 84 844 750 94 630 208 232 19 87 875 778 97 638 12,273 3,141 9,132 2,875 12,359 3,180 9,179 2,944 12,715 3,252 9,463 3,019 13,129 3,362 9,767 3,084 701 358 419 206 200 21 81 821 733 88 624 744 763 696 720 266 132 293 127 304 129 803 261 717 281 123 819 265 736 836 272 747 843 279 766 10, 712 11, 012 11,373 11,770 652 662 683 1,333 928 407 279 170 401 1,360 982 426 287 168 414 1,394 1,051 446 294 169 426 707 1, 438 1,145 467 307 173 437 2, 128 2, 239 2,353 2,475 1,082 1,103 1,127 1,022 1,157 1,558 11,202 5,270 4,606 1,806 2,800 1,532 11,421 5,218 4,547 1,824 2,723 1,513 11,745 5,215 4,537 1,817 2, 720 327 902 545 327 947 565 338 989 590 349 617 1,476 12,139 5,261 4,567 1,835 2,732 Table 6.7.—Supplements to Wages and Salaries by Industry Division Table 6.10.—Inventory Valuation Adjustment by Industry Division [Millions of dollars] [Millions of dollars] All industries, total Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries Mining Contract construction _ Manufacturing _ _ _ _ _ Nondurable goods __ _ _ Durable goods _ _ 1962 1963 1964 27 541 29 909 32 038 34 541 132 461 154 468 157 476 161 502 1965 1,435 1 664 1 744 11 496 4 298 7 198 12 282 4 535 7 747 13 294 4 807 8 487 1 859 3 255 3 544 3 703 1 924 1 709 1 879 1 665 1 903 1 997 3 935 2 078 2 150 Government and government enterprises 4,741 5,234 6,035 22, 800 24 675 1 548 *554 545 Addendum: All private industries 1 633 1 730 ' 574 686 Mining __ Contract construction M anuf acturing_ Wholesale and retail trade Transportation Communication Electric, gas, and sanitary services 1 847 747 669 621 574 All industries, total.. . Corporations, total 14 558 5 156 9 402 Transportation Communication Electric? gas, and sanitary services Wholesale and retail trade Finance, insurance, and real estate Services. _ _ __ _ 5,706 1963 1964 269 —502 -475 -1,849 252 9 7 154 67 —3 8 10 —468 5 —433 -1,475 —478 9 —4 0 1 —34 —3 -322 -33 —5 —20 —16 —15 —16 -719 -68J -7 -21 —16 17 —34 —42 -374 0 6 —6 17 0 2 -26 -10 0 —3 -11 -28 0 -22 -40 -312 1962 Unincorporated enterprises, total. Mining Contract construction Manufacturing Wholesale and retail trade _ _ _ ... •_ —I 1965 28 506 ' Table 6.8.—Income of Unincorporated Enterprises by Industry Division [Millions of dollars] All industries, total.. _ Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries Farms _ _ _ " _ Mining Contract construction _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Manufacturing Nondurable goods Durable goods Transportation Communication __ • Electric, gas, and sanitary services... 1962 1963 1964 50,094 51,047 51,945 56,119 13, 525 13, 018 13,580 13, 103 12, 568 12, 019 15, 660 15, 091 273 3, 597 268 3,698 246 3,921 239 4,039 1 877 1 815 783 739 1,094 1,076 1,876 738 1, 138 1,936 755 1,181 1,007 23 80 1,071 25 85 933 16 56 __ 987 19 67 1965 Wholesale and retail trade Wholesale trade _ _ Retail trade __ 12, 016 3,003 9,013 11, 913 12, 305 3,113 3,031 8,800 9,274 12, 500 3,066 9,434 Finance, insurance, and real estate Services 3,091 14, 710 3,257 15, 443 3,482 17, 082 3,418 16, 501 Table 6.11.—Net Interest by Industry Division [Millions of dollars] Manufacturing Nondurable goods Durable goods Table 6.9.—Noncorporate Capital Consumption Allowances by Industry Division [Millions of dollars] All industries, total Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries - _ Farms Mining Contract construction Manufacturing Nondurable goods Durable goods __ _ _ ._ _ _ . Transportation _ _____ Communication Electric, gas, and sanitary services Wholesale and retail trade Wholesale trade Retail trade 1962 1963 1964 19, 903 20,851 22, 181 4,426 4,670 301 585 288 617 292 623 296 619 372* 150 222 380 130 250 403 404 465 11 103 552 12 112 531 14 120 520 .15 127 1,748 1, 716 1,741 1,723 1,336 1,311 9,757 9,641 2,498 10, 386 10, 269 2,644 11, 203 11, 933 2,828 2,982 412 Finance, insurance, and real estate Real estate _. _. _~ Services ___ 11,593 13, 838 15,463 17,800 1,325 46 134 1,413 58 180 1,562 86 139 1,716 104 97 - - - 320 189 131 328 224 104 338 260 78 656 431 225 --- ... - .__ 532 357 1,269 593 384 1,318 670 403 1,378 736 420 1,459 265 6,100 573 373 7,704 702 527 8,564 857 630 9,969 985 672 785 939 - -- .. Wholesale and retail trade Finance insurance and real estate Services - 23,289 4,144 4, 021 1964 -- Transportation - Communication _ _. Electric gas and sanitary services 1965 4, 063 3, 937 1963 All industries, total Agriculture, forestry and fisheries Mining Contract construction 1965 1962 .. Rest of the world 1,028 405 Table 6.12.—Corporate Profits (Before Tax) and Inventor} Valuation Adjustment by Broad Industry Groups [Billions of dollars] 1962 1962 1963 1964 1965 I II III IV I II 1965 1964 1963 III IV I II III IV I II III IV Seasonally adjusted at annual rates All industries, total Financial institutions Mutual Stock Nonfinancial corporations Manufacturing Nondurable goods Durable goods. Transportation, communication, and public utilities All other industries 32 74.2 61.4 65.3 66.5 67.8 66.8 73.2 72.7 74.0 76.9 7.7 7.9 8.0 8.5 8.4 8.6 8.5 8.7 8.9 9.5 50.3 28.8 13.0 15.8 52.6 29.9 13.3 16.6 53.5 30.2 13.4 16.8 57.3 32.1 14.1 18.1 58.1 32.4 14.6 17.7 59.3 33.0 14.6 18.4 58.1 32.2 14.7 17.5 64.6 37.4 15.5 21.9 64.0 36.7 15.5 21.2 65.0 37.4 15.5 21.9 67.5 39.6 16.4 23.2 9.3 12.3 9.8 12.8 9.8 13.5 10.1 15.0 10.2 15.5 10.6 15.7 10.5 15.5 10.7 16.5 10.9 16.4 11.2 16.4 11.5 16.4 55.7 58.9 66.6 54.3 54.9 8.1 2.0 6.1 7.8 1.6 6.2 8.4 1.7 6.7 8.9 1.8 7.1 8.0 8.1 8.2 •8.1 7.8 7.7 47.6 26.6 12.5 14.1 51.2 28.8 13.0 15.8 58.2 32. 4 14. 5 17.9 65.3 37.8 15.7 22.1 46.4 25.7 12.2 13.5 46.8 26.1 12.3 13.7 47.9 26.8 12.3 14.6 49.3 28.0 13.1 14.9 48.2 26.4 12.5 14.0 8.5 12.4 9.5 12.9 10.4 15.4 11.1 16.4 8.2 12.4 8.4 12.3 8.7 12.3 8.6 12.6 8.9 12.8 56.1 57.4 56.0 58.0 60.3 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS July I960 All industries, total Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ___ Mining. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Metal mining Coal mining Crude petroleum and natural gas Mining and quarrying of nonmetallic minerals Contract construction Manufacturing Nondurable goods _ Food and kindred products Tobacco manufactures Textile mill products Apparel and other fabricated textile products Paper and allied products Printing, publishing, and allied industries Chemicals and allied products Petroleum refining and related industries Rubber and miscellaneous plastic products Leather and leather products Durable goods Lumber and wood products except furniture Furniture and fixtures Stone, clay, and glass products Primary metal industries Fabricated metal products Machinery, except electrical Electrical machinery Transportation equipment and ordnance, except motor vehicles _ _ Motor vehicles and motor vehicle equipment Instruments Miscellaneous manufacturing industries __ _ _ Transportation _ Railroad transportation Local, suburban, and highway passenger.. _ Motor freight transportation and warehousing Water transportation Air transportation _ Pipeline transportation. _ Transportation services __ . 33 Table 6.13.—Corporate Profits Before Tax by Industry Table 6.14.—Federal and State Corporate Profits Tax Liability by Industry Table 6.15.—Corporate Profits After Tax by Industry [Millions of dollars] [Millions of dollars] [Millions of dollars] 1962 1963 1964 1965 1962 1963 1964 1965 1962 1963 1964 55, 408 59,401 67,026 75,676 24,179 26,324 28,359 31,183 31,229 33,077 38,667 138 60 110 119 73 84 87 91 65 -24 23 28 947 1,199 1,063 1,286 215 289 281 368 732 910 782 918 115 95 572 165 165 133 660 241 57 19 86 53 72 34 115 68 58 76 486 112 93 99 545 173 813 853 1,175 1,268 368 367 426 426 445 486 749 842 29, 312 32, 737 38, 508 12,239 13, 690 14,559 17, 127 14, 246 15, 622 18,178 21,381 12, 418 13, 268 14,396 15,983 5,200 5,705 5,982 6,713 7,218 7,563 8,414 9,270 2 338 637 701 428 1, 009 993 3 181 2 477 497 157 2 832 671 720 444 944 946 3 497 2 545 493 176 1,170 335 340 191 474 485 1,662 226 242 75 1,295 353 355 200 441 534 1,842 353 250 82 1,168 302 361 237 535 508 1,519 2,251 255 82 1, 537 318 365 244 503 412 1,655 2,192 243 94 14, 067 16, 044 7,039 7,985 7,028 8,059 9,764 12, 111 379 235 937 1 562 1, 119 2,297 1 479 485 273 1,062 2 009 1,214 2,424 1 581 107 126 441 692 551 1,178 823 132 134 478 881 588 1, 273 863 272 109 496 870 568 1, 119 656 353 139 584 1,128 626 1,151 718 894 4,029 697 439 939 4 913 781 363 422 2 122 371 206 470 2,569 394 203 472 1,907 326 233 469 2, 344 387 160 1,042 1,399 1,023 1,253 2,079 2,271 18, 341 1,720 22,525 2,061 561 678 184 48 140 54 28 71 36 249 43 133 70 61 94 28 1,773 1, 938 1,613 160 1, 747 191 8,577 697 486 89 321 131 108 203 61 3,533 3,830 3,231 302 3 504 326 Electric, gas, and sanitary services 3,885 4,239 4,651 4,848 1, 925 1,990 2,087 Wholesale and retail trade 5,968 6,169 7,521 8,362 2,586 2,663 2, 933 2, 563 3 405 2,680 3 489 1,195 1 391 1,187 1 476 Communication __. Telephone and telegraph Radio broadcasting and television Wholesale trade Retail trade ;_ _ _ __ _ Finance, insurance, and real estate Banking Credit agencies, holding and other investment companies Security and commodity brokers . __ Insurance carriers Insurance agents, brokers, and service Real estate Services Hotels and other lodging places Personal services Miscellaneous business services Automobile repair, automobile services, and garages Miscellaneous repair services Motion pictures _-_ _ _ __ __ Amusement and recreation services, except motion pictures. _ _. _ . Miscellaneous professional services. Rest of the world . Addenda: Financial institutions. Nonfinancial corporations ___ 44,493 26 485 296 99 357 85 —5 146 64 _. 1965 9,240 8,857 4,367 2,080 79 1,763 141 810 4,517 1,986 111 1,317 158 768 791 936 -22 120 406 62 28 6 4,029 9,728 4,214 10, 369 1,950 4,760 10,414 808 481 721 112 51 217 31 -33 75 28 237 46 188 61 47 109 33 1,760 1,892 1,618 142 1,757 135 2,068 1,960 2,249 2,564 2,780 3,288 3,382 3,506 4,588 5, 074 1,368 2 014 1, 493 2 013 4, 968 5,944 672 800 1,943 4,425 5,307 4,781 2,345 1,560 22 962 86 2, 452 1,397 41 505 102 284 3,933 4,076 2,022 520 57 801 55 478 2,065 589 70 812 56 484 506 549 285 387 -22 145 427 63 23 20 31 51 219 31 9 57 24 54 223 39 8 53 -53 69 187 31 19 —51 —46 91 204 24 15 -33 44 147 44 236 59 49 62 86 —15 98 -18 150 2,566 2,547 3,041 3,202 2,566 2,547 3,041 3,202 8, 103 47,305 7,779 51, 622 8,383 58, 643 8,910 66,766 3,298 20,881 3,445 22, 879 4,805 26, 424 4,334 28,743 4,307 34,360 5,202 39,291 1,251 1,439 OOO 579 4,076 24,283 639 3,708 27, 475 SURVEY OF CUEEENT BUSINESS 34 Table 6.16.—Net Corporate Dividend Payments by Industry Table 6.17.-^-Undistributed Corporate Profits by Industry [Millions of dollars] 1962 All industries, total 1963 1964 July 1966 Table 6.18.—Corporate Capital Consumption Allowances by Industry [Millions of dollars] 1962 1965 [Millions of dollars] 1963 1964 1965 1962 1963 1964 1965 __ 15, 183 16, 454 17, 340 19, 173 16, 046 16,623 21, 327 25, 320 30, 067 31, 750 33, 867 Agriculture* forestry, and fisheries 52 130 39 41 13 —154 -16 —13 212 235 249 263 869 142 34 634 59 988 108 40 784 56 907 969 -51 1,069 1,052 1,061 1,053 110 159 101 100 335 327 648 742 780 863 898 926 7,185 7,574 8,268 9,278 7,061 8,048 9,910 12, 103 13, 916 14, 597 15,610 16,969 3,700 3,737 4,192 4,582 3, 518 3,826 4,222 4,688 7,084 7,575 8, 066 8,661 609 183 136 55 285 185 607 190 137 48 265 190 930 128 228 196 1,294 1 327 1,374 1,388 559 119 225 182 250 323 145 1,491 1,394 7,544 8,308 3,073 3,171 1,824 2,002 Mining Metal mining Coal mining Crude petroleum and natural gas Mining and quarrying of nonmetallic minerals Contract construction ___ _ _ „__ Manufacturing Nondurable goods. - Food and kindred products Tobacco manufactures Textile mill products Apparel and other fabricated textile products Paper and allied products Printing, publishing, and allied industries Chemicals and allied products Petroleum refining and related industries Rubber and miscellaneous plastic products Leather and leather products Durable goods Lumber and wood products, except furniture Furniture and fixtures Stone clay and glass products Primary metal industries Fabricated metal products '_ _ _ _ _ Machinery, except electrical Electrical machinery Transportation equipment and ordnance, except motor vehicles Motor vehicles and motor vehicle equipment Instruments Miscellaneous manufacturing industries Transportation Railroad transportation Local suburban and highway passenger Motor freight transportation and warehousing Water transportation Air transportation Pipeline transportation Transportation services Communication Telephone and telegraph Radio broadcasting and television -137 -84 42 -148 53 -78 -15 59 -239 117 222 267 798 67 47 3,485 3,837 3,543 4,222 107 40 260 653 223 491 403 100 38 258 589 237 519 423 165 69 236 217 345 628 253 253 101 326 539 389 632 295 201 873 153 81 188 271 281 4,696 1,034 1,263 168 54 511 580 291 34 43 37 23 45 38 318 41 45 35 31 87 23 1,070 1,262 1,008 1,054 62 4,076 173 152 656 674 —30 -179 17 174 —6 —56 30 —10 1,381 1,503 208 5, 688 7,415 630 610 80 703 -73 7,022 248 93 620 240 86 640 367 579 768 1,788 659 1,090 397 895 270 150 429 931 295 149 2,840 2,903 1,085 1,070 1,352 1,662 1,249 1,553 158 598 224 555 98 122 698 319 56 1,116 650 -81 5 143 26 16 22 10 690 6,832 637 219 106 59 406 116 666 420 1,725 2,481 1,756 1,081 88 145 635 184 1,624 2,218 304 43 176 47 141 109 157 634 169 52 392 118 656 383 oqo 760 79 34 176 48 -125 103 36,300 715 157 619 250 552 126 129 109 Electric, gas, and sanitary services 1,832 1,936 2 127 2,332 128 313 437 448 2,772 2,813 2,876 3,019 Wholesale and retail trade 1,042 961 916 1,041 2 340 2 545 3,672 4,033 2,630 2,747 3,001 3,116 326 716 245 716 1,042 1 298 1,248 1,297 1,128 1,599 4 179 3,182 2,975 3,115 904 922 1,441 1,530 457 5 1,474 —152 1 096 70 85 940 36 657 63 —44 130 139 2,300 2,666 918 32,949 962 35,338 Wholesale trade Retail trade . Finance, insurance, and real estate Banking Credit agencies, holding and other investment companies Security and commodity brokers Insurance carriers Insurance agents, brokers, and service Real estate Services Hotels and other lodging places Personal services Miscellaneous business services Automobile repair, automobile services, and garages Miscellaneous repair services Motion pictures Amusement and recreation services, except motion pictures Miscellaneous professional services Rest of the world Addenda: Financial institutions _ Nonfinancial corpora tions__ _ __ 86 9 —134 16 247 1 448 1,572 13 39 328 904 3,520 4,372 590 937 1,726 1,810 2, 608 2, 744 355 383 222 12 239 33 1,747 230 12 262 37 1,820 1,888 2,134 155 248 11 24 46 11 2 21 36 42 68 20 3 23 —64 45 141 20 17 —72 -82 49 136 4 12 —56 301 179 505 436 22 121 311 196 582 522 23 130 22 18 19 37 —37 80 —37 113 249 75 259 111 1,229 1,017 1 340 1 453 1 337 1,530 1,701 1,749 1,155 14,028 1,108 15,346 1,448 15,892 1,525 17,648 3,650 12,396 3,226 13,397 2,859 18, 468 3,677 21,643 726 29,341 30, 953 157 210 515 797 SURVEY OF CUEEENT BUSINESS July 1966 35 Table 6.19.—Corporate Sales by Industry * [Millions of dollars] 1962 1963 1964 7,493 5,947 6,523 11,955 12,448 2,362 1, 859 2,327 2,116 6,037 5,543 1 943 2 216 12,823 14,423 44,731 5,978 Agriculture, forestry, and fisheries Mining Metal mining Coal mining Crude petroleum and natural gasMining^ and quarrying of nonmetallic minerals IVfanufacturing Nondurable goods Food and kindred products Tobacco manufactures Textile mill products Apparel and other fabricated textile products Paper and allied products Printing, publishing, and allied industries Chemicals and allied products Petroleum refining and related industries Rubber and miscellaneous plastic products Leather and leather products 48,670 56,100 502,678 208,844 216,924 233,878 253,742 64. 183 5,420 15 216 15 017 13, 008 14, 577 29 617 39, 104 8,810 3,892 Durable goods Transportation 399,660 419,324 453,667 40,311 Contract construction 8,099 5,487 11,044 28, 294 23, 202 28, 541 25, 309 8,585 5,884 11, 875 28,478 22,543 30, 004 27, 547 17, 842 28, 606 20, 570 32, 342 7,469 6,923 7, 751 6,821 32,224 34, 526 _ __ „ „ _ 10, 518 1,982 10, 001 2,917 3,928 763 2,115 10, 903 2 019 10,706 3,281 4,441 968 2,208 _ _ 17, 189 18, 254 14, 775 2,414 15 673 2 581 22, 059 22,931 _ -_ Railroad transportation Local, suburban, and highway passenger . Motor freight transportation and warehousing Water transportation . _ __ Air transportation ,_ _ „ „ _ „ , Pipeline transportation Transportation services Communication 64, 383 5, 641 16 042 14, 272 12, 892 15, 554 32, 706 41, 812 8,704 4,918 ___ __ Telephone and telegraph Radio broadcasting and television Electric, gas, and sanitary services - - - Wholesale and retail trade Wholesale trade Retail trade 248,936 190,816 202,400 219,789 Lumber and wood products, except furniture Furniture and fixtures Stone, clay, and glass products _ Primary metal industries Fabricated metal products Machinery, except electrical Electrical machinery _ ___ Transportation equipment and ordnance, except motor vehicles Motor vehicles and motor vehicle equipment 1963 Manufacturing— Continued Durable goods— Continued Instruments _ Miscellaneous manufacturing industries 849,102 892,629 963,910 1,056,762 Total 1962 1965 Services 1965 35, 773 38, 836 19,386 20, 910 24, 302 25, 695 293, 119 302, 904 330,851 356 308 146, 070 147,171 147, 049 155 733 _ _ 1964 _ - _- - Hotels and other lodging places Personal services Miscellaneous business services Automobile repair, automobile services and garages Miscellaneous repair services Motion pictures Amusement and recreation services, except motion pictures Miscellaneous professional services 26,607 30, 018 2,874 3,425 9 347 2 054 798 2,560 2 978 3 846 10 586 2 419 857 2,377 2 335 3,214 2 556 4 399 32, 491 35,289 i Excludes finance, insurance, and real estate. 7.—Supplementary Tables Table 7.1.—Gross National Product: Receipts and Expenditures by Major Economic Groups [Billions of dollars] 1962 Excess of Excess of Receipts Expend- receipts or Receipts Expend- receipts or itures expenditures expenditures (-) itures (-) 3 3 3 4 5 Persons: Disposable personal income Less: Interest paid by consumers and personal transfers to foreigners __ Disposable personal income excluding line 2__ Personal consumption expenditures.. Personal saving.. 6 7 8 Business: Gross retained earnings . _ Gross private domestic investment Excess of investment (—)_ i 2 9 10 11 12 13 Government: Tax and nontax receipts or accruals Less: Transfers, etc.. _ Net receipts _ __ Purchases of goods and services Surplus or deficit (-) on national income and product accounts 14 15 16 Foreign: Net transfers to foreigners Net exports - __ Net foreign investment 17 Statistical discrepancy 18 Gross National Product 1964 1965 Excess of Receipts Expend- receipts or expenditures itures (-) Excess of Receipts Expend- receipts or itures expenditures (-) 1963 385.3 404.6 436 6 8.6 376.6 9.7 394.9 10.7 425.8 66.3 157.0 42.8 114.2 355.1 83.0 21.6 68.8 —16.8 168.8 44.4 124.3 117.1 375.0 87.1 5.1 560 3 560 3 174 2 46.7 127 5 11.9 457.2 401.4 2.8 -3.1 -.3 590 5 —.3 590 5 431.5 166.6 —16.0 189.0 49.6 139.4 128.9 2.8 7.0 —5.7 —1.4 631 7 631 7 -23.1 3.2 8.5 —1.4 25.7 136.2 —1.4 2.8 5.9 24.5 83.4 93.0 1.8 -2.5 .5 .5 76.9 —18.4 122.5 -2.9 2.7 19.9 469.1 681 2 -4.2 -1.6 —1.6 681.2 SUKVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS 36 July 1966 Table 7.2.—Monetary and Imputed Interest [Billions of dollars] 1 1 1962 Net interest (component of national income) 2 ^1 Originating in private business Monetary interest paid Imputed interest paid Less' Monetary interest received Imputed interest received 7 8 Originating in rest of the world Monetary interest received from abroad. _ - _ _ _ _ - _ o y p 5 ft 1963 1964 1965 £ 1962 A 11.6 13.8 15.5 17.8 10 10.9 34.0 153 34.5 3.9 13.1 38.4 16 8 38.2 4.0 14 5 43.1 18 2 42 7 4.1 16.8 48.5 19 9 47.4 4.1 Personal interest income (component of personal income) _ . _ 11 12 13 .7 .8 2 .8 1.1 g .9 1.3 3 1.0 1.5 4 Net interest (component of national income) Monetary interest paid by consumers Net interest paid by government Addenda: Monetary interest paid net of interest received by government (3+8+12+13) Gross interest paid by government Monetary interest paid (3+8+12+15) _ .. 14 15 16 1963 1964 1965 27.7 31 4 34 6 38 4 11 6 81 80 13 8 91 85 15 5 10 1 90 17 8 11 3 93 50.9 10.4 53.4 57.1 11.2 59. 8 63.5 12.0 66.5 70.5 12. 7 74.0 Table 7.3.—Imputations Included in National Income and Product Accounts [Billions of dollars] I 1962 1963 1964 Gross National Product Imputations included, net (51+56+62+69+70 +71+72). Excluding imputations (1—2) 560.3 590.5 631.7 681.2 39.8 520.5 43.0 547.5 46.1 585.6 49.6 631. 6 355. 1 375. 0 401.4 431. 5 6 Personal consumption expenditures __ Imputations included, net (51+56+62+69+70 +71+72—67—68) Excluding imputations (4— 5) 17.0 338.1 19.6 355.4 21.4 380.0 25.1 406.4 7 8 9 Gross private domestic investment Imputations included, net (67+68) „ Excluding imputations (7+8) 83.0 22.8 60.2 87.1 23.4 63.7 93.0 24.7 68.3 106.6 24.5 82.1 1 3 4 5 _ 1965 10 11 12 Capital consumption allowances „ ..... Imputations included, net (52+57+63) Excluding imputations (10—11) 50.0 7.2 42.8 52.6 7.6 45.0 56.0 8.1 47.9 59.6 8.5 51.6 13 14 15 Indirect business taxes Imputations included, net (53+64) TCmlndlng imputations (13—14) 51.5 6.6 44.9 54.7 7.0 47.7 58.5 7.5 51.0 62.7 8.1 54.5 16 17 National income Imputations included, net (54+55+58+65+66 +69+70+71+72) Excluding imputations (16—17) 457.7 481.9 517.3 559.0 26.0 431. 7 28.4 453.5 30.5 486.8 33.0 526.0 296.1 2.0 294.1 311.1 . 333. 6 2.1 2.0 309.1 331.5 358.4 2.2 356.2 18 Wages and salaries _ _ _ _ Imputations included, net (70+71+72) Excluding imputations (19—20) 19 55.7 1.1 1 37 38 39 469.1 27.6 409.0 29.6 439.5 363.7 8.6 384.7 10.2 412.1 11.0 443.4 13.6 401.1 429.8 9.1 -9.4 18.5 10.1 -10.4 20.5 11.3 -11.5 22.8 46 47 48 21.6 15.6 6.0 19.9 15.8 4.1 24.5 16.6 7.9 25.7 16.0 9.7 50 51 52 53 54 55 Personal saving Imputations included, net (67+68—52-57-63). Excluding imputations (46 — 47) Specific imputations Space rental value, owner-occupied nonfarm dwellings _ __ Less' Associated purchases of goods and services Equals: Imputations included in GNP, net (49—50). Capital consumption allowances __ . _ _ _ Taxes _ _ _ .. Interest Net rent (51-52-53-54) 34.7 5.2 29.6 5.8 6.4 8.1 9.3 37.1 5,3 31.7 6.1 6.8 9.0 9.8 39.4 5.5 33.9 6.5 7.3 10.0 10.1 41.8 5.6 36.2 6.9 7.9 11.0 10.4 56 57 58 Space rental value, institutional buildings _ Capital consumption allowances _ _ _ __ _ . . Interest .9 .8 .1 1.1 .9 .2 1.2 1.0 .2 1.3 1.0 .3 59 60 61 62 Space rental value, owner-occupied farm dwellings. _ Food and fuel produced and consumed on farms..... Less* Associated purchases of goods and services Equals: Imputations included in GNP, net (59+ 60—61) _____ Capital consumption allowances Taxes __ Interest Proprietors' income (62— 63— 64— 65) _ - __ 1.7 1.1 .8 1.7 1.0 .8 1.8 .9 .7 1.9 .9 .7 1.9 .6 .2 .2 .9 2.0 .6 .2 .2 1.0 2.0 .6 .2 .2 1.0 2.1 .6 .2 .2 1.1 Owner-occupied dwellings, net purchases Institutional buildings, net purchases _. Services furnished without payment by financial intermediaries __ __ _ Food furnished employees Standard clothing issued to military personnel _ _ Employees' lodging 19.9 2.9 20.3 3.1 20.8 3.9 20.6 3.9 5.4 1.8 .1 .1 6.2 1.8 .1 .1 6.9 1.9 .1 .1 7.8 1.9 .1 .2 49 54:6 27 17.1 9.8 7.3 17.7 10.1 7.6 18.3 10.4 7.9 30 Net interest Imputations included, net (54+58+65+69) Excluding imputations (28— 29) _ ___ 11.6 13.8 -2.2 13.8 15.6 -1.8 15.5 17.3 -1.8 17.8 19.3 -1.5 63 64 65 66 442.6 17.6 425.0 465.5 19.0 446. 5 496.0 20.1 475.9 535.1 21.5 513.6 67 68 69 57. 4 -6.6 64.0 60.9 -7.0 67.9 59.4 -7.5 66.9 66.0 -8.1 74.1 70 71 72 Personal tax and nontax payments Imputations included , net ( — 53 — 64) Excluding imputations (34—35) 436.6 26.0 378.6 374.5 16.7 9.3 7.4 34 35 36 404.6 24.2 361.1 8.1 -8.4 16.5 Rental income of persons Imputations included, net (55) Excluding imputations (25—26) Personal income Imputations included, net (55+66+69+70+71+72). Excluding imputations (31—32) 385.3 1965 355.1 51.9 1.0 50.9 31 32 33 1964 Interest paid by consumers Imputations included, net (—54—58—65) Excluding imputations (43—44) 51.0 1.0 50.0 _ 1963 43 44 45 42 50.1 .9 49.2 25 Personal outlays __.,_ Imputations included, net (52+53+55+57+ 63+64+66+69+70+71+72-67-68). Excluding imputations (40—41). 40 41 Proprietors' income Imputations included , net (66) _ Excluding imputations (22—23) 23 24 Personal income— Continued Disposable personal income _ __ Imputations included, net (53+55+64+66+ 69+70-{-7i-f-72) _ Excluding imputations (37—38) __ _ _ _ . 1962 Table 7.4.—Corporate Profits and Inventory Valuation Adjustment: Not Seasonally Adjusted [Billions of dollars] Corporate profits and inventory valuation adjustment. _ _ _ _ Profits before tax . Profits tax liability _._ Profits after tax Inventory valuation adjustment I II 12.7 14.2 13.7 15 1 13.1 15.2 14 6 16.0 15. 0 17 3 12.7 5.6 7.2 —.1 14 1 6.2 8.0 1 13 8 60 7.8 _ i 14 7 64 8.3 3 13.0 5.7 7.2 .1 15 5 69 8.7 — 3 14 6 65 8.1 0 16 3 72 9.1 — 3 15 1 6.4 8.7 _ 2 17 3 73 10.0 0 III IV I II 19 55 19 64 19 S3 19 62 III IV I II III IV IV I II 16.7 17.6 17.0 19.1 18.1 20.1 16 8 7.1 9.7 _ i 17 8 7.5 10.3 — 2 17.3 7.1 10.2 —.4 19.5 8.1 11.5 -.5 18.3 7.5 10.8 -.2 20.5 8.5 12.1 -.4 III SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS July 1966 37 Table 7.5.—Relation of Corporate Profits, Taxes, and Dividends in the National Income and Product Accounts to Corresponding Totals as Tabulated by the Internal Revenue Service [Millions of dollars] 3 1960 1961 1962 44,499 47,034 50,842 1963 1 55,599 16 Federal income and excess profits taxes—IRS 17 19 Plus: Posttabulation amendments and revisions, including results of audit and renegotiation and carryback refunds.-Amounts paid to U.S. Treasury by Federal Reserve Banks State income taxes on corporations.-.- •i Compiled net profit— IRS 1 2 Plus: Posttabulation amendments and revisions, including allowance for audit profits and gross renegotiation refunds Depletion on domestic minerals __ _ 4, 346 2, 687 4,149 2,699 Oil well drilling costs in excess of depreciation on oil wells _ _ 662 594 556 296 5 Oil well bonus payments written off _ " 430 456 458 437 20 ?1 Less: U.S. tax credits claimed for foreign taxes paid-in vestment tax credit ___ _ _ fi 7 State income taxes on corporations Income of Federal Keserve Banks, Federal Home Loan Banks, and Federal Land Banks 1,306 1,353 1,433 1,684 W, 994 837 941 1,037 3 4 8 Adjustment for insurance carriers and mutual depositary institutions Bad debt adjustment _ _ _ 9 Less: Tax-return measures of: Gains, net of losses , from sale of property Dividends received from domestic corporations _ Income on equities in foreign corporations and branches (to U.S. corporations) 10 11 12 13 Costs of trading or issuing corporate securities- 14 Plus: Income received from equities in foreign corporations and branches by all U.S. residents, net of corresponding outflows _ - 15 Equals: Profits before taxes—National income and product accounts. 1 4,331 2,849 4, 575 3,058 308 390 1,688 1,887 329 2,329 2,129 2,639 4, 064 3,479 3, 752 3,084 3, 276 3, 645 3,448 3, 063 3, 642 3,806 4,694 302 389 296 272 1,880 49,712 2,321 50,349 205 2,566 2,547 55,408 59,401 1963 1960 1961 1962 21,866 22,188 23,930 26,283 498 187 366 415 897 687 799 879 1,306 1,353 1,433 1,684 1,224 1,490 1,564 834 1,915 1,105 Equals: Federal and State income and excess profits tax liability— National income and product accounts. __ ___ 23,032 23,104 24,179 26,324 23 Profits after tax— National income and product accounts (line 15 less line 22) 26,680 27,245 31,229 33,077 ?4 Dividends paid in cash or assets—IRS 17,193 18,038 19,565 21,202 25 Plus: Dividends paid by Federal Reserve Banks and Federal Land Banks _ _ _ U.S. receipts of dividends from abroad, net of payments to abroad 18 26 29 33 37 42 841 1,069 1,229 1,017 4,161 ?7 28 Less: Dividends received by U.S. corporations Capital gains distributions of investment companies _ _ 4,799 5,084 5,274 465 571 564 533 29 Equals: Net dividends— National income and product accounts •__ _ _ ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 13,437 13,770 15,183 16,454 30 Undistributed profits— National income and product accounts (line 23 less line 29) 13,475 16,046 16,623 13,243 Beginning 1963, equals total receipts less total deductions. Table 7.6.—Selected Per Capita Income and Product Series in Current and Constant Dollars Millions Year Population i 1958 dollars Current dollars Gross national product Personal consumption expenditures Personal income Disposable personal income Total Durable goods Nondurable goods Gross national product Personal income Services Disposable personal income Personal consumption expenditures Total Durable goods Nondurable goods services 1929—. 121. 9 846 705 683 634 76 309 249 1,671 1,274 1, 236 1,145 134 569 443 1930 1931 1932 . 1933 1934 1935 1936— 1937 1938— 1939 . 123. 2 124.1 124.9 125. 7 126.5 127.4 128.2 129.0 130.0 131. 0 734 611 465 442 514 567 643 701 651 691 625 531 401 374 427 474 535 575 526 555 605 516 390 362 414 459 518 552 504 537 567 487 389 364 406 437 483 516 492 510 58 44 29 28 33 40 49 54 44 51 276 233 182 177 211 230 256 273 261 268 233 210 178 160 162 167 177 189 187 191 1,490 1,364 1,154 1,126 ,220 ,331 ,506 ,576 ,484 ,598 1,167 1,108 949 921 981 1,068 1,198 1,236 1, 153 1,232 ,128 ,077 921 893 952 ,035 ,158 ,187 ,105 ,190 1,059 1,016 919 897 934 985 1,080 1,110 1,079 1,131 105 90 67 66 74 92 113 117 94 111 535 528 483 466 494 517 573 589 593 620 418 398 367 366 364 376 394 403 392 401 132.1 133.4 134.9 136. 7 138.4 139. 9 141.4 144. 1 146.6 149.2 754 934 1,171 1,401 1,518 1,515 1,475 1,605 1,757 1, 719 , 593 719 911 1,106 1,194 1,223 1,264 1,327 1,434 1, 389 573 695 867 976 1,057 1,074 1,132 1,178 1,290 1, 264 536 604 656 726 782 855 1,014 1,115 1,184 1, 185 59 72 52 48 49 57 111 142 155 165 280 321 376 429 465 514 583 628 656 634 197 210 228 250 269 284 320 346 373 386 ,720 ,977 2,208 2,465 2, 611 2,538 2,211 2,150 2,208 2,172 1,303 1,477 1,663 1,847 1,889 1,870 1,793 1, 703 1,742 1,700 ,259 ,427 ,582 ,629 ,673 ,642 ,606 ,513 ,567 ,547 1,178 1,240 1,197 1,213 1, 238 1,308 1,439 1,431 1,438 1,451 126 143 87 75 68 76 145 171 179 190 640 674 677 685 703 748 784 751 741 741 412 422 434 452 467 484 510 509 517 520 151.7 154.3 157.0 159.6 162.4 165.3 168.2 171.3 174.1 177.1 1,877 2,129 2,201 2, 285 2,247 2,408 2,492 2, 576 2,569 2,731 1, 501 1,657 1,736 1,806 1,787 1, 881 1,980 2, 050 2,074 2,166 1, 364 ,469 ,518 ,583 ,585 ,666 ,743 ,801 ,831 ,905 1, 259 1,337 1,381 1,441 1,456 1,539 1,585 1, 643 1, 666 1,758 201 192 187 208 202 240 231 238 218 250 647 705 726 732 728 746 768 792 805 828 412 440 468 501 526 553 585 613 643 679 2,342 2,485 2,517 2,587 2,506 2,650 2, 652 2, 642 2,569 2,688 1,810 1, 870 1,918 1,969 1,932 2,027 2, 088 2,098 2, 074 2,138 ,646 ,657 ,678 ,726 ,714 ,795 ,839 ,844 ,831 ,881 1,520 1,509 1,525 1, 572 1,575 1,659 1,673 1,683 1,666 1,735 229 204 196 221 218 261 244 242 218 247 752 755 770 780 773 797 810 810 805 829 539 550 559 571 584 601 619 631 643 660 180; 7 2, 788 2,830 3, 002 3, 117 3,288 3,501 2, 219 2,268 2,371 2,457 2,581 2,750 1,937 1,983 2, 064 2,136 2, 272 2,411 1,800 1,824 1, 902 1,980 2,089 2,218 251 240 265 285 309 339 837 848 871 890 931 980 712 735 766 805 849 898 2,699 2,706 2,838 2,909 3, 019 3,158 2, 157 2,183 2,260 2,316 2,404 2,526 ,883 ,909 1,968 2,013 2,116 2,214 1,749 1,755 1,813 1,865 1,946 2, 036 248 239 264 284 308 341 828 833 848 856 887 916 673 684 702 725 751 779 .. 1940— _ 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945-. 1946 1947 . 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 „ 1954— 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 I960— 1961 1962 1963— 1964 1965 1 _ _ _ i ___. 183. 8 186. 7 189.4 192. 1 194. 6 U.S. population, including Armed Forces abroad. 8—Implicit Price Deflators Table 8.1.—Implicit Price Deflators for Gross National Product [Index numbers, 1958=100] 1962 1962 1963 1964 1965 I II 1963 IV III I II 1964 III IV I II 1965 III I IV II III IV Seasonally adjusted Gross National ProductPersonal consumption expenditures - Durable goods Nondurable goods Services _ --- - . 105.8 107.2 108.9 110.9 105.5 105.6 105.8 106.3 106.7 107.0 107.2 107.8 108.3 108.6 109. 1 109.7 110. 1 110.7 111.0 111.6 104.9 106.1 107.4 108. 9 104. 5 104.7 105.0 105.3 105.6 106.0 106.2 106.7 107.0 107.3 107'. 4 107.9 108.2 108.8 109.0 109.5 100.8 102.8 109.0 100. 4 104.0 110.9 100.4 104.9 113.2 99.5 107.0 115.3 100.8 102. 4 108.4 100.8 102.5 108.9 100.8 102. 9 109.2 100.6 103.3 109.6 100.3 103.6 110.2 100.5 103.9 110.7 100.2 104.0 111.1 100.4 104. 5 111.7 100.6 104. 6 112.3 100.5 104. 8 112.9 100.3 104. 9 113. 3 100.1 105.4 114.0 100. 5 106.0 114. 3 100.2 106.7 115. 0 99.2 107.2 115.5 98. 4 107.9 116.4 Gross private domestic investment 104.9 106.0 107.8 109.6 104.5 104.9 105.2 105.1 105.3 105.8 106.3 106.4 106.7 107.4 108. 1 108.7 109.0 109.2 109.6 110. 4 Nonresidential Structures Producers' durable equipment . 104.1 107.1 104. 5 108.9 105.8 111.3 107.4 114.4 104. 0 106.5 104.1 106.8 104.1 107.4 104.1 107.8 104.3 108.6 104.6 109.0 104.7 109.4 104.6 108.6 104.8 108.4 105.5 110.6 106.1 112.6 106.9 113. 6 107.1 113.7 107. 1 113.6 107.2 114.6 108.0 102.3 102.3 103.1 103.8 102. 5 102.6 102.2 102.0 102. 0 102.2 102.3 102.5 103.0 102.9 103.0 103.6 103.8 103.8 103.6 104. 1 Residential structures Nonfarm Farm 106.7 106.8 104.6 108.9 109.0 107.2 112.3 112.4 108.3 115.5 115.6 108.9 105.6 105. 6 104.7 106.4 106.5 104.4 107.5 107.5 104.2 107.3 107.4 105.0 107. 5 107.5 107.4 108.4 108.4 108.5 109.5 109.6 105.9 110.2 110.3 107.2 110.9 110.9 107.4 111.9 112.0 108.2 113. 0 113. 1 108.1 113.4 113.5 109.4 113.8 113.9 106.7 114.5 114.6 108.3 116. 4 116.6 109.8 117.3 117.5 111.0 100. 8 98.5 100.6 99.5 101.5 101.9 104.5 103. 3 102. 0 98.4 100.6 98.7 100.2 98.3 100.6 98.6 101.1 98.4 100.7 99.0 100.3 100. 0 100.4 100.6 101.0 101.9 100.7 102.2 101.4 101. 6 102.9 101.8 105. 0 103.5 104.7 102.2 104.5 103. 4 103.9 104. 2 109.0 111.8 115.8 119.4 108.4 108.6 108.9 110.0 110.6 111.2 111.7 113.4 114.7 114.8 116.3 117.5 118.0 118. 7 119.7 121.1 105.6 113.2 108.0 116.3 112.7 119.3 115.7 123.2 105.6 111.9 105.4 112.6 105.3 113.5 106.3 114.6 107.0 115.1 107.5 115.7 107.7 116.5 109.8 117.7 111.4 118.4 111. 6 118.3 113,4 119. 5 114.3 120.8 114.4 121.6 114.6 122.8 115.8 123.7 117.8 124.6 Fixed investment Ii5.5 Change in business inventories Net exports of goods and services. Exports Imports -_ _-.-- Government purchases of goods and services _ _ -_ _ Federal State and local _ . - ... Table 8.2.—Implicit Price Deflators for Gross National Product by Major Type of Product [Index numbers, 1958=100] 1962 1963 1964 1965 I II IV III I II 1965 1964 1963 1962 III IV I II III IV I II III IV Seasonally adjusted 105.8 107.2 108.9 110.9 105.5 105.6 105.8 106.3 106.7 107.0 107.2 107.8 108.3 108. 6 109,, 1 109.7 110.1 110.7 111.0 111.6 Goods output Durable goods Nondurable goods . 102.6 101. 9 103.0 103.0 101.7 104.0 103.6 102.0 104.7 104.9 102.2 106.9 102.6 102.1 102.9 102.5 102.0 102.9 102.5 101.8 103.0 102.8 101.7 103.5 102.9 101.6 103.6 103.1 101.7 103.9 103.0 101.5 104.0 103.2 101.7 104.3 103.4 102.0 104.4 103.5 101.9 104.5 103, 6 101,. 9 104. 7 104.0 102.1 105. 2 104.4 102.5 105.8 105.1 102.6 106.8 105.0 101.9 107.2 105.2 101.6 107.7 Services Gross National Product _ _ 110.1 112.6 115.8 118.5 109.6 109.8 110.2 110.9 111.9 112.3 112.6 113.8 114.8 115.4 116,, 1 117.0 117.4 117.9 118.7 120.0 Structures 106.4 108. 7 111.7 114. 9 105.4 105.9 106.9 107. 3 107.6 108.2 109.4 109.7 109.9 110.8 112, 6 113.5 113.7 114.3 115.5 116.2 Addendum: Gross auto product 102.1 101.5 101.4 100.0 102.3 102.1 102.1 101.8 101.2 102.1 101.0 101.5 101.3 101.6 101,3 101.0 101.3 100.6 98.8 99.2 _ Table 8.4.—Implicit Price Deflators for Gross National Product by Sector [Index numbers, 1958=100] Table 8.3.—Implicit Price Deflators for Gross National Product by Major Type of Product and Purchaser [Index numbers, 1958=100] 1962 Gross National Product 1963 1964 1965 105 8 107 2 108 9 110 9 Durable goods Personal consumption expenditures Producers' durable equipment Government purchases N e t exports. _ _ _ _ _ _ Change in business inventories 101 9 100.8 102 3 102.1 101 7 100.4 102 3 102 0 102 '0 100.4 103 1 103.1 102 2 99.5 103 8 104 3 Nondurable goods Personal consumption expenditures Government purchases _ _ , Net exports Change in business inventories 103 0 102 8 99.7 104 0 104 0 99 3 104 7 104.9 98.9 106 9 107.0 101.2 Services Personal consumption expenditures Government purchases Net exports 110 1 109.0 113.6 112 6 110.9 117.9 115 8 113.2 123. 4 118 5 115.3 127.7 Structures Private structures _ _ _ _ _ _ Government structures 106 4 106. 9 105 3 108 7 108. 9 108 3 111 7 111.9 111 3 114 9 114.9 114 8 38 1962 105.8 Gross National Product 104.7 Private 104.4 Business 104.9 Nonfarm 96.2 Farm. 116.2 Households and institutions 97.4 Rest of the world 116.6 General government Table 8.5.— Implicit Price Deflators for Gross [Index numbers, 1958=100] 1962 Total value of farm output __Cash receipts from farm marketings and CCC loans Farm products consumed directly in farm households. _ Change in farm inventories Gross rental value of farm homes Less: Value of intermediate products consumed, total Intermediate products consumed, other than rents _ Gross rents paid to nonfarm landlords (excluding operating expenses) Plus: Other items Equals: Gross farm product 1963 107.2 105. 8 105. 4 106.0 94.6 120.9 99.1 121.5 Farm 1963 1964 1965 110.9 108.9 108.9 107.1 108.3 106.6 108.7 107.3 100.0 92.6 131.4 126.7 102.8 102 0 133.3 128.1 Product 1964 1965 98.1 97.6 95.5 97.6 96.8 93.6 95.7 94.5 94.6 100.5 99.1 101.7 110.0 100.3 114.3 101.2 120.4 99.2 127.0 101.1 100.1 100.9 98.8 100.8 102.7 96.2 96.2 104.8 94.6 94.6 104.1 92.6 92.6 103.4 100.0 100.0 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS July 1966 Table 8.6.—Implicit Price Deflators for Personal Consumption Expenditures by Type of Product [Index numbers, 1958=100] Personal consumption expenditures l.. _ Durable goods Autos and parts New cars and net purchases of used cars Tires, tubes, accessories, and partsFurniture and household equipment _ _ Furniture, including mattresses and bedsprings _ _ Kitchen and other household appliances China, glassware, tableware, and utensils, and other durable house furnishings __ __ Radio and television receivers, records, and musical instruments Other durable goods. Ophthalmic products and orthopedic appliances Wheel goods, durable toys, sport equipment, boats, and pleasure aircraft Jewelry and watches, and books and maps Nondurable goods 1962 1963 1964 104.9 106.1 107.4 100.8 100.9 100.4 100.4 108.9 99.5 102.1 92.7 100 6 101.6 93.7 100 5 101.4 94.0 99 5 100 1 95.3 100.0 101.7 92.8 99.4 102.3 90.6 99.2 102.8 89 3 98 4 103. 8 87 6 102. 9 102.8 103.7 104.1 103.1 102.3 100.8 97 7 102.7 108.6 102.3 109. 3 103.6 110.7 103 0 113.0 103.6 100.8 103.9 99.9 103 7 102.1 102 5 101 0 102.8 104.0 104 9 107 0 102.1 100.6 109.2 103.6 102.0 111. 6 104.8 103.1 113. 0 107 2 105.5 115 0 96.1 101.6 105.1 95.4 103.1 106.9 96 0 104.4 107.0 101 0 107.2 107 3 Clothing and shoes Shoes and other footwear Women's and children's clothing and accessories except footwear Men's and boys' clothing and accessories except footwear, and standard clothing issued to military personnel . 104.3 109.9 105.2 110.5 106.1 110.9 107 4 112 9 102.9 103. 7 104 3 105 3 104.1 105.5 107.1 108 6 Gasoline and oil 103.5 103.5 103 2 106 2 Other nondurable goods Tobacco products Toilet articles and preparations Semidurable house furnishings Cleaning and polishing preparations, and miscellaneous household supplies and paper products Other fuel and ice . Drug preparations and sundries Nondurable toys and sport supplies .. 102.9 108.2 101.9 102.8 104.1 110 6 102.3 103.1 104.9 113 3 102.4 104.3 106.3 117 7 101 8 105.3 100.4 103.1 99.1 100.3 100.9 105 1 98.3 100.7 101.0 104 7 • 98.0 100.2 101.1 106 8 97 7 101.3 109.0 110.9 113.2 115. 3 Housing Owner-occupied nonfarm dwellings—space-rental value Tenant-occupied nonfarm dwellings (including lodging houses) —space rent Rental value of farmhouses 105.9 107.0 108 2 109 5 105.6 106.7 107.7 108 8 105 6 110.0 106 7 114 3 107 7 120 4 108 8 127 0 Household operation services _ Electricity Gas Water __ Telephone Domestic service 107.8 103.1 111.6 112.6 104.1 114 4 109.0 103.1 111.7 116.9 104.3 116 7 109.8 102.6 112.0 118 0 104.3 121 1 110 2 102 1 112.3 121 2 102 8 126 8 Transportation services User-operated transportation services Purchased local transportation Street and electric railway and local bus Purchased intercity transportation Railway (excluding commutation) and sleeping and parlor car Intercity bus Airline _ 110.9 108. 6 116.7 116. 2 115. 5 110.6 108. 5 119 5 118.9 110.2 112.6 110.8 122 5 121.7 110 9 116.3 115 3 125 4 124.3 112 3 105.4 111 9 123.6 102.3 106 4 114.9 102.3 107 2 115 2 102 5 109 7 115 8 Other services Shoe cleaning and repair Cleaning, dyeing, pressing, alteration, storage, and repair of garments including furs (not in shops) not elsewhere classified, and laundering in establisnments Barbershops, beauty parlors, and baths Medical care services Physicians .. Dentists. . Brokerage charges and investment counseling Services, furnished without payment by financial intermediaries except insurance companies Admissions to soecified spectator amusements 112.2 111 7 115.5 114 8 119. 3 115 8 122.7 116 5 107.7 109.3 115.0 114.4 109.0 128.1 110.4 112.1 117. 7 116.9 113.3 146.0 112.9 114.9 121.4 119.9 116.3 168.0 115 7 118.4 124.5 124.2 119.8 183.5 113.1 119.7 118.7 124. 9 125.6 134.1 127.8 144.0 1 Totals and subtotals include items not shown separately. Table 8.7.—Implicit Price Deflators for Purchases of Structures by Type [Index numbers, 1958=100] 1962 1963 _ 106.4 108.8 111.7 114 9 __ 106.9 108.9 111.9 114 9 108.7 108 9 112 3 115 5 106.7 108 9 112 3 115 5 106 8 104.5 109 0 107 2 112 4 108 4 115 6 108 9 106.7 106 6 108.9 108 9 112.3 112 6 115 6 115 5 107.1 108.9 111.3 114 4 107. 1 108 9 111 3 114 4 109.5 112.8 115.8 118 5 Industrial Commercial Religious, educational, hospital and institutional and other __ 104 1 112 2 106 5 115 8 109 6 119 2 112 6 122 2 110.4 114 0 117 3 119 9 Public utilities Railroads __ Telephone and telegraph _ E lectric light and power Gas Other Farm.. __ ___ Petroleum and natural gas well drilling and exploration All other private construction 103 1 103 6 103. 4 100.2 108 0 105 2 105.9 104 4 104 3 105 0 101.6 110 0 105 3 105.4 107 2 105 3 107 6 104.2 113 2 109 9 105.5 110 5 109 3 111 9 107 1 116 2 114 4 107 9 103.6 112.1 99.6 116.5 97 7 121.6 95 7 124 9 107.8 108.2 110.2 112.8 113. 2 115.8 116. 3 118 5 1965 Food and beverages____ _ __ Food purchased for off -premise consumption Purchased meals and beverages Food furnished government (including military) and commercial employees, and food produced and consumed on farms. _ Addenda: Food excluding alcoholic beverages... ... Alcoholic beverages Services 39 Total structures Private structures Residential structures New construction... _ _ Nonfarm buildings Farm buildings __ _ Brokers' commissions on sale of structures Net purchases of used structures _ _ ___ No nresi den tial structures New construction Nonresidential buildings, excluding farm Brokers' commissions on sale of structures _ Net purchases of used structures Public structures 1964 1965 105.3 108.4 111.3 114.8 105.2 108. 4 111.3 114.8 Buildings, excluding military Residential _ . Industrial Educational Hospital Other public buildings 109.5 106.7 103.9 110.4 110.6 111.0 113.2 109.7 106.0 114.0 115.1 114.1 116.9 112.1 109 6 117.4 118.3 118.3 119.4 115. 1 111 6 120.2 119.5 120.0 Highways and streets Military facilities. _ _ C onser vation and development 98.0 106.3 112.5 100.6 109.7 116.2 101.4 112.6 121.0 105.2 115.0 124.8 Other public construction Sewer systems ___ Water supply facilities Miscellaneous public construction 110.3 112.5 112.9 105. 7 114.0 116.3 116.5 110.1 118.5 121.0 121.3 113.4 122.3 125.4 125. 4 116.8 107.0. 109.3 113.2 115.7 New construction _ Net purchases of used structures Table 8.8.—Implicit Price Deflators for Private Purchases of Producers' Durable Equipment by Type [Index numbers, 1958=100] Total private purchases .. Purchases of new equipment _. _ _ Dealers' margins on used equipment (except passenger cars) _ _ Net purchases of used equipment from government Less: Exports of used equipment Sale of equipment scrap (except passenger cars).... Total excluding scrap deduction Furniture and fixtures Fabricated metal products Engines and turbines Tractors Agricultural machinery (except tractors) Construction machinery. . _ - .__ ... _. . Mining and oilfield machinery Metalworking machinery Special-industry machinery, n.e.c. General industrial, including materials handling, equipment Office, computing, and accounting machinery __ Service-industry machines.. _ _ __ _ Electrical machinery Electrical transmission, distribution, and industrial apparatus.. __ Oomrrmni cation equipment Other electrical equipment Trucks, buses, and truck trailers Passenger cars __ __ __ _ Aircraft Ships and boats Railroad equipment _ ' _ Instruments Miscellaneous equipment 1962 1963 1964 102.3 102.3 101.7 102.3 102.2 101.2 103.1 103.2 101.4 103.8 103.9 102.8 101.7 84.5 107.4 83.2 105.8 98.4 106.3 108.7 1965 102. 3 102.2 103. 1 103.8 101.8 104.1 93.0 108.3 109.6 106.4 106.0 108.0 108.3 102.4 101.5 92.4 111. 3 111.8 107.7 105.2 107.6 110.7 103.0 101.2 95.4 113.6 114.1 109.8 106.9 110. 3 112.6 103.0 102.9 97.6 114.4 116.4 112.4 107.1 114. 7 115.1 103.8 102.3 98.6 99.2 103.9 102.5 97.6 98.0 105.7 102.8 98.2 98.0 108.9 103. 0 98.6 96.1 98.1 100.0 100.9 99.3 100.8 101.6 98.6 103.7 106.8 95.8 95.6 100.7 98.0 98.4 101.6 101.7 96.9 103.7 106.2 94.9 95.4 100.7 99.6 98.4 101.5 103.0 101.2 105. 7 106.4 94.6 91.3 101.8 97.3 99.3 100.1 104.5 102.4 105.9 107.5 94.9 SURVEY OF CUEEENT BUSINESS 40 July 1966 NEW STATISTICAL SERIES Intercity Motor Carriers (Class I and II Common Carriers); Index of General Freight Tonnage Carried, 1955-66 New Data for Page S-24 [Seasonally adjusted index, 1957-59=100] Year January 1955___ _ 1956 1957 1958 1959 I960.. 1961 1962 1963.. 1964 1965 .. __'__ _ _ 1966 February March April May June July August September October November December Annual 91.5 91.5 93.4 93 7 92 9 88 4 87.2 92. 3 92.7 93.8 97.0 98. 7 92.8 97.5 97.6 89.5 103.8 113. 2 97.0 98.3 88.6 107.3 113. 9 96.5 97.7 89.0 110.0 111.8 95 6 96.9 89.1 113 1 110.3 95 1 96 0 91.1 113 7 109.3 95 1 94 9 94.3 112 1 108 9 93 5 96.8 94.7 113. 0 107.0 93 2 98.7 93.6 109.1 108.2 94 0 97.1 96.4 109.4 110.6 96.0 93.4 100. I 107.2 106. 1 95.3 92.2 101.8 108. 1 103.6 95. 8 88.9 103. 7 114.8 101.1 95.4 95.7 94.3 110. 1 108.7 102.6 119.5 119. 7 127 4 137.7 102.1 118.9 121. 4 127 8 140.2 104. 0 119.6 122.1 127 8 148.5 105. 5 118.8 122.5 130 3 143.6 107 9 118.8 123.1 129 7 142 1 110 1 118.6 123.0 130 1 143 8 110. 5 118.1 124.4 131 5 141. 5 114.8 116. 9 125.3 131 2 141. 6 114.4 118. 2 125.1 133. 7 143.1 116. 6 118.7 126. 3 132. 7 144. 3 118.7 121. 2 122.9 138. 2 151.7 117. 9 118. 2 125.0 142.9 153.8* 110.4 118. 8 123.4 131.9 144.3 154 5 154 6 157 1 154 7 155 0 Source: American Trucking Associations, Inc. U.S. GOVERNMENT P R I N T I N G OFFICE : 1966 O—221-246 CURRENT BUSINESS STATISTICS JL'HE STATISTICS here update series published in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS, biennial statistical supplement to the SURVEY OP CURRENT BUSINESS. That volume (price $2.00) provides a description of each series, references to sources of earlier figures, and historical data as follows: For all series, monthly or quarterly, 1961 through 1964 (1954-64 for major quarterly series), annually, 1939-64; for selected series, monthly or quarterly, 1947-64 (where available). Series added or significantly revised after the 1965 BUSINESS STATISTICS went to press are indicated by an asterisk (*) and- a dagger (f), respectively; certain revisions for 1964 issued too late for inclusion in the 1965 volume appear in the monthly SURVEY beginning with the September 1965 issue. Also, unless otherwise noted, revised monthly data for periods not shown herein corresponding to revised annual data are available upon request. Statistics originating in Government agencies are not copyrighted and may be reprinted freely. Data from private sources are provided through the courtesy of the compilers, and are subject to their copyrights. 1963 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1963 1965 1 1964 II Annual total III | 1964 IV I II 1966 1965 III IV I II III IV I | II* Seasonally adjusted quarterly totals at annual rates GENERAL BUSINESS INDICATORS—Quarterly Series NATIONAL INCOME AND PRODUCTf Gross national product, totalf - . ., _ bil. $ Personal consumption expenditures, total.. __do____ Durable goods total? _ Autom obiles and parts _____ Furniture and household equipment Nondurable goods, total 9 Clothing and shoes Food and beverages Gasoline and oil Services total 9 Household operation Housing Transportation do do — do - - - - --do do do _ - -- -do _ - - - - ;_- do -do _ _do___^ do ••590.5 r 631. 7 ' 681. 2 ' 584. 2 ' 594. 7 ' 605. 8 ' 616. 8 ' 627. 7 ' 637. 9 ' 644. 2 '•660.8 ' 672. 9 '686.5 ' 704. 4 ' 721. 2 732.0 375.0 401.4 431. 5 372.0 378.3 381. 5 391. 1 398.0 407. 5 408.8 418. 9 426.8 435.0 445.2 455.6 458.9 53.9 24.3 22.2 59.4 25.8 25.1 66.1 29.8 27.1 53.2 24.1 21.7 54.5 24. 4 22. 5 55.6 24.9 23.1 57.6 25.3 24.1 59.8 26.0 25.4 61.1 27.1 25.3 58.9 24.6 25.7 65.1 30.1 26.0 64.4 29.2 26.2 66.7 30.2 27.3 68.0 29.9 28.8 70.3 31.4 29.6 66.8 28.3 29.3 168.6 30.6 88.2 13.5 178.9 33.6 92.8 14.1 190. 6 35.9 98. 4 15.1 168.0 30.3 88.3 13.3 169.9 31.4 88.3 13.5 169. 6 30.7 88.6 13.7 174.9 32.8 90.7 13.9 176. 5 32.7 92.1 13.9 181.7 34.3 93.9 14.2 182. 4 34.4 94. 4 14.4 184.5 34.6 95.4 14.4 189.4 35.6 97.8 15.2 191.4 36.0 98.7 15.3 197. 0 37 5 101.6 15.7 201.9 39 4 103.3 15.8 204.7 39.6 104.4 16.0 152. 4 23.1 55.4 11.4 163.1 24. 3 59.2 11.8 174. 8 25.6 63.2 12.8 150.8 22.7 55.0 11.4 153.9 23.5 55.8 11.5 156.3 23.3 56.8 11.6 158.7 23.8 57.7 11.7 161.6 24. 2 58.7 11.7 164.7 24.7 59.6 11.9 167. 5 24. 7 60.7 12.1 169.3 24.7 61.6 12.2 173.0 25.4 62.7 12.7 176.9 26.0 63.6 13.0 180.2 26.3 64.7 13.4 183.4 26.5 66.0 13.5 187. 4 27.4 67.1 13.9 ?118.4 Gross private domestic investment, total do.... 87.1 93.0 106. 6 85.1 88.0 92.9 90.2 91.8 92. 5 97.4 103.8 103. 7 106.7 111.9 114.5 Fixed investment Nonresident ial Structures _ _ _ Producers' durable equipment Residential structures Nonfarm Change in business inventories. _ _ Nonfarm . _ __ do -do __ do. do do -do _ do do 81.3 54.3 19.5 34.8 27.0 26.4 5.9 5.1 88.3 60.7 21.0 39.7 27.6 27.0 4.7 5.3 97.5 69.7 24.9 44.8 27.8 27.2 9.1 8.1 80.3 53.5 19.7 33.8 26. 8 26.2 4.8 4.3 82.0 55.0 19.4 35.5 27.1 26.5 6.0 5.3 84.7 56.8 19.9 36.8 28.0 27.4 8.1 7.0 86.6 58.1 20.3 37.9 28.5 27.9 3.5 3.6 87.6 59.7 20.9 38.8 27.9 27.3 4.2 5.1 88. 9 61.7 21.0 40. 7 27.2 26.6 3.6 4.6 90.0 63.3 21.8 41.4 26.7 26.2 7.4 7.9 94.4 66.7 23.6 43.1 27.7 27.2 9.5 9.4 96.0 67.9 24.6 43.3 28.1 27.5 7.6 6.7 98.0 70.2 24. 4 45.8 27 8 27.3 8.7 7.2 101.5 73.9 26.8 '47.1 27 6 27.0 10.4 9.0 105.6 77. 0 28.5 48.5 28.6 28.0 8.9 8.5 106.4 78.3 28.0 50.3 28.1 27.6 12.0 11.8 Net exports of goods and services . Exports - - Imports _ _ . do_ _ do do____ 5.9 32.3 26.4 8.5 37.0 28.5 70 39.0 32.0 6.2 32.4 26.2 5.6 32.5 26. 9 7.1 34.3 27.1 9.0 36.4 27.4 7.9 36.0 28.1 8.4 37.2 28.8 8.6 38. 1 29.6 6.4 35. 1 28.7 8.2 40.5 32.3 7.1 40.1 33.0 6.1 40.3 34.2 6.0 41. 7 35.6 5.3 42.3 37.0 122. 5 64.2 50.8 58.2 128.9 65.2 50.0 63.7 136.2 66.8 50.1 69.4 120.9 63.4 50. 5 57.5 122.9 64.2 51.0 58.7 124.3 64.4 50.3 59.8 126.5 64.9 50.1 61.6 130.1 66.6 51.6 63.4 129.5 65.1 49.8 64. 4 129. 4 64.1 48.5 65.3 131.6 64.4 48.2 67.3 134.3 65.6 49.1 68.7 137.7 67.5 50.7 70.2 141. 2 69.8 52.5 71.4 145.0 71.9 54.6 73il 149.4 74.6 57 t O 74.8 623. 5 ' 634. 4 ' 636. 8 ' 651. 4 ' 665. 3 '677.8 ' 694. 0 '712.3 324.3 331 2 338 8 348 4 311. 4 316.9 357. 0 318. 8 122. 4 127.7 125 0 122. 0 128 8 134 3 137 9 141.8 215 2 202 4 210 5 193 8 195 0 196 6 204 4 189 0 242.7 247 1 251. 1 254 3 259 8 265 1 268 8 275.5 69.4 72.7 68.5 76.9 79.8 68.8 74.3 73.9 720.0 Govt. purchases of goods and services, total.. do Federal -_ do National defense - _ do _ State and local _ _..._ _ _ do; By major type of produetrf Final sales, total Goods, total __ _ _ _ __ Durable goods Nondurable goods Services Structures _ _ do __do do do do _ do Change in business inventories..^ Durable goods Nondurable goods „_ __ do do do '584.6 ' 627. 0 292.7 313.6 122.2 113.3 179 4 191 3 226.2 244.5 65.7 68.9 '6.9 2.8 3.1 '4.7 3.3 1.4 r 672. 1 '579.4 335.7 290.1 132.2 111.8 203. 5 178. 3 262. 0 223.8 65.5 74.5 ••9.1 6.3 2.7 '4.8 3.2 1.6 r 588. 8 ' 597. 7 ' 613. 3 294.7 298. 1 307.1 114.7 117.3 119.6 180. 1 180 8 187 5 228.1 232. 2 237.3 67.4 65. 9 68.8 ••6.0 2.3 3.7 .' 8. 1 3.8 4.4 3.5 2.3 1.2 r '4.2 36 .5 ••3.6 28 .8 '7.4 44 2.9 '9.5 74 2.1 '7.6 6 4 1.2 '8.7 67 2.1 1K. '10.4 4.7 5.7 '8.9 5.8 3.1 12.0 GNP in constant (1958) dollars bil. $._ ' 551. 0 ' 580. 0 ' 614. 4 ' 546. 0 ' 554. 7 ' 562. 1 ' 569. 7 ' 578. 1 ' 585. 0 ' 587. 2 .'600:3 '607.8 ' 618. 2 '631.2 ' 640. 5 644.2 Gross national product, totalf Personal consumption expenditures, total Durable goods Nondurable goods Services . _ _ Gross private domestic in vestment, total Fixed investment Nonresidential Residential structures _ Change in business inventories Net exports of goods and services _ _ do 353.3 373.8 396. 2 350. 9 356.1 357.7 365.7 371. 0 379. 5 378.9 387.1 392.2 398.9 406.5 412. 8 do _ do_ do 53.7 162.2 137.4 69.1 170.5 144.2 66.4 178.2 151.6 53.0 161.7 136.2 54.4 163.3 138.4 55.3 162.4 140.0 57.2 167.2 141 2 59.5 168.4 143 1 60.9 173.3 145 3 58.8 173. 1 146 9 64.8 174.2 148 1 64.2 177.6 150 4 67.2 178.5 153 1 69.2 182.5 154.8 72.2 184.1 156.5 do 82.5 86.5 97.8 80.6 83.1 87.7 84.6 85.6 85.7 90.2 95. 9 95.3 97.9 102. 2 103.5 do do .do do 76.7 51.9 24.8 5.8 81.9 57.4 24.6 4.6 89.0 64. 9 24.1 8.8 75.9 51.1 24.7 4.8 77.2 52.5 24.7 5.9 79.7 54.3 25.4 8.1 81 2 55.5 25.7 35 81 6 56.6 24.9 40 82 2 58.2 24.1 35 82 8 59.2 23.6 7 4 86 6 62.3 24.4 93 88.0 63.4 24.5 73 89 4 65.5 23. 9 85 91.9 68.4 23.5 10 2 95.0 70.8 24.3 85 do 5.6 8.5 6.3 5.7 5.5 7.1 9.2 8.2 8.4 8.0 5.7 7. 1 6. 4 6.0 5.9 114. 1 108.7 Govt. purchases of goods and services, total do 111.3 109.6 110. 0 Federal . _ do 59.0 59.6 59.5 57.8 57.8 State and local ___do____ 50.4 50.1 56.3 49.7 63. 4 'Revised. * Preliminary. f Revised series. Estimates of national income and product and personal income have been revised (see p. 11 fi. of this issue of the SURVEY) ; revisions 118.3 109.5 110.3 113. 3 111 5 113 2 115. 0 116.6 110 1 111.3 60.4 59.3 58.7 58.2 59.7 57.4 56.1 56.2 57.3 58.3 50.9 52.0 53.6 53.9 54.0 55.3 55.9 56.7 57.3 57.9 prior to May 1965 for personal income appear on p. 18 ff. of this issue of the SURVEY. eludes data not shown separately. s-1 9 In- SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS S-2 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1963 1964 Annual total 1965 1963 III July 1966 1964 IV I 1965 III II IV I II 1966 III IV II* I Ill GENERAL BUSINESS IN DiCATORS— Quarterly Series— Continued NATIONAL INCOME AND PRODUCT— Con. Quarterly Data Seasonally Adjusted at Annual Rates 517.3 559. 0 485.7 493.9 481.9 National income, total t --bil. $. _ C ompensation of employees, total. _ _ do. _ _ _ 341.0 365.7 392. 9 343.1 349.2 358.4 313.0 318.5 Wages and salaries, total— do.___ 333. 6 311. 1 251.6 269. 3 289.1 253.4 Private. ~ — __ do 257.1 12.1 Military do 10.8 11.7 11.6 10.7 Government civilian _ do____ 48.6 52.6 57.1 49.8 48.9 Supplements to wages and salaries do 34.5 29.9 32.0 30.8 30.1 51.4 Proprietors' income, total 9 —do 51.0 51.9 55.7 51.1 39.9 37.9 40.7 38.5 Business and professional 9 - — do 38.1 Farm _-do 12.0 15.1 12.9 13.1 13.0 18.3 Rental income of persons _ ..do 17.2 17.1 17. 7 17.1 Corporate profits and inventory valuation adjust74.2 61.4 58.9 ment, total bil. $__ 66.6 60.3 By broad industry groups: Financial institutions. do 8.4 8.9 7.8 7.9 7.7 Nonfinancial corporations, total do 51.2 65.3 58.2 53.5 52.6 Manufacturing, total..... __ do 37.8 30.2 28.8 32. 4 29.9 Nondurable goods industries. _ _ ^ _ _ _ d o _ _ _ _ 15.7 13.4 13.0 14.5 13.3 Durable goods industries. ___ ...do 22.1 15.8 17.9 16.8 16.6 Transportation, communication, and public utilities—bil. $._ 10.4 11.1 9.5 9.8 9.8 16.4 All other industries -.do 12.9 15,4 13.5 12.8 Corporate profits before tax, total __do__._ 59.4 75.7 67.0 62.7 60.1 31.2 Corporate profits tax liability do 28.4 26.3 27.8 26.6 Corporate profits after tax _._. .do 44.5 34.9 33.1 38.7 33.5 Dividends -do 19.2 16.5 16.8 17.3 16.6 Undistributed profits „ — _ _ do. _ _ _ 25.3 16.6 21.3 16.9 18.1 Inventory valuation adjustment.. do. -1.5 -.4 -.5 .2 -1.3 N e t interest - _ _ _ _ _ _ do 17.8 15.5 13. 8 14.2 14.7 DISPOSITION OF PERSONAL INCOMEf Quarterly Data Seasonally Adjusted at Annual Rates Personal income, total. bil. $__ ' 465. 5 ' 496. 0 535.1 467.8 475.8 Less: Personal tax and nontax payments do 66.0 59.4 60.9 61. 7 60.9 Equals: Disposable personal income _ _ _ _ _ do__... 436.6 469.1 406.9 414.1 404.6 Less* Personal outlays© _ _ _ _ do 443.4 412.1 384.7 388.1 391. 6 Equals: Personal saving! _. do 25.7 22.5 19.9 24.5 18.8 NEW PLANT AND EQUIPMENT EXPENDITURES Unadjusted quarterly or annual totals: All industries bil. $_ 39.22 44.90 51.96 10.14 11.09 Manufacturing __ _ _ _ do 4.56 15.69 22.45 18. 58 3.95 Durable goods industries. do 9.43 2.31 7.85 11.40 1.96 Nondurable goods industries. . _ _ I _ _ _ _ _ . d o 9.16 2.25 7.84 11. 05 1.99 Mining _ _ „ _ _ _ _ do 1.04 1.19 1.30 .28 .27 Railroad _. __ do .33 1.10 1.41 1.73 .29 Transportation, other than rail. .__._. _._do 1. 92 .54 2.81 2.38 .45 Public utilities do 5.65 6.22 1.61 6.94 1.60 Communication. _ _ _ _ _ do _ 3.79 4.30 1.06 4.94 .93 Commercial and other do 2.72 10.03 10.83 11.79 2.64 Seas. adj. qtrly. totals at annual rates: All industries _ do 41.20 40.00 Manufacturing. _ do___ 16.45 15.95 Durable goods industries ____ ^ do___ 8.30 8.00 Nondurable goods industries. do___ 8.15 8.00 Mining _ do... 1.05 1.05 Railroad.. _ do... 1.35 1.20 Transportation, other than rail __ do... 2.10 1.85 Public utilities _. do___ 5.80 5.90 Communication .... do 4.05 3.85 Commercial and other _ do... 10.45 10.20 U.S. BALANCE OP INTERNATIONAL PAYMENTSc* Quarterly Data Are Seasonally Adjusted (Credits -f; debits -) Exports of goods and services (excl. transfers under militarv grants) mil. $ 32,339 36,958 38,993 8,135 8,564 Merchandise, adjusted, excl. military ___do.._ 22,071 25, 297 26,276 5,633 5,949 Military sales do 145 657 747 844 103 Income on U.S. investments abroad do __ 1, 183 5,392 5,901 1,148 4,654 Other services do 1,287 5,522 5,972 4,957 1,251 Imports of goods and services do —26 442 -28,468 -32, 036 -6,728 -6,784 Merchandise, adjusted, excl. military do. _ _ -16,992 -18,62 -21,488 -4,344 -4,372 Military expenditures do -719 -2,936 -2,834 -2,881 -719 Income on foreign investments in the U.S do -352 -32 —1 271 —1 404 -1,646 Other services ... do .__ -5,243 -5,60 -6,02 -1,34 -1,34 Unilateral transfers, net (excl. military grants) transfers to foreigners (— ) mil. $ -70 -727 -2,784 -2,76 -2,794 Transactions in U.S. private assets, net; increase (— ) mil $ -3,69 -67 -1,10 -4,456 -6,52 Transactions in U.S. Govt. assets, excl. official -48 -94 reserve assets; increase (— ) mil. $ -1,57 -1, 664 -1,67 Transactions in U.S. official reserve assets, net increase (—) mil $ 1,22 227 17 37 Transactions in foreign assets in the U.S., net (U.S 358 liabilities); increase (+) mil. $ 30 10 2,98 3,31 _2 14 Liquid assets _ _ _ do 2,627 13 2,29 21 Other assets, do 17 136 68 68 16 Unrecorded transactions do -25 -35 -429 -1,01 Balance on liquidity basis—increase in U.S. officia reserve assets and decrease in liquid liabilities t -13 -1,35 all foreigners; decrease ( — ) mil $ -20 -2,67 -2,79 Balance on official reserve transactions basis— in crease in U.S. official reserve assets and decrease in liquid and certain nonliquid liabilities to foreign -9 official agencies" decrease ( — ) mil $ -1,30 -2, 04 rl,54 r Revised. * Preliminary. * Estimates for Apr -June 1966 based on anticipa ted capit al expend itures of business 2 Estimates for July-Sept. 1966 based on antic pated ca pital expejiditures of busiaess. Anticipated expenditures for the year 1966 are as foilows (in bi .$):Alliiidustries 60.78; m anufacturing, total, 27.02; durable goods industries, 13.78; noneiurable gc>ods indiretries, 3.24; 1 mining, 1.42; railroad, 2.05; transportation, 3.49; pu blic utilit ies, 7.99; commerc lal and (>ther (incl. communication), 18.80. a includes commuili cation. 504.0 355.3 324.4 261.8 11.6 51.0 31.0 51.3 39.1 12.2 17.4 513.7 362.2 330.6 267.1 11,6 51.9 31.7 52.2 39.9 12.2 17.6 522. 9 369.8 337.4 272.3 11.7 53.4 32.4 51.9 40.3 11.7 17.8 528.5 375. 3 342.2 275.9 11.9 54.3 33.1 52.2 40.3 11.9 17.9 543.3 381.7 348.2 281.2 11.8 55.2 33.5 53. 3 40.5 12.9 18.1 552.2 387.8 353.7 285.8 11.7 56.3 34.1 55.9 40.4 15.5 18.3 562. 7 395. 6 360. 8 291.1 12.0 57.7 34.8 56.7 40.7 16.0 18.4 577.8 406.5 370.8 298.5 13.0 59.3 35.7 57.1 41. 1 16.0 18.5 595. 7 419.6 380.0 305. 9 13.6 60.4 39.6 58,4 41.4 17.0 18.7 65.3 66.5 67.8 66.8 73.2 72.7 74.0 76.9 80.0 8.0 57.3 32.1 14.1 18.1 8.5 58.1 32.4 14.6 17.7 8.4 59.3 33.0 14.6 18.4 8.6 58.1 32.2 14. 7 17.5 8.5 64.6 37.4 15.5 21.9 8.7 64.0 36.7 15.5 21. 2 8.9 65.0 37.4 15.5 21. 9 9.5 67.5 39.6 16.4 23.2 9.4 70.6 41.9 17. 2 24.7 10.1 15.0 65.8 27.9 38.0 17.1 20.9 -.5 14.7 10.2 15.5 66.8 28.3 38.5 17.3 21.3 -.3 15.1 10.6 15.7 67.8 28.7 39.1 17.4 21.7 .0 15.7 10.5 15.5 67.7 28.6 39.0 17.7 21.4 -.9 16.3 10.7 16.5 74.5 30.7 43.8 18.1 25.7 -1.3 16.9 10.9 16.4 74.5 30.7 43. 8 18.8 25.0 -1.8 17.5 11.2 16.4 75.0 30.9 44.1 19.5 24.6 -1.0 18.1 11.5 16.4 78.7 32.4 46.3 20.2 26.1 -1.8 18.7 11.3 17.4 82. 7 34.1 48.7 20.9 27.8 -2.8 19.1 -2.0 19.6 484.0 60.7 423.4 401. 4 22.0 492.0 56.9 435.1 408.5 26.6 500.3 59.1 441. 2 418. 4 22.8 507. 5 60.9 446. 6 420. 0 26. 6 518.0 64.9 453. 2 430.3 22.8 527. 6 66.6 461. 0 438. 6 22.4 541.9 65.7 476. 2 447. 1 29.0 552.8 66.7 486.1 457.6 28.5 564.6 69. 5\ 495. 1 468.4 26.7 573.3 73.6 499.7 472.1 27.6 9.40 3.79 1.93 1.87 .26 .32 .51 1.18 .97 2.37 11. 11 4. 53 2.30 2.23 .29 .36 .63 1.58 1.10 2.61 11.54 4.67 2.37 2.30 .30 .37 .59 1.71 1. 06 2.84 12.84 5.59 2.83 2.76 .33 .35 .64 1.76 1.17 3.01 10. 79 4.54 2.25 2.28 .29 .39 .58 1.32 1.08 2.59 12. 81 5.47 2.76 2.70 .33 .44 i .77 1.71 1. 24 2.85 13. 41 5.73 2.91 2.82 .32 .44 .72 1.88 1.22 3.10 14.95 6.72 3.48 3.24 .35 .46 .73 2.04 1.41 3.25 12.77 1 15. 17 5. 61 6.74 2.87 3.44 2.74 3.30 .33 .36 .40 .51 .75 .97 1.60 1.97 1.26 2.83 34.62 42. 55 17.40 8.85 8.55 1.15 1.40 2.30 5.95 4.05 10.25 43.50 17.80 9.00 8.80 1.15 1.25 2.25 6.30 4.30 10.45 47. 75 20.15 10.15 10.00 1.30 1.55 2.60 6.35 4. 40 11.40 49,00 20.75 10.40 10. 40 1.25 1.75 2.55 6.80 4.55 11.30 50.35 21.55 10.80 10. 70 1.30 1.55 2.70 6. 85 4.80 11. 60 52. 75 23.00 11.75 11.25 1.25 1.70 3.00 6.75 5.05 11.95 55.35 24.15 12.45 11.70 1.35 1.95 3.00 7.30 5.30 12.25 58.00 i 59. 60 2 61. 65 25. 60 26.60 27. 55 13.15 14. 00 13.55 12.45 13.05 13.50 1.40 1.40 1.40 1.75 1.85 2.10 3.30 3.65 3.40 8.25 7.80 8.10 5.35 12.35 3 18. 50 s 18. 85 45.65 18.85 9.60 9.20 .1.20 1.50 2.40 6.30 4.40 11.00 9 112 9,001 9,308 9,537 8,776 6,092 6,389 6,660 5,625 6,156 200 162 186 201 198 1,561 1,402 1,369 1,368 1,253 1,390 1,389 1,423 1,356 1,354 -6,850 -7,03 -7, 196 -7,390 -7,164 -4,389 -4, 579 -4,752 -4,90 -4, 656 -664 -72 -686 -683 -74 -373 -344 -349 -37 -339 -1,434 -1,471 -1,38 -1,384 -1,40 -68 -1,36 -71 -1,38 -694 -1,58 21.1 15.66 6.84 3.46 3.38 .36 .54 .89 2.23 34.80 10, 13C 10,016 10, 065 v 10, 41 6,798 6,826 7,027 p7,12 i>19 229 199 216 1,254 pl,53 1,61C 1,470 1,492 1,521 1,568 * 1, 56 -8, 087 -8, 245 -8,540 p-S, 90 -5,481 -5,595 -5, 756 j>-6, 00 -701 -745 -771 p-83 -404 -458 p-43 -411 -1, 501 -1,494 -1,555 p-1,63 -67 -662 -768 -719 -645 p-85 -2,18 -1, 605 -346 -827 -91 p-88 -29 -35 -41 -61 -367 -469 -268 -47 *-33 -5 30 7 -15 84 68 4 27 *42 41 29 12 -29 33 24 8 -15 71 54 17 -20 1,84 1,53 31 -36 18 -14 32 -42 -294 -13 -10 24 49 -25 24 31 7 23 -8 *37 P! *2 *-2 -24 -55 -61 -69 22 -53 -35 p-5 -1,38 427.7 387. 2 311. 3 14.1 61.8 40.5 57.9 41.6 16.3 18.8 p—2 23 23 -1,15 -32 -61 -23 -84 -14 |S(je corresj>onding ilote on p 8-1. 91ncludes inventor y valuati on adjusl ment. ei3ersonal outlays comprise persona1 consuniption e?cpenditu res, interest paid by consumejrs, and i>ersonal 1transfer p ayments to foreig aers. §P ersonal s aving is f ,xcess of. clisposabl e income over per sonal ou ;lays. iews in t he Mar., June, Sept., and rfl VEore coniplete details are given in the quar fcerly rev Dec. issues of the SUBVEY. OF CURRENT BUSINESS July 1966 1965 p 1964 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS Annual S-3 1966 1965 May June July Aug. Oct. Sept. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June* GENERAL BUSINESS INDICATORS—Monthly Series PERSONAL INCOME, BY SOURCEf Seasonally adjusted, at annual rates: f Total personal income ' r bil. $ Wage and salary disbursements, total do.-— C ommodity-producing industries, total-do — Manufacturing :.;__do Distributive industries do Service industries Government -._._ Other labor income Proprietors' income: Business and professional Farm. -. do. do__._ __do do do •.-. Rental income of persons _ - _ do Dividends do. Personal interest income do Transfer payments - - do Less personal contributions for social insurance Total nonagricultural income do 528 0 ' 532 2 '535 4 154L8 537.8 ' 552 5 '547 2 '553 2 ' 558 2 r 560 2 ' 564 7 ' 569 0 ' 570 5 r 573 o 358.4 144.3 115.5 86.7 354.1 142.7 114. 1 86 2 356. 1 143.8 114. 9 86 3 358.3 144.0 115.6 86 8 360.6 145.0 116.3 87 1 363.5 145.2 116.5 87 6 366.9 146.9 117 9 88 4 371.4 149. 2 119 6 89 2 374. 1 150.7 120 3 89 7 376.8 152.1 121 8 90 1 380.1 153. 9 123 3 90 9 382. 9 155.4 124 0 91 4 384.7 156. 0 125 2 91 5 387.0 156.8 125 9 91 9 389.7 157.7 126 5 92 5 54.1 64.3 16 6 58.1 69.2 18.5 57 2 68.0 18 2 57.7 68.3 18 4 58.6 68.8 18 6 59.1 69.5 18.8 59.8 70.9 19.0 60 0 71 6 19 2 60 6 72.4 19 4 60 9 72 9 19 6 61 1 73 6 19 8 61 2 74.1 20 0 61 7 74.5 20 2 62 0 75.2 20 4 62 5 75 9 20 6 62 9 76 6 20 7 39 9 12.0 40.7 15.1 40 4 15.7 40 4 16.9 40 7 16.3 40 6 15.9 40 7 15.9 40 8 15 8 41 1 16.0 41 3 16 2 41 3 16 8 41 3 17.0 41 5 17.3 41 5 16 7 41 6 16 3 41 7 15 9 17 7 17 3 34 6 36 8 18.3 19.2 38.4 39.7 18 3 18 7 38 0 37 7 18 3 19.3 38 4 37 5 18 4 19.3 38 7 38 4 18 4 19.5 38 9 38.3 18 5 19 8 39 2 i 49 2 18 5 2Q 0 39 4 39 8 18 6 20 2 39 7 40 3 18 6 20 5 40 0 41 4 18 6 20 8 40 5 42 3 18 7 21 0 41 0 42 6 18 20 41 42 7 9 4 9 18 7 21 0 41 8 42 6 18 8 21 2 42 1 42 5 18 8 21 2 42 4 43 1 12.5 13.2 13.1 13.2 13,2 13.2 13.2 13.3 13.5 13.6 16.8 16.9 16.9 17.0 17.1 479 7 515.6 507 9 510 8 514 6 517.6 526 9 532 6 537 2 538 8 543 0 547 0 549 1 551 9 17.2 555 7 41, 639 2 506 496 0 ' 535. 1 333. 6 134.0 107 2 81 2 1 532 3 576 4 FARM INCOME AND MARKETINGS* Cash receipts from farming, including Government payments (48 States), total J mil. $ Farm marketings and CCC loans, total do Crops do Livestock and products, total 9 do _ Dairy products - - do Meat animals . do Poultry and eggs do Indexes of cash receipts from marketings and CCC loans* unadjusted:! All commodities 1957-59 = 100_ . Crops - _--_-do__ _ Livestock and products ._ __do Indexes of volume of farm marketings, unadjusted: I All commodities . •_ . _ 1957-59 = 100_ _ Crops - do Livestock and products __ _ _ - _ - _ do T 39 115 r 36,946 17 136 19 810 5 022 11, 126 3 333 39, 187 17, 334 21, 853 5,070 12, 943 3,527 '115 124 107 '122 '126 118 r 118 r 118 ••119 120 132.3 143.3 133 1 133 5 132.6 111.3 151 3 144.9 148.4 140. 7 114.4 161.0 131. 8 131.7 142.8 128 1 132.0 r *2 918 '3 040 ' 3 840 ' 4 504 r 5 343 ' 4 578 ' 3 836 P 3 695 2, 478 2, 892 2, 934 3, 200 3,886 5 003 4 494 3 782 3 629 744 1 098 1 201 1 292 1 897 2 924 2 428 1 775 1*698 1 734 1 794 1 733 1 908 1 989 2 Q79 2 066 2 007 1 931 427 '414 401 453 401 409 '443 420 428 1,017 1,174 1,241 1 296 1 293 1 203 1 172 973 1,061 332 279 291 266 318 346 349 295 '338 P 3 010 P 3 143 P 2 883 P2 800 2 843 959 1 884 408 1 150 288 2 969 810 2 159 463 1 329 331 2 764 765 1 999 460 1 189 308 2 760 747 2 013 '486 1 186 299 M03 65 131 p 90 50 119 108 96 116 '109 ' 105 ' 113 '119 ' 113 '124 145 '165 '129 186 255 135 '167 ' 212 ' 134 '141 'M35 'P106 '84 155 ' 148 '122 125 '1 30 pllO ' 140 »103 67 130 105 91 l!6 '109 '107 '110 '116 ' 111 '120 140 '161 '125 184 254 131 '167 ' 219 '128 ' 134 ' p 128 ' 152 '157 ' 118 ' 110 r P 94 r 61 ' 119 P 87 48 115 142.6 145.2 139.3 143. 2 145.9 149.9 148.1 146. 6 148.3 152. 0 ' 154. 6 ' 154. 5 '155.8 158. 3 144 6 149 0 139.0 114.4 147. 2 151.7 141. 5 115.9 140.3 144.9 134.6 112.3 143.9 143.3 144.7 118.2 147 5 148.3 146.5 114.2 152 3 154 6 149.4 118.4 150 5 154 5 145 5 117.2 148 3 155 4 139 3 117 4 149 9 156 3 141 9 115. 6 154. 1 160.2 146.5 116.9 ' ' ' ' 161 5 168 7 152 5 119.6 142.4 140.2 159. 9 134.0 146. 9 139 8 137.8 163.6 129 6 144.2 143. 2 141.6 165. 8 133.9 146.8 138.3 135. 2 147.0 131.4 144.9 141.1 H38. 9 129.6 141.8 145.9 145. 7 143.8 148.4 142 3 149.7 151 4 150. 1 174.9 142 2 154.2 148 7 145 2 173.4 136 2 156. 1 146 4 140 0 16S. 7 130 9 160 3 148 5 142 2 167.4 134 1 162.1 151.6 145.6 170. 7 137.6 164.6 ' 153. 2 ' 146. 4 ' 172. 5 ' 138. 1 167.8 132.8 131 2 134. 3 144.1 144.2 144:0 145.0 146. 9 143.1 147. 0 149.5 144.5 140. 3 142.9 137.5 145. 1 144.5 145.7 146.2 146.6 145.8 148.6 147 6 149.7 147.6 145 4 149. 9 146 8 145 9 147 7 118 r 118 '92 65 113 T r r ••86 r 46 115 r r 71 rP 93 '80 '104 INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION Federal Reserve Index of Quantity Output Unadj., total index (incl. utilities). __. 1957-59 =100.. By industry groupings: Manufacturing total do Durable manufactures . do _ Nondurable manufactures do Mining _ ___do Utilities do . By market groupings: Final products, total Consumer goods . Automotive and home goods Apparel and staples Equipment, including defense do do do.-__ -do do. Materials.. __._ Durable goods materials Nondurable materials _ _ do do_ __ do 157 1 ' 157 7 ' 159 0 163. 9 '164 8 '166 3 148. 5 148 8 ' 150 0 118. 7 ' 115. 6 ' 118. 6 '152 2 ' 144. 9 '172.3 136 2 '167.9 '153 0 '144.8 ' 169. 0 156 7 149 0 174 '170.5 173 3 148.1 147 4 148. 7 152.4 ' 155. 7 ' 156. 7 '158.4 151.7 155. 8 ' 158. 6 '160.4 153.1 ' 155. 6 ' 154. 7 156.3 159.9 162 157 do 132 3 143.3 141 6 142.7 144.2 144.5 143.5 145 1 146 4 148 7 150 2 151.9 '153 4 '153 7 '155 0 155 8 do. 133.1 144.9 143 1 144.1 145.7 146.0 145.2 146.7 148.2 150 6 152 4 154.1 158.5 Durable manufactures 9 do Primary metals >_ do Iron and steel - . do Nonferrous metals and products do Fabricated metal products ___do Structural metal parts _. do 133.5 129.1 126.5 138 3 132.7 130 3 148.4 137. 5 133.6 152.1 147.8 145.4 146.4 140.2 139.7 153 4 146.0 142. 7 148.1 143.0 143.3 146.1 146.4 144.3 150.0 148.7 152.1 138. 4 148.0 145.5 150. 5 146.5 143.3 149.0 147. 5 145.0 148.2 131.2 125.0 152 3 147. 0 144 7 150.3 123. 7 115.8 155.0 150.9 148.2 151.3 119.4 110.5 158 8 153.6 152.6 155 0 126 5 118 2 162 1 156 3 154 0 157.6 130.8 122.9 159 1 157.0 154.2 159.7 ' 161. 7 ' 162. 7 '164 3 133.6 141.4 ' 142. 4 ' 146. 3 128.7 136. 1 ' 137. 0 ' 142. 1 164.0 ' 168 4 '167.1 160 4 160. 7 ' 161. 4 ' 160. 7 162.3 158.9 158.9 ' 159. 1 158.5 165.1 145 142 Machinery do Nonelectrical machinery do Electrical machinery do Transportation equipment 9 - do. . Motor vehicles and parts.... do,_ . Aircraft and other equipment. . do.— 141 4 142.1 140 6 130.7 150.1 112.4 160.4 160.3 160.6 149.2 175.2 125.3 156.9 157.0 156 8 147.3 175.5 121.7 159.0 159.4 158.4 149.5 178.0 123.3 160.6 161.7 159.2 149.8 177.4 124.1 161.4 162.4 160.1 151.5 177. 5 127.3 162.3 162.4 162.1 149. 4 175. 2 125. 6 166.0 165.8 166.2 155.0 177. 1 134.4 167.5 166.9 168.4 157.3 178,0 138.0 170 7 169 2 172 8 160.7 179.2 143.4 174.3 171.9 177.6 163.1 176.7 150.1 176.7 '176.0 '178.4 '181.0 174.4 174.0 ' 174. 5 ' 177. 9 179.8 ' 178. 8 ' 183. 6 ' 185. 0 163.2 165. 8 ' 166. 0 ' 165. 7 175.5 178.1 ' 176. 8 ' 170. 6 151.6 154.3 '156.4 ' 161. 4 183 180 186 167 170 164 Instruments and related products Clay, glass, and stone products... Lumber and products Furniture and fixtures . Miscellaneous manufactures 136.4 126.0 112 6 143. 4 133. 4 151.4 133. 5 117.4 157.4 146.0 147.0 130.3 117 1 156.5 143. 6 149.8 131.6 112.8 156.8 143.6 152.1 132.6 115.4 155.8 143.5 152.6 133.5 117.2 156.3 146.6 155.7 133.8 116.2 156.8 147.1 158.0 134.4 118. 3 159. 7 150.4 159.0 135.5 119.1 162.6 153. 0 162.2 137.6 125.4 164.3 155. 5 166. 0 139.4 125.6 165.4 151. 2 169.4 171.9 '174.6 '176.9 141. 4 ' 143. 0 ' 142. 1 ' 140. 9 126.5 ' 129. 3 ' 130. 7 125.9 169.6 172.2 166.8 168.8 155.3 156. 8 156.4 ' 157. 7 176 141 Seas, adj., total index (incl. utilities) By industry groupings: Manufacturing, total - _ do do do do___ do Nondurable manufactures. ... do._. 132.6 140.7 138.8 139.0 140.4 122 9 Textile mill products do 134 8 131 6 132 2 133 8 Apparel products • do 134 1 145 0 145 3 145 4 143 8 102 6 Leather and products do 107 8 110 9 105 1 107. 7 Panp.r and nrnrlnnts do 149 3 140 ft 139.4 142.1 133. 4 'Revised. *> Preliminary. i Italicized total excludes and other footnoted figures include retroactive lump-sum payment of social security benefits; disbursements of $885 million put on annual rate basis amounted to $10.6 billion. f See corresponding note on p. S-l. t Revised series. Dollar ( 155.6 ' 156. 4 '157 7 163 159 174 159 140.4 141.3 142.1 144.2 145.1 146.0 147.0 ' 147. 9 ' 148. 4 ' 149. 5 150.2 134 8 135 7 137.7 139 4 140 3 140.1 140.7 140. 7 '141.5 142. 3 147 2 148. 5 146.9 148.3 ' 147. 3 149.5 141.9 143 8 145.7 107.0 108.2 109.3 110.1 113. 9 111. 7 110.1 '111.4 116.2 141.1 143.9 143.6 147. 4 147.7 148.4 148.5 ' 150. 2 ' 150. 2 152.7 figures and indexes of cash receipts and volume of marketings revised beginning 1963; data prior to May 1965 appear in the Dept. of Agriculture publication, Farm Income Situation , July 1966. 9 Includes data for items not shown separately. SURVEY OF CUEEENT BUSINESS S-4 1964 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1965" 1965 May Annual July 1966 June July Aug. 1966 Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June » GENERAL BUSINESS INDICATORS—Continued INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION— Continued Federal Reserve Index of Quantity Output— Con. Seasonally adjusted indexes— Continued By industry groupings— Continued Nondurable manufactures—Continued Printing and publishing_____-1957-59=100_Newspapers _ _ _ do_ _ Chemicals and productsdo_ Industrial chemicals.-, __do Petroleum products _ do 123.3 117.0 159.6 178.4 121.0 130.3 124.2 173.3 196. 1 123.4 129.3 121.5 169.3 191.7 122.9 130.0 124.7 169.9 192.9 121.8 131.3 126.2 172.8 194.9 124.5 133. 0 129.7 174.2 195.7 125.8 129. 3 120.1 176.6 199.9 125.1 131. 1 125.1 177.1 200.9 124.0 133.2 127. 2 178.5 202.9 126. 1 134. 2 129. 5 180.6 206.3 127.8 135.7 130. 2 181. 9 206.3 130.5 138. 2 139.0 138.4 ' 142. 4 130. 4 130.7 '127.7 133.8 184.3 ' 186. 2 • 187. 7 191.2 209.4 '212.2 214.1 125. 5 '125.6 ' 127. 8 126.6 156.3 120.8 120.1 124.4 120.8 172.2 123.3 122.4 128.4 120.5 168.2 121.9 120.6 129.0 116.5 169.1 122.3 121.2 128.5 121.8 170.2 123.1 122.6 125.9 119.9 168.1 122.4 121.9 125. 0 120.7 171.2 123.2 121.8 131.0 120.6 175.5 123. 6 122.1 131.8 114.5 181.6 125.0 123. 5 133.0 118.9 181.3 125.3 123.6 134.3 117.1 184.6 126.0 124.6 133.2 119.6 183.3 ' 185. 7 127.0 127. 7 125.5 125.7 135.1 138.3 126.7 126.8 111.3 107. 1 110.4 109.9 117. 4 118.7 114.4 111.8 112.3 111.8 122. 6 126.5 114.0 113.0 111.9 111.3 121.6 123.9 115.3 117.1 112.5 112.2 123. 7 125.8 116.0 117.1 113.0 112. 1 126. 4 127. 3 117.0 115.2 114.2 113.4 130.2 129.1 112.6 106. 7. 110.6 108. 5 122.4 127.4 115.8 116.8 114.0 114.0 116.5 125.5 116.0 115. 7 113.8 114.5 114.2 133.2 117.9 118.5 114. 5 116.0 120.6 138.2 117.2 114.4 113,, 4 114,, 1 133,, 4 135,, 5 117.7 ' 120. 2 ' 115. 8 111.2 117.7 85.3 115.0 ' 116. 7 ' 117. 2 115.1 117. 0 ' 117. 2 130.8 134.5 ' 140. 1 135.6 137.1 ' 130. 9 do do do 151.3 153.9 143.4 161.0 165.5 147.0 159. 7 164.3 144.9 161.9 167.1 145.6 161.2 165. 8 146.8 161.6 166.2 147.2 165. 8 171.3 148.5 165.3 170.5 148. 9 165.7 170.9 149.3 164,, 9 169.7 168.9 174.7 do do do 131.8 131.7 142.8 142.4 140.2 159.9 140.2 138.6 158.5 140.7 138.7 158.2 141.7 139.3 158. 1 142.3 139.5 158.1 165.3 170.9 147.7 * 143.3 140.7 158. 5 145.7 141.7 161.7 147.4 142.8 163.0 148.8 144.1 166. 7 149. 5 144.1 166.9 151.4 '152.4 ' 152. 7 ' 153. 5 145.5 ' 146. 0 ' 146. 0 ' 145. 8 166. 8 167.6 ' 167. 8 '164.9 154. 5 146.6 166 145. 1 150.6 138.0 141.1 137.1 142.4 167.1 182.6 146.8 154.7 152.4 154.2 168.1 184.9 146.0 151.8 147.6 154.4 168.1 187.1 143.0 151.3 148.8 153.5 167.8 184.6 145.8 151.2 146.5 154.0 169.8 184.3 150.7 149.8 145.2 152.3 166.5 178. 1 151.2 153.0 149.1 152.0 168.6 181.1 152.0 156.9 154.0 154.9 168. 8 182.5 150. 8 159.0 155.2 157. 4 169.4 182.4 152.4 164. 8 161.3 161.0 168.5 180.3 153.1 165.7 165.0 163.3 167.6 171. 6 177.8 183.8 154.3 155.5 166.2 ' 164. 1 162.7 '155. 7 164.0 165.5 163 168 Aoparel and staples do Apparel, incl. knit goods and shoes, .do Consumer staples do Processed foods •_ _ do 128.1 124.2 129.3 119.9 134.0 134.3 133.9 122. 2 132.2 132.5 132.2 121.1 132.8 133.2 132. 7 120.7 133.7 132.2 134. 1 122. 4 133.6 131.9 134.1 121.6 135.0 134.0 135.3 121.6 135.4 135.1 135. 4 122.2 136.4 136.5 136.4 123.1 137.0 138. 5 136.5 123.1 136.8 136.4 136.9 123.7 138.7 '139.3 139.1 138.0 ' 138. 9 140.4 139.4 ' 138. 7 ' 139. 4 140 138.9 124. 6 125.2 125.1 124.0 Beverages and tobacco ____do Drugs, soap, and toiletries _do Newspapers, magazines, books... do Consumer fuel and lighting do 123.2 146.9 123.7 142.3 125.7 157.0 127.1 149.8 124.8 151.9 126.6 148.2 126.2 152.9 125.6 150.6 123.9 157.0 128.0 151.2 123.6 160.1 128.0 150. 6 127.5 161.3 126.1 154.2 126.0 159.2 126.3 156. 0 128. 2 161. 2 127.6 155.2 128. 5 162. 7 129.6 153.9 128.6 164.0 132.0 151.9 132.3 166.0 134.0 155.8 134.4 128.9 165.9 ' 167. 3 136.5 135.7 154.6 153.9 132.0 139.1 137.0 145. 3 141.0 133.1 146.9 156.6 153.1 164.4 162.4 148.1 143.7 153.5 150.6 162.3 157.1 141.7 144. 9 154.6 151. 9 164.1 157.8 143.7 147.0 156.4 155.1 165.2 155. 0 145.3 148.4 157. 8 153.8 165.2 163.6 157.1 149. 0 159.0 155.3 166.4 164.2 155.4 154. 3 164.3 159.4 169. 7 178.7 155.7 157.3 167.2 162.0 172 7 180.4 165. 8 153. 8 168.9 162. 4 174.5 188.0 163.9 161.3 170.5 162.6 177.5 194.9 161. 2 164. 1 173.2 166. 1 178. 6 198.9 158.0 166.2 175.4 167.4 184.2 198.9 163.0 ' 166. 9 ' 170. 0 ' 175. 9 ' 179. 0 167.3 169.0 ' 186. 4 190.6 ' 201. 3 206. 4 157.6 171.4 181 _..do____ do do do do 132.8 131.2 145.8 134.4 124.5 144.1 144.2 166.8 151.9 133.8 142.6 143.4 162.3 148.7 131.4 144.5 146.1 169.9 150.0 131.3 146.4 148.4 171.8 153.3 132.7 146.1 147.3 167.9 154.7 134.6 143.7 142.8 165.4 154.2 134.5 144.3 142.2 167. 0 158.4 135.3 145.6 143.0 168.2 160.0 137.2 148.7 146.7 168.3 163.2 138.8 150. 4 150.1 170. 0 165.8 142.9 156.8 158 do do do do 134. 3 127. 4 127.9 127.1 144.0 136.5 136.6 136.5 141.8 134.1 132.0 135.2 143.4 134.8 132.0 136.2 145.0 137.6 136.1 138.3 144.8 135.1 132.1 136.6 144.5 135.9 134.4 136.7 146.4 136.8 136.6 136.9 148.1 140.3 144.9 138.0 150.7 143.4 146.9 141.7 150.6 143. 4 142. 3 144. 0 152.0 '154.3 ' 154. 6 156.0 152.0 ' 155. 6 ' 156. 9 ' 156. 6 173.6 169.1 ' 169. 0 164.7 170.0 171.9 ' 173. 6 177.2 143.6 ' 146. 3 ' 144. 9 141.8 152.0 ' 153. 1 ' 152. 2 155.3 144.5 ' 146. 0 ' 146. 0 148.5 144.6 ' 145. 9 ' 144. 0 147.6 144.4 ' 146. 1 '147.0 149.0 122. 6 112.2 149.6 127.6 115. .2 159.2 127.9 115.1 160.1 129.9 116.9 162.4 128.9 117.0 158.8 129.2 117.2 160.1 126.3 112.1 161.5 129.7 117.9 160.9 129.9 117.8 161.7 131.7 119.5 163.8 130.6 117. 4 164. 9 131.7 ' 134. 0 ' 130. 8 ' 134. 5 135 118.0 ' 120. 5 ' 115. 1 ' 120. 7 121 166.9 168.7 170.0 1445,552 1483,343 39,814 39,943 230,775 252, 242 20, 513 20,652 214, 777 231, 101 19,301 19, 291 41,452 21,820 19, 632 40, 518 40,173 40,548 21, 191 20,924 21, 146 19,327 19, 249 19,402 41,403 21,606 19, 797 42, 622 42, 665 22,316 22, 307 20,306 20, 358 84, 744 '86,991 '85,455 85, 589 42, 702 44, 121 '43, 540 44,030 22, 433 23, 238 '22,708 22, 961 20,269 20,883 '20,832 21, 069 1261,630 1283,950 84, 173 93,718 177, 457 190,232 23, 668 23, 585 7, 827 7,755 15,841 15, 830 24, 647 8,092 16, 555 24,816 8,252 16,564 25, 023 8, 324 16, 699 25, 263 8,399 16, 864 16, 981 7,563 9, 418 16,779 '17,334 '16, 966 17, 004 7,538 7, 887 ' 7, 718 7,715 9,241 '9,447 '9,248 9,289 Rubber and plastics products. _---_ .-do_^_ . Foods and beverages.. do Food manufactures _ do Beverages do Tobacco products do Mining _ Coal — -^ Crude oil and natural gas Crude oil Metal mining Stone and earth minerals. - do do ._do__.. - do _ - do_ __ —.do — Utilities Electric Gas By market groupings: Final products, total Consumer goods Automotive and home goods. Automotive products _. -do Autos - do. __ Auto parts and allied products. __do.._Home goods 9 do Appliances, TV, and radios ..do Furniture and rugs do E quipment , including defense 9 do Business equipment do Industrial equipment _ do___ _ Commercial eouipment do Freight and passenger equipment . . do Farm equipment do Materials Durable goods materials 9_^ Consumer durable Equipment Construction Nondurable materials 9Business supplies Containers General business supplies. Business fuel and power 9 - Mineral fuels _ Nonresidential utilities. _ do____ -do do 144 187.8 127.5 126. 4 ' 126. 0 124. 5 135.6 115.8 ' 118. 1 ' 116. 9 ' 115. 8 '116.6 129.5 127. 5 118.4 117 115 116 168.8 ' 168. 3 ' 169. 0 169.5 174.2 173.6 ' 168. 8 161.2 189.6 ' 167. 5 ' 153. 3 152.8 ' 167. 4 168.6 ' 167. 5 166.1 166.3 169.5 172.5 138.5 156 BUSINESS SALES AND INVENTORIES § Mfg and trade sales (seas adj ) totalft Manufacturing , total Durable goods industries Nondurable goods industries 84, 669 mil $ do _ do. do Retail trade total* Durable goods stores Nondurable goods stores do do do Merchant wholesalers, totalj Durable goods establishments Nondurable goods establishments do do do 23,317 7,616 15, 701 23,322 7,665 15, 657 23, 753 24,194 7, 768 7,865 15,985 16, 329 Mfg. and trade inventories, book value, end of year or month (seas adj ) totalj mil $ a* 120,938 122, 047 '123,085 '124,091 125, 500 68,015 64,269 64,625 65, 394 42,324 39, 475 39,951 40, 600 25,691 24, 794 24, 674 24, 794 33,957 32, 823 33, 014 33,088 14, 782 14, 566 14, 546 14, 592 19,175 18, 257 18,468 18,496 62,944 Manufacturing , total do 38, 412 Durable goods industries _ do 24, 532 Nondurable goods industries do Retail trade, totalf do_.__ 31,130 Durable goods stores do.___ 13, 136 17,994 Nondurable goods stores... do Mierchant wholesalers total! do Durable goods establishments do Nondurable goods establishmentsdo__. *• Revised. * Preliminary. 1 Based on unadjusted data. 9Includes data for items not shown separately. tSee corresponding note on p. S-ll. §The term "business" here includes only manufacturing and trade; business inventories as shown on p. S-l cover data for all types of producers, both farm and nonfarm. Unadjusted data for manufacturing are shown on p. S-5; those for retail trade on p. S-ll. 25, 536 '24,949 24, 555 8,649 ' 7, 939 7,532 16,887 '17,010 17, 023 68, 594 69, 040 69, 648 '70,346 71, 032 42, 589 42,884 43,273 '43, 779 44, 256 26,005 26, 156 26, 375 '26, 567 26, 776 34, 113 34, 427 34, 556 34, 737 35, 266 14, 949 15, 113 15, 201 15, 336 15, 813 19, 164 19, 314 19, 355 19,401 19, 453 18, 231 18, 580 '18,881 '19,008 19, 202 10, 571 10, 809 10, 995 '11,209 11, 358 7,771 '7,886 ' 7, 800 7,844 7,660 {Revised series. The panel of reporters in the Census Bureau wholesale sample has been updated to reflect information from the 1963 Census of Wholesale Trade; comparable data prior to Jan. 1966 are not presently available. 65,788 40, 814 24, 974 33,360 14, 819 18,541 66,267 41, 300 24,967 33,045 14,621 18, 424 66,642 41, 523 25, 119 33,296 14, 782 18,514 67,192 41,869 25,323 33, 533 14,774 18, 759 68,015 42,324 25,691 33, 957 14,782 19, 175 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS July 1966 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 1965 Annual S-5 1966 1965 May June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June GENERAL BUSINESS INDICATORS—Continued BUSINESS SALES AND INVENTORIES— Con. Inventory-sales ratios: Manufacturing and trade, totalft ratio Manufacturing, total Durable goods industries .. Materials and supplies. Work in process Finished goods 1 43 1.44 1.41 1 44 '1 45 1 47 do do do___ do - do _ 1 64 1. 91 .57 79 .54 1 61 1 91 59 80 52 1.61 1.92 .61 . 79 .52 1.62 1.93 .61 .80 .53 1 58 1.86 .58 .78 .50 1.62 1.93 .60 .82 .51 1 65 1 97 .61 83 .53 1 64 1.96 .61 83 .53 1 62 1.94 .60 82 52 1 60 1 90 58 81 51 1 61 1 91 58 82 51 1 62 1 91 .58 82 51 1 58 1.86 .56 81 .49 1.61 1.92 .58 .84 .50 '1 62 r 1 93 .58 84 r 51 1 61 1 93 58 84 51 do do.__ do do 1 35 .53 .19 .62 1 29 50 .19 60 1.28 .50 .18 .60 1.28 .50 .19 .59 1 26 .49 .18 59 1.29 .50 .19 .60 1 30 .51 .19 60 1 29 .50 .20 59 1 28 .50 .19 59 1 27 49 19 58 1 28 49 19 59 1 29 50 .19 60 1 26 .49 .19 59 1 27 49 .19 59 '1 28 49 .19 59 1 27 49 19 59 do do _ _do____ 1.40 1.86 1.18 1 38 1 84 1.16 1.41 1.91 1.16 1.42 1.90 1.18 1.40 1 86 1.17 1.41 1.91 1.17 1 39 1.88 1.15 1 38 1.88 1.13 1 36 1 83 1.13 1 37 1 79 1 16 1 36 1 80 1 15 1 36 1 80 1.15 1 35 1.76 1.15 1 39 1 92 1.14 1 39 '1 93 1 14 1 44 2 10 1 14 1.07 1.40 .81 1.11 1.43 .84 1.09 1.39 '.83 1. 10 1.43 .83 '1.12 '1 45 '.84 1.13 1.47 .84 983 987 Nondurable goods industries Materials and supplies. _ _ _ Work in process Finished goods- _ Retail trade, totalf Durable goods stores. Nondurable goods stores. Merchant wholesalers, totalj _ do Durable goods establishments do. _ _ _ Nondurable goods establishments_-____do MANUFACTURERS' SALES, INVENTORIES, AND ORDERS Manufacturers' export sales: Durable goods industries (unadj.), total.. .mil. $._ 800 831 747 805 870 856 884 1,006 855 882 938 '934 483, 343 40, 074 41, 914 37, 844 39, 443 41, 198 42, 185 41, 642 40 766 39, 982 43,570 45,218 ••44, 918 44,254 230, 775 11, 525 38 832 21, 236 23, 549 252 242 11, 753 41 910 22 916 24, 292 21, 157 1,010 3, 613 1,923 2,025 22, 280 1,095 3 639 1,954 2,147 19 564 19, 813 1 022 1, 046 3 273 3 590 1 847 2,076 1 905 2,089 20 778 21 748 21 738 993 1 046 l' 050 3 266 3 215 3 266 1*675 1 595 1 612 2,122 2 088 2, 101 21 659 934 3 188 1 546 2 014 20 751 856 3 379 1 713 1 908 22878 885 3 773 1 919 2 110 23 996 r 23 869 23 619 i 24 600 976 r 1 028 1 019 3 955 r 4 074 3 984 i 4 000 2 076 2* 108 2 178 2,203 ' 2 187 2 204 33, 696 30 207 59,628 38, 450 7,523 36 490 33 593 68 039 45, 412 8 347 3,164 2 646 5,755 3, 898 679 3,299 2 844 6 106 4,144 732 2 970 3 087 6 223 4,326 729 3 124 3 117 6 342 4 180 773 2 952 2 854 5 981 4 034 *678 3 312 3 193 6 485 4 270 742 _ _ _ d o _ _ _ _ 214, 777 _ do __ 75, 883 do 4,693 do 17 808 do _ 17,116 do___ 33, 578 do 18 187 do _ 10, 212 231,101 80 678 4,864 19 318 19 385 36 030 19 178 11 653 18,917 6, 575 374 1 553 1,566 3,180 1 584 998 19, 634 18, 280 19,630 20, 420 6,825 6 545 6 780 7 215 439 425 415 407 1 679 1 368 1 686 1 725 1,653 1 503 1 658 1 706 3 133 3,189 2 823 2, 944 1 647 1 624 1 637 1 628 948 983 1 028 883 20, 437 19, 904 19 107 7 154 7 018 6 832 410 405 400 1 751 1 721 1 580 1 718 1 675 1 649 3,070 2 958 2 797 1 650 1 613 1 625 1, 032 985 995 19 231 6 861 387 1 495 1 632 2 998 1 622 986 20,692 21, 222 '21 049 20 635 7,259 r 7r 177 7 218 7 234 430 427 410 398 1 655 1 672 1 754 r 1 685 1 743 1,810 >r i 770 1 783 3,404 3 356 3 145 3* 498 1 668 1 597 'r 1 722 1 693 1 124 1*080 1 061 1, 113 42 665 42,702 Shipments (not seas, adj.), total. Durable goods industries, total 9 ., Stone, clay, and glass products.. Primary metals Blast furnaces, steel mills. _ _ Fabricated metal products do do do _ do _ do Machinery, except electrical Electrical machinery Transportation equipment- . __ _ Motor vehicles and parts Instruments and related products Nondurable goods industries, total 9 Food and kindred products Tobacco products ' _ _ Textile mill products Paper and allied products . Chemicals and allied products Petroleum and coal products Rubber and plastics products _ Shipments (seas, adj.), total. By industry group: Durable goods industries, total 9 Stone, clay, and glass products Primary metals Blastfurnaces, steel mills... Fabricated metal products _ 9,001 do.... 445, 552 _ do.___ do do _ do_ __ do 9,941 2 857 2 539 5 069 3 366 '650 2,814 2 746 4 355 2 570 675 3 063 3 002 5 035 3 071 742 3 048 3 063 6 057 4 178 728 3 526 3 332 6 655 4,431 809 '3 506 r 3 218 r Q 496 ' 4 280 r 794 3 441 3 189 6*454 i 6 700 4 138 794 44, 121 ' 43, 540 44,030 do 39, 814 39, 943 41, 452 40, 518 40, 173 40, 548 41, 403 42 622 _doi___ do _ _ do.___ _____do.___ .do 20, 513 923 3,435 1,835 1,955 20, 652 962 3,389 1,820 1,974 21, 820 969 3,782 2,170 2 036 21, 191 926 3,708 2,105 1, 968 20, 924 953 3,237 1,652 1,995 21, 146 947 3,204 1,608 1,963 21, 606 1,013 3,335 1,681 2,139 22 316 22,307 1 140 1 092 3 470 3 499 1 730 1, 741 2 130 2 166 Machinery, except electrical do____ Electrical machinery. ____do Transportation equipment do _ _ _ Motor vehicles and parts... __ do _ _ Instruments and related products _ _ _ _ _ _ do_ ___ 2,993 2,748 5, 519 3,680 688 3,009 2,701 5,668 3, 814 691 3,119 2,894 5, 870 4, 004 728 2,990 2, 800 5,803 3,932 703 3,081 2,796 5,863 3,905 694 3,127 2,906 5,973 4,037 707 3,150 2,962 5, 907 3 981 710 3 242 3 073 6 075 3 993 713 19, 301 6,661 364 1,610 1, 572 3,030 1,631 988 19, 291 6,671 411 1, 600 1, 575 3,057 1, 637 958 19,632 6, 777 400 1,603 1,656 3, 063 1,648 980 19, 327 6,843 387 1,619 1,616 2,957 1,615 968 19, 249 6,821 415 1, 581 1,631 2,942 1, 614 951 19, 402 6,845 405 1,609 1,656 2,982 1,639 958 19, 797 7, 001 394 1,673 1,691 3,067 1, 619 1, 012 20 306 7 131 410 1 703 1 762 3 133 1,594 1 064 20 358 20 269 7,114 7 157 427 433 1 624 1 659 1,710 1,717 3 127 3 143 1, 638 1, 605 1,055 1, 051 20,883 7,257 450 1,729 1,763 3,326 1,640 1,081 ' 20, 832 ' 7, 255 ••411 ' 1, 670 ' 1, 740 f 3, 260 ' 1, 756 ' 1, 079 21, 069 7,313 416 1,715 1,789 3,204 1,743 1, 069 3,769 8,280 4,948 4,088 3,001 15, 728 3, 705 8,374 4,942 4,232 3,062 15, 628 3, 788 8,582 5,093 4, 408 3 169 16, 412 3,700 8, 554 5, 001 4,347 3,058 15, 858 3,715 8,549 5,125 4,323 3 080 15, 381 3,735 8, 615 5,172 4,452 3,066 15, 508 3,861 8 812 5, 175 4,418 3 252 15, 885 4 067 8 955 5 385 4 448 3 409 16 358 4 005 8 979 5 484 4 298 3 427 16 472 3 956 8 961 5,314 4 410 3 361 16 700 4,140 9,140 5, 529 4,573 3,488 17, 251 ••4,080 ••9,092 ' 5, 453 'r 4, 275 3, 340 ' 17, 300 4,167 9,175 5,645 4, 334 3,196 17, 513 1, 567 2,281 3,849 1,553 2,298 3, 838 1,644 2,324 4 070 1,564 2,341 3 878 1,567 2,422 3 980 1,618 2,402 4,035 1,674 2 385 4 087 1 770 2 530 4 188 1 698 2 604 4 272 1 711 2 577 4* 192 1,817 r 1, 785 1,758 2,637 ' 2, 638 2,856 4,376 '4 301 4,349 65 088 40, 410 24 678 65 481 40, 704 24 777 65 869 41, 096 24 773 66, 218 41,212 25, 006 66 777 41 407 25 370 67 620 41 831 25 789 68 651 42 463 26 188 69441 43 070 26 371 70 049 ' 70, 755 71, 599 43 594 ••44,219 44, 894 26 455 '26 536 26, 705 65 394 68 594 69040 69 648 ••70,346 Nondurable goods industries, total 9 Food and kindred products Tobacco products Textile mill products Paper and allied products Chemicals and allied products Petroleum and coal products Rubber and plastics products do __do do ___do____ _ _ do _do__ do __. do By market category: Home goods and apparel do____ 22 41, 750 22 44, 909 Consumer staples __ do 94 397 101, 305 Equipment and defense prod., excl. auto.do____ 22 55, 185 22 60, 300 Automotive equipment.. _ _ do 50, 403 43, 344 2 Construction materials and supplies do 35 878 2 37 543 2 Other materials arid supplies. do 174, 998 2 188, 883 Supplementary market categories: 2 Consumer durables _ _ _ _ do 17, 902 2 19, 283 2 Defense products. . do 25 953 2 27, 965 2 Machinery and equipment do 42 331 247 115 Inventories, end of year or month: Book value (unadjusted) total Durable goods industries, total Nondurable goods industries total Book value (seasonally adjusted) total By industry group: Durable goods industries total 9 Stone, clay, and glass products Primary metals Blast furnaces steel mills Fabricated metal products Machinery except electrical Electrical machinery Transportation equipment Miotor vehicles and parts Tnsfrnmfints and r^lata/l nrndnnts do do do 62642 38 001 24 641 67 620 41 831 25 789 64, 769 40, 033 24 736 64,979 40, 321 24 658 64, 269 64, 625 do 62 944 68 015 do do do do do 38 412 1* 587 6 111 3*707 4,251 42 324 39 475 39 951 1,623 1 626 1,620 6 349 5 996 6 074 3 678 3 531 3,597 4,856 4,544 4,565 do do do do r\n 7 558 5 388 7 908 3 013 8 508 6 093 8 930 3 318 I'filQ 1 7SR 7 763 5 662 8 104 3 249 1 fi7fi ' Revised. * Advance estimate. 2 Based on data not seasonally adjusted. tSee corresponding note on p. S-ll. 7 878 5 726 8,267 3 290 1 fiS7 3,257 3 145 5 962 3 824 764 65, 788 66, 267 66, 642 67 192 68 015 40 600 40 814 1, 600 1,618 6 163 6 142 3 631 3 576 4,611 4,685 41 300 1,614 6 224 3*633 4,766 41,523 1,640 6, 275 3, 669 4,772 41 869 1 634 6 261 3 658 4, 816 42 324 42 589 1 626 1 638 6 349 6 438 3 678 3 760 4,856 4,828 8 142 5, 873 8 600 3 370 1 fiQfi 8 298 5 907 8,707 3 430 1 711 8,364 5,947 8,706 3 412 7 988 5 810 8,653 3 527 1 fiRS 1.714 8 5 8 3 453 993 860 366 1 730 8 508 6 093 8 930 3 318 I'TRR 8 521 Q 177 8*984 3 263 i'»ftfi 22,433 23, 238 ' 22, 708 ••995 1 042 1,078 3,643 3,726 ' 3, 803 1, 930 2,006 1,843 2,288 ' 2, 148 2 202 22, 961 122,800 931 3,788 i 3, 800 2,012 2,127 3,285 'f 3, 226 3,266 3, 284 6, 243 ' 5, 939 4, 096 '3 844 803 '800 3,255 3,322 6,214 i 6, 200 3,914 804 3,179 3 120 6 049 3 955 740 42 884 43 273 ' 43, 779 1 643 1 652 ' 1, 662 6 486 6 553 '6 594 3 813 3,817 3 786 4, 779 ' 4, 754 4 829 8 575 6 210 9 047 3 276 l'R92 9 Includes data for items not shown separately. jSee corresponding note on p. S-4. 8 610 6 334 9,186 3 226 1.RS1 '8,658 '6,408 ' 9, 481 ••3,274 r 1. 883 71, 032 44, 256 1, 695 6,719 3,890 4,761 8,758 6,501 9,483 3,327 1.933 SURVEY OF CURKENT BUSINESS S-6 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 | 1965 Annual July 1966 1966 1965 May June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. 13,004 2,428 3, 901 2,261 18,468 2,224 6,777 5,589 11,412 1,834 4,107 1,197 12, 988 2,445 3,963 2,188 18, 807 2, 255 6,843 5 802 11, 478 1,853 4,138 1,196 '13,146 13, 342 2, 498 '2,490 r 4, 019 4,119 ' 2, 195 2,253 ' 19, 141 19, 256 '2,244 2,347 '6,904 6,948 ' 6, 078 5,984 '11,492 11, 658 ' 1, 860 1,874 ' 4, 143 4,192 ' 1, 208 1,246 26,156 6, 230 2, 338 3,169 1,981 4 460 1,816 1,293 26, 375 6,357 2,394 3, 174 1,985 4 460 1,809 1,295 '26,567 ' 6, 480 ' 2, 395 ' 3, 173 1, 997 '4,504 '1,802 ' 1, 299 May June GENERAL BUSINESS INDICATORS—Continued MANUFACTURERS' SALES, INVENTORIES, AND ORDERS— Continued Inventories, end of year or month—Continued Book value (seasonally adjusted)— Continued By industry group— Continued Durable goods industries— Continued B y stage of fabrication : Materials and supplies 9 mil. $ Primary metals do Machinery (elec and nonelec ) do Transportation equipment do Work in process 9 _ do Primary metals do Machinery (elec. and nonelec.) do Transportation equipment do Finished goods 9 do Primary metals do Machinery (elec and nonelec ) do Transportation equipment do Nondurable goods industries, total 9 do Food and kindred products do Tobacco products do Textile mill products do Paper and allied products do Chemicals and allied products do Petroleum and coal products do Rubber and plastics products do By stage of fabrication: Materials and supplies do Work in process .. do Finished goods do By market category: Home goods and apparel do Consumer staples _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ do Equip and defense prod., excl. auto do Automotive equipment _ do Construction materials and supplies do Other materials and supplies do Supplementary market categories: Consumer durables do Defense products do Machinery and equipment _ _ _ -do 11 688 2 248 3 263 2 216 15, 933 2 024 5 763 4 695 10 791 1 839 3 920 997 12 943 2 388 3 816 2 278 18, 109 2 130 6 699 5 465 ll' 272 1 831 4 086 1*187 12 512 2 317 3 502 2 362 16 162 1 957 5 966 4 686 10 801 1*722 3 957 1 056 12 537 2 305 3 540 2 372 16 533 1 985 6 122 4 820 10 881 1 784 3 942 1 075 24 532 25 691 24 794 24 674 6 030 6* 034 6 100 6 040 2 359 2 371 2 328 2 317 2 837 3 130 2 826 2 879 1 885 1*965 1 885 1 882 4 003 4*335 4 174 4 133 1 745 1 756 1 775 1 765 1 176 1*279 1 221 1 234 9 619 9 964 9 675 9 608 3 522 3*862 3 558 3 611 11 391 11 865 11 561 11 455 6 499 9 660 13 241 3 683 5 629 24 232 12 664 12 672 12 812 12, 886 2 310 2,316 2,302 2,302 3 609 3 702 3 747 3 808 2 420 2 232 2 317 2,348 17 053 17 283 17, 380 17, 502 2 051 2 058 2 066 2 114 6 242 6 351 6 415 6,491 5 155 5 284 5 277 5 228 10* 883 10 859 11 108 11 135 1 802 1 768 1 856 1,859 3 947 3 962 4 043 4 012 1 078 1 084 1 113 1,130 12, 914 2,336 3 825 2,300 17, 763 2 097 6,577 5 408 11, 192 1, 828 4 044 1, 152 12, 943 12, 951 2,388 2,423 3, 816 3 862 2,278 2, 250 18,109 18, 285 2, 130 2 179 6,699 6,744 5,465 5 537 11, 272 11, 353 1,831 1,836 4, 086 4 092 1, 187 1, 197 24 794 24 974 24 967 25 119 25 323 25, 691 26 005 6, 034 6j 243 6*073 6 000 5 881 5 861 5 993 2 281 2 286 2 286 2 328 2,268 2,371 2, 334 2 952 3 003 3 038 3 119 3 085 3,130 3 119 1, 970 1*900 1 916 1 922 1 919 1 934 1,965 4 203 4 240 4 258 4 285 4 350 4 335 4 409 1 746 1 727 1 696 1* 718 1 737 1,756 1 787 1, 296 1*244 1 258 1 262 1 273 1 306 1, 279 26, 776 6,515 2,394 3,153 2,028 4,620 1, 798 1,305 9 827 3 823 11 673 ^9,964 3,862 11, 865 10 028 3, 876 12 101 10,072 3,877 12,207 10, 153 ' 10, 309 10, 396 3,893 ' 3, 913 3, 975 12, 329 ' 12, 345 12, 405 7 021 6 694 6 650 6 685 6 815 6 863 6 866 6 890 9 770 9* 721 9*737 9 675 9 566 9 630 9,708 9*844 14 835 13 419 13 635 13 858 14 046 14 286 14 376 14 650 4* 032 3 941 3 983 4*215 4 068 4 124 4 102 4 092 5 852 5 908 5 983 6 Oil 6 054 5 835 5 862 K QO1 26 229 24 610 24 774 25 078 25* 332 25* 520 25 685 25* 841 7,021 9,844 14, 835 4,032 6 054 26, 229 7 167 10, 039 14 966 3, 992 6 017 26 413 7,247 10,036 15,054 4,003 6 071 26*,629 7,329 10, 251 15, 266 3, 941 6 072 26,789 '26,924 7,488 10, 452 15, 636 4,041 6 124 27, 291 3 254 6 270 10 591 3 287 6,388 10, 701 3 384 6 519 10, 735 3 423 6 581 10,815 3,475 ' 3, 508 6,824 ' 7, 079 10, 848 '10,939 3,626 7. 085 11, 028 42 259 43 104 42 094 21,818 22.648 22, 109 20 441 20 456 19 985 41, 531 22,448 19 083 42 379 23,052 19 327 45,434 24,578 20856 47, 398 '46,401 44, 584 26, 099 '25,238 23,879 1 25, 600 21 299 ' 21, 163 20,705 41 483 41 843 42 234 43, 868 43 986 44,129 45, 833 '45, 064 23,578 3 603 1 776 2 177 3 427 3*462 6,526 2 268 23,741 3,994 2 141 2 247 3*317 3*332 6,574 2 092 24,888 4,057 2,104 2 411 3 529 3,489 6,873 2 395 9 537 3*591 11 666 9 645 3 662 11 667 9 766 9 769 3 702 3 825 11 499 11 525 3 221 3 233 6 044 6 091 10 432 10 492 ' 7, 403 '10,380 '15,557 '3,992 r g 090 3 287 6 388 10* 701 3 210 5*740 9 651 New orders, net (not seas, adj.), total Durable goods industries, total Nondurable goods industries total do 452 368 492 272 _do____ 237,631 260, 732 do 214 737 231 540 40 162 21* 166 18 996 New orders, net (seas, adj.), total By industry group: Durable goods industries, total 9 Primary metals _ _ _ _ _ Blast furnaces, steel mills Fabricated metal products Machinery except electrical Electrical machinery Transportation equipmentAircraft and parts -do do do do do do .do do 237,631 41 308 23 303 24 222 34 929 31 212 61, 174 17 514 260,732 41 017 21 378 24 914 38*434 35 292 72,973 22 044 20,992 3 286 1 632 2* 027 3 108 2 801 5,878 1 552 21,310 22, 195 21, 509 3 454 3 493 3 119 1 816 1 851 1 465 2 042 2 058 1 974 3 189 3 140 3 318 2 874 3* 099 3 000 5,870 6,363 6*141 1 684 1 646 1 956 22, 163 2 908 1 276 2 013 3 315 2 995 6,853 2 462 do do do 214 737 57 318 157 419 231 540 63 458 168 082 19 189 5 157 14 032 19 379 19 651 5 298 5 444 14 081 14 207 19 320 19 418 5 267 5*307 14 053 14 111 20 465 5 717 14 748 20 408 5 580 14 898 20388 5 604 14 784 20 945 '20,867 5,745 '5,650 15 200 '15,217 41 94 57 43 36 178 740 388 765 643 325 507 45 057 101 315 65* 081 51 053 38 058 191 708 3 689 3 751 3 725 3 784 3 780 3 778 3 868 4,145 8 277 8 389 8 583 8* 55$ 8 550 8 604 8 806 8 955 5 323 5 509 5 466 5 543 5*756 5 689 5* 485 5 834 4 208 4 194 4 524 4 004 4* 504 4 516 4 413 4 448 3 105 3 132 3* 155 3 040 3 118 3*129 3 296 3 604 15 579 15 714 16 393 15 707 15* 775 16 127 16 366 16 882 4 119 8 981 6 112 4 298 3 452 17 024 3 937 8 960 5 833 4 332 3 399 17 668 4,173 9 141 6 036 4 538 3 600 18 345 17 920 27, 126 44,471 19 449 32 534 49,679 1,844 2,528 4,583 1 810 3,402 4,450 1 676 3,035 4,584 1 819 ' 1, 784 1,818 3,375 ' 3, 299 2,874 i 3, 300 4,587 ' 4, 788 4,808 i 4, 700 55 962 53,042 2 920 64 896 59 869 60 309 61 178 61, 543 56 694 57 064 57 904 3 353 3 175 3 245 3 274 64 896 67 293 61*. 543 63 844 3 353 3 449 69 156 65,543 3 613 71 337 '72 822 73, 154 67,646 '69,018 69, 280 i 70, 300 3 691 '3 804 3,874 66 068 67 388 68 814 70 527 '72 049 60 664 61 445 62, 534 63 803 5 375 5 432 5 646 5 750 2 730 2*765 2*653 2 606 5 224 5 298 5 467 5 513 9 769 10 014 10 304 10 475 9 453 9 692 9 830 10 147 25, 838 25, 903 25,993 26, 557 19 569 19 683 19 781 20 397 65,110 6 102 3 063 5 558 10 613 10*358 27,082 20 846 66, 762 6 434 3 238 5 681 10 857 10 581 27*. 712 21 566 Nondurable goods industries total Industries with unfilled orders© Industries without unfilled orders^ • do By market category: Home goods and apparel do Consumer staples do Equip, and defense prod excl auto do Automotive equipment do Construction materials and supplies do Other materials and supplies do Supplementary market categories^ Consumer durables do Defense products............ _.._ do _ Machinery and equipment— do Unfilled orders, end of year or month (unadjusted), total mil $ Durable goods industries, total _ do Nondur. goods Indus witn unfilled orders© do 3 056 5*625 9* 431 2452 368 2492 272 Unfilled orders, end of year or month (seasonally adjusted), total mil $ By industry group: Durable goods industries, total 9 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ do Primary metals do Blast furnaces, steel mills do Fabricated metal products " " ~do~~ Machinery, except electrical do Electrical machinery do Transportation equipment _ _ do. _ _ _ Aircraft and parts do 57 044 66 068 53,958 6 559 4 311 4 811 8 302 8 103 21,090 15 526 62,534 5 646 2 730 5 467 10 304 9 830 25,993 19 781 Nondur. goods indust with unfilled orders© do 3 086 3 534 1 975 29 223 5 490 20 356 2 124 34 732 6*041 23 171 By market category: Home goods apparel consumer staples Equip, and defense prod incl auto Construction materials and supplies Other materials and supplies Supplementary market categories: " """" Consumer durables _ Defense products. Machinery and eauioment do do do do 3 241 3 249 5 814 5 968 9 863 10 006 42 357 38 713 39 964 22*651 20,404 20,348 19 706 18 309 19 616 40 181 40 689 1 574 2,460 4,069 59 897 1 586 2 579 4,091 60 588 41 846 1 560 2 618 4,348 3 134 40 926 19 417 5 347 14 070 1 640 2 808 4,159 1 610 3, 450 4,153 22,425 22,389 23,403 3 148 3 392 3,684 1 451 1 635 1 854 2 335 2*050 2 213 3 349 3 396 3 532 3 211 3 201 2 983 6,165 6,920 5,972 2 466 1 608 1 724 19 845 5*454 14 391 1 675 3 276 4,249 1 695 2 567 4,325 61 697 62 758 63 676 58 438 59, 479 60 379 3 259 3 279 3 297 64 129 60 752 3 377 60 981 61 391 62 699 56,875 57 454 57 830 6 569 6 637 6 348 4 148 4 144 3 825 5 051 5 093 5 115 8 782 8 963 8 984 8 555 8 773 8 978 22, 951 23', 069 23) 563 16 861 17 074 17 252 3 022 3 250 6*030 10* 216 58 148 59, 385 5 760 5 431 3 185 2 809 5 120 5 137 9 313 9 547 9 178 9 376 23, 901 24*. 891 17 732 18 631 3 243 3 314 63 993 64 821 3 329 3 534 •1 KQK 3 704 1 908 1 922 1 861 1 953 2 017 2 046 2 048 2 124 2 241 31 154 31 607 32 097 32 587 33 401 33 983 34 284 34* 732 35 360 5 721 5 733 5 720 5 701 5 739 5 803 5' 845 6 041 fi nfi^ 21 114 21 326 21 303 21 150 21 542 22 161 22 644 23 171 23 724 2 219 35 803 6 099 24 693 3 151 3 376 ' 4, 051 ' 9, 092 ' 6, 295 4 343 ' 3, 426 '17 857 '68,250 ' 6, 536 '3 269 r 5 740 '11 169 '10 909 '28, 333 '22 006 3 765 r 3 799 2 254 36 275 6 211 25* 787 45, 152 '24,197 24,189 1 24, 100 ' 3, 905 4, 263 i 4, 100 ' 2, 037 2,331 ' 2 206 2,237 ' 3, 538 3,542 ' 3, 612 3, 401 ' 6, 561 6,508 i 6,700 ' 2, 099 1,929 '2 225 '37 186 '6 298 '26 340 20, 963 5,695 15, 268 4,192 9,177 5,915 4, 527 3,220 18, 121 73, 171 69, 479 1 70, 700 7,012 17,300 3,588 5 850 11, 456 10, 988 28,627 129,100 22, 079 3 692 2, 251 37, 651 6 321 26 948 1 420 1 601 1 399 1 412 1 328 1 406 1 449 1 504 1 526 1 601 1 712 1 677 1 680 ' 1 678 1,739 20 058 24 587 21 457 21 743 22 036 22 503 03 532 24 407 24 587 24 587 25 383 25 841 26* 578 '27 239 27, 257 IB. nnn 14 Ififi 14 499 14 ?nn 14 Q«9 15 159 15 2fiQ 15 finft 1ft nnn ifi 1«1 Ifi 575 ifi 785 r 17. 273 17. 733 13 3fi7 'Revised. i Advance estimate. 2 Data for total and components (incl. market filled orders for other nondurable goods industries are zero. 1 For these industries (food and categories) are based on new orders not seasonally adjusted. kindred products, tobacco products, apparel and related products, petroleum and coal prod© Includes textile mill products, ucts, chemicals and allied products, and rubber and plastics products) sales are considered i 9 Includes data for items not shown separately. leather and products, paper and allied products, and printing and publishing industries; unequal to new orders. do do dn SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS July 1966 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 1966 1965 1965 May Annual S-7 June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May 16, 585 17, 868 20. J56 17,305 17, 299 17, 022 17, 036 16, 603 June GENERAL BUSINESS INDICATORS—Continued BUSINESS INCORPORATIONS^ New Incorporations (50 States and Dist. Col.) : Unadjusted number.. 197,724 203,897 Seasonally adjusted .. do INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL FAILURES^ _ number.. Failures, total Commercial service - - - - . Construction '. Manufacturing and mining Retail trade Wholesale trade Liabilities (current), total '. do _ do.__ do do do 16,540 16,043 17,635 16,671 16,794 16,369 16,114 16,957 15S962 17, 138 15,889 16,744 15, 130 17,418 18, 185 16, 999 19, 731 17, 677 13, 501 13, 514 1,183 1,094 1,074 1,131 1,100 1,047 1,033 1,090 1,084 946 1,226 1, 106 997 1, 226 2,388 1,299 2,513 2, 097 6, 250 1,355 126 204 191 549 113 90 205 172 510 117 82 205 157 514 116 114 208 176 533 100 124 205 172 479 120 110 212 145 490 90 103 201 155 477 97 119 210 156 492 113 101 203 160 515 105 103 167 139 430 107 130 209 171 601 115 121 206 154 509 116 108 210 121 459 99 2,254 6,241 1,392 .....thous. $._ 1,329,223 1,321,666 133,113 144,607 121,485 135, 039 104,976 82,066 71, 722 97, 575 103, 175 95, 536 103, 471 110, 141 96, 376 do _ _ _ do do____ do ._; do.... 182, 527 262,392 361, 864 281, 948 240, 492 248, 523 290, 980 350, 324 287, 478 144,361 48,806 17, 729 32,978 20, 944 12,656 54, 207 35, 601 22,435 22,353 10, Oil 4,891 53,372 31, 145 21, 352 10, 725 47, 127 24, 080 30,097 19, 704 14, 031 23,039 19,007 24,880 27, 463 10, 587 10, 381 19, 139 17, 862 27, 876 6, 808 7,635 14,420 22, 539 20, 606 6,522 7,895 22, 741 24, 972 28, 793 13,174 8,021 13, 877 23,029 42, 216 16,032 8 595 24,306 18, 163 35 165 9,307 11 005 16 630 29 928 29 749 16, 159 20 761 35 024 22, Oil 22 444 9,901 26 400 23 832 20 164 17 054 8,926 Failure annual rate (seasonally adjusted) No. per 10,000 concerns. _ i 53. 2 153.3 54.1 50.1 52.8 56.9 59.7 51.5 51.4 54.2 50.7 44.1 50.2 47.4 45.8 262 226 287 225 171 171 225 540 293 277 369 160 270 232 312 224 174 173 232 545 303 277 384 170 269 231 291 236 170 171 234 545 303 277 380 174 265 236 313 240 172 168 243 547 291 272 365 161 263 239 290 240 175 174 262 546 284 266 361 150 264 241 281 246 175 189 269 546 283 267 359 147 Commercial service Construction _ « Manufacturing and mining.. Retail trade Wholesale trade COMMODITY PRICES PRICES RECEIVED AND PAID BY FARMERS Prices received, all farm products^ 1910-14=100.. Crops? do Commercial vegetables _______do Cotton . . do Feed grains and hay ..do _ Food grains do Fruit . .. do Tobacco .... do Livestock and products 9 . do . Dairy products. ; do _ Meat animals do Poultry and eggs _ .-__. .. ._ do Prices paid: All commodities and services. ; do . Family living items do Production items do All commodities and services, interest, taxes, and wage rates (parity index) 1910-14=100 Parity ratio § . ..do 237 239 247 262 166 190 307 490 236 256 270 142 248 232 261 245 173 164 236 513 261 261 319 145 251 247 321 252 182 162 249 499 254 241 319 137 254 241 282 254 180 157 228 499 265 240 342 139 252 232 249 253 177 160 197 501 269 249 343 142 249 223 233 244 171 162 ••230 517 272 258 341 147 249 223 237 249 171 160 248 528 271 270 333 150 249 221 252 248 161 164 234 528 273 277 332 151 249 219 259 245 156 167 211 550 275 282 155 259 224 259 236 166 170 231 549 290 281 357 164 282 300 270 288 306 276 290 307 277 290 307 278 289 305 277 288 305 277 288 305 276 289 307 276 291 309 278 293 309 281 295 312 282 297 314 284 296 314 283 296 315 283 296 314 283 313 76 321 77 323 78 323 79 290 307 278 009 321 78 321 78 322 77 322 77 324 80 327 80 329 82 331 81 333 80 333 79 333 79 108.1 109.9 109.6 110.1 110.2 110.0 110. 2 110. 4 110.6 111.0 2 111. 0 111.6 112.0 112.5 112.6 108 0 108 9 105 2 106. 0 103 0 101.2 121 6 104.4 115 2 117.0 106 4 98.6 104.7 115.3 107.2 108.7 107 8 109.1 107. 3 103.5 107.9 102. 8 105.7 109 3 107.9 119.0 113. 6 119.4 109 2 114.1 109 6 110 4 106 4 107.9 102 6 99 0 120 8 105. 1 117 8 120 0 108 8 105! 1 105.0 115.2 108.5 110 6 108 9 111.4 107 2 105 6 107 8 103 1 106 8 111 1 109 7 1214 115 6 122 3 109 9 115 2 109 4 110 3 106.2 107.5 102 9 100.2 121.1 105. 2 117 5 119.5 107 9 100.3 104.2 121.4 108. 2 110.2 108 8 110.8 107. 1 104 6 107.7 103.1 106.8 111 4 110.0 121.3 115.6 121.8 111.0 115.9 110 0 110 3 1069 108. 6 102 6 97 4 122. 7 105.1 117 6 119. 7 110 1 10&4 104.0 125. 9 108.2 110 3 108 8 111.0 106.9 103 4 107 8 103. 1 106.9 111 2 109 7 121.3 115. 7 122. 2 111 0 115.7 110 1 110 2 106 9 108 7 102 3 97 2 123 0 104.7 117 8 120 0 110 9 109.2 104.3 124.3 108.3 110 6 108 9 •111.2 106.6 103 2 106 9 102.9 106.1 111 5 110 0 121 4 115 3 122.7 108 7 114.6 109 8 110.2 106 6 108.5 101 8 97. 1 120. 3 104.7 117 9 120.0 110 1 109.8 105. 0 114.6 108.2 110 7 109 0 111.4 105.3 103 5 107. 7 102.9 106.4 111 0 109 5 121.5 115.6 122. 8 109.0 114.3 110 0 110.6 106.6 108.6 101.7 96.5 118. 9 104.9 118 5 120.7 109 7 109.8 105.3 108.5 108.6 110. 8 109 1 111.6 107.4 104.3 107.9 103.1 107.2 111.0 109.5 121.6 115.8 122.8 109 2 114. 8 110 2 110 9 106 9 108. 7 102 1 97 7 119.4 105. 3 118 7 121. 0 109 7 108.9 105.5 108. 5 109.0 111 2 109 2 112.1 107.7 106 9 107. 9 103.3 107. 8 111 2 109.7 121. 6 116.2 123.0 109 2 115.2 110 4 111 2 107 1 108 9 102 4 98 7 118 7 105.6 119 0 121 3 109 7 108. 5 105.8 109. 9 109.2 111 5 109 3 112.5 107.9 107 2 108 0 103.3 108.1 111 5 110 1 121. 6 116. 4 123.4 109 6 115.4 110. 8 111.3 107. 4 109. 4 102.4 98.7 118. 2 105.7 119 3 121. 6 110 6 110.1 106. 1 111. 0 109.4 111.8 109 5 112.9 108.1 108 6 108.0 103. 6 108.1 111 6 110 1 122.0 116. 6 123.7 110 0 115 4 110 8 111 1 107 4 109. 6 101 9 97 4 114. 8 105.3 119 5 121.8 111 4 112.9 106. 6 111.3 109.2 112 0 109 7 113.1 106.4 108 9 107.9 103. 6 107.3 111 2 109 6 122.0 116.9 124.2 110 4 115.7 111 4 111 3 108 0 110 6 101 8 97 v 114 0 105.4 119 7 122 0 113 1 115 7 107.0 116.5 109 4 112 1 109 8 113.3 106 5 109 0 108 2 103 8 107.6 111 1 109 6 122.0 117.1 124.5 110 8 115.9 111 9 111 6 108 4 111 1 102 0 97 1 115 4 105. 6 120 1 122 5 113 9 116 9 108.1 117. 4 109 6 112 3 109 9 113.5 106 6 108 9 1082 104 0 108 2 111 4 109 9 122 1 117 6 125.3 111 0 116 6 112 4 112 2 108 8 111 4 102 3 97 4 117 4 106.0 121 1 123 6 114 0 115 6 108.9 119. 8 110 3 113 0 110 1 114.3 108 3 108 5 108 3 104.4 108.7 112 0 110 5 122.1 118.1 125. 8 111 6 116.8 112 4 112 5 108 8 111 3 102 5 97 o 117 5 106.3 121 5 124 1 113 5 113.9 109.3 119. 2 110 7 113 5 110 2 115. 2 108 2 108 0 108 2 104 6 109.3 112 0 110 5 122. 1 118.4 126.3 112 0 116.8 78 9QO CONSUMER PRICES (U.S. Department of Labor Indexes) Unadjusted indexes: All items. . 1957-59=100.. Special group indexes: All items less shelter do All items less food do v Commodities do Nondurables . ... do Durables 9 do New cars _ do Used cars _. do , Commodities less food... ...do Services do Services less rent . _ __ do Food 9 do Meats, poultry, and fish _do_.__ Dairy products.. do. _ Fruits and vegetables.... __...do____ Housing. do Shelter 9. do Rent do Homeownership do Fuel and utilities 9 . _ do Fuel oil and coal do Gas and electricity do Household furnishings and operation do Apparel and upkeep . do Transportation do Private.. . . do Public do Health and recreation 9—- . do Medical care . ._ do Personal care do Beading and recreation do Seasonally adjusted indexes:* Food --— _ do Apparel and upkeep do Transportation.. _.do— .- 'Revised. 1 Based on unadjusted data. Beginning with indexes for Jan. 1966, data for six additional areas (Cincinnati, Houston, Kansas City, Milwaukee, Minneapolis-St. Paul, and San Diego) have been incorporated into the national CPI. These areas were "linked" into the CPI as of Dec. 1965 and were first used in calculating the Dec. 1965-Jan. 1966 price change. cf Compiled by Dun & Bradstreet, Inc. (failures data are for 48 States and Dist. Col.). 2 114 3 114 0 113 1 114 2 110 8 111 6 109.4 108.0 107 8 108 8 108 5 107 6 111.4 112.3 112.0 111. 8 111.3 110.8 {Revisions for Jan. 1963-Mar. 1965 are available upon request. § Ratio of prices received to prices paid (parity index). 9Includes data for items not shown separately. * New series. Beginning with indexes for Jan. 1966, seasonally adjusted indexes for selected groups and subgroups of the CPI were published by the Dept. of Labor. Additional information and a description of the BLS Seasonal Factor Method are available from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Dept. of Labor, Washington, D.C. 20210. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS S-8 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1965 1964 July 1966 1966 1965 Annual May June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan, Mar. Feb. Apr. May June COMMODITY PRICES—Continued WHOLESALE PRICES tf (U.S. Department of Labor Indexes) Spot market prices, basic commodities: 22 Commodities __1957-59=100_ 9 Foodstuffs _do 13 Raw industrials do All commodities __ _ _ __do __ By stage of processing: Crude materials for further processing— _do Intermediate materials, supplies, etc do Finished goods O do By durability of product: Durable goods do Nondurable goods do Total manufactures _ ' do Durable manufactures. _ _ _ _ do _ Nondurable manufactures do Farm products and processed foods do !97.7 !88.8 104. 6 1 104. 7 191.9 1114.6 105.2 90.3 116.9 104.2 90.1 115.3 103.3 89.0 114.6 104.7 91.2 115.2 105. 4 93.2 114.8 105.6 93.4 115.0 106.1 93.9 115.5 108.9 97. 9 117.1 112. 0 100. 7 120.5 113.8 101.9 122.9 113. 6 100.7 123.5 112.5 100.8 121.5 110.7 100.4 118. 3 111.4 102.0 118.4 100.5 102. 5 102.1 102.8 102.9 102.9 103.0 103. 1 103.5 104.1 104. 6 105.4 105.4 105. 5 105. 6 105.7 94.1 100.9 101.8 98.9 102.2 103.6 98.3 101.9 103.2 100.6 102.2 103.9 100.5 102.3 104.0 100.8 102.4 103.8 100.0 102.5 104. 1 100.1 102.6 104.3 100.8 103 0 104. 7 103.2 103.0 105.3 105. 2 103. 4 105.6 107.5 103.8 106.3 106.9 103.9 106.4 106.3 104.3 106.3 105.7 104.8 106.2 105. 5 104. 9 . 106.4 102.4 99.1 101.1 102.5 99.7 103. 7 101.5 102. S 103.7 101.9 103.6 100. 8 102.4 103.6 101.1 103.7 102.0 103.0 103.7 102.3 103.7 102.2 103.1 103.7 102.5 103.9 102.0 103.2 103.9 102.4 103.9 102.2 103.2 103.9 102.5 104.0 102. 4 103.4 104.0 102.7 104.2 102.9 103.7 104.2 103.2 104.2 103.9 104.1 104.2 103.8 104. 6 104.5 104.4 104. 5 104. 3 104.9 105.5 104. 9 104.8 104.8 105.3 105.3 105.0 105. 1 104.7 105.7 106.1 105.0 1Q5.1 105. 1 105.5 105. 6 r 106. 1 104.6 104.8 98.0 102. 1 101.1 103. 5 103. 7 103.3 103. 5 103.6 104 3 106.5 107. 7 109.8 109.4 108. 7 '107.9 100.0 103.9 88.4 105.0 99.1 85.5 88.3 106. 4 99.5 96.1 89.3 102.6 99.4 95.6 88.6 103. 2 100.3 94.2 87.4 104.0 103. 0 92.2 90.1 109.0 104. 5 97.5 92.4 112. 6 107.4 98.0 92.9 116.7 106.8 101.3 90.8 114.2 106.4 M11..0 91.2 112.4 104.5 1 104.1 99.7 94.9 108.5 110.6 112.6 114.8 104.8 110. 9 110. 5 113.0 114.9 105.4 110.9 110.5 113.9 117.0104.8 109. 9 104.0 104.3 104.7 104.9 97.6 95.2 94.4 106.4 104.7 105.9 97.6 95.6 94.1 104.0 105.5 106.2 97.7 '96.0 94.1 102. 5 106. 6 106.2 97.7 95.8 94.5 101. 2 104.8 106.8 100.3 98.2 100.4 128.9 97.8 99.9 97.5 100.4 128.2 97.2 100.0 94.9 100.3 129. 2 97.7 r 100. 4 96.9 100.2 128.3 98.4 101.5 97.0 100.2 128.3 100.2 98.3 89.0 107. 0 78.4 87.9 98.4 89.0 107.2 78.5 87.7 98.4 89.1 107. 2 78.4 87.2 98.6 98.9 89.4 89.3 108.3 ' 108. 9 78.4 '78.3 86.8 86.8 98.9 89.4 108.9 78.3 86.8 114.6 113. 8 132.3 114.2 101.9 103.4 116. 0 114.4 140.0 116. 6 102. 8 104. 3 117.8 114.9 152.8 118.0 103. 7 105.6 118.7 115.3 147.8 123.3 105.6 107.4 104.1 116.8 116.4 96.5 100.5 1C4.2 117. 0 116.5 96.6 100.5 104.4 117.3 116.9 97.0 100.5 104.7 117.8 117.5 97.8 100.4 106. 3 91.9 101.2 117.4 106. 7 91.6 101. 3 118.7 106.6 91.6 101.7 117.2 107.0 91.5 102.0 118.3 101.6 105.4 101.6 99.9 100.0 104.1 93.3 91.1 101.6 105.4 101. 6 99.1 100. 5 104. 5 93.4 91. 1 101.6 105.4 101.8 98.6 100. 8 104.8 93.5 91.1 101.6 105. 6 101.8 97 A 100.9 104. 9 93.5 91.1 101. 9 104.1 100.4 94.7 132.8 105.0 102.1 104.2 100.6 94. 2 134.9 105.2 102.0 104. 3 100.8 93.5 140.3 105.4 101. 9 104.2 101.0 92.5 142.2 105.4 102. 0 104.3 101.2 107.6 100.7 105. 6 112.6 102.9 107. 6 100.7 105.6 •111.5 102.7 107.7 100.9 105.6 111.5 103.2 107.7 100.9 105. 6 111.2 103.1 $0. 972 .907 $0.972 .909 $0. 971 $0. 970 .906 94.3 103. 2 94.1 84.7 98.4 101.8 89.6 98.9 98.4 118.5 91.0 96.2 Foods, processed 9 _ _ _do _ Cereal and bakery products do Dairy products and ice cream do Fruits and vegetables, canned, frozen _ _do_ _ _ _ Meats, poultry, and fish _ _ _ do__ _ 101. 0 107. 8 107.8 104.8 90.8 105.1 109.0 108.5 102. 1 101. 0 103.3 108. 3 106.8 100.4 97.7 106.1 108.5 107.1 101. 5 105.5 106. 6 109.3 107. 8 101.8 106.3 106.7 108. 8 108.5 100.4 106.3 106.7 109.1 109.1 101.8 105. 3 106.9 109.4 109.4 104. 7 104. 9 107.6 110 6 110.4 105.4 105.5 109.4 111.2 111.3 105.1 110.5 110. 3 111. 8 110. 9 104. 7 112. 7 111.8 112.1 112.7 105.5 114.9 111.5 112.2 115. 0 104.8 113.3 101. 2 102.5 102.3 102.5 102.5 102. 7 102.7 102.8 103.2 103.2 103.5 103.8 96.7 94.2 95.0 96.8 100.1 104.7 97.4 95.0 94.4 112.7 103. 5 105.4 97.6 94.8 95.0 116. 7 104.3 105.7 97.4 94.8 93.9 114.0 104.3 105.7 97.4 95.0 94.0 110.3 103.3 105.7 97.1 95.0 93.9 104.4 102.1 105.7 97.2 95.0 93.9 108.4 102.5 105.7 97.6 95.4 94.1 110. 1 103.4 105.9 97.5 95.5 94.7 106.7 103 8 105.9 97.6 95.5 94.6 110.1 1C3.8 105.9 97. 6 95.1 94.4 113. 1 103.8 105. 9 97.6 95.2 94.5 110. 0 104.7 105.9 Fuels and related prod., and power 9 do____ Coal do Electric power _ Jan. 1958— 100 _ Gas fuels.. . _ _ do _•_ Petroleum products, refined 1957-59=100__ 97.1 96.9 101.1 121. 3 92.7 98.9 96.5 100.8 124.1 95.9 98.4 94.6 100. 8 122. 2 95.4 98.7 94.7 100.8 122. 7 96.0 98.7 95.2 100. 7 122.5 96.0 99.0 95.8 100.8 123. 9 96.4 99.2 96.6 100.8 125. 3 96. 4 99.4 97.3 100.8 125. 8 96.6 100.3 97.5 100. 8 126.8 98.1 100.6 97.6 100.7 128.6 98.4 100. 5 98. 1 100. 4 128.2 98.3 Furniture, other household durables 9 -- -do _ _ Appliances, household. _ do__ Furniture, household do Radio receivers and phonographs do___ Tele vision receivers _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ do__ 98.5 91.3 105.3 81.5 90.9 98.0 89.2 106.2 80. 2 88.5 98.0 89.2 106.0 81.1 88.9 98.0 89.4 105.9 81.1 88.9 97.8 89.2 105.9 79.6 87.8 97.7 88.6 106.1 79.0 88.0 97.7 88.6 106.2 79.0 88.0 97.8 88.6 106. 4 79.2 87.9 98.0 88.6 106. 6 79.2 87.9 98.2 88.8 106.7 79.2 87. 9 Hides, skins, and leather products 9 -^— dpFootwear ___ _ _ _ _ _do__ Hides and skins _ do __ Leather _ _ _ _•'•__ do . Lumber and wood products do Lumber _ _ do _ 104.6 108.5 87.5 102.9 100. 6 100.7 109.2 110.7 111.2 108.1 101.1 101.9 107.4 109.7 105.9 104.2 100.4 101.0 107.7 109. 8 103.1 107. 6 100.3 101. 1 108.8 110.0 117.4 105.9 100. 5 101.2 112. 2 110.2 133.4 112. 5 101.8 102.5 111.3 110.3 124.9 110.9 102.0 103.1 113.3 113.6 125.6 111.9 101.6 103.0 113.6 113.7 126.5 113.3 101.6 103. 0 Machinery and motive prod. 9 - - do _ Agricultural machinery and equip _do___ Construction machinery and equip do_._ Electrical machinery and equip _ _ _ do _ Motor vehicles do 102.9 112.9 112.4 96.8 100.5 103.7 115. 1 115. 3 96.8 100.7 103.7 114.7 115.1 97.1 100.8 103.8 114.7 115.2 96.9 100.7 103.7 114.9 115.3 97,0 100.7 103.8 114.8 115.6 96.7 100.7 103. 8 115.0 115. 6 96.6 100.5 103.9 114.9 115.8 96.6 100.5 Metals and metal products 9 Heating equip m e n t _ _ _ _ Iron and steel Nonferrous metals 102.8 92.0 100.5 105.9 105. 7 91.7 101.4 115.2 105.7 91, 6 101.5 115.2 105.9 92.0 101. 3 116.2 105. 8 91.7 101.5 115.5 106.2 91.9 101.4 116.5 106.2 91.9 101.2 117.0 Nonmetallic mineral products 9 do Clay products, structural . __ do Concrete products do Gypsum products do Pulp, paper, an$ allied products. „ _ _ _do _ Paper do Rubber and products do Tires and tubes do 101. 5 104.2 100. 9 108. 2 99.0 103.6 92.5 89.0 101.7 105.1 101. 5 104 0 99.9 104.1 92.9 90.0 101.9 104.9 101.3 108.1 100.0 104. 0 92.9 89.7 102.0 104.9 101. 6 107.5 100.0 104.1 93.1 90.2 101.9 105. 3 101.7 105.7 99.9 104.1 93.0 90.2 101. 6 105.3 101.5 100.6 99.9 104.] 93.2 91.1 Textile products and apparel 9 — Apparel Cotton products. _ Maninade fiber textile products Silk products Wool products 101.2 102.8 99.6 95.8 117.3 103.0 101.8 103. 7 100. 2 95.0 134 3 104.3 101.6 103.2 99.9 96. 0 135.1 103.8 101.9 103.6 100.2 95.9 132.2 104.0 101.9 103.8 100.3 95.7 127.6 104. 4 107.4 100.7 105.6 109. 2 101. 0 107.7 100.8 105. 8 111.0 102.7 108.1 100.8 107.3 108.9 102.5 107.6 100.7 105. 6 111.0 102.5 $0. 973 .908 Chemicals and allied products 9 Chemicals, industrial Drugs and Pharmaceuticals _ Fats and oils, inedible _ _ _ _ _ __ Fertilizer materials Prepared paint _ - -do__ do _ do _ do __ do - do ._ do _ _ __ do _ do _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ do __ do . _ _ do _do _ do do do Tobacco prod, and bottled beverages 9 — -do___ Beverages, alcoholic ___do___ Cigarettes do Miscellaneous do Toys sporting goods do 107.7 93.6 110. 4 Farm products 9 do Fruits and vegetables, fresh and dried-do Grains _ _ _ _do _ Livestock and live poultry do 100.3 109.0 89.6 104.6 Commod. other than farm prod, and foods. _do 106.2 105.2 105. 6 106.1 105. 1 r 103. 3 '122.9 ' 119. 1 163.0 125.1 ' 109. 6 113.1 123.1 119. 1 161. 0 126.3 108.0 112, 1 105.0 118. 0 117.9 98.2 100.3 105.2 ' 105. 8 118.1 ' 118. 2 118.5 ' 118. 9 '98.7 98.4 100.2 ' 100. 9 105.9 118.3 118.9 98,7 100. 7 107.5 91.7 102.2 119.5 108.0 91.8 102.3 120.8 108.2 92.1 102.0 122.1 108.4 92.1 101.8 ' 122. 5 108.7 92.5 102. 0 123.2 102.0 105.6 102.0 101.4 101. 2 105. 2 93.7 91.1 102. 1 105.8 102.1 101.4 101. 3 105.4 94.1 91.1 102.1 105.9 102.2 101.4 101. 8 105. 4 94.3 91.1 102.4 102.3 106.3 106.0 102.7 102.7 101.4 102.2 102.3 ' 102. 7 107.1 106.0 95.4 95.4 94.4 94.4 102.4 106.5 102. 9 102.2 103.0 108. 0 95.4 94.4 91. < 143. 6 105.^ 101.9 104.6 101.0 91.3 147. 6 105.9 102.0 104.7 101.5 91.0 155.3 105.8 102.1 104.7 101.8 90.8 151.4 106. C 102.2 104.7 102.3 90.5 151.6 106.3 102.2 ' 104. 9 102, 6 89.9 140.9 ' 106. 4 102. 2 104.8 102.8 89.9 143.8 106.5 107.7 100.9 105.6 113. 2 103.0 107.9 101. 3 105.6 112.5 103.1 108.1 101 1 105,6 114.3 103. 2 108.0 101. 0 105.6 116.0 103.3 109.2 101.0 109.5 113. 1 103.3 109.4 101. 0 110.0 113. C 103.7 109.4 101. 0 110.0 115. 1 103. 7 109.8 101.0 110.0 116.0 103.7 $0.966 .904 $0. 961 $0.956 .901 $0.949 .896 $0. 949 .893 120.8 ' 118. 4 148.8 122.4 108.4 110.9 PURCHASING POWER OF THE DOLLAR As measured byWholesale prices Consumer prices 1957-59—$! 00 do $0. 995 .925 $0. 97 .91 $0. 97 .91 'Revised. *> Preliminary * Annual averages computed by QBE. cfFor actual wholesale prices of individual commodities, see respective commodities. .90 .90 O Goods to users, including raw foods and fuels. $0. 948 '$0.947 .889 .888 $0. 946 9 Includes data not shown separately. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS July 1966 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 1965 1965 May Annual .8-9 June July Aug. 1966 Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June '6,066 '6,372 6,936 CONSTRUCTION AND REAL ESTATE CONSTRUCTION PUT IN PLACE f ...mil.. $_. 66, 221 71, 903 6,197 6,768 6,768 6, 806 6, 789 6,754 6,486 6,010 5, 065 4,650 5, 418 Private total 9 -: • do____ Residential (nonfarm) do New housing units __do Nonresidential buildings, except farm and public utilities total 9 mil. $__ Industrial ~• do Commercial do Farm construction - - _-do Public utilities -_ _ - — do 45,914 26, 507 20, 612 49,999 26, 689 20, 765 4, 319 2, 371 1,728 4,647 2, 630 1, 935 4,587 2, 591 2,019 4, 623 2,527 2, 009 4,607 2,450 1,955 4, 606 2,370 1,897 4,530 2, 283 1,836 4,381 2,138 1, 723 3, 651 1, 843 1,483 3,389 1,627 1,315 3,861 '4,308 '4,454* 1, 873 ' 2, 191 ' 2, 364 1, 443 '1,620 ' 1, 731 12, 998 3,572 5,406 1,221 4,850 16, 521 5,086 6,704 1,195 5, 178 1, 382 440 534 95 435 1,423 440 560 102 456 1,397 422 548 109 454 1,488 438 615 112 465 1,549 478 646 107 465 1,605 478 678 104 487 1,605 500 682 99 500 1,635 575 640 95 466 1,302 442 510 92 367 1,266 453 451 91 354 1, 452 511 530 92 395 Public, total 9 —.do 20, 307 21,904 1, 878 2,121 2,181 2, 183 2, 182 2,148 1,956 1,629 1, 414 1,261 1, 557 _do -do do do 7,052 474 968 7,144 7,684 464 883 7,539 658 32 77 645 708 40 83 778 696 44 78 880 703 45 86 851 722 48 91 825 728 50 82 799 687 46 88 666 637 42 63 468 588 38 54 362 556 37 52 277 618 38 69 436 New construction (unadjusted), total ----- Buildings (excluding military) Residential Military facilities Highways and streets -~ New construction (seasonally adjusted at annual rates), total mil. $__ Private total 9 - do Residential (nonfarm) do Nonresidential buildings, except farm and public utilities total 9 mil. $ Industrial do Commercial _ _ _ do ._ Farm construction do Public utilities - - - do_ __ Public, total 9 Buildings (excluding military) Residential Military facilities Highways and streets - - do do_ __ do____ do - - __do__^_ 4,^717 2,556 1,870 ' 1, 546 '565 '550 91 431 1, 493 529 520 96 '458 (0 0) 0) 1, 758 ' 1, 918 2,219 x 678 41 66 538 102 478 0) 628 796 48 0 751 ' 715 43 71,973 71, 756 70,358 70,863 72,830 72, 687 74,039 76,046 76,055 77,017 78, 140 '76,844 '74,087 73, 697 50, 132 50, 317 49, 122 49, 222 50, 167 50, 084 51,209 53, 445 53, 285 54,290 55,066 '54,347 '51,790 51,210 27, 070 27, 224 26, 983 26, 621 26, 413 26,343 26,243 26, 684 27, 460 27, 463 27,279 '27,437 '26 992 26, 402 16,390 5, 416 6, 091 1, 201 5,034 16, 300 5,426 6,199 1, 196 5, 187 15, 406 4,907 5,882 1, 188 5,185 15, 949 4, 973 6,239 1,186 5,142 16, 984 5,321 6,977 1,186 5,208 16, 923 5,068 7, 056 1,185 5,196 17,839 5,291 7,706 1,183 5,429 19, 551 6, 250 8,017 1, 182 5,412 18, 812 5,987 7, 846 1,185 5,220 19, 388 6,629 7,294 1,190 5, 512 20, 495 '19,572 17,764 7,073 ' 7, 175 6, 511 7,672 ' 7, 097 5, 932 1,194 1,197 1,201 5,409 5,458 ' 5, 301 0) 0) 0) 1,205 5, 421 21,841 21,439 21,236 21, 641 22, 663 22, 603 22, 830 22, 601 22,770 22, 727 23, 074 22, 497 '22,297 7,536 395 887 7,512 7, 315 451 834 7, 523 7, 382 471 980 7,499 7,609 472 910 7,494 8,187 505 1,025 7,689 8,311 522 832 7, 734 8,382 525 967 7, 398 «, 196 522 760 7,559 8, 404 524 733 7,507 8,357 529 823 7, 457 '8,383 530 1, 009 7, 409 '8,149 535 887 7,360 22,487 '8,194 8,223 535 0) 0) (0 7,309 , 7,259 CONSTRUCTION CONTRACTS Construction contracts in 48 States (F. W. Dodge Co.): Valuation total mil. $ 247,299 49,831 4,864 4, 625 4, 795 4,265 4,153 4,356 3,745 3,698 3,374 3, 270 4,737 5,098 Index (mo. data seas, adj.)— __ -1957-59 =100. _ 3 137 144 145 139 149 139 147 147 141 153 149 144 158 161 156 Public ownership _ _ _mil. $ Private ownership '.-do _ _ By type of building: Nonresidential - do Residential • _ do Non-building construction do New construction: Advance planning (EN R) §___ _ __do____ Concrete pavement awards: Total thous. sq. yds Airports do Roads - do____ Streets and alleys do Miscellaneous do_ _ 215,371 2 31,928 16,330 33, 501 1. 517 3,348 1, 553 3, 072 1,750 3,045 1,313 2,952 1,332 2,821 1, 294 3,061 1, 163 2, 582 1,304 2,395 1,125 2,249 1,066 2,204 1,463 3,274 1,574 3,524 1, 902 3,230 2 15, 495 2 20, 561 2 11, 244 17, 470 21,461 10,900 I 775 2, 074 1,015 1,551 2,080 993 1,691 1,952 1, 151 1,507 1, 971 788 1,464 1, 756 934 1,582 1,897 877 1,328 1,696 721 1,433 1,446 819 1, 177 1, 290 906 1,259 1,299 712 1,726 2,004 1, 007 1,883 2,081 1, 134 1,826 1,970 1,335 2,962 4, 174 3, 215 3,714 3,915 3, 895 4,618 5,707 3,384 3,942 4,608 3,686 3,578 5,132 44,405 45,625 123, 768 5,352 89,872 25,578 2, 967 125, 580 4, 410 86,779 29, 016 5,376 New housing units started: Unadjusted: Total, incl. farm (private and public) — thous -. 1, 590. 7 One-family structures do 973.0 Privately owned do 1,557.4 1, 542. 7 963. 5 1,505.0 162.1 102.3 157. 5 162.3 99.9 155.5 143.9 94.1 141. 3 138.0 88.5 134.7 125.9 80.0 124.3 135.7 87.2 133. 6 118.3 71.4 116.1 103.2 59.9 102.3 87.3 48.2 84.6 81.0 46.8 78.2 130. 9 ' 80. 9 126.3 1,563.7 1, 117. 7 1, 530. 4 1, 520. 4 1, 067. 5 1, 482. 7 159.8 110.4 155. 2 159.7 114. 3 152. 8 141. 6 95.1 139. 0 136.2 94.8 132.8 124.3 87.8 122.7 133. 0 94.8 130.9 117. 1 78.8 114. 9 101.6 75.9 100.8 86. 3 61.5 83.7 79. 5 55.4 76.7 128. 7 ' 146. 9 ' 133. 8 90.0 ' 91. 4 ' 106. 6 124.1 '144. 8 '129.9 128.5 1,516 1,501 1,566 1,539 1,473 1, 447 1, 427 1, 409 1,453 1,436 1,411 1, 380 1,547 1, 531 1, 769 1,735 1,611 1,585 1,374 1,349 ' 1, 502 '1,295 ' 1, 481 ' 1, 264 1, 288 1,264 ' 1, 241 4-1,243 r 1,245 ' 1, 234 r 1, 228 '710 '709 1, 180 '678 116 117 29,147 1, 329 20,831 5,639 1,347 33, 048 857 20,692 9,549 1, 950 34, 455 1,601 22,421 8, 991 1,443 4, 902 25 684 513 21, 298 3,161 711 HOUSING STARTS AND PERMITS Total nonfarm (private and public) In metropolitan areas Privately owned Seasonally adjusted at annual rates: Total including farm (private only) Total nonfarm (private only) do do __ do do do New private housing units authorized by bldg. permits (12,000 permit-issuing places) : Seasonally adjusted at annual rates: Total thous__ One-family structures do 1, 286 720 '710 4 r 720 116 114 '698 '1,244 ' 1, 280 '1,292 '731 ' 727 « 724 ' 1, 255 ' 1, 197 '652 '711 1,569 1, 538 ' 149. 2 ' 137. 1 ' 95. 2 89. 4 ' 147. 1 '133.2 ' 1, 268 '1,185 ' 743 '660 130.9 127.7 125. 3 '1,098 '596 941 574 120 CONSTRUCTION COST INDEXES Dept. of Commerce composite American Appraisal Co., The: Average 30 cities Atlanta New York San Francisco St. Louis 1957-59=100 1913=100 do do do do Associated General Contractors (building only) 1957-59 =100__ 112 116 802 878 888 792 785 824 904 925 814 808 818 901 917 804 810 820 901 917 804 809 825 907 917 804 809 119 123 122 123 124 ' Revised. * Not yet available; estimate included in total. 2 Annual total includes 3 revisions not distributed to months. Computed from cumulative valuation total. * Revisions for Jan.-Apr. 1965 (thous.): Total—1,273; 1,226; 1,245; 1,204; one-family structures—737; 703; 698; 697. 116 827 908 917 804 809 829 908 939 834 809 117 117 834 909 940 834 805 835 909 940 834 815 118 837 909 941 837 817 118 840 913 945 839 821 118 118 119 119 843 916 946 840 822 845 917 949 841 830 854 926 954 852 836 858 927 954 852 853 127 126125 124 124 124 124 124 124 124 124 f Revised series. Monthly data for 1962-64 appear on p. 40 of the May 1966 SURVEY. 9Includes data not shown separately. §Data for June, Sept., and Dec. 1965 and Mar. and June 1986 are for 5 weeks; other months, 4 weeks. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS S-10 1964 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1965 July 1966 1965 Annual June May July 1966 Sept. Aug. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan., Feb. Mar. Apr. June . May CONSTRUCTION AND REAL ESTATE—Continued CONSTRUCTION COST INDEXES— Con. E. H. Boeckh and Associates: 1 Average, 20 cities: All t vpes combined_ 1957-59 = 100. . Ap'artments, hotels, office buildings do Commercial and factory buildings do Residences '_ _ . '. do Engineering News-Record: Building -do Construction _ do Bu. of Public Roads—Highway construction: Composite (avg for year or qtr.) _ 1957 -59= 100. _ 113.4 114.6 113.4 111.6 117.2 118. 5 117. 2 115.2 116.1 117.5 116.1 114.1 117.2 118.4 117. 3 115.0 118.0 119.2 118.1 116.0 118.2 119.4 118.3 116.1 118.4 119.7 118.5 116.4 118.8 120.0 118.8 117.0 118.9 120.1 118.9 117.0 119.5 120.7 119.5 117.6 119.7 121.1 119.8 117.1 119.5 120.6 119.5 117.6 119.8 120.8 119.8 118 0 120.3 121.4 120.3 118 7 121 2 122.3 121 1 119 4 116.1 123.2 118.9 127.8 117.8 126.0 118.8 127. 6 119.1 128.6 119.5 129.5 120.1 129.8 120.4 129.8 120.2 129. 7 120.4 130. 0 120. 5 130.0 121.7 131. 2 122. 0 131. 4 123.1 132.4 123 7 1124 5 133.4 i 135. 4 102.0 105.7 152.6 157.1 106.9 106.7 106.6 109 0 CONSTRUCTION MATERIALS Output index: Composite, unadjusted 9 Seasonally adjusted - .1947-49 =100. . do Iron and steel products, unadjusted Lumber and wood products, unadj Portland cement , unadjusted do do - do 159.6 148.9 171.2 160.3 159.5 165.6 176.7 160.8 171.0 164.1 165.9 146.8 150.0 157.2 144.9 168.8 134. 8 144. 4 136.4 ' 144. 2 148.0 151 4 103. 6 101.6 154. 2 151. 9 183.2 161.1 157.5 186.2 165.9 155.5 207.3 170.0 161.9 233.2 163.6 149.1 236.2 187.5 167.5 246.7 161.6 173.8 224. 5 159.8 166. 3 235.8 143, 6 159.5 188.1 148.0 156.6 150.2 182.1 188.9 102.1 16.6 180 10.4 15.7 154 15.1 165 17.3 186 16.6 189 15.1 192 14.5 222 13.3 219 113.6 170.5 177. 2 ' 136. 8 r 155 3 T 189.9 178 4 172.2 189.0 167 8 184.7 17.7 160 16.0 168 10.1 12.8 133 13.0 127 111 9.4 98 REAL ESTATE Mortgage applications for new home construction: Applications for FHA commitments thous. units.. Seasonally adjusted annual ratesj do Requests for V A appraisals . . - do Seasonally adjusted annual ratesf do 113 Home mortgages insured or guaranteed by— Fed Hous Adm * Face amount mil. $ 6, 573. 22 7, 464. 59 515. 58 2, 852. 21 2,652.23 182. 49 Vet Adm * Face amount§ do Federal Home Loan Banks, outstanding advances 5,997 5,227 to member institutions, end of period mil. $_. 5,325 New mortgage loans of all savings and loan associations estimated total mil $ By purpose of loan: Home construction. do Home purchase ' . - - do All other purposes do Fire losses (on bldgs contents etc ) mil $ 8.4 97 8.9 95 5.9 89 13.8 179 5.4 72 9.1 92 8.7 89 755. 77 254. 42 714.36 245.00 706. 02 242.64 698.25 227.87 727. 41 236.31 511. 89 189. 76 607.09 163.04 515. 71 131.82 497. 79 166. 66 557. 09 5,586 5,793 5,770 5,802 5,826 5,724 5,997 5,898 5,739 5,687 6,516 6,704 6,783 1,961 1,825 1,996 1, 888 1,663 ••430 '798 660 383 759 521 123. 59 117.47 2,399 2,186 2, 187 2,079 526 861 635 614 1,099 520 1,063 511 1,099 490 9,578 10, 248 9,753 9,521 603 686 1 367 13 1 455 63 116. 92 13.6 214 6.7 105 757. 29 244. 70 2,022 116 664 6.8 100 646. 67 217. 21 23,847 36 921 108 620 7.2 94 610. 77 217.36 6 515 ' 5, 922 10,397 r 10, 697 7,593 * 7, 228 24, 505 New nonfarm mortgages recorded ($20,000 and under) estimated total mil $ Nonfarm foreclosures number 8.6 95 9.7 100 119. 54 577 130. 52 1, 549 1,554 1, 998 1,015 574 487 910 564 431 834 560 491 865 640 322 640 587 307 645 602 454 814 730 9,806 9,577 9,642 10, 421 9, 375 9, 211 10, 179 108. 72 112 28 124.04 120. 40 131. 10 133. 36 138 126 143 131 142 121 144 131 140 124 115. 44 111. 78 r DOMESTIC TRADE ADVERTISING Printers' Ink advertising index, seas, adj.: Combined index. 1957—59 — 100 Business papers do Magazines...... ._ do Newspapers. _ —do Radio (network) Television (network) _ Television advertising: Network (major national networks): _do___ _ ......do 125 112 136 103 89 103 157 136 122 147 109 92 108 175 135 126 145 104 108 119 171 135 114 145 110 99 112 178 135 122 151 108 77 101 173 141 129 160 108 91 89 178 279 2 1 145 9 1 260 3 99 1 17 3 96 5 409 2 88 7 360 6 56.6 234.8 209.5 Foods, soft drinks, confectionery do 27.9 103.2 112.0 Soaps, cleansers, etc.. do 145.4 31.0 146.8 Smoking materials. ... do 259.8 ....... 57.7 229.2 Another....—. — do.— Spot (natl. and regional, cooperating stations): 273 6 Gross time costs total mil $ 1 016 0 1 075 5 95 38 9 38 5 207.4 48.1 Drugs and toiletries .do 192.9 377.7 97.7 Foods, soft drinks, confectionery do 352.7 25 9 100 4 98 5 13 4 48 7 50 2 302 4 79.1 283 2 All other do NTfit timA 0091*4 fftfral mil $ Magazine advertising (general and natl. farm magazines): Cost, total mil.$-. Apparel and accessories .; do Automotive, incl. accessories _do.___ Building materials do. ; Drugs and toiletries . ... __do___ Foods, soft drinks, confectionery .do 996.8 1,076.9 64.8 61.8 111.7 110.7 on A 27. 1 134. 8 133. 9 103. 7 6.6 11. 6 ! 5.9 69.3 58.3 Beer, wine, liquors do 9.2 71.5 Household equip. , supplies, furnishings. . do. . . 71.7 4.9 48.4 50.5 Industrial materials _ _ do. _ _ 2. 7 21.7 16.0 Soaps, cleansers, etc.. do... 41.6 3.6 Smoking materials _ do... 38.3 35.2 Allother do... 365. 6 320.9 ' Revised. »Index as of July 1,1966: Building, 124.6; construction, 137.4. t Copyrighted data; see last paragraph of headnote, p. S-l. 9 Includes data for items not shown separately. 86.6 2.4 9 0 68.7 .9 e O t) A O «> g A 6.0 4.6 6.1 4.2 1.4 4.3 27.5 3.3 24.3 3.8 3.9 65.3 6.6 A A 1 7 Q (\ 138 126 145 113 78 118 183 147 112 97 126 174 151 112 108 110 187 159 111 109 102 182 156 115 96 125 184 153 118 84 130 175 269.2 16 3 91 0 52.0 26.8 29.3 53.8 401 5 44 4 123 9 67 3 28.6 46 7 90.6 354.5 24.0 116.3 72.2 30.3 248 3 10 1 51.1 82.7 26 4 10 5 67.5 303 9 10 6 56.4 107.1 ......... 25 8 11 5 92.5 290.2 12.9 57.0 107.8 26.3 12.7 73.6 90.0 10.1 0 /» o n in 1 a e Q1 3.2 5.2 6.0 5.00 __...— 120.5 8.0 1A Q 0 t\ 117.8 5.9 1K O 12 0 9 9 19 ^ 1A Q 7.3 8.5 6.5 9. 2 9.1 5.7 iq -i 70.6 i 66 77 83.1 4.0 11 2 2 3 91 10 7 11.3 5.4 3.9 2.4 3.8 91.5 3.9 7 9 12 11 9 n 64.6 1.7 O Q 1 R 101.9 6.8 11 5 34 10 8 12 2 5.2 7.6 3.6 3.0 3.3 4.0 2.9 11 9 9 i % 14 1 2.6 2.5 3.4 2.2 3.9 3.4 3.7 3.5. 36.4 31.0 38.8 31.3 38.6 26.7 32.7 21.3 J Revised seasonally adjusted data for 1958-64 will be shown later. § Data include guaranteed direct loans sold. 3.4 3.1 • - .... 112.4 9.2 12 5 47 11 1 10 9 6.0 8.9 4.2 17 3.0 40.2 110.4 6.7 11 8 3.9 12.0 10 6 7.0 10.0 4.8 16 3.5 38.5 ;____ SURVEY OF CUEEENT BUSINESS July 1966 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1966 1965 1965 1964 S-ll May Annual June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May 282.3 79.4 202.9 16.2 5.9 26.0 154.8 282.4 81.6 200.8 16.0 6.6 27.2 151.0 308.9 87.0 221.8 18.7 5.5 31.5 166.2 June DOMESTIC TRADE—Continued ADVERTISING— Continued Newspaper advertising linage (52 cities): Total . mil. lines Classified do. Display, total . do Automotive _ do Financial — do General do Retail do 2,973.5 787.1 2, 186. 3 159.7 60.9 292.5 1,673.2 3, 164. 6 865.6 2,298.9 170.4 63.4 288.5 1,776.7 286.0 79.9 206.0 16.9 5.0 28.5 155.6 266.0 75.7 190.3 17.3 5.4 24.9 142.7 238. 7 74,1 164.6 13.4 5.7 18.2 127.3 261.4 79.1 182.3 13.3 3.9 18.1 147.1 271.9 72.9 198.9 13.2 4.6 27.4 153.8 296.3 78.4 217.9 18.8 5.4 30.6 163.2 292.4 71.8 220.7 14.6 5.2 28.7 172. 2 285.4 62.0 223.4 9.6 5.4 22.9 185.6 240.0 73.7 166.3 12.8 7.8 18.8 126. 8 231.0 69.5 161.5 13.1 4.7 22.1 121.7 mil. $._ 261,630 RETAIL TRADE All retail stores: t Estimated sales (unadj.), total f 283,950 23,820 23,825 24,129 22,989 22, 732 25,067 25, 158 30,601 22, 054 21, 260 24, 712 '25,477 '24,847 125,395 84,173 48,730 45,799 2,931 93, 718 56, 266 53,217 3,049 8, 144 5,006 4,729 277 8,362 5,094 4,812 282 '8,066 4,821 4,540 281 7,448 4,243 3,984 259 7,082 3,784 3,540 244 8,413 4,994 4, 719 275 8,390 4,954 4,689 265 8,976 4,835 4,516 319 6,985 4,300 4,089 211 6,998 4,366 4,166 200 8,606 '8,372 ' 8, 097 i1 8, 512 5,430 ' 5, 138 ' 4, 807 5, 018 5,169 ' 4, 848 4,531 '290 276 261 Furniture and appliance group 9 do_ 13,090 Furniture, homefurnishings stores do 8,079 Household appliance, TV, radio . do __ 4,199 13,737 8,538 4,223 1,044 666 312 1,106 708 329 1,129 724 335 1,139 724 347 1,201 712 393 1,272 790 394 1,318 819 397 1,619 941 546 1, 058 645 342 1,015 614 335 1, 150 ' 1, 097 ' 1, 129 '1,213 720 714 '699 344 ' 336 368 Lumber, building, hardware group do Lumber, bldg. materials dealers cT— do_ __ Hardware stored do 11,340 8,690 2,650 12,115 9,302 2,813 1,090 839 251 1,143 900 243 1,160 916 244 1, 119 889 230 1,102 865 237 1,132 885 247 1,098 846 252 1,084 729 355 ' 817 619 198 774 594 180 177,457 15,282 3, 121 5,944 3,626 2,591 190,232 15, 752 3,258 6,243 3,680 2,571 15,676 1,256 256 496 282 222 15,463 1,208 268 456 275 209 16,063 1, 145 236 440 278 191 15,541 1,173 226 443 309 195 15,650 1,324 250 496 348 230 16, 654 1,360 280 553 310 217 16, 768 1,455 299 602 341 213 do do do do. do. ... 8,613 19, 577 62,864 57,272 20,269 9,335 21, 423 66, 920 61, 068 21, 765 751 1,831 5,496 5,010 1,844 746 1,865 5,477 4,986 1,895 766 2,015 6,043 5,519 1,963 757 1,984 5,453 4,956 1,926 759 1,856 5,498 5,017 1,820 798 1,878 5,962 5,448 1,884 786 1,747 5,577 5,072 1,849 . 1,089 1,881 6,559 5,977 1,.889 778 1,708 5,600 5, 127 1,815 752 1, 618 5,348 4,874 1,667 798 1,809 5,808 5,297 1,827 General merchandise group 9 - do. Department stores do.___ Mail orderhouses (dept. store mdse.) .do Variety stores __ do. Liquor stores do 32,350 20,809 2,402 4,948 6,011 35,840 23,421 2,581 5,320 6,305 2,809 1,836 194 423 510 2,746 1,806 184 409 497 2,663 1,731 172 412 542 2,865 1,863 212 426 497 2,962 1,942 223 422 505 3,122 2,035 225 448 533 3,600 2, 344 328 484 561 5,644 3,745 358 888 826 2,375 1,564 166 313 496 2,285 1, 474 166 335 470 2,887 ' 3, 080 '3,035 13,150 1,892 ' 2, 007 ' 1, 996 i 2, 080 202 198 218 460 430 393 534 ' 541 496 25, 023 25, 263 25, 536 '24,949 '24,555 124,841 Durable goods stores 9 do Automotive group _ do _ Passenger car, other auto, dealers. ...do Tire, battery, accessory dealers. ..-— do Nondurable goods stores 9 — . do Apparel group _ do Men's and boys' wear stores.do. _ Women's apparel, accessory stores do Family and other apparel stores do Shoe stores do.. Drug and proprietary stores . Eating and drinking places Food group _ Grocery stores ... Gasoline service stations Estimated sales (seas, adj.), total f do 21, 625 il5, 069 14, 262 2,418 1,152 1,009 200 249 554 428 992 466 213 244 566 168 193 306 980 762 218 1,038 '794 '244 1,093 828 265 16, 106 '17,105 '16,750 116,883 1, 277 ' 1, 456 ' 1, 355 1 1, 366 '268 261 225 '604 567 544 292 '305 275 '279 235 233 '824 ' 1, 901 '6,075 ' 5, 559 '1,898 '825 1805 ' 1, 972 11 2, 021 ' 5, 747 5, 873 '5,238 15,369 ' 1, 963 i 2, 006 23,317 23,322 23,668 23,585 23,753 24.194 24,647 24,816 do__ do do. do.. 7,616 4,555 4,295 260 7,665 4,606 4,359 247 7,827 4,743 4,491 252 7,755 4,660 4,402 258 7,768 4,658 4,398 260 7,865 4,614 4,345 269 8,092 4,776 4,509 267 8,252 4,953 4,714 239 8,324 4,884 4,610 274 8,399 4,995 4,718 277 8,649 ' 7, 939 '7,532 5. 121 '4,580 4,306 4', 822 '4,302 4,046 260 299 '278 Furniture and appliance group 9 __ do.. Furniture, homefurnishings stores do__ Household appliance, TV, radio do 1,088 682 332 1,099 699 334 1,118 722 334 1,127 706 353 1,184 716 389 1,221 749 380 1, 218 . 1,207 756 735 378 366 1,208 759 378 1,220 730 405 1,249 ' 1, 202 '741 765 '379 405 1,183 740 368 1,004 776 228 1,011 783 228 1,016 782 234 1,002 768 234 1,002 765 237 1,021 775 246 1,074 819 255 1,070 825 245 1,149 896 253 1,114 862 252 1,150 895 255 1,034 '797 '237 998 755 243 Durable goods stores 9 Automotive group. ..___ Passenger car, other auto, dealers Tire, battery, accessory dealers Lumber, building, hardware group Lumber, bldg. materials dealers cf. Hardware stores do.. do do. Nondurable goods stores 9 Apparel group... _ Men's and boys' wear stores. Women's apparel, accessory stores, Family and other apparel stores Shoe stores _do_ do.. do .do.. do do. 15,701 1, 299 271 502 306 220 15,657 1,278 262 501 303 212 15,841 1,315 268 510 326 211 15,830 1,306 271 500 327 208 15,985 1,343 278 508 344 213 16,329 1,321 276 535 290 220 16.555 1,384 280 566 311 227 16,564 1,340 269 560 297 214 do do do do. do 755 1,769 5,497 5,021 1,811 760 1,769 5,534 5,053 1,824 775 1,812 5,571 5,076 1, 831 779 1,807 5,568 5,078 1,820 794 1,814 5,586 5, 097 1, 827 816 1,825 5, 788 5,271 1,843 818 1,810 5,757 5,235 1,860 828 1,875 .5,956 5,432 1,838 806 1,879 5, 783 5,278 1,907 806 1,915 5,879 5,359 1, 907 ' 816 1, 935 5,917 5,391 1, 907 '843 ' 1, 924 ' 5, 981 ' 5, 467 '1,927 837 1,916 5,930 5,428 1,936 General merchandise group 9 do Department stores do Mail order houses (dept. store mdse.) .do Variety stores _ do. Liquor stores . do 2,940 1, 909 215 450 530 2,894 1,885 211 442 525 2,961 1,936 ^ 219 443 527 2,988 1,961 211 448 513 3,043 1,982 223 452 530 3.055 1,978 220 459 531 3,199 2,087 235 469 543 3,069 2,019 209 433 533 3,230 2,119 243 451 560 3,225 2,127 223 457 561 3,225 ' 3, 194 2,119 ' 2, 099 224 220 453 459 '564 559 3,213 2,105 216 468 564 35, 285 15, 916 8, 123 2,372 2,587 35, 699 16,118 8,218 2,480 2, 602 35,977 16, 602 8,552 2, 535 2,634 19, 369 3,939 4,033 6,432 3,787 19,581 3,951 4,079 6,543 3,887 19,375 .3, 910 4,056 6, 445 3,837 Drug and proprietary stores _ . Eating and drinking places Food group Grocery stores Gasoline service stations Estimated inventories, end of year or month: f Book value (unadjusted), total f mil. $__ Durable goods stores 9 _. do Automotive group do Furniture and appliance group—. do Lumber, building, hardware group. _do_ ._ Nondurable goods stores 9 Apparel group Food group . General merchandise group Department stores do do do do____ do r 30, 181 12,854 5,578 2,227 2,461 32,903 14, 433 7,189 2, 312 2,427 33,277 15, 098 7,338 2,389 2,611 33, 087 32,935 32, 743 32, 527 33, 708 15, 002 14,918 14,317 13, 623 14, 016 7,308 6,615 5, 945 6,344 7,300 2,396 2,426 2,419 2,383 2,338 2, 590 2,547 2,520 2, 529 2,526 17,327 3,432 3,822 5,381 3, 174 18,470 3,677 4,074 5,831 3,466 18, 179 3,709 3,803 5,847 3,419 18, 085 3,631 3,803 5,825 3,378 18, 017 3,638 3,762 5,855 3,400 Book value (seas, adj.), total f do 31,130 33,957 32,823 33, 014 33,088 Durable goods stores 9 _ . _ do _ 13, 136 14,782 14, 566 14,546 14,592 Automotive group do 5,645 7,329 6,813 6,900 6,979 Furniture and appliance group do 2,272 2,359 2,383 2,393 2,357 Lumber, building, hardware group—do 2,512 2,535 2,525 2, 525 2,550 r Revised. i Advance estimate. tRevised sejries. Data reflect use of 3new sam pie (effective with data for Oct. 1965) based on definiti ons and (jlassificati ons acco rding to the 1963 Census of Business. See p. 20 ff . of the Feb. 19(56 SURVETr for data back to 1 959 for irifg, and trade inventories, total and retail inventories, See p. JL8 ff. oft!le April SURVEY for inventory-sales ratios, mfg. and trade sales, total, a nd retail sales baclj: to 1959 (revised ac- 18; 426 3,930 3,735 6,025 3,517 18,904 4,141 3,720 6,309 3,693 19,692 4,213 3,892 6,749 4,023 16, 699 16, 864 1,417 1,450 289 289 570 594 327 318 240 240 34, 771 32, 903 33, 103 34, 148 14, 533 14, 433 14,923 15, 480 6, 772 7,189 7,541 7,951 2,502 2,312 2,312 2,307 2,525 2,427 2,462 2,504 20,238 4,266 3,982 6,920 4,175 18,470 3,677 4,074 5,831 3,466 18,180 3,544 3,959 5,933 3,442 18, 668 3,753 3,945 6,071 3,546 i 7, 832 16, 887 '17,010 '17,023 117,009 1,421 1,377 '1,389 282 '279 277 582 '579 569 321 '308 299 223, 236 232 33,360 33,045 33, 296 33, 533 33,957 34,113 34, 427 34, 556 34, 737 35, 266 14, 819 14,621 14, 782 14, 774 14, 782 14,949 15, 113 15, 201 15,336 15, 813 7,768 7,213 7,036 7,250 7,329 7,304 7,484 7,315 7,361 7,365 2,401 2,393 2,335 2,383 2,359 2,398 2,383 2,389 2,458 2,530 2, 562 2,563 2,512 2,541 2,558 2, 532 2,532 2,558 2,507 2,534 count s receivalble data prior to (Dct. 1965are not ]presently availabl e) . Com plete det ails appear iii the Monthly Retail Trad e Report , Jan. 19(56 and su bsequent issues, a^Bailable firom the Burea u of the Census, Wash., I).C., 202 33. 9 In eludes dsita not silownseparately. cf Cornprises lumber yards, birilding nlaterials dealers, and paint, plumb ing, and electrical stores. SURVEY OF GUERENT BUSINESS S-12 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 1965 July 1966 1965 Annual May June July 1966 Sept. Aug. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May 18,759 3,867 19, 164 3, 844 4, 027 6, 501 3 803 19, 314 3,917 3, 981 3 805 19 355 3 904 4 012 6 479 3 802 19 401 3 915 4 019 6 523 3 875 19 453 3 966 4 040 6 508 3 869 June DOMESTIC TRADE—Continued RETAIL TRADE— Continued All retail storesf— Continued Estimated inventories, end of yr. or mo. f— Con. Book value (seas, adj.)— Continued Nondurable goods stores ? ___ mil. $__ Apparel group ____. do Food group do _ General merchandise group ._ __ _ do Department stores do Firms with 4 or more stores: Estimated sales (unadjusted), total do Firms with 11 or more storesrf Estimated sales (unadj ), total 9 1 do Apparel group 9 • --do Men's and boys' wear stores do Women's apparel accessory stores do Shoe stores --do Drug and proprietary stores do Eating and drinking places _ _ do __ Furniture and appliance group -do General merchandise group 9 Dept stores excl mail order sales Variety stores Grocery stores Lumber yards bldg materials dealers cf Tire battery accessory dealers ' Estimated sales (seas adj ) total 9 1 do __ do do do do do 17, 994 3,613 3,857 5,809 19, 175 3,871 4, 111 3,410 3,718 3,784 5,905 3,447 68, 306 « 73, 454 4,287 531 4,445 557 1,622 1,155 1,656 1,168 2, 300 1,891 1, 193 18, 541 3,541 18,496 3,842 3,804 6,055 3,575 6,048 3,553 3,903 3,735 6,004 3,503 5,960 5,898 6,096 5,899 362 47 136 98 181 162 98 351 45 128 97 183 167 103 314 38 120 82 189 170 97 337 36 125 89 183 172 99 26, 112 17, 593 2,065 1,401 2, 032 1,378 1, 982 1,334 2,135 1,431 26, 198 27, 725 2, 276 2, 221 1,242 1,312 2,029 1,677 1,126 23, 645 15,807 3,770 6,289 4,096 do Apparel group 9 do Men's and boys' wear stores do Women's apparel accessory stores do Shoe stores do Drug and proprietary stores do___ Eating and drinking places - _ - do____ Furniture and appliance group do General merchandise group 9 - -- —do Dept stores excl mail order sales do Variety stores do Grocery stores __do: Lumber yards bldg materials dealers cf do Tire battery accessory dealers do Sales by type of payment: Cash sales percent of total sales Installment sales do 18, 468 3, 810 3,792 6,035 315 315 2,497 3,899 3,815 328 2,142 18, 424 18, 514 6,040 3,542 3,608 19, 175 3,871 4, 111 6, 289 3,718 6,092 6, 432 6,591 9, 275 5,494 5,256 6 214 6 661 6 291 376 41 139 106 187 168 102 390 52 145 96 197 169 109 412 53 153 98 196 155 110 679 94 263 154 318 167 135 288 40 102 81 185 163 86 263 31 99 73 179 155 86 361 37 135 104 199 187 105 420 45 158 125 207 183 96 373 42 145 102 206 187 100 2,188 1,480 2,260 2,615 1,743 4,070 1, 707 1 162 1,636 1,087 2, 095 1, 416 2, 236 1,511 2, 220 1 516 326 2,249 3,848 3,812 1,522 347 2,451 3, 896 6, 092 386 2,241 2, 751 701 2,831 244 2, 311 6,443 262 2,216 316 2,416 368 2, 631 341 2, 336 119 123 121 114 108 121 108 134 93 84 116 124 124 6 044 6, 037 6,091 6, 162 6,248 6,209 6,373 6,445 6 475 6,598 6,610 6, 574 6,536 365 47 135 96 187 157 363 45 133 97 188 159 • 368 46 137 95 193 158 371 47 133 97 194 160 375 47 139 97 198 163 382 49 146 99 204 164 383 46 139 104 203 160 374 45 143 100 206 168 392 49 146 106 199 180 407 47 156 104 205 179 386 43 144 106 208 193 382 45 150 100 213 184 382 43 146 102 215 181 2, 132 1 418 2,112 1,413 2,172 1,458 2, 216 1,506 2, 250 1,515 2, 203 1,469 2,342 2,217 1,516 2, 330 1, 564 2,392 2,363 2,295 1,587 2, 499 371 1,553 2,421 359 2,506 2, 336 1,576 2, 378 366 2,422 123 120 136 120 117 18, 193 7,120 11, 073 8, 269 17, 486 '16,912 6,838 * 6, 583 10, 648 r 10. 329 7, 786 ' 7, 471 9, 700 * 9, 441 16,865 6,578 17, 180 6,891 10, 289 17, 034 6,916 10, 118 17, 418 9, 215 9,201 17, 207 '17,419 7, 039 r 7, 020 10, 168 '10 399 7, 842 ' 7, 881 9, 365 '9,538 1,577 348 2,323 353 2,339 371 2,325 116 120 107 94 18 193 7,120 11 073 8 269 9 924 16, 780 17,166 6,943 17 034 6 916 10 118 7 833 9 201 16,824 6.722 112 do do do Department stores: Ratio of collections to accounts receivable: Charge accounts percent 322 342 2,290 All retail stores, accounts receivable, end of yr. or mo. : Total (unadiusted) t mil $ Durable goods stores do iNonauraD e g s i Total (seasonally adjusted) t Durable goods stores Nondurable Roods stores 18, 257 3, 762 337 2,302 2,301 342 2,303 109 114 338 108 6,926 9, 854 7,907 8, 873 10, 102 7,825 8,999 10, 223 8, 040 9, 126 7,965 342 9,924 7,833 362 49 17 49 18 48 17 51 18 50 17 49 18 50 18 50 18 50 18 52 18 48 18 43 39 18 43 38 19 43 39 18 44 37 19 44 37 19 44 38 18 42 39 19 42 40 18 43 39 18 46 37 17 43 36 21 1,625 370 2,449 10 287 7, 533 9,332 6,954 10, 464 7,895 9,523 EMPLOYMENT AND POPULATION POPULATION Population, U.S. (incl. Alaska and Hawaii): Total, incl. armed forces overseas mil__ 1 192. 12 EMPLOYMENT Noninstitutional population, est. number 14 years 134. 14 of age and over, total, unadj mil 1194.57 194. 17 194.37 194. 57 194. 79 195. 01 195. 24 195.45 195. 64 195. 83 196. 00 196. 16 196. 34 196. 50 196. 67 136.24 135.98 136. 16 136. 25 136.47 136. 67 136.86 137.04 137.23 137.39 137. 56 137. 74 137. 91 o 138. 10 138.28 78,713 75, 953 73, 196 4, 954 68,242 78, 598 75, 803 72, 837 4, 128 68, 709 78, 477 75, 636 72, 749 3,645 69,103 77,409 74,519 71,229 3,577 67, 652 77,632 74, 708 71, 551 3,612 67,939 78, 034 75, 060 72, 023 3,780 68, 244 78, 914 75, 906 73, 105 4,204 68,900 79, 751 76, 706 73,764 4,292 69, 472 82,700 79, 601 75,731 5,187 70, 543 2,966 2, 888 600 531 3.9 3.8 58,445 58.749 76,111 76,567 72,914 73,441 4,273 4,486 68, 641 68,955 3,197 3,126 644 660 3,290 678 4.4 59,985 76,754 73, 715 4,429 69, 286 3,039 661 3,158 685 4.2 59, 930 76,355 73, 521 4,442 69, 079 2, 834 579 3,037 749 4.0 59, 707 76, 341 73, 435 4,363 69,072 2, 906 588 2,802 779 3.7 58, 994 76,666 73, 799 4,482 69, 317 2, 867 603 2,942 602 3.8 58, 349 76, 268 73,231 4,076 69, 155 3,037 536 3,870 466 4.9 55, 575 77, 086 73, 997 4,238 69, 759 3,089 476 4.1 2.6 4.0 12.9 4.0 2.6 3.8 12.0 3.7 2.6 3.6 10. 9 3.8 2.6 3.6 11.7 3.7 2.4 3.6 12.0 4.0 2.4 4.0 13.4 4.0 2.6 3.9 12.3 thous__ do_ do ___do do 76,971 74, 233 70, 357 4,761 65,596 78,357 75, 635 72,179 4,585 67, 594 78,425 80, 683 75, 741 78, 003 72, 407 73, 716 5,622 5, 128 67, 278 68, 094 81, 150 78,457 74, 854 5,626 69, 228 80, 163 77,470 74, 212 5,136 69,077 78,044 75,321 72, 446 4,778 67, 668 Unemployed (all civilian workers) _ -do __ Long-term (15 weeks and over)_____ do Percent of civilian labor force Not in labor force .... thous.. Civilian labor force, seasonally adj© do Employed, total do Agricultural employment _ - i _ _ do Nonagricultural employment do Unemployed (all civilian workers) do Long-term (15 weeks and over) do Rates: t All civilian workers _ Men, 20 years of age and over Women, 20 years of age and over Both sexes, 14-19 years of age____ 3,876 973 5.2 57, 172 3,456 755 4.6 57,884 3,335 804 4.4 57,556 75, 306 71, 816 4,869 66,947 3,490 715 4,287 762 5.5 55,477 75, 652 72, 085 4,651 67, 434 3,567 779 3,602 587 4.6 55, 102 76, 054 72, 618 4,639 67, 979 3,436 685 3, 258 612 4.2 56, 310 75, 772 72, 387 4,572 67, 815 3,385 717 2,875 2,757 609 588 3.6 3.8 58,626 58,149 75, 611 75,846 72, 297 72, 561 4, 418 4, 551 67, 879 68, 010 3,314 3,285 728 697 5.2 3.9 5.2 14.7 4.6 3.2 4.5 13.6 4.6 3.3 4.4 14.0 4.7 3.2 4.8 14.0 4.5 3.2 4.4 13.4 4.5 3.1 4.4 12.9 Total labor force, incl. armed forces. Civilian labor force, total __ _ Employed, total Agricultural employment Nonagricultural employment 'Revised. «Corrected. * As of July 1. fSee corresponding note on p. S-ll. 9 Includes data not shown separately. cf Comprises lumber yards/building materials dealers, and paint, plumbing, and electrical stores. 4.4 3.0 4.2 13.2 4.3 2.9 4.2 13.2 4.2 2.8 4.3 12.3 0 Effective with the Feb. 1966 SURVEY, data reflect revised seasonal factors; comparable data for earlier periods appear in the Feb. 1966 BLS report, Employment and Earnings and Monthly Report on the Labor Force, GPO, Wash., D.C. 20402. 1 Unemployed in each group as percent of that group. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS July 1966 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 | 1965 1965 May Annual S-13 June July Aug. 1966 Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June P EMPLOYMENT AND POPULATION—Continued EMPLOYMENT— Continued Employees on -payrolls (nonagricultural estab.) :f Total unadjusted! ._thous Manufacturing establishments Durable goods industries Nondurable goods industries .... Mining, total 9 Metal mining Coalmining —Crude petroleum and natural gas _ do_ _' do _ _ _ do. do do do do 60, 444 60,000 60,848 60, 694 60, 960 61,515 61, 786 62 029 62, 660 61 041 61 212 61 826 62 500 '63 028 63 966 17, 259 9 813 7, 446 17 984 10 379 7,604 17, 745 10 279 7,466 18, 027 10 437 7,590 18, 016 10 416 7,600 18, 211 10 410 7, 801 18, 428 10 608 7,820 18, 412 10 623 7, 789 18 443 10 686 7', 757 18,415 10 718 7, 697 18 274 10 697 7,577 18 457 10 812 1, 645 18 588 r!8 709 '18 843 10 910 '11 027 '11 121 7,678 ' 7, 682 ' 7, 722 19 135 11 276 7,859 633 628 629 640 641 640 627 629 631 628 617 613 85 140 288 84 136 281 3,476 4,083 749 248 3,575 4,098 750 252 978 229 740 627 986 233 755 634 12, 437 3,213 9,224 3,029 8,905 10 024 12,596 3,269 9,327 3,062 9, 008 10 033 60, 032 17,835 10, 266 79 148 289 83 142 282 83 142 282 3,056 3,947 756 267 3,211 4,031 737 267 920 213 706 614 84 142 288 84 139 290 3,223 4,008 737 270 3,412 4,070 747 263 965 231 737 620 946 227 731 614 12, 132 3, 173 8,959 2,964 8, 569 9 595 12, 588 3, 263 9,325 3, 044 8,907 10, 051 58,156 17,259 9,813 247 602 406 612 1,231 60, 444 17, 984 10,379 429 621 1,292 Fabricated metal products. _ ... do__ Machinery ___ ~_ do Electrical equipment and supplies. _ .do. _ _ _ 1, 187 1,606 1,548 Transportation equipment do. _ _ _ Instruments and related products____do_.__ Miscellaneous manufacturing ind— _ _ do_ _ 1,605 369 398 C ontract construction _ do Transportation and public utilities 9-----do_ __ Railroad transportation do Local and interur ban passenger transit., do . _ _ r 58, 156 615 83 143 278 84 145 279 84 144 281 83 143 277 84 143 275 84 142 275 3,495 4,112 741 270 3,465 4,104 738 271 3,375 4,091 730 270 3,203 4,087 733 273 2,974 4, 025 718 273 2,851 4,034 710 272 3,015 4, 054 985 234 756 639 1,001 1,005 1,001 12, 583 3, 301 9 282 3,098 9,081 9 716 12, 574 3,312 9,262 3,102 9,062 9 698 60,501 18, 032 10, 424 236 602 430 618 1,317 60, 621 18, 072 10, 476 428 613 1,285 60,290 17,943 10, 345 234 601 428 612 1,306 427 618 1,318 1,260 1,714 1,672 1,251 1, 692 1, 647 1,259 1,707 1,665 1, 269 1,728 1,677 1,740 385 424 1,722 378 416 1,735 383 415 711 272 '585 84 105 274 644 r Q2Q 85 143 274 _ '3,191 ' 3, 311 3 559 r 4, 075 ' 4, 111 4 165 '714 718 267 '268 238 742 622 240 744 618 993 243 745 621 954 242 745 619 962 246 748 618 970 248 753 619 12,639 3,307 9,332 3,073 9,039 10, 102 12, 736 3,321 9,415 3,066 9, 073 10, 301 12, 960 3,326 9,634 3,062 9,054 10, 413 13, 638 3,345 10, 293 3,064 9, 046 10,579 12, 716 3,303 9, 413 3, 049 8,959 10 427 12, 617 3,299 9,318 3,054 9,030 10, 556 12, 700 3,305 9,395 3, 075 9,112 10 667 60, 756 18, 098 10,494 61,472 61,884 18,321 18, 429 10,615* 10, 707 244 243 613 623 435 442 627 636 1,269 1,274 62, 148 18,522 10, 805 430 622 1,308 61,001 18, 163 10,523 243 605 432 624 1,284 447 644 1,283 62,501 18,691 10, 919 255 630 448 640 1,288 62, 918 '62,935 '63,060 18, 780 18,860 '18,939 10, 996 rll, 056 '11,107 257 261 '267 636 628 '619 451 451 456 643 ••640 634 1,294 1,303 ' 1, 310 1, 263 1,728 1,683 1,269 1,736 1,697 1,274 1,745 1,722 1,294 1,768 1,741 1,3001,771 1, 769 1,314 1,783 1,794 1,327 1,798 1,826 1,334 1, 800 1,843 1,335 ' 1, 809 >• 1,880 ' 1, 331 1,339 '1,826 ' 1, 898 1,847 1,927 1, 740 389 418 1,781 388 428 1,771 390 428 1, 767 392 435 1,790 394 440 1,805 398 446 1,822 405 430 1,860 410 437 1, 884 414 440 ' 1, 890 416 443 '1,900 ' 422 '446 1,893 425 443 7, 604 Nondurable goods industries. ... _ _ _ _ _ do__ 7, 446 7,569 7, 608 7, 598 1,737 1,734 Food and kindred products __do___ 1,746 1,733 1,728 84 Tobacco manufactures _do 89 86 86 87 920 Textile mill products do 914 921 891 916 1,351 Apparel and related products _do_ 1,302 1,346 1,367 1, 343 638 Paper and allied products. do____ 634 641 625 633 977 950 971 Printing, publishing, and allied ind. .do 975 981 902 Chemicals and allied products _ do. _ _ _ 894 877 900 908 178 Petroleum refining and related ind_-_do____ 183 176 177 179 464 Rubber and misc. plastics products. _ do. _ _ _ 434 460 463 464 354 Leather and leather products. _. do____ 352 348 355 351 628 Mining __do 627 633 626 633 3,211 Contract construction do 3 056 3 154 3 188 3 195 4, 031 Transportation and public utilities do 3 947 4,020 4 034 4, 031 12, 588 12 532 12 580 12 619 Wholesale and retail trade - - _ . • do 12 132 3,044 Finance, insurance, and real estate do 3 032 3 049 2 964 3 041 8,907 Services and miscellaneous do 8,569 8,843 8,857 8, 929 10,051 Government.. .do 9 595 9 955 10 014 10 054 Production workers on mfg. payrolls, unadjusted:! 13, 376 13 180 13 412 13 361 Total unadjusted! thous 12 769 Seasonally adjusted _ do 13 252 13 340 13* 405 7,621 7,750 7,701 Durable goods industries, unadjusted- -do,. .. 7,209 7,693 7, 721 7,599 7,662 Seasonally adjusted _ _ __ do__ 106 102 99 100 Ordnance and accessories—..___., __do____ 98 532 531 Lumber and wood products do 530 553 553 Furniture a n df i x t u r e s_ _ _ _ _ do 337 350 355 353 356 Stone, clay, and glass products.. do__ 492 512 497 507 499 Primary metal industries _ _ _ „ do 1,002 1,055 1,066 1,085 1,080 493 Blastfurnaces, steel and rolling mills do 506 459 481 506 912 984 974 Fabricated metal products do 976 968 Machinery _ do 1,192 1, 204 1, 199 1,206 1 118 1,146 1,114 1,132 Electrical equipment and supplies. _ _ d o _ _ _ _ 1, 136 1, 038 1,241 Transportation equipment 9 do 1, 244 1,240 1,120 1,218 667 Motor vehicles and equipment do 672 660 678 581 Aircraft and parts. _do 353 341 342 350 338 Instruments and related products do 246 234 245 247 238 Miscellaneous mfg. industries do_ 340 336 319 329 329 Nondurable goods industries , unad j. . . _ do. _ _ •_ 5,560 5,559 5,662 5, 660 5,684 Seasonally adjusted do 5,653 5,684 5, 678 Food and kindred products _do 1, 124 1,154 1,175 1,080 1,146 Tobacco manufactures . do. _ _ _ 77 63 63 63 72 Textile mill products... do 817 826 798 816 821 Apparel and related products . do 1,158 1,184 1, 208 1,165 1,203 Paper and allied products . do. _ _• _ 489 490 499 499 497 Printing, publishing, and allied ind__do 601 613 616 618 620 Chemicals and allied products .do 544 544 529 548 542 Petroleum refining and related ind— _do.__I 114 109 112 114 110 petroleum refining „ do 85 87 87 90 86 Rubber and misc. plastics products. .do 354 335 355 358 361 Leather and leather products. do 306 305 310 308 311 r Revised. » Preliminary. !Beginning in the Jan. 1966 issue of the SURVEY, data for employment, hours, earnings, and labor turnover reflect adjustment to Mar. 1964 benchmarks and the introduction of the 1963 amendments to the 1957 SIC system; they are not strictly comparable with previously pub- 7, 596 1, 723 80 921 1,345 637 981 911 179 466 353 627 3 189 4 049 12 600 3 053 8,946 10 085 7,604 1,717 79 924 1,356 640 980 910 179 465 354 7,640 1,733 81 928 1,362 643 984 909 177 469 354 7, 706 1,761 81 933 1,369 646 990 914 178 477 357 7,722 1, 745 84 937 1,377 650 992 918 178 483 358 7,717 1, 743 83 939 1,355 654 998 922 177 485 361 617 3 186 4, 067 12, 641 3,061 8,967 10, 119 622 3 202 4, 071 12,684 3,069 9, 019 10,171 627 3 267 4,079 12 754 3,074 9,081 10 269 630 3 386 4,079 12, 822 3, 082 9, 128 10 328 632 3 383 4' 090 12 909 3 080 9, 142 10 390 7,772 1,749 82 943 1,383 658 1,004 927 176 487 363 631 3, 374 4,104 12, 942 3,082 9,205 10, 472 iq 770 IQ 7^4. 13 457 7,887 7,781 106 550 364 13 507 7,900 7, 798 108 543 366 -10 770 iq £4.7 •jo 794 13 731 Motor freight trans, and storage _ do Air transportation do Telephone communication. _ _ . do_ . . _ Electric, gas, and sanitary services do.-.. Wholesale and retail trade _ .. _ _ do_ _ Wholesale trade _ _ - __do__ _ Retail trade do Finance insurance, and real estate _ do Services and miscellaneous. '. do Government do Total seasonally adjusted! ----- do Manufacturing establishments. __ ,_ do Durable goods industries _ do Ordnance and accessories do__ Lumber and wood products. do Furniture and fixtures do_ _ Stone, clay, and glass products _ _ do Primary metal industries do 236 606 231 603 239 603 13 540 13 440 7,683 7,769 102 558 360 236 744 630 242 601 250 633 '975 252 '759 621 r 991 255 763 622 12, 883 '12 918 13 076 ' 3, 314 3 321 3 381 r 9 569 '9 597 9 695 '3 089 r 3' 102 3 137 '9 242 ' 9' 348 9 461 10 726 '10 769 10 789 63, 384 19, 047 11,180 271 616 456 635 1,328 7, 784 ' 7, 804 ' 7 830 1,748 1, 738 ' 1, 727 84 '84 '83 946 '947 '950 1, 384 1,392 '1,412 659 659 661 1,003 1,013 '1,015 931 '931 '937 175 176 '178 491 496 499 363 368 368 632 '591 '624 3 462 '3 370 r 3 275 4,107 ' 4, 112 ' 4, 123 13,015 ' 13, 004 ' 13, 016 3,100 r 3, 101 ' 3, 105 9,251 '9,261 '9,283 10, 571 10, 636 '10,695 7,867 1,718 85 951 1,431 667 1,023 944 179 506 363 630 3,332 4,128 13, 060 3,115 9,303 10, 769 13 828 '13 917 '14 030 14 003 ' 14 054 r 14. 105 8,098 * 8, 191 ' 8, 267 8,177 ' 8, 214 ' 8, 247 122 120 '126 ' 534 544 527 371 '372 371 '510 496 515 1,060 ' 1, 077 '1,082 460 '472 477 1,023 1,033 1,038 1 277 ' 1 285'1 296 1,265 '1,290 ' 1, 304 1,355 '1,357 '1,368 699 700 ' 695 '430 417 425 '270 266 266 338 '346 '353 5, 730 '5,726 ' 5, 763 5,826 ' 5, 840 '5,858 1,075 1, 075 ' 1, 080 62 64 60 844 840 '848 1,244 1,223 '1,241 512 507 511 '642 '644 638 564 566 556 '111 109 107 84 84 85 386 380 '383 314 316 318' 14 263 14 187 8,386 8.294 '128 565 378 7,968 8,024 7,949 7,929 7,955 7 878 8 122 8 027 108 110 '118 114 533 540 522 522 368 367 367 366 516 526 511 500 519 508 488 489 1,100 1,076 1,032 1,069 1,026 1,017 1,049 1,035 504 484 451 437 435 449 442 1,054 979 1,004 999 1,017 1, 016 1,012 1,018 1,312 1,196 1 212 1 212 1 242 1 226 1 266 1 250 1,330 1,148 1,241 1,180 1,203 1,221 1,261 1, 245 1,359 1,144 1,324 1,291 1, 270 1,314 1,340 1,318 682 697 568 706 706 696 688 431 356 364 391 369 381 408 400 274 250 254 254 258 256 260 263 358 352 355 376 365 373 330 318 5, 854 5,877 5,857 5,886 5,821 5,756 5, 642 5,703 5,893 5,671 5,676 5, 709 5,776 5,769 5 815 5 774 1,122 1,232 1,256 1, 136 1,266 1,074 1,194 1,088 61 86 76 86 78 75 67 70 857 834 832 835 830 838 834 898 1,264 1,220 1,224 1,228 1,229 1,229 1,236 1,179 525 509 506 505 507 504 503 504 651 622 626 630 635 634 630 635 568 543 543 543 547 551 549 544 114 113 111 109 108 114 107 107 86 85 86 85 87 85 84 84 394 372 380 377 363 369 378 378 320 312 311 316 316 320 314 318 lished figures. Comparable earlier data appear in BLS Bulletin 1312-3, Employment and Earnings Statistics for the United States, 1909-65 (Dec. 1965), $4.25, GPO, Washington, D.C. 20402. 9 Includes data for industries not shown separately. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS S-14 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 1965 Annual July 1966 1965 May 1 June July Aug. 1966 Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June* EMPLOYMENT AND POPULATION—Continued EMPLOYMENT— Continued Miscellaneous employment data: Federal civilian employees (executive branch): United States thous_. Wash. , D. C . , metropolitan area. _ do 2,317 244 2,347 251 2,308 246 2,342 255 2,375 258 2,376 256 2,341 251 2,352 251 2,371 253 2,512 1254 2,375 251 2, 400 252 2,429 255 2,462 256 2,482 258 Railroad employees (class I railroads):© Total — do — Index, seasonally adjusted.— —1957-59 =100. _ 683 75.8 652 73.4 653 72.7 663 73.1 667 73.7 666 74.2 656 74.3 652 74.6 644 75.1 645 75.5 *633 70.3 * 631 ^ 70.7 "631 "71.3 P636 "71.8 *639 P 71. 6 132. 5 124.2 93.0 145.3 135.9 96.5 148.2 133.8 97.5 156.8 136.7 99.1 162.0 135.1 98.3 170.2 136.1 100.5 Ifi0.7 140.3 97.2 165.3 141.4 99.4 151.2 142.4 97.4 146.5 143.8 99.4 132.5 140.8 96.9 126.4 143.2 95.9 139.0 144.7 97.1 40.7 41.2 3.1 41.4 3.6 42.0 41.3 41.0 3.6 42.2 41.8 4.0 41.0 41.0 3.4 41.6 41.7 3.7 41.1 41.0 3.5 41.7 41.7 3.8 41.0 40.9 3.8 41.7 41.6 4.0 41.3 41.2 3.9 42.1 42.0 4.2 41.4 41.4 3,9 42.2 42.2 4.3 41.7 41.4 4.0 42.6 42.2 4.4 41.2 41.5 3.7 42.1 42.4 4.1 41.3 41.6 3.8 42.1 42.4 4.2 41.4 41.5 3.8 42.2 42.3 4.2 41.2 41.5 3.9 42.2 42.4 4.3 41.5 41.4 4.0 42.3 42.2 '4.3 41.5 41.2 4.0 42.3 41.9 4.3 42.1 '41.1 40.9 '42.1 42.3 '41.2 '42.2 '41.7 '41.6 42.3 '42.4 41.3 42.7 41.1 41.9 42.6 42.6 INDEXES OF WEEKLY PAYROLLS! Construction (construction workers)<!.1957-59=100_ . Manufacturing (production workers) t — do_ . .. Mining (production workers)! - -do_ '146.2 ' 153. 5 146.1 '148.4 '86.9 ' 102. 4 172.5 151.2 105. 0 HOURS AND EARNINGS! Average weekly gross hours per production worker on payrolls of nonagric. estab., unadjusted:! All manufacturing estab , unadj.! hours Seasonally adjusted __do Average overtime — do Durable goods industries - do _ Seasonally adjusted --' ..do Average overtime - . do 3.3 3.9 41.2 41.1 3.5 42.1 42.0 3.9 Ordnance and accessories _ _ _ _ do__ Lumber and wood products _ _ _ _ _ _ do Furniture and fixtures do Stone, clay, and glass products ,.do_._. Primary metal industries - do Blast furnaces, steel and rolling mills.. do 40.5 40.4 41.2 41.7 41.8 41.1 41.9 40.8 41.5 41.9 42.1 41.0 41.6 41.4 40.9 42.4 42,3 41.3 41.8 40.7 41.4 42.3 42.6 41.8 42.2 40.8 41.0 42.3 42.4 42.0 41.9 41.4 42.0 42.5 41.8 41. 0 41.9 41.0 41.7 42.3 41.7 39.9 42.4 41.4 42.2 42.3 40.9 38.2 42.4 40.8 42.0 42. 3 40.7 37.3 42.9 41.2 42.6 42.2 41.4 38.5 42.7 40.9 41.0 41.6 41.9 40.1 42.2 40.4 41.2 41.4 42.0 40.3 41.8 40.-6 41.5 42.0 42.1 40.6 Fabricated metal products _ do Machinery do Electrical equipment and supplies. ____do 41.7 42.4 40.5 42.1 43.1 41.0 42.3 43.3 41.0 42.4 43.4 41.1 41.7 42.8 40.3 42.0 42.5 40.7 41.9 42.8 40.8 42.4 43.3 41.2 42.4 43.4 41.5 42.6 44.2 42.0 42.0 43.7 41.3 42.2 44.0 41.4 42.2 44. 1 41.3 42.1 43.8 41. 1 42.6 44.1 '41.3 42.5 44.0 41.3 Transportation equipment 9—-do Motor vehicles and equipment do Aircraft and parts do Instruments and related products do Miscellaneous mfg. industries _ _ _ _ do 42. 1 43.0 41.4 40.8 39.6 42.9 44.2 42.0 41.4 39.9 43.2 44.6 41.9 41.5 39.7 43.1 44.5 42.0 41.6 39.7 42.1 42.9 41.9 41.2 39.3 41.4 41.6 41.7 41.4 40.0 41.8 42.3 41.5 41.6 40.0 43.4 44.7 42.3 41.9 40.4 43.9 45.4 43.1 42.0 40.4 44.1 45.3 43.7 42.0 40.5 43.3 43.7 44.0 42.0 39.6 42.9 43.2 43.6 42.2 40.2 42.7 42.9 43.4 42.2 40.4 43.0 '43.7 '42.9 '41.8 39.7 '42.3 42.0 '43.5 '42.4 40.0 42.2 40.3 40.0 3.2 41.5 37.9 41.9 36.9 43.3 38. 7 41.7 42.7 41.7 42. 1 38.4 40.2 40.1 3.5 41.4 39.4 41.6 36.2 43.3 38.8 42.2 43.5 42.8 42.0 37.8 40.2 40.1 3.4 41.4 39:2 42.1 36.3 43.7 38.6 41.8 42.5 41.9 42.3 37.8 40.3 40.3 3.4 41.3 37.9 42.3 36.4 43.5 38.5 42.0 42.3 42.0 42.4 38.2 40.4 40.2 3.4 41.4 39.0 42.3 36.2 43.8 39.1 42.1 41.7 41.7 42.8 39.2 39.8 40.2 3.1 40. 7 38.1 41.8 35.7 42.8 38. 1 41.7 41.8 41.8 42.1 38.8 40.2 40.6 3.3 40.8 39.6 42.3 36.6 43.1 38.5 41.9 41.7 41.6 42.0 39.2 40.2 40.4 3.3 40.5 38.2 42.3 36.9 43.3 38.8 42.0 41.9 41.9 42.0 38.5 '39.9 '40.4 3.3 40. 4 '38.1 41.4 36.1 43.2 38.5 42.4 42.6 42.6 ' 41. 8 37.8 40.3 40.3 3.4 40.9 '38.3 '42.2 '36.5 '43.6 38.8 42.2 42.8 '42.8 '42.1 '38.6 40.4 40.1 3.5 41.4 38.9 42.1 36.8 43.5 38.8 42.4 43.0 42.4 42.0 39.1 43.2 41.6 40.8 42.9 38.9 37.1 43.4 38.0 42.4 41.9 39.1 42.2 37.1 35.6 40.3 36.5 42.8 41.5 41.4 42.0 38.3 36.6 42.7 37.5 41.8 41.2 37.4 42.4 36.4 35.1 39.6 35.9 42.8 41.8 41.2 42.9 37.1 36.4 38.9 37.0 42. 2 42.1 40.7 42. 7 36.5 35.6 39.3 36. 2 42.1 41.7 40.7 42.3 36.3 35.5 38.1 36.3 42.6 41.6 41.1 43.0 37.7 36.8 40.9 37.2 '41.4 42.5 '32.8 '42.8 '36.9 35.8 '40.1 36.4 '42.9 42.3 41.4 42.5 37.1 35.7 39.6 36.9 42.7 42.7 43.2 40.4 41.2 38.3 41.0 37.4 42.3 43.2 41.3 41.7 37.5 40.8 36.5 42.5 43.1 40.9 41.7 37.4 40.9 36.2 42.1 42.4 42.0 41.8 37.1 40.8 35.9 42.2 42.7 40.5 41.5 37.7 41.2 36.7 41. 7 41.6 39.9 41.6 37. 1 40.8 35. 9 41.8 42.3 40.6 41.6 37.0 40.7 35.8 42.0 42.0 40.3 41.0 36.9 40.7 35.7 '42.2 '41.7 40.1 41.1 36.9 40.6 35.7 43.0 42.0 40.3 41.2 36.9 40.7 35.7 38.9 38.6 37.7 38.6 37.9 38.8 37.4 38.2 37.4 38.5 37.4 38.1 37.2 38.1 37.4 38.1 '37.4 38.0 37.3 38.4 40.1 40.2 39.7 40.0 40.2 Nondurable goods industries, unadj do 40.0 40.0 Seasonally adjusted do 39.9 3.1 3.1 2.9 3.1 Average overtime .do __ 3.1 41.1 41.0 41.9 Food and kindred products do 41.0 41.2 37,9 37.2 37.6 38.8 Tobacco manufactures do 37.8 41.7 41.6 Textile mill products . do__ 41.3 41.0 41.9 36.4 36. 4 36.5 35.9 36.6 Apparel and related products __ do__ 43.1 43.0 43.1 Paper and allied products ___do — 42.8 43.3 38.6 38.5 38.4 38.5 Printing, publishing, and allied ind-._.do 38.5 42.2 41.9 41.6 Chemicals and allied products do 41.6 42.0 42.4 42.2 42.8 41.9 42.4 Petroleum refining and related ind do 41.9 41.8 41.4 41.8 Petroleum refining ___do 41.6 42.0 41.7 41.7 Rubber and misc. plastics products do 41.3 42.1 38.2 38.0 38.6 37.9 38.4 Leather and leather products do Nonmanufacturing establishments:! 42.4 42.6 42.3 41.9 42.6 Mining 9 _ do 41.6 42.0 41.9 41.4 41.7 Metal mining ... do «39.9 40.0 41.0 « 39.0 Coal mining -do 42.6 42.3 42.5 42.5 41.9 Crude petroleum and natural gas do 37.4 38.4 37.2 38.6 Contract construction do 38.0 36.8 36.1 35.8 36.3 General building contractors _ do_ _ _ 36.9 40.8 42.0 Heavy construction do 40.8 41.7 42.8 36.9 37.8 37.4 Special trade contractors _ do_ _ _ 37.8 36.6 Transportation and public utilities: 42.6 42.1 42.4 Local and suburban transportation do_ _ _ 42.6 42.0 42.2 42.5 42.9 Motor freight transportation and storage. do_ _ . 41.9 42.9 40.4 40.1 Telephone communication do 40.2 40.6 39.9 41.4 41.5 41.1 41.2 41.3 Electric, gas, and sanitary services d o _ _ _ 37.6 37.7 38.4 37.9 Wholesale and retail trade do __ 37.9 40.8 40.9 40.7 41.0 40.9 Wholesale trade do 36.5 36.6 37.5 36.9 37.0 Retailtrade ._ do Services and miscellaneous: 37.7 38.4 37.9 38.9 37.7 Hotels, tourist courts, and motels do 39.6 39.2 Laundries, cleaning and dyeing plants. _ _ do_ . _ 38.8 39.0 38.7 Average weekly gross earnings per production worker on payrolls of nonagric. estab.:! All manufacturing establishments ! dollars102. 97 107. 53 107. 53 107. 79 107. 01 Durable goods industries do_ . _ 112. 19 117. 18 117. 46 117. 74 116.06 122. 31 Ordnance and accessories . _ 130. 73 128. 96 129. 58 131. 66 r _ _ _ do_ _ _ 88.54 89.42 88.73 88.94 Lumber and wood products do.__ 85. 24 86.94 86.51 Furniture and fixtures _ _ do. _ _ 84. 46 87.98 85.89 Stone, clay, and glass products do 109.78 110. 66 110. 40 110. 83 105. 50 Primary metal industries do_ _ _ 133. 88 134.09 135.89 135.68 130.00 Fabricated metal products ___do___ 111.34 116. 20 116. 75 117. 02 114. 68 Machinery ' _ do 121.69 127. 15 127. 74 128.03 125.83 Electrical equipment and supplies_ ____do_._ 101. 66 105. 78 105.37 106.04 103.97 Transportation equipment. do._ 130.09 137. 71 137. 81 137. 49 133. 46 Instruments and related products do_._ 108. 05 107.90 108.99 107. 53 103. 63 Miscellaneous mfg. industries. . . _ do_ _ _ 82.37 84.56 84.96 83.71 84.99 ' Revised. * Preliminary. « Average for 11 months. 1 Includes Post Office employees hired for the Christmas season; there were about 140,000 such employees in the United States in Dec. 1965. <B Effective Jan. 1965, data reflect change in definition of class I railroads (to $5 million or 43.5 42.3 40.0 38.4 37.4 40.8 36.3 106.45 107.83 108.62 109. 71 110. 92 110. 00 110. 27 110. 95 111.24 112. 05 112. 05 115. 51 117. 18 118. 72 119. 43 120. 98 119. 99 120. 41 120. 69 121. 54 121. 82 121. 82 131. 15 131. 15 133. 56 133. 56 136. 85 135.36 m.93 131. 67 132. 62 '133.35 135. 79 91.08 90.61 91.49 89.76 89.40 88.75 88.48 88.51 '92.06 '94.24 93.30 89. 04 88.75 ' 91. 10 91.76 89.24 90. 73 90.30 92.02 88.15 88.58 89.64 111. 78 112. 10 112.94 112.94 112. 25 110. 66 110. 54 112. 56 ' 114.09 115. 06 115. 87 132. 51 133. 44 130.06 129.83 132. 48 135. 34 136.08 137.25 138.74 ' 139.07 140.15 115.08 116.48 118.30 118.72 119. 71 118. 02 119.00 119.85 119.99 121. 84 120. 70 124. 95 127. 12 129. 47 130. 20 133. 48 132. 41 133.76 134. 51 134. 03 135. 83 135. 52 104.60 106. 08 107.12 108.32 110.04 108. 21 108.47 107. 79 ' 108.09 ' 108.62 108. 62 130.82 135. 01 141.48 144. 87 145. 53 142. 46 141. 14 140. 06 141. 47 ' 138.74 138.42 108. 05 108. 58 109.78 110.88 111. 30 111. 72 112. 25 112.67 ' 112.02 ' 114.06 114. 21 84.80 85.20 86.46 86.46 87.48 87.12 88.88 87.74 '88.40 88.40 88.44 more annual railway operating revenues). The index (back to 1963) has been adjusted for comparability, whereas the number of employees has not. ! See corresponding note, bottom p. S-13. 9 Includes data for industries not shown separately. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS July 1966 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 1965 1965 Annual S-15 May June July Aug. 1966 Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr, May June p EMPLOYMENT AND POPULATION—Continued HOURS AND EARNINGS— Continued Average weekly gross earnings per production worker on payrolls of nonagric. estab.t— Con. All manufacturing establishments f— Continued 94 64 Nondurable goods industries dollars. . 90.91 99 87 97.17 Food and kindred products do 76.05 Tobacco manufactures do 79 59 73. 39 Textile mill products do__ 77 98 64.26 Apparel and related products -do _ _ 66 61 109; 57 Paper and allied products do 114 22 Printing, publishing, arid allied ind — do____ 114. 35 118.12 116. 48 Chemicals and allied products do 121 09 133. 66 Petroleum refining and related ind do__ 138 42 Rubber and misc plastics products do. _. _ 104. 90 109 62 68.98 Leather and leather products _do._ __ 71. 82 Nonmanufacturing establishments: t 117. 74 123 52 Mining? do 122. 54 Metal mining -do 127. 71 126. 82 Coalmining do 137 38 Crude petroleum and natural gas __ __ do — 113. 05 115. 90 132. 06 Contract construction _. -do 138 01 122.79 General building contractors do 128 16 Heavy construction do : 131. 78 137 50 138. 35 Special trade contractors. do 144 65 Transportation and public utilities: Local and suburban transportation do 104. 16 107. 78 Motor freighttransportationandstorage.do — 124.02 130. 48 Telephone communication _ do__ _ 105. 32 109 08 Electric, gas, and sanitary services do__ _ 125. 25 131 24 74 28 Wholesale and retail trade do_ _ 76 53 Wholesale trade do ___ 102. 56 106 49 64.75 Ketail trade — -— do ___ 66 61 Finance, insurance, and real estate: 76.67 Banking ._• do 79 24 92.01 Insurance carriers do _ _ 95 12 Services and miscellaneous: Hotels, tourist courts, and motels.. do — 49. 54 51. 17 55,73 Laundries, cleaninganddyeingplants. do 58.98 Average hourly gross earnings per production worker on payrolls of nonagric. estab.:f 2.53 All manufacturing establishmentsf.dollars.. 2.61 2 44 2 50 Excluding overtimed1 do_ Durable goods industries do 2. 71 2 79 2.60 2.67 Excluding overtimed*— -— _do 3. 02 3.12 Ordnance and accessories do..__ 2 11 Lumber and wood products do 2 17 2 12 2 05 Furniture and fixtures do . 2 62 Stone clay and glass products do 2.53 Primary metal industries _ do_ 3. 11 3. 18 3.41 3.46 Blast furnaces, steel and rolling mills, .do 2 67 2 76 Fabricated metal products do • 2 87 2 95 Machinery do 2.51 2 58 Electrical equipment and supplies do 3.21 3.09 Transportation equipment 9 . _ __ _ _do.__ 3.21 Motor vehicles and equipment do.__ 3. 34 3 14 3 02 Aircraft and parts do 2.61 2.54 Instruments and related products. do.__ 2.13 Miscellaneous mfg. industries do_ _ _ 2.08 2.36 2.29 Nondurable goods industries do 1 2.21 2.27 Excluding overtimed do 2.43 2.37 Food and kindred products _do. 1.96 2.10 Tobacco manufactures _do 1.79 Textile mill products do 1.87 1.79 1 83 Apparel and related products _ . do 2.56 2.65 Paper and allied products . . do Printing, publishing, and allied ind. ___do,__ 2.97 3.06 2.80 2. 89 Chemicals and allied products _do__ Petroleum refining and related ind _ do. _ _ 3.19 3.28 Petroleum refining . _ do 3.37 3.47 2.54 2.61 Kubber and misc. plastics products. _ _ _ d o _ _ _ 1.82 1.88 Leather and leather products. do.__ Nonmanufacturing establishments : t 2.92 2.81 Mining 9 _ _ _ __ _do -_. 2.96 3 07 Metal mining do « 3.26 "3 45 Coal mining do r 2.66 2 74 Crude petroleum and natural g as do 3.55 3 69 Contract construction do 3.43 3.55 General building contractors do 3.23 3.37 Heavy construction __ _ _ _do _ 3.92 3.78 Special trade contractors do___ Transportation and public utilities : 2 56 Local and suburban transportation do 2.48 3.07 2.96 Motorfreighttransportationandstorage do 2.62 2.70 Telephone communication do 3.17 3.04 Electric, gas, and sanitary services do 2.03 Wholesale and retail trade do 1.96 2.6 2.52 Wholesale trade do 1.7 Retail trade. do 1.8 Services and miscellaneous: 1.3 Hotels, tourist courts, and motels do 1.2 1.4 1.5 Laundries, cleaning and dyeing plants do__ a ' Revised. v Preliminary. Average for 11 months, t See corresponding note, bottom p. S-13. 94 00 00 45 81.10 76 54 65 52 12 66 17.04 20 69 37 80 07 59 71. 44 94. 47 00 53 83.16 77. 52 66. 61 14.31 17.43 20 96 137 38 09.46 72.19 94 87 00 98 82.72 77 64 66.43 114. 65 117. 12 120 22 139 10 109 25 71.80 95 11 99 19 78.07 79 19 67.53 115. 18 118. 81 121 35 138 35 109. 88 72. 19 95.68 100.19 78.41 78. 62 67.33 116. 48 120.28 123. 65 142. 68 110. 46 71.82 95.68 100. 19 77.62 79.99 67.52 117. 12 119. 66 122. 06 141.10 112. 10 71.82 96.32 100 77 80. 35 80.79 67.70 116. 58 118. 97 123.06 142. 97 111. 94 72. 58 96.96 101. 84 83.07 80.79 67.33 117. 82 121.60 123. 35 140. 53 113. 42 74.87 95 52 100 94 82 30 79 84 66 05 115 13 117. 73 129 18 140 87 111 14 74.11 96.48 101 59 88.31 81. 22 68.81 115. 94 119. 74 123 19 140 95 110. 88 75.26 96.88 101 25 84.80 81.22 69.37 116. 91 121.06 122 64 141 62 110. 46 73.92 '96 96 102 21 '86 87 79 90 r 67 15 117 50 120. 51 124 66 145 69 110 35 72.95 97 93 98 58 103 48 105 16 87 32 89.86 81 45 82 94 68 26 68 82 119 03 119 19 122.22 121.83 124 49 126 35 145 95 146 63 111 57 111 72 74.88 75.85 23 97 27.68 38 40 17.15 40 16 129 54 139 86 147. 04 123. 97 126. 77 142. 27 113.97 139. 08 127 78 140 53 145. 86 122. 9fr 128. 21 134. 46 116. 03 140. 50 129 15 143. 38 147. 04 126. 14 127. 71 141. 98 117. 12 143. 15 131 33 148. 43 148.96 124. 66 131. 57 135. 29 116. 47 138. 75 128. 52 138. 63 145. 27 126.26 130.31 143. 24 115. 92 144. 01 132. 49 149.45 150.00 123. 73 127. 12 128.96 131. 67 129. 78 142. 96 117.87 119. 69 136. 14 139. 50 126. 71 132 13 135. 83 131. 87 142. 52 148. 00 126 18 132 19 142 04 121.27 137 97 129 23 132 44 145 89 126.30 127. 37 130.94 129. 79 142 45 143. 44 120. 13 121. 69 138 30 142. 88 129 93 134 32 130 68 138 65 146 65 149. 92 121 72 133 88 111 52 122. 41 140 22 131 74 137 54 147 42 131 27 132 82 152 35 121. 98 141 72 131 73 137 02 150 55 109." 06 109. 06 129. 55 131. 27 107 87 107. 33 131. 14 129. 47 76 56 76 33 106 75 105 93 66 43 67.16 108. 97 131. 27 108. 40 130. 51 77 95 106 60 68.25 110. 17 132. 62 108. 27 130. 60 77 75 106. 60 68. 07 109. 56 133.92 112. 75 133.86 77.25 106. 90 67.53 110.08 133.18 | 111.66 1 134. 69 77.42 107. 57 67.33 109.04 131. 44 115. 50 135.43 76.80 108. 12 67.13 108. 88 132. 37 112. 59 134. 05 77 29 109. 59 67.90 108 00 128. 54 110 12 135 20 77 54 108 94 67 49 109 10 132. 40 112 87 135 62 77 70 109 08 67 30 109. 62 131. 88 111.63 133. 25 77 49 109 48 67.47 111 41 131. 36 111 08 134 40 r 78 23 110 43 67 47 113 09 132. 72 111 63 135 14 r 78 60 111 11 78.86 94 86 78.44 94 74 79.24 95 74 79.24 95.86 79.18 95.86 80.35 95. 86 80.35 96.49 80.35 96.87 82 28 97 73 81 47 98 74 81.84 '82 21 98 47 r gg 10 82 21 97 94 51. 65 60.19 50. 90 59.58 52.13 59. 28 51.74 58.67 51.65 59.06 52.30 60,14 51. 99 58.83 52. 36 59.68 51. 99 59. 44 52.08 59.06 51.99 ' 52. 36 59.82 60.04 52.97 61.06 1.88 2. 61 2 50 2.79 2.67 3.10 2 18 2. 10 2. 61 3.19 3.46 2 76 2.95 2.58 3.19 3.32 3.12 2.62 2.14 2.35 2.26 2.44 2.20 1. 85 1.82 2.64 3.05 2.88 3.24 3.45 2.60 1.88 2.61 2 50 2 79 2.67 3.12 2 18 2 11 2.62 3.20 3.47 2 75 2.94 2.58 3.17 3.29 3.11 2.61 2.13 2.36 2.27 2.41 2.20 1.88 1.82 2.66 3.05 2.89 3.25 3.45 2.62 1.86 2.59 2.49 2.77 2.65 3.13 2.20 2.12 2. 63 3.17 3.43 2.74 2.94 2.57 3.16 3.28 3.13 2.61 2.12 2.36 2.26 2.39 2.06 1.89 1.83 2.66 3.07 2.91 3.24 3.43 2.61 1.88 2.63 2.51 2.81 2.68 3.13 2.21 2.14 2.65 3.20 3.49 2.78 2.97 2.60 3.23 3.36 3.15 2.61 2.13 2.38 2.28 2.42 1.99 1.89 1.86 2.69 3.10 2.93 3.28 3.48 2.63 1.90 2.63 2.52 2.82 2.68 3.15 2.21 2.15 2.67 3.18 3.47 2.79 2.99 2.60 3.26 3.39 3.18 2.62 2.14 2.38 2.28 2.42 1.98 1.90 1.86 2.68 3.10 2.92 3.32 3.52 2.65 1.90 2. 65 2.53 2.83 2.69 3.15 2.20 2.15 2.67 3.19 3.47 2.80 3.00 2.61 3.30 3.44 3.21 2.64 2.14 2.39 2.29 2.44 2.12 1.91 1.86 2.68 3.09 2.93 3.38 3.59 2.64 1.90 2.66 2.54 2.84 2.70 3.19 2.17 2.16 2.66 3.20 3.50 2.81 3.02 2.62 3.30 3.43 3.23 2.65 2.16 2.40 2.30 2.46 2.13 1.91 1.86 2.69 3.11 2.93 3.37 3.57 2.65 1.91 2.67 2 55 2 85 2.72 3.17 2 17 2 15 2 66 3.23 3.53 2 81 3 03 2.62 3.29 3.40 3 25 2.66 2.20 2.40 2.31 2.48 2.16 1.91 1.85 2.69 3.09 2.93 3.37 3.55 2.64 1.91 2.67 2 56 2 86 2.72 3.15 2 19 2 15 2 67 3 24 3 54 2 82 3 04 2 62 3 29 3^39 3 26 2.66 2 20 2 40 2 31 9 49 2 23 1 92 1 88 2 69 3.11 2 94 3.38 3 56 2.64 1.92 2.68 2 56 2 86 2.72 3.15 2 18 2 16 2.68 3.26 3.56 2 84 3 05 2 61 3.28 3.37 3 26 2.67 2.20 2.41 2 31 2 50 2.22 1.92 1 88 2.70 3.12 2.92 3.38 3. 57 2.63 1.92 2.91 3.04 3.46 2.75 3.65 3.52 3.33 3.89 2.91 3.04 3.47 2.72 3.66 3.52 3.37 3.90 2.90 3.06 2.73 3.64 3.50 3.35 3.89 2.92 3.07 3.48 2.73 3.68 3.54 3.42 3.92 2.94 3.14 3.46 2.76 3.74 3.61 3.44 3.98 2.95 3.14 3.46 2.76 3.76 3.62 3.50 4.00 2.96 3.15 3.47 2.7£ 3.7^ 3.6] 3.43 3.97 2.97 3.15 3.47 2.79 3.76 3.63 3.39 4.00 2.99 3.14 3.49 2.84 3.78 3.63 3.37 4.03 3 00 3 14 3 50 2 84 3 81 3 66 3 43 4 04 2.99 3 12 3 49 2 83 3 79 3 65 3 39 4 03 2.56 3.07 2.69 3.16 2.03 2.61 1.82 2.56 3.06 2.69 3.15 2.02 2.59 1.82 2.57 3.06 2.67 3.16 2.03 2.60 1.82 2.58 3.07 2.68 3.17 2. 03 2.60 1.82 2. 59 3.10 2.73 3.21 2.06 2.62 1.85 2.59 3.09 2.73 3.23 2.07 2.63 1.86 2.59 3.10 2.75 3.24 2.07 2.65 1.87 2.58 3.10 2.78 3.23 2.05 2.66 1.85 2.59 3.09 2.76 3.25 2.09 2.67 1.88 1.37 1.52 1.35 1.52 1.34 1.52 1,33 1.52 1.37 1.53 1.38 1.55 1.39 1.54 1.40 1.55 1.39 1.56 2 61 3 13 2 78 3 26 2 10 2 68 1 88 1.40 1.55 2 61 3 14 2 77 3 25 2 10 2 69 1 89 1.39 1.57 2.61 2 50 2 79 2.66 3.10 2 16 2 10 2.61 3.17 3.43 2 76 2.95 2.57 3.19 3.32 3.12 2.60 2.13 2.35 2.26 2.45 2.18 1.84 1.80 2.62 3.04 2.86 3.25 3.43 2; 58 2.70 2 58 2 88 2'. 74 3.15 2 24 2 17 r 2 71 3 28 3 59 2 85 3 08 r 2 63 3 29 3.41 3 25 2.68 2 21 2 43 2 33 2 53 r 68 19 2.70 2 58 2 88 2.74 '3.16 2 26 2 19 2 72 r 3 28 3 59 2 86 3 08 2 63 r 3 28 3. 37 r 3 28 2.69 r 2 21 2 43 2 33 r 2 53 2 72 '3.13 2 94 '3.42 r 3 62 ' 2. 64 1.93 2 28 1 93 1 87 2 73 3.15 2 95 3.41 '3 62 '2.65 1.94 2 94 3 15 3 40 2 86 3 80 3 68 r 3 43 4 05 '3 06 3 14 3 68 2 87 '3 82 3 69 3 46 4.08 2 64 '3 15 2 77 '3 27 '2 12 '2 72 1 89 '1..40 1.58 2 63 3 16 2 77 3 28 2 13 2.73 1.91 1.42 1.59 r 2 28 1 93 r I 86 r 130 66 146 69 79 66 110 98 69 33 2.70 2 58 2 88 2.74 3.18 2 27 2 19 2 72 3 29 2 84 3 08 2 63 3.28 3 29 2.70 2.21 2.44 2 34 2 54 2.31 1.97 1 87 2.74 3.14 2.98 3.41 3.63 2.66 1.94 3.06 3 82 2.13 2.72 1.91 d'Derived by assuming that overtime hours are paid at the rate of tune and one-half 9 Includes data for industries not shown separately. SURVEY OF CUERENT BUSINESS S-16 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 1965 July 1966 1965 Annual May June July Aug. 1966 Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. 3 496 5 064 1 24 3. 520 5 087 3.520 Mar. May Apr. June EMPLOYMENT AND POPULATION—Continued HOURS AND EARNINGS— Continued Miscellaneous wages: Construction wages, 20 cities (ENR): § 3.242 Common labor. . ___ _ $perhr__ 4. 733 Skilled labor do 1.08 Farm without board or rm., 1st of mo __ do 2.850 Railroad wages (average, class I)—_ _do___. LABOR CONDITIONS 123 Help-wanted advertising, seas, adj— 1957-59 =100__ Labor turnover in manufacturing estab.: t 4.0 Accession rate, total. _mo. rate per 100 employees. _ Seasonally adjusted _ . do. __ 2.6 New hires -do 3.9 Separation rate, total ______ do Seasonally adjusted do_ — 1.5 Quit _ _ do 1.7 Layoff -_ do Seasonally adjusted do_ __ I ndustrial disputes (strikes and lockouts) : Beginning in period: Work stoppages __ __ number. _ 3 655 Workers involved' _ thous__ 1,640 In effect during month: Work stoppages - - number-Workers involved" _ thous__ Man-days idle during period do___ 22 900 EMPLOYMENT SERVICE AND UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE Nonfarm placements _ _ _ __thous_ 6 281 Unemployment insurance programs: 1 725 Insured unemployment all programs® do State programs: Initial claims do 13, 938 Insured unemployment, weekly avg do 1 605 Percent of covered employment :cf Unadjusted _ __ 3.8 Seasonally adjusted 1 373 Beneficiaries, weekly average _ thous_ 2 522 Benefits paid mil. $ Federal employees, insured unemployment, weekly average _ thous 30 Veterans' program (UCX): 335 Initial claims do Insured unemployment, weekly avg do 51 Beneficiaries, weekly average . — _~ -do 48 90 2 Benefits paid mil. $ Railroad program: 155 Applications _ _ _ thous Insured unemployment, weekly avg do 38 Benefits paid mil. $ 78 4 3.415 4.951 1.14 3.002 3.355 4.886 3. 414 4 969 3.453 3.014 2.994 3.000 3.482 3.486 3.486 2.994 3.009 5 056 1 09 3.014 5 002 5 029 3. 486 5 041 3.495 3.017 2. 995 5 055 5 097 3 533 5 108 1 28 3.567 5 141 3 644 5 213 2 1 26 »185 155 145 146 145 152 160 168 181 186 184 191 201 189 185 4.3 4.1 5.6 4.5 5.4 5.5 4.5 3.9 5 0 3.1 4.6 4 9 4. 2 4.9 52 ' 4. 6 '4.8 P5.0 v 4. 9 p4.0 *4..1 4.6 2.3 3.1 4.0 4.1 3.0 3.6 4.5 4.3 3.6 4.1 3.2 4.3 4.2 3.9 5.1 4.5 4.0 5.7 4.5 3.5 4.4 2.9 3.9 4.9 2.2 3.2 48 3.1 3.6 3.7 4.1 3.6 1.7 1.1 1.4 1.8 1.8 1.6 2.6 1.6 1.7 3.5 1.3 1.3 2.2 1.4 1.3 1.7 1.5 1.3 1.4 1.8 1.3 1.9 1.3 1.1" 11 1.0 1.1 '4.3 ' 4.7 ' 2. 5 '1.0 '1.2 ••425 ••268 '416 '156 '388 '109 '345 ' 155 ' 321 '101 '289 '140 ' 158 205 101 240 107 310 198 350 228 '702 '371 '570 ' i 669 '677 '685 335 '631 ' 505 '334 ••1201 '192 '354 '76 127 '229 '209 '250 23 300 'U 850 r 2 590 ' 3 670 '2 230 ' 2 110' 1 770' 1 380 ' 907 1 000 380 142 865 1 350 1.9 1.4 1.7 1.1 1.4 ' 3, 963 'i 450 ' 1, 550 n 127 r 4. 992 1.17 4, 0 '24 4. 0 4.3 1.8 1.0 450 236 500 379 2 450 *2.4 v .8 f I. 0 480 208 640 294 2, 870 6, 473 573 610 554 603 644 611 531 462 452 460 547 533 568 1 419 1,259 1 131 1 210 1 178 1 030 982 1,104 1 386 1 736 1,678 1 381 1 112 916 12, 047 1 328 870 1, 078 1, 139 976 1,120 760 981 791 933 1,004 1 042 1,285 1 308 1, 399 1 644 693 1 179 1, 590 1 044 665 862 2.5 3.1 901 29 2.2 834 2.0 2.7 745 2.3 2.7 794 30 2.7 990 1,413 217 2 23 1,272 225 5 2.3 2.1 931 1.9 2.1 806 3.0 763 2.7 1 059 2.4 2.6 985 3.6 2.6 769 1 301 2.9 1, 131 2 166 30 1,060 165 7 156 3 149 5 148 0 138 6 117 8 132 2 172.1 3. 7 27 1 330 212 7 155. 5 126 1 25 22 20 22 21 19 20 21 23 29 29 26 21 18 266 36 34 17 33 34 26 33 27 5 2 4 5 19 28 27 4 6 16 24 23 3.7 18 25 21 3.7 20 29 24 4.3 18 31 30 4.6 17 27 26 53 25 33 31 52 20 32 30 67 5 22 30 30 4 6 13 22 21 3.6 12 18 18 2.9 138 30 5 26 19 21 30 24 14 28 6 26 18 60 5 4 3 7 22 9 25 38 35 11 24 37 36 30 941 30 932 10 22 3.8 4 8 38 4 6 11 31 51 3,310 3,245 10,554 10,406 2,250 2,205 8,304 8,201 3,392 9,017 1,903 7,114 3,332 9,910 1,834 8,076 4 1 5 26 5.2 36 3,313 10,656 1,828 8,828 3,388 11, 014 2,066 8,948 3,464 11,560 2,253 9,307 4 28 FINANCE BANKING Open market paper outstanding, end of period: Bankers' acceptances. ... ____.___mil. $._ Commercial and finance co. paper, total.._.do Placed through dealers. do Placed directly (finance paper) do____ 3,385 8,361 2,223 6,138 Agricultural loans and discounts outstanding of agencies supervised by the Farm Credit Adm.: Total, end of period _ ____mil. $__ Farm mortgage loans: Federal land banks ____do Loans to cooperatives _ do Other loans and discounts —.do 3,718 958 2,428 Bank debits to demand deposit accounts, except interbank and U.S. Government accounts, annual rates, seasonally adjusted: Total (225 SMSA's)© _ ._bil. $_. New York SMSA........._______ do___. Total 224 SMSA's (except N.Y.)___ do.__. 6 other leading SMSA's?— _.__—do___. 218 other SMSA's________ __do___. 4,621. 4 1,925.3 2,696.1 1,030.8 1,665.3 Liabilities, total9-——__ _ Deposits, total ___ Member-bank reserve balances Federal Reserve notes in circulation 39,930 186 37,044 15,075 _—_do___. 19,456 18, 086 35,343 Ratio of gold certificate reserves to FR note liabilities _____ percent.. 42.7 3,355 9,370 1,965 7,405 3,337 10,439 2,046 8,393 3,299 10,358 2,117 8,241 3,418 11, 372 2,113 9,259 7,873 7,988 8,040 8,007 8,022 8,080 8,206 8,367 8,570 8,788 4,011 940 2,778 4,058 4,097 2,956 4,171 940 2,902 4,204 1,009 2,794 4,245 1,082 2,696 4,281 1,055 2,745 4,328 1,113 2,766 4,385 2,884 4,135 944 2, 962 2,837 1,145 4,477 1,137 2,956 4,553 1,148 3,087 5,135.9 2,138.5 2,997.4 1,140.9 1,856.5 4,825.6 1,954.1 2,871.5 1,082.7 1,788.8 5,327.8 2,308.4 3,019.4 1,146.8 1,872.6 5,302.6 2,281.6 3,021.0 1,149.5 1,871.5 5,146.8 2,128.0 3,018.8 1,141.0 1,877.8 5,126.9 2,104.3 3,022.6 1,142.9 1,879.7 5,129.9 2,061.0 3,068.9 1,165.4 1,903.5 5,408.3 2,229.4 3,178.9 1,215.0 1,963.9 5, 523.1 2.273.5 3.249.6 1,234.5 2,015.1 5,509.6 2,311.5 3,198.1 1,218.4 1,979.7 5,605.6 2,341.7 3,263.9 1,251.2 2,012.7 5,811.7 2,414.6 3,397.1 1,336.6 2,060.5 5,934.1 2,544.0 3,390.1 1,304.2 2,085.9 5,797. 5 2,449.4 3,348.1 1,311.3 2,036.8 65,371 64, 246 63,794 931 935 4,647 1,106 3,193 61,475 62,632 61,914 61,429 63,384 63,504 64,050 65,371 64,124 65,452 64,797 66,520 43,340 41,169 137 545 40,768 13,436 14,023 41,159 41,166 536 39,100 13,670 39,207 13,591 40,619 237 39,049 13, 596 41,704 41,905 174 510 39,774 39,657 13,587 13,582 42,789 365 40,575 13,512 43,340 43,085 42,717 42,840 137 327 239 315 40,768 40, 565 40,189 40,734 13,436 13,436 13,432 13,204 43, 285 452 40,713 13,190 43,940 441 41,480 13,092 44,656 211 42,169 12,993 61,475 66,520 657 62,632 61,914 61,429 63,384 63,504 64,050 65,371 64,246 63,794 64,124 65,452 64,797 19., 620 19,625 19,278 18,447 18,006 18,229 37,950 34,974 35,444 19,304 35,796 18, 008 18,645 17,191 36,021 19,591 18,149 36,319 19,612 18, 204 36,628 19,163 18,050 37,408 19,620 18,447 37,950 20,098 19,205 18,751 18,014 37,337 37,322 19,233 18,000 37,432 19,841 18,736 37,536 19,673 20,083 18,119 18,567 37,880 38,258 38.6 38.0 37.7 37.4 37.1 36.1 35.4 36.0 35.3 35.1 35.4 40.1 ' Revised. » Preliminary. 1 Revisions for Jan.-Mar. 1965 (units as above): Beginning in mo.—stoppages, 244; 208; 329; workers, 99; 45; 180; in effect—stoppages, 404; 393; 511; workers, 183; 149; 274; man-days, 1,740; 1,440; 1,770. - As of July 1, 1966. § Wages as of July 1,1966: Common labor, $3.728; skilled labor, $5.238. t See corresponding note, bottom of p. S-13. © Excludes persons under extended duration provisions. 3,314 9,692 2,194 7,498 7,729 65,371 __do.__. do___. do___. 3,467 9,934 1,976 7,958 4,281 1,055 2,745 7,104 Federal Reserve banks, condition, end of period: Assets, total 9 — — — — mil. 5 Reserve bank credit outstanding, total 9 _.do Discounts and advances.-. __ _do U.S. Government securities..do___. Gold certificate reserves _ . _ do 3,392 9.017 1,903 7,114 36.0 34.6 34.0 cf Insured unemployment as % of average covered employment in a 12-month period. O Total SMSA's include some cities and counties not designated as SMSA's. \ Includes Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, Detroit, San Francisco-Oakland, and Los Angeles-Long Beach. 9 Includes data not shown separately. SUKVEY OF CUEEENT BUSINESS July 1966 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are s' own in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 1966 1965 1965 End of year S-17 May June July Aug. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. 21, 958 21, 614 21, 958 21,589 22, 719 22, 267 22, 750 22, 392 Sept. Feb. Mar. Apr. 22 23S 21 862 22 160 21 855 551 —246 22 528 '22 487 00 22 170 '22 117 22 r 370 358 626 722 —268 ' 352 May June FINANCE—Continued BANKING— Continued All member banks of Federal Reserve System, averages of daily figures: 1 21, 609 i 22, 719 21,472 Reserves held total mil. $ * 21, 198 1 22, 267 21, 147 Reouired __do Ull 325 *452 Excess - do 505 1243 1454 Borrowings from Federal Reserve banks. _. do i —2 -180 !168 Free reserves do Weekly reporting member banks of Fed. Res. System, condition, Wed. nearest end of yr. or mo.: Deposits: 68, 045 69, 723 62, 606 Demand, adjusted^1 mil. $ 102, 574 103, 507 97, 840 Demand total 9 do 73, 654 Individuals, partnerships, and corp do 75, 269 67, 521 5,239 5,545 5,355 State and local Governments do____ 6,384 3,866 U S Government __ do_ . 4,563 12, 539 Domestic commercial banks do 12, 429 12, 046 66, 881 78, 260 72,994 Time,total9 do Individuals, partnerships, and corp.: Savings -- do_ __ 40, 698 45, 362 42, 540 16, 407 21, 258 19, 679 Other time do Loans (adjusted) , total d" _..do._._ 102, 227 117, 165 107,450 42, 119 Commercial and industrial do 50, 629 45, 270 For purchasing or carrying securities, _-do_ __ 6,677 6, 803 6,420 9,032 9,290 To nonbank financial institutions do 10, 919 20, 008 22, 540 20, 842 Real estate loans do Other loans _ _ do. __ 29, 156 32, 068 30, 474 Investments, total __ do_ __ 48, 783 48, 299 46, 708 27, 679 24, 252 24,026 U.S. Government securities, total do 21, 979 19, 502 20, 823 Notes and bonds do 21, 104 24, 047 22, 682 Other securities _ __ _ _ . . do_ _ Commercial bank credit (last Wed. of mo., except for June 30 and Dec. 31 call dates) , seas, adjusted: 267.2 ' 294. 4 279.4 Total loans and in vestments© bil. $ 167.1 ' 191. 6 179.5 LoansQ _ _ ._ do 61.4 58.6 U.S. Government securities do '58.0 41.3 Other securities _ _ do 38.7 • r 44. 8 Money and interest rates: § Bank rates on short-term business loans: In 19 cities _ __ . percent New York City. — do 7 other northern and eastern cities do 11 southern and western cities . do Discount rate (N.Y.F.R. Bank), end of year or month __ percentFederal intermediate credit bank loans ..do Federal land bank loans -..do Home mortgage rates (conventional 1st mortgages) : New home purchase (U.S. avg.) percent-Existing home purchase (U.S. avg.) _do Open market rates, New York City: Bankers' acceptances (prime, 90 days) do Commercial paper (prime, 4-6 months).. do Finance Co. paper placed directly, 3-6 mo. do Stock Exchange call loans, going rate do Yield on U.S. Government securities (taxable): 3-month bills (rate on new issue) percent ._ 3-5 year issues __ _ . _ do Savings deposits, balance to credit of depositors: N.Y. State savings banks, end of period mil. $__ U.S. postal savings ^ . do. __ 21, 617 21, 187 528 -182 21,863 21,513 350 524 -174 63, 809 103, 553 69, 651 5,410 8,664 12, 404 73,817 64, 171 94, 572 68,096 4,900 5,022 10,861 74, 764 63, 505 96,101 68, 189 5,105 3,914 12, 566 75, 896 21, 709 21,363 346 430 564 -134 21, 740 21, 356 384 344 528 -144 369 490 -146 452 —83 452 358 454 —2 402 —44 478 —107 64, 133 65, 012 66, 175 69,723 97, 048 100, 028 101, 204 103. 507 68, 280 71,348 72, 127 5,572 4,940 5,429 5^355 5,591 2,442 3,789 3,866 12,075 13, 692 12,977 12, 429 76, 276 77, 170 77, 662 78, 260 68,220 99,647 72,415 5,532 3,153 11, 982 78,868 65 231 99 182 71,371 5,531 3 147 12, 619 79, 600 43, 128 43, 433 43, 827 44, 319 44, 805 45, 094 45, 362 45, 015 20, 130 20,542 20, 990 21, 003 21, 342 21, 511 21 258 22, 259 110,925 108, 548 111,071 111, 755 112, 727 114, 741 117, 165 116,025 46, 847 46, 282 46, 987 48, 117 48, 778 49, 167 50, 629 50,462 5,712 6, 224 5,453 5,587 6, 482 6,429 7,418 6.420 9,484 10, 289 10, 154 10,058 10, 319 10, 919 10,349 9,830 21, 149 21, 367 21, 739 22, 012 22, 231 22, 425 22 540 22,638 29, 326 30, 224 30, 113 30, 553 30, 585 31, 245 32, 068 31, 444 47, 515 47, 244 47, 086 47, 023 47, 769 47, 790 48,299 47, 557 24, 254 23, 667 22, 992 22, 830 23, 991 24, 119 24, 252 23,942 20, 619 20, 677 20, 322 20, 202 19, 948 19, 550 19 502 18, 957 23, 261 23, 577 24, 094 24, 193 23, 778 23, 671 24, 047 23, 615 282.8 183.0 57.7 42.1 281.5 182.7 56.4 42 .4 286.1 185. § 57.0 43.3 371 286.2 186.2 56.5 43.5 r 288. 8 ' 187. 9 57.0 43.9 r 305 COQ 215 314 674 q«n 66 292 67 921 65 630 65 159 97, 162 101 082 102 617 102 318 70, 313 73,303 71, 772 70, 259 5,651 5,469 6,030 5,651 3,223 3 983 4 700 7 471 11, 512 11 807 12 727 11 936 81,001 81 813 82 696 82 868 45 064 45, 111 43 377 43 093 43 104 22 961 24 160 26 040 27 133 27 515 116,939 118, 410 119, 494 121, 725 124, 566 51,315 52, 640 52, 495 53,839 55, 792 6, 035 6 249 6 666 6 784 6 768 10,419 10, 618 10 789 10 924 11 635 22 730 22 867 23 041 23* 260 23 516 31 124 32, 019 31 757 32 786 32* 674 46 220 45, 252 46 371 45 368 45 114 22 418 21, 474 21 849 20 704 20 276 18 296 17 945 18 064 17 469 17 582 23 802 23, 778 24 522 24' 664 24 838 291.5 ' 294. 4 '297.4 '297 5 '300.3 ' 303 0 304 3 189. 6 ' 191. 6 r 194.7 r 195 2 ' 199. 0 '200 7 202 2 ••57.7 '58.0 ' 57.8 '56.8 '56.1 '56.2 54.9 r r 45 5 '45.2 '44.2 r 46 1 44. 8 '44.9 47 2 306 6 205 5 53.9 47 2 8 4. 99 34.75 25.02 35.30 2 5. 06 24.83 2 5. 09 25.34 4.00 «4. 70 25.45 4.50 24.94 25.43 4.00 4.93 5.43 4.00 4.99 5.43 4.00 4.98 5.43 4.00 4.98 5.43 4.00 5.02 5.43 4.00 5.01 5.43 4.00 5.02 5.43 4.50 5.02 5.43 4.50 5.06 5.43 4.50 5.15 5.43 4.50 5.17 5.48 4.50 5 26 5 49 4.50 5 36 5 52 35.78 25.93 25.76 25.89 5.77 5.88 5.76 5.86 5.77 5.86 5.76 5.86 5.75 5.89 5.75 5.87 5.80 5.91 5.78 5.91 5.81 5.97 5.85 5.97 5.90 6.01 5.99 6.09 6.02 6.16 8 8 3. 77 3. 97 »3.83 8 4. 50 8 4. 22 M.38 34.27 »4.69 4.25 4,38 4.25 4.75 4.25 4.38 4.25 4.75 4.22 4.38 4.25 4.75 4.14 4.38 4.25 4.75 4.25 4.38 4.25 4.75 4.25 4.38 4.32 4.75 4.25 4.38 4.38 4.75 4 55 4.65 4.60 4.97 4.75 4.82 4.82 5.07 4 86 4.88 4.88 5.25 4.96 5.21 5.02 5.41 5 00 5.38 5.25 5.50 5 18 5.39 5.38 5.50 5 39 5.51 5.39 5.52 3. 549 4. 06 33.954 34.22 3.895 4.11 3.810 4.09 3.831 4.10 3.836 4.19 3.912 4.24 4.032 4.33 4.082 4.46 4.362 4.77 4.596 4.89 4.670 5,02 4.626 4.94 4. 611 4 86 4.642 4 94 4.539 5 oi 28, 260 30,312 309 28,995 350 29, 272 29,380 338 29, 498 29, 785 29,845 321 30, 001 30,312 314 30,442 303 30, 574 30,797 292 30,496 277 30, 581 8 8 390 5.00 4.76 5.03 5.31 4.99 4.74 5.01 5.31 342 332 327 5.55 5.41 5.58 5.70 5.27 5.08 5.32 5.46 317 299 5 5 5 6 §2 65 86 00 4.50 230 CONSUMER CREDIT* (Short- and Intermediate-term) Total outstanding, end of year or month mil. $.. 78, 442 87,884 80,469 81, 717 82,539 83, 319 83,801 84, 465 85,291 87,884 87, 027 86, 565 87,059 88, 184 89, 092 68, 565 62, 807 63,850 64, 704 65, 508 65, 979 66, 511 67 168 68 565 68,314 68 279 68, 827 69 543 70 209 Installment credit, total do 60, 548 Automobile paper do 28, 843 26, 717 27,280 27, 779 28, 111 28, 175 28,393 28, 612 28, 843 28, 789 28,894 29,248 29,597 29 908 25,195 Other consumer goods paper.... do____ 15, 593 17, 693 15, 458 15,648 15,818 15, 996 16,229 16, 492 16, 797 17, 693 17, 566 17,386 17, 450 17, 597 17, 732 3,534 3,648 3,664 3,604 3,675 3,602 Repair and modernization loans do 3,576 3,689 3,634 3,532 3,676 3,597 3,675 3,603 3 642 18,354 17, 098 17, 346 17, 503 17, 753 17, 911 17, 950 18, 070 18 354 18 325 18 396 18, 532 18 747 18 927 Personal loans _ __ _ do 16 228 By type of holder: 60,273 55, 762 56, 726 57, 537 58, 296 58, 703 59, 105 59,567 60, 273 60, 202 60, 331 60, 863 61, 539 62, 178 Financial institutions, total.. do 53,141 Commercial banks do _ 29, 173 26, 670 27, 214 27, 705 28,107 28, 343 28, 618 28, 855 29, 173 29,201 29, 312 29, 684 30,127 30 507 25, 094 Sates finance companies do 16, 138 15, 158 15, 372 15, 565 15, 721 15, 802 15,876 15, 963 16, 138 16,106 16, 072 16, 106 16,191 16, 263 14, 762 7,124 7,235 7,512 6,871 7,310 Credit unions ... do 7,032 7,512 7,593 7,711 7,363 7,436 6,458 7,447 7,473 7 839 5,334 5,387 5,410 5, 243 5,606 5,287 5,422 Consumer finance companies ^ do 5,465 5,621 5,670 5,606 5,630 5, 078 5,598 5,695 1,809 1,846 1,838 1,844 1,821 1,820 Other _ . do 1,826 1,848 1,844 1,850 1,840 1,749 1,850 1,853 1 874 7,212 7,276 8,292 7,124 7,167 7,045 8,292 7,964 7,406 7,601 Retail outlets, total do 8,112 8,004 7,948 7,407 8,031 3,847 3,811 3, 910 4,488 3,745 3,785 3,979 4,101 4,488 3,922 4,419 Department stores . . . do 1,103 1,235 1,076 1,084 1,090 1,117 Furniture stores do 1,138 1,167 1,235 1,152 1,208 425 431 447 405 417 433 447 Automobile dealers. do 438 443 459 448 451 466 370 472 2,122 1,841 1,831 2,122 1,819 1,816 1,890 1,838 1,851 2,037 Other do 1, 963 19, 319 17, 662 17, 867 17, 835 17, 811 17, 822 17,954 18, 123 19, 319 18, 713 18,286 18,232 18,641 18 883 Noninstallment credit, total do 17 894 7,575 7, 624 7,682 7,539 7,600 7,648 7,682 7,546 7,731 7,795 7,836 Single-payment loans, total do 7,400 7,666 7 925 6 954 6,497 6,342 6,477 6,476 6,520 6,546 6,555 6,587 6,574 Commercial banks do 6,587 6,630 6,676 6,717 6,784 5,950 1.063 1,078 1.080 1,078 1.093 1.119 1.058 1.069 1.095 1.092 1.119 Other financial institutions _do.___ 1. 095 1.101 1.141 1.004 9 Includes data not shown separately. 'Revised. 1 2 3 ©Adjusted to exclude interbank loans. Average for Dec. Average for year. Daily average. §For bond yields, see p. S-20. cFFor demand deposits, the term "adjusted" denotes demand deposits other than domestic ^Monthly data are as of the following dates: 1965—May 21; June 30; July 16; Aug. 13; Sept. commercial interbank and U.S. Government, less cash items in process of collection; for 10; Oct. 8; Nov. 5; Dec. 3; 1966—Jan. 28; Feb. 25; Mar. 25; Apr. 22; May 20. loans, exclusive of loans to domestic commercial banks and after deduction of valuation t Revised monthly data prior to Mar. 1965 appear in the May 1966 Fed. Reserve Bulletin. reserves (individual loan items are shown gross; i.e., before deduction of valuation reserves). SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS S-18 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 1965 1965 May Annual July 1966 June July Aug. 1966 Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June FINANCE—Continued CONSUMER CREDIT §— Continued Total outstanding, end of year or month— Con. Noninstallment credit— Continued Charge accounts, total _mil. $._ Department stores... do__._ Other retail outlets _ _ do Credit cards do Service credit do_ __ Installment credit extended and repaid: Unadjusted: Extended total do Automobile paper _ do_ __ Other consumer goods paper _do____ All other do Repaid total do _ Automobile paper _ _ _ _ _ d o _ __ Other consumer goods paper ____do____ All other do _ Seasonally adjusted: Extended total do Automobile paper do Other consumer goods paper do All other do Repaid total do___ Automobile paper do Other consumer goods paper do All other -__ - -_ do FEDERAL GOVERNMENT FINANCE Net cash transactions with the public: o* Receipts from mil. $ Payments to do 16,300 1909 4, 756 1635 i 4, 640 16,746 1968 15,055 1723 i 4, 891 5,453 647 4,142 664 4,809 5,528 627 4,218 683 4,793 5,534 591 4, 217 726 4,762 5,498 595 4, 149 754 4,738 5,496 647 4,078 771 4,726 5,645 682 4,221 742 4,685 5,740 725 4,291 724 4,735 6,746 968 5,055 723 4, 891 6, 107 855 4, 509 743 4, 940 5,505 5,393 5,670 5. 860 746 5,050 755 5,044 765 5,135 788 5,098 67,505 24,435 19, 473 23, 597 61, 121 21, 676 17, 737 21, 708 75,508 27, 914 21, 454 26, 140 67, 495 24, 267 19, 355 23, 873 6,253 2,419 1,684 2,150 5,330 1,937 1,518 1,875 6,839 2,646 1,804 2,389 5,796 2,082 1,614 2,100 6,537 2,524 1,777 2,236 5,682 2,025 1,607 2,050 6,493 2,401 1,789 2,303 5,688 2,068 1,611 2,009 6,085 2,088 1,849 2,148 5,616 2,024 1,617 1,975 6,247 2, 318 1,899 2, 030 5,714 2,099 1,636 1,979 6,608 2,410 2,004 2, 194 5.955 2,193 1,700 2, 062 7, 519 2,328 2,657 2,534 6, 120 2, 097 1,760 2,263 5, 586 2,001 1, 684 1, 901 5, 837 2, 055 1, 811 1,971 5,517 2,084 1,527 1, 906 5,552 1,979 1,707 1,866 6,865 2, 676 1,890 2,299 6,317 2, 322 1,826 2,169 6,658 2,486 1,874 2,298 5,942 2,137 1, 727 2,078 6, 694 2, 526" 1,898 2,270 6,028 2,215 1,763 2,050 6,167 2,249 1,731 2,187 5,511 1,987 1,569 1,955 6,196 2,285 1,719 2,192 5,601 2,007 1,590 2,004 6,383 2,355 1,818 2,210 5,659 2,007 1,608 2, 044 6,385 2,372 1,816 2,197 5,729 2,068 1,662 1,999 6,434 2,385 1,859 2,190 5, 748 2,056 1,638 2,054 6, 425 2,338 1,907 2,180 5,805 2, 080 1,670 2,055 6, 530 2,480 1, 873 2,177 5,831 2,148 1,683 2,000 6,489 2,443 1,862 2,184 5,855 2,107 1,720 2,028 6,544 2, 340 1, 983 2, 221 5, 947 2, 115 1, 778 2, 054 6,492 2,340 1,957 2,195 5,954 2, 135 1, 781 2,038 6,673 2,479 1,959 2,235 6,024 2,216 1,708 2,100 6,505 2,302 1,958 2,245 5,974 2,145 1,729 2,100 6,472 2, 298 1,933 2,241 5,979 2, 159 1,784 2,036 15, 334 4,981 11, 571 9,696 3,763 -4, 714 11, 595 12, 299 -705 4,283 10, 728 12, 599 11,090 10, 518 12, 312 1,509 -6, 234 -1, 584 10, 838 7, 091 11, 121 11,233 -283 -4, 142 12, 400 11,264 1,136 13,804 12, 086 1,718 11,853 11,325 528 13,916 12,821 1,095 32, 646 32, 395 251 30, 646 32, 104 -1,458 30, 685 33, 098 -2,413 32,684 36, 908 -4,224 ' 125. 0 120.6 '123.8 ' 126. 3 ' —2.5 ' 126. 9 ' 127. 0 T —. 2 ' 133. 7 '2.3 1 115, 031 120,340 -5,308 Seasonally adjusted, quarterly totals: t Receipts from do Payments to do Excess of receipts or payments ( — ) do Receipts and expenditures (national income and product accounts basis), qtrly. totals, seas, adj. at annual rates: * ' 115. 1 Receipts bil $ Expenditures do ' 118. 1 r 30 Surplus or deficit ( ) do Budget receipts and expenditures: 117, 222 Receipts total mil $ 88, 696 Receipts netf do 1,352 Customs do Individual income taxes do___. 52, 334 Corporation income taxes do 25, 047 17,106 Employment taxes do Other internal revenue and receipts do 21, 382 Expenditures totallf do 96, 945 11, 039 Veterans' benefits and services. _ _do 5, 484 52, 261 National defense do 29,067 All other expenditures do Public debt and guaranteed obligations: Gross debt (direct), end of yr. or mo., total-bil. $-- i 317. 94 Interest bearing, total do_ _ i 313. 55 Public issues do i 267. 48 Held by U.S. Govt. investment accts_do____ 114.36 Special issues do i 46. 08 Noninterest bearing and matured _ _ do_ __ 14.39 Guaranteed obligations not owned by U.S. Treasury, end of year or month bil. $ 1.81 U.S. savings bonds: Amount outstanding, end of yr. or mo do____ i 49. 89 4.61 Sales, series E and H do Redemptions _ _ _-do_ __ 5.25 123, 376 127, 920 —4, 544 11, 857 10, 567 1,290 ' 124. 9 '123.4 r4 4 r I Q r 136.0 124,354 96, 679 1,646 56, 102 27, 035 17, 268 22,303 101,378 11,615 5,151 52, 773 32, 582 11, 582 7,268 128 6,067 520 2,861 2,007 8,116 955 450 4,317 2,486 15,525 13,404 145 5,324 6,597 1,406 2,053 9,070 989 476 4,949 2,700 5,070 3,807 137 1,661 727 629 1,915 7,240 1,000 210 3,848 2,261 10, 586 7,350 145 5,540 482 2,501 1,918 8,990 966 483 4,372 3,261 12, 640 10, 999 159 5,422 4,236 1,120 1,703 9,452 966 474 4,531 3,482 4, 327 3,295 153 1,508 625 461 1, 580 8,750 962 486 4,477 2,878 10, 220 8, 106 164 5,934 507 1,508 2,107 9,105 963 526 4,518 3,320 10, 807 9,553 140 3, 705 4, 315 803 1,844 9,426 1,005 207 5,091 3, 155 7, 137 6,453 136 4,140 682 423 1,756 8,809 1,035 530 4,605 2,712 12,432 8,335 129 6,986 573 3,117 1,627 8,156 976 513 4,483 2,200 15, 701 11, 297 168 4,376 7,244 2,040 1,873 10, 193 1,035 525 5,600 3,038 13,072 9,929 151 7,341 2,440 1,320 1,821 8,362 1,013 289 4,995 2,078 13,746 8,452 158 7,389 751 3,615 1,833 9,055 1,025 485 4,895 2,650 1320.90 i 316. 52 i 270. 26 i 15. 51 i 46. 26 14.39 319. 22 314. 17 266. 33 14.70 47.83 5.05 317. 27 313. 11 264. 46 14.59 48.65 4.16 316. 58 312. 20 264. 41 14.39 47. 79 4.38 318. 24 313. 90 264. 12 14.92 49.78 4.34 316. 75 312. 36 264. 29 15.40 48.07 4.39 318. 90 314. 56 267. 60 15.18 46.96 4.34 321. 71 317. 36 270.30 15.65 47.05 4.36 320. 90 316. 52 270.26 15.51 46.26 4.39 322. 00 317. 60 273.24 15.53 44.36 4.40 323. 31 318. 92 273. 14 15.82 45.78 4. 39 321. 00 316. 58 270. 62 15.64 45.96 4.42 319. 58 315. 22 270. 30 15.47 44.92 4.36 322. 36 317.93 269.12 15.58 48.80 4.43 1.46 .61 .59 .47 .50 .52 .49 .46 .46 .42 .43 .46 .47 .47 .46 50.45 .35 .46 50.49 .46 .54 50.52 .43 .51 50.58 .41 .47 50.63 .40 .49 i 50. 46 4.49 5.44 50. 11 .36 .43 50.15 .36 .46 50.23 .39 .46 50.26 .37 .46 50.28 .34 .45 50.36 .37 .41 50.42 .34 .40 50.46 .33 .42 50.44 .47 .65 319. 91 315. 43 264. 31 51.12 4.48 LIFE INSURANCE Institute of Life Insurance: Assets, total, all U.S. life insurance companies I 152. 92 153. 50 154. 42 155. 19 156.04 156. 89 157.64 158. 70 159. 63 160. 23 160. 80 161. 48 162. 04 bil.$_ i 149. 47 70. 98 71.15 70.10 75.50 69.97 70.50 70.66 69.82 69.84 70.22 69.63 69.12 69.16 Bonds (book value) total do 167.96 ~ 7.27 ' 7.28 7.07 7.20 7.24 7.29 7.29 6.80 6.96 6.74 6.75 7.13 Stocks (book value), total_ do_ _ 6.67 17.94 58.82 61.29 61. 71 62.10 60.52 60.88 58.41 60.02 58.02 59.28 57.66 57.00 57.38 Mortgage loans, total do i 55. 15 56.32 56.65 54.10 55.99 56. 98 55.68 53.04 53.36 53.72 54.52 55. 20 Nonfarm do 52.48 52.81 i 50. 85 4.74 4.72 4.68 4.73 4.70 4.69 4.68 4.64 4.65 4.70 4.68 4.61 4.58 Real estate do 14.53 7.96 8.05 7.59 7.85 7.72 < 7.77 7.67 7.55 7.62 7.41 7.51 7.46 7.36 Policy loans and premium notes do i 7 14 1.02 1.25 1.48 1.30 .90 1.01 1.30 1.27 1.36 1.23 1.31 1.19 1.28 Cash do 11.49 7.74 7.65 7.67 7.38 7.63 7.60 7.09 7.34 7.63 7.33 6.97 7.00 Other assets do 15.26 7.00 Payments to policyholders and beneficiaries in 984.2 978. 7 964.3 918.9 909.8 1,139.5 879.4 1, 246. 3 935.5 954.2 950.2 878. 5 U S total mil $ 10, 757. 8 11, 416. 6 911. 6 425.1 503.0 418.1 403.5 388.8 411.8 400.4 381.9 480.1 399.3 398.8 388. 0 374.3 Death benefits do 4, 533. 5 4, 831. 4 82.3 80.9 94.8 75.8 85.1 77.9 74.8 67.9 74.6 74.6 75.2 80.9 Matured endowments _do___ 931.1 71.1 898.7 13.6 14.0 16.6 14.4 12.2 13.0 12.7 12.5 14.3 15.9 12.3 12.7 14.8 163.0 Disability payments. _. _.__do___ 160.6 92.5 100.3 83.5 90.0 90.9 104.5 86.7 85.3 85.0 85.5 81.2 89.0 84.6 Annuity payments do 961. 0 1, 038. 9 178. 2 196.5 162.1 178. 6 148.5 157.0 148.3 174.8 157.1 164.5 158.8 Surrender values do 165.2 162.9 1,833.7 1, 932. 3 188.0 200.7 186.4 209.3 228.3 169. 2 210.4 176.6 415.7 215. 3 203.3 Policy dividends... d o _ _ _ 2,370.3 2. 519. 9 169.9 198. 5 *New series; latest revised data for earlier periods appear in the Aug. 1965 and July 1966 'Revised. »Preliminary. 1 issues of the SURVEY. HData for net receipts and total expenditures reflect exclusion of End of year; assets of life insurance companies are annual statement values. certain interfund transactions. § See note "t" on p. S-17. cf Other than borrowing. J Revisions prior to 1965 for cash transactions with the public (seas, adj.) and for Jan. 1964-Apr. 1965 for assets of all life insurance cos. will be shown later. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS July 1966 Unless otherwise stated, statistics ithrough 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1965 1965 1964 May Annual S-19 June July Aug. 1966 Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June FINANCE—Continued LIFE INSURANCE— Continued Life Insurance Agency Management Association: Insurance written (new paid-for insurance):} Value estimated total _. mil. $__ 105, 008 -•1142,124 ••9,094 '9,268 ' 8, 785 '8,966 79,979 '137,703 '10,296 '12, 180 '8,120 ' 8, 494 '11,352 '10, 173 Ordinary _ . do . 73, 130 ' 82, 479 76,845 ' 7, 176 ' 6, 609 ' 6, 811 ' 6, 859 ' 7, 085 ' 7, 286 ' 7, 601 '6,151 ' 6, 564 ' 7, 980 '7,308 Group and mass-marketed ordinary _ _ _ _ d o 24, 566 ''52,349 ' 1, 564 ' 1, 824 ' 1, 586 '1,554 ' 2, 542 '129,997 ' 2, 374 ' 4, 055 ' 1, 420 '1,392 ' 2, 750 '2,291 7, 312 '7,296 Industrial -do '590 '601 7621 '524 ' 622 ' 685 '628 '578 '636 '549 '538 '574 Premiums collected: t Total life insurance premiums _.._ _ _ _.do_ __ 14,385 Ordinary - - do_ __ 10, 768 Group and wholesale _ _ do. _ _ . 2,225 1,391 Industrial do 15,032 11,250 2,419 1,364 1,218 924 188 106 1,223 930 195 98 1,254 954 194 105 1,222 915 204 103 1,191 898 193 100 1,264 962 196 106 9,938 7,431 1,878 629 1,216 914 206 96 1,364 1,046 220 98 1, 251 947 203 101 1,310 990 217 103 13, 732 -37 10,877 3,037 13,730 -31 0 2,159 13, 634 20 67, 775 10, 766 13, 632 -57 133 2,463 13, 532 26 13, 433 1.293 1,248 934 211 104 1, 532 1,026 278 228 1,251 953 188 110 Gold and silver: Gold: Monetary stock, U.S. (end of period) ___mil. $__ 15, 388 13, 733 14, 290 13,934 13, 857 13, 857 13, 858 13, 857 13, 805 Net release from earmark! do 256 142 124 99 -157 43 81 -198 18 Exports thous. $._ 422, 744 1,285,097 267,956 126, 407 159, 947 108, 028 126, 324 101, 275 101,335 Imports _ .do 40, 888 101, 669 1,562 2, 153 17, 794 1,539 2,465 1,888 56, 027 13, 733 -72 67, 842 10, 102 / MONETARY STATISTICS mil. $__ 21,395.0 1, 019. 8 do 133.4 do do 51.4 1, 069. 6 125.6 89.2 10.4 90.1 10.7 90.8 10.0 91.0 10.5 89.7 10.2 90.4 10.5 91.6 10.4 89.3 10.2 91.2 9.8 87.8 9.6 90.5 10.1 90.8 10.1 thous. $__ 144, 121 do 66,311 doL per fine 07, 1.293 54,061 64, 769 1.293 9,273 4,364 1.293 2,101 3,763 1.293 848 3,917 1.293 4,199 5,716 1.293 1,534 6,104 1. 293 4,046 4,722 1.293 5, 072 10, 809 1.293 3,908 7,688 1.293 4,616 6,475 1. 293 8,875 6, 546 1. 293 ' 7, 929 6,452 1. 293 7,358 7,277 1.293 1.293 thous.fineo z _ _ 29, 933 do 41,716 do 45,872 31,916 40, 333 44,423 2, 632 3,290 3,527 2,884 2,903 3,418 2,549 3,838 3,159 2,507 3,647 3, 231 3,043 3,566 2,957 3,020 3, 677 3,871 2,801 2,867 ' 2, 273 3 6, 825 3,580 3,496 3,625 2,424 2, 960 3, 026 4, 149 bil. $_. 39.6 42.1 39.2 39.7 39.9 40.2 40.4 40.8 41.8 42.1 41.1 41.3 41.5 41.5 42. 1 Money supply and related data (avg. of daily fig.) :t Unadjusted for seas, variation: Total money supply bil. $ Currency outside banks _ _ _ _ do Demand deposits __ do Time deposits adjusted?. _ i do._._ U.S. Government demand deposits do_ _ 156.3 33.5 122.8 119.4 5.8 162.6 35.2 127.4 137.6 6.4 157.6 34.6 123.0 135.4 9.7 159. 6 34.9 124.6 136.6 9.3 160.9 35.4 125. 6 138.3 9.1 160.5 35.5 125.0 140.2 7.4 163.2 35.6 127.5 141.4 5.6 165.8 36.0 129.8 143.5 5.0 167.4 36.5 130.9 144.4 4.0 172.0 37.0 135.0 145.3 4.5 173.0 36.5 136.5 147.4 3.7 167.8 36.3 131.5 148.7 5.1 167.8 36.5 131.3 150.2 4.6 171.6 36.8 134.8 152.2 3.0 166.9 37.0 129.9 153.9 7.2 168.8 37.3 131.5 « 154. 0 6.2 160.0 34.9 125. 1 134.6 161.8 35.0 126. 8 135.9 162.5 35.2 127.3 137.6 162.7 35.4 127. 3 140.1 164. 3 35.6 128. 7 141.6 165.6 35. 9 129.7 143.6 165.7 36.1 129.6 145. 5 167.4 36.3 131.2 147.0 168.4 36.7 131.8 148.0 168.0 36.8 131.2 148.8 169.2 36.9 132. 3 149.6 171.1 37.1 134. 0 151.6 169. 5 37.3 132.2 152.9 171. 1 37.3 133.8 153. 3 47.0 96.0 34.7 44.3 30.6 50.9 107.0 36.3 45.5 32.2 49.3 104.9 35.1 44.4 31.1 48.4 99.4 35.5 44.9 31.7 47.2 95.4 35.3 44.1 31.4 47.4 96.3 35.1 43.8 31.4 50.5 104. 7 37.0 47.6 32.1 50.6 102.2 37.5 47.7 33.3 50.7 104.5 37.0 47.3 32.7 50.9 105.6 37.0 47.6 32.5 52.3 107.1 38.3 49.1 33.5 52.8 112. 0 37.7 47.8 33.3 52.4 109.3 37.8 49.8 32.8 3,667 3,111 Production, world total South Africa _ Canada _ United States Silver: Exports Imports Price at New York Production: Canada Mexico. United States _ Currency in circulation (end of period) Adjusted for seas, variation: Total money supply _ _ Currency outside banks Demand deposits Time deposits adjusted? do_ _ _ do do do. __ Turnover of demand deposits except interbank and U.S. Govt., annual rates, seas, adjusted: Total (225 SMSA's) 9 _ .ratio of debits to deposits.. NewYorkSMSA ..do Total 224 SMSA's (except N.Y.). . ___.do_ _ 6 other leading SMSA'scf » do 218 other SMSA's do 4,104 44.7 89.5 32.9 41.4 29.2 48. 4 99.6 35.4 44.9 31.4 23, 211 1,692 507 27, 521 1,896 694 7,215 454 166 6,590 522 176 7,484 511 201 7,229 469 162 314 754 2, 857 4,094 681 758 1,225 338 4753 3,188 4,442 761 970 1,401 93 188 853 1,088 220 270 411 105 184 789 1,079 253 214 312 84 219 815 1, 214 206 251 290 68 213 847 1,207 115 294 324 842 2,001 1,512 1,151 2,499 1,926 325 689 455 304 652 471 278 658 594 313 680 546 546 2, 808 2 617 721 3,496 4 3 285 187 1,057 759 184 469 876 203 985 976 186 973 833 Dividends paid (cash) , all industries do 10, 810 Electric utilities, profits after taxes (FederaL Reserve) mil. $ 5 r 2. 375 Transportation and communications (see pp. S-23 andS-24). 11, 979 2,942 2,623 3, 756 3,040 2, 568 597 626 632 758 6 PROFITS AND DIVIDENDS (QTRLY.) Manufacturing corps. (Fed. Trade and SEC): Net profit after taxes, all industries mil. $ Food and kindred products •_ do _ Textile mill products _do~ __ Lumber and wood products (except furniture) mil. $Paper and allied products do Chemicals and allied products..do Petroleum refining ^ _ .do Stone, clay, and glass products do Primary nonferrous metal do Primary iron and steel do Fabricated metal products (except ordnance, machinery, and transport, equip.) mil. $_. Machinery (except electrical) do Elec. machinery, equip., and supplies do Transportation equipment (except motor vehicles, etc ) mil $ Motor vehicles and equipment do All other manufacturing industries do SECURITIES ISSUED Securities and Exchange Commission: 4, 297 2,936 3,160 Estimated gross proceeds, total mil. $._ 37, 122 40, 108 By type of security: 2,814 2,712 3,988 34,030 Bonds and notes, total do 37, 836 1, 322 1,324 10,865 1,729 13, 720 Corporate do 384 154 78 Common stock do 2,679 1,547 44 155 65 412 Preferred stock ._ ___ _do 725 ' Revised. 1 Includes $27.8 bil. coverage on U.S. Armed Forces. 2 Estimated; excludes U.S.S.R., other Eastern European countries, China Mainland, and North Korea. ? Data 4 for Nov.-Dec. Beginning with April 1966 SURVEY, data reflect reclassification of companies between paper and allied products industries and instruments, etc.6 (included in all other). s Revisions for lst-4th qfcr. 1964 (mil. dol.): 659; 541; 583; 592. Beginning June 1966, data exclude balances accumulated for payment of personal loans (amounting to $1,140 million for week ending June 15). ^Revisions for 1964 and 1965 for insurance written and for Jan-Aug. 1964 for premiums 2,354 3,029 2,661 6,340 2, 948 3,021 3,008 4,250 3,458 2,878 3,833 2,834 3,043 2,789 6,083 2,537 1,143 1,383 2, 065 958 1,487 1, 152 1,142 861 55 181 72 396 56 116 165 68 75 21 28 12 119 92 86 8 collected will be shown later; those for money supply and related data for 1959-64 appear on p. 44 of the June 1966 SURVEY. § Or increase in earmarked gold (—). tTime deposits at all commercial banks other than those due to domestic commercial banks and the U.S. Govt. 9 Total SMSA's include some cities and counties not designated as SMSA's. cfIncludes Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, Detroit, San Francisco-Oakland, and Los Angeles-Long Beach. 2, 262 837 78 15 2, 861 1,370 76 92 SUEVEY OF CUEEENT BUSINESS S-20 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 1965 Annual July 1966 1965 May June July Aug. 1966 Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June FINANCE—Continued SECURITIES ISSUED— Continued Securities and Exchange Commission— Continued Estimated gross proceeds— Continued By type :of issuer: Corporate, total 9 mil. $__ Manufacturing do Extractive (mining) _ _ _ do Public utility . do Railroad i do Communication _ _ _ __do Financial and real estate do Noncorporate, total 9 TJ S Government •____ State and municipal New corporate security issues: Estimated net proceeds total Proposed uses of proceeds: New money total Plant and equipment Working capital Retirement of securities _ _ Other purposes State and municipal issues (Bond Buyer) : Long-term Short-term _- - - --do do -do 13, 957 3,046 421 2,760 333 2,189 3,856 15, 992 5,417 342 2,936 284 947 4,276 1,773 735 20 275 24 145 373 2,038 484 14 195 16 99 1,045 1,443 454 43 228 27 154 206 930 364 19 305 13 29 134 1.538 435 25 365 26 202 343 986 287 28 169 20 96 284 1,398 424 21 242 11 47 544 1, 646 492 64 307 14 60 437 1, 339 370 21 399 46 142 153 1,273 541 34 249 42 163 116 2,482 1,001 28 344 40 304 296 1,592 673 14 368 35 77 173 1,026 413 38 259 47 41 111 23, 165 10, 656 10, 544 24, 116 9,348 11, 148 1,387 356 1,020 2, 26,0 362 1,000 1,492 388 1,055 1,424 371 718 1,490 342 984 1,675 369 867 4,942 3,463 1,018 1,302 331 768 1, 682 475 1, 176 1,735 345 845 1,768 457 848 2,075 426 1,181 2,085 412 896 do__ 13, 792 15, 801 1, 746 2,018 1,427 919 1,523 973 1,377 1, 632 1, 325 1,259 2,452 1,570 1,015 do do do __do do 11, 233 7,003 4,230 754 1,805 13, 063 7,712 5,352 996 1 741 1,560 993 566 55 132 1,665 651 1,014 72 281 1,168 735 433 137 122 760 572 188 69 91 1,249 797 452 130 143 834 480 355 49 90 1,183 584 598 52 143 1,279 699 580 136 217 1,214 959 255 22 88 1,068 817 251 22 169 2,039 1,482 557 7 407 1, 421 1,077 344 16 133 938 680 258 13 64 do do 10, 544 5,423 11, 084 6,537 1,020 652 1,000 489 991 380 718 557 984 543 867 397 1,018 665 768 332 1, 176 355 845 382 848 608 1, 181 1, 061 896 865 !534 5, 543 i 1, 666 i 3, 706 477 5,154 1,208 4,187 515 5,139 1,297 4,436 491 4,887 1,233 3,676 491 4,908 1,192 3,771 539 5,016 1,369 3,609 525 5,096 1,475 3,552 550 5,232 1,479 3,661 534 5,543 1,666 3,706 581 5, 576 1, 730 3,669 575 5, 777 1,765 3,586 645 5, 671 1,822 3,603 604 5,862 1,744 3,858 625 5,797 1,839 3,741 95.1 111.5 93.9 110.6 94.7 111.9 93.9 110.8 93.9 110.8 93.5 111.0 92.8 109.3 92.7 108.4 92.3 107.7 91.1 106.3 90.5 106.9 89.5 105.2 87.9 103.9 87.6 105.9 87.6 104.5 86.9 103.2 84.46 U.S. Treasury bonds, taxable^ do Sales: Total, excl. "U.S. Government bonds (SEC): All registered exchanges: Market value mil. $ 2, 882. 48 2, 640. 74 Face value - -do New York Stock Exchange: Market value do _ 2, 782. 80 Face value do _ 2, 542. 26 New York Stock Exchange, exclusive of some stopped sales face value total mil $ 2,524 50 Yields: 4.57 Domestic corporate (Moody's) percent-. By rating: 4.40 Aaa do 4.49 Aa . --do 4.57 A _ _ _ . _ — .-do 4.83 Baa do_ __ By group: 4.52 Industrials _ __ do_ __ 4.53 Public utilities _ _ do 4.67 Railroads _do_ _ Domestic municipal: 3.20 Bond Buyer (20 bonds) __ _do_ __ 3.22 Standard & Poor's Corp. (15 bonds) do 83.76 84.58 84.57 84.51 84.00 83.27 82.97 82.22 81.21 81.15 79.32 78.92 79.75 79.56 78.93 3, 794. 22 3, 288. 68 240. 82 220. 36 303. 79 278. 99 265. 58 248. 19 294.76 256. 23 398. 73 332. 00 424. 51 345. 52 373. 10 296. 25 490. 17 368. 03 359. 80 287.99 383. 38 296. 12 485. 14 373. 14 423.27 334.44 394. 28 344. 51 3. 643. 11 3, 150. 16 230. 16 210. 27 287. 04 262. 56 253.01 282. 80 235. 86 245. 19 389. 95 323. 26 414. 32 336. 49 361. 09 285. 05 469.00 350. 45 348. 47 278. 54 371. 60 285. 18 466. 96 358. 35 402.67 318. 91 380. 69 333. 50 2 975.21 207. 90 271. 92 191. 64 244. 98 307. 79 290. 84 272.00 302. 78 252.64 250. 95 331. 66 253. 71 285. 53 4.60 4.64 4.65 4.69 4.72 4.75 4.84 4.89 4.94 5.10 5.16 5.18 5.28 4.46 4.48 4.49 4.52 4.56 4.60 4.68 4.74 4.78 4.92 4.69 4.91 4.71 4.93 4.75 4.95 4.85 5.02 4.91 5.06 4.96 5.12 5.12 5.32 4.98 5in 5.17 5.48 5.07 4.65 4.88 4.96 f\ 10 5.18 5.41 r r 1,073 358 SECURITY MARKETS Brokers' Balances (N.Y.S.E. Members Carrying Margin Accounts) Cash on hand and in banks Customers' debit balances (net) Customers' free credit balances (net) Money borrowed mil. $ do do - -do Bonds Prices: Standard & Poor's Corporation: Industrial, utility, and railroad (AAA issues): Composited1 -- - dol. per $100 bond- _ Domestic municipal (15 bonds) do_ *488 5, 101 *1 1, 169 4, 132 1 1 4.64 4.57 4.44 4.49 4.57 4.63 4.87 4.55 4.81 4.58 4.85 4.62 4.88 4.61 4.60 4.72 4.55 4.53 4.64 4.59 4.56 4.66 4.62 4.58 4.71 4.63 4.60 4.73 4.65 4.64 4.77 4.67 4.67 4.81 4.71 4.71 4.83 4.79 4.82 4.91 4.84 4.85 4.97 4.91 4.90 5.02 5.06 5.08 5.18 5.09 5.21 5.19 5.12 5.23 5.20 5.25 5.32 5.26 3.28 3.27 3.20 3.19 3,30 3.26 3.25 3.26 3.29 3.25 3.41 3.36 3.40 3.42 3.50 3.47 3.54 3.56 3.54 3.52 3.83 3.63 3.59 3.72 3.62 3.59 3.78 3.68 3.83 3.77 K rie 5.29 5.58 _do_ __ 4.15 4.21 4.14 4.14 4.15 4.19 4.25 4.27 4.34 4.43 4.43 4.61 4.63 4.55 4.57 4.63 Cash dividend payments publicly reported: Total dividend payments.mil.$__ U S Treasury bonds, taxable© Stocks Finance _ Manufacturing Mining Public utilities: Communications Electric and gas Railroads Trade Miscellaneous __. _ _ _ - - - 17, 682 19,488 487 2,864 1,279 507 2,735 1,333 537 3,881 1,561 756 2,870 1,385 526 3, 043 --- do do do 2,805 9,298 601 3, 154 10, 317 637 106 180 3 251 1,951 121 271 400 19 115 189 1 305 1,763 122 277 431 21 141 199 4 572 2,504 187 428 460 23 326 193 4 293 1,880 124 280 438 21 111 197 3 261 2,064 127 __do do -do do do 1,573 2,035 422 680 268 1,678 2,174 446 768 314 2 150 6 28 12 115 242 71 74 39 312 152 21 81 23 2 150 9 29 12 114 245 70 76 40 316 153 25 84 26 2 146 7 26 12 118 252 113 81 54 343 156 19 107 25 3 159 9 48 14 121 258 74 73 47 349 160 27 84 26 3 160 6 29 17 124 261 80 82 44 7.05 7.70 3.43 3.81 4.57 6.00 7.65 8.48 3.86 4.09 4.90 6.33 7.54 8.38 3.80 4.00 4.92 6.31 7.55 8.38 3.83 4.04 4.92 6.31 7.57 8.41 3.84 4.04 4.92 6.31 7.59 8.42 3.88 4.07 4.92 6.31 7.63 8.47 3.90 4.08 4.92 6.31 7.78 8.67 3.96 4.16 4.92 6.31 8.12 9.03 3.99 4.28 4.93 6.57 8.15 9.06 4.02 4.34 4.94 6.59 8.18 9.10 4.03 4.35 4.94 6.59 8.22 9.16 4.03 4.35 4.94 6.59 8.23 9.17 4.08 4.35 4.94 6.65 8.23 9.18 4.08 4.35 4.94 8.24 9.18 4.09 4.35 4.94 6.65 8.26 9.18 4.10 4.39 5.14 6.65 Dividend rates and prices, common stocks (Moody's): Dividends per share, annual rate, composite dollars... Industrials do Public utilities do_ Railroads - _ __ _do N.Y. banks do Fire insurance companies do_ _ _ 250. 31 249. 78 238. 93 242. 16 235. 08 Price per share, end of mo., composite do 284.32 282. 16 269. 18 273. 38 258. 55 Industrials do 117. 08 118. 21 114. 22 114. 76 108. 76 Public utilities . do 95.06 90.22 86.23 90.93 94.01 Railroads do___ r 1 Revised. End of year. 9 Includes data not shown separately, cf Number of bonds represented fluctuates; the change in the number does not affect the continuity of the series. 246. 50 254. 52 260. 91 255. 62 258. 09 257. 90 279. 07 290. 30 301. 00 296. 07 299. 67 300. 28 115. 46 116. 95 118. 38 115. 84 114.86 111. 34 94.36 95.11 99.69 102. 30 103. 46 109.88 1 Prices are derived from average yields on basis O For bonds due or callable in 10 years or more. 6:65 252. 36 244. 95 246. 67 236. 01 230. 25 293. 20 286. 15 288. 13 274.18 267. 22 106. 81 105. 41 106. 33 102. 45 99.95 110. 59 102. 01 102.66 93.56 92.58 of an assumed 3 percent 20-year bond. July 1966 S-21 SURVEY OF CUEKENT BUSINESS Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 1965 Annual 1966 1965 May June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June FINANCE—Continued SECURITY MARKETS-Continued Stocks— Continued \ Dividend yields and earnings, common stocks (Moody's) : Yields, composite percent-Industrials __ _ do Public utilities do Railroads . do N.Y. banks _ do Fire insurance companies. do 3.00 2 98 3 15 4 05 2 97 2.50 3.06 2 98 3 30 4 30 3 33 2.74 Earnings per share (indust., qtrly. at arm. rate; pub. util. and RR., for 12 mo. ending each qtr.) : Industrials _ _ dollars Public utilities _!__ do Railroads _ _ do 14 39 5.41 6 97 16 50 5 92 8 16 Dividend yields, preferred stocks, 14 high-grade (Standard & Poor's Corp.) percent-. 4.32 4.33 294. 23 834 05 146 02 204. 36 318. 50 910. 88 157. 88 216. 41 Prices: Dow-Jones averages (65 stocks) __ _.. __ Industrial (30 stocks) Public utility (15 stocks) _ Railroad (20 stocks) Standard & Poor's Corporation :cf Industrial, public utility , and railroad: Combined index (500 stocks) _ _ _ .1941-43=10Industrial, total (425 stocks) 9 Capital goods (122 stocks) Consumers' goods (188 stocks) Public utility (50 stocks) Railroad (25 stocks).. _ Banks: New York City (10 stocks). Outside New York City (16 stocks) Fire and casualty insurance (22 stocks) 3.02 2 97 3 21 4 43 3 39 2.70 3.16 3 11 3 35 4 69 3 51 2.84 3.13 3 08 3 35 4 44 3 38 2.86 3.08 3 02 3 36 4 31 3 25 2.90 17 21 5 68 6 91 4.30 319 927 161 209 93 50 35 18 4.38 302 878 154 195 72 06 93 79 3.00 2 92 3 33 4 29 3 17 2.94 2.98 2 88 3 35 4 17 3 43 2.96 303 873 155 199 66 43 71 51 3.26 3 12 3 77 3 93 3 78 2.79 3.36 3 20 3.87 4.26 3 81 2.95 3.34 3 19 3.84 4.24 4 03 2.82 3.49 3.35 3.99 4.65 3.95 2.97 3.59 3.44 4.10 4.74 4.18 3.05 17.10 6.03 8.56 4.32 4. 38 4.41 4.47 4.51 4.63 4.83 4.78 4.83 4.93 37 70 44 21 321. 61 922 18 157. 51 218. 86 330. 89 944 77 157 19 231. 09 335. 45 953. 31 157. 11 238. 11 337. 09 955. 19 152. 00 245. 33 346.95 985. 93 151.26 255. 52 347. 42 977 15 145 87 264.99 331. 16 926. 43 141. 49 252. 80 337. 27 943. 70 140. 26 260. 64 314. 62 890. 70 137. 32 233. 07 311. 51 888. 73 134. 07 229. 24 4.34 312 887 155 214 3.17 3 03 3.62 3.96 3 55 2.70 18 26 5.92 8 16 14 60 5 82 7 22 4.38 3.16 3 02 3 50 4 19 3 51 2.63 3.18 3 05 3 44 4 18 3 51 2.94 81.37 88.17 89. 28 85.04 84.91 86.49 89,38 91.39 92.15 91.73 93.32 92.69 88.88 91. 60 86.78 86.06 do do do_._ do_._. do 86.19 76.34 73.84 69.91 45.46 93.48 85.26 81.94 76.08 46.78 94 69 86.35 85.21 77.50 45.53 90 19 81.62 80.04 74.19 42.52 89 92 80.54 78.80 74.63 43.31 91.68 83.25 80.23 74.71 46.13 94.93 86.91 82.34 76.10 46.96 97.20 90.28 83.90 76.69 48.46 98. 02 91.62 83. 751 76.72 50.23 97.66 91.42 83. 31 75.39 51.03 99.56 93.35 84.28 74.50 53.68 99.11 93.69 83. 48 71.87 54.78 95. 04 90 28 78.96 69.21 51.52 98.17 93.54 79.28 70.06 52. 33 92.85 88.78 75.12 68.49 47.00 92. 14 87.34 73.75 67.51 46.35 do_.__ do do 39.64 77.54 67.20 38.92 71.35 64.17 38.91 71 23 67.67 37.17 68.47 62.54 38.18 70.22 60.95 38.96 70.98 60.75 40.43 72.74 60.79 39.68 71.68 58.58 37.19 69.26 59. 56 37.71 70.27 66.13 37.24 70.93 67.86 36.10 70.51 66.98 34. 11 65.19 63.28 33.67 64.17 65. 27 32.32 61.22 63.33 32.39 61.32 61.64 72 147 2 045 89,225 2,587 6 580 198 6 911 187 5 656 154 5,952 163 7,993 222 9 664 279 8,603 262 11, 683 345 11, 022 304 11, 169 302 12, 978 12, 909 337, 357 12, 268 302 60 424 1 482 73, 200 1,809 5 366 133 5 819 136 4 783 116 4 937 120 6 662 165 7 857 199 6,879 163 9,200 231 8,651 206 8,789 198 10, 359 224 9, 893 221 9,800 209 1 237 1,556 110 128 85 109 155 164 147 191 183 166 192 186 171 474 32 9,229 537. 48 10, 058 503 54 9 647 478 83 9 785 487 85 9 829 500 62 9,863 517. 67 9,931 532. 83 9,984 530.77 10, 013 537.48 10, 058 542. 75 10, 136 535. 38 10, 180 523. 93 10, 245 536. 36 10, 276 507. 77 10, 507 Sales (Securities and Exchange Commission): Total on all registered exchanges: Market value mil $ Shares sold millions On New York Stock Exchange: Market value mil $ Shares sold (cleared or settled) millions Exclusive of odd-lot and stopped stock sales (N.Y S E ; sales effected) millions Shares listed, N.Y. Stock Exch., end of period: Market value, all listed shares bil $ Number of shares listed millions FOREIGN TRADE OF THE UNITED STATES FOREIGN TRADE Value Exports (mdse ) incl reexports totalO Excl. Dept. of Defense shipments Seasonally adjusted _ By geographic regions:A Africa Asia Australia and Oceania Europe Northern North America Southern North America South America By leading countries : Africa: United Arab Republic (Egypt) Republic of South Africa . Asia; Australia and Oceania: Australia including New Guinea India . . Pakistan Malaysia Indonesia Philippines Japan Europe: France East Germany West Germany mil $ do 26,488.8 27, 346. 2 2,427.9 2,335.6 2, 244. 8 2, 188. 3 2,163.0 2, 444. 0 2, 505. 4 2, 606. 5 12,132.5 2, 297. 5 2, 817. 9 2, 600. 5 2, 616. 9 25,670.6 26, 567. 1 2,381.0 2,218.9 2, 172. 1 2, 123. 5 2,140.2 2, 419. 5 2, 440. 4 2, 550. 5 12,132.5 2, 210. 3 2,747.0 2,464.7 2, 505. 9 2,260.2 2,230.2 2, 255. 5 2,332.9 2,324.1 2,341.6 2,408.2 2,355.8 2, 248. 6 2, 334. 8 2,594.4 2, 331. 2 2, 364. 4 do do do do do 1, 222. 5 1, 224. 1 5, 233. 7 5, 495. 8 850.7 750. 1 8 326. 7 8, 851. 6 120.4 466.7 76.7 806.3 120.2 459.0 70.2 675.9 82.1 485.0 69.4 732.9 111.9 422.1 104.9 670.4 129.2 401.1 78.9 666.7 105.6 458.8 67.1 806. 0 84.5 480.3 66.3 857.6 91.0 525.9 60.2 880.4 85.9 400.6 56.9 765.2 86.2 447.2 60.2 790.3 132.0 533.6 70.2 993. 5 114.4 495.6 60.0 820.4 114.7 442.0 61.5 828.1 do do do 4,746.7 2, 044. 8 2, 129. 7 5, 587. 1 2, 094. 6 2, 141. 7 517.7 175.6 192.3 531.2 179.0 168.9 451.1 171. 0 164.7 440.1 170.9 172.2 458.5 172.8 191.9 532.5 188.6 210.6 528.3 193.0 197.4 524.8 190.4 227.8 434.1 170.3 178.1 457.4 161.3 177.2 567.1 212.0 217.8 564.6 176.7 196.0 623.5 186.2 213.4 do do 268.2 396.1 157.6 437.8 9.0 46.6 11.7 42.0 10.4 29.5 23.6 41.9 17.8 50.0 11.9 35.7 6.4 27.7 6.1 21.2 5.8 30.6 12.0 23.2 22.8 41.4 18.6 33.3 22.6 30.8 do do do do 639.6 955.0 375.7 77.0 700.7 928. 0 335.9 89.5 65.2 81.0 41.9 8.1 58.2 92.2 28.9 7.6 58.6 97.3 26.9 8.1 78.1 75.2 31.3 7.5 60. 9 72.9 14.0 7.1 52.3 73.3 22.9 7.4 56.3 53.3 25.5 8.1 50.1 63.0 42.3 8.0 46.3 62.3 17.3 3.0 49.9 88.4 15.8 3.7 58.8 116.9 13.2 4.1 51.0 97.9 11.7 4.1 47.6 63.0 16.8 3.7 do do do 68.1 361.5 1,912.6 41.5 336.3 2, 057. 5 5.4 32.0 152.5 3.3 27.7 152.3 4.3 28.4 195.4 2.1 24.7 156.7 4.3 34.5 145.6 2.7 32.0 169.9 2.7 25.4 196.6 3.8 26.1 202.6 2.3 24.1 157.9 2.9 23.9 174.6 2.5 27.5 194.3 3.1 29.6 196.0 2.4 26.6 174.2 do do_ _ do 805. 9 20.2 1,315.2 901.8 12.6 1, 501. 8 87.6 2.1 127.7 71.5 .8 113.0 69.2 .1 121.2 72.7 .6 120.1 61.8 .5 114.1 78.9 1.2 147.0 86.1 .9 159.7 88.0 3.4 129. 6 83.3 3.7 131.5 84.0 1.6 121.2 98.7 1.4 166.1 82.6 4.2 143.9 83.2 3.4 131.0 864.4 833.4 67.5 Italy do 74.8 63.6 44.4 2.0 144.6 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics do 8.8 3.1 1,471.4 1, 564. 8 132.2 128.5 118.7 United Kingdom ____ ___do r Revised. ? Preliminary. 1 See note 2 for p. S-22. cf Number of stocks represents number currently used; the change in number does not affect continuity of the series. 9 Includes data not shown separately. O Beginning Jan. 1965, data reflect adoption of revised export schedule; in some instances, 75.4 81.3 67.9 88.5 85.1 71.8 81.7 86.5 60.7 59.5 6.2 4.2 4.8 2.9 3.1 4.3 2.6 3.1 3.1 1.5 138.6 140.9 164.1 140.0 138. 1 175.6 155.6 126.3 143.9 117.5 because of regrouping of commodities and release of some "special category" items from the restricted list, data for commodities and countries are not comparable with those for earlier periods. A Excludes "special category" shipments. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS S-22 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 1965 1965 May Annual July 1966 June July Aug. 1966 Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Feb. Jan. Mar. Apr. May June FOREIGN TRADE OF THE UNITED STATES—Continued FOREIGN TRADE— Continued Value— Continued Exports (mdse.) , incl. reexports— Continued By leading countries— Continued North and South America: C anada mil $ Latin American Republics, total 9 Argentina Brazil Chile 4, 774. 5 5, 586. 7 517.6 531.2 451.1 440.1 458.5 532. 5 528.3 524.8 434 1 457.4 567 0 564.5 623.5 3, 737. 9 3, 750. 6 327.6 307.6 297. 6 304.1 327.3 354.5 344.8 375.8 310. 4 303. 4 379. 6 331.0 357.3 261.6 387.8 180. 9 266.0 328. 6 235.3 23.2 27.5 21.0 19.4 20.2 15.8 22.0 18.8 18.0 25.9 24.7 17.4 18.4 32.0 31.1 25.5 39.9 21.3 22.7 35.9 23.2 22.8 52.1 26.3 16 8 39.5 20.8 16.7 31.5 22.3 18.7 53.6 20.7 15.0 46.0 19.4 18.1 51.2 23.3 246.2 do -do_ __ 0) 1, 092. 4 do 606.3 do 21.4 13.8 0 95.2 55.8 12.8 0 92.5 52.2 13.4 0 88.9 52.8 15.5 0) 93.1 49.9 17.2 0 98.0 58.3 18.3 0 99.2 54.0 23.9 0 99.0 56.9 18.0 0) 93.5 45.0 21.9 0) 86.9 44.6 25.2 1, 105. 2 623.7 108.6 51.7 23.3 0 88.2 49.6 28.0 0 98/2 49.8 do do do do _ Colombia Cuba Mexico Venezuela _ _- Exports of U.S. merchandise, total Ot— Excl military grant-aid t By economic classes: Crude materials Crude foodstuffs Manufactured foodstuffs and beverages Semimanufactures cf Finished manufactures cf Excl military grant-aid By principal commodities: Agricultural products, total 9 Animal and vegetable oils and fats Cotton, unmanufactured Fruits vegetables and preparations Grains and preparations Meat and meat preparations Tobago and marmfantnrfis A Nonagri cultural products, total 9 - _ 532.9 do __ '6, 347. 5 '6, 228. 6 530.9 r 548. 0 do 6 344 8 »• 484. 6 587.0 652.2 647.5 505.7 518.6 624.8 552.3 549.6 1,928.5 1, 599. 6 1,745.4 2,153.6 2, 005. 6 2,018.5 d o _ __ 229.0 do 547.3 do __ 1 540.2 do 520 6 do 2 991 7 Petroleum and products _ _ __ __ __do Textiles and manufactures do _ 471.4 804.9 do 18 684 0 21 366 4 1,723 3 1 907 0 1 632 9 1 716 0 1 797 6 1, 997. 1 1,966 7 2,159 9 1 828 7 1 822 5 2 245 7 2, 071. 2 2, 092. 5 do _. 1,789.0 1 829 5 1 663 11, 763. 6 1 806 8 2,005 9 1,903 3 2, 034. 6 1,935 5 1 992 9 2 072 7 2, 138. 2 2, 070. 2 _ _ _ do 916.5 do 3, 619. 5 do __ 439.7 do 5 307.3 Northern North America _ do Southern North America do South America _ _ _ _ _do By leading countries: Africa: United Arab Republic (Egypt) do Republic of South Africa _ ___ _ do Asia; Australia and Oceania: Australia, including New Guinea do India do Pakistan __ __ __ __ __ do_ Malaysia do Indonesia do Philippines _ do Japan. __ _ _do Europe: France do East Germany ' do West Germany.— _ __ do Italy do Union of Soviet Socialist Republics do United Kingdom _ do North and South America: Canada do Latin American Republics, total 9 875.1 4 528.4 453.5 6 293 0 4, 241. 6 4, 837. 1 1 639.3 1 741.1 __ 2, 508. 5 2, 626. 2 r 75.3 339 8 38.0 542 3 r 0 9 8 6 50.9 345 6 41 7 505 7 68.4 394 7 36.7 486 8 89.1 423 4 47 4 489 9 87.9 411.0 55.5 621 1 398.6 145 4 182. 2 441 7 158 3 245.1 400 5 114 5 173.2 408.3 123.1 198.9 414 7 118 2 214.1 416.4 136.4 268.4 243.2 2 6 8.2 .6 15.3 5 27.6 220.0 25. 1 25.9 23 7 ' 28.0 4.2 4.0 13.6 16 7 10.8 10 2 35.3 25 6 231.0 194. 5 35.1 31.8 3.6 24.5 14 7 33.5 224.1 63 5 3 117.6 54 8 2 6 112.7 55 1 2 110.6 49 1 33 118 4 53 3 .3 91.2 56 1 2.4 112.1 398 3 441 5 399 4 273 5 344.2 238.6 10 3 36.4 13 8 11 1 38.9 22 3 89 27.8 99 82 410 30 537 16 2 249.5 16.1 225.1 14 17.4 1 0 18.8 281.1 304.5 40.0 161.1 169 7 _ 387.2 -_ 1, 768. 0 314 1 348.0 44.8 211.9 165 3 369.1 2, 414. 1 24.5 24.3 20.1 33 1 4.1 17 3 15 7 27 1 __ __ __ _ 495 0 615 3 6.5 67 1, 171. 1 1, 341. 6 619 7 526 2 20 2 42.6 1, 143. 2 1, 405. 3 4 238 5 4 831 9 do 3, 523. 7 3, 676. 6 do do do 111 3 534.7 218.2 122. 1 511.9 209.4 3.2 16.7 12 2 29.5 177.3 54 2 r r .6 110 4 r 49 3 22 115.5 Colombia __ __ do 276.7 r 19 9 25.2 280.4 18 8 (i) (i) o o o Cuba do Mexico do 643.1 637.9 57 2 61 9 39 3 Venezuela... ___ __ do 956.4 1. 020. 6 66.3 101.9 71.1 r Revised. *> Preliminary. * Less than $50,000. 2 Military grant-aid shipments for Dec. 1965 (ordinarily included with Jan. 1966 data) are included in Feb. 1966 data; subsequent months will include these shipments on a 2-months delayed basis. JRevisions for Jan.Nov. 1964 will be shown later. 9 Includes data not shown separately. OSee similar 459. 3 do __ r!9,788 9 r20,774.7 '1,864.5 '1,776.5 1 664. 1 1, 701. 7 'I, 648.6 1, 824. 9 1, 820. 0 Machinery, total§ 9 _ _ C1) 429.4 do 690.2 do _. do 434 7 do 2 579.8 do - 181. 3 do 544 5 1 720 8 2 326. 2 504.7 895.7 Argentina Brazil Chile 92.7 54.6 do 2 897. 5 2, 540. 2 do 1 687.4 do do _ 4, 067. 2 14 893 8 do 14 076. 1 do do do do __ do General imports, total J Seasonally adjusted! By geographic regions: Africa __ _ Asia Australia and Oceania Europe 0 0) do__— 26, 136. 4 27, 003. 3 2, 397. 4 2, 307. 4 2, 212. 1 2,161.0 2, 133. 2 2,411.9 2, 472. 2 2, 576. 0 22,105.3 2, 264. 0 2, 778. 4 2, 557. 9 2, 568. 1 25 318 2 26 224. 5 2, 350. 5 2, 190. 7 2, 139. 4 2,096. 2 2, 110. 4 2, 387. 4 2, 407. 2 2, 520. 0 22,105.3 2, 176. 8 2 707 5 2, 422. 1 2, 457. 1 do Automobiles, parts, and accessories Chemicals and related products! Coal and related fuels Iron and steel prod. (excl. adv. mfs.) Agricultural ___ ___ Tractors, parts, and accessories Electrical Metalworking§ Other industrial 196. 4 88.5 102.5 416.2 41.4 644 4 81.1 412 4 35.2 592 3 90.0 446 6 37.7 661 5 70 9 373 § 37 8 556 5 72.2 375 6 43.3 534 1 119. 0 438 0 41.7 689 8 448.9 151 9 470.1 178 0 403 1 161 3 225 2 417.0 153 9 225. 4 182 8 472.8 274.7 252.7 170.0 218.8 511. 4 156.1 219. 6 .6 16.3 .5 26.3 1.2 25.6 28 16 5 10 14.1 1.9 31.3 3.6 17.4 .8 37.2 43.0 27.0 3.3 18.6 16.2 31.2 28.7 33.8 5.3 26.9 15 7 39.9 221.9 26 28 6 8 12 29 200 2 9 3 3 5 2 8 31 6 25 4 5.5 18 7 12 6 32 5 190.0 24.3 26 0 6.5 10 4 16 3 40 6 250.1 27.3 29.0 5.7 17.1 18.8 34.6 245. 4 27.0 27.6 5.9 15.4 16 0 21.8 227.8 23.2 27.3 2.6 18.5 13 8 28.5 231.3 234.8 41 7 1.4 110.4 53 1 19 111.8 54 7 .3 135.7 58 5 8.2 148.2 54 3 .4 133.1 58 8 3.5 137.1 61 5 1.2 131.9 67 9 5.7 165.3 47 6 5 130 1 49 3 19 124 5 50 4 4 119.7 51 6 4 8 106.0 63 8 8 156 8 58 5 34 151. 7 53 3 .5 131.8 56 1 3.7 138.0 61 3 .8 141.7 58 4 4.5 149.7 407 6 413 5 416 0 448 6 469 7 402 5 416 9 519 9 472 8 510 8 270.4 276.2 348.5 342.4 380.5 323 8 328. 7 369.1 326.3 318.3 10.4 36.1 11 9 11 8 54. 3 18 9 11.3 65.6 24 9 10.4 62.9 23 1 10 8 63.0 11 5 11 3 48 5 19 4 9 3 48.1 17 2 12 9 42.9 22 2 14.4 44.9 16.2 13.7 43.1 18 0 22.8 24.1 (i) 39 2 68.9 31.4 0 47.3 84.5 27.0 31.6 0 65 5 110.1 22 6 0 62 9 84.6 27.8 20.9 0 73 1 111.6 20.7 0 70.1 82.2 26.8 0 64.8 69.0 o 41 8 77.5 o 63.7 70.3 o 65 2 81.7 520.7 434.6 48.6 637 7 note on p. S-21. cfData for semimanufactures reported as "special category" are included with finished manufactures. AManufactures of tobacco are included in the nonagricultural products total. §Excludes some "special category" exports. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS July 1966 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 1965 1966 1965 May Annual S-23 June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Dec. Nov. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June FOREIGN TRADE OF THE UNITED STATES—Continued FOREIGN TRADE— Continued Value— Continued Imports for consumption, total mil. $ 18,600.3 21, 281. 8 1,718.8 1, 878. 0 By economic classes: Crude materials .do 3,444,1 Crude foodstuffs _ do 2, 034. 0 Manufactured foodstuffs and beverages. _ do 1, 812. 0 Semimanufactures do 3, 988. 3 Finished manufactures _ do_ __ 7, 321. 5 By principal commodities: ••4,104.4 4, 092. 2 338.8 345. 2 Agricultural products, total 9 - do Cocoa (cacao) beans, incl. shells. _ . d o 130.9 Coffee _ _ _ do 1, 200. 3 Rubber, crude (incl. latex and guayule) .do 200.6 458.4 Sugar (cane or beet) ._ _ _ _ _ do _ Wool and mohair, unmanufactured. _ _ _ d o _ _ _ _ 205. 3 Nonagricultural products, total 9 . _ . . 13.8 77.3 13.3 47.3 17.6 13.2 89.7 16.9 42.5 18.6 262.3 319. 0 354.1 411.2 399.0 428.6 353.3 371. 6 431.2 390.4 358.3 8.6 59.4 12.8 22.3 16.9 11.3 77.8 11.2 42.7 19.1 14.5 83.6 15.3 48.8 20.1 8.9 128.7 17.4 50.8 17.9 7.6 125.9 17.2 41.0 18,4 7.4 113.5 17.2 51.7 17.5 13.4 93.0 9.4 16.7 23.7 18.0 102. 5 18.3 28.8 21.1 15. 4 118.2 15.2 36.3 27.9 10.1 97.1 18.7 37.8 29.2 12.6 91.2 16. 4 30.1 18.5 _ do _ '14,495.9 '•17,189.6 '1,380.0 1, 532. 8 '1,373.1 '1,408.1 ' 1, 440. 9 1, 592. 7 1,553.9 '1,701.2 1, 447. 5 1, 434. 6 1, 800. 5 '1,613.3 1, 707. 4 Furs and manufactures do Iron and steel prod. (excl. adv. mfs.)___do Nonferrous ores, metals, etc.: Bauxite, crude _. do Aluminum semimfs (incl. calcined bauxite) mil. $_. Copper, crude and semimfs . .do Tin, including ore do Paper base stocks Newsprint Petroleum and products 120.5 1,060.2 182.3 444.7 235. 1 1,635.4 1,727.1 1,795.0 2, 003. 9 1,952.9 2, 129. 8 1,800.8 1, 806. 2 2, 231. 7 '2,003.7 2, 065. 7 do do do 116.6 819.9 128.8 11. 2 8.9 7.6 7.1 6.5 6.5 4.9 20.2 14.7 15.7 20.3 11.7 12.7 125.8 143.0 11.6 10.9 13.7 13.7 11.1 11.4 12.7 12.4 12.4 9.3 13.6 11.4 13. 5 199.0 340.2 111. 7 270.5 302.2 168.6 24.4 22.1 13.0 32.6 26.6 12.7 25.1 23.0 10.5 24.4 27.9 9.2 20.3 25.4 16.5 23.9 35.4 13.1 22.6 24.3 18.1 29.1 26.8 34.2 15.5 16.0 14.6 27.0 18.1 6.3 32.5 25. 7 7.4 29.7 23.7 16.8 30.0 29.0 18.0 405.5 752.5 1,872.4 451.7 789.6 2, 0631 3 34.4 64.9 144.3 39.8 72.4 192.2 34.9 64.4 147.4 37.4 65.1 159.4 36. 4 70.5 -164. 0 36.3 67.6 172.0 41.2 67.2 150.1 37.7 78. 5 200.2 31.5 68.7 99.6 33.5 63.6 178.2 42.1 75.6 215.4 35.0 71.0 157.6 39.1 78.4 154.3 143 146 102 144 152 106 155 163 106 143 152 106 141 149 106 137 146 106 139 147 105 158 166 105 159 167 105 167 175 105 P138 pl46 P106 ^143 pl51 »106 P177 P188 P106 135 133 99 i 153 U52 199 149 147 99 165 163 99 140 139 99 148 146 99 154 153 99 171 170 100 168 168 100 184 184 100 *>156 ?156 * 100 p 156 *156 plOO pl90 *192 plOl 171, 810 16, 927 15, 598 1,558 15, 753 1,412 16, 340 1,448 15, 675 1, 342 14,997 1,346 17, 279 1,563 16, 304 1,527 14, 733 1,618 12, 423 1,340 255, 454 14, 935 19,906 1,207 25, 552 1,368 20,532 1,124 22, 078 1,225 21, 222 1,295 22, 304 1,412 20, 381 1,352 24, 222 1, 474 19, 010 1,264 228.7 2, 289. 4 19.1 193.7 17.7 182.5 17.5 180.3 18.2 189.6 17.9 173. 1 19.2 202.0 22.6 234. 4 21.2 231. 9 18.9 221. 1 20.0 220. 5 22.9 226.4 24.5 224.4 96.1 1, 315. 9 6.2 100.3 9.2 103.9 7.5 104.9 6.8 95.1 8.1 94.0 8.3 144.8 8.7 123.9 11.7 154.7 8.2 112.0 7.3 118.2 9.4 150.8 8.9 137.1 Indexes Exports (U.S. mdse., excl. military grant-aid): Quantity 1957-59=100.. Value - ~ . do. _ Unit value _ ._ _ _ _ do Imports for consumption, d" Quantity . . . .. do Value _-do Unit value : do Shipping Weight and Value Waterborne trade: Exports (incl. reexports) :§ Shipping weight ....thous. sh. tons.. 171, 055 Value mil. $__ 17,004 General imports: Shipping weight _. thous. sh. tons.. 233, 808 Value mil. $__ 13, 437 Airborne trade: Exports (incl. reexports) : Shipping weight _ _ thous. sh. tons163.3 Value . mil. $__ 1,884.6 General imports: / Shipping weight thous. sh, tons.. 64.3 Value . . mil. $ 956.1 TRANSPORTATION AND COMMUNICATION TRANSPORTATION Air Carriers Scheduled domestic trunk carriers: Financial operations (qtrly. total) : Operating revenues, total 9 -< mil. $_ 2, 831 832 3,306 Transport, total 9 do 2, 805 826 3,278 Passenger __do 744 2, 527 2,933 Property do 187 53 218 U.S. mail (excl. subsidy) do 65 74 18 Operating expenses (incl. depreciation) ... do 2, 531 2,886 708 Net income (after taxes) _ do 136 65 223 Operating results: Miles flown (revenue) mil 822.1 78.3 82.1 940. 9 78.0 Express and freight ton-milesflown......do ... 726. 9 74.5 921.6 74.8 73.0 Mail ton-miles flown do 184 7 219.6 16 9 16 6 16 5 Passengers originated (revenue) do 61.9 71.4 6.3 6.3 5.8 Passenger-miles flown (revenue) bil 41.9 49.2 45 4 6 39 Express Operations (qtrly.) Transportation revenues.. _ mil. $ 431.4 412.4 103.7 Express privilege payments do 119.3 28.2 118. 2 Local Transit Lines Fares, average cash rate... cents 21.2 22.2 22.0 21.9 22.1 Passengers carried (revenue) mil 6,854 '6,787 ' 5 583 '523 '563 Operating revenues (qtrly. total) mil. $ 1,408 p 1,427 367 Motor Carriers (Intercity) Carriers of property, class I (qtrly. total): Number of reporting carriers ._ _ _ 2 1, 018 1,119 Operating revenues, total mil. $ 6,176 1,776 Expenses, total ... do 5,890 1 663 Freight carried (revenue) _ _ mil. tons 366 108 ' Revised. v Preliminary. 1 See note "<$" for this page. 2 Number of carriers filing 3 complete reports for 1964. As compiled by Air Transport Assn. of America. * Reflects New York City 13-day transit strike. * Revised Jan. 1965 (mil): 550. 9 Includes data not shown separately. 885 878 788 55 17 739 79 83.6 77.6 17 2 6.8 49 79.7 86.7 17 7 6.1 4 2 83.0 95.0 19 4 6.3 4.2 78.8 85.2 19 9 5.9 38 106.7 31.1 22.2 '519 22.2 559 P 3g76 854 846 747 61 22 762 49 84.5 92 9 29 4 63 45 v 3 775 P 3 21 v 3 788 i> 3 45 84.9 75.9 19 8 6. 3 44 78.0 79.4 20 2 5.' 8 40 119 1 32 5 22.2 '589 22.3 574 22.3 '601 87 9 96 3 C)A 9 69 v 3 51 •P 3 4 8 22 3 579 22.3 590 103 9 25 6 22.3 ' 4 477 22.3 528 22.3 607 cf Beginning Jan. 1965, indexes are based on general imports, instead of imports for consumption as formerly. §Excludes "special category" shipments and all commodities exported under foreign-aid programs as Department of Defense controlled cargo. S-24 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 1965 July 1966 1966 1965 Annual May June July Aug. Oct. Sept. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. 154 6 157 1 154.7 May June TRANSPORTATION AND COMMUNICATION—Continued TRANSPORTATION— Continued Motor Carriers (Intercity) — Continued Freight carried, volume indexes, class I and II (ATA): Common and contract, carriers of property (qtrly.).. _ .average same period. 1957-59=100 Common carriers of general freight, seas, adj.* 1957-59—100 Carriers of passengers, class I (qtrly.) :§ Number of reporting carriers Operating revenues, total mil. $ Expenses, total do Passengers carried (revenue) -mil Class I Railroads Freight carloadings (AAR): Total cars thous Coal _ do Coke __— _ do Forest products do Grain and grain products _do _ _ Livestock do Ore .. do Merchandise, l.c.L do Miscellaneous _ do Freight carloadings, seas. adj. indexes (Fed. R.): Total 1957-59=100Goal. _ do Coke . do Forest products . do Grain and grain products _do -Livestock do Ore do Merchandise, l.c.l __ do __ Miscellaneous.. _ _ do Financial operations (qtrly.): Operating revenues, total 9 mil $ Freight do Passenger do Operating expenses do Tax accruals and rents do Net railway operating income do Net income (after taxes) do Operating results: Ton-miles of freight (net), revenue and nonrevenue (qtrly ) bil Revenue ton-miles* __ do _ Revenue per ton-mile (qtrly avg ) cents Passengers (revenue) carried 1 mile (qtrly ) mil Waterway Traffic Clearances, vessels in foreign trade: Total U S ports mil net tons Foreign vessels do United States vessels do Panama Canal: Total thous Iff tons In United States vessels do Travel Hotels: Average sale per occupied room dollars Rooms occupied " % of total Restaurant sales index same mo 1951 — 100 Foreign travel: U »5 citizens* Arrivals thous i Departures do Aliens* Arrivals do Departures do Passports issued and renewed. _ do — National parks, visits do Pullman Co. (qtrly.): Passenger-miles (revenue) mil Passenger revenues mil $ COMMUNICATION (QTRLY.) Telephone carriers: O perating revenues 9 __ mil. $ Station revenues do Tolls, message do Operating expenses (before taxes) do Net operating income do Phones in service, end of period mil Telegraph carriers: Domestic (wire-telegraph): Operating revenues mil. $__ Operating expenses, incl. depreciation do Net operating revenues do International.^ Operating revenues do Operating expenses, incl. depreciation do Net operating revenues do 137.6 150 9 131 9 144 3 151 4 142 1 1 158 656 5 570.9 506 9 p604 6 P 511. 4 p212 9 29,027 5,530 29 554 5 679 1,960 2,625 2 003 2,657 423 440 153 2,005 639 15,693 96 95 1 962 465 16. 222 97 97 2 384 r 444 ••34 r !57 180 r 8 205 39 *• 1, 318 101 104 2 2 890 "•2495 2 r2269 r2 22 768 427 2 43 2 189 2 276 2 r 26 2 285 6 290 44 1, 493 2 r 246 l 561 2 94 98 95 98 2 381 479 35 161 221 7 222 34 11 192 33 1,221 1,220 94 101 94 95 9 778 8 384 10 208 8 836 2 582 2 240 2,575 2,215 7 680 1 285 7 849 1 396 1 963 1 965 576 109 95 95 31 87 20 97 122 103 82 33 90 — 20 99 117 99 101 34 86 18 96 95 102 102 35 81 17 96 2 347 2 241 26 228 16 129 31 1, 683 1,273 2 2 2, 189 472 29 160 238 82 102 99 41 83 17 95 7 65 27 6 67 26 1,158 1,174 83 112 114 45 117 18 105 80 106 107 50 113 17 99 94 101 110 36 103 14 101 2 2, 790 2542 244 2198 2273 28 2103 233 2 1, 591 100 99 94 105 109 33 109 14 103 355 292 276 185. 2 181. 9 1 273 4 084 361 258 213 670 3 659.3 1 282 18 248 709 3 697.7 1 266 17 389 180 2 178.2 1 258 4 333 178 7 175.6 1 261 5 151 202 2 166 9 35 3 208 5 174 6 33 9 18 6 15 4 32 18 6 15 7 29 19 0 16 3 28 18 6 15 6 29 18 4 15 4 30 19 5 16 0 35 18 8 15 7 31 16 8 14 1 27 74 210 10 750 78 927 9 080 fi AQ1 6 467 fi OKK 9 53 9 71 2 Qi3 2 841 1 890 1 653 1,133 33, 976 3 351 3*341 2 093 l' 819 1,330 36 509 2 218 37 76 2 014 34 55 10, 938 5 922 3 827 1 924 77 4 11, 750 6 272 4 188 7 fl7fi 2 091 81 5 299.4 264 2 21 1 107 4 3 83.0 3 17 6 10.26 9.73 7 193 762 895 9 36 10 03 9 10 9 99 10 15 10.44 10.41 9.08 9.83 9.41 60 109 49 115 9.64 70 112 9R4. 308 398 182 165 175 QKfl KfU 433 226 182 131 365 230 213 105 348 265 251 184 80 258 224 189 188 59 226 195 154 134 59 200 221 155 152 59 817 231 232 158 119 84 741 227 248 131 111 104 762 1,075 473 3,631 2, 534 1,219 458 556 60 106 62 118 65 123 176 9 38 8 04 8.15 2 896 1 547 ~ 1 028 1 751 2, 964 1 573 1 064 3,056 1 620 1 108 1 873 3,104 1,637 1,124 1 849 519 538 79 2 80 4 81 5 82.7 305.6 267 4 23 8 77.3 67 6 56 77.3 68 6 53 77.3 65.7 76.8 66.9 9.0 5.3 112 2 87.0 21 0 28 8 22.1 53 27 0 21.2 50 29 2 22.4 60 28.9 21.7 _ _ 530 66 117 187 1,766 67 127 200 2,630 210 5,492 474 8 05 _ __ 106 103 102 31 91 13 97 798 6 340 780 8,346 108 107 111 32 105 13 101 6,847 7 123 789 8 578 96 102 101 107 108 32 149 14 101 821 6 442 973 5 074 2 1, 575 100 105 6 849 7 090 2 393 1,308 97 75 460.1 2 4 73. 2 7 065 *767 296 171 159 168 1,307 27 230 4 55. 8 716 66 116 2299 453.0 2 4 70. 4 6 035 65 106 7 226 24 452.9 628 57 112 7 155 26 242 2201 2283 213 6 809 63 115 2 2, 966 2528 464 36 163 206 122 496 65 123 2,434 329 35 161 209 2,518 2,207 835 738 2,229 2 022 963 816 (• AQR 92 103 115 34 112 16 102 97 92 132 694 62 112 99 94 413 34 150 225 2 668 2 316 813 61 111 2.096 10 73 29 102 98 98 100 93 97 2,103 434 32 147 234 360 250 205 T 155.0 —-— 465 29 156 211 1,217 156 139 154 5 147 * 32 108 610 2 31 36 2 200 158 2 284 200 100 103 97 40 95 20 100 553 153 8 147 2 127.8 53 2 2 292 '448 113 100 96 49 97 27 98 107 105 98 36 95 22 104 151 7 188 1 142.6 59 4 ' 2 42 r 2 185 r2 144 3 143 1 147 147 ' Revised. p Preliminary. 1 Number of carriers filing complete reports for 1964. JData cover 5 weeks; other periods, 4 weeks. 3 Revised total; quarterly revisions are not available. * Preliminary estimate by Association of American Railroads. *New series. The monthly motor carrier index (ATA) is based on a sample of carriers that represents approximately one-third of the class I and II common carriers of general freight; monthly data back to 1955 are shown on p.. 40 of the July 1966 SURVEY. Railroad revenue ton-miles are compiled by Interstate Commerce Commission. 141 6 150 8 127.2 53 3 r 148.9 148 8 141 5 143 8 556 ........ ....... 6.2 §Effective 1st qtr. 1965, carriers reporting both intercity and local and suburban schedules are classified as intercity if intercity revenues equal or exceed 50 percent of revenues from both operations. 9 Includes data not shown separately. cf Radio-telegraph and cable carriers. Comparability of data between periods shown has been affected by organizational changes: Certain operations reported prior to 1965, and others reported through mid-1965, are no longer covered. SURVEY OF CUBRENT BUSINESS July 1966 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 1965 Annual S-25 1966 1965 May June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. 1,278 1,533 1,371 832.9 Tr 920. 2 87.0 !00 5 517.1 593 5 110.1 r 121.4 437.4 r 450 5 16 065 r!8 303 352.7 r 394. 7 891. 5 101 1 573 4 123.3 429 0 17, 642 405. 0 May June CHEMICALS AND ALLIED PRODUCTS CHEMICALS Inorganic chemicals, production: Acetylene ---mil. cu. ft_ Ammonia, synthetic anhydrous (commercial) thous. sh. tons. Carbon dioxide liquid, gas, and solid do Chlorine, gas (100% C^) __do___ Hydrochloric acid (100% HC1) do___ Nitric acid (100% HNOa) do Oxygen (high purity) _ .__ mil. cu. ft_ Phosphoric acid (100% P206)____thous. sh. tons__ Sodium carbonate (soda ash), synthetic (58% Na2O) '- - -thous. sh. tons Sodium bichromate and chromate___ _ _ _ _ _ _ d o Sodium hydroxide (100% NaOH) _ __do Sodium silicate (soluble silicate glass), anhydrous thous. sh. tons__ Sodium sulfates (anhydrous, refined; Glauber's salt* crude saltcake)__ _thous. sh. tons__ Sulfuric acid (100% H3S04) do_ Organic chemicals, production :cf Acetic anhydride Acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin) _ _ _ _ Creosote oil __ _-. DDT - . - Ethyl acetate (85%) Formaldehyde (37% HCHO)__ Glycerin, refined, all grades: Production. _ Stocks, end of period__ Methanol, synthetic and natural Phthalic anhydride . 15, 964 7,634.3 1, 119. 6 5, 945. 2 1,264.2 4,732.5 153, 387 3,283.0 16,548 1, 420 8, 607. 4 721.5 1 173 8 107.7 6, 438. 9 544. 7 1, 310. 0 107.4 4 860 0 351.5 182, 404 15, 314 3,845.1 338.1 1, 401 1,385 707.9 111.7 524.5 106.2 291.4 15, 057 350. 9 698.2 114.2 540. 0 105.8 350.2 15,064 306.9 1,139 1,399 1,380 1,523 1, 411 707.4 112 6 535.2 102.9 386. 7 15, 571 330.3 701.4 104.2 517.2 108.9 400 7 14,426 313.7 737. 6 97.5 559.6 116.8 448.6 15, 409 343.6 762.1 87.9 542.0 113.4 441. 0 14, 753 333. 5 816.6 88 5 583.2 120.6 465 7 15, 543 343. 3 846.6 84 4 561 5 119.5 471 0 16 603 361.1 1,358 4,947.9 137.9 16,389.0 4. 931. 0 138.2 6. 723. 5 406. 8 12.4 569.4 398. 5 11.6 549.7 411.8 9.5 572.0 409.2 10.6 558.4 398.5 12.0 530.1 414.6 11.8 580. 6 422.7 11.7 563 0 431.3 12.2 604 1 564.6 589.8 46.6 45.7 45.4 50.3 50.8 55.2 52.3 49.6 411 6 386.4 12.4 11.4 584 5 •' 532 3 38.7 1,315.6 1. 392. 4 105.3 108.1 123.1 119.6 122.0 125.9 121.3 120.3 128 1 22, 923. 5 24,822.0 2, 116. 3 2,011.0 2, 001. 6 2 120.9 2 088 8 2 175.8 2 060 8 2 211 7 2 168 0 mil. lb__ *1, 399.2 128.2 do _ mil. -gal.. 1113.3 1, 533. 9 29.0 2 108. 4 116.5 1 123. 7 mil. Ib ___do__ __ 1 117. 7 __. do____ 12,839.9 144.6 107. 3 3,085.5 13.7 10.1 250.3 8.7 263.0 8.7 253.2 2.3 10.4 134.0 1.9 9.3 128.4 2.3 13.4 128.0 10.7 2.3 9.0 13.2 13.5 156 5 2.6 134.4 87 3.0 7.9 8.7 252.3 11 3 13.2 274.1 96 10.9 252.8 r r 439 1 12.6 628 1 421.4 12.6 605 9 65.4 55.4 44.7 119. 2 129. 4 111.6 2 091 5 r 2 297 2 2 232 6 128.8 139 8 79 123 1 2. 7 75 130 6 81 76 10 5 10 0 13 9 78 290.5 13 4 6 4 278.4 12 3 80 269.9 12 0 83 309.7 30.5 28.3 28.4" 24.7 42.1 36.1 47.1 • 53.1 28 8 30 3 39.4 55 0 28 6 28.6 36.0 49 0 29 30 39 57 2.6 9.9 263.4 2.6 135 2 3.1 2.7 129 0 r 2.8 2.9 97 14 2 11 9 290.1 14 0 10 5 296.1 30 1 16 6 39.1 54 9 30 1 21.4 36.7 57 1 do do mil. gal— mil. lb__ 320.1 27.6 1 397. 7 i 555. 5 353.2 24. 7 433.3 579. 1 31.4 30.1 37.5 51.3 31.6 25.5 37.3 46.3 25.7 28.6 37.3 49.1 30.3 28.2 36.0 48.1 27.9 29.8 34.1 47.7 33.7 32.6 35.1 47.5 mil. tax gal-do do do 684.5 192.9 551.0 68.0 710. 1 200. 5 586.2 69.0 58.9 190.4 50.8 55.5 190.9 50.5 56.9 191.1 51.0 54.9 196.3 45.4 60.6 196.9 46 1 74.0 197.8 46 9 62.7 200 3 45 8 75 62. 3 200.5 47 6 5.2 54.8 208 4 50 6 4 9 49.5 211 9 46 4 51 54 6 211 5 52 0 53.1 208 5 45 7 6*5 61 mil. wine gal__ ___do ._ do 296. 8 ••296.7 315.9 315.2 27.2 27.5 27.1 27.9 27.4 27.0 24.3 24.7 24.8 25.2 25. 3 24.6 26 3 27 2 4 4 25.6 25.5 54 27 2 29 2 34 24 9 24 3 4 0 28 0 28 1 38 24 6 24 6 37 thous. sh. tons__ ______do do _ do 9, 578 1, 152 c 173 1,150 1,002 do do__ — _ do _do____ do 2, 799 Potash deliveries (K~2O)_ _do____ Superphosphate and other phosphatic fertilizers (100%P205): Production thous. sh. tons__ Stocks, end of period , ._ do_ _ 8 0 6 3 122. 3 90 r ALCOHOL Ethyl alcohol and spirits: Production Stocks, end of period Use for denaturation Taxable withdrawals Denatured alcohol: Production Consumption (withdrawals) Stocks, end of period 3.4 5.4 5.3 5.8 6.1 4.9 5.1 5.6 5.3 5.2 6.1 4.7 6.7 5.5 FERTILIZERS Exports, total 9 Nitrogenous materials Phosphate materials Potash materials .'— Imports, total semimanufactures 9Ammonium nitrate Ammonium sulfate Potassium chloride Sodium nitrate _ 310,810 31.196 3 8, 104 3 1, 053 835 107 650 57 200 176 -' 177 1,195 1,780 3,088 3,465 431 799 7,145 1, 026 363 1,026 1, 005 c 97 803 101 935 157 624 120 1, 119 151 805 129 944 135 674 97 895 106 666 96 « 869 c 74 725 58 852 C 89 272 747 47 1,039 77 126 703 116 398 17 11 133 32 12 8 71 42 16 10 76 26 19 6 191 22 14 14 179 17 14 7 227 3 21 10 136 50 15 10 183 47 9 18 181 18 11 19 139 17 15 26 290 44 3,342 301 116 199 357 234 307 208 250 335 238 495 3,831 343 220 305 348 275 450 304 459 302 411 338 425 334 463 348 469 349 505 363 548 181 469 78 OOQ '422 413 r 1,174 103 786 74 192 854 73 20 20 284 38 15 10 175 43 401 295 MISCELLANEOUS PRODUCTS Explosives (industrial), shipments, quarterly: Black blasting powder .. mil. Ib— .9 High explosives _ do 1, 281. 6 Paints, varnish, and lacquer, factory shipments: Total shipments __ mil. $ 2, 002. 2 Trade products _ _ do 1, 173. 4 Industrial finishes __do _ _ 828.8 Sulfur, native (Frasch) and -recovered: Production thous. Ig. tons 6, 250 Stocks (producers'), end of period do_ 4,227 .8 1,459.4 .2 .2 396.3 387. 1 2, 169. 3 1, 246. 7 922. 6 201.8 121 9 79.9 216.9 129 6 87.3 7,304 3,425 625 4,096 4, 002 611 200.6 124 3 •76.3 195 7 122 0 73.7 188 0 112 6 75.4 627 628 3,825 3, 670 3,881 531 .2 396.8 178.1 99 7 78.4 645 167 9 90 5 77 4 621 3,710 3 611 146 8 73 4 73 4 637 2 371 4 164 6 85 3 79 3 r 165 2 r 34 g r go 6 210 4 112 4 98 0 3, 425 670 611 3 346 3 281 3 213 13.1 14.5 17.0 15.9 673 PLASTICS AND RESIN MATERIALS Production: Cellulose plastic materials mil. lb__ Thermosetting resins: Alkyd resins ___ __._ do Coumarone-indene and petroleum polymer resins ____mil. Ib... Polyester resins do Phenolic and other tar acid resins ___ _ do Urea and melamine resins do Thermoplastic resins: Styrene-type plastic materials (polystyrene) mil. lb__ Vinyl resins (resin content basis) _ _ _ do Polyethylene __ do T U61.3 169.6 14.4 15.8 11.8 12.6 15.6 21.4 14.0 13.5 i 593. 6 585.6 50 0 54 5 47 7 51 6 51 8 49 1 43 6 45 0 47 7 48 8 59 0 55 9 1354.3 i 316. 6 i 832. 5 1570.3 324.9 388.0 919.9 595.8 26.1 33.7 71.8 46.9 25.4 35. 5 72.9 48.2 28.7 32.1 66.9 40.0 26.6 32.1 76.1 46.3 27.4 31 6 84.3 55.8 28.3 30.3 86.1 60.0 26.5 34 3 82 9 58.4 27.1 36 7 84.8 62.2 25 0 35 7 80 6 52.6 25.7 36 3 80 1 52.7 28 0 40 5 87 8 56.3 29.2 38 5 83 8 53. 1 1,728.9 2, 002. 5 2,066.8 2, 282. 0 2,613.4 1 3,047.4 167.8 181.6 256.9 168.9 181.4 256.4 150.4 169.9 254.3 168. 2 185.9 262.3 179.2 197.5 264.7 180. 7 179.0 218. 7 215 7 282.2 1 279. 9 177.4 214 7 260.1 191.5 221 6 291.1 197.7 221.4 274.6 Revised. i Revised annual total; revisions are not distributed to the monthly data. 2 Beginning Jan. 1965, data exclude creosote in coal-tar solutions (formerly included); these averaged 930,000gallons per month in 1964. 3 See note "O" for p. S-21 171.7 172.0 206.6 203.2 278.8 1 267.6 cfData are reported on the basis of 100 percent content of the especified material unless otherwise indicated. 9 Includes data not shown separately. Corrected. SURVEY OF CUERENT BUSINESS S-26 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 1965 July 1966 1965 May Annual June July Aug. 1966 Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. 05, 254 94, 962 101, 899 Apr. M ay June ELECTRIC POWER AND GAS ELECTRIC POWER Production (utility and industrial), total t mil kw -hr Electric utilities, total By fuels _ _ By waterpower Privately and municipally owned util Other producers (publicly owned) Industrial establishments, total By fuels By waterpower _ Sales to ultimate customers total (EEI) Commercial and industrial: Small light and power§ Large light and power § Railways and railroads Residential or domestic Street and highway lighting Other public authorities Interdepartmental j 96, 142 101, 631 103, 858 97,081 95, 722 95,299 102, 182 86,985 71,675 15,310 86, 723 71,260 15, 463 93, 480 76,963 16, 517 96,468 79, 896 16, 571 86,865 71, 577 15, 288 93,057 74,890 18, 167 75, 354 71, 694 73, 857 17,703 16, 385 17, 772 96, 667 100, 559 983, 990 1,054,790 84, 745 806, 917 861,342 68, 134 177, 073 193 448 16, 610 87, 761 72, 023 15, 738 93, 102 77, 178 15, 924 95, 240 79, 571 15, 670 88,877 73, 875 15,002 do do 806, 446 177, 544 855 632 199, 158 68,959 15, 786 71, 916 15, 845 76,062 17, 040 77, 925 17, 316 69, Oil 19, 866 70,998 15,987 70, 606 16, 117 75,699 17,781 77, 844 18, 624 70, 172 16,692 do do do_ 99, 751 96, 523 3,228 102 139 98, 988 3,151 8,575 8,257 319 8,381 8,126 255 8,530 8,298 232 8, 617 8,407 211 8,204 8,001 203 8,737 8,497 240 8,576 8,323 252 8,702 8,438 263 8,786 8,520 266 8,097 7,835 262 8,841 8,527 315 8,587 8,269 318 do 890 356 953 441 75, 598 78,238 80, 576 83, 922 83, 712 80, 488 78, 551 81, 969 84, 755 84, 418 84,035 82, 324 do do 183 539 409 356 202 128 433 342 15 517 36, 336 17, 571 18, 745 19, 536 36, 641 35, 851 37, 269 do do do do do 401 381 367 406 410 382 353 357 353 357 408 365 4 721 4 653 262 010 280 999 20, 808 21, 046 23,023 24,100 24, 474 22, 759 22, 075 24, 866 27, 589 "27,976, 26, 024 24, 001 816 866 722 773 797 776 727 644 675 631 863 655 8,290 8,783 20 651 21 675 1 768 1, 822 1,775 1,797 1,791 1,825 1, 811 1,971 1,923 1,944 1,928 2,111 135 158 125 151 169 138 192 167 120 170 181 149 1 789 1 859 -do _do_ _ do _ _ 1 083,741 1,156,929 93, 320 19, 021 17, 770 37, 183 36, 824 16, 603 16, 699 17, 005 36, 707 37,043 36, 836 88,079 71, 759 16, 321 91, 630 73, 193 18, 436 8,929 8, 610 320 16, 988 17, 034 17, 164 36, 183 37, 711 37,800 Revenue from sales to ultimate customers (Edison Electric Institute) mil $ 14 408 5 15, 158 8 1, 205. 1 1, 243. 2 1, 287. 0 1,325.8 1,332.2 1,284.0 1,242.2 1, 288. 4 1,326.4 1, 324. 6 1, 304. 7 1, 282. 8 GAS Manufactured and mixed gas: Customers end of period total 9 Residential Industrial and commercial thous do do 798 745 52 698 655 42 703 660 42 690 649 41 698 655 42 mil therms do do 1 541 976 552 1 370 818 544 300 171 126 168 67 100 349 213 132 Revenue from sales to consumers total 9 mil $ Residential do 165 2 117 3 46 9 129 7 86 7 42 4 29 1 19.1 97 16.5 9.0 7.4 32.7 22.1 10.4 thous do 36 298 33 350 2 908 37 130 34 101 2 987 36 308 33, 396 2 872 36, 290 33, 414 2 836 37, 130 34, 101 2 987 mil therms do 114 340 37 699 71 293 27, 805 8,529 18 181 21, 820 3,351 17, 216 29,476 9,307 18, 815 1 676.5 884 9 753.6 1, 126. 9 448.8 640.1 1, 803. 8 957.8 797.8 Sales to consumers total 9 Residential Industrial and commercial Natural gas: Customers end of period total Q Residential Sales to consumers total 9 Residential ' Revenue from sales to consumers total 9 mil $ Residential do Industrial and commercial do 117 900 . 38* 764 75 434 6 960 2 7 231 7 3 772 3 3 911 6 2 998 1 3 195 9 FOOD AND KINDRED PRODUCTS; TOBACCO ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES Beer: Production mil bbl Taxable withdrawals do Stocks end of period do Distilled spirits (total): Production mil tax gal Consumption, apparent, for beverage purposes mil. wine gal__ Taxable withdrawals , mil. tax gal-Stocks, end of period— do Imports mil proof gal Whisky: Production mil. tax gal-Taxable withdrawals do Stocks, end of period do Imports mil proof gal 105. 90 98. 64 9.99 108. 21 100. 41 10.30 162. 94 10.05 9.24 12.24 11.21 10.21 12.50 10.42 9.85 12.38 9.66 9.61 11.68 9.08 8.49 11.58 7.81 7.50 11.28 7.71 7.60 10.83 8.13 8.03 10.30 7.76 6.69 10.88 7.39 6.66 11.07 8.32 13.04 15.84 19.11 20. 02 19.65 17.32 17.02 19. 82 17.63 20.59 10.58 881. 60 3.83 25.75 12.07 886.20 5.14 23 54 11.93 888.94 4.52 4.66 13. 16 12.92 6.58 10.47 832. 11 835. 85 5.95 6.53 13.28 6.20 840.16 2.94 12.49 15.06 7.87 7.50 842. 55 846. 87 3.31 4.49 13.18 7.41 850. 07 4.00 4.07 10.84 7.82 6.97 4.50 6.40 3.93 6.98 4.83 8.50 5.81 8.10 5.36 .59 .73 3.31 .20 .77 .91 3.14 .21 .93 .86 3.10 .22 .76 .40 3.40 .11 .79 .35 3.78 .11 .88 .48 4.14 .12 .65 .49 4.26 .10 .13 49.80 112.90 15.33 15.85 171. 61 266. 87 1.37 1.19 35.72 16.25 279. 14 1.82 7.37 9. 50 15.05 12.00 262. 28 254. 72 2.01 1.51 2.58 12.42 239. 59 .95 2.59 17.62 225. 26 1.38 2.26 12.89 213.69 1.16 1.48 14.44 14.01 22,49 11. 30 871.05 3.96 24.07 11.95 870. 65 4.58 112.87 89. 44 832. 18 40.81 126.88 90.06 835.85 51.10 9.08 3.76 10.05 6.94 5.65 6.92 840. 97 841. 10 836. 60 3.93 3.00 3.43 9.36 6.62 836. 20 3.82 92.24 65.60 94.00 64. 80 7.24 4.88 8.10 5.46 6.31 4.38 7.54 5.09 8.26 5.78 10.96 8.11 5.82 5.35 2.66 1.19 7.29 6. 25 3.10 1.45 .57 .44 3.56 .12 .66 .51 3.62 .10 .32 .31 3.60 .07 .52 .41 3. 66 .08 .52 .58 3.54 .09 232. 26 167. 25 262. 28 ^14. 91 3.25 12.22 170. 52 1.27 2.53 13.59 157. 01 1.27 1.48 9.91 146. 16 .86 3.92 13.57 137. 14 1.01 3.42 468.58 3.42 3.79 Distilling materials produced at wineries— -do 369. 35 r Revised. « Corrected. {Monthly revisions for 1964 appear on p. 43 of the June 1966 SURVEY produc tion data for all periods shown here include Alaska and Hawaii. 17.60 193. 28 164. 72 231. 24 14.54 "9.82 8.54 12.34 30.86 36. 15 19.15 9.40 15.05 10.06 865.82 872. 90 877. 94 7.31 6.73 3.34 185. 06 275. 86 ' 293. 09 133. 17 138. 52 862.42 872. 90 58.04 50.60 Rectified spirits and wines, production, total mil. proof gal— Whisky do Wines and distilling materials: Effervescent wines: Production mil wine gal Taxable withdrawals __ do____ Stocks, end of period do Imports do Still wines: Production do Taxable withdrawals do Stocks, end of period do Imports. _ do 10.31 8.73 11. 83 22.18 21.76 24.02 26.62 9.85 10.65 11.84 16.26 866. 20 865. 42 865. 73 865. 31 4.33 5.26 6.31 3.41 10.91 11.85 11.12 7.94 836.22 833.24 5.64 4.68 2.82 4.50 29.91 11.33 4.46 128.60 200. 11 66.74 §DIita are rlot whol ly compjirable on a year to year 1jasis beeause of c hanges from one classilication t o anothe r. 91ncludes c latanot shown separately SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS July 1966 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 1965 Annual S-27 1966 1965 May June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June FOOD AND KINDRED PRODUCTS; TOBACCO—Continued DAIRY PRODUCTS Butter, creamery: Production (factory) _ _ _ _ _ Stocks, cold storage, end of period.. Price, wholesale, 92-score (N. ¥.)__.. Cheese: Production (factory), total American, whole milk _ mil. Ib 1,442.4 do 66.5 $ per lb__ .599 1,337.1 52.1 .610 146.4 165.8 .598 135. 8 207.9 .599 106.6 219.5 .602 85.9 192.5 . 620 74.6 161.1 .627 78.8 124.8 .636 78.2 83.0 .641 90.3 52.1 .646 100.2 33.7 .601 92.5 26.6 .627 103.2 25.5 .643 107.5 34.3 .632 116.0 '53.2 .641 mil. lb__ 1, 726. 5 do 1, 157. 4 1,743.2 1, 155. 3 179.3 129. 2 179.8 128.8 161.3 113.0 142. 5 96.7 127.9 82.1 126.8 77.3 119. 4 70.0 130.0 76.1 131.8 80.9 127.7 78.6 157.6 100.3 164.6 112.7 186.0 131.9 326.0 Stocks, cold storage, end of period.. ___do 308.6 283.6 271.0 American, whole milk do Imports '• ' _. do 78.0 79.3 Price, wholesale, American, single daisies (Chicago) __ $ per lb__ .434 .450 Condensed and evaporated milk: Production, case goods: 94.6 97.0 Condensed (sweetened) mil. lb__ 1, 888. 1 1. 690. 5 Evaporated (unsweetened) do Stocks, manufacturers', case goods, end of period: 6.9 5.9 Condensed (sweetened) ____..__ mil. lb__ 185.3 134. 8 E vaporated (unsweetened) do____ Exports: 62.8 165.3 Condensed (sweetened) do 37.3 124.7 Evaporated (unsweetened) do Price, manufacturers' average selling: 5.99 6.09 Evaporated (unsweetened) .._._$ per case Fluid milk: 127,000 125,061 Production on farms... mil. Ib 62,883 60,577 Utilization in mfd. dairy products do ••4.24 Price, wholesale, U.S. average $ per 1001b__ ' 4. 16 Dry milk: Production: 87.6 84.8 Dry whole milk _ mil. lb__ Nonfat dry milk (human food) _ _ _ d o 2, 176. 8 1,999.0 Stocks, manufacturers', end of period: 7.0 5.0 Dry whole milk___ do 58.2 108. 8 Nonfat dry milk (human food) . do Exports: ' 12. 3 120.0 Dry whole milk__ do 838.6 '438.8 Nonfat dry milk (human food) __do Price, manufacturers' average selling, nonfat dry .147 .146 milk (human food)__ _ _$ per lb_. 342.1 299.3 7.0 378.7 333.2 6.3 402.0 354.7 4.2 415. 0 364.3 4.2 386.6 340.6 5.3 351.9 310.5 6.4 335.3 297.2 9.3 308.6 271.0 11.4 301.1 262.9 11.4 277. 6 238.3 7.2 270.7 230.4 11. 1 296.9 '324.0 252.9 ' 276. 4 5.9 7.8 353.6 304. 7 .439 .439 .439 .441 .449 .457 .470 .490 .492 .501 .524 .507 .500 .517 9.4 183. 7 5.4 180. 8 9.1 159. 2 8.5 152.7 5.6 136.0 7.5 123.0 9.0 110. 1 10.5 119.5 9.5 117.0 9.2 119.4 9.2 148.9 9.3 166.0 11.2 195. 0 7.7 165.9 7.9 199.0 9.1 224.9 8.5 235.6 7.3 228.2 7.5 200.6 7.5 166.4 5.9 134.8 5.2 103.2 5.4 61.9 6.6 40.2 5.8 73.6 8.5 128.3 6.3 1.7 3.5 2.0 4.4 2.7 6.9 2.4 2.6 2.3 5.5 2.5 3.0 1.8 10.0 2.7 8.7 2.1 2.0 2.2 9.7 3.1 4.7 3.4 9.1 4.4 6.07 6.07 6.07 6. 08 6.11 6.13 6.11 6.12 6.14 6.33 6.46 6.55 6.63 12,206 6,435 3.90 11, 742 6,354 3.87 10,856 5,554 4.03 10,046 4,800 4.20 9,404 4,055 4.43 9,446 3,866 4.56 9,106 3,722 4.64 9,556 4,070 4.62 9, 865 4,362 4.54 9,254 4,215 4.55 10,645 5,035 4.54 10,874 5,289 4.45 11,707 5,860 '4.34 7.6 244.6 7.7 224.9 5.6 169.8 4.7 131.2 5.4 100.6 6.2 102.0 7.3 105.2 7.6 130. 7 8.4 129.8 7.3 124.0 6.8 144. 8 8.2 170. 5 7.5 193.0 7.7 154.0 7.8 154.2 7.6 136.4 6.8 109.8 6.0 74.0 4.9 65.4 4.3 59. 2 5.0 58.2 5.0 59.6 6.2 53.8 5.9 47.5 6.7 78.1 9.2 110. 0 2:7 30.3 1.2 44.4 1.1 53.0 3.1 63.3 1.1 69.2 1.8 64.6 1.8 21.5 1.2 14.0 1.2 16.9 1.7 6.4 2.0 16.2 1.0 28.8 2.2 9.5 .145 .145 .146 .147 .148 .148 .149 .150 .151 .152 .156 .169 .172 120.4 127. 3 127.5 120.3 124. 3 134.8 144.2 ' 131. 7 112.0 127.9 161.3 160.6 139.7 86.0 .661 11, 416 4.35 GRAIN AND GRAIN PRODUCTS Exports (barley, corn, oats rye, wheat) _ _ .mil. bu_. 1,385.8 ••11,385.6 Barley: Production (crop estimate) __ Stocks (domestic), end of period On farms. Off farms Exports, including malt§ . Prices, wholesale (Minneapolis): No. 2, malting. ___ No. 3, straight _ _ 2402.9 309.9 190.1 119.9 74.4 2 411. 9 311.5 195. 2 116. 3 165.9 7.8 9.3 5.2 5.0 400.7 257.2 143.5 6.8 8.5 8.3 311. 5 195.2 116.3 5.1 4.2 6.3 199.3 105.4 93 9 4.5 7.9 7.3 1.21 1.13 1.33 1.27 1.39 1.32 1.39 1.27 1.34 1.23 1.28. 1.26 1.27 1.25 1.31 1.28 1.38 1.36 1.34 1.33 1.37 1.35 1.40 1.38 1.36 1.35 1.32 1.29 1.33 1.30 Corn: Production (crop estimate, grain only). .mil. bu_. 23,584 193.6 Grindings, wet process . do 2 4, 171 204.9 17.3 17.1 16.8 18.5 17.3 17.9 17.4 15.8 16.0 15.2 18.0 17.0 16.8 3,956 2,818 1,137 481. 6 4*099 3,142 956 1598.9 46.3 1,934 1,283 650 57.5 51.6 48.8 31,170 3604 3566 43.3 52.9 73.6 4,099 3,142 956 66.7 48.9 51.5 2,899 2,160 740 65.7 64.6 53.4 1.23 1.23 1.28 1.25 1.36 1.31 1.34 1.28 1.33 1.26 1.28 1.21 1.28 1.23 1.19 1.19 1.14 1.14 1.21 1.19 1.29 1.27 1.29 1.24 1.25 1.22 1.28 1.24 1.28 1.26 2880 710 622 88 2959 783 680 103 4.6 i 24. 3 .5 .7 2.3 2.9 4.3 5.6 6.9 1.1 •3 .6 .8 3.4 5.2 .70 .74 .77 .74 .72 .72 . 71 .70 .72 .77 .78 .78 .77 .75 .74 273,1 276.9 1,523 1,025 1.491 1,033 125 134 82 45 79 76 65 28 59 46 173 37 112 77 133 85 121 137 80 49 126 105 95 59 76 97 185 207 91 98 70 87 72 122 180 207 158 162 143 ••146 80 5,575 3,665 5,711 4,020 62 275 66 <422 238 220 907 244 1, 547 385 1,403 442 482 408 337 400 332 360 195 316 133 291 108 253 72 288 1,641 1,670 2,933 ••13,411 .083 .086 718 392 .084 374 247 . 084 334 322 .084 709 97 .082 1,356 151 .082 1, 859 245 .080 1,787 440 .082 1,641 292 .082 1, 527 335 .082 1,350 207 .082 1,170 233 .083 1,002 205 ".083 763 295 1.17 1.14 _ do do _ do do do ___ $ per bu do Stocks (domestic), end of period, total, .mil. bu__ On farms do Off farms do Exports, including meal and flour ___do Prices, wholesale: No. 3, yellow (Chicago) _ $perbu Weighted avg., 5 markets, all grades do Oats: Production (crop estimate) _ mil. bu__ Stocks (domestic), end of period, total. do Onfarms__ do Offfarms___ _ do Exports, including oatmeal do Price, wholesale, No. 2, white (Chicago) $ per bu__ Kice: Production (crop estimate) ...mil. bags 9 California mills: Receipts, domestic, rough mil. Ib Shipments from mills, milled rice ...do , Stocks, rough and cleaned (cleaned basis), end of period mil. lb._ Southern States mills (Ark., La., Tenn., Tex.): Receipts, rough, from producers .mil. lb._ Shipments from mills, milled rice .do Stocks, domestic, rough and cleaned (cleaned basis), end of period ... mil. Ib Exports do Price, wholesale, Nato, No. 2 (N.O.) $ per fb__ 3101.8 340.7 361.1 s 283 3220 363 944 806 139 Rye: Production (crop estimate). ....... ..mil. bu._ 233.3 233.3 Stocks (domestic), end of period . do _ 21.3 28.8 312.9 Price, wholesale, No. 2 (Minneapolis) __$ per bu. 1. 10 1. 28 1.16.1 1.11 1.15 ' Revised. v Preliminary. » See note "O" for p. S-21. 2 crop estimate for the r ear. 3 old crop only; new crop not reported until beginning of new crop year (July for >arley, oats, rye, and wheat; Oct. for com). 783 680 103 548 461 87 36.0 28.8 24 7 1.15 1.13 1.17 1.13 1.18 1.25 1.16 1.22 4 Beginning June 1965, data include shipments to Gov't. agencies. § Excludes pearl barley. 9 Bags of 100 Ib. 18.2 SURVEY OF CUREENT BUSINESS S-28 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 1965 1965 May Annual July 1966 June July Aug. 1966 Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. % Apr. May June FOOD AND KINDRED PRODUCTS; TOBACCO—Continued GRAIN AND GRAIN PRODUCTS— Con. Wheat: . Production (crop estimate) , total Spring wheat ___ Winter wheat Distribution mil bu do do do * 11 291 i 11327 266 303 1 1 025 i i 024 1, 458 1 438 328 436 369 438 2 818 2 1, 708 1,339 901 257 644 Stocks (domestic), end of period, total On farms Off farms do do do 1, 449 390 1,060 1, 339 408 931 Exports total including Wheat only. _ do do 819 5 746. 2 '3694 2 '3 646. 5 65 4 62.6 59 7 56.1 68 2 64.9 63 6 58.3 69 4 64.2 67 2 60.6 55.2 51.0 '58 8 '54.3 58 5 56. 3 69.5 67.9 90 4 87.7 83.6 77.7 72.8 67.0 2 06 1 86 1. 92 1 83 1 58 1 70 1 81 1 52 1.65 1 81 1 46 1.61 1 86 1 50 1.64 1 79 1 59 1.70 1 84 1 61 1.76 1 84 1 63 1.72 1 88 1.65 1.76 1 87 1 64 1. 75 1 86 1 66 1.75 1 89 1 65 1.77 1 87 1 64 1.74 1 84 1 65 1.72 1.87 1.74 1.78 265 621 93 5 4 941 602 209 254 584 90 9 4 693 575 874 19 656 89 5 23 500 97 1 18 689 80.9 22 169 91.6 23 307 101.8 21, 296 93.0 21 543 85.5 20, 169 87. 7 19, 621 89.6 53 168 42 328 50 275 52 838 48 105 48 642 45 735 44 294 23,013 90. 7 416 51 811 20, 796 89.7 44 331 23,399 102.1 428 52 816 4 314 5 068 31, 475 3 20, 464 1,195 4 846 1,554 1,403 2,277 4 136 2,250 2,826 1, 775 4,314 1,924 955 711 4,086 1,155 5 975 5. 600 5. 988 5.617 5 963 5.617 5 988 5.617 5 988 5 567 433 flour Prices, wholesale: No. 1, dark northern spring (Minneapolis) No 2 hd and dk hd winter (Kans City) do Weighted avg. , 6 markets, all grades do Wheat flour: Production: Flour thous sacks (100 Ib ) Operations, percent of capacity Offal thous sh tons Grindings of wheat thous bu Stocks held by mills, end of period thous sacks (100 Ib ) Exports _ _ _ ' - do Prices, wholesale: ! Spring, standard patent (Minneapolis) $ per 100 Ib Winter hard 95% patent (Kans City) do 364 433 408 931 563 133 2685 1, 146 346 408 431 388 392 368 357 376 46 833 2,532 2,492 5 913 t>5 901 5 540 v5 540 5 652 5 390 5 784 5 464 5 573 5 260 5 740 5 360 6 013 5 653 5 938 5 610 5 875 5 577 4,820 25, 133 14, 779 7 096 5, 076 26, 614 13,994 7 230 340 2,043 995 359 378 428 2,337 1,254 533 492 2, 406 1,304 470 2,334 1,497 1 , 403 710 382 2,304 1, 110 484 459 376 2, 232 2,037 943 « 1,110. 389 513 2,103 906 2, 390 1,412 1,261 2,314 1,128 328 387 2,238 1, 045 338 478 2,219 1,152 22.86 19. 79 26 21 25.81 22. 50 27 17 26.40 22.68 27 00 27.44 23.88 27 50 26.71 23.22 25 50 27. 01 22. 97 23 50 26. 93 22.92 25 00 26.58 22.88 25.00 26.33 23.02 27. 00 26.41 24.12 29.50 26.65 24.64 32 00 27.55 26.38 37 50 28.96 27.62 36 00 27.73 26.74 p 35. 00 26.54 26.31 25.33 24.92 71 667 19, 114 63 708 15, 386 4 719 1,199 4, 717 1,260 4 430 1,090 4,750 1, 166 5,475 1,228 5,421 1, 231 5,503 1,357 5,010 1,263 4,719 1,161 4, 650 1,091 5,806 « 1,316 5,303 1,291 4,913 1,245 1,192 14. 89 20.98 19.86 22.26 23. 09 23.88 22.49 23.19 24. 07 26. 85 27.26 27.15 24.00 21. 72 22.25 22.88 13.2 18 1 16.0 18.1 18.9 20.2 18.7 21.6 23.7 24.8 23.9 23.7 21.4 19.1 18.7 19.3 12 947 4,436 2 547 11 710 3, 450 2 157 918 966 973 910 785 972 359 187 206 80 1,033 <314 120 970 271 161 907 229 115 1,032 384 392 943 294 136 976 279 172 315 168 335 21. 93 24.29 26.50 24.25 29, 676 28,336 702 665 1 088 484 r 3 535 1 012 15,653 328 57 841 15, 995 269 LIVESTOCK Cattle and calves: Slaughter (federally inspected): Calves thous. animals Cattle. _ _ do Receipts at 26 public markets _ _do _ Shipments feeder to 8 corn-belt States do Prices, wholesale: Beef steers (Chicago) $ per 100 Ib Steers, stocker and feeder (Kansas City)__do___.. Calves vealers (Natl Stockyards 111 ) do Hogs: Slaughter (federally inspected) thous animals Receipts at 26 public markets __do __ Prices: Wholesale, average, all grades (Chicago) $perl001b._ Hog- corn price ratio (bu. of corn equal in value to 100 Ib. live hog) Sheep and lambs: Slaughter (federally inspected) thous animals Receipts at 26 public markets. do____ Shipments, feeder, to 8 corn-belt States do Prices, wholesale: Lambs, average (Chicago) $ per 100 Ib 370 932 466 318 2,249 961 448 1,148 278 113 334 191 1,106 382 342 26.00 24.75 23.75 23.00 23.50 23. 75 25.88 27.88 28.25 26.75 25.75 27.12 2 165 2,288 2,194 2,283 2,459 2,462 2,465 2,386 2 348 2,143 2,500 2,349 2,363 610 44 493 37 442 37 399 45 453 55 484 50 487 42 509 35 528 43 585 32 '572 31 514 98 102 411 56 1,239 1,330 1,323 1,370 1,413 1,383 1,397 1,413 1,244 1,367 1,291 1,359 '213 214 254 107 MEATS AND LARD Total meats: Production (carcass weight, leaf lard in) , inspected slaughter __ mil Ib Stocks (excluding lard), cold storage, end of period __mil. lb_. Exports (meat and meat preparations) do Imports (meat and meat preparations) do Beef and veal: Production, inspected slaughter do Stocks, cold storage, end of period do____ Exports. _ __ _ _ do Imports _ _ do Price, wholesale, beef, fresh, steer carcasses, choice (600-700 Ibs.) (New York) _ _ _ _ . _ _ _ $ per lb_. Lamb and mutton: Production, inspected slaughter mil Ib Stocks, cold storage, end of period __do Pork (including lard), production, inspected slaughter __ mil. Ib Pork (excluding lard) : Production, inspected slaughter do Stocks, cold storage, end of period .do Exports. _ do Imports do Prices, wholesale: Hams, smoked, composite $ per Ib Fresh loins, 8-12 Ib. average (New York) ..do Lard: Production, inspected slaughter mil Ib Stocks, dry and cold storage, end of period do Exports _ do Price, wholesale, refined (Chicago) $ per lb_. r Revised. ? Preliminary. 1 Crop estimate for the year. 87 81 182 2 54 93 177 2 66 400 ' 48 .449 .453 .460 .442 .424 46 12 47 10 41 11 54 13 50 18 49 '20 21 993 1,002 1, 035 943 888 858 1,078 1,008 954 795 802 817 751 701 878 804 126 4 128 6 711 .450 46 10 46 10 53 10 13, 399 11,766 881 894 824 867 10, 445 284 133 210 9 330 152 3 53 692 698 699 292 3 224 4 656 176 3 135 4 .458 .443 2 153 127 682 • .136 542 .532 .498 .512 .531 .587 .563 .571 .572 . 564 1 772 138 144 122 107 20 98 14 82 29 122 .140 .144 .161 .151 3 62 251 .153 69 13 2 3 88 .441 .446 45 10 21 107 47 12 .462 45 11 21 94 .435 .446 576 12 22 101 50 13 .433 624 13 19 211 92 .439 . 398 262 1,410 99 72 718 186 2 87 93 244 6 65 201 3 71 216 2 62 r346 104 .450 23 '4 141 6 23 21 .542 .557 .575 .576 144 146 .163 .165 62 19 59 16 269 3 61 152 4 262 5 58 158 2 256 2 64 186 4 236 3 50 .469 217 4 30 26 27 31 .622 .585 .702 .616 .675 .643 .657 .639 .568 158 139 129 114 144 .158 .156 .169 .171 .160 66 10 62 21 70 6 69 15 625 77 18 225 2 65 2 53 761 '272 3 '268 5 213 p . 537 .533 .562 .604 29 149 '94 5 22 141 104 15 p. 150 Old crop only; new grain not 4reported until beginning of new crop year (July for wheat). See note "O" for p. S-21. Beginning March 1966, data are for receipts at 28 markets. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS July 1966 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 | 1965 Annual S-29 1966 1965 May June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June FOOD AND KINDRED PRODUCTS; TOBACCO—Continued POULTRY AND EGGS Poultry: Slaughter (commercial production) _ mil. lb Stocks, cold storage (frozen) , end of period, total mil.lb__ Turkeys do Price, in Georgia producing area, live broilers $perlb__ Eggs: Production on farms __ mil. cases O__ Stocks, cold storage, end of period: Shell thous. casesO__ Frozen _.__ mil. lb__ Price, wholesale, extras, large (delivered; Chicago) $ per doz__ 7,546 7, 998 563 645 683 773 847 877 819 695 589 522 554 605 617 357 207 315 200 177 82 159 70 177 88 239 147 343 244 470 363 391 280 315 200 284 181 249 156 201 122 169 92 '151 69 148 66 .137 .145 .153 .153 .151 .149 .137 .134 .141 . 140 .155 .155 .165 .150 .160 .155 178.9 179.4 16.0 15.0 15.0 14.6 14.1 14.6 14.4 15.0 15.0 13.7 15.6 15.4 15.8 14.8 62 58 85 51 321 67 525 84 521 98 423 100 321 95 234 81 126 64 85 51 76 38 20 28 28 24 42 33 '76 '42 104 54 .331 .328 .273 .294 .298 .341 .384 .391 .410 .411 .375 .412 . 423 .385 .319 268.4 .234 354. 4 .172 40.2 .159 37 7 .134 26 0 , 118 36 2 .161 48 5 .171 32 4 .171 27 2 .184 25 2 .213 41 9 .239 57 7 .221 46 6 .233 29 2 .259 33 5 .244 4,470 22,374 3,143 21, 680 22 823 7,212 21, 290 1 965 1 818 .479 1,395 .451 MISCELLANEOUS FOOD PRODUCTS Cocoa (cacao) beans: Imports (incl. shells),. thous. Ig. tons Price, wholesale, Accra (New York) $ per lb._ Coffee (green) : Inventories (roasters', importers', dealers'), end of period.. thous. bags c? Roastings (green weight).., _do Imports, total do From Brazil do__ __ Price, wholesale, Santos, No. 4 (New York) $perlb__ Confectionery, manufacturers' sales __mil. $__ Fish: Stocks, cold storage, end of period mil. lb__ Sugar: Cuban stocks, raw, end of period thous. Spanish tons. _ United States: Deliveries and supply (raw basis) :§ Production and receipts: Production. _ _ _ _ _ _ thous. sh. tons. _ Entries from off-shore, total9 do____ Hawaii and Puerto Rico____ __do Deliveries, total 9 For domestic consumption Stocks, raw and ret, end of period do_ _ do do Exports, raw and refined... sh. tons__ Imports: Raw sugar, total 9 — --thous. sh. tons— From the Philippines do.--_ Refined sugar, total do __ Prices (New York): Raw, wholesale $ per lb__ Refined: Retail (incl. N.E. New Jersey) _.$ per 5 lb__ Wholesale (excl. excise tax) _ _ _ _ $ per lb__ Tea, imports •__ 5,742 2,667 2, 612 5,330 1 554 1 831 1 206 386 457 '1,430 .453 '83 .460 . 455 215 230 152 198 973 4,408 5,505 '4,152 5,796 1,903 1,966 9,706 10,151 3 143 278 1 556 411 1 812 ' 551 3 173 5 657 5,837 5,112 2 666 '802 2 549 736 2 254 846 1 829 2 013 488 545 2 382 *529 597 570 ••76 .455 ••106 .445 , '163 .438 '156 .438 '•146 .440 '130 .440 120 .425 127 .420 '130 .423 112 .413 .410 166 192 210 228 231 232 230 210 175 162 162 '164 174 3,598 ' 3, 198 3,055 2,823 2,133 1,598 1,098 973 1,000 1,570 2, 480 2, 990 2, 675 2,300 961 '932 481 1,831 145 ••95 120 612 401 198 317 191 355 141 316 114 883 876 957 950 1 006 2,170 1,928 1,658 1,023 1,007 1,291 1, 552 83 245 240 253 239 855 846 2,420 65 98 826 815 150 85 786 777 83 39 874 132 682 673 221 194 294 196 331 203 783 777 2,600 2,519 831 817 134 231 235 258 260 750 739 2,700 ' 10, 020 ' 2, 648 4, 222 i 2, 359 196 71 290 166 121 106 137 321 76 62 1, 765 155 123 3,506 3, 783 1,055 82 373 82 9 368 72 4 188 69 6 362 156 2 412 137 10 444 71 7 350 85 2 430 108 8 159 38 260 106 1 313 149 4 303 117 253 46 2 .069 .068 .068 .068 .067 .068 .068 .069 .068 .067 .068 .069 .068 .657 .100 . 595 .095 .591 .093 .595 .095 . 592 .095 .591 .095 .594 .095 .596 .096 .604 .096 .606 . 096 .605 .096 .611 .098 10, 463 11, 028 6 372 9 173 14 543 9, 123 13, 724 12 504 10 447 224.2 219. 9 204. 2 240 2 274.6 281.6 270 4 255 4 9, 671 1,171 84 thous. lb__ 133, 592 130, 358 Baking or frying fats (incl. shortening) : Production mil. lb._ 2,664.1 2, 792. 5 Stocks (producers' and warehouse), end of period mil.lb116.6 121.1 Salad or cooking oils: 2, 773. 1 Production . do__ 2, 846. 1 Stocks (producers' and warehouse) , end of period 85.9 mil. lb__ 118. 8 Margarine: Production _ _ do 1, 857. 4 1,904.4 Stocks (producers' and warehouse) , end of period 41. 6 mil.lb__ 48.0 Price, wholesale (colored; mfr. to wholesaler or .261 large retailer; delivered) $ per lb.. .241 .248 996 2,166 '862 ' 2, 648 2, 738 (2) 2, 514 * 2, 313 (y\ .069 .069 .615 .098 .616 P. 095 .617 9 352 14 677 13 778 11, 948 266.2 266 3 265 2 r 242 6 262.1 122.3 122. 9 106.4 103.2 97.6 105.7 113.1 116. 6 114.2 118.8 118.4 ' 132. 0 123.1 242.6 270. 6 229. 4 226.4 218.4 213.5 231. 3 257 7 254.5 238.1 271 8 '233 9 252.9 156.1 149.0 125.7 85.5 65.9 62.2 80.3 85.9 98.9 87.9 79.0 '96.2 104.8 142. 0 145.1 142.9 148 6 164 9 161.6 168.7 175 4 185. 5 172 7 188 5 '163 6 164 7 51.5 47.0 48.5 44.5 41.9 47.2 45.3 41.6 44.0 48.4 58.5 '56.0 57.5 .263 . 263 .261 .261 .261 .261 .261 9.. 261 48 9 36 5 44 6 29 6 47.7 35.4 47 6 44.7 45 4 36 5 '40 0 34 6 .263 . 261 .261 .261 40 6 30.4 43 1 39.7 45 5 47.5 45.1 45. 3 . 069 FATS, OILS, AND RELATED PRODUCTS Animal and fish fats: A Tallow, edible: 530.1 Production (quantities rendered) mil lb 553.2 45 3 39. 6 434.5 Consumption in end products I__ __ do____ 464.0 35.8 34.8 Stocks (factory and warehouse), end of period 31.1 mil. lb._ 34.9 41.7 29.8 Tallow and grease (except wool) , inedible: 352. 2 4,565.7 4,302.5 351.0 Production (quantities rendered) do Consumption in end products _ _ d o 2, 301. 4 2, 158. 0 179.6 181.6 Stocks (factory and warehouse) , end of period 418.5 366.4 mil.lb371.7 353.5 Fish and marine mammal oils: Production do 180.2 190.2 40.1 22. 3 Consumption in end products do 5.7 80.9 6.8 79.8 Stocks (factory and warehouse) , end of period mil. lb 139.9 185.3 126.4 148.1 ' Revised. » Preliminary. 1 See note "O" for p. S-21. 2 Less than 500 short tons. 0 Cases of 30 dozen. c? Bags of 132.276 lb. 49 3 42.9 27.6 23.9 21.5 22.6 26.0 31.1 36.8 36. 6 40.8 '41.0 49.5 325.1 149. 5 343.9 355. 8 184.5 364.7 376.4 366.7 190.1 179.2 196.7 346.1 190.5 370.6 208.2 ' 338. 5 ' 188. 3 361.2 195.0 368. 7 187.7 209.3 354. 5 320.4 351. 3 368.3 391. 5 418. 5 435.2 446.5 '410.2 ' 414. 0 357. 0 40.6 37.7 17.8 9.1 6.8 8 2 3.0 7.3 .5 5.4 5 7.0 '54 18.9 6.4 166. 1 7.6 7.1 7.5 .3 7.0 '6.6 7.4 192.1 204.4 177.5 201. 4 185.3 168.1 158.8 137.4 ' 135. 5 138.6 § Monthly data reflect cumulative revisions for prior periods. 9 Includes data not shown separately; see also note "§". A For data on lard, see p. S-28. SUEVEY OF CUKRENT BUSINESS S-30 1965 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS Annual July 1968 1965 May June July Aug. 1966 Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June FOOD AND KINDRED PRODUCTS; TOBACCO—Continued FATS, OILS, AND RELATED PRODUCTS— Continued Vegetable oils and related products: Coconut oil: Production: Crude mil. Ib Refined do Consumption in end products... do Stocks, crude and refined (factory and warehouse) end of period mil Ib Imports do Corn oil: Production: Crude _ _ _ __do Refined do Consumption in end products do Stocks, crude and refined (factory and warehouse) end of period mil Ib Cottonseed cake and meal: Production thous sh tons Stocks (at oil mills) end of period do Cottonseed oil: Production: Crude mil. Ib Refined do Consumption in end products. do Stocks, crude and refined (factory and warehouse) end of period mil Ib Exports (crude and refined) do Price wholesale (drums* N Y ) $ per Ib Linseed oil: Production crude (raw) mil Ib Consumption in end products do Stocks, crude and refined (factory and warehouse) end of period mil Ib Price, wholesale (Minneapolis) $ per lb__ Soybean cake and meal: Production thous sh tons Stocks (at oil mills), end of period... do Soybean oil: Production: Crude mil Ib Refined do Consumption in end products do Stocks, crude and refined (factory and warehouse) end of period mil Ib Exports (crude and refined) do — Price, wholesale (refined; N.Y.)-$ per lb_. Leaf: (d) 46.0 '61. 5 32.4 52.3 70.7 327. 6 506. 0 765. 4 365.4 488.1 723.5 32.5 47.1 63.7 23.5 42.1 63.2 24.9 25.6 44.5 30.6 41.4 63.2 19.7 35.6 59.6 28.7 42.3 60.8 38.2 39.9 57.1 36.8 38.5 60.3 27.6 47.8 65.6 21.2 43.7 59.1 154.0 397.1 154. 4 383.6 181.3 38.8 156.0 22.7 137.8 0 123.5 7.1 114.9 24.8 106.8 34.4 127.0 18.7 154.4 11.1 131.7 109.5 146.3 43.7 413.9 393.1 412.2 446.1 412.8 421.5 36.1 34.3 35.8 38.2 31. 8 34.1 36.4 31.1 35.8 38.8 37.9 35.3 40.7 34.8 36.6 40.1 39.0 38.5 36.5 37.3 37.6 36.0 35.3 36.6 35.4 30.3 30. 0 34.3 31.2 32.2 40.5 34.7 31.7 '25.4 37.0 32.7 30.5 40.1 26.1 38.4 39.6 39.3 38.5 35.4 32.0 28.6 26.1 30.3 29.6 34.8 '40.2 53.1 2, 705. 7 126. 8 2, 755. 5 80.9 181.9 238. 5 126.1 207.6 98.9 168.5 71.9 110.8 191.0 77.7 297.9 91.0 338.4 96. 1 332.8 80.9 334.4 94.6 305.4 115. 0 287.6 156.7 197.4 189.6 158.5 213.0 1, 932. 8 1,600.0 1,410.0 1,974.2 1,668.8 1, 471. 7 135. 0 119.6 106.8 93.0 98.9 121. 5 72.6 92.1 105. 8 50.0 80.3 113. 0 132. 7 95.3 133.4 212.1 149. 0 145.9 236.5 176.5 130.1 230.9 193.5 130.0 232.6 181.4 131.0 214.7 166.4 125.4 139.2 202.4 204.2 ' 147. 6 132.0 ' 112. 1 115.9 132.8 104.7 506.3 603.5 .141 300.1 501.3 i .149 560.0 26.9 .146 492.5 50.3 .138 420. 6 41.5 .137 292.5 54.6 .135 236.2 30.6 .135 243.6 18.1 281.1 37.9 .155 300. 1 48.8 .153 335,6 49.8 .164 366.3 30.0 .168 396.0 37.7 .171 408.9 10.8 v .178 392.8 11.8 443.6 377.2 410.1 239.4 22.3 22.3 31.3 23.4 15.7 21.5 37.2 21.0 48.7 20.4 45.9 18.8 33.5 17.1 40.9 16.3 37.5 17.3 38.1 16.8 43.1 21.3 '36.4 20.0 41.2 22.2 185.5 .134 213.5 .134 205.0 .139 198.2 .137 184.6 .134 180.7 .133 184.7 .128 188.2 .128 199,9 .128 213.5 .127 216. 9 .128 225.6 .128 225.9 '237.7 .128 v .128 261. 2 10, 635. 2 11, 179. 1 102. 6 74.6 944.1 239.5 856. 2 205.3 846. 4 163.7 856.5 133. 9 697.2 74.2 999.7 1, 125. 6 1,135.2 1,163.8 1,042.7 1,142.8 '1,010. 1 1,165.2 74.6 105. 0 113.7 121.6 ' 115. 4 152.5 97.2 104.3 4, 943. 8 5, 235. 5 4, 591. 8 4, 547. 3 4,423.6 \4,423.3 448.0 373.5 368.3 406.0 390.9 397.5 403.2 340.2 362.6 408.2 375.8 373. 8 329.5 357.6 385.3 474.8 353. 2 366.2 510.1 423.2 399.9 519.8 445.2 429.1 533.2 468. 6 453. 5 478.4 416.5 415. 8 526. 3 ' 476. 6 476.4 '418.0 466.5 ' 409. 5 541.9 450.9 432.6 374. 8 544.2 1, 273. 2 1, 026. 7 .134 .123 573.3 85.1 .129 522.1 78.2 .121 499.0 61.0 .121 423.0 99.3 .132 297.4 89.9 .138 373.0 28.5 .132 401.1 36.6 .137 374.8 168.7 .132 414.8 44.6 .142 444.2 '485.9 ' 521. 9 42.1 45.6 33.2 .136 p .139 .144 580.9 47.2 5,582 468,075 243, 347 35, 737 15,163 5,231 36, 116 16, 687 36, 137 14, 210 32,554 16, 181 5,323 50, 425 15, 382 44,051 13,061 71, 273 14,937 5,582 62, 288 11,527 31,970 15, 245 29, 525 14, 495 5,482 39,285 13, 523 23,191 16, 413 23, 134 13, 838 166,617 13, 143 15, 141 12, 112 15, 032 14, 847 14,956 13, 666 11, 799 45, 046 511, 463 7,577 160, 624 23,052 3,919 40,841 714 13, 228 2,795 3,846 47,063 659 14,906 2,109 3,672 39, 727 607 12, 636 1,831 4,907 46,647 697 14, 553 1,984 4,021 44,084 658 14, 024 1,948 3, 747 41, 771 670 14,505 1,920 3,694 43,446 696 12, 651 1, 701 4,053 37, 720 445 9,958 2,290 4,088 39,348 571 3,524 42, 985 525 4,577 47, 053 630 4,040 39,582 571 1, 515 2,019 2,190 2,414 1,926 13,782 15,623 295 330 1,236. 1,320 11,797 183 927 14,386 157 1,278 8,724 3,741 24.7 52.5 70.7 176.5 T 155. 1 10.4 87.2 '38.0 '28.8 135.9 31.3 TOBACCO 2 2, 228 Stocks, dealers' and manufacturers' end of periodt 5,664 miLlb.. 514, 514 Exports incl scrap and stems thous Ib 179, 651 Imports incl scrap and stems do Manufactured: 180, 082 Consumption (withdrawals): Cigarettes (small): Tax-exempt.:.. . .millions.. 42,643 497, 446 Taxable do 8,106 Cigars (large) , taxable. do _.. 175, 808 25,144 Exports cigarettes millions 2 1, 855 LEATHER AND PRODUCTS HIDES AND SKINS Exports: Value, total 9— thous. $_. Calf and kip skins . thous. skins.. Cattle hides thous. hides.. Imports: Value, total 9— thous. $._ Sheep and lamb skins thous. pieces.. Goat and kid skins ...do.... Prices, wholesale (f.o.b. shipping point): Calfskins, packer, heavy, 9^/15 Ib $ per lb._ Hides, steer, heavy, native, over 53 Ib do 2,391 11,504 106,253 2,458 13,311 11,809 210 1,496 10,023 218 1,219 9,720 186 1,147 8,131 190 928 7,737 190 841 10,513 161 1,339 9,655 253 1,036 12,703 311 1,277 9,645 241 935 81,879 30,455 12,882 80,263 31,850 14,411 7,353 2,799 1,409 6,298 1,825 1,430 7,664 3,763 820 5,545 1,999 1,282 6,772 2,607 1,225 6,083 2,271 966 4,968 1,382 5,751 1,732 1,391 5,195 1,231 1,130 6,787 2,841 794 11,052 5,548 1,142 9,500 4,541 856 .414 .106 .541 .143 .550 .139 .525 .134 .550 .194 .550 .174 .575 .166 .575 .159 .625 .164 .625 .174 .700 .194 .775 .174 P .675 p .184 6,263 23,436 14, 557 30,316 532 1,938 1,162 2,656 574 1,987 1,317 2,647 397 1,569 1,071 1,922 496 1,982 973 2,763 464 1,958 1,066 2,600 2,038 1,296 2,511 542 2,071 1,434 2,756 528 2,065 1,523 500 1,965 1,371 2,550 445 1,927 1,255 2,654 464 2,149 ' 1,428 2,887 2,044 1,257 2,625 6,804 5,207 4,836 5,627 5,420 7,169 7,023 6,818 6,974 6,346 7,164 5,741 .790 .765 .735 .750 .750 .770 .940 p .900 LEATHER Production: Calf and whole kip._-. thous. skins.. 6,535 Cattle hide and side kip.. ..thous. hides and kips.__ 22,834 Goat and kid . thous. skins.. 12,874 Sheep and lamb do 31,548 Exports: Glove and garment leather ..thous. sq. ft.. 46,496 Upper and lining leather do 42,582 Prices, wholesale: Sole, bends, light, f.o.b. tannery ..$ per lb__ Upper, chrome calf, B and C grades, f.o.b. tannery .... $ per sq. ft.. 1.200 d ' Revised. p Preliminary, Data withheld to avoid individual firms. 1 Average of months shown. 8 Crop estimate for the year. . 525 .156 .725 .710 .710 .710 1.244 1.252 1.248 1.238 disclosure of operations of 5,875 1.293 p 1.333 1.300 1.280 1.247 1.253 1.271 1.230 1.238 3 Effective Jan. 1965. data are for all leather, except sole and rough; see note "O" for p. 8-21. {Revisions for 2dqtr. 1963-4th qtr. 1964 (mil. Ib.): 4,692; 4,791; 5,287; 5,355; 4,961; 5,069; 5,664. 9 Includes data for items not shown separately. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS July 1966 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are sHown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 | 1965 Annual S-31 1966 1965 May June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May LEATHER AND PRODUCTS—Continued , LEATHER MANUFACTURES Shoes and slippers :t Production, total _ _ thous. pairs __ 612, 789 ; Shoes, sandals, and play shoes, except athletic thous. pairs 516, 124 Slippers do 79 267 7,116 Athletic do Other footwear _ _ do 10, 282 Exports do Prices, wholesale, f.o.b. factory: Men's and boys' oxfords, dress, elk or side upper, Goodyear welt 1957-59=100 Women's oxfords, elk side upper, Goodyear welt 1957-59=100 t Women's pumps, low-medium quality. _ do _ 630, 012 49, 436 51, 145 46, 268 57, 105 53,859 51, 760 50, 270 52, 673 '52, 514 52, 900 535, 311 85 938 6,712 2, 351 41, 557 7 097 580 202 43, 084 7 241 587 233 39, 782 5 974 353 159 48, 184 8,185 549 187 44,358 41, 795 8, 714 9,224 571 503 216 238 40, 969 8,566 544 191 45, 440 '46,254 6 554 f 5r 494 506 558 173 208 46, 034 6 129 553 184 1,912 i 2 533 171 115 191 231 237 105.9 111.0 109.6 109.6 109.6 110.1 110.1 116.5 116.5 106.5 111.0 107.3 113.0 106.5 111.3 106. 5 111.2 106.5 112. 8 106.5 112.4 106. 5 112. 4 109.7 117. 3 109.7 116. 6 285 255 221 186 167 274 260 116.5 116.5 116 5 116.5 120. 3 109.7 117. 0 109.7 118. 3 109 7 119.3 109.7 119.3 111.4 121. 2 283 LUMBER AND PRODUCTS LUMBER— ALL TYPES National Forest Products Association :cf Production, total mil. bd. ft-_ Hardwoods _ ___ _ _ _ do _ Softwoods... '__ do __. Shipments, total. Hardwoods Softwoods _.do _ __do do Stocks (gross) , mill, end of period, total do Hardwoods _ .do Softwoods __ do_ __ Exports, total sawmill products. Imports, total sawmill products.. SOFTWOOD Douglas fir: Orders, new __ _ Orders, unfilled, end of period „_ - Production _ _ i__ _ Shipments. Stocks (gross) , mill, end of period. .-- do do mil. bd. ft do do do do Exports, total sawmill products ___do Sawed timber do Boards, planks, scantlings, etc do Prices, wholesale: Dimension, construction, dried, 2" x 4", R. L. $perMbd. ftFlooring, C and better, F. G., 1" x 4", R. L. $ per M bd. ft_. Southern pine: Orders, new __mil. bd. ft_. Orders, unfilled, end of period ....do _ _ _ 35, 408 5,891 29, 517 36,158 6 129 30, 029 2, 980 533 2,447 3,111 539 2,572 2,969 518 2,451 3,262 552 2,710 3,349 507 2,842 3,128 539 2, 589 2,970 539 2,431 2,927 504 2,423 2,691 476 2 215 2,909 553 2,356 3,410 652 2,758 3, 211 660 2,551 3,242 625 2,617 35,587 6,290 29, 297 36 680 6,465 30 215 3, 112 557 2, 555 3,229 539 2,690 3,193 515 2,678 3,316 548 2,768 3, 208 537 2 671 3,163 568 2,595 2,888 550 2 338 2,912 496 2 416 2 860 507 2 353 3 040 675 2 365 3 472 685 2 787 3, 462 689 2 773 3 395 684 2 711 6,434 1,536 4, 898 5,728 1 151 4, 577 5, 974 1,224 4,750 5,864 1,224 4,640 5,645 1,226 4,419 5,566 1,229 4, 337 5,698 1,196 4,502 5,676 1,161 4,515 5, 733 5,728 1,147 » 1 151 4,577 4,586 5,618 1 120 4,498 6,526 1, 061 4, 465 5,492 1 061 4 431 5, 323 1,055 4,268 5,150 1 000 4,150 957 5,240 1 962 5,163 81 411 70 532 86 500 85 513 77 449 87 429 67 412 131 444 70 345 77 415 74 514 99 462 98 518 8,916 607 9 289 620 782 682 814 624 838 673 773 654 719 550 739 518 752 523 848 620 723 738 691 728 1 038 923 817 906 606 652 8,967 8, 845 1,075 9,256 9,277 1,079 742 785 1, 172 804 872 1,104 712 788 1,021 788 792 998 832 823 1,007 772 771 1,043 777 747 1,073 758 752 1,079 732 840 1,063 751 701 1,113 843 843 1,113 782 835 1, 084 794 860 1,027 369 136 233 M45 i 111 !334 35 11 24 28 7 21 38 15 23 32 7 25 34 9 25 40 12 29 26 5 22 87 6 80 31 10 21 27 11 15 32 9 23 46 11 35 49 12 37 81.14 82.16 81.22 80.01 80. 84 83. 34 83.46 82.27 82.14 82.25 83.56 83.69 88.16 p 92. 65 153. 07 156. 85 158. 19 157. 10 157. 10 155. 79 155. 79 155. 79 156.43 156. 44 157.63 158. 64 161.61 p 166.84 6, 346 281 6,864 366 618 380 579 374 605 387 615 388 591 373 572 367 534 349 542 366 564 418 508 420 761 503 578 469 533 415 6,504 Production do 519 6,346 6,321 Shipments _ _ _ _ do 6, 779 589 Stocks (gross), mill and concentration yards, end 1, 362 1,087 1, 278 of period mil. bd. ft Exports, total sawmill products M bd. ft_. 102,684 H00,581 12, 380 11,709 Sawed timber do 90, 975 Boards, planks, scantlings, etc do Prices, wholesale, (indexes): Boards, No. 2 and better, I" x 6", R. L. 94.3 92.0 92.7 1957-59 =100__ Flooring, B and better, F. G., 1" x 4", S. L. 95.3 97. 1 96.0 1957-59=100.. Western pine: 11,057 906 10, 565 Orders, new mil. bd. ft 535 505 463 Orders, unfilled, end of period ..do 10,875 Production do 10, 579 923 10,951 912 Shipments _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ do 10, 449 1,732 1,624 1,809 Stocks (gross) , mill, end of period. do ___ Price, wholesale, Ponderosa, boards, No. 3, 1" x 67. 42 65. 49 70.33 12", R. L. (6' and over) $ per M bd ft 540 585 562 592 543 614 582 606 548 578 541 552 545 525 504 512 507 506 625 678 568 612 578 587 1,233 9,126 1, 203 8, 136 1,132 8,762 1,108 6,212 1, 078 8,694 1,067 9,466 1,087 7,451 1,079 10, 106 1,080 7, 885 1,027 11,244 983 6,927 974 10, 078 92. 5 93.4 95.0 96. 0 96.2 98.0 98.7 99.8 101.2 102. 2 106. 2 99.1 100.1 100.8 102. 5 102.7 108.2 940 627 875 596 1, 096 730 973 682 820 535 910 1, 021 1,488 960 968 1,480 96.3 96.8 947 532 1, 064 590 1,025 526 935 507 943 491 774 456 995 535 938 921 1,641 917 1,005 1,553 1,068 1, 055 1,566 1,124 954 1,736 969 959 1,746 839 809 1,776 872 916 1,732 708 769 1,671 815 907 1, 579 982 962 1,599 68.28 66.65 66.34 67.53 67.07 65. 55 63.91 63.45 65.83 68. 19 p 71. 48 97.3 98.2 98.8 HARDWOOD FLOORING Maple, beech , and birch : Orders, new mil. bd ft Orders, unfilled, end of period_ _ _ do . • Production. _ do____ Shipments do Stocks (gross) , mill, end of period do Oak: Orders, new do Orders, unfilled, end of period do Production do Shipments do Stocks (gross) , mill, end of period do " Revised. *> Preliminary. 'See note "O" for p. 6-21. 31.9 10.1 28.5 31.2 4.0 31.2 11.1 29.0 30.2 3.1 2. 4 11.6 2.5 2.6 4.8 3.1 11.8 2.9 3.2 4.4 3.4 11.9 2.4 3.0 3.8 1, 9 11.4 2.2 2.9 3.1 2.6 11.4 2.6 2.7 3.0 2.6 11.1 2.3 2.5 3.1 2.9 11.8 2.0 2.1 2.8 2.0 11.1 2.6 2.4 3.1 3.0 12.0 2.3 2.2 3.1 2.6 13.1 2.1 1.7 3.4 3.2 14.1 2.3 2.4 3.5 3.9 15.8 1.9 2.3 3.0 2.3 16.0 2.0 2.4 2.8 819.6 35.6 842.2 824. 2 54. 5 818.4 64.3 778. 7 783.3 35. 4 72.2 61.9 61.7 62.6 51.8 69.5 56.2 65.1 70.0 46.7 73. 2 62.2 63.5 67.2 42.9 83.3 70. 0 68.9 72.5 37.7 71.6 70.2 70.7 71.4 37.0 64.0 69.2 64.6 66.4 34.9 62.0 69.8 63.9 61.4 35.8 64.2 64.3 65. 9 65.0 35.4 78.0 80.5 61.4 61.7 35.0 60.7 85. 3 57.0 56.0 34.4 77.2 91.6 65.5 66.1 31.7 59.0 89.3 60. 6 63.5 30.5 51.0 78.7 62.1 60.7 30.7 i Revisions for Jan.-Oct. 1964 are shown in Bu. of the Census report M31A(64)-13. cf Formerly National Lumber Manufacturers Association. June SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS S-32 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 | 1965 Annual July 1966 1966 1965 May June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June METALS AND MANUFACTURES IRON AND STEEL Exports: Steel mill products thous. sh. tons Scrap do Pig iron. __ do 3,435 7,881 176 12,496 16,170 128 200 623 2 177 472 1 188 711 1 195 561 2 204 550 2 254 334 1 218 509 1 274 417 6 175 347 1 158 419 (2) 159 342 2 143 440 1 126 429 2 Imports: Steel mill products Scrap Pig iron 6,440 299 751 10,383 235 916 1,014 17 99 1,192 28 80 1,094 17 67 1,061 22 96 786 15 114 892 18 101 939 20 96 671 24 106 668 21 38 538 15 62 776 91 32 714 146 88 919 17 137 84,093 52, 262 31, 831 84,626 7, 413 90, 534 55, 214 35, 320 90, 360 7, 638 8,111 4,890 3,221 8,043 7,027 8,083 4,863 3,220 8,021 7,066 7,569 4,728 2,840 7,582 7,051 7,608 4,731 2,877 7,515 \7,184 7,034 4,434 2,600 7,009 7,213 6,957 4, 199 2,758 6,741 7,432 6, 566 3,835 2,732 6,498 7,502 7,109 4,153 2,956 7,001 7, 638 32.77 34.70 33.36 35.00 35.66 38.50 33.88 35.00 33. 84 35.00 32.73 35.00 30.67 31.00 29.30 32.00 29.58 31. 50 31.25 33.00 32. 36 33. 50 32.89 36.00 33.32 * 30. 01 36.50 *33.50 Iron ore (operations in all U.S. districts) : Mine production thous. Ig. tons Shipments from mines do Imports - — _ _ - -_ - do 3 84, 836 3 85, 184 42,417 87,420 85, 801 45, 105 9, 144 10, 913 4,120 10, 102 11,333 5,106 10,508 12,481 4, 505 10,851 11, 699 5,128 10,282 10,366 3,894 8,892 9,955 4,093 4,543 6,294 4,131 4, 164 2, 643 3,123 4,712 1,882 1,898 4,497 1,751 1, 489 5, 038 2,057 2,219 6,892 6, 958 3,432 U.S. and foreign ores and ore agglomerates: Receipts at iron and steel plants do Consumption at iron and steel plants do Exports _ _ do Stocks total, end of period do At mines do At furnace yards do At U S docks do 118,325 122, 197 6,963 71, 677 10, 752 57, 184 3, 741 121, 964 14, 082 125, 143 11, 682 17,085 929 68,781 '53,071 12,290 16, 624 53,997 '34,742 2,494 1,705 15, 256 11, 083 950 55,909 15, 392 38,923 1, 594 15, 929 11, 133 1,037 58,931 13, 420 43,710 1,801 15,367 10, 897 1,033 62, 675 12,572 48, 181 1,922 13, 224 9,764 544 66,357 12,486 51,641 2, 230 12,929 8,976 778 69,466 11,424 55,594 2,448 10,050 8,213 331 70, 718 10, 732 57,430 2, 556 5,266 8,699 437 68,781 12, 290 53, 997 2,494 3, 069 9, 595 275 65,170 15, 120 47, 562 2,488 3,232 9, 499 396 61,466 17, 866 41,295 2,305 3,976 11, 127 408 56,881 20,847 34, 144 1,890 8,841 10, 897 593 54, 613 20, 781 32,088 1,744 15, 421 11, 658 1,048 do do do Iron and Steel Scrap Scrap for consumption, total thous sh. tons Home scrap produced do Purchased scrap received (net) _ do Consumption total do Stocks, consumers', end of period do Prices, steel scrap, No. 1 heavy melting: Composite (5 markets) $ per Ig. ton Pittsburgh district do Ore 3,502 35, 852 1,703 1,032 1,272 97 109 74 115 105 125 98 154 117 92 76 83 109 85,601 86,382 88,173 88, 945 8,195 8,165 7,849 7,864 7,780 7,836 7,661 7, 762 6, 690 6, 794 6,310 6,378 5, 880 5,930 6,327 6, 502 6,910 6,834 7,937 7,853 8,241 2,461 2,329 2,402 2,508 2, 505 2, 416 2,446 2,460 2,450 2,329 62.75 63.00 63.50 62. 75 63.00 63.50 62.75 63.00 63. 50 62. 75 63.00 63.50 62.75 63.00 63.50 62.75 63.00 63.50 62.75 63.00 63.50 62.75 63.00 63.50 62. 75 63.00 63. 50 62.75 63.00 63. 50 62.75 63.00 63.50 62. 75 63.00 63.50 62.75 62.75 63.00 P63.00 63.50 v 63. 50 62.75 855 14,316 8,129 882 15,713 9, 173 960 1, 376 822 917 1, 454 869 925 1,282 771 892 1, 302 815 881 1,322 777 876 1,273 732 842 1,178 689 882 1, 255 696 916 1,227 661 1,008 ••975 977 1, 229 ' 1, 469 1,380 802 671 ••825 122 1,001 589 174 1,136 648 152 96 53 144 105 60 165 81 44 171 81 50 176 90 54 172 95 54 174 93 52 174 101 59 176 98 56 174 97 55 187 112 ••67 12, 012 145.6 11, 593 145. 2 11, 551 140.0 11,324 137.3 9,949 124.6 9,296 112. 7 8,822 110. 5 9,627 116. 7 10, 577 128.2 10,249 137. 5 12, 083 146.5 355 164 131 357 178 143 368 134 105 389 152 120 393 171 138 404 160 128 428 157 128 436 175 145 443 175 145 452 168 137 ' 525 '209 '173 512 162 127 510 172 134 544 152 114 568 154 114 569 172 134 573 178 139 580 187 145 589 190 148 7,874 395 569 811 148 7,887 394 577 808 132 7,699 379 590 833 101 8,634 403 606 856 101 6, 698 333 516 827 96 6, 237 265 523 833 99 6,200 323 512 777 111 6,061 313 529 698 143 6, 602 335 536 675 146 6,734 301 490 684 140 8,282 349 609 838 165 8, 174 324 600 819 155 8,221 334 596 822 152 1,282 1,211 14.488 1,266 13, 199 Bars and tool steel, total do 9.344 814 767 827 8,401 Bars* Hot rolled (incl light shapes) do 3,150 285 305 298 3,229 Reinforcing do 1,877 138 1, 467 145 152 Cold finished do 744 8.689 734 8,137 778 Pipe and tubing,. . do 3,484 268 298 3,105 306 Wire and wire products do _ 6,659 521 Tin mill products do 419 317 6,083 36, 733 3,244 3,052 3,286 34, 222 Sheets and strip (incl electrical) total do 10,630 942 893 960 9,948 Sheets* Hot rolled do 16, 571 1,485 1,409 1,489 15, 699 Cold rolled do Steel mill products, inventories, end of period: 16.3 15.5 15.8 11.2 Consumers' (manufacturers only) mil sh tons 12.9 6.2 5.5 6.2 62.4 68.7 Receipts during period do 5.9 5.0 ' 60.5 5.8 67.0 Consumption during period do 4.4 4.2 4.2 4.1 Service centers (warehouses) do 4.5 Producing mills: 8.4 8.2 8.1 9.1 In process (ingots semifinished etc ) do 8.5 7.5 7.1 7.3 8.7 7.9 Finished (sheets, plates, bars pipe, etc ) do .0837 .0837 .0837 .0837 .0837 Steel (carbon), finished, composite pricel- .$ per lb_' Revised. *> Preliminary. 1 See note "O" for p. S-21. 2 Less than 500 tons. 3 Revised total; monthly revisions are not available. ^Beginning Jan. 1964, the composite reflects substantial changes in products and weights used and is not comparable with earlier periods. The new composite price is based on AISI 1, 328 836 315 167 877 323 733 3,406 1,009 1,538 1,083 644 291 139 588 248 275 2,733 797 1,178 1,036 626 264 137 566 228 360 2,327 662 985 972 592 237 132 534 226 631 2,116 600 880 964 587 233 134 592 240 302 2,280 656 997 1, 013 649 207 147 604 256 382 2,655 751 1, 243 1,041 681 208 143 712 239 390 2,737 790 1, 263 1,284 818 281 173 887 318 527 3,305 948 1,513 1,279 797 297 175 874 327 535 3,260 919 1, 494 1,321 830 301 179 886 344 559 3,207 894 1,455 17.2 6.0 5.1 4.6 17.0 5.2 5.4 4.6 15.6 4.2 5.6 4.6 14.3 4.4 5.7 4.5 12.9 4.4 5.8 4.5 12.0 4.9 5.8 ••4.9 11.3 4.9 5.6 4.7 10.9 5.9 6.3 4.7 10.8 ••5.9 ••6.0 p4.7 P 11. 0 *6.1 P5.9 Manganese (mn content) general imports do Pig Iron and Iron Products Pig iron: Production (excluding production of ferroalloys) thous. sh. tons Consumption do Stocks (consumers' and suppliers'), end of period, thous. sh. tons Prices: Composite ,---$ per Ig. ton__ Basic (furnace) do Foundry, No. 2, Northern __ _ do Castings, gray iron: Orders, unfilled, for sale, end of period thous sh tons Shipments total do For sale do Castings, malleable iron: Orders, unfilled, for sale, end of period thous. sh tons Shipments, total do F o r sale - d o 62.75 193 96 57 Steel, Crude, Semifinished, and Finished Steel ingots and steel for castings: 127, 076 3131, 462 Production thous. sh. tons 135.3 130.5 Index - - daily average 1957-59=100 Steel castings: Orders, unfilled, for sale, end of period 436 337 thous. sh. tons__ 1,962 1,835 Shipments total do 1,569 1,471 For sale, total do Steel forgings (for sale): 589 459 Orders unfilled end of period do 2,027 31, 734 Shipments total do 1,578 31,334 Closed die (drop upset press) do Steel products, net shipments:' Total (all grades) Semifinished products Structural shapes (heavy) , steel piling Plates Rails and accessories do do do do do 84,945 4,229 6,085 8, 491 1,395 92,666 4, 528 6,798 9,764 1,523 11, 569 r 12, 191 pll, 400 144.9 •• 147. 8 P142. 8 583 185 153 9.5 9.2 9.1 8.3 8. 3 8.5 ••9.0 8.2 8.2 *8.9 8.1 7.3 7.9 7.8 8.3 7.4 7.3 8.2 7.0 "8.0 .0839 .0839 .0839 .0837 . 0838 .0839 .0837 .0837 . 0839 .0843 .0842 net shipments of carbon steel and is the average price of all finished carbon steel products (except rails and wire products) weighted by tonnage. Prices used are base prices at Pittsburgh; the average includes an additional 25% for "extra" charges but does not include freight. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS July 1966 1964 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1965 Annual S-33 1966 1965 May June Aug. July Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May 423 339 3 222 456 345 3 273 538 440 3 347 504 407 3, 382 474 386 3,609 2 017 r 2 455 2 592 June METALS AND MANUFACTURES—Continued IRON AND STEEL— Continued Steel, Manufactured Products Fabricated structural steel: Orders, new (net) Shipments Backlog, end of period - --_. -thous. sh. tons__ do do__ _ 4,500 4,241 2,712 4, 868 4 321 3,151 570 318 3,279 458 363 3,245 337 329 3,268 341 413 3,176 438 383 3, 179 327 411 3 177 415 365 3,199 325 413 3 151 Barrels and drums, steel, heavy types (for sale) : Orders, unfilled, end of period— __- __ _ __thous__ Shipments do Cans (tinplate), shipments (metal consumed), total for sale and own use.. thous. sh. tons__ 1,154 24, 312 1, 226 24,132 1,280 2 057 1,251 2 171 1,264 2 001 1,300 2 126 1,323 2,045 1,273 1 975 1,298 1 920 1 226 1 994 1 930 4, 928 372 421 458 538 497 406 393 333 333 2, 754. 5 726.0 237. 0 63.0 227.6 66.0 235.1 57.0 234.9 62. 0 218.7 56.0 237.2 62.0 236.5 62.0 245. 0 62.0 527. 3 65.4 !203. 6 51.1 4.6 18.3 65.6 5.6 16. 7 51.4 5.1 19.0 45.6 6.8 15 7 39.6 4.9 17 6 42.8 6.9 13 2 41 6 70 14 5 63.4 . 2450 79.4 .2450 83.0 . 2450 81 1 .2450 71.0 .2450 76.8 .2450 75 0 ,2457 4, 737 4 r 340 427 422 247.3 59.0 223.5 58.0 249.0 72.0 204.7 55 3 94 18 1 25 2 73 19 0 51 9 83 12 8 57 7 12 1 17 4 54 5 99 10 7 52 5 10 7 13 0 64 8 .2450 78 3 .2450 71 8 .2450 64 8 .2450 60 3 .2450 .2450 683. 9 r 500 2 T 224 7 125 4 638.6 489 6 219 0 137 2 715.4 ' 802. 8 512 1 r 592 5 236 5 267 8 141 3 152 4 740.4 556 2 254 6 NONFERROUS METALS AND PRODUCTS Aluminum: Production, primary (dom. and foreign ores) thous. sh. tons 2, 552. 7 Recovery from scrap (aluminum content). _do 657.0 Imports (general): 392.4 Metal and alloys, crude.- _ __ _ _ _ _ - _ _ do_ . Plates, sheets, etc ____ __do_ _ 49.7 Exports, metal and alloys, crude _ do 208.6 Stocks, primary (at reduction plants), end of period thous. sh. tons Price, primary ingot, 99.5% min_. $ per lb__ Aluminum shipments: Ingot and mill products (net) Mill products, total __ Plate and sheet (excl. foil) _ _ _ Castings. _ . mil. lb_ do do _ _do_ _ 96.9 . 2372 '8, 025. 5 " 777. 7 ' 709. 6 ••596.3 •7,063.5 r 4 834.9 ••5, 688. 2 r 528. 5 '511 1 r431 4 ••2, 618. 6 ' 261. 6 r 238. 6 r 193. 4 2, 273. 9 2 1,253. 7 1,409.0 115.0 121. 7 96.6 Copper: Production: Mine, recoverable copper. . _._ . _thous. sh. tons. 1, . 246. 8 Refinery, primary do 1, 656. 4 From domestic ores _ _ do 1 259 9 From foreign ores . do 396 5 Secondary, recovere d as refined do. _ 332.4 Imports (general) : Refined, unrefined, scrap (copper cont.) ..do 584.8 Refined do 137 7 Exports: Refined and scrap _____ do 430.6 Refined do 316 2 Consumption, refined (by mills, etc.) do 1, 859. 2 Stocks, refined, end of period , Fabricators' Price, bars, electrolytic (N.Y.).. 64.8 . 2451 r r r r r 635. 2 650. 1 '643.7 664. 9 r 457 6 463 5 r 462 3 r 466 5 200 5 r 200 7 191 4 r 195 g 117. 2 103 1 117 5 124 2 r 1,354.7 1,711.8 1,335,7 376. 1 429.4 119.1 144.6 116 6 28.0 37.9 116.8 147. 8 110 2 37 5 35.3 105. 8 143.8 116 1 27.7 34.4 109.4 139 4 113 0 26 4 33 4 107. 9 133 1 101 1 32 0 36 6 115.1 143 5 107 4 36 1 40. 9 109.0 137 6 106 6 31 0 36 7 109.8 144 0 114 3 29 8 40 7 118.2 127 7 99 8 27 9 37 8 107.1 127 2 101 7 25 6 29 6 523.8 137.4 31.1 97 58.4 12 9 29.9 90 36.7 95 39.0 11 4 55.4 18 3 63.8 16 4 36.3 11 8 35.0 11 6 41.1 98 1 422. 1 i 325. 0 2, 042. 6 43.6 36.5 171. 1 29.3 18 9 187. 8 30.7 23 0 124. 5 33 3 26 0 178. 0 29 0 22 0 183. 2 32.2 26 3 178.2 32 5 25 5 165.8 30 5 22 1 176.7 25 7 20 4 189 6 27 4 18 4 197.4 31 5 35 3 45 7 27 5 30 9 38 0 219 5 i>202 7 p 188. 3 112.3 76.7 .3545 118. 7 79.2 .3560 162 3 118.5 .3560 148 1 111,2 .3560 132 8 93.3 .3560 130 8 90.6 .3568 128 6 84 9 .3641 161 3 112 9 .3586 5J78 3 114 5 . 3613 204 8 132 8 .3604 205 7 j>183 8 P 181 8 132 5 Pl24 3 P 124 5 .3603 .3612 .3615 123.7 '• 120. 7 137 9 148 6 111 8 120 4 26 1 28 2 43 5 42 3 126. 2 144 8 117 1 27 7 47 4 43.0 10 0 50.1 13 0 45.2 13 1 do _do .$ per lb__ 149 6 110.0 .3196 161. 3 112.9 .3502 Copper-base mill and foundry products* shipments (quarterly total) : Copper mill (brass mill) products ..mil. Ib _ Copper wire mill products (copper cont.)_-_do--_Brass and bronze foundry products _ _ do 2,787 1,992 1,063 2,974 2,177 1,075 LeadProduction: Mine, recoverable lead. thous. sh. tonsRecovered from scrap (lead cont.) _.do __ 286. 0 541. 6 293.0 554.0 22.0 46.7 22.4 48.1 22.6 40.5 25.5 42.4 25.7 48.0 25.5 48.4 24.7 45.8 24.6 46.3 24.9 46.8 23.6 44.7 '29.6 50.8 27.5 43.6 344.4 334.2 1, 202. 1 *1, 241.5 18.7 99.4 25.8 102.6 37.1 86.1 32.3 103 1 24.2 105 3 37.7 111 2 25.1 108 5 34.3 101 9 30.3 103 3 30.0 99 3 39.9 112.5 27.5 104 6 Imports (general), ore (lead cont.), metal.. .do Consumption, total. do _ 799 544 274 716 524 249 25.3 98.4 106.8 86.9 90.2 93.9 99.8 105.3 104.7 101. 6 106.8 107. 2 109.1 114.6 113.1 38.1 113.4 25. 9 103.2 27.2 107.1 29.3 110.8 31. 0 118.5 26.3 106.2 24.3 95.5 25.0 92.2 25.7 98 9 25.9 103 2 26.2 101 3 25. 8 99 3 23.2 105.9 21.2 98 8 71.5 .1360 48.1 .1600 63.4 .1600 62. 5 . 1600 63.1 .1600 59.4 .1600 53.8 .1600 52.2 .1600 51.1 .1600 48.1 .1600 49.0 .1600 52.3 .1600 47.1 .1600 48.1 .1600 . 1514 Tin: Imports (for consumption) : Ore (tin content) Jg. tons__ Bars, pigs, etc _ do Recovery from scrap, total (tin cont.) _ . _ _do_ _ As metal _ _ _ do Consumption, pig, total _do _ Primary _do_. (3) 31,584 23, 508 3, 334 82,890 58,586 4,326 40, 814 23, 580 3,155 84, Oil 58,550 492 3, 207 1,925 240 7,010 5,080 322 3,073 2,210 310 7,610 5,420 40 2 648 1,790 230 6,755 5,005 219 2 061 1,815 255 7,075 5,135 37 4 015 1,885 265 5,990 3,995 792 2,552 1,990 250 6,205 3,960 19 4 348 1,955 270 6 280 4,185 669 7 735 1,990 345 6,170 3,930 280 3 499 « 2, 050 300 6 495 4,435 317 4 070 <= 1,995 270 6 470 4,555 0 2,001 2, 335 300 7,775 5,480 29 4 363 1,224 4 016 4 13, 064 27, 656 1.7817 83 24, 215 1.9195 173 23,183 1. 8894 142 226 23,587 22, 985 1. 8412 1.8696 364 24,350 1.9190 149 25,315 1. 8532 131 26,385 1. 7676 148 27, 656 1. 7423 303 27, 180 1. 7875 290 116 27, 245 27,130 1. 7810 1.7398 782 26, 315 1. 7424 4, 041 24,343 1. 5772 Zinc:A Mine production, recoverable zinc thous. sh. tons.. 574. 9 52.1 610.1 49.0 48.3 Imports (general): Ores (zinc content) ___ __•' do 429. 4 357.1 32.9 32.3 38.9 Metal (slab, blocks) •___ _do_ . 118.3 9.4 153.0 3.7 21.1 Consumption (recoverable zinc content) : Ores..,. _. _ do «. 105. 9 113. 6 9.7 8.9 8.8 Scrap, alltypes.-.do 219.2 *222.5 18.9 19.1 18.6 r 2 Revised.. * Preliminary.. * See note "O" for p. S-21. Monthly data (1962-64), revised to the 1962 complete canvass of nonferrous producers, are available; estimates beginning 1965 reflect the revised benchmark. 3 Data for Sept. 1963- Apr. s1964 are in terms 4 of gross weight. Revised total; monthly revisions are not available. Beginning Jan. 1966, total includes copper (totaling 10,900 tons end of Jan. 1966) held by nonconsumers, etc., .3593 862 625 280 753 596 277 Stocks, end of period: Producers', ore, base bullion, -.and in process (lead content), ABMS -thous. sh. tonsRefiners' (primary), refined and antimonial (lead content) . _ .thous. sh. tonsConsumers' d* __ _ _ __ _ __do _ Scrap (lead-base, purchased), all smelters thous. sh. tons.. Price, common grade (N.Y.) $ perlb- Exports, incl. reexports (metal) _ - - - - - - - - do . Stocks, pig (industrial), end of period §_ do_--_ Price, pig, Straits (N.Y.), prompt. $ perlb__ .2450 .1500 7 245 5 170 50.7 51.5 51.3 49.9 49.2 48.6 48.7 53.8 51.1 36.1 10.7 36.2 2.7 34 8 20.7 42.2 14.0 42 1 17.8 35 0 22 0 32 9 18.9 39 5 21.6 35 3 14 0 408 1. 6928 1. 6077 32 8 26 3 8.6 10.3 10.4 10 4 10 4 96 8.6 10 4 10 5 18.4 18.5 18.6 19.2 18.9 19.1 18.6 19.0 18.7 not previously covered. « Corrected. d*Consumers' and secondary smelters' stocks of lead in refinery shapes and in copper-base scrap. § Stocks reflect surplus tin made available to industry by Q'SA. A Beginning Aug. 1964, data reflect sales to the industry of metal released from the Government stockpile. SURVEY OF CUREENT BUSINESS S-34 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 1965 Annual July 1966 1965 May June July Aug. 1966 Sept. Oct. Nov. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. 89.1 52 113.2 g 89 9 6 0 112 5 79.9 57 116. 1 1 85.4 62 127.0 1 87 0 57 119 1 1 (*) 28.8 .1450 Dec. May June METALS AND MANUFACTURES—Continued NONFERROUS METALS AND PROD.— Con. Zinc— Continued Slab zinc: A Production (primary smelter), from domestic 1 and foreign ores _ _ . thous. sh. tons. _ 954. 1 1,005.2 Secondary (redistilled) production _ _ do. 171.6 73.1 Consumption, fabricators' _ _ _ _ _ __do __ i 1, 207. 3 '11,354. 1 26.5 59 Exports do Stocks, end of period: 31.2 30.1 Producers' , at smelter (AZI) d* ., do 145.4 107.5 Consumers' do . 1450 Price, prime Western (East St. Louis) .$ per lb_. . 1357 87.5 60 117 8 2 84. 2 6.0 116.5 27.3 129 3 . 1450 30.3 130 8 .1450 27.2 124.5 . 1450 30.1 145 4 . 1450 32.2 158 1 .1450 29.7 156 0 .1450 r 166 7 .1450 33.2 158 3 .1450 10 11.6 10 13.1 9 12.4 .9 11.0 .7 9.0 8 8.7 .'7 7.1 6 7.7 .6 8.1 43.4 44.6 58.8 41.2 64.8 36.1 68 4 35.9 53.7 32.8 40.2 35. 7 45 1 35.4 42.1 36.7 '46 6 42.3 40.3 38.7 199.2 31.4 153.9 19.7 191.5 27.1 226.6 31.7 212.7 26.1 190.0 22.1 196.5 23.9 162. 5 18.2 180.7 19.6 227.2 23.6 187. 5 23.3 82.3 57.3 110. 3 77 5 158:8 106 4 186.5 120.3 227.6 141.8 259.0 185 5 144.1 105.6 82.9 57.3 61.1 44 6 82.6 47.8 '88.5 '51 9 87.2 57 9 97. 4 82.3 192.1 107.3 88 7 205.0 116.6 96 0 214.0 140.4 112.2 206.2 174.4 136.1 226.4 169.0 132.5 234.2 118.6 95 3 208.2 111.2 91.8 246.7 89.5 72 6 225.3 86.3 71.3 207.4 ' 88. 3 '73 8 236. 6 65.1 53 3 218.6 371. 8 267. 2 198.2 274. 0 244.6 227.6 14.2 2.6 7.9 16.3 1.6 10.7 13.7 1.8 6. 1 16 1 17 99 25 6 3.5 16 4 11 7 2.0 54 205.6 231.8 209.7 210 1 810 1,015 837 983 883 1,228 722 965 749 776 920 1 087 907 932 857 1,028 4 159 3 980 4,015 86.9 6.8 113.3 4 82.6 65 115.5 3 85.1 54 96.9 5 84.9 64 113.9 4 25.2 102.4 .1450 23.3 102 3 .1450 26.9 110 6 .1450 29.2 128 2 .1450 9.2 115. 3 .5 6.4 7 8.4 6 11.4 585. 5 35.7 42.1 48.6 46 3 47.9 2, 244. 5 304.8 170.0 25. 6 1, 810. 8 1,647.2 1 227. 2 1, 107. 9 1, 426. 0 1, 162. 1 2, 680. 1 1,389.4 1,127.5 2,616.4 182. 3 74.9 208 6 66.9 218.6 322.5 192.9 274.6 280.6 387.0 316.9 295.0 339.5 114. 9 13.7 57.5 152 8 21.6 75 2 11.3 1.1 5.3 9.7 1.4 5.1 18.3 1.0 6.7 10.5 1.0 6.0 12.6 2.0 7.2 11.4 1.3 6.8 13.8 2.0 7.7 152. 0 186 3 170.3 191. 2 171.4 192.6 183.0 211.0 557 820 765 848 742 842 558 695 745 899 84.0 53 117.0 2 (4) (4) 39.9 42.1 .1450 HEATING EQUIPMENT, EXC. ELECTRIC Radiators and con vectors, shipments: Cast-iron mil. sq. ft. radiation 10.5 113. 2 Nonferrous _ ^__do__ _ Oil burners: Shipments __ _ _ thous 568.0 42.6 Stocks, e n d o f period _ _ _ _ _ _ _ .do Ranges, gas, domestic cooking (incl. free-standing, set-in, high-oven ranges, and built-in oven broilers) -- - . . _ _ _ _ -thous - 2, 170. 6 Top burner sections (4-burner equiv) ship do 342. 6 Stoves, domestic heating, shipments, total _do_ _ Gas do Warm-air furnaces (forced-air and gravity air-flow), shipments, total _ _ _ • - _ _ _ _ __ thous -. Gas do Water heaters, gas, shipments _ __ do. . MACHINERY AND APPARATUS Fans, blowers, and unit heaters, qtrly.: Fans and blowers, new orders mil. $ Unit-heater group, new orders do - _ Foundry equipment (new), new orders, net -mo. avg. shipments 1957-59=100 _ Furnaces (industrial) and ovens, etc., new orders (domestic), net mil. $ _ Electric processing __ _ _ _ do __ Fuel-fired (exc for hot rolling steel) do 53.5 16.0 53 6 19.0 55.2 17.6 Material handling equipment (industrial) : Orders (new), index, seas, adj © 1957-59=100 Industrial trucks (electric), shipments: Hand (motorized) number Rider-type _ _ do. . Industrial trucks and tractors (internal combustion engines), shipments number 6,891 7,129 8,202 9,994 36 171 41,746 3,242 3,625 3,497 3,378 3,729 3,910 4,144 4,052 3,531 3 619 Machine tools: Metal cutting tools: Orders new (net) total mil. $ Domestic do Shipments, total _ do _ _ Domestic _ _ _ _ _ _ __do-_ _ Estimated backlog, end of period.. _. months __ 976.50 1,176 00 808. 90 1, 054. 40 958. 60 791. 80 830. 55 636. 75 7.6 6. 3 74 75 67.10 82.45 71. 75 6.4 93 65 87.10 83.75 71.15 6.5 95 60 84.75 69.45 60. 70 6.8 106 80 95. 40 57. 55 50.10 7.3 99 85 87.00 80.80 70.90 7.6 99 25 93.00 91.05 75.60 7.6 110 50 100.25 77.95 67.25 7.7 128. 50 126. 50 135 45 155 85 r 134 50 129 65 109.10 98.15 7.6 79. 30 70.20 8.2 83.00 73.55 8.7 105 05 '86 00 94 25 ••78 35 r 9. 5 '9.1 90 85 79 55 9.8 319 30 297. 75 287. 85 259. 80 9.9 24 05 22 55 27.90 24.80 9.0 40 85 39 70 26.00 23.55 9.4 26 70 26 05 20.20 17.75 9.4 24 55 22 95 20. 35 18.85 9.7 25 60 24 00 21. 20 18. 95 9.8 35.20 33.45 24.30 21.90 10.3 27 15 25 05 22.95 19. 55 10.4 27 60 23 95 30.30 27.55 9.9 29 75 26 10 23.35 22. 25 10.0 30 50 29 40 28 70 26.15 10.2 31 25 r 22 80 28 65 r 21 80 30 45 r 26 70 28 75 ' 25 30 '9.6 10.0 2 37 0 2 38 6 245 7 2 77 3 2 §3 8 2 107 9 Metal forming tools: Orders new (net) total mil. $ Domestic do Shipments, total do Domestic ___ _ __• do.... Estimated backlog, end of period---, .months.. 388 70 353 30 228.20 200. 85 10.9 Other machinery and equip., qtrly. shipments: Construction machinery (selected types), total 9 1 mil. $ _ 1,1 523. 7 Tractors, tracklaying, total _ do 392. 6 Tractors, wheel (con. off-highway) __ _ _ do. . 128. 7 Tractor shovel loaders (integral units only), 1 wheel and traeklaying types - _ _ . _ _ .-mil. $... 352. 9 Tractors, wheel (excl. garden and contractors' off-highway types) mil. $ i 679 2 Farm machines and equipment (selected types), excl. tractors... _. _ _. _ _ . mil. $ 954.0 ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT Batteries (auto, replacement), shipmentsj__thous . 30,627 Household electrical appliances: Ranges (incl. built-ins), sales, total-________do__-- 1,965.0 Refrigerators and home freezers, output 1957-59=100__ 140.8 Vacuum cleaners^ sales billed thous 4, 506. 7 Washers, sales (dom. and export) _ _ do 4, 189. 6 Driers (gas and electric), sales (domestic and 1 export) . _ . thous 1, 826. 4 Radio sets, production!-. . __. ___ _do_ __ Television sets (incl combination), prod.§. _.do Electron tubes and semiconductors (excl. receiving, power, and spec, purpose tubes), sales. ..mil. $._ Motors and generators: New orders, index, qtrly _ _ 1947-49=100 New orders (gross) : Polyphase induction motors, 1-200 hp mil. $ D.C. motors and generators. 1-200 hp do r 2 407.7 98.4 39.9 393.5 105.7 27.6 1, 739 8 439 7 151 3 521. 7 120.5 51.9 408.2 114.9 91.3 106.6 828 1 209.5 161.5 236.9 1, 057. 0 295.5 244.4 225.4 31 10 27 45 27 15 25 75 9.6 30,528 1, 735 2,015 2,145 2,531 3,512 3,686 3,387 3,085 2,654 2,918 2,042 '1,772 2,065.0 144.1 176. 3 148.5 163.4 186.0 174. 0 184.1 198.3 176. 8 182. 8 177.4 147.8 1 5 106 9 14 347 1 160. 5 329.6 315.0 159.8 367.9 388. 7 125. 1 329. 2 356.1 87.6 376. 6 398.6 145. 3 497.7 430.6 160.1 534.4 397.2 147.5 543. 5 370. 4 159. 7 431.4 357.1 170.3 434. 5 317.4 176.2 517 0 364.7 151.6 549 6 397 7 192.6 429 0 351.6 176.2 397 6 349 6 83.3 109.0 127. 7 213. 3 274. 2 279.1 234.3 238. 8 186 7 193 2 180 2 128.0 108 6 1,793 3 2, 171 3946 751 1,757 596 3 1,764 2, 214 819 3 1, 230 2,312 1,086 2,074 32,417 1,044 31,208 1, 874 915 1,862 924 32,260 31,239 71.3 68.9 81.1 1 2, 098. 4 19, 176 9,570 24,118 11,028 653. 0 757.0 178 215 183.2 36.3 210.1 44.6 57.5 63.3 52.3 63.4 17.6 3.7 19.4 3.8 72.4 70.0 68.9 212 228 16.2 4.4 Revised. » Preliminary. * Revised total; monthly revisions are not available. For month shown. 3 Data cover 5 weeks: other months, 4 weeks. 4 Less than 50 5 tons. Excludes new orders for motors 1-20 hp.; in May 1966, domestic sales of this class totaled $11,500,000. ASee similar note, p. S-33.* cfProducers' stocks elsewhere, end of June 1966,10,000 tons. © Revised back to 1963 to in- lie. so 115. 50 121 10 137 45 rl!8 40 119 30 15.5 3.6 19.2 3.2 73.8 217 15.9 4.2 18.1 3.1 18.7 4.7 1,973 '197.3 '165.8 159.3 1,824 ' 1, 801 3 2, 092 907 ' 874 3 1, 129 74.6 248 6 8.2 ' 6 10. 1 4.2 5.2 5 11. 2 5.5 59.1 4.8 59.8 3.6 corporate new seasonal factors. 9 Includes data not shown. $ Data reflect adjustment to the 1963 Census of Manufactures; revisions back to 1963 are available. § Radio production comprises table, portable battery, auto and clock models; television sets cover monochrome and color units. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS July 1966 1964 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1965 Annual S-35 1966 1965 May June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June PETROLEUM, COAL, AND PRODUCTS COAL Anthracite: Production _— thous. sh. tons— 17,184 1,575 Exports — do Price, wholesale, chestnut, f.o.b. car at mine $ per sh. ton__ 13. 895 Bituminous: Production tlious. sh. tons— 486, 998 12. 979 12. 005 12.005 12.495 12. 495 12.495 12.985 12.985 510, 000 41, 903 43, 068 34, 042 46, 228 43,344 46, 596 46, 356 Industrial consumption and retail deliveries, 431 116 total 9 thous. sh. tons Electric power utilities do— 223, 032 Mfg. ana mining industries, total do 187, 758 88,757 Coke plants (oven and beehive) do 458, 969 242, 729 196, 534 94, 620 35 417 18, 632 16, 174 8,430 35 584 19,292 15, 762 8, 119 36 135 20, 018 15, 481 8, 161 37 545 21, 051 15, 562 8,120 36, 198 19,936 14, 910 7,504 38 136 20, 066 16, 237 7,457 39 132 20, 552 16, 423 7,074 do__ _ _ 19,615 19,048 528 442 564 840 1,266 1,748 Stocks, industrial and retail dealers', end of period, total 9 _ — __ thous. sh. tons.. Electric power utilities _ do Mfg. and mining industries, total. do Oven-coke plants __ do 75,342 52, 661 22,305 10, 081 77,393 53, 437 23,603 10, 506 68, 692 47, 713 20,763 9,749 71, 418 49 857 21,311 9,970 66, 149 47 482 18, 407 7,744 69,308 49 244 19, 768 8,484 70,418 50, 411 19, 715 8,253 73,000 52 017 20, 691 9,107 376 353 216 250 260 296 292 292 365 353 277 228 191 203 47,969 i 50, 181 4,707 5 069 4 231 5 086 5 160 5 560 4 627 3 542 2 854 3 166 3 512 3 937 Retail deliveries to other consumers Retail dealers do Exports do Prices, wholesale: Screenings, indust. use, f.o.b. mine $ per sh. ton__ Domestic, large sizes, f.o.b. mine do 15,444 1851 1,313 73 1, 626 93 1, 256 82 1,292 88 1,364 129 1,269 108 895 56 999 84 12. 985 13. 580 13.580 13. 580 *12. 250 46, 585 42 090 40 200 48 200 '30 260 45 255 42 851 22, 646 17 556 7,397 45 157 24, 063 17 904 7,538 40 564 21 263 16 354 7,200 41 021 r 3g Q47 21 631 20 324 17 521 rr16 567 8,171 7, 627 37 357 19 972 16 598 8,210 2, 078 2,625 3,189 2,947 75,226 53 125 21, 736 9 743 77,393 53 437 23,603 10 506 71, 889 49 779 21, 833 10 137 69,055 47 197 21,630 9 870 1,255 69 1, 286 66 1 082 1 289 r 1 232 49 62 50 1, 865 1 102 46 130 706 73,526 ' 68, 121 69,769 48 973 46 919 48 605 24, 362 r 20' 993 21 164 11 318 r 8 640 8 493 4.798 6. 895 4. 794 6.926 4.806 6.551 4.799 6. 595 4. 799 6.645 4.786 6.833 4,790 7.017 4. 795 7.144 4.794 7.203 4. 794 7. 228 4.794 7 247 4.804 7 247 4. 798 v 4. 798 7.005 P 6 704 1,236 60,908 16, 865 1,542 64> 924 17,208 136 5,781 1,390 164 5 566 1,407 149 5 598 1,475 154 5 549 1,489 85 5,208 1, 443 72 5 158 1 358 64 4 929 1,412 75 5 102 1 553 94 5 184 1 558 94 4 895 1*352 108 '108 5 598 r g 401 1*478 1 381 1, 971 1,708 262 1,359 524 2,699 2,445 254 1,1 478 834 1, 136 993 143 1,564 60 1,118 982 136 1, 548 69 1,177 1, 017 160 1,511 63 1,271 1,085 181 1,460 99 1,484 1,278 206 1,418 73 1 918 1, 690 227 1 414 65 2 341 2,103 239 1 411 77 2 699 2,445 254 1 478 78 2 789 2 548 242 1 550 64 2 627 2 696 2 345 2 172 2*504 2 442 192 185 173 1 546 1 584 1 570 68 67 ' 118 .number. _ 20,620 2.92 $ per bbl— mil. bbl— 3, 223. 3 % of capacity-87 18, 761 2.92 3,300.8 87 1,354 2.92 272.9 85 1,583 2.92 273.1 87 1,521 2.92 288.7 89 1,784 2. 92 286.1 89 1,844 2.92 270.2 86 1,375 2.92 281.7 87 1,606 2.92 276.0 88 1, 685 2.92 287.2 89 1,050 2.92 290.6 90 1,394 2.92 261. 3 90 All oils, supply, demand, and stocks : J New supply, total— mil. bbl— 4,036.1 4,190.8 Production: Crude petroleum... do 2, 786. 8 2, 848. 5 422. 5 Natural-gas liquids, benzol, etc.. __do 441. 6 Imports: Crude petroleum .do 438.6 452.0 448.7 Refined products^. ~ ^.. do 388. 1 Change in stocks, all oils (decrease,—) do 3.7 -2.9 346.8 340.9 345.5 347.4 329.1 357.4 345.0 369.6 378.3 238.3 36.8 232.4 35.2 237.6 36.6 240. 2 36.5 222.5 35.0 244.1 37.9 239.6 38.0 253 6 39.2 250 5 38.9 39.0 32.9 23.9 39.9 33.3 13.3 40.7 30. 6 13.2 40.8 29.9 10.9 43.2 28.4 4.3 39.1 36 2 12.1 32.0 35.4 -7.6 27.9 49 o -36.6 42 0 46 9 -16.6 406 2 COKE Production: Beehive... _ . thous. sh. tons^_ Oven (byproduct) _ -do Petroleum coke§ _____ do Stocks, end of period: Oven-coke plants, total . do __ At furnace plants _do_ At merchant plants. _ __do Petroleum coke.. , , _ __ _•„__„_ -^do. „ Exports do 1 196 238 A 000 5 fi«JQ 106 2 167 2 009 158 1AR PETROLEUM AND PRODUCTS Crude petroleum: Oil wells completed.. Price at wells (Okla.-Kansas) Runs to stillsj Refinery operating ratio Demand, total Exports: Crude petroleum Refined products — Domestic demand, total 9 Gasoline.. Kerosene Distillate fuel oil Residual fuel oil Jet fuel.... Lubricants Asphalt Liquefied gases Stocks, end of period, total Crude petroleum. Natural-gas liquids .__ Refined products.... Refined petroleum products: J Gasoline (incl. aviation): Production — Exports. —_ Stocks, end of period..—-. do 1,274 »2.92 271.7 87 346.8 389.5 362.1 231 7 36.0 258 1 39.5 249 2 38 8 34 7 44 5 -23.1 38.8 53 1 9.4 36 5 37 6 11.1 394 9 370 0 380 1 351 1 0 56 364 4 126 0 12 1 .1 62 373 8 145 4 87 5 344 147 6 4, 032. 4 4, 193. 7 323.0 327.5 332.3 336.5 324.8 345 3 352.6 do__ -_ 1.4 do _ 72.5 3, 958. 5 .do do 1,685.5 _do 178.4 1.1 66.8 4,125.9 2 1, 720. 2 297.6 0 5.8 317.2 149.6 4.3 .1 6.2 321.2 155.2 4.5 .4 5.7 326. 2 156. 7 4.9 0 5.7 330.8 154.4 5.9 0 5.2 319.6 142.5 6.0 .2 51 340.0 147 0 7.7 .1 5.5 347.0 140.1 9.4 53 400.9 149 0 12 7 .1 51 389 7 132 6 14 1 (3) 3 8 9 3 1 do ___ do _ _ _ do _ 750.4 554.6 118. 6 776.0 586.4 2 220. 6 45. 8 39.6 19.7 41.8 38. 6 18.2 44.3 37.8 18.6 47.9 36.8 20.0 49.8 37.5 19.6 56.9 45.8 18 2 71.7 46.8 18.6 92 9 65 9 19 4 96 1 65 9 18 6 88 4 64 7 17 6 76 5 65 9 19 9 63 3 49 1 21 5 _do____ __do__— do 45.8 120.2 247.9 47.0 127.6 260.8 4.2 12.3 16.9 4.3 15.7 17.1 4.1 17.2 17.1 4.0 17.8 17.9 4.0 15.5 19.0 3.8 14.7 21.9 3.8 9.4 24.0 37 5.4 33. 1 41 3.7 34 8 36 3.5 30 5 46 61 27 2 44 81 24 0 _— ... __do__ — __._do __ — „ _do— __ _, _do 839.2 230. 1 35.7 573.5 836. 3 220.3 35.9 580. 2 826.7 255.1 35.0 536.7 840.1 253.6 38.7 547.8 853. 2 242.1 43.6 567. 6 864.1 236.4 46.7 581.0 868.4 231. 1 46.9 590.4 880. 5 231.8 45.9 602.8 873.0 226.7 42. 5 603.7 836,3 220 3 35 9 580. 2 819. 8 221 4 28.9 569. 5 796.6 225 4 24.7 546.4 806.0 236 3 26 4 543.4 817 0 249 3 30 6 537.1 1,704.4 2 4.9 2183.1 137.9 .5 205.6 141. 6 .7 192.6 148. 5 .3 185.1 150. 4 .4 181.8 140.5 .3 180.3 142.4 .3 176.6 142.5 4 179.2 151 4 1 183.1 152. 5 2 203. 5 133.8 2 212.2 146 3 2 214.2 140 1 2 207 9 .113 .113 .113 .113 .113 .113 .113 .105 P . 113 .211 .210 .209 .213 .210 .213 .210 .211 .212 ' __do _ _ _ do .___ do 1, 687. 4 8. 0 199. 5 2 Prices (excl. aviation) : Wholesale, ref. (Okla., group 3)___.$ per gal.102 .113 .113 .113 .113 Retail (regular grade, excl. taxes), 55 cities (1st of following mo.)_._ $ per gal_ .200 .208 .208 .213 .209 • Revised. * Pretiminary. * See note "Q" for p. 8-21. 2 Beginning Jan. 1965, gasoline excludes special naphthas; aviation gasoline represents finished grades only (alkylate excluded); commercial jet fuel (formerly included with kerosene) is included with jet fuel. 1,517 2.92 285.3 88 3 Less than 50,000 bbls. 9 Includes data not shown separately. § Includes nonrnarketable catalyst coke. I Revisions for Jan.-Oct. 1964 will be shown later. .218 .218 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS S-36 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 1965 Annual July 1966 1965 May June July Aug. 1966 Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May PETROLEUM, COAL, AND PRODUCTS—Continued PETROLEUM AND PRODUCTS— Continued Refined petroleum products:}:—-Continued Aviation gasoline: Production. __ _ mil. bbl_. Exports do Stocks, end of period. _ do _ Kerosene: Production do Stocks end of period do Price, wholesale, bulk lots (N.Y. Harbor) $ per gal. .' Distillate fuel oil: Production __ mil. bbl._ Imports '_-- --- -- - do__ _ Exports do Stocks end of period do Price, wholesale (N.Y. Harbor, No. 2 fuel) $ per galResidual fuel oil: Production _ mil. bbl Imports do Exports do _ Stocks, end of period _ do Price wholesale (Okla., No. 6) $ per bbl Jet fuel (military grade only): Production mil. bbl Stocks, end of period do _ Lubricants: Production do Exports do _ Stocks end of period do Price, 'wholesale, bright stock (midcontinent, f o b . Tulsa) $ per gal Asphalt: Production mil. bbl Stocks end of period do Liquefied petroleum gases: Transfer from gasoline plants do Stocks (at plants, terminals, underground, and at refineries) end of period mil. bbl Asphalt and tar products, shipments: Asphalt roofing total thous. squares Roll roofing and cap sheet do Shingles all types do Asphalt siding Insulated siding Saturated felts do do thous. sh. tons 127.8 5.4 9.1 i 148. 6 4.2 i 8. 3 169.5 36 2 1 4.3 4 8.5 4.0 .7 8.2 4.2 .3 8.2 4.1 .3 8.5 4.1 3 8.7 3. 8 2 84 3.9 4 8.0 39 1 83 37 1 85 94. 5 i 24 1 66 21 0 7.0 23 4 6.7 25 3 66 26 0 69 26 9 81 27 3 83 26 3 10 4 24 1 10 3 20 2 .096 .098 .095 .095 .095 .095 .098 .100 .100 .103 742.4 11.8 5.4 155.8 765. 4 13.0 3.7 155. 4 61.5 1.2 3 99 4 58.7 .5 .2 116.6 65.5 .9 .3 138.5 66.4 1.6 3 158.4 62.8 1.1 .5 172.0 65.7 1.3 1 182.0 66.1 1.1 .3 177.3 70.1 1.1 3 155. 4 o n 9.1 3.3 2 92 3.0 2 90 98 17 9 95 18 7 70 19 6 .103 .103 .103 v . 102 70.1 1.1 .4 130. 0 62.8 .6 1.0 104.0 64.7 .8 .3 92.8 60.4 1.4 .3 91.0 I .086 .090 .087 .087 .087 .087 .090 .092 . 092 .095 .095 .095 .095 p. 092 266.8 295 8 18.9 40.4 1 50 268.6 344. 6 14.9 56.2 1.83 21.3 24 6 .9 40.1 1 75 20.9 23 6 1.0 45.2 1 75 21.6 22.1 1.3 50.2 1.80 21.1 20 4 1.3 53.8 1 85 19.5 20.0 1.0 55.1 1.90 22.4 27. 5 1.1 58.4 1.95 22.8 26.1 1.0 59.7 1.95 24.6 38.5 1.0 56.2 1.95 26.3 37.8 1.1 53.6 1.90 22.2 37.3 1.1 47.6 1.80 23.8 42.8 1.9 46.8 1.60 20.5 28.6 .8 46.2 pl.55 108.0 9.9 i 191. 2 i 18. 7 16 9 20.0 15 7 20.5 16.8 21.0 16 0 19. 8 16 0 17.9 16.5 18.2 16.2 18.6 16.6 18.7 16.8 18.9 15.7 19.2 '17. 9 20.1 17.6 18.7 63.7 18. 2 14 1 62.9 16.7 13.3 56 1.7 13 4 5.1 1.3 12 9 5.4 1.4 12 8 5.4 .9 13 3 51 1.4 13 0 5.1 1.6 12.8 5.1 1.2 12.9 5.5 1.4 13.3 5.6 1.1 13.8 5.1 1.2 14. 1 5.4 1.3 13.6 5.3 1.4 13.1 .270 .270 .270 .270 .270 .270 .270 .270 .270 .270 .270 .270 .270 P. 270 114 9 14.2 123.6 16.2 12 2 23.5 12 1 20.7 14.4 18.5 14.6 16. 2 13.5 14.8 12.6 13.2 9.8 13.9 7.3 16.2 6.6 19.5 6.0 22.4 8.0 24.5 10.3 26.8 59 2 189 6 56 1 200.2 49 13 0 48 12.8 49 12.3 48 13.1 4 3 14.6 43 17.5 4.2 19.6 5.1 22.9 5.4 24.0 4.9 21.1 5.3 17.9 4.9 14.9 31 8 32.0 31 1 35.3 40.1 43.5 43.8 42.8 39. 4 32.0 24.3 20.1 21.1 25.4 71, 075 26 218 44 857 72, 696 28 584 44, 112 6 070 2 197 3 874 7,215 2 591 4 625 7,634 2 856 4 778 8,546 3 322 5 224 7,766 3,130 4,636 7.279 2,987 4,292 5, 599 2,294 3,305 4,580 1,982 2,598 3,601 1,490 2,111 ••4,724 f 1, 996 ' 2, 728 5,486 2, 031 3,456 720 680 995 645 603 973 40 61 75 50 70 89 52 66 95 70 65 109 72 69 93 75 63 82 62 45 73 47 31 66 4, 987 2, 056 2,932 44 21 80 30 17 56 '35 36 68 38 44 74 PULP, PAPER, AND PAPER PRODUCTS PULPWOOD AND WASTE PAPER Pulpwood: Receipts Consumption Stocks end of period Waste paper: Consumption Stocks end of period Production: Total all grades thous. cords (128 cu. ft ) do do 49, 872 49, 711 4,843 50,452 50, 740 5,770 4,190 4,365 4,429 3, 935 3, 989 4,613 4,234 4, 110 4,856 4,379 4,351 4,985 4,270 4,085 5,268 4,611 4, 664 5,328 4,228 4,383 5, 317 4,441 4,072 5, 770 4,247 4,574 5,412 4, 192 4,293 5,320 4,843 4, 651 5,428 4,512 4, 642 5,260 thous sh tons do 9,493 596 9,914 573 836 515 854 518 720 555 833 532 840 520 899 511 842 512 804 573 848 486 808 464 '920 '466 867 488 thous sh tons 32, 429 1, 457 20, 006 2,685 33,296 1,486 20, 514 2,789 2,900 132 1,787 242 2,646 110 1,605 242 2,680 113 1, 657 218 2,917 134 1, 822 238 2,700 120 1,678 220 2,949 130 1,817 258 2,894 119 1,811 232 2, 626 124 1,606 217, 2,918 141 1,808 230 2, 750 124 1,715 213 3,052 140 1,908 242 2,964 132 1,854 239 WOODPULP Sulfate Sulfite do do Groundwood Defibrated or exploded do do 3,596 1,621 3, 063 3,920 1,473 3,113 342 125 «271 324 125 239 337 122 263 305 121 256 334 126 284 339 119 275 320 113 247 337 121 281 315 118 265 342 131 289 331 133 275 Stocks, end of period: Total all mills Pulp mills Paper and board mills Nonpaper mills 319 125 247 do do do do 781 228 462 92 730 253 395 82 735 278 374 83 748 284 381 84 763 281 400 82 766 302 383 81 743 290 375 78 750 311 369 70 739 300 366 73 730 253 395 82 698 265 359 75 682 : 252 351 79 '680 242 '355 '82 685 243 361 81 Exports all grades total Dissolving and special alpha All other do do do 1,602 581 1,021 H,402 2535 897 132 48 85 107 43 64 119 52 67 109 42 67 110 41 69 123 49 74 101 33 68 129 56 73 128 58 71 126 56 70 125 56 70 153 46 108 140 47 93 Imports all grades total Dissolving and special alpha All other do do do 2,922 272 2,650 3,127 280 2,847 244 23 221 288 26 263 245 23 222 265 23 242 253 25 228 261 23 237 306 24 282 270 23 247 242 22 220 249 23 226 303 27 276 254 20 234 287 24 263 3, 847 3,651 3, 911 3, 751 3,624 3, 626 3, 746 1, 587 1, 677 1,627 1,573 1, 700 1,544 1,608 1, 759 1,845 1,858 1,789 1,754 1,730 1, 788 11 11 12 11 11 11 11 291 324 286 295 365 342 340 {Revisions for Jan.-Oct. 1964 will be shown later. '4,045 '1,756 '1,935 12 '341 3,942 1,699 1,882 12 349 PAPER AND PAPER PRODUCTS Paper and board: Production (Bu. of the Census): 43,747 3,.720 3, 575 All grades, total, unadjusted ___thous. sh. tons__ 41, 748 19,020 1,532 1,609 Pap6r do 18, 180 20, 760 1,776 19, 663 1, 688 Paperboard do 135 12 13 148 ^Vet-machine board do 324 341 3,833 3,797 Construction paper and board. _ do_ 'Revised. * Preliminary. 1 See note 2 for p. S-35. 2 See note "O" for p. S-21. 3, 419 1,488 1, 599 8 324 June SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS July 1966 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 1965 1966 1965 May Annual S-37 June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May June PULP, PAPER, AND PAPER PRODUCTS—Continued PAPER AND PAPER PRODUCTS— Con. Paper and board— Continued New orders (American Paper and Pulp Assoc.) : All grades paper and board thous sh tons "Wholesale price indexes: Printing paper 1957-59 — 100 Book paper, A grade do Paperboard - - do Building paper and board do Selected types of paper (APPA) : Fine paper: Orders new thous. sh tons Orders, unfilled, end of period do 41, 646 44, 296 3 800 3,631 3, 632 3,747 3,664 3,934 3,708 3,556 3,970 3,694 4 190 p 4, 017 p 4, 103 101 4 109.4 96.5 94.2 101 4 110.6 96.4 93 0 101.4 110.7 96.3 92.7 101.4 110.7 96.3 92.7 101.4 110.7 96.3 93.5 101. 4 110.7 96.3 93.3 101.4 110.7 96.4 93.4 101. 4 110. 7 96.5 93.8 101. 4 111. 5 96.5 93.3 101.4 111.5 96.5 92.7 101. 4 112. 7 96.7 92.7 101.4 113.5 96.7 92.7 101.4 113.5 97. 0 92 7 101. 4 113. 5 97.0 92.6 2, 234 98 2,460 154 208 135 209 145 200 161 202. 157 197 153 209 156 220 163 207 154 '228 ••156 »•r 226 !68 241 167 *>234 *> 173 *243 P 187 do do 2,244 2,237 2,410 2, 446 201 207 200 206 186 196 204 208 197 198 211 208 206 220 208 214 ' 217 '228 ••204 '219 203 230 *207 P220 *231 *234 do __do _ 5,800 437 6, 198 510 512 508 519 522 530 558 510 518 517 543 550 554 476 500 502 510 553 522 '531 553 606 604 *>564 p-611 P 586 P 622 Production do Shipments.. _ ___-_ __ __do._Coarse paper: Orders, new . . _ do Orders, unfilled, end of period do. _ 5 623 5,623 5 993 5,993 504 504 503 503 471 471 493 493 507 507 534 534 503 503 505 505 527 526 r 503 r 503 547 547 P 542 *>542 P 564 p 564 4,392 190 4,590 210 384 226 367 232 357 226 392 235 357 219 396 227 379 199 379 210 '394 ••211 ••381 »-225 437 245 423 260 p394 *250 do _ do 4, 352 4,331 4,591 4,564 392 380 359 361 357 358 390 382 371 374 395 391 392 393 376 379 r 399 r r 376 r 376 419 411 400 404 p 412 p 405 do do do 7,301 7,310 178 7,720 7,747 150 648 691 268 634 697 205 651 642 209 663 646 225 637 637 225 686 694 217 693 717 193 648 691 150 675 610 215 654 617 253 738 688 302 702 732 272 735 777 £30 do do do 2,261 2, 273 22 2,180 2,183 19 198 196 21 169 171 19 168 167 20 196 189 27 160 167 20 182 178 23 193 192 24 181 186 19 197 191 25 185 184 27 203 210 20 192 191 20 205 207 17 Consumption by publishersd" do Stocks at and in transit to publishers, end of period thous sh tons 6, 031 6, 387 570 527 477 517 509 591 589 576 526 498 586 576 628 585 573 526 560 619 634 626 580 570 573 586 619 624 641 668 Imports _ _ _ _ _ _ do Price, rolls, contract, f.o.b. mill, freight allowed or delivered $ per sh. ton 5, 954 6,323 515 581 518 525 574 539 538 627 551 509 633 570 607 134. 23 132. 40 132. 40 132. 40 132. 40 132. 40 132. 40 132. 40 132. 40 132. 40 132. 40 132 40 386 563 384 88 i 417 1796 410 90 441 742 423 92 412 760 405 89 384 818 359 78 412 818 416 90 413 848 415 90 444 844 441 94 437 847 443 94 386 793 414 89 438 855 421 93 453 902 446 95 471 944 450 95 453 973 450 94 469 1, 025 466 97 137, 261 148 312 11,871 12, 403 11, 747 12, 523 13, 167 13, 633 13 375 12 812 12 044 11 848 14 043 13 068 13 477 121.7 133. 7 120.8 131.1 137.2 137.5 128 4 136 2 122 9 115 9 140 2 129 5 44 34 93 73 44.94 .258 Production Shipments __ _ Printing paper: Ordersvnew _ _ Orders, unfilled, end of period Production. __ Shipments Newsprint: Canada: Production Shipments from mills Stocks at mills, end of period United States: Production. _ Shipments from mills Stocks at mills, end of period Paperboard (National Paperboard Assoc.) : Orders, new (weekly avg.) thous. sh. tons__ Orders, unfilled, end of period do__ Production, total (weekly avg.) __do Percent of activity (based on 6.5-day week)— _ _ Paper products: Shipping containers, corrugated and solid fiber, shipments^ mil sq ft surf area Folding paper boxes, shipments, index of physical volume _ _ _ _ _ 194.7-49=100 125.7 128. 2 390 r r 132 40 ^134 40 452 999 457 94 r !33 5 p 143 2 RUBBER AND RUBBER PRODUCTS RUBBER Natural rubber: Consumption •___ thous. Ig. tons Stocks, end of period do Imports , incl. latex and guayule do_ _ _ Price, wholesale, smoked sheets (N.Y.)__$ per lb__ Synthetic rubber: Production___ Consumption _ Stocks, end of period. __ Exports _ _ _ _ _ _ thous. Ig. tons do _ _ _ do do Reclaimed rubber: Production Consumption Stocks, end of period do do do 481. 50 86.85 514. 71 100. 01 445. 32 .257 41.01 93 87 31. 72 .283 42.16 95 68 42.22 .268 36.55 97 04 30. 66 .258 40. 57 96 20 28.42 .248 43.98 96 96 39.90 .243 46.14 96 44 41.91 .241 45.41 98 36 43.91 .241 44 26 100 01 44.57 .243 46 94 98 70 28.31 .245 1,764.94 1,813.99 1, 451. 51 1,540 87 297. 13 311. 95 321. 26 2 281 78 155. 61 122. 20 317. 81 29.27 144. 86 126. 30 315. 37 23.87 141.35 108. 25 325. 26 24. 32 148. 59 119. 51 323.56 24.87 137. 70 131. 44 311. 08 21 70 156. 52 140 48 304. 81 25 17 157. 87 133 44 302. 99 23 79 166. 12 135 82 311. 95 23 32 168. 88 137 78 320. 46 23 31 441. 19 . 252 153 131 317. 29 r r 45 93 90 26 44 33 .244 46 38 91 72 38.45 .241 07 r 169 52 r 165 59 54 !50 23 411 02 01 t-309 77 315 58 91 30 00 26 11 165 55 137 64 321. 76 24 07 50 90 r 90 56 40 27 .258 276. 26 263. 19 30.08 280 29 269. 54 30 16 22 19 21.27 30 22 23 12 22. 78. 29 60 21.08 20.03 29 96 22 60 20.80 30 88 22 38 22 20 30 39 23 43 24 03 29 06 22 83 21 45 28 84 24 66 22 75 30 16 23 32 23 06 28 93 thous__ 158,113 167,854 13,228 13, 460 12, 174 12,822 13, 921 15, 331 14, 194 14, 839 15, 308 14, 605 169, 060 58,280 107, 905 2,875 14 688 5,049 9,439 200 15, 605 5,336 10, 033 236 14, 227 4,222 9,689 316 12 145 2 215 9,682 248 14 863 4 178 10,441 244 16 073 5 557 10, 206 310 13 709 5 511 8,017 181 13 062 5 386 7,472 205 13 912 4,987 8,729 195 12 222 4 844 7 181 196 37. 059 2 381 41 441 211 22 84 27 19 21 88 r24 56 28 72 >30 07 23 18 r 22 06 29 97 24 02 21 66 30 87 16, 275 15, 317 14, 885 15 855 5 527 10 079 249 16 224 5 253 10 734 237 14 690 4 903 9 587 200 40 775 175 41 214 220 .236 TIRES AND TUBES Pneumatic casings: Production. Shipments, total Original equipment __ Replacement equipment Export.- __ Stocks , end of period . ___.-_ Exports (Bu. of Census) Inner tubes: Production. _ Shipments Stocks, end of period Exports (Bu. of Census) _ do do _ _._do do 150, 488 48,045 100, 369 2,075 do do 37, 553 1,589 2 39, 515 208 37, 207 199 35, 036 250 36, 095 173 35,110 191 34, 442 259 35, 083 183 37, 059 156 38 366 140 40 833 180 42, 437 41, 890 11, 454 896 41 342 3 079 41, 936 ' 3, 079 11, 334 11, 839 2 1, 189 100 3 290 3, 438 11, 266 82 3 207 3,297 11, 196 128 3 251 3 521 11, 015 77 3 455 3 413 11, 145 123 3 513 3,589 11, 045 174 3 243 3 058 11, 336 99 3 483 3 021 11, 839 108 3 507 4 351 11 216 71 3 558 3 983 3 742 4 480 11 179 r!0 630 87 64 do do _ _ _ _do __do r Revised. p Preliminary. 1 Beginning Jan. 1965, monthly data are 4-week averages for period ending Saturday nearest the end of the month. Annual data for new orders are 52-week averages: those for unfilled orders aie as of Dec. 31. 2 gee note "O" for p. S-21. 3 591 3 533 3 724 10 699 11 039 126 125 cf As reported by publishers accounting for about 75 percent of total newsprint consumption. t Revisions for Jan. 1964-Feb. 1965 will be shown later. SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS S-38 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1965 1964 1965 May Annual July 1966 June July Aug. 1966 Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May 28, 779 30,883 35 330 June STONE, CLAY, AND GLASS PRODUCTS PORTLAND CEMENT Shipments,finishedcement thous. bbl_. 1366,304 1373,563 34, 416 . 39, 192 39, 439 41, 242 37, 531 39, 418 31,446 25, 117 17,327 16, 982 CLAY CONSTRUCTION PRODUCTS Shipments: Brick, unglazed (common and face) mil. standard brick.. 7, 743. 8 311.4 Structural tile, except facing thous. sh. tons__ 1, 837. 2 Sewer pipe and fittings, vitrified do Facing tile (hollow) , glazed and unglazed mil. brick equivalent __ 353.4 Floor and wall tile and accessories, glazed and un286. 0 glazed mil. sq. ft__ Price index, brick (common), f.o.b. plant or 107.1 N Y. dock ___-1957-59=100-_ r 8,089.2 313.3 1, 732. 2 758.3 29.6 165. 9 787.8 26.5 185.4 761.3 26.2 171.0 768. 2 28.9 175.5 743.7 27.5 166. 3 749.5 29.2 155. 6 714. 0 26.1 138.8 645.6 23.7 118.8 464.3 20.4 94.5 421.0 16.7 82.9 747. 7 '23.4 ' 151. 3 748.1 22.8 146.4 326.9 26.8 29.7 31.1 30.6 30.3 28.5 28.3 28.1 23.1 '21.8 '26.3 28.2 282.7 23.6 26.4 24.0 24.8 24.7 23.4 22.1 21.6 22.5 21.5 '25.9 24.7 108.4 107.8 107.8 107.8 108.8 109.2 109.2 109.4 109.8 109.9 110.4 110.7 110.7 GLASS AND GLASS PRODUCTS Flat glass mfrs ' shipments _ Glass containers: Production.. 354, 308 86, 153 89, 869 96, 489 144 753 180, 202 140 559 213, 749 32, 643 53,510 38, 848 51, 021 39, 769 56,720 thous. $_ 324, 955 Sheet (window) glass, shipments Plate and other flat glass, shipments do do thous. gross__ 189, 414 201, 327 17, 672 18, 600 18,460 19,333 16,733 18, 227 16,206 15,219 16,745 16,352 18,658 '17, 567 18, 421 184,773 Shipments , domestic , total. __-_ do General-use food: 20,829 Narrow-neck food -- --do Wide-mouth food (incl. packers' tumblers, jelly glasses, and fruit jars) .thous. gross. _ 50, 721 195,380 15, 732 17, 948 16,894 18,361 17,393 16,638 15, 870 15, 715 14,715 14,298 •17, 785 '16,578 17, 687 21,548 1,398 1,664 2,080 2,830 2,886 1,932 1,489 1,403 1,431 1, 537 2,035 ' 1, 717 1,659 53,582 3,931 4, 636 4,431 4,976 4, 929 5,030 4,707 4, 193 4, 369 3,964 4,356 ' 3, 851 4, 201 17, 664 33, 252 16, 756 20 283 36, 135 17, 273 2,277 3, 355 1,221 2,465 3,915 1,352 2,089 3,852 1,155 1,764 3,357 1, 382 1,371 2,838 1,488 1,379 2,332 1,759 1, 427 2,530 1,723 2, 131 2, 694 ll447 •1, 146 2, 414 1,248 1,413 2,216 1,366 2,034 ' 2, 266 3,302 ' 3, 304 1,571 ' 1, 469 2, 649 3,680 1,541 36, 764 do do. __ 7,366 1,421 do 38, 381 6,913 1 265 2,947 524 79 3,275 552 89 2,692 509 86 3,371 3,193 3,548 552 106 3,367 514 113 3,200 520 127 3, 501 560 128 512 94 3,247 460 95 3,864 531 92 3,366 502 103 3,359 517 81 25,375 26, 802 25,733 26, 112 26, 812 27,314 26, 401 27,537 27,518 26,802 28,466 30,370 30, 801 31, 977 32, 814 °1 072 2 257 1,630 ' 2, 502 —_ Beverage Beer bottles Liquor and wine do _ do _ do _ _ _ _ Medicinal and toilet Chemical, household and industrial . Dairy products Stocks, end of period .- - do 564 117 GYPSUM AND PRODUCTS (QTRLY) Crude gypsum, total: Imports Production thous sh tons do Calcined production total Gypsum products sold or used, total: Uncalcined uses Industrial uses Building uses: Plasters: Base-coat AH other (incl Keene's cement) Lath Wallboard All other 6 246 10, 684 T 5 911 10 035 or ar do 9,440 '9 320 do do 4,562 292 '4 580 « 'a 841 ' 1. 334 do do 972 993 mil sq ft do do 1 495 7,542 253 r 2,365 2 131 1,734 2, 708 1, 475 ' 2, 568 1,033 2,245 r 2, 510 2, 313 2,074 r r 1, 283 ' 1, 122 319 76 87 77 79 786 81 828 976 « '208 237 ••264 210 266 '235 173 168 202 311 2,073 67 1,623 ar212 ' 1 368 «'307 '8 083 0 1,729a 51 r 271 r 378 r 2, 148 79 371 2, 133 ' 74 * 264 54 TEXTILE PRODUCTS WOVEN FABRICS Woven fabrics (gray goods), weaving mills f Cloth woven total 9 mil linear yd Cotton. do ]V£anmade fiber do 12 672 9 136 3 289 13 037 9, 262 3,517 1,050 2 1, 258 2893 2337 823 581 223 1,036 730 285 2 1, 258 2883 2351 1,034 1 038 1 027 1 108 1,100 1,097 1, 139 621 394 615 390 «1 094 4 409 3,121 1, 168 4 241 3,025 1,110 4 216 3,019 1,088 4, 145 2,949 1,092 4,139 3,020 1,018 4 180 3,046 1,016 4 140 3,023 180 922 3,663 8,920 733 2886 742 751 276 Stocks total end of period 9 d71 Cotton A£anmade fiber do do do 1 068 1 139 676 442 979 588 367 Orders unfilled total end of period 0 IT Cotton. M! anmade fiber do do do 3 757 2 500 1,161 4 140 3,023 4 432 3,153 1,159 15 14P 14, 916 15 182 8,940 14 956 9,296 21 929 21 817 1 655 18,706 1 456 23 757 23 652 2 505 19 619 1 528 661 386 999 636 «437 649 440 733 282 655 427 1,027 729 282 654 423 21, 171 2827 2321 676 442 999 280 293 2373 430 422 409 1,008 1,078 1,084 COTTON Cotton (exclusive of linters) : Production: (T-inningsA thous running bales Crop estimate, equivalent 500-lb. bales thous bales Consumption do Stocks in the United States, total, end of period thous bales Domestic cotton total do Public storage and compresses TTnrpicm nnt.trm- tntal do rtr» 112 105 742 2897 595 16 443 16363 15 156 15082 14, 290 14, 223 14, 099 13, 056 1 753 1 599 12, 521 1 472 511 427 80 74 230 ' Revised. l Beginning Jan. 1965, excludes finished cement used in the manufacture of prepared masonry cement (2,734 thous. bbls. in 1964); annual totals include revisions not distributed to the months. 2 Data cover 5 weeks; other months, 4 weeks. 3 Ginnings to Dec. 13. 4 Ginnings to Jan. 15. 5 See note "<?." fBeginning 1964, data are not strictly comparable with figures for earlier periods because of revised fabric classifications and the inclusion of manmade fiber drapery fabrics. 9 Includes data not shown separately. 67 11,718 3 12,691 414,481 14, 916 753 753 2947 758 769 28, 401 27, 366 26, 301 25, 056 23,757 22, 617 28, 306 27, 265 26, 202 24, 956 23, 652 22, 516 4 915 7 544 1,130 14 620 12, 157 2,505 12, 512 14,037 17, 457 18,632 19,619 19, 741 1,645 1 174 1 071 1 201 1 409 1 528 21, 692 21, 596 20,413 20, 323 131 18,381 1,811 90 19,542 19,460 354 17, 360 1,746 82 18, 629 18, 553 751 2831 698 19, 188 1,710 377 16, 524 1,652 100 95 101 99 105 101 96 76 cf Stocks (owned by weaving mills and billed and held for others) exclude bedsheeting, toweling, and blanketing, and billed and held stocks of denims. Effective Aug. 1965, stocks cover additional manmade fiber fabrics not previously included. 1fUnfilled orders cover wool apparel (including polyester-wool) finished fabrics; production and stocks exclude figures for such finished fabrics. Orders also exclude bedsheeting, toweling, and blanketing. ATotal ginnings to end of month indicated, except as noted. « Data for 1st qtr. 1965. SURVEY OF CUEKENT BUSINESS July 1966 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1964 | 1965 Annual S-39 1966 1965 May June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May 177 6 28.5 29.5 214 1 28.5 29.6 123 113 848 120 88 803 19.3 14.7 10.7 .536 8.2 June TEXTILE PRODUCTS—Continued COTTON—Continued Cotton (exclusive of linters)—Continued Exports. _ __ thous. Imports . do Prices (farm), American upland cents per lb— Prices, middling I'7, avg. 15 markets do Cotton linters: Consumption ._thous. Production^ _ _ _ _ do Stocks, end of period „ _do_— COTTON MANUFACTURES Spindle activity (cotton system spindles): Active spindles, last working day, total mil.. Consuming 100 percent cotton do Spindle hours operated, all fibers, total bil_. Average per working day _do Consuming 100 percent cotton do Cotton yarn, natural stock, on cones or tubes: Prices, f.o.b. mill: 20/2, carded, weaving _$ per lb_. 36/2, combed, knitting§ _do___. Cotton cloth: Cotton broadwoven goods over 12"' in width: Production (qtrly.) mil. lin. yd-. Orders, unfilled, end of period, as compared with avg. weekly production No. weeks' prqd_. Inventories, end of period, as compared with avg. weekly production.-No. weeks' prodRatio of stocks to unfilled orders (at cotton mills) end of period, seasonally adjusted—v_. Mill margins cents per lb— Prices, wholesale: Denim, mill finished cents per yd_. Print cloth, 39 inch, 68 x 72__ ___do-_. Sheeting, class B, 40-inch, 48 x 44-48.. .do—. MANMADE FIBERS AND MANUFACTURES Fiber production, qtrly. total.. mil. lb_. Filament yarn (rayon and acetate) ___do__— Staple, incl. tow (rayon) do Noncellulosic, except textile glass: Yarn and monofilaments* ____do Staple, incl. tow*__ ____do Textile glass fiber _ —do Exports: Yarns and monofilaments _._thous. lb— « Staple, tow, and tops. __do Imports: Yarns and monofilaments do Staple, tow, and tops ___do— Stocks, producers', end of period: Filament yarn (rayon and acetate)..—mil. lb— Staple, incl. tow (rayon) _do Noncellulosic fiber, except textile glass: Yarn and monofilaments* do Staple, incl. tow*._ ^ do..— Textile glass fiber. ___, _do__— Prices, manmade fibers, f.o.b. producing plant: Staple: Rayon (viscose), 1.5 denier $ perlb— Polyester, 1.5 denier* do.— Yarn: Rayon (viscose), 150 denier. __ do— Manmade fiber and silk broadwoven fabrics: Production (qtrly.), total 9 . mil. lin. yd— Filament yarn (100%) fabrics? do— Chiefly rayon and/or acetate fabrics do Chiefly nylon fabrics do Spun yarn (100%) fabrics (except blanketing) 9 mil. lin. yd— Rayon and/or acetate fabrics and blends do Polyester blends with cotton do Combinations of filament and spun yarn fabrics mil. lin. yd— Exports, piece goods thous. sq. yd— WOOL Wool consumption, mill (clean basis): Apparel class. _ __'__._ mil. lb— Carpet class „_do Wool imports, clean yield*. ___—„—do Duty-free (carpet class)*.— do Wool prices, raw, clean basis, Boston: Good French combing and staple: Graded territory, fine. $ per lb— Graded fleece, % blood do Australian, 64s, 70s, good topmaking do 5,241 118 i 29. 6 130.7 3,795 gg «28.0 <* 29. 6 251 4 29.9 30.8 398 2 30.1 30.9 266 3 30.0 30.7 117 53 28.9 30.0 226 3 29.5 29.7 304 6 29.4 29.7 29.0 29.6 1,396 1, 572 709 1 406 1,635 735 112 105 768 2 133 71 715 86 53 671 106 44 605 2 138 123 572 119 188 641 110 200 680 18.7 15.3 124.6 .471 103. 6 18.9 14.7 128.0 .493 102.9 18.8 15.2 10.1 .506 8.2 18.7 15.0 212.3 .492 29.8 18.8 15.0 8.3 .417 6.7 18.9 15.1 10.1 .506 8.1 19.0 15.0 212.3 .493 29.8 19.0 15.0 10.3 .517 8.2 .630 .892 .629 .891 .622 .878 .627 .885 .632 .889 .632 .898 .637 .900 8,966 9,238 18.2 20.3 19.1 19.5 24.2 18.8 5.2 4.5 3.9 4.1 5.1 .30 3 29. 49 .23 37.51 .19 37. 30 .20 37. 49 36.6 17.4 34.9 18.6 17. 5 34.9 18.8 17.5 34.9 18.8 17.5 3,018.0 777.5 594.3 3,532.2 825.0 648.0 880.5 207.9 164.2 905.0 210.5 162.0 847.6 559.1 239. 5 997. 7 779.2 282.3 246.8 191.9 69.7 251. 7 209.7 71.1 278 16 26.6 29.5 254 6 26.6 29.5 236 6 27.9 29.5 131 190 735 118 193 777 116 179 811 2 143 168 833 19.1 15.0 10.4 .522 8.3 18.9 14.7 2 11. 8 .470 29.3 18.9 14.7 10.4 .522 8.2 18.8 14.6 10.5 .525 8.2 19.2 14.7 213.0 .518 2 10. 0 19.2 14.7 10.5 .525 8.0 .637 .903 .642 .910 .642 .916 .647 .926 .652 .934 .652 .938 p 657 P. 940 18.6 18.7 19.0 20. 3 4.0 4.1 4.0 4.1 4.5 .21 .21 37.97 3 38. 31 .21 38.57 .22 38. 62 .23 38.58 .23 38.77 38.78 38.77 38.58 38.71 34.9 18.8 17.5 34.9 18.8 17.5 34.9 18.8 17.5 34.9 18.8 17.5 34.9 18.8 17.5 34.9 18.8 17.6 34. 9 18.8 18.0 p 35. 6 P 18 8 p 18.0 910.7 203.3 ----156 4 938.2 201.7 167 0 '5 65. 4 rs 55 7 567.9 5 59 4 260.5 214 4 76.1 271.4 220 2 77.9 8 509 4,902 9 209 5,506 2,374 2,189 34.9 18.8 17.5 34.9 18.8 17.5 447 15 27.9 29.5 2 7,559 4,686 10, 071 4,976 8,081 2,840 8,189 3,336 8, 282 4,034 7,516 3,058 8,821 3,404 8,903 4,856 7,737 4,173 9,114 4,204 10,029 6, 181 9, 202 133,695 15,690 130, 108 970 9,781 1,564 9,505 1,023 9,689 1,114 13,412 1,313 12, 670 1,198 12, 507 1, 610 12, 537 1,989 13,859 1,421 18, 130 810 10, 700 1,094 16, 247 32.6 51.3 59.8 55.8 33.5 55.5 34.5 60.6 40.1 69.6 46.3 73. 0 52.9 71.1 55.3 68.5 55.6 60.3 59.8 55.8 61.6 58.7 61.1 56.7 60.1 53.9 76.9 57.5 36.8 109. 3 96. 7 32.2 .28 .98 .78 .28 .85 .80 3, 545. 4 1, 583. 1 852.2 283.1 3, 926. 2 1, 640. 6 855.8 303.9 981. 1 416. 7 219.6 77.2 960.6 398.4 209.1 74.0 1, Oil. 5 408.3 205.5 76.0 1, 260. 4 1, 534. 6 374.4 379.1 419.6 665. 6 456.8 643.3 713.5 162.0 171.9 152.4 179. 7 154. 5 210 7 472.4 185,263 109.1 73.8 37.0 89.8 57.0 33.7 .28 .84 .78 .28 .84 .78 .28 .84 .80 • .28 .84 .80 .28 .84 .80 109.3 96.7 32.2 .28 .84 .80 .28 .84 .80 519.4 167, 083 14,660 131.3 13,494 11, 148 11, 910 127.3 13, 869 14,839 14,953 233.9 122.7 212.3 113.9 274.7 112.3 271. 6 108.9 22.1 8.7 20.6 7.8 227.3 210.8 23.0 10.5 19.5 6.5 22.5 11.7 23.2 8.7 25.5 11.1 2 27. 1 2 10. 9 25.9 10.3 22.6 9.4 23.8 12.0 21.1 9.3 21.1 6.8 1.397 1.286 1. 389 1.249 1.192 1.156 1. 195 1.145 1.075 1.195 1.155 1.075 1.218 1.172 1.100 1.265 1.220 1.225 1.275 1.253 1.225 1.275 1.255 1. 225 109.0 109.0 109. 0 6 66.8 r 29.1 29.6 2,310 116, 473 «6 99, 923 56,411 50, 763 WOOL MANUFACTURES Knitting yarn, worsted, 2/20s-50s/56s, American system, wholesale price ._ 1957-59=100— 106.2 107.9 107. 8 106.7 107.1 Woolen and worsted woven goods, exc. felts: Production (qtrly.) mil. lin. yd— 255.2 267.3 73.4 Suiting, price (wholesale), flannel, men's and boys', f.o.b. mill. 1957-59=100— 95.9 100.2 101. 1 101.7 101.7 r 2 Revised. p Preliminary. * Season average. For 5 weeks, other months, 4 weeks. 3 Margins reflect equalization payments to domestic users (Aug. 1964-July 1965, 6.5 cents; beginning Aug. 1965, 5.75 cents per pound). < For 11 months; price not available for Sept. 1964. s For month shown. « See "O." P- S-21. « Season average to Apr. 1,1966. §Data beginning Aug. 1965 are not strictly comparable with earlier prices. 370 .28 .84 .80 123.8 15, 798 38.72 1 132 1 752 21,488 13, 654 '58 8 r53 5 57 5 53 Q 112.9 89.9 24 5 .28 .84 .80 .28 . . 84 .80 .28 .84 .80 P. 28 P. 84 p. 80 12, 912 13,711 16,413 14 600 13 958 23.3 '229.3 9.1 211.3 24.0 33.0 7.0 10.8 23.4 8.5 26.9 95 23 1 83 1.375 1.225 1.275 21.1 7.4 23.4 9.0 28.1 9.1 1. 279 1.235 1.225 1.280 1.235 1.225 1.280 1.235 1.225 1.291 1. 229 1.225 1.325 1.225 1.235 1. 350 1.225 1.275 109.0 108.4 109.6 109.6 110.2 110.2 225.6 210.1 38.72 1.375 1.183 1.275 61.2 102.4 102.4 102. 4 102.4 102.4 102. 7 102.7 101.7 102. 7 9 Includes data not shown separately. *New series. Sources: Polyester staple price, U.S. Dept. Labor; wool imports, U.S. Dept. Agriculture from Bureau of the Census records (such imports exclude animal hairs). Data are available as follows: Price, back to 1955; noncellulosic yam and staple—production to 1951; stocks, to 1953; wool imports to 1948. SUKVEY OF CUERENT BUSINESS S-40 Unless otherwise stated, statistics through 1964 and descriptive notes are shown in the 1965 edition of BUSINESS STATISTICS 1965 1964 July 1966 1965 May Annual June July Aug. 1966 Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May 16 003 15 491 June TEXTILE PRODUCTS—Continued APPAREL Hosiery shipments Men's apparel, cuttings:! Tailored garments: Suits Overcoats and topcoats thous. doz. pairs 189, 534 194, 753 13 905 17, 289 16 120 17 105 17 620 18 764 16, 620 15 445 15 015 16 033 18 299 - - thous. units ..— -do 20, 343 3,956 22, 419 4,436 1,889 1, 995 1,181 1,858 1,897 417 2.059 449 2,021 1, 731 447 10, 830 128, 378 12, 492 139, 009 1,073 11, 937 1,099 12, 465 661 10,214 1,062 11, 937 1,015 12, 476 26,946 30, 321 2, 573 2,499 1,894 2,439 4.861 3,749 4,867 3,949 367 308 436 331 356 261 410 355 23, 708 271, 214 12. 235 »• 25, 531 274 541 11, 736 1,340 25 067 2,354 24 311 903 2,301 19 086 2,437 21 932 518 18. 493 7,919 16, 869 9, 906 1,359 1,445 Coats (separate) , dress and sport. do Trousers (separate) , dress and sport. _ do Shirts (woven fabrics), dress and sport thous. doz _ Work clothing: Dungarees and waistband overalls do Shirts _do Women's, misses', juniors' outerwear, cuttings:J Coats thous. units Dresses do Suits do Blouses, waists, and shirts Skirts thous. doz _ do 446 N 902 485 933 321 988 1,284 1,001 904 1,291 915 1,766 274 1, 787 358 2,116 1.101 12, 309 1, 138 10, 983 1, 157 10, 461 1, 161 11, 295 1, 123 11, 116 1,307 13, 670 2,542 2. 641 2,735 2, 519 2,331 2,406 2,711 465 322 485 361 409 334 394 339 435 341 436 351 485 406 2,350 20, 660 975 2,794 21, 591 1,035 2,637 20, 140 1,003 1,788 19 032 2,012 19, 444 953 851 1,305 1,489 1,323 1,197 1,207 866 359 905 655 561 245 301 755 TRANSPORTATION EQUIPMENT AEROSPACE VEHICLES Orders, new (net), Qtrly. total mil. $ U S. Government -do Prime contract do Sales (net) receipts or billings, Qtrly. total do U.S. Government -do 17, 970 13, 516 16,282 16, 686 12, 815 22, 183 14,571 20, 101 17, 016 12, 535 5,106 3,298 4,589 4,206 3,081 6,091 3,861 5,572 4,133 3,017 6,292 4,452 5, 599 4, 627 3,426 Backlog of orders, end of period 9 do U S. Government do Aircraft (complete) and parts do Engines (aircraft) and parts do Missiles, space vehicle systems, engines, propulsion units, and parts mil. $ Other related operations (conversions, modifications), products, services.. _ .mil. $ 15,218 11, 658 6,276 1,527 20, 385 13, 696 8,885 2, 503 16, 762 11, 824 7,056 1,771 18, 720 12,669 8,506 l,94g 20, 385 13, 696 8,885 2, 503 4,558 5,480 4, 725 4,867 5,480 1,418 1,856 1,568 1,681 Aircraft (civilian): Shipments© do Airframe weight©, -thous. Ib Exports mil. $ 1, 066. 1 22, 905 287.2 1, 592. 0 32, 200 473.0 9, 292. 3 8, 931. 5 7, 751. 8 7, 554. 1 1,540.5 1. 377. 4 11, 057. 4 10 716 6 9, 305. 6 9, 100. 7 1 751.8 1, 615. 9 1, 856 119. 1 2,472 23.2 130.8 2, 562 24.1 145. 2 2,866 61.1 148. 4 2,682 57.9 160.6 3,186 49 5 172.7 3, 596 31.7 169.1 3,400 47.0 186.8 3, 588 68.8 198. 3 4,265 61.8 986.0 1, 058. 6 960.7 1, 034. 3 894.0 832. 7 819.3 880.9 153. 3 164.5 141. 4 153. 4 880. 1 863.8 754.0 745.6 126.1 118.2 444.7 433.9 333. 0 330.4 111.7 103.5 592.0 1,010.2 1, 058. 1 1,043.0 567. 4 967.9 1,015.6 1, 006. 7 452.9 855.6 908.5 883.8 438.5 825. 4 878.7 861.3 139. 0 149.6 154.6 159. 2 136.9 129.0 145.4 142.5 950.1 921. 1 798.0 780.4 152. 1 140.7 917.6 1,089.8 889.9 1, 061. 5 766.3 919.8 748.8 902.0 151. 3 170.1 141.1 159.5 '963.2 935.5 811.0 793.9 152.3 141.6 5.66 3.93 1.02 4.58 1.28 6.87 .87 .85 5.10 4.75 124.6 2,574 34.3 111.2 2, 508 17.7 163.6 3,195 47.1 r MOTOR VEHICLES Factory sales, total. Domestic Passenger cars, total Domestic... __ _ Trucks and buses, total Domestic _ _ _ __ thous_. do -do _.do ___ do -do Exports: Passenger cars (new), assembled ._ do Passenger cars (used)-..- _ _ _ do Trucks and buses (new"), assembled- __ __do _ Trucks and buses (used) _ __ do _ Truck and bus bodies for assembly* _ do Imports: Passenger cars (new) , complete units do Passenger cars (used) do Trucks and buses, complete units do Shipments, truck trailers: Complete trailers and chassis number Vans do Trailer bodies chassis sold separately do Registrations:© New passenger cars thous Foreign cars do New commercial cars (trucks) do 166. 31 1 3105. 03 10.40 i 10. 42 146. 83 i 3 59. 67 5.92 i 5.77 5.70 17.29 7.37 .79 .95 4.99 4.59 .52 .86 .54 .48 .54 .72 51. 19 46.06 .14 .26 57 .54 .46 .45 18.94 45. 84 15.68 5.58 4.28 .83 .50 .41 .95 .48 .68 15. 45 1.07 7.95 10.81 1.21 6.12 9.95 1.17 6.65 .45 .96 .63 .75 .48 .84 13. 29 1,38 7.11 .65 1.44 10.37 1.07 6.08 9. 92 1.21 6. 36 74.06 .57 2.22 .65 .87 .56 .95 59.28 1.04 2.20 54.90 1.39 .95 64.63 1.01 2.66 57. 14 77.26 .58 2.68 49.41 .57 8,649 5,533 1,849 8, 760 5,716 2,402 8,363 5,684 2,469 9,062 6,060 2,021 8,503 5, 674 1,488 8,489 -•11,546 5,593 ' 7, 572 1,621 r 2, 263 10, 906 7,018 766.7 54.3 129.7 589.5 51.7 122. 6 745.8 52.1 133 1 793.9 47.3 122.5 908.7 57.1 147.7 606. 6 37.0 109.2 721.6 48.8 129.0 878.8 59.7 143.4 822.6 55.6 148.6 777.2 50.6 144.0 5, 784 3,739 2,045 5, 034 3,583 1,451 6,345 4,429 1,916 7, 112 4, 883 2,229 6,983 4,598 2,385 8,894 6,512 2,382 7,725 5,297 2,428 6,262 4,550 1,712 8,054 6,009 2,045 7,262 5,689 1,573 7,500 5,473 2,027 8,555 7,971 584 6,330 5,586 744 ' 8, 800 ' 6, 187 2, 613 7,821 6,441 1,380 6,429 5,691 738 7,661 5,606 2,055 12, 566 '11,245 '12,220 11, 064 ' 9, 230 '7,957 1,502 4,263 2,015 9, 567 8,855 712 515. 70 10. 89 6.01 559 43 8.00 7.60 41.53 86 938 51, 836 7 794 103 756 65, 909 14 653 9 390 5,923 642 9, 134 5, 544 1,156 8,752 8, 174 5,627 5,261 1 593 1,146 8, 065. 2 9, 313. 9 484.1 569. 4 1 361 8 1 528 9 841.4 49.5 130.8 841.5 49.3 135.2 833.6 52.0 136.4 77, 880 53, 376 24, 504 5,873 3,976 1,897 6,813 4,659 2,154 88, 218 ' 65, 547 22,671 5,839 5,241 598 .26 .38 13.16 948. 8 2999.3 921. 1 787.8 2 821. 5 771.2 161.0 2177 8 149.9 .13 .39 .21 .13 .80 .46 55. 68 1.30 .46 2.13 .47 1.47 978 RAILROAD EQUIPMENT Freight cars (ARCI): Shipments Equipment manufacturers, total Railroad shops, domestic number do _do 69, 074 45, 360 23, 714 New orders Equipment manufacturers, total. . _ . Railroad shops, domestic do do. do 71, 072 44, 627 26, 445 Unfilled orders, end of period Equipment manufacturers, total Railroad shops, domestic _ do do do 32, 949 18, 972 13, 977 45, 266 32. 873 12,393 35, 207 20, 875 14, 332 36, 744 23, 982 12, 762 37, 293 25, 832 11, 461 40, 832 28,209 12, 623 42, 373 30, 291 12,082 41, 735 31, 140 10, 595 42, 736 32, 471 10, 265 45, 266 32,873 12,393 46, 004 33,644 12, 360 51, 760 39, 878 11, 882 54, 721 42, 905 11, 816 59, 652 45, 219 14,433 61,596 48,478 13, 118 254 191 201 14 26 64 22 62 10 52 13 39 9 30 0 10 3 7 7 14 0 14 0 20 0 20 0 20 0 70 1, 495 4 1, 481 1, 492 1, 491 1,489 1,488 1,488 1,479 1,480 4 1, 484 5.3 5.3 5.4 5.0 4.9 1,486 5.7 5.6 1,480 5.8 4 1, 481 5.8 1,487 5.3 1, 495 5.9 87. 00 58. 18 4 88. 20 4 59. 58 88 05 59. 05 88.09 59.16 88.20 59.27 88. 32 59.38 88.48 59.45 4 88. 20 459.58 88.30 59. 68 88.50 59.78 88.70 59.90 489.00 4 59. 97 Passenger cars: Shipments. do'. Unfilled orders, end of per__.do___Freight cars (revenue), class 1 railroads (AAR):§ Number owned, end of period thous Held for repairs, % of total owned _ Capacity (carrying), aggregate, end of period* mil. tons. Average per car _tons__ r 3 4 r 5.7 5.7 87.90 58.81 87.92 58.93 l 2 Revised. See note "O" for p. S-21. Preliminary estimate of production. Beginning Jan. 1965, data exclude exports of incomplete (unassembled) vehicles. See note "§." <= Corrected. J Monthly revisions for 1963-64 are available upon request. 9 Total includes backlog for nonrelated products and services and basic research. ©Data include military-type planes shipped to foreign governments. 5.8 ' 9, 997 ' 8, 384 ' 5, 838 * 5, 830 2, 554 ' 4, 159 :: 5.0 89.30 60.08 ________ *New series. Monthly data prior to 1965 are available upon request. ©Courtesy of R. L. Polk & Co.; republication prohibited. § Excludes railroad-owned private refrigerator cars and private line cars. Effective Apr. 1966, data include cars owned by three class II roads (over 2,600 cars end of Apr. 1966). Also, change in definition of class T railroads, as stated in 1965 BUSINESS STATISTICS note, is reflected in figures beginning Dec. 1965, instead of Jan. 1965. Generals : ", - , ,\ / : , • . - . ' ' ' - : .-:>'' - Business indicators.'.,,';,•.'.,.,>,",;',,Y, / , . , - . , . ; ,>' '1-7, Commodity prices,."..*...' , , .> , « ; , . , > . ; » , 7,8 Construction and real estate. . . ' . V , , . . . , / . . ! , ; 9»10 Domestic trade,,/'.,/„..,..;....: .,'..;........ 1<HJ Employment and population..,;-..,.,.«..».;,-,';,•Finance. .. .''.,.•...*....::,.,; ; . ',.,....;<..-.''-.,,- ; Foreign trade ojf the United States.;,,.... >..'. Transportation and cei^mttiiications,.. •.", •',...." Indtistrys • - " ' 12-16 16-21 21-23 &3;,24 , ' : • ..*..- , • • ! " v | : ' • • ; • • , ' ' Chemicals arid allied products;...,..'.-..,,,;... 25 Electric power aiad gas,., .... ;,»,,,. 26 Food and kindred products; tobacco.,.:..,",,. 26-30 Leather and products. +,,...' i...... 30,31 Lumber and products.-,, ^ * ; * , / , ;\ . . \ . 31 Metals and manufactures, , , , ' , . , , , > , , , ,, . 33-34 Petroleum, coal, and products, > . . . » ' , ; . ; » » ; - , , > , . 35,36 Pulp, paper, andpaper products;;.,,,.;;,.. . -. .36*37 Rubber and rubber products..,",,,;,/;,:. B7 Stone, clay, and glass products...^ ,,,,', 38 Textile products,;v....... > , ; / , , .',> ,*., .v 38-40 Transportation e q u i p m e n t , , , , . » , . , , / , « , , , , . . 40 ' . . 'INDIVIDUAL' SERIES, Advertisin|;, . , •?.,v ,..;'..,' , , . ' . . , . ' . ; " . . , , • / , » . 30* 11, 16 Aerospace vehicles. , ,,,,,,.'.... ,\ 1".' ..... >\ . . .-. 40 Agricultural loans. / . , , . » , , , ; , » , » , , » . , , » . '. . . . . 16 Air carrier operations. ...... ....... , ..... . . ,' — 23 Aircraft and parts , . , , , ..... : , , , ' „ . . • / . ; • • . . . 3, 6, 13^15, 40 Alcohol* denatured and ethyl, » . . , , , , . ; . . . „ . -^ ____ 25 Alcoholic beverages; 1 ..... *''.,, .-.,,..' v , . , " . , . . . . 8*10, 26 Aluminum. , » . „ . . . . . , , ; , , , , . ' ........ > . . . -. ..... 23, 33 Apparel ....... . . . . . , , , , ..... ... 1, 3,4,7,8, 10-1$, 40 Asphalt and tar products ..... -, ...... > .-, ,.... , • , . . . , " 35,36 Automobiles, etc ..... > , : 1, 3-8, 10, II, 13-15, 19, 22, 40 Balance of international payments. , . .......... . 2 Banking ...... r. : , . . .'.; >*; ........ v .-.'; ..... \ . ;v , 16* 17 Barley , . , , , , , , , , , , . , , , , .......... V, , , . . : ..... • , '27 Barrels and drums. , , , ; . . , , . . » . . . . . . , , . » ...... 33 Battery shipments, . ,, , . . . , , , , , . . - . . , . ; ..... .,../, 34 Beef and veal,, . . . ; ____ , , . , ; . . . . . / , , ...... i. . . . , 28 Beverages. , , , , . . / , , -• , . , ...... . . , . . . : . . , . 4, 8, 10* 26 Blast furnaces, steel works etc, . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5, 6,13-15 Bonds, outstanding, issued, prices, safes, yields. . i* 18-20 33 Brass and bronze, . . . . . . . . . . , , , , , . , » , » , , . , , , , , 38 Brick . , , , . . . . ' ..... ,, , , . . , , . , , . , , . . , . . . . . . 20 Broker's balances. . . , »'; . . ! . . . . „ , . , . ' ; ....... .... Building and construction materials. ,', -. . 8, 10, 31 36, 38 Building costs. .'; , , , . . , . ; , < ..... , . . , , , . , , , . , , , 9,10 Building permits, . , , , . , . , . , . . , , . . . . . . , ..... . . . 9 7 Business incorporations (new), failures. ; , , . . . . . . 4, 5 Business sales and inventories, , , , , , , , . . » , . * , , . : . . ; , Butter. , « ...... ;',,;;,.... , ; , , , , , vv, »..;•:. .. . i- ^27 Cans (tinplate). ....... ............ .'.,., ....... 33 Carloadings. . ---- . . . . . . ..... » , ; . . , , ---- . . ---- . 24 Cattle and calves ............. , . . , , , . / , , . , ...... 28 Cement and concrete products. . . , » , , , . , . . , , 8-^10, 38 Cereal and bakery products, , » . , , , . , » , » . , , ; , . . . , 8 Chain-store sales, firms with 4 or more and 11 or more stores, . . , , , , , , . . . . . . . ............ , . . . 12 Cheese ........ ...... , . , , . . _ , . , , , . ; , , , , . . ; . . 27 Chemicals ..... . . . . . . ..... .... 4-6,8,13-15,19,22,25 Cigarettes and cigars, « ,;. , , , , , , . , . . . . . . . . , , , ... 8,30, Civilian employees, Federal, , ; , , , , „ , . . „ . , , ..... 14 Clay products. . . . . . . . . . ..... , ...... . . . , ,_____ 8, 38 Coal. .- . , ........ . ; : . . : .,,.:.;., ,4,8,13-15,22,24,35 Cocoa, . . . ..... . . . . ..... . . . . . ; ..... , , . ; . ; ; . . . 23,29 Coffee. ........ ...... . . , ..... , . , . . , ........ . . . 23, 29 Coke.. . . ............. / , . . . ........ . . . . . ..... 24,35 Communications. . . , , . . . . , , , , . . . , . . ; , 2,13-15,20,24 Confectionery, sales. . . ..... . . ---- . , . . . . ; , . . . . , 29 Construction? ; , Contracts____..... ---- » , . . . , , , ; ....... , . . . . 9 Costs,,. .-. . : ..... - . : . . . v . .-; ..... . ....... '. . :. : ,. 9,10 Employment hours, earnings, wages, . ......... :13-16 Fixed investment, structures , , , , ....... ....... 1 Highways and roads. „ , , . . . . . . . , . ,____. , . . , . 9, 10 Housing starts, , . . . , . . . , , , . , , . . . . . . ---- , , . . - ' 9 New construction put in place. .... ....... , , . . 9 Consumer credit. ..-...'____, . , ..... .... ........ 17, 18 Consumer expenditures ........... , . , . ; ........ 1 Consumer goods output, index . . . . * . ..... „ „ „ , . , . 3, 4 Consumer price index. , , , . , . ...... , , . . , . . . . . . . 7 Copper. .________, ,________. . ; , ........ . ........... 23, 33 Corn, . . . . . . , ' . . . . , v I . , . , . . ; v . .m ....... , , ..... :' 27 : Cost of living (see Consumer price index), , . . , , . , 7 Cotton, raw and manufactures ____ , , ____ 7, 8, 22, 38, 39 Cottonseed cake and meal and oil , . , . : . . . . ..... 30 Credit, short- apd intermediate-term. . ........ . . 17, 18 > Crops. . . , , . , . . ' , . , . . . , ........ . . . . . . 3,7,27,28,30,38 Crude oil and natural gas, , , . . . . . . . . , , , . . . 4, 13—15, 35 Currency in circulation. . , . , , , . . , , . „ 1 . , , , . ; , , . » . 19 Bairy products, ...... ;____. , ..... . .......... 3,7,27 Debits, bank. . . . . . . V ..... , , , . , . , . . . . . . . . , , . . 16 Debt, U.S. Government, . . , . , - ....... . . ..... . > . 18 Department stores ....... . ; ............... . 11, 12, 17 Deposits, bank , , . ...... ..... . . . . . ; . , , . ; r , 16, 17*19 Disputes, industrial ............ , , , . ......... . , = 16 Distilled spirits____, , . ........... ,.-.'.:____. ..... 26 Dividend payments, rates, and yields ..... . ; 2,3, 18-21 Drug stores, sales, ............................. 11, 12 Earnings, weekly and hourly., ^ , . . . , , , ; , , , 14-16 Eating and drinking places, , , . ; , , , . . , , » 11,12 Eggs and poultry, v; . , , , . . , , . ; . , ; . 3,7,29 Electric power, .,,,,,., ... 4,8,26 Electrical machinery and equipment.».... .. 3, 5f 6,8,13-15,19,22,34 Employment estimates,..//.-.,. /. '«.'/. * - •. "'12-14 Employment Service activities. . „ , , . . , . , . . . , — 16 Expenditures, XJ»S. Government.,..,,,.;....... 18 Uxploisiyes.' , : . . ' « , ' • . ' « , , , , ' . , r. .> . . . . . - . . -.'«;., ,; - ; ; 25: Exports (see also individual commodities)..,, 1,2,31-23 Express o p e r a t i o n s . , « . , ; , . , , , ; , , . , , , , , , , ^ , , , , . 23 Failures, industrial and commercial, v , , , 7 Fans and blowers,...,,,,..,:. ,,,,... .si... 34 Farm income, marketings, and; p r i c e s . » , . , ; , . . . . , 2,3,7 ',-Farm wages,.».,-..-... -,, .,'.,,';.-,, . , / , » , - ' '• 16 Fats and oils..,.,.., : . . . . , , 8,22,29,30 I*eder^l G»vernment finance...;.,,,...,., A-,, 18 Fedleral Reserve banks, condition of. ..,,,,,, 16 Federal Reserve member b a n k s : . , . « . . , , ; , . » , . , , 17 Fertilizers. , ,, . . . . , , . . , , . , . . , . , , 8,25 Fire losses ;.;,,.,;,;,,.., .„,...' /-]..... 10 Fish oils and fish. , , . , , , , , , , , ; •.,.,' 29 Flooring, hardwood,,,,,.-... ;,. v , , . . . . . . . . V , , , 31 Flour, wheat.,,,., I..,,.;; .......: 28 Food products,.,. 1,4~^< 1Q; 11,13-15,19,22,23,27^30 Foreclosutres, real estate. -t,,; ,,.., ; , . , ; 10 Foreign trade (see also individual^commod,},.... 21-23 Foundry equipment,, > . > , , ; /,, .,.,,..,... 34 Freight caifloadings. . , — . . , . , , . , , . ^ . , . . . , , , . . 24 Freight cars (equipment).....,.,,. 4,40 Fruits and vegetables ....,,...,... 7,8,22 Fuel oil ,,,;,.. : , , , . ; . . . . . 35,36 Fuels. , . , . , , .,,,.,.;,;.. , \ 4,8,35,36 Furnaces., 1 ..,,.., ....,..,.,,.,., 34 Furniture;,. i . , . . , , . ,, 3,4,8,11-15,17 . Fursr ,,;,,; .., " . . . . . . ; . , , . 23 Gas, output, prices, sales, revenues. , . , , , , . . . . . 4,8,26 Gasoline, > . . . , . . . ,.,,...!.. ,. 1, 35,36 Glass and products , — ,... 38 Glycerin, ,.,, ,,,... 25 Gold.., ,.,;.,,.,-..; "";„;..., /,'v.. 19 Grains and products.,. . v •.,,..,. 7,8,22,24,27,28 - Grocery stores. * , - , , . ' , , , ; — , , . , , / , . - , . . ' . , . . , » . 11,1,2 Gross national product^,.,,,,;, » . , . ; . „ ; , , , . . , , 1 Gross private domestic investment.,.-,;.,.,,,,/,,.. 1 Gypsum and products,,. , . . ; , , = » , . . , . . . . . . , . * , . . 8,38 Hardware stores.., , — ' ' 11 Heating equipment.,.,.;,. .v.,',,, •; : . . , . 8,34; Hides and s k i n s . . , , , , . . . . , , . , . , , . . . . , 8,30 Highways and r o a d s , . . . . , , . , , , , , , , ; ,. 9,10 ' Hogs;,.... ; ,.,-...,..;.-..;v . ; , . . , . ; , . , , , ^ 28 Home Loan banks, outstanding advances.,,.;,.. 10 Home mortgages. . , ....,,.,.; ;;,, 10 Hosiery., ..,.,,, 40 Hotels ,,,.,,,..,.. . , . . . , , . . . . . , , 14,15,24 Hours of work per week, . , . . , , , » , . , , , , , » . , , . . . 14 Housefurnishings, ,,,,,., ,, / 1,4,7,8,10-12 Household appliances and r a d i o s , . . . ; , , . . . . 4,8,11,34 Housing starts arid permits , ,,,.. 9 Imports (see also individual commodities)...., 1,22,23 Income, p e r s o n a l . . » , , . . . . : . . ,, 2,3 Income and employment tax receipts....,.,...,. 18 Industrial production indexes: By industry.,. ,; ,,.,....... 3,4 By market grouping. , , , , i . . , , , . , , , t3, 4 Installment credit..... , , , , . . , . . . , , . . , . 12,17,18 Installment sales, department stores.,..,,, — ,. 12 Instruments and related products, 3,5,13-15 Insurance, l i f e . . . . . . . . . . . :.,,../. 18,19 Interest and money rates..,,., ...,,,;,.«, 17 Inventories, manufacturers* and trade*, 4-6,11,12 Inventory-sales ratios. . : . , , . , , , , , . . . . ,,. . 5 tron and steel , 3, 5,6,8,10,13-15,19,22, 23,32,33 16 Labor advertising index, disputes, turnover, 12 Labor force -, 28 Lamb and mutton .,,, 28 ...Lard .,,;,.,...,,. ,,.,..,...,, 33 Lead. Leather and products. . , , , . , , , , 3,8,13-15,30,31 Life i n s u r a n c e . , » , . , . . , . , . . . . . , , , , , , , , . 18,19 Linseed o i l , . , . ; , , , , . , . . . . . . . . . , , , . . . . . . . : ., , , 30 Livestock..., ,, 3,7,8,24,28 Loans, real estate, agricultural, bank, brokers* (see also Consumer credit).... , , . , , . , . , 10,16,17,20 Lubricants;..,,,, . , , , , . , 35,36 Lumber and products, 3» 8,10-15,19,31 Machine toools ,.,.....„.... 34 Machinery. : , 3,5,6,8,13-15,19,22,34 Mail order houses, s a l e s , . . . . , , . . , . , , 11 Manmade fibers and manufactures 8,39 Manufacturers* sales (or shipments), inventories, • orders; '. , •,, ,;,,,, 4-6 Manufacturing employment, production workers, payrolls, hours, e a r n i n g s . . , . . , . , . . . . . ,, . :13-15 Manufacturing production indexes, , , , . . . . » . . , , . 3,4 Margarine ........,,.., ,...,,.,,<,, 29 Meat animals and meats , 3,7,8,22,28 Medical and personal care , , . . , . , , , , „ . » , , . . , , . » 7 Metals •. 3-6,8,13-15,19,22,23,32-34 Milk", • ....;....,....,, ....; - 27 Mining and minerals, , 2-4,8,13-15,19,20 Monetary statistics. 19 Money supply , " . . . •. 19 Mortgage applications, loans, rates, . , , , , . , , , 10,16,17 Motor carriers. . . . , * ,. ,,.,., 23,24 Motor vehicles:......... 1,3-8,10,11,13-15,19,22,40 Motors and generators I . , , , . „"! ,. 34 National defense expenditures . . . ; . , . . . . . > , ; 1,18 National income and product < . i , , . . ; . . ; . . . . . . . . 1-, 2 National parks, v i s i t s . . . - . . . . . , ' , . . , , , , , , . , . . . ^ . 24 Newsprint,,.,. .\.,.'/.-. ;,;.. :."...',. .v. ,;,:,\. .;„ ;; 23,37 New ¥ork Stock Exchange, selected data,,.,.«.. 20, 21 Nonferrous metal|.;... ......, j . . , , . - 3,8,19,23,33,34 Noninstallment credit, , . .. .1, i\ . . . . . , . , , . , . , , , 17; 18 'Oil burners," -.--.". v. v.,,,';-.'., %;, .''.•,.; ,*\ .-v,.. .-vVv, 34 Oils and fats.,..,.:,......4 ..;, h .,.,:.:.. 8,22,29^ 30 Orders, new and unfilled, manufactures?.:,....,, 6 Ordnance.'/. .';.;',.•.:v.., .*< ,,. .v, ;> ,. ,1, .,;,,,,', I.'• 13-45 ' Paint and paint materials..., . . . : > , . . . . . , . . , ,\ . 8^25 Panama Canal tr,aMe.. , . , . . ;.. 4 . . . . , , 24 Paper and products and pulp. » , , , » ,.;.... 3> 5,6* 8,4%15,19,23,36,37 ! Parity ratio,»:'.•, >,; -. >:/.„•..;;,,...;.., ;'.Yh . ; >. ' . • ' 7 Passports issued-, >... ,. ;;.,;. .\,,..,,,;:; .'. ,.'..',''»v...,' ", ;..24 • Payrolls,, indexes. . . . , ; > , , . « . ! . , , . . . . . § , . . ; . ; , , , 14 Personal consumption expenditures,,.,,,,,...... 1 Personal income. . , . . « , , * , .,..,, 2,3 Personal outlays....... \...... J . . . ; , , . , . , . . , . . 2 Petroleum and products,,........... j . ; . , , , . , , 4-6, 8, H, 13-15* 19,22,23,35,36 1 Pig-iron ,. .,;,,;-.,.,,,,;,,.,,'-,.^,,;; ,;.=,. -;/.«,,,-.. , JJ32 •. Plant atnd equipment expenditures.......,,..... 2,20 Plastics and resin materials;.,,,.,, ».,.;,;. 25 Population » . : . . , , " . . . '* .....,,,,,,,,,,,. 12 Pork.,,,,,...-...-'..\, ,v,;.,,,'.v: /;^,.....^:,. '2'8V\ Postal savings.,,,,.,,. ....... 1 ..,= , . . . , . , . , 17 Poultry and e g g s , , . . . ; . , . , . . . . . , , , . 3,7,29 Prices (see also individual commodities).,.,.,,,.,.. 7,8 Printing and publishing. t .,,\ , , . , . , . . . . . . . , . 4,13-15 Profits, corporate.,...... : , . . . , , . i«>^.;.,. 2,19 Pubne utilities.,...;'...,,.,..... 2-4,7-9,13r-15,18-21 Pullman Company.,, .... . . ... ;,,,, ,\ ,;, .""'.'. ,~*. . . 24 Pulp aiid p u l p w o o d . . . . . . , , , , . ; . , , . . . . . . , * , , . , 36 Purchasinig power of the dollar , . * . . . . 1....,/,, ^ 8 Radiators and c o n v e c t o r s . . . , . , , , , . . , » , . . 1 . . . . . 34 Radio and television;..,,,,.,..,,;.. ; , . 4,8,10,11,34 Railroads,,..,.,..,,. 2,13,14,16,18,20,21,24,40 Railways (local) and bus lines.....:;.;!....; 13-1S,2B ayon and a c e t a t e . , . , . , . . . , , . . . . . . , , , 39 eal estate. . / , , , . : . . , , . . . . . . , , . . . . 10,17,18 Receipts* UfS. Government.....,,.. r . . , , , ; , . . , 18 Recreation/.,.,,,,,. .;\, / . . . . , » , , . . . ' . > . : . - . . ' . , - , ' ^ , - . , - 7' • 34 ReMgerators and home freezers.,.,,,, : Rent (housing). , / .;...-,; .;,.'',. Retail t r a d e . . , , . . . . , , . ; . . . , . , , . . . 4,5,7,11-15. 17,18 . . . . . . . . _ Rice ..>,;,.. ' - ' 27 Roofing and siding, asphalt;.,...,,, Rubber and products (incl. plastics). ,..-.;".. 4-6, 8,13-15,23,37 t ...:... 36 2 Saying, personal,.....,,,..',,,-,. J-,.,,.....,..; - Savings deposits.--.,,...,'., ; .....,'.,,. .•••-.'.....,,.., 17 Securities issued,, , , 19,20 Security markets. . * , . , ; , ' . - ' . , , j. ~t20,21 Services,: •;.;.,;.:...r..: ;....,.,',. I;7, 13^-15 Sheep and l a m b s . . , , , . , , , . . . . , , , . . . . . . . , , , 28 Shoes and other f o o t w e a r , , , . . . . . , . , . . . — 8,11,, 12,31 Silver \ ..,.....-., ,,...,,,........,,,,. 19 Soybean cake arid meal atid o i l , , , . . , , ; . . . . . . 30 Spindle activity, c o t t o n , , . , , . . , . . . . ^ . . ..... 39 32,3$ Steel iiigots and steel manufactures.,,,..,. 32 Steel scrap,-, /,,.;; .',;,...-,,:,. :\|f: ,"; :. . 20,21 Stock pricek, earnings, sales, e t c . , , . . . . Stone, clay, glass products . . . . . 3-5,8,13-15, 19,38 34 StoVes and- ranges ,... ,',;.'.,,.,/.... — U ,.\ . Sugar " ; -,..'.... - 23,29 ;, -, .. ^ Sulfur. .*,,,., , Sulfuric acid. , Superphosphate.. . — ::..;..:./,.,.. .-•.,. '.,,. —-, , „/ - . . 1". . •. . ., . — -' 25 '25 25 Tea imports. .,..,, .,,,,..,;. 29 Telephone, telegraph, cable,, and radiotelegraph •carriers,',,.,,.,.. . . . / . . . . . , . , \ , , . , , , 13-15,24 Television and radio . . . , / . . . . . . . , . . 4,8,10,11,34 Textiles and products.. . .. 3,5,6,8,13-15,19,22,38^40 ' Tin.;.."./ \ .. ,-. . / . . . . . '.: 7..:"1. 23, 33:' Tires and inner tubes, , v . : , , , . , . 8,11,12,37 Tobacco and manufactures....... 4-8,10,13-15,22,30 -Tractors,,,,.,.,,,'..;...; ; . , , ; , _ , , . , 22,34 Trade (retail and whoelsale), , , . , , . . , , , 4,5,11,12 Transit lines, local „.'...-'. . . ., 23 Transportation,.»....,; . ., 1, 2, 7,13-15,23,24 Transportation equipment...,...V,,, 3-6,13-15,19, 40 Travel......,, ; . , , . . . . . , ; , . , . ; . . , , 23,24 Truck trailers, ..,.,, , 40 Trucks (industrial and other) 4 1 •• . , . . . . . , . . 34,40 Unemployment and insurance. 12,16 U.S. Government bondss , •„'.' 16-18,20 U.S. Government finance. , , 18 Utilities., , 2-4,9* 13-15,18-21,26 Vacuum cleaners ;.,.,;.;.....,;......., 34 Variety stores,, , 11,12 Vegetable o f l s . . . . , , ,.,; 30 Vegetables and fruits,. * , . . , . . , /.. 7,8,22 Vessels cleared in foreign trade. 24 Veterans' benefits. , . » , . , . . . . . , . ... 16,18 Wages and salaries.,..,,/!. /. ... ,,. 2,3,14-16 Washers and d r i e r s , . , . . , . . ; 34 Water heaters,». ; ,..,,..-;.., '.,..;,..34 - Waterway traffic. ,-.. r.,-; . • 24 Wheat and wheat flour. , ... 28 Wholesale price indexes. , , , , . . , , 8 Wholesale trade. v . . . -,., 4,5,7,13-15 Wood pulp:, , , . ..; ;.; 36 Wool and wool manufactures 7,8,23,39 ' Zinc.... V , : . . . . ' . . . . - . / , . : . . . , . . . / . . ; . . / . / . : . ,;33,34 POSTAGE AND FEES PAID 0. S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE UNITED STATES G O V E R N M E N T PRINTING OFFICE 1C D O C U M E N T S WASHINGTON. First-Class M " Now Available... BUSINESS STATISTICS 1965 Biennial Edition THE FIFTEENTH VOLUME in a series of statistical supplements to the monthly SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS, the new edition provides, for the past quarter century, historical data for more than 2,500 series. For most series, annual data are presented back to 1939. Quarterly statistics back to 1954 are shown for those series ordinarily published on a quarterly basis, and monthly data back to 1961 are given for monthly series. A feature new to this volume is an appendix providing monthly or quarterly data back to 1947 for 350 of the more important economic series. Color keyed explanatory notes to the time series define terms, give sources of data, and describe the methods of compilation used. 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